New Perspectives on Maritime History and Nautical Archaeology
This series is devoted to providing lively and important books that cover the spectrum of maritime history and nautical archaeology broadly defined. It includes works that focus on the role of canals, rivers, lakes, and oceans in history; the economic, military, and political use of those waters; and the people, communities, and industries that support maritime endeavors. Limited neither by geography or time, volumes in the series contribute to the overall understanding of maritime history and can be read with profit by both general readers and specialists.
This series is complete and no longer accepting submissions.
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A Civil War Gunboat in Pacific Waters
Life on Board USS Saginaw
Borderland Smuggling
Patriots, Loyalists, and Illicit Trade in the Northeast, 1783-1820
Captain "Hell Roaring" Mike Healy
From American Slave to Arctic Hero
The Sea Their Graves
An Archaeology of Death and Remembrance in Maritime Culture
Sovereignty at Sea
U.S. Merchant Ships and American Entry into World War I
The Rescue of the Gale Runner
Death, Heroism, and the U.S. Coast Guard
Chinese Junks on the Pacific
Views from a Different Deck
Commodore Abraham Whipple of the Continental Navy
Privateer, Patriot, Pioneer
Nexus of Empire
Negotiating Loyalty and Identity in the Revolutionary Borderlands, 1760s1820s
Voyages, the Age of Sail
Documents in American Maritime History, Volume I, 1492-1865
Voyages, the Age of Engines
Documents in American Maritime History, Volume II, 1865-Present
Attack Transport
USS Charles Carroll in World War II
Merchant Mariners at War
An Oral History of World War II
X Marks the Spot
The Archaeology of Piracy
American Coastal Rescue Craft
A Design History of Coastal Rescue Craft Used by the USLSS and USCG
Spanish Convoy of 1750
Heaven's Hammer and International Diplomacy
Crisis at Sea
The United States Navy in European Waters in World War I

