Brigadier General Casimir Pulaski takes a round of grape shot in a
futile charge before British Guns at Savannah, Georgia.
|
Yesterday
was Casimir Pulaski Day. If you just responded with a “huh?”
you don’t live in Illinois where it
is an official state holiday
celebrating Polish ethnic pride and political clout. And, by the way, the Revolutionary War officer remembered as the Father of the Cavalry who
died in a glorious but reckless lancer charge on British artillery at the siege of Savanah.
For
decades Chicago’s huge Polish community—the
Toddling Town was the largest Polish city in the world—yearned
for acceptance and proof that they
had muscled their way at last to
equal recognition with the city’s other major
ethnic groups. The damned Irish, who lorded it over everyone else had St. Patrick’s Day and two, count
‘em, two big Parades one on the South Side and the Daley extravaganza on State
Street. The Italians had Columbus Day and
their own big parade plus the Outfit which pretty much ran a lot of
the city and all of those pizza parlors. The Puerto
Ricans had their Independence Day and
Humboldt Park even if they never got
any real independence. The Mexicans got Cinco de Mayo which wasn’t even much of a thing south of the Border. And then when Martin Luther King died, Blacks
started demanding a holiday in
his honor even though the Poles had been here longer and had patiently waited their turn.
Another candidate for Polish Pride Poster boy, Kosiuszko. |
The
Polish community pinned their hopes for
recognition on the Continental Army
trooper. They could have picked
another Polish emigre soldier, Thaddeus Kosciuszko, who played a much
more significant role in Polish
history. He was commissioned a Colonel and served as an engineering officer under General Horatio Gates. He distinguished
himself at the Battle of Saratoga where
he laid out the Continental defenses around Bemis Hill that would confound
all of Gentleman Johnny Burgoyne’s attempts
to attack. Later he constructed the
fortifications of Fort Clinton at West Point then commanded by Benedict
Arnold. He later served with great
distinction in the Sothern Campaign under
Nathanial Green. At war’s end he was promoted to Brigadier General, but found that
collecting his seven years back pay was
nearly impossible.
After
returning to Poland he became a hero and commander in the Polish–Russian War of 1792. That
war ended with loss of territory with extended Russian influence over much of
the Commonwealth. In 1794 the country
faced partition between surrounding
powers Russia, Austria, and Prussia.
He became commander-in-chief of
the insurrection that became known
as the Kosciuszko Uprising and defended Warsaw from onslaughts by the
Prussians and Russians. Eventually he
was wounded, captured, and imprisoned by the Russians while the Third Partition of Poland. After finally being pardoned, he returned to the United
States as an exile. He eventually returned to Europe where he
engaged in talks to lead a Polish force in Napoleon’s
army in exchange for French support for a liberal Polish republic. When
Napoleon showed himself to be a dictator
and only hoping to use the Poles as a pawn
he abandoned that project.
Kosciuszko was a true Democrat in
Poland he advocated not just the emancipation
of serfs and Jews, but offering them full citizenship rights. In his will he left his American
holdings to a fund to free the
slaves—which American courts refused
to honor. Kosciuszko died in Switzerland at the age of 71 in
1817. He was revered as a Polish
national hero.
You
would think such a man would be the one Chicago’s Poles would choose to be their
symbolic secular saint. Instead they picked the dashing cavalryman. Poles are at heart deeply romantic
and the cavalry holds a special place
in the national identity and units
of hussars and later lighter uhlans were the core of Polish armies and their most successful units. A man on horseback who died gloriously easily trumped an engineer, no matter how skilled or useful.
Casimir
Pulaski, son a Polish noble was born
on March 6, 1745 in Warsaw. After the election of King StanisĆaw
II August of the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth in 1764 his father became one of the leaders of the Bar Confederation, which saw the King StanisĆaw
as a Russian puppet and sought to
end Russian hegemony over the Commonwealth and restore the traditional role
of the nobility in a decentralized
semi-feudal governance. The Bar
Confederation went into open rebellion and
young Casimir was commissioned as a cavalry officer fighting both the King’s
loyal forces and the Russians.
He
proved to be an adept, skillful, and
audacious commander of a Banner—the basic unit of Polish cavalry which was recruited and paid by the
noble families sponsoring them—rising quickly after a series of victories in
1768. He was captured by the Russians that
June after leading a two week defense in the siege of a monastery in BerdyczĂłw. He was paroled
after pledging to renounce his allegiance to the Bar Confederation and
not again take up arms against the
King. When he returned to Warsaw he
declared that he did not consider his renunciation binding because it was given under
duress. Many Bar leaders, including
his father, considered the renunciation dishonorable
and even pressed for a court martial.
A young Pulaski as a Polish cavalry commander in the Bar Confederacy uprising. |
But
the rebels needed quality commanders and eventually he was reinstated however grudgingly. He served with notable distinction
thought the rest of the war until 1772 when the Bar Confederation was finally
defeated. During this time he won many victories and fame and was raised to the
command of a regiment of several
banners.
He often operated independently
and sometime refused to coordinate with
other commands and units. He was
considered a loose cannon and
increasingly at odds with the
political leadership of the Confederation.
The
resistance was hard pressed by numerically
superior forces including large Russian formations and by Austrians and Prussians equally eager to carve up Poland 1772. In some desperation Pulaski agreed to join a plot to kidnap the King. The plot
was foiled and revealed forcing Pulaski to flee
to France. He was tried in absentia, convicted of
attempted regicide, stripped of all property, and sentenced to
death.
Because of the regicide charge he could not be given official sanctuary in Paris and had to stay there illegally. His attempts to offer his services to the
French and other armies were rebuffed.
Pulaski survived with the support of a Polish exile
community but was occasionally imprisoned
for debt. He did meet liberal French aristocrats
like the young Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette who in turn
introduced him to American minister
Benjamin Franklin who was looking for experienced
European officers to serve the Continental Army in 1777. Franklin was
deeply impressed by Pulaski and by his military
reputation. He wrote an effusive letter of recommendation to General Washington, “Count Pulaski of Poland, an officer
famous throughout Europe for his bravery and conduct in defence of the liberties of his country against the
three great invading powers of Russia,
Austria and Prussia ... may be highly useful to our service.” The grandiose title of Count was Franklin’s
invention to impress Congress. The title
did not exist in Poland and as a younger
son of a nobleman, Pulaski had no
title at all beyond his military rank.
Armed with the letter Pulaski sailed for North America arriving in Marblehead, Massachusetts in July of
1777. He met with Washington in August. The commanding General always had a soft spot for adventurous and idealistic
young European officers. Besides which
his rag-tag army was nearly bereft of organized cavalry beyond
small units used as scouts and couriers. But Washington could not unilaterally appoint
him an officer. That required
Congressional action which was slow in coming because Congress was leery of the minor onslaught of European volunteers
and the salaries to which they would
be entitled. For several weeks Pulaski remained an unofficial member of Washington’s retinue and made visits to Philadelphia to plead his case.
While still technical civilian, Pulaski rode with the 30 members of Washington’s personal mounted guard on a reconnaissance during the Battle of Brandywine on September 11,
1777 as the main body of the army was under heavy pressure. He discovered British movements to cut off Washington’s line of retreat. The General directed him to intercept and collect troops he encountered and to use them “at his discretion” to protect and cover the
Continental retreat. He led a charge that saved the undertrained and
armed cavalry, kept the lines open, and was credited with saving the Army and Washington’s life. In his report to Congress Washington’s praise
was enough to finally earn Pulaski’s official appointment as a Brigadier General of Cavalry on
September 15.
He had not even officially learned of his
appointment the next day, although he was now operating as an officer, when he
led a patrol that spotted a major British
force closing on Washington’s position.
Although a major storm disrupted the maneuver, Washington once again had reason to be grateful.
That winter he went
into camp with the Army at Valley
Forge where he urged the Army to continue operations against the enemy through the winter pointing out that
in Poland campaigning continued through the harsh weather. Because the
British followed the Western European custom
of going into camp for the winter,
Pulaki felt that they could be trapped and
surprised. Washington, who had one of his few battlefield victories when he crossed the Delaware on Christmas of 1776 to capture a Hessian garrison at Trenton, New Jersey, was sympathetic but his officer’s council of war were unanimous in opposition to the pan. Instead Pulaski spent the winter planning his
reorganization of Continental cavalry
and drafting the first regulations for the formation.
General "Mad" Anthony Wayne booted Pulaki's standing in the Continental Army with praise for his performance in operations in New Jersey. |
He then joined the bulk of the cavalry
at Trenton where they were stationed to begin training them. While there Washington’s capable commander in
New Jersey, “Mad” Anthony Wayne, to
support his activities in Southern New Jersey.
On February 28 Pulaski led 50 horsemen to intercept a much large force
under Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Stirling
at Burlington who was convinced
that he had encountered a much larger force and prepared to withdraw across the
Delaware. The next day Wayne and Pulaski’s
combined force hit Stirling while still in camp. Pulaski’s horse was shot out from
under him and his men took casualties.
It was a minor skirmish, but disrupted British operational plans.
Wayne commended Pulaski in his official
report but the cavalryman was disappointed
when Congress rejected his plan to recruit
and train a force of lancers and disgruntled that his promised pay was
not forthcoming. He resigned as
Brigadier of Cavalry in March 1778 and rejoined Washington at Valley Forge.
He then traveled south where he met General Horatio Gates at Yorktown, Virginia who accepted Pulaski’s
plan and persuaded Congress to restore his
rank as Brigadier with the new title Commander
of the Horse. He was authorized to
recruit a special unit of 68 Lancers and 200 supporting light infantry.
He recruited the force in the horse
country around Baltimore attracting
young gentlemen of quality and European volunteers into
the Pulaski Cavalry Legion. By August 1789 it was nearly at full force
and was undergoing rigorous training.
With pay and supplies from Congress still not forthcoming, Pulaski used
his own slender purse and donations
from the local aristocracy to uniform, arm, and equip his command to the highest standards. He quickly had one of the Continental Army’s
first true elite units.
A Lancer of Pulaski's Cavalry Legion. |
Despite his personal sacrifices, tight
fisted Congressional auditors challenged his expenses and some local landowners complained of being subjected to excessive requisition to supply his troops. He was plagued by this on-going investigation the rest of his life. And in fact after death attempts were made to
get “restitution” from his nearly nonexistent estate.
In October Pulaski endured one of the
few disastrous defeats of his career.
His Legion accompanied by three other companies of light infantry and
other cavalry was sent to Little Egg
Harbor district in Southern New Jersey to disrupt anti-smuggling
activities by Captain Patrick
Ferguson who was also trying to retrieve
goods taken by American privateers. A deserter
informed Ferguson about a camp of an infantry company along with word that adequate sentries had not been
posted. Ferguson surprised the camp at
dawn, killing 50 patriots by bayonet and capturing 5 before Pulaki’s
Legion arrived on the scene drove Ferguson off capturing a few stragglers who could not reach their
boats.
In early 1779 Pulaski was ordered to
join the Sullivan Expedition against
the British allied Iroquois who were
devastating the Mohawk Valley in upstate New York. He did not relish the prospect of frontier service away from the main theaters of action against the
British. He also felt, rightly, that the
heavily wooded semi-wilderness was
not suitable for his mounted force. He
threatened to once again resign and return to Europe but instead asked for
re-assignment to the Southern Command. Washington sent him to Charleston, South Carolina where he reported for duty on May 8
where the city was preparing for a siege by British Brigadier General Augustine Prevost who had caught American General
Benjamin Lincoln’s troops attempting
to re-take Savanah, Georgia and
chased the undisciplined mostly militia force back to Charleston. Pulaski’s Legion was sent out to try and
blunt the British advance on May 11 and was badly mauled by the superior
force. In fact, he lost most of the
60 infantry Legionaries he had with him.
But the action caused Prevost to retreat toward Savanah.
Back in Charleston Pulaski suffered from bouts with malaria but
remained in active command of his
unit. In September Lincoln planned a
push to retake Savanah with reenforcements by French troops under Admiral Charles Hector, Comte d’Estaing. The Legion was sent to Augusta, Georgia to join General Lachlan McIntosh in command of
Georgia forces as the forward elements
of Lincoln’s army. After capturing an
important British outpost on the Ogeechee
River the Legion became the advance guard of d’Estaing’s force. During the Seige of Savanah he was placed in command of all cavalry forces
both French and American. During an
attack across the narrow causeway leading
to Savanah on October 9, French troops began to buckle under intense British artillery
fire. To rally them, Pulaski led a desperate charge up the causeway
directly into the mouth of the British Guns.
It was brave but foolhardy. He
was unhorsed by a devastating round of grape
shot and the charge was broken.
Pulaki was carried unconscious from the
field and evacuated of the South Carolina privateer Wasp for medical attention. How and where he died are in dispute. Some accounts say he died of his wounds on
board the Wasp on October 11 and was buried at sea. Others say he was landed and taken to the Greenwich plantation in Thunderbolt, near Savannah, where he
died and was buried in an unmarked
grave. On October 21 he received a symbolic burial with full military honors in Charleston.
The Siege of Savanah was broken and
Lincoln had to retreat to Charleston. In
March of 1780 the city was surrounded by a new 5,000 man British Army under General Henry Clinton. He was forced to surrender the city on May 12, although most of the South Carolina
Militia and some Continentals were able to escape. It was the worst defeat in the Southern theater.
Pulaski equestrian monument in Washington, D.C. |
Pulaski’s dramatic but wasteful
sacrifice was widely praised. He became a national hero with towns
and counties in George, Tennessee, and elsewhere named for him.
Monuments were erected including one at the symbolic grave which was
dedicated by the Marquis de Lafayette in a
Masonic service during his 1825 Grand
Tour. His bust was also enshrined in
the U.S. Capitol’s Hall of Heroes in
1867 and in an equestrian monument at
Freedom Plaza, 13th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue in 1910. In 2009 President
Barack Obama signed legislation posthumously
confirming American citizenship only the 7th person so honored. There have also been commemorative medals struck and postage stamps issued.
But the struggle to get Illinois to
declare a holiday was epic in itself and a case study in ethnic pride and
politics. Back in 2000 while I was a custodian
at Briargate Elementary School in Cary, Illinois I reflected on that in a
long poem I shared with the staff when
school was closed to students for the Holiday. Later it was reprinted in the UUNews, a weekly unofficial UUA e-mail newsletter in
which I was sort of a resident versifier.
Somehow it was discovered by some Polish-American
patriots who were very offended
to the point of threatening physical
violence.
You be the judge, because we are reaching way back and telling that part of
the story in the old ballad.
Come, Let Us
Venerate Him, St. Casimir Pulaski
This
year, of all years, St. Casimir Pulaski,
we genuflect our gratitude,
at this day which you and the State
of Illinois
in its infinite wisdom
have granted us.
So
we sing your paeans and remember—
How
you, bright young Pole,
hero of your people,
burning with the Rights of Man
with dash, swagger, and soldierly
stupidity
consecrated yourself a martyr
upon the Redcoat cannon at Savannah.
And
it was you, in Great Chicago—Warsaw-by-the-Lake
who exiled Slaves,
fodder for the Stockyards,
taconite for blast furnaces,
faceless brawn in a thousand
factories,
charwomen of the high rise palaces
of privilege,
you they called to be their patron
and their hero.
It
was you they remembered
as they waited patiently for the
Irish dynasty to pass,
to take their turn at command,
to reap the spoils, plunder, and
patronage
due them for their steadfast,
plodding service.
And
it was to you they cried
when the niggers usurped their place
and when, with taunting arrogance,
dark Chicago named a feast for their
saint,
the same King who had marched
through
Polish bungalows and two flats
shattering the peace by inviting
stones with his head.
In
your name old Roman Puchinski,
the very Prince denied the throne
blocked a State feast until your
name
could be placed with Columbus and
St. Patrick
on the calendar of veneration,
until Harold Washington threw back
his massive head,
crinkled his eyes and boom his great
voice—
“It’s
a deal!
I will come and stand by
you
at the Polish National
Alliance,
under the White Eagle
Flag
and listen to pretty
golden hair children in peasant dress
sing and spin to
accordions.
And you will come with
me in January
as we listen to some
bright preacher’s son
recite, ‘I Have a
Dream.’
Then both of us on St.
Patrick’s Day
will don green paper
derbies and broad sashes,
clutch blackthorn sticks
and arm in arm step off
lively
behind the wailing pipes
of the Shannon Rovers
as the Irish, green beer
in hand,
jeer and hiss us both as
interlopers and pretenders.”
--Patrick Murfin
As for the Illinois Holiday, it has come in for hard times. Concerned with lost instructional times because of several holidays including the
State observance of Abraham Lincoln’s
Birthday and Veterans Day on November 11, the legislature made
school closing optional with an application for an easily obtained waiver. Over
75% of Illinois school districts have done just that. Even in Chicago the 2012 Public Schools contract with the Chicago Teachers Union allowed that
massive system to opt out. Poles were enraged but their political clout has greatly diminished
as many of second and third generation have assimilated and relocated to suburbia as
part of the general White Flight of ethnics,
They have left behind vibrant
but shrunken neighborhoods where
the elderly first generation immigrants
of the Post World War II years
mingle with recent arrivals, many of
them undocumented. From de
facto control of broad swaths of the Northwest,
Southwest, and East sides. Their political influence has shrunk to a handful of wards largely supplanted by the rising Latino
communities, and the reverse
migration from the suburbs of young professionals
and hipsters.
The present historical analysis, or historical story if some prefer, presented above, gives to us all a depth and breadth of information about a very real American Hero: Casimir Pulaski, that we are grateful for this contribution. Our organization: the American Czechoslovak Landmarks Trust, a 501-c-3 public charity, dedicated to the preservation and protection of not only Czechoslovak landmarks, but also all Slovanic landmarks across North America, is certainly pleased to include all memorials and related landmarks named in memory of the “Father of the American Cavalry”: Casimir Pulaski.
ReplyDeleteWe will also gladly give Pulaski his due in our newsletter and our website, found at: landmarkstrust.org (the Czechoslovak Society).
Thank you for this contribution.
Dr. Dwight George Ć ulc, Chairman, Board of Trustees
American Czechoslovak Landmarks Trust,
A 501-c-3 non-profit Public Charity
All Slovanic related comments are welcome at: info@landmarkstrust.org