In 1775, Captain Henry Mowat infamously ordered the burning of Falmouth--now Portland. That act cast him as the arch-villain in the state's Revolutionary history, but Mowat's impact on Maine went far beyond a single order. The Scottish Mowat began his North American career by surveying the Maine coast, capturing and confiscating colonial merchant ships he suspected of smuggling. Already feared by Mainers when the war broke out, his legacy was further tarnished when he was blamed for dismantling Fort Pownall at the mouth of the Penobscot River. In this volume, local historian Harry Gratwick examines the life of Henry Mowat and whether he truly was the scoundrel of Revolutionary Maine.
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The French & Indian War in Western Pennsylvania

World War II POW Camps in Ohio

World War II Rhode Island

Nathanael Greene in South Carolina : Hero of the American Revolution

Revolutionary Delaware : Independence in the First State

Paducah and the Civil War

Yankees & Rebels on the Upper Missouri : Steamboats, Gold and Peace

Long Island City in 1776 : The Revolution Comes to Queens

World War II Indiana Landmarks

World War II Buffalo

The Cape May Navy : Delaware Bay Privateers in the American Revolution

New Mexico in the Mexican-American War



