Benjamin Carp's The Great New York Fire of 1776 followed directly after my reading of The Cause: The American Revolution and Its Discontents by Joseph Ellis. Consequently, to a limited extent I did find some similarities of content here and there. However, because the two historians come to the story of the American Revolution from different vantages and with different emphases, I found such similarities helpful in reinforcing my understanding of the history and not at all repetitious. I suspect that Carp's book would be of interest to anyone curious about the rebellion of the North American colonies and the formation of a national governing body in the late 18th century regardless of what other books he or she may have read on the topic.
While Carp's purported focus is on the cause of the fire that destroyed about a fifth of New York City on 21 September 1776 shortly after the Continental Army retreated from the town and as the British were beginning to occupy it as their winter headquarters. However, the book goes well beyond that topic in its revelations of colonial society and the actual nature of a rebellion that was far more vicious, disorganized, and opposed by more of the citizenry than the popularly held national myth would have us believe today. I found these revelations to be the strong points of the book, the fire itself being little more than a unifying factor in the narrative, its true cause having never been determined nor being discoverable beyond doubt today.
A few examples of the revelations that I found of especial interest either because I had not been exposed to them before or, equally likely, that I had largely forgotten include the widespread use of incendiarism as a weapon of war and the fact that the British burned a number of colonial cities to destroy their ports, homes and businesses and to interrupt their sea-going trade. The reader is also reminded that the colonies were anything but united, New Englanders, for example, having no fondness for New Yorkers, whom they viewed as Tories and Anglicans, rendering the Yorkers anathema in both politics and religion. Then, of course, one finds the issue of slavery to be divisive and in no way restricted to the Civil War period eighty-five years later. While it is fairly common knowledge today that General and, later, President Washington was himself a slave owner, Carp reminds us of his Iroquois name of Conotocarious, meaning “Town Destroyer” thanks to his relentless destruction of Native property and lives. During the colonies' rebellion and following withdrawal of the British, rebels among the colonists saw their Loyalist neighbors as enemies, attacking their persons, forcing them to flee their homes and livelihoods, and either burning or confiscating their properties, thousands being forced to find asylum in British Canada.
I found Carp's book to show more clearly than any other the extent to which the British colonies in North America were disunited, how neighbor turned against neighbor, the surprisingly vast numbers of “Americans” driven out of the country because they had supported the "wrong” side in what was a civil war of the colonies against their British government, and the barbarism practiced by both British soldiers and colonial rebels against those whom they perceived as enemies. Carp rips the veneer of myth away from what we today call the American Revolution and exposes much of the trauma, torture, revenge, and regional hatreds that characterized the land that would become the United States.
If there is any nit that I would pick with this book it is that the topic of the fire is not really the most important contribution of the book to our knowledge of the North American colonists' rebellion, including its causation, in the late 1770s and early 1780s. Still, the book's description of the hostilities goes a long way in revealing the nature of internal colonial frictions and the horrors of the rebellion, so if the title encourages more readers to pick up the book, I shall not criticize it. I do note that there is more peritext in this book than usual, the notes, acknowledgments and index occupying 95 pages, leaving only 250 pages of historical discussion in this 345 page book; this is, please note, merely an observation and not a criticism, and I'd certainly recommend The Great New York Fire of 1776 to anyone who wishes to understand more of the reality behind the American Revolution.