Warriors and Warships, Robert D. Banks
Warriors and Warships, Robert D. Banks
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Warriors and Warships
Conflict on the Great Lakes and the Legacy of Point Frederick

Author: Robert D. Banks

Narrator: Tom Perkins

Unabridged: 9 hr 22 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 03/21/2023


Synopsis

The untold story of Point Frederick, where early nineteenth-century Canadians built warships that stopped invasion, brought peace, and the world's longest undefended border.

Opposite Kingston, Point Frederick became the 1789 dockyard home of the navy on Lake Ontario. Armed vessels were built to transport settlers and the military.

War in 1812 prompted the need for larger warships. Shipwrights were critical to winning the war. French Canadians from Quebec shipyards worked with the British to build warships with massive firepower.

In 1814, two invading armies advanced on outnumbered British and Canadians holding Niagara. Meanwhile, powerful Royal Navy warships sailed toward the action, unchallenged. When advised he was without naval support, the American commander halted his advance and withdrew from Canada.

With peace, the need for warships vanished. But threats of rebellion and insurgence demanded gunboats, and continued naval presence until 1853, when the dockyard finally closed. Glimpses of dockyard legacy are found today in Kingston waters, and on the grounds of the Royal Military College of Canada.

About Robert D. Banks

Robert D. Banks graduated from Royal Military College (RMC) in 1974, and went on to become a military pilot, flight surgeon, NASA consultant, and author of scientific papers. His published articles include histories of air force and naval squadrons, WWII, and historic buildings of RMC. He splits his time between Barrie, Ontario, and San Antonio, Texas.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Will

Warriors and Warships tells the history of Point Frederick, a peninsula in Kingston, Ontario, from the 1600s to the founding of the Royal Military College of Canada in 1876. This history is significant not only to Kingston, but to Canada - as shipbuilding activities and naval defense at the peninsul......more