Good read.
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Good read.
Two other books worth a look are (The history of) The American Sailing Navy and
The Search for Speed under sail 1700-1855
Both of these are by Chapelle.
I might also then suggest "Six Frigates", the story of the origins of the US navy.
Other than the fabulous account of how our Navy was built, including the political context and forces of the time...I found Thomas Jefferson a peculiar fellow in the buildup to 1812. Not to get too political and violate any of our rules, but I found it hard to swallow that the man who authored the Declaration of Independence would/could resort to the confiscation of all liberty of commerce abroad has his first reaction to the crisis. The contradiction being what it was lead me on a reading streak of original sources - the man really was a living paradox! As a lesser known example, his vision of the simplistic agrarian utopia for America sharply contradicted with his desire to obtain every scientific and industrial novelty which modern technology could produce. His anti-liberty actions when in a crisis being his first instinct arguably laid the foundation of today's version of the party he founded. Happy to discuss objectively in our other forum here. My only point here being that corruption, power, and everything else that plagues modern politics from any side is not new at all. Read the book. It all existed in plain(er?) sight even then - lest we forget.
You're getting closer to the nubs there ssgross; have a look at the history of central banking in the USA if you want to see where the power issues really lie. As Franklin noted, the revolution wasn't caused by stamps and tea, but by the taking away of the 13 colonies power to produce their own paper money and the depression that followed. Of course the Lords and Commons in London were in turn merely following their orders from what is euphemistically called "The City of London" in taking those powers away, and they've been following orders closely ever since. ;)
Jefferson was certainly a very clever man, but sadly "enlightenment" does nothing to change human nature, though it does seem to foster a persistent delusion to the contrary. Just ask Sally. :D
"The Last Grain Race" is Eric Newby's account of his voyage before the mast on the four-masted barque Moshulu with a cargo of grain from Australia to Scotland in 1938. It can be compared with Dana's Two Years Before The Mast. These were the last carrying-trade routes on which sailing ships could still hope to make a profit (and only then if overheads were cut to the bone).