Journal of Military History
Article Abstracts
Vol. 71, No. 3
July 2007
Articles:
John F. Guilmartin, Jr., "The Earliest Shipboard Gunpowder
Ordnance: An Analysis of Its Technical Parameters and Tactical
Capabilities," The Journal of Military History 71
#3 (July 2007): 649-669.
- Few technological developments in the history of warfare
have been as portentous as the appearance around the turn of
the sixteenth century of effective heavy gunpowder ordnance on
shipboard, which began a new era in sea warfare. Employed on
Mediterranean war galleys and Portuguese caravels, the weapons
marked the solution of a series of daunting technological problems
discussed in this article, beginning with the appearance of gunpowder
in Europe about 1300. Unlike developments on land, change was
at first gradual, but shortly after 1400 the pace of development
sharply accelerated to culminate in what may legitimately be
termed a revolution in firepower at sea.
Wayne E. Lee, "Peace Chiefs and Blood Revenge: Patterns
of Restraint in Native American Warfare, 1500-1800," The
Journal of Military History 71 #3 (July 2007): 701-741.
- Discussions of the escalation in the intensity and lethality
of European-Native American warfare lack a systematic catalog
of Indian restraints on war, in contrast to the extensive literature
on European warfare. This article surveys eastern Native American
societies at war from roughly 1500 to 1800 for limits on destructive
potential and intent. Although Indian societies were willing
to seek to destroy an enemy, including indiscriminate killing,
patterns of restraint inherent to their social authority, cultural
values, and methods of warfare tended to limit escalation and
the overall level of violence. The dissonance of patterns of
restraint in Indian and European warfare contributed to Euro-Indian
escalation.
William Philpott and Martin S. Alexander, "The French
and the British Field Force: Moral Support or Material Contribution?"
The Journal of Military History 71 #3 (July 2007): 743-772.
- This article examines how the French viewed British military
preparations for a war against Germany in the 1930s. It focuses
on declining French expectations of the effectiveness of British
military support as the reality of Britain's small and ill-prepared
Field Force became apparent as war approached. Nevertheless,
France continued to place a high moral value on immediate British
participation in the common fight, as a token of her commitment
to the alliance and long-term potential. For that reason, careful
monitoring of British military developments and strategic intentions
remained central to France's preparations for a future war with
Germany.
Alexander Hill, "British Lend-Lease Aid and the Soviet
War Effort, June 1941-June 1942," The Journal of Military
History 71 #3 (July 2007): .773-808.
- The historiography of Allied assistance to the Soviet Union
during the Great Patriotic War (1941-45) has paid little attention
to deliveries made during the First Moscow Protocol period to
the end of June 1942, during which Britain was the primary provider
of aid. Whilst aid shipped during this period was limited compared
to that for subsequent U.S.-dominated protocols, its significance
has to be understood in the context of the military and economic
situation faced by the Soviet Union during the first year of
the war.
William M. Donnelly, " 'The Best Army that Can Be Put
in the Field in the Circumstances': The U.S. Army, July 1951-July
1953," The Journal of Military History 71 #3 (July
2007): 809-847.
- Between July 1951 and July 1953 the U.S. Army found itself
attempting to support both a field army in Korea and the NSC
68 military buildup. During these years, however, the Army suffered
from a crippling manpower dilemma, both in quantity and in quality,
the result of a limited national mobilization and President Harry
S. Truman's decision to cut the Army's budget without cutting
its missions. This dilemma adversely affected combat effectiveness,
readiness, and morale. For some career soldiers, the stresses
of this period exposed aspects of the Army's institutional culture
that they found disturbing.
Historiographical Essays:
Ethan S. Rafuse, "Still a Mystery? General Grant and the
Historians, 1981-2006," The Journal of Military History
71 #3 (July 2007): 849-874.
- In 1879 General William T. Sherman remarked that, although
he had known Ulysses S. Grant for years, "to me he is a
mystery, and I believe he is a mystery to himself." Over
the last quarter-century many authors have claimed to have solved
or at least shed fresh light on the mystery of Grant. For the
most part, they have portrayed Grant as a great general and good
man, dissenting strongly with the highly negative portrayal of
Grant contained in William S. McFeely's 1981 Pulitzer Prize-winning
study. This essay traces the evolution of Grant scholarship since
1981 and suggests possible lines of inquiry for future Grant
scholars.
-
Eugenia C. Kiesling, "Illuminating Strange Defeat and
Pyrrhic Victory: The Historian Robert A. Doughty," The
Journal of Military History 71 #3 (July 2007): 875-888.
- "Illuminating Strange Defeat and Pyrrhic Victory: The
Historian Robert A. Doughty" is the first of a new genre
of Journal of Military History articles designed to explore
particular historiographical areas by focusing on the contributions
of their most distinguished historians. In surveying the scholarship
of Brigadier General (Rtd.) Robert A. Doughty as well as his
role in shaping the History Department at the United States Military
Academy, this article explores the evolution of English-language
interpretations of the fall of France in 1940 and the French
effort in the Great War while highlighting Doughty's efforts
to teach the U.S. Army how to harness historical study in the
interest of doctrinal development.
Document of Note:
David J. Ulbrich, "The Long-Lost Tentative Manual for
Defense of Advanced Bases (1936)," The Journal of Military
History 71 #3 (October 2007): 889-902.
- Until 1998, the Tentative Manual for Defense of Advanced
Bases was lost at the National Records Center in Suitland, Maryland.
Originally published in 1936 by the U.S. Marine Corps Schools,
this document resurfaced at the National Archives in Washington,
D.C., when Marine Corps records were being shifted among archival
facilities. The Tentative Manual for Defense of Advanced Bases
represented the culmination of decades of doctrinal thinking
in the Marine Corps about the defense of island bases against
enemy amphibious, naval, and aerial assaults. The passages excerpted
in this research note demonstrate that the far-sighted marines
correctly conceived of effective ways to defend American bases
on Wake Island, Midway, Guadalcanal, and other islands in the
Pacific War.
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