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The Age of Fighting Sail: The Story of the War of 1812

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In this story of the Naval War of 1812 between the United States and England, C. S. Forester portrays the action, politics, and historical consequences as no one else can. Not only the heroes, but also the mighty warships come to life in this amazing, real life history.

Although America was in its infancy, the state of the world at the time, combined with the determination of America's forefathers, made it possible for the United States to cause serious damage to the well established British naval force.

Each individual battle is brought to life as the brave young captains command their ships with tremendous skill. History becomes more than words on a page; it becomes a vivid reality. As the war continues, young America emerges a nation to be respected and admired.

280 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1957

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About the author

C.S. Forester

234 books974 followers
Cecil Scott Forester was the pen name of Cecil Louis Troughton Smith, an English novelist who rose to fame with tales of adventure and military crusades. His most notable works were the 11-book Horatio Hornblower series, about naval warfare during the Napoleonic era, and The African Queen (1935; filmed in 1951 by John Huston). His novels A Ship of the Line and Flying Colours were jointly awarded the 1938 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction.

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5 stars
194 (32%)
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243 (40%)
3 stars
111 (18%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 34 reviews
Profile Image for Chris D..
102 reviews28 followers
May 11, 2023
A vibrant look at the encounters between ships of the United States Navy and the Navy of Great Britain during the period of the War of 1812. Forester, who is a well-known chronicler of Naval action, does not disappoint in this book when it comes to action. Great detail is given in these mostly one on one battles in the Atlantic.

This is not a military history of the War of 1812 which might frustrate some as the big picture is not addressed and at times it feels like the reader has entered in the middle of a conversation. This work is very well written but is also technical and will not be for everyone.
Profile Image for Stuart Dean.
758 reviews6 followers
April 11, 2020
A scholarly look at the War of 1812. Forester covers the situation leading up to the war, current events of the time affecting the war, the politics and public sentiment on both sides, and the military abilities of both America and the United Kingdom. In the midst of all that he submits detailed accounts of strategic sea battles across the globe, from New York harbor to Java, the English Channel to the Great Lakes. As usual, his portrayal of sailing ships in pitched combat is unrivaled and riveting.

Forester shows how the War of 1812 was mainly due to a question of national sovereignty, as the United States wanted to establish themselves as a legitimate nation whose citizens should be respected, and the U.K. treated American shipping as an easy place to gather sailors through impressment. Only the conditions of the time allowed the U.S. to even consider any action against the British; the number of U.S. Navy ships in 1812 could be counted by a man on his fingers and toes with digits left over, while his Majesty's Navy numbered over 1000 vessels, more than 10% of which were ships of the line. But most of the British Navy was held up in the blockade of Europe and the Peninsular Campaign against Bonaparte, so the U.S. could conceivably achieve a satisfactory result. The American plan was basically to be a nuisance to the British until the British agreed to stop impressment, and the British plan was to use as little materiel as possible to swat away the tiresome Americans and get back to the war they had been fighting for twenty years. Both sides overestimated how quickly things could be resolved.

Much more is covered, including the personalities, strengths, and weaknesses of pivotal figures involved. The very reason for the war led to early victories for the U.S. and allowed them to lengthen the conflict, as after twenty years of fighting the French the British were woefully short of able seamen, and their technology and tactics had become stagnant in a long period of easy victories and blockade duty. They were slow to adapt, overly bureaucratic, and if not for the defeat of Napoleon the War of 1812 might have dragged on for years longer. In the end won a war that achieved them little, while the U.S., though it did not reach its stated goals, made the leap from backwards former colony to actual nationhood and someone to be reckoned with, and broke the last barrier to a standing national military force.

This book could serve as standard textbook material in public schools teaching the history of the War of 1812, or just as easily an enjoyable read for the fans of Horatio Hornblower and the Master and Commander guy.
352 reviews3 followers
April 9, 2022
No one can tell the history of the naval battles of the 18th and 19th centuries quite like C.S. Forester. Many Americans know very little about the War of 1812, let alone that most of its most important battles took place on water between sailing ships of various kinds and armament, not only in and around coastal North America but across the world's oceans and seas. If you want to know more about this forgotten war, its heroes, its battles and the politics at play in the young American Republic and the ascendant British Empire, this book is an excellent place to start.
Profile Image for Tom King.
Author 5 books3 followers
October 14, 2010
Forester really understands the Napoleonic era navy. This is a terrific book if you love history and wooden sailing ships.

And I do.
Profile Image for M. Shipley.
Author 2 books2 followers
July 31, 2024
A rather esoteric history. It is also extremely academic and it would do well to have a thesaurus on hand while reading. But it is extremely informative. When I say esoteric that’s because they’re author assumes a ton of previous knowledge concerning generals and admirals and other events. But it is very much a interesting look at all the naval engagement during the war of 1812. It’s not so much about the techniques of fighting in Boats or ships of line like I thought it would be, but more of a look at the overall strategy of warfare during the war 1812. I learned a ton and would recommend it to any body interested in learning about that.
22 reviews1 follower
May 7, 2020
Interesting, but not an Easy Read

This a very scholarly analysis of the naval aspects of the War of 1812. It covers the political background and provides insight into both the American and British thinking behind the origins and the conduct of the war.

This book is both complex and technical and really is aimed at an audience familiar with and keenly interested in naval warfare in the late 18th century.
9 reviews
September 6, 2021
Great stories and insights

Forester gives a great view of the naval aspects of the War of 1812. It is amazing the things that figured important in that conflict. In particular, the analysis of the various captains, good and bad, was most interesting. Much better appreciation of the effect of that war on US history.
1 review
October 6, 2024
This book brought history to life.

C. S. Forester as a talented author of age of sail wartime novels has applied his talents to non fiction . As as a result this book has brought to life the politicians and commanders involved in this crucial time.
This book read like good novel and I found it hard to put down.
A job very well done.

..gk.. 6
16 reviews
August 13, 2019
Fascinating account of a trying time in America's history

Until reading this, I had no concept of how close out country came to bring lost. The author's use of the marine viewpoint makes for a much different understanding of the war of 1812. Fact filled but always engaging.
60 reviews1 follower
September 27, 2019
Well written, obvious’

More detail than u might want, but that detail says to U this was a serious time, possibly more serious than the revolution.
Amazing period, yet today, our navy is not up to strength, we never learn from the past.
Idiots we elect, self centered.
14 reviews
November 20, 2019
An excellent, if brief, history.

As an old fan of Forester's novels of war in the North Atlantic I approached a pure history with reservation. But this excellent an a very easy read written with the skill.of the novelist and the authority of the historian.
Profile Image for Nate Hendrix.
1,145 reviews6 followers
October 14, 2022
Normally I love Forester's books, but this would be an exception. It read to much like a text book. The battle scenes were not written with His usual style and the detail was tedious instead of engaging. I was very disappointed and did not finish it.
2 reviews
February 19, 2023
History of a nearly forgotten war.

C.S. Forested tells the story of the war of 1812 in a compelling and unbiased method. His skillful accounting of the naval actions bring the tang of salt air and wafting smell of gunpowder to the imagination of the reader.
Profile Image for Elsie Dalton.
24 reviews4 followers
Read
April 11, 2025
I picked this up out of genuine historical curiosity, but I kept reading for the way he writes naval action sequences. Gripping! He covers the drier historical material too, and it does drag occasionally, but Forester was born to write sea battles. Worthwhile.
Profile Image for Frank G. Lea.
73 reviews
December 10, 2019
History

There times when history is not very exciting,and this is one. At times this year is exciting, but throughout. From a historical view it is a worthy read.
63 reviews
June 26, 2020
Easy to read, kept my interest .. It's written mainly about individual ship battles.
Profile Image for C. J. Pappas.
5 reviews
February 24, 2021
KnowledgCoupled with Good Storytellinge

This historical drama unfolded as a tripping story with humanitarian of the characters and events well placed in their context
2 reviews1 follower
April 21, 2021
Nice

Good history of the War of1812 Naval battles.
Could have been clearer on Who's Who in general,
Three more words
152 reviews2 followers
December 6, 2021
A curious collection of a poor fledgling navy at war

The 1812-14 war was one which seemed to not have the enthusiasm of either combatant to generate a successful conclusion
5 reviews
March 23, 2022
History of the naval war of 1813

Forested is as his best at being a historian of the Sea. Read this book ugly like historical sea battles.
Profile Image for Andy Gore.
634 reviews5 followers
November 12, 2023
A fascinating account of a war I knew very little about and the saddest is, how having agreed peace, ships still fought because the news hadn't filtered through to them.
302 reviews1 follower
February 8, 2024
Hard going at times because of the technical terms. As a history of a war, not bad, in fact quite interesting.
28 reviews2 followers
March 7, 2010
An interesting book about the naval activity during the War of 1812. Written by the author of the classic Horatio Hornblower series (fiction), this book has a similar writing style, which is a somewhat odd fit for a history book; the approach is neither typical storytelling nor typical historical analysis. However, despite (or perhaps because of) the lack of the typical rigor of a historical work (e.g., there is no bibliography, so it's not clear what primary source material the author consulted) the book is quite approachable and interesting.

One particularly interesting thing that I learned from this book is the early battle history of the USS Constitution. I had already known that she was one of the U.S. Navy's earliest successful warships, but I hadn't realized just how much she outshone her sister ships during the War of 1812. Constitution fought and won many battles during the war, under several different captains. Many of these victories were in evenly-matched single-ship actions; this was particularly shocking to the British Royal Navy, who at that time was the foremost sea power of the world. Constitution's last victory of the war came after the peace treaty had been signed, but before she learned of the treaty. (This was hardly unusual in those days; Andrew Jackson's victory at the Battle of New Orleans also occurred after the treaty was signed. In fact, one U.S. warship, the USS Peacock, was still capturing British merchantmen in the Indian Ocean six months later!)

One minor complaint is that the book jumped around a bit to follow individual threads, rather than presenting the material in strictly chronological order. I have seen this approach work quite well for other authors, but for some reason I found it a bit hard to follow in this case. However, it may be that this is more a reflection of the complexity of the material (i.e., the sheer number of fronts on which the war was being fought simultaneously) than on any fault of the author.

In any case, despite that minor complaint, I enjoyed this book and would recommend it to anyone interested in this era of naval history.
19 reviews1 follower
March 27, 2017
Fascinating view of the war of 1812 from a British and almost strictly naval point of view. I've read several canadian and american histories of the war and they dealt mostly with the brutal onshore slog. The war of 1812 was fought mostly because the British were not willing to give up the practice of impressing US sailors into their navy. Illegal according to international law at the time the British in a desperate life and death struggle with Napoleon needed sailors to fill up their navy. The US was seen as a likely safe haven for escaping english sailors who became american citizens. The British in their desperation for manpower wanted to close this avenue as a way of escape for disaffected british sailors and so trod heavily on American sovereignty with this practice. The other main cause of the war was again maritime as the british were harassing US merchantmen in an attempt to keep an embargo in place on continental trade. The british were more willing to move on the trade issues but the british navy was intransigent when it came to pursuing perceived deserters.
The war was fought with no British concession on their boarding of american ships or the impressment of american sailors and the need for an embargo largely ended with the defeat of Napoleon at the battle of nations near Leipzig in October of 1813. The English though after this war were more sensitive towards american sovereignty as the cost and trouble caused by the war outweighed anything they could gain. The looked to deal with their problem of desertion by improving conditions and pay for sailors on British ships. One of the lessons learned from the war was that the american ships were often better lead, better crewed and gun for gun better built ships than their british counterparts. Some of the British successes from the war such as the investing of Chesapeake bay with a large naval presence had to be discontinued because the rate of desertion from unhappy sailors this close to the american shores proved ruinous to the navy and it's discipline.
All in all this was a very interesting view of this war that I'd never heard before.
Profile Image for John Nevola.
Author 4 books15 followers
July 12, 2013
A Fresh Look at the War of 1812

When one picks up a Forester book, one usually thinks immediately of the Horatio Hornblower series for which he is well known. He is an accepted expert on sailing ships, especially warships, and brings all of his insight knowledge and experience to the party in The Age of Fighting Sail.

If this book were to be only about the one-on-one frigate actions in which American ship design and seamanship bested their vaunted British counterparts, the book would be worth it. However, Forester expands his aperture to include battles between many other ships of various sizes besides frigates. He also includes battles fought in the Pacific, American privateer sorties and captures near the British Isles and the battles on the Great Lakes. In fact, I was left wanting to know more about the victories of the frigates Constitution and United States.

The most interesting aspect of the book is how he relates the events of the Napoleonic Wars to what was happening in America at that same moment in history. The events in Europe clearly shaped the destinies of the British and Americans in their own little war held mainly on American soil and in American waters. But the connection becomes relevant once Forester explains how each theatre affected the other and ultimately the outcome of the war.

Forester's style can be awkward at times and many passages had to be read more than once to garner a clear understanding of what the man was trying to say. His fairness and logic, on the other hand, were impeccable throughout this book and reading it is like eating candy to those interested in American military and political history. The same applies to those fascinated by the manner in which warring ships battled it out on the high seas solely under sail power.

This is an interesting book and a wonderful contribution to understanding American history.

John E. Nevola - Author of the Last Jump - A Novel of World War II
Displaying 1 - 30 of 34 reviews

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