Benedict Arnold

Patriot and Traitor

By Randall, Willard Sterne

Publishers Summary:
Part One Of Two Parts Benedict Arnold should have died in battle. For the first half of the American Revolution, he fought brilliant and successful campaigns. He built an American fleet on Lake Champlain, repulsed the British at Valcour Island, won the battle of Saratoga and nearly succeeded in making Canada the 14th state. So why did he turn coat? Motives are difficult, but there was something almost too ambitious about Arnold. Was he unstable? Overly ardent? Grandiose? Whatever the vice, it visited him fatally late in the war. In 1880 he sold himself and his secrets to the Brits. He got 6000 pounds, the contempt of his allies and a name that means "traitor" to this day. "A tale of high tragedy." (The Quarterly Journal of Military History)

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ISBN
978-1-55710-034-4
Publisher
William Morrow & Co


REVIEWS

Library Journal

Reviewed on July 1, 1990

An encyclopedic biography of the Revolutionary War general whose name became synonymous with treason. Randall's narrative covers Arnold's whole life, including his military heroics for the American Revolutionary War, and the often undeserved charges of misconduct leveled against Arnold after the Canadian campa...Log In or Sign Up to Read More

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