The New York Review of Books - 24.04.2020

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46 The New York Review


Did Britain Win the American Revolution?


David A. Bell


To Begin the World Over Again:
How the American Revolution
Devastated the Globe
by Matthew Lockwood.
Yale University Press, 523 pp., $30.00


In the late eighteenth century, few
places in the world were more remote
from Europe than Vancouver Island.
The closest major European outpost
lay nearly a thousand miles to the
south, in Spanish California. Traveling
to Europe took at least six months, in
wind-powered ships making a weary-
ing, dangerous voyage of
nearly 15,000 miles around
the tip of South America
and back north through
the Atlantic. Nonetheless,
British traders who had
explored the region had
high hopes of harvesting its
bountiful furs for shipment
across the Pacific to sell in
China. They planned to use
the proceeds to purchase a
Chinese commodity for
which their compatriots
had developed an insa-
tiable taste: tea. So when
reports finally reached
London in January 1790
that a Spanish ship had
seized two British vessels
off Vancouver Island the
previous spring, the two
countries nearly went to
war. The speed limits of
the preindustrial age did
not prevent far-flung parts
of the world from knitting
themselves into a tight web
of connections.
Many of the most reveal-
ing and innovative works of history
in recent years have taken these early
global connections as their subject.
Some have done so in miniature, craft-
ing finely detailed studies of individuals
whose odysseys map out earlier cur-
rents of global trade and imperial com-
petition: Linda Colley’s The Ordeal of
Elizabeth Marsh (2008) traced the life
of an obscure eighteenth- century En-
glishwoman, possibly of mixed race,
as these currents swept her between
the West Indies, Europe, Africa, and
South Asia. Others have made use of
the largest possible canvas: Christo-
pher Bayly’s The Birth of the Modern
World , 178 0 –1914 (2003) showed how
connections changed and intensified
across the globe as steam power sup-
planted sail, telegraph cables made the
transmission of news instantaneous
(even across oceans), industrial econo-
mies burgeoned, and empires extended
their often murderous sway.
The impulses behind these works are
not hard to discern. The surging global
flows of capital, information, goods,
and people in our own age—widely
hailed a generation ago as liberating
but whose dangerous effects have since
become all too visible—have stirred
a powerful curiosity about their long-
term origins. Emphasizing global inter-
actions also helps us see non-Western
peoples as participants in their own
history, rather than as passive objects
of Western attention.
The limitations of the new global


history, however, are as notable as its
illuminations. Change on a global scale
is easier to describe than to explain.
Even Bayly, in his magisterial volume,
had trouble giving reasons for the
enormous transformations he chron-
icled. The pressure to situate every
event in the widest possible setting
can also lead writers to forget that the
most intense and consequential forms
of historical change often do not take
place on the scale of the globe, but in
small, crucible- like locations: Paris in
1789, St. Petersburg in 1917. And few

historians have the time and resources
to properly master the many different
historiographies, bodies of source ma-
terial, and—not least—languages that
a global history may entail. A full treat-
ment of the Vancouver Island incident,
for instance, would require consulta-
tion of sources in English and Span-
ish, and several archives, as well as a
knowledge of the indigenous history of
the region. Criticism of the new global
history for overreach has by now occa-
sioned more than a few lively debates.^1
Matthew Lockwood’s To B egin the
World Over Again exemplifies both the
illuminations and the limitations of the
global approach. His subtitle, “How
the American Revolution Devastated
the Globe,” meanwhile, provides per-
haps the most egregious case yet of a
global historian’s overreach—or at
least overmarketing. The book itself
does not actually hold the revolution
responsible for global devastation. In-
deed, Lockwood says little about the
revolution itself, and seems somewhat
confused about how it should be under-
stood. At one point he calls it “a revolu-
tion in favor of liberty” that provoked a
“reactionary counter-revolution in the
wider world” by traditional authorities

anxious to prevent their own countries
from imitating it.
Yet he does not discuss the spread
of American political ideas and barely
mentions the most obvious case of the
American Revolution inspiring revolu-
tionary change elsewhere: the French
Revolution. And just two pages after
the remark about liberty, he dismis-
sively insists that “the vast majority of
Earth’s inhabitants... did not give a
damn about a civil war in British North
America or the ideas and ideals that
inspired it.” He pays considerable at-

tention to American slavery, but unlike
The New York Times’s much debated
“1619 Project,” he does not claim that
the Americans revolted in large part to
preserve slavery in the face of growing
British abolitionist sentiment. To the
contrary, he argues convincingly that
the British only found it advantageous
to move seriously toward abolition
once the revolution had deprived them
of their largest slave colonies.

The source of the supposed global
devastation lies elsewhere. In keeping
with a great deal of recent global his-
tory scholarship, Lockwood sees the
“age of revolution” less as a moment of
ideological rupture than as one of cri-
sis in European imperial governance.^2
The enormous fiscal demands of a
global imperial competition that had
intensified throughout the eighteenth
century, principally among Britain,
France, and Spain, placed intolerable
pressures on each. The explosive re-
sult, starting in 1775, was more than a
half-century of nearly continuous revo-
lution, counterrevolution, and warfare
on a vast scale. Lockwood portrays the

American Revolution not merely as the
first major act in this drama, but as the
one that unleashed the tragic violence
that followed and that set the scene for
Great Britain’s eventual emergence
as the first true world power. He calls
the book “very much the story of how
Britain won the American Revolu-
tion,” and this intriguingly counterin-
tuitive statement would have made a
far better subtitle (the title itself comes
from Thomas Paine’s Common Sense).
From this point of view, the ideological
content of the American Revolution is
almost irrelevant.
Like Colley in The Or-
deal of Elizabeth Marsh,
Lockwood uses individual
life stories to tell his global
history. Many of them are
familiar to historians of the
period, but he has assem-
bled a remarkably diverse
collection and writes about
them vividly. Dean Ma-
homet, one of his examples,
was a Bengali who served in
the army of Britain’s East
India Company during its
wars against the Maratha
Confederacy. In 1784, at age
twenty-five, he accompa-
nied his Irish commanding
officer back to Europe and
later opened London’s first
Indian restaurant, the Hin-
doostanee Coffee House.
It failed, but Mahomet
bounced back, starting a
series of profitable, South
Asian–themed bathhouses
that featured the newly
fashionable Indian hair
and body massage called
“shampoo.” He eventually became the
official “shampooing surgeon” to two
British kings and lived into his nineties.
Lockwood also recounts the story
of Bennelong, an Australian of the
Eora people whom British colonists
kidnapped in 1789 to help them learn
Aboriginal languages and customs. He
traveled to Britain in 1792 but returned
to Australia three years later and re-
fused to remain among the colonists.
“He fell off spontaneously into his early
habits,” one observer recorded, “in
spite of every thing that could be done
to him in the order of civilization.”
John Aitken, meanwhile, was a Scot-
tish petty criminal who emigrated to
Virginia as an indentured servant in
1773, one step ahead of the law. Re-
turning to Britain two years later, he
decided to help the Americans win
their struggle for independence. With
some assistance from an American
agent in France, he cobbled together a
series of ingenious incendiary devices
and carried out what Lockwood calls
terrorist arson attacks on British naval
shipyards. These caused widespread
panic and a security clampdown that
lasted even after the authorities caught
and executed Aitken.
Most traveled of all the book’s char-
acters was Boston King, born into slav-
ery in South Carolina in 1760. During
the American Revolution he fled to
British forces who promised him free-
dom in return for helping their war ef-
fort. Having moved to British-occupied

John Trumbull: The Sortie Made by the Garrison of Gibraltar, 1789

Metropol

itan Museum of Art

(^1) See for instance Richard Drayton
and David Motadel, “Discussion: The
Futures of Global History,” with re-
sponses by Jeremy Adelman and David
A. Bell, Journal of Global History,
Vol. 13, No. 1 (2018).
(^2) See notably Jeremy Adelman, Sover-
eignty and Revolution in the Iberian
Atlantic (Princeton University Press,
2006), and Justin duRivage, Revolu-
tion Against Empire: Taxes, Politics,
and the Origins of American Indepen-
dence (Yale University Press, 2017).

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