Spain, plus France and Holland, strongly supported the Americans once they began winning.
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I saw a meme today implying that French president Emmanuel Macron, like French king Louis XVI, deserved to be guillotined. I responded:
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Good meme, but in fairness, Louis XVI was not such a bad king, actually, and the Jacobins who guillotined him were just murderous Illuminati.
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There would be no USA today without King Louis’ ships, troops and massive financial assistance to George Washington.
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The French naval victory over the British Royal Navy at the Battle of the Chesapeake is what made the Battle of Yorktown so decisive. The British had to surrender when their backs were to the Bay and it was the French Navy, not the British, that loomed up on their horizon with naval guns.
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“At the end of its tether” the American Revolution succeeds!
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White Americans, therefore, can win today in their freedom struggle if they get serious and fight, because huge world powers HATE THE JEW-PUPPET US GOVERNMENT AS MUCH AS WE DO.
Britain provided the answer. Her harsh laws, acts and proceedings after the war forced her colonial empire, especially the 13 colonies in North America, to help pay for the war, to raise additional revenue and to maintain British government leaders and military forces in the colonies. This new policy generated strong opposition to these measures. Spain was watching the unfolding colonial reactions — Boston Tea Party, Lexington and Concord, oratory by the likes of Patrick Henry and the writings of Tom Paine among others, which were viewed as acts of treason by Britain, but noted as steps toward independence by Spain. Patriot Commissioners, who were to meet with heads of state in Europe, were sent by the First and Second Continental Congresses to offer them the return of lands lost in the French and Indian War and to grant favored trade nation status to any country or duchy that would provide war materiel and/or other aid to the Patriots.
Spain responded to this offer; in four ways, but not openly: money loaned, money given; a clandestine world trading company to provide war materiel and to bring European military leaders to America; opening literally a second front; and sending Spanish observers to America.
Much less is known about major military actions in the Pacific. Since 1768, Spain had a major port and shipbuilding center at San Blas on the west coast of Mexico in addition to Acapulco. More than 20 ships plus treasure galleons operated on a regular schedule supplying Pacific Coast missions, presidios and pueblos as well as trading up and down the coast, across the Pacific and in the Far East. Skirmishes were reported between Spanish and British ships during the American Revolution. Explorations of the northern Pacific also took place in what is known today as Vancouver Island, Glacier Bay, Prince William Sound and Unalaska where lands were claimed and lookouts established for Russian and English ships.
One of the greatest impacts of the Spanish navy was keeping the English in the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico from reinforcing Cornwallis at Yorktown October 1781.
The early land claims from the Atlantic to the Pacific made by four colonies — Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Virginia and North Carolina — were finally settled by the Treaty of Paris in 1783.
Information confirming Spain’s role in the American Revolution can be found in the acts and proceedings of the Continental Congresses recorded by Charles Thomson. Additional material is available in the Library of Congress, National Archives, National Historical Park Service and university and private collections. Spanish sources include California Mission Archives and Archivos General de Indies, Seville, Spain.
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Murphy, W. S. “An Irish Regiment in Mexico 1768-1771.” Irish Sword, 2 (Summer 1956), pp. 257-263.
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Robertson, James Alexander, editor. “Spanish Correspondence Concerning the American Revolution.” Hispanic American Historical Review, 1 (August 1918), pp. 299-316.
Saavedra de Sangronis, Francisco. The Journal of Don Francisco Saavedra de Sangronis, 1780-1783. Edited by Francisco Morales Padrón; translated by Aileen Moore Topping. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1989.
Thompson, Buchanan Parker. Spain: Forgotten Ally of the American Revolution. North Quincy, Mass.: Christopher Publishing House, 1976.
West, Elizabeth Howard. “The Indian Policy of Bernardo de Galvez.” Mississippi Valley Historical Association Proceedings, 8 (1914-1915), pp. 95-101.
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Canrotte, Manuel. La intervencion de España en la independencia de la América del Norte. Madrid: Victoriano Suárez, 1920.
Clemente Balaguer, Jose Carlos. “El Ejército Español en la primera mitad del ochocientos.” Revista de Historia Military, 27 (#55, 1983), pp. 83-104.
Escoffet y de Matas, Joseph. “Instrucción militar cristiana.” Revista de Historia Militar, 23 (#47, 1979), pp. 165-191.
Gárate Córdóba, José María. “Las Reflexiones Militares del Marqués de Santa Cruz de Marcenado.” Revista de Historia Militar, 29 (Special Number, 1985), pp. 21-48.
Gil Munilla, Octavio. Participación de España en la genesis histórica de los Estados Unidos. Madrid: Publicaciones Españolas, 1952.
Gil Ossorio, Fernando. “Artillería británica para la Marina española del siglo XVIII.” Revista de Historia Militar, 18 (#37, 1974), pp. 93-103.
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Jiménez Jiménez, Rosa María. “El Conde de Aranda, director general de los Cuerpos de Artillería y Ingenieros.” Revista de Historia Militar, 25 (#50, 1981), pp. 41-50.
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Martínez de Campos y Serrano, Carlos. España belica en el siglo XVIII. Madrid: Aguilar, 1965.
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