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Alfred Thayer Mahan

Alfred Thayer Mahan (/məˈhæn/; September 27, 1840 – December 1, 1914) was a United States naval officer and historian, whom John Keegan called "the most important American strategist of the nineteenth century."[1] His book The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660–1783 (1890) won immediate recognition, especially in Europe, and with its successor, The Influence of Sea Power Upon the French Revolution and Empire, 1793–1812 (1892), made him world-famous.[2]

Alfred Thayer Mahan
Born(1840-09-27)September 27, 1840
West Point, New York, U.S.
DiedDecember 1, 1914(1914-12-01) (aged 74)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Buried
Quogue Cemetery
Quogue, New York
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Navy
Years of service1859–1896
Rank Captain
Rear admiral (post retirement)
Commands heldUSS Chicago
USS Wasp
USS Wachusett
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War Spanish–American War
Signature

Early life edit

Mahan was born on September 27, 1840, at West Point, New York, to Dennis Hart Mahan,[3] a professor at the United States Military Academy and the foremost American expert on fortifications, and Mary Helena Okill Mahan (1815–1893), daughter of John Okill and Mary Jay, daughter of Sir James Jay. Mahan's middle name honors "the father of West Point", Sylvanus Thayer. Mahan attended Saint James School, an Episcopal college preparatory academy in western Maryland. He then studied at Columbia for two years, where he was a member of the Philolexian Society debating club.[4] Against the better judgment of his father, Mahan then entered the U.S. Naval Academy, where he graduated second in his class in 1859.[5]

Early career edit

After graduation he was assigned to the frigate Congress from 9 June 1859 until 1861. He then joined the steam-corvette Pocahontas of the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron and participated in the Battle of Port Royal in South Carolina early in the American Civil War.[6] Commissioned as a lieutenant in 1861, Mahan served as an officer on USS Worcester and James Adger and as an instructor at the Naval Academy. In 1865, he was promoted to lieutenant commander, and then to commander (1872), and captain (1885). As commander of the USS Wachusett he was stationed at Callao, Peru, protecting U.S. interests during the final stages of the War of the Pacific.[7][8]

 
Alfred T. Mahan as a captain

While in actual command of a ship, his skills were not exemplary; and a number of vessels under his command were involved in collisions with both moving and stationary objects. He preferred old square-rigged vessels rather than smoky, noisy steamships of his own day; and he tried to avoid active sea duty.[9]

Naval War College and writings edit

In 1885, he was appointed as a lecturer in naval history and tactics at the Naval War College. Before entering on his duties, College President Rear Admiral Stephen B. Luce pointed Mahan in the direction of writing his future studies on the influence of sea power. During his first year on the faculty, he remained at his home in New York City researching and writing his lectures. Though he was prepared to become a professor in 1886, Luce was given command of the North Atlantic Squadron, and Mahan became President of the Naval War College by default (June 22, 1886 – January 12, 1889, July 22, 1892 – May 10, 1893).[10] There, in 1888, he met and befriended future president Theodore Roosevelt, then a visiting lecturer.[11]

Mahan's lectures, based on secondary sources and the military theories of Antoine-Henri Jomini, became his sea-power studies: The Influence of Sea Power upon History, 1660–1783 (1890); The Influence of Sea Power upon the French Revolution and Empire, 1793–1812 (2 vols., 1892); Sea Power in Relation to the War of 1812 (2 vols., 1905), and The Life of Nelson: The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain (2 vols., 1897). Mahan stressed the importance of the individual in shaping history and extolled the traditional values of loyalty, courage, and service to the state. Mahan sought to resurrect Horatio Nelson as a national hero in Britain and used his biography as a platform for expressing his views on naval strategy and tactics. Mahan was criticized for so strongly condemning Nelson's love affair with Lady Emma Hamilton, but it remained the standard biography until the appearance of Carola Oman's Nelson, 50 years later.[12]

Mahan struck up a friendship with pioneering British naval historian Sir John Knox Laughton, the pair maintaining the relationship through correspondence and visits when Mahan was in London. Mahan was later described as a "disciple" of Laughton, but the two were at pains to distinguish between each other's line of work. Laughton saw Mahan as a theorist while Mahan called Laughton "the historian".[13] Mahan worked closely with William McCarty Little, another critical figure in the early history of the Naval War College. A principal developer of wargaming in the United States Navy, Mahan credited Little for assisting him with preparing maps and charts for his lectures and first book.[citation needed]

Origin and limitation of strategic views edit

Mahan's views were shaped by 17th-century conflicts between the Dutch Republic, the Kingdom of England, the Kingdom of France, and Habsburg Spain, and by the naval conflicts between France and Spain during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. British naval superiority eventually defeated France, consistently preventing invasion and an effective blockade. Mahan emphasized that naval operations were chiefly to be won by decisive battles and blockades.[14] In the 19th century, the United States sought greater control over its seaborne commerce in order to protect its economic interests which relied heavily on exports bound mainly for Europe.

According to Peter Paret's Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age, Mahan's emphasis on sea power as the most important cause of Britain's rise to world power neglected diplomacy and land arms. Furthermore, theories of sea power do not explain the rise of land empires, such as Otto von Bismarck's German Empire or the Russian Empire.[15]

Sea power edit

Mahan believed that national greatness was inextricably associated with the sea, with its commercial use in peace and its control in war; and he used history as a stock of examples to exemplify his theories, arguing that the education of naval officers should be based on a rigorous study of history. Mahan's framework derived from Jomini, and emphasized strategic locations (such as choke points, canals, and coaling stations), as well as quantifiable levels of fighting power in a fleet. Mahan also believed that in peacetime, states should increase production and shipping capacities and acquire overseas possessions, though he stressed that the number of coal fueling stations and strategic bases should be limited to avoid draining too many resources from the mother country.[16]

The primary mission of a navy was to secure the command of the sea, which would permit the maintenance of sea communications for one's own ships while denying their use to the enemy and, if necessary, closely supervise neutral trade. Control of the sea could be achieved not by destruction of commerce but only by destroying or neutralizing the enemy fleet. Such a strategy called for the concentration of naval forces composed of capital ships, not too large but numerous, well-manned with crews thoroughly trained, and operating under the principle that the best defense is an aggressive offense.[17]

Mahan contended that with a command of the sea, even if local and temporary, naval operations in support of land forces could be of decisive importance. He also believed that naval supremacy could be exercised by a transnational consortium acting in defense of a multinational system of free trade. His theories, expounded before the submarine became a serious factor in warfare, delayed the introduction of convoys as a defense against the Imperial German Navy's U-boat campaign during World War I. By the 1930s, the U.S. Navy had built long-range submarines to raid Japanese shipping; but in World War II, the Imperial Japanese Armed Forces, still tied to Mahan, designed its submarines as ancillaries to the fleet and failed to attack American supply lines in the Pacific. Mahan's analysis of the Spanish-American War suggested to him that the great distances in the Pacific required the American battle fleet to be designed with long-range striking power.[18]

Mahan believed first, that good political and naval leadership was no less important than geography when it came to the development of sea power. Second, Mahan's unit of political analysis insofar as sea power was concerned was a transnational consortium, rather than a single nation state. Third, his economic ideal was free trade rather than autarky. Fourth, his recognition of the influence of geography on strategy was tempered by a strong appreciation of the power of contingency to affect outcomes.[19]

In 1890, Mahan prepared a secret contingency plan for war between the British Empire and the United States. Mahan believed that if the Royal Navy blockaded the East Coast of the United States, the US Navy should be concentrated in one of its ports, preferably New York Harbor with its two widely separated exits, and employ torpedo boats to defend the other harbors. This concentration of the U.S. fleet would force the British to tie down such a large proportion of their navy to watch the New York exits that other American ports would be relatively safe. Detached American cruisers should wage "constant offensive action" against the enemy's exposed positions; and if the British were to weaken their blockade force off New York to attack another American port, the concentrated U.S. fleet could capture British coaling ports in Nova Scotia, thereby seriously weakening British ability to engage in naval operations off the American coast. This contingency plan was a clear example of Mahan's application of his principles of naval war, with a clear reliance on Jomini's principle of controlling strategic points.[20]

Impact edit

Timeliness contributed no small part to the widespread acceptance of Mahan's theories. Although his history was relatively thin, based as it was on secondary sources, his vigorous style, and clear theory won widespread acceptance of navalists and supporters of the New Imperialism in Africa and Asia.

Given the rapid technological changes underway in propulsion (from coal to oil and from reciprocating engines to turbines), ordnance (with better fire directors, and new high explosives), and armor and the emergence of new craft such as destroyers and submarines, Mahan's emphasis on the capital ship and the command of the sea came at an opportune moment.[17]

Germany edit

Mahan's name became a household word in the Imperial German Navy after Kaiser Wilhelm II ordered his officers to read Mahan, and Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz (1849–1930) used Mahan's reputation to finance a powerful High Seas Fleet.[21] Tirpitz, an intense navalist who believed ardently in Mahan's dictum that whatever power rules the sea also ruled the world, had The Influence of Sea Power Upon History translated into German in 1898 and had 8,000 copies distributed for free as a way of pressuring the Reichstag to vote for the First Navy Bill.[22]

Tirpitz used Mahan not only as a way of winning over German public opinion but also as a guide to strategic thinking.[23] Before 1914, Tirpitz completely rejected commerce raiding as a strategy and instead embraced Mahan's ideal of a decisive battle of annihilation between two fleets as the way to win command of the seas.[22] Tirpitz always planned for the German High Seas Fleet to win the Entscheidungsschlacht (decisive battle) against the British Grand Fleet somewhere in "the waters between Helgoland and the Thames", a strategy he based on his reading of The Influence of Sea Power Upon History.[22]

However, the naval warfare of World War I proved completely different than German planners, influenced by Mahan, had anticipated because the Royal Navy avoided open battle and focused on blockading Germany. As a result, after the Battles of Heligoland Bight and Dogger Bank, Admiral Hugo von Pohl kept most of Germany's surface fleet at its North Sea bases. In 1916, his successor, Reinhard Scheer, tried to lure the Grand Fleet into a Mahanian decisive battle at the Battle of Jutland, but the engagement ended in a strategic defeat.[24] Finally as the German army neared defeat in the Hundred Days Offensive, the German government tried to mobilize the fleet for a decisive engagement with the Royal Navy. The sailors then rebelled in the Kiel mutiny, instigating the German Revolution of 1918–1919, which toppled the Hohenzollern monarchy and forced the new government to sue for peace.[25]

United Kingdom edit

Mahan and British First Sea Lord John Fisher (1841–1920) both addressed the problem of how to dominate home waters and distant seas with naval forces unable to do both. Mahan argued for a universal principle of concentration of powerful ships in home waters with minimized strength in distant seas. Fisher instead decided to use submarines to defend home waters and mobile battlecruisers to protect British interests.[26]

France edit

Though in 1914, French naval doctrine was dominated by Mahan's theory of sea power, the course of World War I changed ideas about the place of the navy. The refusal of the German fleet to engage in a decisive battle, the Dardanelles expedition of 1915, the development of submarine warfare, and the organization of convoys all showed the French Navy's new role in combined operations with the French Army. The Navy's part in securing victory was not fully understood by French public opinion in 1918, but a synthesis of old and new ideas arose from the lessons of the war, especially by Admiral Raoul Castex (1878–1968), who synthesized in his five-volume Théories Stratégiques the classical and materialist schools of naval theory. He reversed Mahan's theory that command of the sea precedes maritime communications and foresaw the enlarged roles of aircraft and submarines in naval warfare.[27]

Japan edit

The Influence of Seapower Upon History, 1660–1783 was translated into Japanese[28] and was used as a textbook in the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN). That usage strongly affected the IJN's plan to end Russian naval expansion in the Far East, which culminated in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05.[29] It has been argued that the IJN's pursuit of the "decisive battle" (Kantai Kessen) contributed to Imperial Japan's defeat in World War II,[30][31] because the development of the submarine and the aircraft carrier, combined with advances in technology, largely rendered obsolete the doctrine of the decisive battle between fleets.[32] Nevertheless, the IJN did not adhere strictly to Mahanian doctrine because its forces were often tactically divided, particularly during the attack on Pearl Harbor and the Battle of Midway.

United States edit

Mahan believed that if the United States were to build an Isthmian canal, it would become a Pacific power, and therefore it should take possession of Hawaii to protect the West Coast.[33] Nevertheless, his support for American imperialism was more ambivalent than is often stated, and he remained lukewarm about American annexation of the Philippines.[34] Mahan was a major influence on the Roosevelt family. In addition to Theodore, he corresponded with Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt until his death in 1914. During World War II, Roosevelt would ignore the late Mahan's prior advice to him that the Commonwealth of the Philippines could not be defended against an Imperial Japanese invasion, leading to a futile defense of the islands against the Japanese Philippines campaign.[35]

Later career edit

Between 1889 and 1892, Mahan was engaged in special service for the Bureau of Navigation, and in 1893 he was appointed to command the powerful new protected cruiser Chicago on a visit to Europe, where he was feted. He returned to lecture at the War College and then, in 1896, he retired from active service, returning briefly to duty in 1898 to consult on naval strategy during the Spanish–American War.

Mahan continued to write, and he received honorary degrees from Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Dartmouth, and McGill. In 1902, Mahan popularized the term "Middle East," which he used in the article "The Persian Gulf and International Relations," published in September in the National Review.[36]

As a delegate to the 1899 Hague Convention, Mahan argued against prohibiting the use of asphyxiating gases in warfare on the ground that such weapons would inflict such terrible casualties that belligerents would be forced to end wars more quickly, thus providing a net advantage for world peace.[37]

In 1902, Mahan was elected president of the American Historical Association, and his address, "Subordination in Historical Treatment", is his most explicit explanation of his philosophy of history.[38]

In 1906, Mahan became rear admiral by an Act of Congress that promoted all retired captains who had served in the American Civil War. At the outbreak of World War I, he published statements favorable to the cause of the Allies, but in an attempt to enforce American neutrality, President Woodrow Wilson ordered that all active and retired officers refrain from publicly commenting on the war.[39]

Religious life edit

Mahan was reared as an Episcopalian and became a devout churchman with High Church sympathies. For instance, late in life he strongly opposed revision of the Book of Common Prayer.[40] Nevertheless, Mahan also appears to have undergone a conversion experience about 1871, when he realized that he could experience God's favor, not through his own merits, but only through "trust in the completed work of Christ on the cross."[41] Geissler called one of his religious addresses almost "evangelical, albeit of the dignified stiff-upper-lip variety."[42] And Mahan never mentioned a conversion experience in his autobiography.

In later life, Mahan often spoke to Episcopal parishes. In 1899, at Holy Trinity Church in Brooklyn, Mahan emphasized his own religious experience and declared that one needed a personal relationship with God given through the work of the Holy Spirit.[43] In 1909, Mahan published The Harvest Within: Thoughts on the Life of the Christian, which was "part personal testimony, part biblical analysis, part expository sermon."[44]

Death and commemoration edit

 
The Mahan Hall at the United States Naval Academy is named for Mahan.

Mahan died in Washington, D.C., of heart failure on December 1, 1914, a few months after the outbreak of World War I.

Family edit

Alfred Thayer Mahan married Ellen Lyle Evans in June 1872; they had two daughters and one son.

Dates of rank edit

  • Acting midshipman: 30 September 1856
  • Midshipman: 9 June 1859
  • Lieutenant: 31 August 1861
  • Lieutenant commander: 7 June 1865
  • Commander: 20 November 1872
  • Captain: 23 September 1885
  • Retired list: 17 November 1896
  • Rear Admiral on the retired list: 1906

Awards edit

In fiction edit

In 1901, an alternate history by Robert Conroy, the main character is a young United States Army officer named Patrick Mahan, a fictitious nephew of Admiral Mahan, who himself appears briefly in the story as well.

In Harry Turtledove's Southern Victory, another alternate history, Mahan is frequently mentioned but never appears. He is spoken of as having been President of the United States from 1889 to 1897, and the Mahan Bedroom is a famous room in the Powel House in Philadelphia, analogous to the actual Lincoln Bedroom in the White House. As President, Mahan prevented the construction of a Confederate shipping canal in Nicaragua and opined that the main problem with republics is that "over time, the voters are apt to get tired of paying for what their country needs to defend itself".

The protagonist in G.C. Edmondson's novel The Ship that Sailed the Time Stream frequently mentions Mahan and/or Mahan's ghost as an exclamation.

In The Riddle of the Sands, Erskine Childers has his character Davies "aimlessly fingering a volume of Mahan".

Works edit

  • The Gulf and Inland Waters (1883)
  • The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660–1783 (1890)
    • The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660–1805 (abridged ed, 1980)
    • The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660–1783 (1890) at archive.org
    • The Influence of Sea Power upon the French Revolution and Empire, 1793–1812 (1892) at archive.org
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer (1892). Admiral Farragut. D. Appleton and company, New York. pp. 333. Url
  • The Future in Relation To American Naval Power, Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Oct 1895
  • The Life of Nelson: The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain (1897)[48]
  • The Life of Nelson, Volume 1 (of 2) by A. T. Mahan at Project Gutenberg
  • The Life of Nelson, Volume 2 (of 2) by A. T. Mahan at Project Gutenberg
  • The Interest of America in Sea Power, Present and Future (1897)
  • Lessons of the War with Spain, and Other Articles (1899)
  • The Problem of Asia and Its Effect Upon International Policies (1900)
  • Story of the War in South Africa 1899–1900 (1900) online
  • Types of Naval Officers Drawn from the History of the British Navy (1901) online
  • Retrospect & Prospect: Studies in International Relations, Naval and Political (1902)
  • Sea Power in Its Relation to the War of 1812 (2 vols.) (1905) (Boston: Little Brown) American Library Association.
  • Reflections, Historic and Other, Suggested by the Battle of the Japan Sea. (1906) Proceedings magazine, June 1906, United States Naval Institute.
  • From Sail to Steam, Recollections of Naval life (1907)
  • Naval Administration and Warfare: Some General Principles, with Other Essays (1908)
  • The Harvest Within: Thoughts on the Life of the Christian (1909)
  • Naval Strategy: Compared and Contrasted with the Principles and Practice of Military Operations on Land (1911)
  • Armaments and Arbitration; or, The Place of Force in the International Relations of States (1912)
  • The Major Operations of the Navies in the War of American Independence (1913) at Project Gutenberg

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Keegan, John. The American Civil War Knopf, 2009, 272.
  2. ^ Suzanne Geisler, God and Sea Power: The Influence of Religion on Alfred Thayer Mahan (Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2015), 1.
  3. ^ "Mahan, Alfred Thayer". public2.nhhcaws.local. Retrieved July 13, 2023.
  4. ^ "Alfred Thayer Mahan". www.c250.columbia.edu. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  5. ^ Geissler, 24–26.
  6. ^ "Mahan, Alfred Thayer".
  7. ^ Richard W. Turk, The Ambiguous Relationship: Theodore Roosevelt and Alfred Thayer Mahan (Greenwood Press, 19870, 10.
  8. ^ Larrie D. Ferreiro, 'Mahan and the "English Club" of Lima, Peru: The Genesis of The Influence of Sea Power upon History', The Journal of Military History72: 3 (July 2008), 901–906.
  9. ^ Paret, Peter (1986). Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 445.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on May 17, 2006. Retrieved May 17, 2006.
  11. ^ Geissler, 99–100.
  12. ^ ODNB entry for Carola Oman: Retrieved 8 July 2012. (subscription required)
  13. ^ Knight, Roger (2000). . London: Institute for Historical Research. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved April 3, 2007.
  14. ^ Vego, Milan (2009). . Naval War College: 4. Archived from the original on January 31, 2017. Retrieved December 12, 2016. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  15. ^ Paret, Peter (1986). Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. pp. 453–455.
  16. ^ Crowl, Alfred Thayer Mahan, 451, 460.
  17. ^ a b Philip A. Crowl, "Alfred Thayer Mahan: The Naval Historian," in Paret, Peter, Gordon A. Craig, and Felix Gilbert, eds. Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age (1986), ch. 16.
  18. ^ "Go Get Mahan's Yardstick". U.S. Naval Institute. July 1, 2019. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
  19. ^ Jon Tetsuro Sumida, Inventing Grand Strategy and Teaching Command: The Classic Works of Alfred Thayer Mahan (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997).
  20. ^ Kenneth Bourne and Carl Boyd, "Captain Mahan's 'War' with Great Britain," U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, 94:7 (1968), 71–78. ISSN 0041-798X
  21. ^ Holger Herwig,"The Failure of German Sea Power, 1914–1945: Mahan, Tirpitz, and Raeder Reconsidered", The International History Review, 10:1 (February 1988), 72–73.
  22. ^ a b c Herwig, 69–105.
  23. ^ Herwig, 72–73.
  24. ^ "Naval Warfare | International Encyclopedia of the First World War (WW1)". encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
  25. ^ "World War I – End of the German war and the Armistice". www.britannica.com. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
  26. ^ Jon Tetsuro Sumida, "Geography, Technology, and British Naval Strategy in the Dreadnought Era." Naval War College Review 2006 59(3): 89–102.
  27. ^ Martin Motte, "L'epreuve des Faits: ou la Pensee Navale Française face a la Grande Guerre", Revue Historique Des Armées 1996 (2): 97–106. ISSN 0035-3299.
  28. ^ Mark Peattie & David Evans, Kaigun (U.S. Naval Institute Press, 1997).
  29. ^ Mahan, Proceedings article 1906.
  30. ^ Donald Goldstein and Katherine Dillon, The Pearl Harbor Papers (Brassey's, 1993)
  31. ^ Marc Parillo, The Japanese Merchant Marine in WW2 (U.S. Naval Institute Press, 1993)
  32. ^ Crowl, "Alfred Thayer Mahan: pp. 474–477.
  33. ^ Brinkley, Alan (2010). "19: From Crisis to Empire". The Unfinished Nation. Columbia University: McGraw-Hill. p. 499.
  34. ^ Geissler, 134–135.
  35. ^ Roberts, Andrew (2009). Masters and Commanders: The Military Geniuses Who Led the West to Victory in World War II (1 ed.). London: Penguin Books. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-141-02926-9 – via Archive Foundation.
  36. ^ Adelson, Roger. London and the Invention of the Middle East: Money, Power, and War, 1902–1922 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995), 22–23.
  37. ^ Barbara Tuchman, The Proud Tower, 246.
  38. ^ Geissler, 151–152;"Subordination in Historical Treatment."
  39. ^ Giessler, 189. Mahan unsuccessfully appealed the order to Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels, arguing that retired officers were no different from private citizens and should not be "silenced".
  40. ^ Geissler, 178–185.
  41. ^ Geissler, 78.
  42. ^ Geissler, 149.
  43. ^ Geissler, 149. He concluded with "the reiteration of my sure and joyful confidence, that I have tried God these many years and found Him ever faithful...that all I have, all that I am, all that have accomplished, has been of Him and through Him."
  44. ^ Geissler, 167.
  45. ^ Ebarb, Matthew A. "Midshipmen Learn Lessons from the Fleet 2009-01-14 at the Wayback Machine" (story number NNS071020-04), Navy.mil, October 20, 2007.
  46. ^ Geissler, 1
  47. ^ Mahan Division website 2016-12-30 at the Wayback Machine.
  48. ^ "Review of The Life of Nelson, The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain by Captain A. T. Mahan". The Quarterly Review. 187: 126–152. January 1898.

Bibliography edit

Primary sources

  • Seager II, Robert, ed. Letters and Papers of Alfred Thayer Mahan (3 vol 1975) v. 1. 1847–1889. – v. 2. 1890–1901. – v. 3. 1902–1914
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer. The Influence of Sea Power upon History, 1660–1783 (1890) online edition
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer. The Influence of Sea Power upon the French Revolution and Empire, 1793–1812 (2 vols., 1892) online edition
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer. Sea Power in Relation to the War of 1812 (2 vols., 1905). online edition
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer., Reflections, Historic and Other, Suggested by the Battle of the Japan Sea. By Captain A. T. Mahan, U.S. Navy. US Naval Proceedings magazine, June 1906, Volume XXXVI, No. 2 United States Naval Institute.
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer. The Life of Nelson: The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain (2 vols., 1897) online edition
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer. Mahan on Naval Strategy: selections from the writings of Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan ed by John B. Hattendorf (1991)
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer. "The Negotiations at Ghent in 1814", The American Historical Review, Vol. 11, No. 1 (Oct., 1905), pp. 68–87, Published by: The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the American Historical Association Article Stable URL: JSTOR 1832365

Further reading edit

  • Apt, Benjamin. Naval War College Review (Summer 1997). Online. Naval War College. September 24, 2004
  • Bowling, Roland Alfred. "The Negative Influence of Mahan on the Protection of Shipping in Wartime: The Convoy Controversy in the Twentieth Century." PhD dissertation U. of Maine 1980. 689 pp. DAI 1980 41(5): 2241-A. 8024828 Fulltext: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
  • Crowl, Philip A. "Alfred Thayer Mahan: The Naval Historian" in Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age, ed. Peter Paret (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986)
  • Hattendorf, John B., ed. The Influence of History on Mahan. Naval War College Press, 1991. 208 pp.
  • Holmes, James R., "Strategic Features of the South China Sea: A Tough Neighborhood for Hegemons", Naval War College Review, Spring 2014, Volume 67, Number 2, pp. 30–51.
  • Kaplan, Robert D. (2012) The Revenge of Geography: What the Maps Tell Us About the Coming Conflicts and the Battle Against Fate New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1-4000-6983-5
  • Karsten, Peter. "The Nature of 'Influence': Roosevelt, Mahan and the Concept of Sea Power." American Quarterly 1971 23(4): 585–600. in Jstor
  • LaFeber, Walter. "A Note on the "Mercantilistic Imperialism" of Alfred Thayer Mahan," The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, Vol. 48, No. 4 (Mar., 1962), pp. 674–685 online at JSTOR
  • Livezey, William E. Mahan on Sea Power (Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, reprinted 1981)
  • Puleston, W. D. Mahan: The Life and Work of Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan, U.S.N 1939 online edition
  • St. John, Ronald B. "European Naval Expansion and Mahan, 1889–1906." Naval War College Review 1971 23(7): 74–83. ISSN 0028-1484. Argues that key Europeans were already set to expand their navies and that Mahan crystallized their ideas and generate broad support.
  • Schluter, Randall Craig. "Looking Outward for America: An Ideological Criticism of the Rhetoric of Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan, USN, in American Magazines of the 1890s." PhD dissertation U. of Iowa 1995. 261 pp. DAI 1995 56(6): 2045-A. DA9536247 Fulltext: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
  • Seager, Robert. Alfred Thayer Mahan: The Man and His Letters (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1977), the standard biography
  • Shulman, Mark Russell. "The Influence of Mahan upon Sea Power." Reviews in American History 1991 19(4): 522–527. in Jstor
  • Shulman, Mark Russell. Navalism and the Emergence of American Sea Powers, 1882–1893 (1995)
  • Sumida, Jon Tetsuro. Inventing Grand Strategy and Teaching Command: The Classic Works of Alfred Thayer Mahan (2000) 184 pages excerpt and online search from Amazon.com
  • Turk, Richard W. The Ambiguous Relationship: Theodore Roosevelt and Alfred Thayer Mahan (1987) online edition
  • Varacalli, Thomas F.X. "National Interest and Moral Responsibility in the Political Thought of Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan" Naval War College Review, Vol. 69, no. 2 (Spring 2016), 108–127
  • Zimmermann, Warren. First Great Triumph: How Five Americans Made Their Country a World Power. (2002). 562 pp., chapter on Mahan

External links edit

Military offices
Preceded by President of the Naval War College
1886–1889
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Naval War College
1892–1893
Succeeded by

alfred, thayer, mahan, september, 1840, december, 1914, united, states, naval, officer, historian, whom, john, keegan, called, most, important, american, strategist, nineteenth, century, book, influence, power, upon, history, 1660, 1783, 1890, immediate, recog. Alfred Thayer Mahan m e ˈ h ae n September 27 1840 December 1 1914 was a United States naval officer and historian whom John Keegan called the most important American strategist of the nineteenth century 1 His book The Influence of Sea Power Upon History 1660 1783 1890 won immediate recognition especially in Europe and with its successor The Influence of Sea Power Upon the French Revolution and Empire 1793 1812 1892 made him world famous 2 Alfred Thayer MahanBorn 1840 09 27 September 27 1840West Point New York U S DiedDecember 1 1914 1914 12 01 aged 74 Washington D C U S BuriedQuogue CemeteryQuogue New YorkAllegiance United States of America UnionService wbr branch United States Navy Union NavyYears of service1859 1896RankCaptain Rear admiral post retirement Commands heldUSS ChicagoUSS WaspUSS WachusettBattles warsAmerican Civil War Battle of Port RoyalSpanish American WarSignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 Naval War College and writings 4 Origin and limitation of strategic views 5 Sea power 6 Impact 6 1 Germany 6 2 United Kingdom 6 3 France 6 4 Japan 6 5 United States 7 Later career 8 Religious life 9 Death and commemoration 10 Family 11 Dates of rank 12 Awards 13 In fiction 14 Works 15 See also 16 References 17 Bibliography 18 Further reading 19 External linksEarly life editMahan was born on September 27 1840 at West Point New York to Dennis Hart Mahan 3 a professor at the United States Military Academy and the foremost American expert on fortifications and Mary Helena Okill Mahan 1815 1893 daughter of John Okill and Mary Jay daughter of Sir James Jay Mahan s middle name honors the father of West Point Sylvanus Thayer Mahan attended Saint James School an Episcopal college preparatory academy in western Maryland He then studied at Columbia for two years where he was a member of the Philolexian Society debating club 4 Against the better judgment of his father Mahan then entered the U S Naval Academy where he graduated second in his class in 1859 5 Early career editAfter graduation he was assigned to the frigate Congress from 9 June 1859 until 1861 He then joined the steam corvette Pocahontas of the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron and participated in the Battle of Port Royal in South Carolina early in the American Civil War 6 Commissioned as a lieutenant in 1861 Mahan served as an officer on USS Worcester and James Adger and as an instructor at the Naval Academy In 1865 he was promoted to lieutenant commander and then to commander 1872 and captain 1885 As commander of the USS Wachusett he was stationed at Callao Peru protecting U S interests during the final stages of the War of the Pacific 7 8 nbsp Alfred T Mahan as a captainWhile in actual command of a ship his skills were not exemplary and a number of vessels under his command were involved in collisions with both moving and stationary objects He preferred old square rigged vessels rather than smoky noisy steamships of his own day and he tried to avoid active sea duty 9 Naval War College and writings editIn 1885 he was appointed as a lecturer in naval history and tactics at the Naval War College Before entering on his duties College President Rear Admiral Stephen B Luce pointed Mahan in the direction of writing his future studies on the influence of sea power During his first year on the faculty he remained at his home in New York City researching and writing his lectures Though he was prepared to become a professor in 1886 Luce was given command of the North Atlantic Squadron and Mahan became President of the Naval War College by default June 22 1886 January 12 1889 July 22 1892 May 10 1893 10 There in 1888 he met and befriended future president Theodore Roosevelt then a visiting lecturer 11 Mahan s lectures based on secondary sources and the military theories of Antoine Henri Jomini became his sea power studies The Influence of Sea Power upon History 1660 1783 1890 The Influence of Sea Power upon the French Revolution and Empire 1793 1812 2 vols 1892 Sea Power in Relation to the War of 1812 2 vols 1905 and The Life of Nelson The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain 2 vols 1897 Mahan stressed the importance of the individual in shaping history and extolled the traditional values of loyalty courage and service to the state Mahan sought to resurrect Horatio Nelson as a national hero in Britain and used his biography as a platform for expressing his views on naval strategy and tactics Mahan was criticized for so strongly condemning Nelson s love affair with Lady Emma Hamilton but it remained the standard biography until the appearance of Carola Oman s Nelson 50 years later 12 Mahan struck up a friendship with pioneering British naval historian Sir John Knox Laughton the pair maintaining the relationship through correspondence and visits when Mahan was in London Mahan was later described as a disciple of Laughton but the two were at pains to distinguish between each other s line of work Laughton saw Mahan as a theorist while Mahan called Laughton the historian 13 Mahan worked closely with William McCarty Little another critical figure in the early history of the Naval War College A principal developer of wargaming in the United States Navy Mahan credited Little for assisting him with preparing maps and charts for his lectures and first book citation needed Origin and limitation of strategic views editMahan s views were shaped by 17th century conflicts between the Dutch Republic the Kingdom of England the Kingdom of France and Habsburg Spain and by the naval conflicts between France and Spain during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars British naval superiority eventually defeated France consistently preventing invasion and an effective blockade Mahan emphasized that naval operations were chiefly to be won by decisive battles and blockades 14 In the 19th century the United States sought greater control over its seaborne commerce in order to protect its economic interests which relied heavily on exports bound mainly for Europe According to Peter Paret s Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age Mahan s emphasis on sea power as the most important cause of Britain s rise to world power neglected diplomacy and land arms Furthermore theories of sea power do not explain the rise of land empires such as Otto von Bismarck s German Empire or the Russian Empire 15 Sea power editMahan believed that national greatness was inextricably associated with the sea with its commercial use in peace and its control in war and he used history as a stock of examples to exemplify his theories arguing that the education of naval officers should be based on a rigorous study of history Mahan s framework derived from Jomini and emphasized strategic locations such as choke points canals and coaling stations as well as quantifiable levels of fighting power in a fleet Mahan also believed that in peacetime states should increase production and shipping capacities and acquire overseas possessions though he stressed that the number of coal fueling stations and strategic bases should be limited to avoid draining too many resources from the mother country 16 The primary mission of a navy was to secure the command of the sea which would permit the maintenance of sea communications for one s own ships while denying their use to the enemy and if necessary closely supervise neutral trade Control of the sea could be achieved not by destruction of commerce but only by destroying or neutralizing the enemy fleet Such a strategy called for the concentration of naval forces composed of capital ships not too large but numerous well manned with crews thoroughly trained and operating under the principle that the best defense is an aggressive offense 17 Mahan contended that with a command of the sea even if local and temporary naval operations in support of land forces could be of decisive importance He also believed that naval supremacy could be exercised by a transnational consortium acting in defense of a multinational system of free trade His theories expounded before the submarine became a serious factor in warfare delayed the introduction of convoys as a defense against the Imperial German Navy s U boat campaign during World War I By the 1930s the U S Navy had built long range submarines to raid Japanese shipping but in World War II the Imperial Japanese Armed Forces still tied to Mahan designed its submarines as ancillaries to the fleet and failed to attack American supply lines in the Pacific Mahan s analysis of the Spanish American War suggested to him that the great distances in the Pacific required the American battle fleet to be designed with long range striking power 18 Mahan believed first that good political and naval leadership was no less important than geography when it came to the development of sea power Second Mahan s unit of political analysis insofar as sea power was concerned was a transnational consortium rather than a single nation state Third his economic ideal was free trade rather than autarky Fourth his recognition of the influence of geography on strategy was tempered by a strong appreciation of the power of contingency to affect outcomes 19 In 1890 Mahan prepared a secret contingency plan for war between the British Empire and the United States Mahan believed that if the Royal Navy blockaded the East Coast of the United States the US Navy should be concentrated in one of its ports preferably New York Harbor with its two widely separated exits and employ torpedo boats to defend the other harbors This concentration of the U S fleet would force the British to tie down such a large proportion of their navy to watch the New York exits that other American ports would be relatively safe Detached American cruisers should wage constant offensive action against the enemy s exposed positions and if the British were to weaken their blockade force off New York to attack another American port the concentrated U S fleet could capture British coaling ports in Nova Scotia thereby seriously weakening British ability to engage in naval operations off the American coast This contingency plan was a clear example of Mahan s application of his principles of naval war with a clear reliance on Jomini s principle of controlling strategic points 20 Impact editTimeliness contributed no small part to the widespread acceptance of Mahan s theories Although his history was relatively thin based as it was on secondary sources his vigorous style and clear theory won widespread acceptance of navalists and supporters of the New Imperialism in Africa and Asia Given the rapid technological changes underway in propulsion from coal to oil and from reciprocating engines to turbines ordnance with better fire directors and new high explosives and armor and the emergence of new craft such as destroyers and submarines Mahan s emphasis on the capital ship and the command of the sea came at an opportune moment 17 Germany edit Mahan s name became a household word in the Imperial German Navy after Kaiser Wilhelm II ordered his officers to read Mahan and Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz 1849 1930 used Mahan s reputation to finance a powerful High Seas Fleet 21 Tirpitz an intense navalist who believed ardently in Mahan s dictum that whatever power rules the sea also ruled the world had The Influence of Sea Power Upon History translated into German in 1898 and had 8 000 copies distributed for free as a way of pressuring the Reichstag to vote for the First Navy Bill 22 Tirpitz used Mahan not only as a way of winning over German public opinion but also as a guide to strategic thinking 23 Before 1914 Tirpitz completely rejected commerce raiding as a strategy and instead embraced Mahan s ideal of a decisive battle of annihilation between two fleets as the way to win command of the seas 22 Tirpitz always planned for the German High Seas Fleet to win the Entscheidungsschlacht decisive battle against the British Grand Fleet somewhere in the waters between Helgoland and the Thames a strategy he based on his reading of The Influence of Sea Power Upon History 22 However the naval warfare of World War I proved completely different than German planners influenced by Mahan had anticipated because the Royal Navy avoided open battle and focused on blockading Germany As a result after the Battles of Heligoland Bight and Dogger Bank Admiral Hugo von Pohl kept most of Germany s surface fleet at its North Sea bases In 1916 his successor Reinhard Scheer tried to lure the Grand Fleet into a Mahanian decisive battle at the Battle of Jutland but the engagement ended in a strategic defeat 24 Finally as the German army neared defeat in the Hundred Days Offensive the German government tried to mobilize the fleet for a decisive engagement with the Royal Navy The sailors then rebelled in the Kiel mutiny instigating the German Revolution of 1918 1919 which toppled the Hohenzollern monarchy and forced the new government to sue for peace 25 United Kingdom edit Mahan and British First Sea Lord John Fisher 1841 1920 both addressed the problem of how to dominate home waters and distant seas with naval forces unable to do both Mahan argued for a universal principle of concentration of powerful ships in home waters with minimized strength in distant seas Fisher instead decided to use submarines to defend home waters and mobile battlecruisers to protect British interests 26 France edit Though in 1914 French naval doctrine was dominated by Mahan s theory of sea power the course of World War I changed ideas about the place of the navy The refusal of the German fleet to engage in a decisive battle the Dardanelles expedition of 1915 the development of submarine warfare and the organization of convoys all showed the French Navy s new role in combined operations with the French Army The Navy s part in securing victory was not fully understood by French public opinion in 1918 but a synthesis of old and new ideas arose from the lessons of the war especially by Admiral Raoul Castex 1878 1968 who synthesized in his five volume Theories Strategiques the classical and materialist schools of naval theory He reversed Mahan s theory that command of the sea precedes maritime communications and foresaw the enlarged roles of aircraft and submarines in naval warfare 27 Japan edit The Influence of Seapower Upon History 1660 1783 was translated into Japanese 28 and was used as a textbook in the Imperial Japanese Navy IJN That usage strongly affected the IJN s plan to end Russian naval expansion in the Far East which culminated in the Russo Japanese War of 1904 05 29 It has been argued that the IJN s pursuit of the decisive battle Kantai Kessen contributed to Imperial Japan s defeat in World War II 30 31 because the development of the submarine and the aircraft carrier combined with advances in technology largely rendered obsolete the doctrine of the decisive battle between fleets 32 Nevertheless the IJN did not adhere strictly to Mahanian doctrine because its forces were often tactically divided particularly during the attack on Pearl Harbor and the Battle of Midway United States edit Mahan believed that if the United States were to build an Isthmian canal it would become a Pacific power and therefore it should take possession of Hawaii to protect the West Coast 33 Nevertheless his support for American imperialism was more ambivalent than is often stated and he remained lukewarm about American annexation of the Philippines 34 Mahan was a major influence on the Roosevelt family In addition to Theodore he corresponded with Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D Roosevelt until his death in 1914 During World War II Roosevelt would ignore the late Mahan s prior advice to him that the Commonwealth of the Philippines could not be defended against an Imperial Japanese invasion leading to a futile defense of the islands against the Japanese Philippines campaign 35 Later career editBetween 1889 and 1892 Mahan was engaged in special service for the Bureau of Navigation and in 1893 he was appointed to command the powerful new protected cruiser Chicago on a visit to Europe where he was feted He returned to lecture at the War College and then in 1896 he retired from active service returning briefly to duty in 1898 to consult on naval strategy during the Spanish American War Mahan continued to write and he received honorary degrees from Oxford Cambridge Harvard Yale Columbia Dartmouth and McGill In 1902 Mahan popularized the term Middle East which he used in the article The Persian Gulf and International Relations published in September in the National Review 36 As a delegate to the 1899 Hague Convention Mahan argued against prohibiting the use of asphyxiating gases in warfare on the ground that such weapons would inflict such terrible casualties that belligerents would be forced to end wars more quickly thus providing a net advantage for world peace 37 In 1902 Mahan was elected president of the American Historical Association and his address Subordination in Historical Treatment is his most explicit explanation of his philosophy of history 38 In 1906 Mahan became rear admiral by an Act of Congress that promoted all retired captains who had served in the American Civil War At the outbreak of World War I he published statements favorable to the cause of the Allies but in an attempt to enforce American neutrality President Woodrow Wilson ordered that all active and retired officers refrain from publicly commenting on the war 39 Religious life editMahan was reared as an Episcopalian and became a devout churchman with High Church sympathies For instance late in life he strongly opposed revision of the Book of Common Prayer 40 Nevertheless Mahan also appears to have undergone a conversion experience about 1871 when he realized that he could experience God s favor not through his own merits but only through trust in the completed work of Christ on the cross 41 Geissler called one of his religious addresses almost evangelical albeit of the dignified stiff upper lip variety 42 And Mahan never mentioned a conversion experience in his autobiography In later life Mahan often spoke to Episcopal parishes In 1899 at Holy Trinity Church in Brooklyn Mahan emphasized his own religious experience and declared that one needed a personal relationship with God given through the work of the Holy Spirit 43 In 1909 Mahan published The Harvest Within Thoughts on the Life of the Christian which was part personal testimony part biblical analysis part expository sermon 44 Death and commemoration edit nbsp The Mahan Hall at the United States Naval Academy is named for Mahan Mahan died in Washington D C of heart failure on December 1 1914 a few months after the outbreak of World War I Four ships have been named USS Mahan including the lead vessel of a class of destroyers The United States Naval Academy s Mahan Hall was named in his honor 45 as was Mahan Hall at the Naval War College Mahan Hall at the United States Military Academy was named for his father Dennis Hart Mahan A T Mahan Elementary School and A T Mahan High School at Keflavik Naval Air Station Iceland were named in his honor A former mission school in Yangzhou China was named for Mahan 46 A U S Naval Sea Cadet Corps unit in Albany New York is named for both Mahan and his father 47 Mahan Road is an entrance to the former Naval Ordnance Laboratory in White Oak Silver Spring Maryland The facility is now the headquarters of the Food and Drug Administration Family editAlfred Thayer Mahan married Ellen Lyle Evans in June 1872 they had two daughters and one son Ancestors of Alfred Thayer Mahan2 Dennis Hart Mahan1 Alfred Thayer Mahan6 John Okill3 Mary Helena Okill14 Sir James Jay7 Mary JayDates of rank editActing midshipman 30 September 1856 Midshipman 9 June 1859 Lieutenant 31 August 1861 Lieutenant commander 7 June 1865 Commander 20 November 1872 Captain 23 September 1885 Retired list 17 November 1896 Rear Admiral on the retired list 1906Awards editCivil War Campaign Medal Spanish Campaign Medal Chesney Gold MedalIn fiction editIn 1901 an alternate history by Robert Conroy the main character is a young United States Army officer named Patrick Mahan a fictitious nephew of Admiral Mahan who himself appears briefly in the story as well In Harry Turtledove s Southern Victory another alternate history Mahan is frequently mentioned but never appears He is spoken of as having been President of the United States from 1889 to 1897 and the Mahan Bedroom is a famous room in the Powel House in Philadelphia analogous to the actual Lincoln Bedroom in the White House As President Mahan prevented the construction of a Confederate shipping canal in Nicaragua and opined that the main problem with republics is that over time the voters are apt to get tired of paying for what their country needs to defend itself The protagonist in G C Edmondson s novel The Ship that Sailed the Time Stream frequently mentions Mahan and or Mahan s ghost as an exclamation In The Riddle of the Sands Erskine Childers has his character Davies aimlessly fingering a volume of Mahan Works editThe Gulf and Inland Waters 1883 The Influence of Sea Power Upon History 1660 1783 1890 The Influence of Sea Power Upon History 1660 1805 abridged ed 1980 The Influence of Sea Power Upon History 1660 1783 1890 at archive org The Influence of Sea Power upon the French Revolution and Empire 1793 1812 1892 at archive org Mahan Alfred Thayer 1892 Admiral Farragut D Appleton and company New York pp 333 Url The Future in Relation To American Naval Power Harper s New Monthly Magazine Oct 1895 The Life of Nelson The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain 1897 48 The Life of Nelson Volume 1 of 2 by A T Mahan at Project Gutenberg The Life of Nelson Volume 2 of 2 by A T Mahan at Project Gutenberg The Interest of America in Sea Power Present and Future 1897 Lessons of the War with Spain and Other Articles 1899 The Problem of Asia and Its Effect Upon International Policies 1900 Story of the War in South Africa 1899 1900 1900 online Types of Naval Officers Drawn from the History of the British Navy 1901 online Retrospect amp Prospect Studies in International Relations Naval and Political 1902 Sea Power in Its Relation to the War of 1812 2 vols 1905 Boston Little Brown American Library Association Reflections Historic and Other Suggested by the Battle of the Japan Sea 1906 Proceedings magazine June 1906 United States Naval Institute From Sail to Steam Recollections of Naval life 1907 Naval Administration and Warfare Some General Principles with Other Essays 1908 The Harvest Within Thoughts on the Life of the Christian 1909 Naval Strategy Compared and Contrasted with the Principles and Practice of Military Operations on Land 1911 Armaments and Arbitration or The Place of Force in the International Relations of States 1912 The Major Operations of the Navies in the War of American Independence 1913 at Project GutenbergSee also edit nbsp Biography portalReferences editNotes Keegan John The American Civil War Knopf 2009 272 Suzanne Geisler God and Sea Power The Influence of Religion on Alfred Thayer Mahan Annapolis Naval Institute Press 2015 1 Mahan Alfred Thayer public2 nhhcaws local Retrieved July 13 2023 Alfred Thayer Mahan www c250 columbia edu Retrieved August 10 2022 Geissler 24 26 Mahan Alfred Thayer Richard W Turk The Ambiguous Relationship Theodore Roosevelt and Alfred Thayer Mahan Greenwood Press 19870 10 Larrie D Ferreiro Mahan and the English Club of Lima Peru The Genesis of The Influence of Sea Power upon History The Journal of Military History72 3 July 2008 901 906 Paret Peter 1986 Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press p 445 Presidents of the U Archived from the original on May 17 2006 Retrieved May 17 2006 Geissler 99 100 ODNB entry for Carola Oman Retrieved 8 July 2012 subscription required Knight Roger 2000 The Foundations of Naval History John Knox Laughton the Royal Navy and the Historical Profession Review of book by Professor Andrew Lambert London Institute for Historical Research Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved April 3 2007 Vego Milan 2009 Naval Classical Thinkers and Operational Art Naval War College 4 Archived from the original on January 31 2017 Retrieved December 12 2016 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Paret Peter 1986 Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 453 455 Crowl Alfred Thayer Mahan 451 460 a b Philip A Crowl Alfred Thayer Mahan The Naval Historian in Paret Peter Gordon A Craig and Felix Gilbert eds Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age 1986 ch 16 Go Get Mahan s Yardstick U S Naval Institute July 1 2019 Retrieved December 9 2020 Jon Tetsuro Sumida Inventing Grand Strategy and Teaching Command The Classic Works of Alfred Thayer Mahan Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1997 Kenneth Bourne and Carl Boyd Captain Mahan s War with Great Britain U S Naval Institute Proceedings 94 7 1968 71 78 ISSN 0041 798X Holger Herwig The Failure of German Sea Power 1914 1945 Mahan Tirpitz and Raeder Reconsidered The International History Review 10 1 February 1988 72 73 a b c Herwig 69 105 Herwig 72 73 Naval Warfare International Encyclopedia of the First World War WW1 encyclopedia 1914 1918 online net Retrieved July 20 2022 World War I End of the German war and the Armistice www britannica com Retrieved July 20 2022 Jon Tetsuro Sumida Geography Technology and British Naval Strategy in the Dreadnought Era Naval War College Review 2006 59 3 89 102 Martin Motte L epreuve des Faits ou la Pensee Navale Francaise face a la Grande Guerre Revue Historique Des Armees 1996 2 97 106 ISSN 0035 3299 Mark Peattie amp David Evans Kaigun U S Naval Institute Press 1997 Mahan Proceedings article 1906 Donald Goldstein and Katherine Dillon The Pearl Harbor Papers Brassey s 1993 Marc Parillo The Japanese Merchant Marine in WW2 U S Naval Institute Press 1993 Crowl Alfred Thayer Mahan pp 474 477 Brinkley Alan 2010 19 From Crisis to Empire The Unfinished Nation Columbia University McGraw Hill p 499 Geissler 134 135 Roberts Andrew 2009 Masters and Commanders The Military Geniuses Who Led the West to Victory in World War II 1 ed London Penguin Books p 18 ISBN 978 0 141 02926 9 via Archive Foundation Adelson Roger London and the Invention of the Middle East Money Power and War 1902 1922 New Haven Yale University Press 1995 22 23 Barbara Tuchman The Proud Tower 246 Geissler 151 152 Subordination in Historical Treatment Giessler 189 Mahan unsuccessfully appealed the order to Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels arguing that retired officers were no different from private citizens and should not be silenced Geissler 178 185 Geissler 78 Geissler 149 Geissler 149 He concluded with the reiteration of my sure and joyful confidence that I have tried God these many years and found Him ever faithful that all I have all that I am all that have accomplished has been of Him and through Him Geissler 167 Ebarb Matthew A Midshipmen Learn Lessons from the Fleet Archived 2009 01 14 at the Wayback Machine story number NNS071020 04 Navy mil October 20 2007 Geissler 1 Mahan Division website Archived 2016 12 30 at the Wayback Machine Review of The Life of Nelson The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain by Captain A T Mahan The Quarterly Review 187 126 152 January 1898 Bibliography editPrimary sources Seager II Robert ed Letters and Papers of Alfred Thayer Mahan 3 vol 1975 v 1 1847 1889 v 2 1890 1901 v 3 1902 1914 Mahan Alfred Thayer The Influence of Sea Power upon History 1660 1783 1890 online edition Mahan Alfred Thayer The Influence of Sea Power upon the French Revolution and Empire 1793 1812 2 vols 1892 online edition Mahan Alfred Thayer Sea Power in Relation to the War of 1812 2 vols 1905 online edition Mahan Alfred Thayer Reflections Historic and Other Suggested by the Battle of the Japan Sea By Captain A T Mahan U S Navy US Naval Proceedings magazine June 1906 Volume XXXVI No 2 United States Naval Institute Mahan Alfred Thayer The Life of Nelson The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain 2 vols 1897 online edition Mahan Alfred Thayer Mahan on Naval Strategy selections from the writings of Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan ed by John B Hattendorf 1991 Mahan Alfred Thayer The Negotiations at Ghent in 1814 The American Historical Review Vol 11 No 1 Oct 1905 pp 68 87 Published by The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the American Historical Association Article Stable URL JSTOR 1832365Further reading editApt Benjamin Mahan s Forebears The Debate over Maritime Strategy 1868 1883 Naval War College Review Summer 1997 Online Naval War College September 24 2004 Bowling Roland Alfred The Negative Influence of Mahan on the Protection of Shipping in Wartime The Convoy Controversy in the Twentieth Century PhD dissertation U of Maine 1980 689 pp DAI 1980 41 5 2241 A 8024828 Fulltext ProQuest Dissertations amp Theses Crowl Philip A Alfred Thayer Mahan The Naval Historian in Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age ed Peter Paret Oxford Clarendon Press 1986 Hattendorf John B ed The Influence of History on Mahan Naval War College Press 1991 208 pp Holmes James R Strategic Features of the South China Sea A Tough Neighborhood for Hegemons Naval War College Review Spring 2014 Volume 67 Number 2 pp 30 51 Kaplan Robert D 2012 The Revenge of Geography What the Maps Tell Us About the Coming Conflicts and the Battle Against Fate New York Random House ISBN 978 1 4000 6983 5 Karsten Peter The Nature of Influence Roosevelt Mahan and the Concept of Sea Power American Quarterly 1971 23 4 585 600 in Jstor LaFeber Walter A Note on the Mercantilistic Imperialism of Alfred Thayer Mahan The Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol 48 No 4 Mar 1962 pp 674 685 online at JSTOR Livezey William E Mahan on Sea Power Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press reprinted 1981 Puleston W D Mahan The Life and Work of Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan U S N 1939 online edition St John Ronald B European Naval Expansion and Mahan 1889 1906 Naval War College Review 1971 23 7 74 83 ISSN 0028 1484 Argues that key Europeans were already set to expand their navies and that Mahan crystallized their ideas and generate broad support Schluter Randall Craig Looking Outward for America An Ideological Criticism of the Rhetoric of Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan USN in American Magazines of the 1890s PhD dissertation U of Iowa 1995 261 pp DAI 1995 56 6 2045 A DA9536247 Fulltext ProQuest Dissertations amp Theses Seager Robert Alfred Thayer Mahan The Man and His Letters Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press 1977 the standard biography Shulman Mark Russell The Influence of Mahan upon Sea Power Reviews in American History 1991 19 4 522 527 in Jstor Shulman Mark Russell Navalism and the Emergence of American Sea Powers 1882 1893 1995 Sumida Jon Tetsuro Inventing Grand Strategy and Teaching Command The Classic Works of Alfred Thayer Mahan 2000 184 pages excerpt and online search from Amazon com Turk Richard W The Ambiguous Relationship Theodore Roosevelt and Alfred Thayer Mahan 1987 online edition Varacalli Thomas F X National Interest and Moral Responsibility in the Political Thought of Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan Naval War College Review Vol 69 no 2 Spring 2016 108 127 Zimmermann Warren First Great Triumph How Five Americans Made Their Country a World Power 2002 562 pp chapter on MahanExternal links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Alfred Thayer Maan nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Alfred Thayer Mahan nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alfred Thayer Mahan Works by Alfred Thayer Mahan at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Alfred Thayer Mahan at Internet Archive Works by Alfred Thayer Mahan at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Past Presidents of the Naval War College from the Naval War College website Afred Thayer Mahan at Find a Grave The Life of Nelson Archived July 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine reviewMilitary officesPreceded byStephen Luce President of the Naval War College1886 1889 Succeeded byCaspar F GoodrichPreceded byCaspar F Goodrich President of the Naval War College1892 1893 Succeeded byCharles Herbert Stockton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfred Thayer Mahan amp oldid 1195259302, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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