Journals of Robert Rogers of the Rangers

Journals of Robert Rogers of the Rangers

Author: Robert Rogers

Publisher: Ravenio Books

Published: 2014-01-09

Total Pages: 156

ISBN-13:

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Robert Rogers (1731 – 1795) was an American frontiersman who commanded the famous Rogers Rangers in the French and Indian War.


Journals of Robert Rogers of the Rangers

Journals of Robert Rogers of the Rangers

Author: Robert Rogers

Publisher:

Published: 2016-10-20

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9781539590156

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Journals of Robert Rogers of the Rangers is the firsthand accounts of American frontiersman Robert Rogers. He led the "Rogers' Rangers" during the French and Indian War.


Robert Rogers of the Rangers

Robert Rogers of the Rangers

Author: John R. Cuneo

Publisher: New York : Oxford University Press

Published: 1959

Total Pages: 338

ISBN-13:

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In this sympathetic biography, Robert Rogers appears as a true a hero of the French and Indian War, the St. Francis Raid, Pontiac's Conspiracy, and the fruitless search of the Northwest Passage in the Hudson Bay. A controversial man in his own time and even today, his life was as turbulent as the times in which he lived. Loved by his men, but often in conflict with authority, court martialed on a charge of treason, always pursued by creditors, his career zig-zagged erratically from fame to obscurity. Basing his account on much original research, Mr. Cuneo sheds new light on the days when white men and Indians scalped one another.


War on the Run

War on the Run

Author: John F. Ross

Publisher: Bantam

Published: 2011-04-26

Total Pages: 578

ISBN-13: 0553384570

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Often hailed as the godfather of today’s elite special forces, Robert Rogers trained and led an unorthodox unit of green provincials, raw woodsmen, farmers, and Indian scouts on “impossible” missions in colonial America that are still the stuff of soldiers’ legend. The child of marginalized Scots-Irish immigrants, Rogers learned to survive in New England’s dark and deadly forests, grasping, as did few others, that a new world required new forms of warfare. John F. Ross not only re-creates Rogers’s life and his spectacular battles with breathtaking immediacy and meticulous accuracy, but brings a new and provocative perspective on Rogers’s unique vision of a unified continent, one that would influence Thomas Jefferson and inspire the Lewis and Clark expedition. Rogers’s principles of unconventional war-making would lay the groundwork for the colonial strategy later used in the War of Independence—and prove so compelling that army rangers still study them today. Robert Rogers, a backwoods founding father, was heroic, admirable, brutal, canny, ambitious, duplicitous, visionary, and much more—like America itself.