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Young Nelsons

Boy sailors during the Napoleonic Wars

D. A. B. Ronald (PhD, University of Exeter, UK) Alexander Kent

$32.99

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English
Osprey Publishing
10 September 2009
They 'fought like young Nelsons.' The words of a schoolmaster, writing from aboard the Mars after the battle of Trafalgar, describing the valour of his pupils in the heat of battle. Made immortal by the novels of Patrick O'Brian, C. S. Forester and Alexander Kent, these boy sailors, alongside those of every other Royal Navy ship, had entered the British Navy to fight the French across every ocean of the world. There was a long-standing British tradition of children going to sea, and along the way found adventure, glory, wealth and fame. During the Napoleonic Wars, these children, some as young as eight or nine, were also fighting for the very survival of Britain. Drawing on many first-hand accounts, letters, poems and writings, this book tells the dramatic story of Britain's boy sailors during the Napoleonic Wars for the very first time.

By:  
Foreword by:  
Imprint:   Osprey Publishing
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 233mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 30mm
Weight:   650g
ISBN:   9781846033605
ISBN 10:   1846033608
Pages:   320
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Other merchandise
Publisher's Status:   Active
Foreword by Alexander Kent; Prologue /Chapter 1: Younkers /Chapter 2: Scape Gallowses /Chapter 3: A Royal Sailor /Chapter 4: A sink of vice and abomination /Chapter 5: Young Squeaker /Chapter 6: Rites of Passage /Chapter 7: The Little World /Chapter 8: Into the Glorious Fray /Chapter 9: Mutiny, Punishment and Promotion /Chapter 10: The Battle of the Nile /Chapter 11: The Nelson Family at War /Chapter 12: Land Ahoy /Chapter 13: Trafalgar /Chapter 14: Spoils of War /Chapter 15: The War of 1812 /Chapter 16: Napoleon on the Bellerophon /Chapter 17: ‘Ah! The Peace has come too soon’

Reviews for Young Nelsons: Boy sailors during the Napoleonic Wars

To the best of my knowledge, this is the first book to examine this area, and its particular value lies in the mass of documentary evidence collected here from naval memoirs recounting the experiences of individual sailors, very often stories of endurance and suffering as these youngsters, some of them as young as 10 or 11, came to terms with the rites of passage (often involving bullying and the theft of their precious possessions) and the rough and tumble and hardship endured by novices at sea; all this graphically before us in vivid contemporary illustrations. --<i>Brian Southam, JASNA News (Summer 2010)</i></p> Youong boys might well be though a nuisance on board a sailing warship, but it was essential to train them from an early age in the skills and discipline required to maneuver a large sailing vessel during battle... It is therefore surprising that relatively little has been written about the role of boys in Nelson's era. This welcome book redresses that deficiency, using secondary sources and a range of firsthand accounts gleaned from the boys' letters, logbooks, and contemporary reports. Young Nelsons is well-written, well-referenced, and packed full of information -- an easy and enjoyable read both for the specialist and the popular market. --<i>Roy Adkins, Naval History (June 2010)</i></p> Young Nelsons tells of boy sailors who volunteered to fight for Britain and found adventure, glory and fame in the process. These children -- some as young as eight or nine -- fought during the Napoleonic Wars: their letters, poems and diaries tell of their experience here and makes for an outstanding military history library addition. --<i>The Bookwatch (December 2009)</i></p> Young Nelsons reads like Tom Brown's Schooldays at Sea. This is a fascinating though heartbreaking account of the little boys who grew into men in the hermetically sealed world of the Royal Navy. Riveting. --<i>Dr Amanda Foreman, Senior Visiting Scholar, AHRB Centre for Editing Lives and Letters, Queen Mary, University of London and author of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire</i></p> This is a really first-rate book exploring in significant detail a little researched area of Naval Life and the author is to be congratulated on his depth of research to produce such a well structured and fascinating account. --<i>David Clement</i></p>


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