ABINGTON, Pa. — A new book written by Friederike Baer, associate professor of history at Penn State Abington, offers a groundbreaking look at the American Revolutionary War from the perspective of the estimated 30,000 German auxiliaries who were hired by Britain to put down the American rebellion. The book was published this month by Oxford University Press.
“The book fills a significant gap on scholarship about the Revolutionary War, and it offers a fresh perspective of war and North America during pivotal point in American history,” Baer, who spent eight years writing and researching "Hessians: German Soldiers in the American Revolutionary War," said.
“It is different from other accounts of the war in that it is not a military history in the traditional sense. Instead of focusing on weapons and tactics and strategy, it draws on first-person impressions and descriptions of the American land and the people, including slavery. It presents aspects of the German role that have never really been addressed. I tried to go back and figure out how people who participated in the war felt,” she said.
Baer said that in the early 1780s, about one-third of the British regular army in North America was comprised of German auxiliaries, who were puzzled as to why the colonists would revolt against a king under whose reign they had grown so prosperous.
“The book covers the time from the troops’ recruitment to their experiences in North America between 1776 and 1783. The study moves beyond the common Trenton-Saratoga-Yorktown narrative of the Revolutionary war. I tried to give justice to the range of experiences and backgrounds of these participants in the war,” she said.
“Generally speaking, German soldiers had a favorable impression of America. They found the war to be unusually brutal, though. They saw destruction and plundering everywhere, and Americans fighting Americans. It was an unusually violent war, and it was difficult to distinguish friend from foe,” Baer continued.