Monday 27 August 2018

Passport to Inaccuracy

While we have touched extensively on the naval issues on Lake Ontario before, one small detail has come to my attention recently.

At the "Battle" of Limestone Ridge, it is mentioned that the Hamilton Naval Company is attached to the militia order of battle, meaning the men of that company were apparently shooting it out with American troops on the Niagara frontier. However, we know from the flashback in Chapter 10 Pt. 1, that apparently the ship operated by the Hamilton Naval Company, the Passport, is being converted at Kingston.

Now, from the text the naval action there apparently takes place in May as well. This raises the question, how can the naval company be two places at once?

The simple answer is, they can't. The author, either not realizing (more likely not caring) about his mistake blithely rolls on with it. What is interesting, however, is that the author seems to understand he's underselling the Canadians. He could only know about Harbottle through either seeing him in the 1867 militia list he uses as his base, or by reading about the Fenian raids.

Anything beyond a cursory glance would have led the author to realize that in 1862 no less than six naval and marine companies were formed for service on Lake Ontario (the Garden Island Naval Comapny not being formed until January 1863) versus the precisely zero pre-existing naval militia companies or militia infrastructure on the American side.

What this suggests of course is that the author has deliberately chosen to underrate, and reassign, the Anglo-Canadian capabilities on the lakes, for the express purpose of making an easier American victory. Or, the author is lazy. You decide.

Sunday 12 August 2018

Haiti, wait a minute...

Burnished Rows of Steel, Chapter 5 Part 1:
The Executive Mansion
Washington City, District of Columbia
May, 1862
...
“The Spanish, apparently not content merely to take over Santo Domingo, are threatening war with Hayti; we of course, have encouraged the Haytians to resist to the utmost,” Seward said, with a grin of his own.

How did the Union encourage a government with which they had no diplomatic relations?
The United States recognized Hayti (Haiti) on July 12, 1862, when President Abraham Lincoln commissioned Benjamin F. Whidden was to act as a U.S. diplomatic representative to Hayti under the title “commissioner and consul-general.” ... Diplomatic relations and the American Legation in Port-au-Prince were established on October 1, 1862, when Commissioner and Consul General Benjamin F. Whidden presented his credentials to the Government of the Republic of Haiti.
Of course, it probably never occurred to TFSmith that the wonderful, egalitarian, totally 100% not racist United States would refuse to recognise a country because its leaders were black. He probably doesn't even know that the US similarly refused to recognise Liberia until September 1862.

(Needless to say, horrendously racist discriminatory aristocratic white supremacist Britain recognised Haiti in 1825, and Liberia on its independence in 1847.)