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Forests and French Sea Power, 1660-1789 PDF

253 Pages·1956·13.94 MB·English
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FORESTS AND FRENCH SEA POWER 1660-1789 Paul Walden Bamford UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS: 1956 Copyright ©, Canada, 1956, by University of Toronto Press, and printed in Canada. London: Geoffrey Cumberlege, Oxford University Press SCHOLARLY REPRINT SERIES ISBN 0-8020-7033-7 LC A57-226 FORESTS AND FRENCH SEA POWER, 1660-1789 This page intentionally left blank TO MY PARENTS This page intentionally left blank Preface FEW WORKS in the English language deal with the historical de- velopment of French sea power. G. S. Graham, in his Empire of the North Atlantic, offers an integrated survey of French and Brit- ish naval development during the old regime. And in adding James Phinney Baxter's Introduction of the Ironclad Warship, and Pro- fessor Robert G. Albion of Harvard University, who touches on French developments, one just about completes the list. Theodore Ropp's two-volume work on "French Naval Policy, 1871-1904," remains unpublished. Historians of campaigns, like Mahan, have been more interested in the eighteenth-century record of British success than in the naval annals of the power that came off second-best. Hence British naval history is much better known to the English reader, and with it the political and economic influence of British sea power on inter- national relations. The navy of the old French monarchy is best remembered, at least in America, for its influence on the outcome of the American Revolution. Otherwise, its history is often assumed to consist merely of the unhappy side of British success, a long series of individual defeats largely explicable in terms of faulty tactics and strategy. Those interested in another side of the story, in naval administration and the economic connections of French sea power, can find large regions to be explored in the documentary riches of the Archives de la Marine. Of one of these regions the present study attempts to sketch a provisional map. The title might be taken to promise considerable attention to naval architecture, to problems of decay and rot in wooden ships, and to the sciences, botanical and physical, involved in the con- viii PREFACE struction and maintenance of timbered warships. These matters are, of course, relevant to the general problem in hand. However, the work of Professor Albion on the British naval timber problem, published some years ago, treats these questions at length. The diffi- culties of French naval shipbuilders and their methods of dealing with problems of dry rot, timber seasoning, storage, etc., were very similar to the British problems and solutions. It has seemed unneces- sary to do more than comment briefly on French experience with some of these technical problems, though special attention has been given here to the problem of mâture d'assemblage (made masts), with which the French were far more deeply involved than the British in the eighteenth century. This study confines itself mainly to analysis of the emergence, growth, and gradual aggravation of the French problem of naval mast and timber supply before the French Revolution. Though essentially concerned with naval administration, this subject has involved study of the connections of the naval service with agricul- tural, industrial, and commercial conditions in France and in Europe. It has seemed particularly important to show how the mast and timber problem, and with it French sea power, was affected by geography and the nature of public policy. In preparing this study I incurred a host of obligations. Fulbright and Ford Foundation grants afforded financial help without which the research in France and the United States could not have been undertaken. At all stages of that research I enjoyed the co-operation and assistance of archivists and librarians. In France I had the benefit of counsel from MM. Georges Bourgin, Directeur Honoraire des Archives de France, and Jean Denizet, Chef du Service des Archives et Bibliothèques de la Marine. M. Olivier de Prat, charged with the care of naval papers at the Archives Nationales, gave very helpful pointers on the location and nature of manuscript sources, and at Rochefort, Mme Marie Descubes facilitated my use of the documents under her care. The kindness and co-operation of Mlle Mireille Forget, at Toulon, was extended even to the point of giving me access to documents while her archive was being transferred and reorganized. André Reussner, Professor at the Ecole de Guerre Navale, was kind enough to read and comment on an early draft of chapters 11-v. I wish also to thank Professor Albion for his comments on a PREFACE ix draft of the manuscript, and for having taken the trouble to type and send me unpublished extracts from his dissertation dealing with the timber problem during the French Revolution. Valuable criti- cism has also been given me by two colleagues, Professors Walter L. Dorn and Warner Woodring of Ohio State University. Miss Jean C. Jamieson, of the University of Toronto Press, gave the manu- script the benefit of her searching editorial criticism. At Columbia University I incurred deep obligations to Professors Shepard B. Clough and Garrett Mattingly for reading and criticiz- ing the entire manuscript. Neither, of course, is responsible for whatever shortcomings remain, but to each I owe much for cor- rections, and still more for the stimulation afforded by their respec- tive seminars in French and early modern European history. No obligation is greater than that to my wife, Pauline Homa Bamford, who was asked to criticize almost every page of every draft. Her unfailing patience and encouragement have made the book possible, P. W. B.

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By choosing to concentrate upon discovering what forest resources were available to the French navy during the ancien régime and what use it was able to make of them, Mr. Bamford has not only provided the first monograph on that subject in the English language, but has gone far toward explaining wh
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