The early French Wars (1689-1748) in North America saw provincial
soldiers, or British white settlers, in Massachusetts and New Hampshire
fight against New France and her Native American allies with minimal
involvement from England. Most British officers and government officials
viewed the colonial soldiers as ill-disciplined, unprofessional, and
incompetent: General John Forbes called them "a gathering from the scum
of the worst people."
Taking issue with historians who have criticized provincial soldiers'
battlefield style, strategy, and conduct, Steven Eames demonstrates that
what developed in early New England was in fact a unique way of war that
selectively blended elements of European military strategy, frontier
fighting, and native American warfare. This new form of warfare
responded to and influenced the particular challenges, terrain, and
demography of early New England. Drawing upon a wealth of primary
materials on King William's War, Queen Anne's War, Dummer's War, and
King George's War, Eames offers a bottom-up view of how war was
conducted and how war was experienced in this particular period and
place. Throughout Rustic Warriors, he uses early New England culture as
a staging ground from which to better understand the ways in which New
Englanders waged war, as well as to provide a fuller picture of the
differences between provincial, French, and Native American approaches
to war.