Note: Part II of a series in
which we look at George Washington as the Continental Army Commander in the
American Revolution.
On June
15, 1775 the Continental Congress appointed
George Washington as the Commanding General of the Continental
Army. With Massachusetts and other New
England militia units already besieging
the British Army in Boston, Congress created a new Continental
Army as a signal to the enemy that
it was facing united Colonies, not
just crazy, disgruntled Yankees.
A unified command was essential, as was the arrival on the scene at the earliest possible moment of troops from the Middle and Southern colonies.
The choice for the Commander was the subject
of some intrigue. There were other candidates.
Most
noteworthy was retired British Regular Army Lt. Colonel Charles Lee
who had served as a junior officer
with the 44th Foot Regiment in the French and Indian Wars. Although he was away from the unit for
the Battle of
the Monongahela, Lee
did serve at the Siege of Louisburg, a failed attempt to capture Ft.
Ticonderoga, the capture of Ft.
Niagara, and the failed attack on Montreal. After returning to England and rising in the
ranks, he became a mercenary
serving with the Portuguese against
a Spanish invasion and in the
service of King Stanislaus II of Poland in the Russo-Turkish War. After retiring from the British Army he expressed sympathy for the Colonial cause and immigrated to Virginia
where he purchased an estate. Lee was by far the most experienced officer available and had many supporters.
Thomas
Mifflin, a “fighting Quaker” from Pennsylvania was put
forward by that colony’s delegates.
Artemus
Ward, already commanding the troops in
front of Boston, was naturally a candidate.
Among other names mentioned was another former British Regular officer, Richard Montgomery originally of Dublin, a veteran soldier with strong
political links to British Whigs, and married into New York’s powerful Livingston
family.
Each of these men had regional and political support in Congress.
Virginia delegate Colonel
George Washington was officially
uninterested in the position. But he showed
up in Congress wearing his full
uniform as Colonel of the Virginia Regiment—the Virginia Blues. At a sturdy
6’2” the gentlemanly Washington cut quite a martial figure. His mere
presence inspired the members,
especially in contrast to the slovenly, crude, and eccentric
Lee.
Like other candidates,
Washington had served in the French and Indian Wars—in fact he started the war with his attack on a French scouting party near Fort Duquesne. He established Ft.
Necessity nearby, but was soon driven out by French reinforcements. He served as General Braddock’s aide-de-camp on his doomed
expedition and was noted for his
coolness under fire and getting as many men as possible out of the ambush.
As commanding officer of the Virginia
Blues he had established a series of
frontier outposts for protection against Indian raids and conducted years of low grade warfare in the west.
Massachusetts delegate
John Adams quickly recognized Washington as the best candidate. He knew that a Virginia officer was essential in rallying the rest of the colonies to the rescue of his state. Adams distrusted
Lee because of his British roots and
was offended by his uncouth manners. He used all of his considerable legislative skill to line up a majority to elect
Washington.
In the end, however the choice might have come down to a matter of pay. Lee insisted
on the pay of a British Major
General. Washington promised to serve “without pay” only for expenses. The frugal
Congress, which had no power to
raise revenues, liked that.
Washington accepted the
appointment with appropriate, if feigned, modesty. In a letter home he
wrote:
I assure you, in the most solemn manner, that, so
far from seeking this appointment, I have used every endeavor in my power to
avoid it, not only from my unwillingness to part with you and the family, but
from a consciousness of its being a trust too great for my capacity, and that I
should enjoy more happiness in one month with you at home than I have the most
distant prospect of finding abroad.
The ailing General Ward
was confirmed as official second in command, Lee made senior Major General, Montgomery a Brigadier, and Mifflin rode
north with Washington as his aide-de-camp and was soon to rise to
Quarter Master General.
Washington was in New York City on his way to assume command of
the siege when he received an account of the Battle of Bunker Hill from the Massachusetts
Committee on Safety. The report exaggerated
British losses and papered over the
difficulties Connecticut
General Israel Putnam experienced trying to assert command, but it heartened the new commander. He arrived on July 2 to
find the army in some disarray and a
general stalemate between the two sides. He spent the next months gaining the confidence of his new
command and its officers, reorganizing—basically creating—the Continental
Line while trying to keep his Militia and volunteers on duty. There were a few indecisive skirmishes and both sides suffered near starvation and small pox outbreaks over
an exceptionally harsh winter.
But that same snowy winter allowed the rotund young
former bookseller Col. Henry Knox to drag the heavy cannons captured
at Fort Ticonderoga overland. Some of the cannon, under Knox’s
command were able to begin shelling
Boston on March 2, 1776. On March 5 Washington moved more cannon to
the commanding Dorchester Heights
in an overnight surprise operation.
That placed the British fleet, as
well as the city under Continental guns.
An astonished British General
William Howe is said to have
proclaimed, “My God, these
fellows have done more work in one night than I could make my army do in three
months.” It was checkmate and game over. After delays because of unfavorable winds,
British boarded ships and sailed from the city on March 17.
American troops, all handpicked for earlier exposure to and survival of small
pox, led by Artemas Ward entered the city on March 20.
Washington had forged and army from a disorganized rabble in arms, liberated the cradle of the Revolution, and notched
the first significant victory of the war—significant
enough to embolden those in the Continental
Congress led by John Adams who were pushing for a full declaration of independence. The
Commanding General’s prestige could
not have been greater.
However things
would take a turn for the much worse.
With Boston secured, Washington moved his army to defend New York, the key mid-Atlantic port where the Hudson River flowing north and Lake Champlain provided and invasion
route to or from Upper Canada and Quebec.
Control over the port and river also prevented New England from being cut off from the capitol at Philadelphia, the breadbasket
Colonies of Pennsylvania, Virginia,
and the South. The city was a prime target for the British and
Washington knew they had an intact army in
Nova Scotia and a powerful fleet.
Subordinates Generals Charles Lee and Nathaniel Greene began construction of fortification in Manhattan
and on Brooklyn Heights before
Washington and his 18,000 troops arrived from Boston. Neither believed that the city could be held against a full scale British attack
and wanted to position artillery under Knox to do the greatest damage to an invasion force possible before retreating and taking up defensive positions up the Hudson and
in New Jersey.
Aggressive and overconfident,
Washington wanted to lure the British into a full set-piece battle hoping to crush
the invasion bring a quick end to the war.
He had not yet conducted a full scale battle and over estimated his
still rudely trained troops. Ft. Washington on the tip of Manhattan and Ft. Lee opposite it across the Hudson
were hastily erected.
The British fleet commanded by Admiral Richard Howe began arriving and anchoring off of Staten Island in late June. Troops under his brother William landed on
the Island on July 2, quickly dispersing a small Continental garrison there
while the Staten Island Militia simply switched sides. Couriers
from Philadelphia arrived on July 5 and the Declaration of Independence was read to the troops and public in
the city on that day. Jubilant mobs toppled an equestrian statute of King George III and lopped off its head. The always decorous Washington was mortified
but soon glad to have the statue melted down for musket balls and cannon
shot.
By mid-July British ships had sailed passed the guns of
Forts Washington and Lee and sailed
upriver to Tarrytown effectively cutting off the city from provisions from
the north. Howe attempted to open negotiations for Washington’s
surrender but was repeatedly rebuffed
for sending messages to George
Washington, Esq. instead of General
George Washington. In early August
Howe was reinforced by more ships and troops under Generals Henry Clinton and Charles Cornwallis arrived bring the total British force to an
overwhelming 32,000 troops including 8,000 tough Hessian mercenaries on Staten Island and 73 warships.
Washington was unsure where the British would strike ignored
the advice of Nathaniel Green that Long Island was the likely first target. Washington
felt that an attack on Long Island would be a diversion for a main thrust at
Manhattan itself. He made a nearly fatally bad decision to split
his already out-numbered army in two and defend both. Green was assigned command on Long Island,
but was taken ill and replaced by New Yorker John Sullivan.
On August 22 4000 advance troops under Clinton and
Cornwallis landed at Long Island’s Sheep’s
Head Bay unopposed by a regiment of Pennsylvania
Rifles who fell back. The sharpshooters might have made the landing hot work with their lethally accurate fire but were not
prepared for a full field assault. The troops rapidly advance six miles and
established camp at Flatbush. Meanwhile 40 pieces of artillery and more
troops were brought ashore. Washington
was sent faulty intelligence on the size of the force and concluded that it was
the feint he had feared. He sent only
1,500 more troops from Manhattan to reinforce Long Island with the veteran of
Bunker Hill and the Siege of Boston Israel
Putman taking overall command on the island. The arrival of Hessian reinforcements for the
British brought their number to over 20,000.
On August 27 1,600 Colonials under Lord Sterling—William Alexander—mainly from the 1st Delaware Regiment and 1st Maryland Infantry met a force under
British General James Grant on the high ground that became known as Battle Hill. The colonials fought effectively and
inflicted heavy casualties on the British stopping their advance. They believed that they had stopped the main
force. Unfortunately this was a
diversion for a main attack across Jamaica
Plain led by a much larger force under Clinton.
The Hessians attacked troops under John Sullivan at
Flatbush’s Battle Pass then the main force flanked
him and attacked his positions in
the rear. The left of the American line collapsed
and Sullivan rallied his troops in fierce hand-to-hand fighting and managed
to get most of the survivors to Brooklyn
Heights before he was captured. Stirling managed to fight off his
attackers for hours on the right but
was soon nearly surrounded with the
arrival of 2,000 fresh Royal
Marines. Stirling personally took command of a rear guard of about 280 Marylanders
under Major Mordecai Gist who became
known to history as the Maryland 400—a
hat tip to the 400 Spartans at Marathon. They launched a desperate counter charge to hold up the British
and allow the remnants of his troops to escape through a narrow pass to Brooklyn
Heights.
Meanwhile Washington, who now realized that the Long Island
campaign was no diversion, arrived from Manhattan with reinforcements which
were too late in arriving to commit to the battle, watched the desperate fight
of the Marylanders in front of the fortified stone Vechte-Cortelyou House where 259 of them died. Only a dozen or so made it back to
Continental lines. Stirling, a Scot nobleman, feared he would be hung by the British and hacked his way with his sword through their lines to surrender to the relative safety of the Hessians, who had been bayonetting captured private soldiers but would give gentlemanly respect to an officer. Washington is said to have exclaimed, “Good
God, what brave fellows I must this day lose!”
But now he and the tattered
remnants of his army were trapped on Brooklyn Heights. The situation looked grim. But Howe did not press the attack. He later told a court of inquiry that he was
concerned with saving lives on both sides and that he wanted to give Washington
a chance to surrender honorably in a
hopeless situation. Most likely he had in mind the horrific
casualties that the Colonials could inflict from behind secure earthworks to troops charging up hill—the lesson of
the fighting on Breed’s [Bunker] Hill.
As the British began to dig siege trenches, Washington brought over 1,500 more troops from
Manhattan including the rugged fishermen of John Glover’s Marblehead Regiment.
Washington managed to evacuate thousands of troops and his precious artillery from the disaster on Long Island. |
With skirmishing long
the trench lines a steady rain began
to fall on the afternoon of the 28th slowing the British progress on the
trenches. Meanwhile he had Knox’s
artillery pound the British lines.
Washington sent word to Manhattan to gather all flat bottom scows and row
boats and bring them over under cover of darkness. At a Council
of War on the 29th Washington agreed
to Thomas Mifflin’s proposal to evacuate Brooklyn Heights while
Pennsylvanians under his command provided a rear guard. The evacuation began undetected by the
British that night with Glover’s fishermen manning the boats. A fortuitous fog covered the continuing
operation when it dragged on into daylight of the 30th. At 7 am Washington, the last man on Long
Island not held prisoner stepped into the last boat. He had miraculously gotten his army—9,000
men--to the temporary safety of Manhattan.
It was the only bright
spot in an otherwise disastrous
battle. It turned out to be the
largest by men committed of the entire war, but it was also Washington’s nadir as a commander. His stubbornness and the bad strategic decision
to split his forces had placed his whole army in jeopardy. Naturally some in Congress new began to call for his replacement by Lee or
perhaps Green who was recovering from his illness.
Many historians have harshly judged Washington’s capacity as
a field general based on the Long
Island campaign. But recently respected
historian David McCullough in his
epic 2006 historical novel 1776
has argued that the escape from Long Island was an heroic and masterful American Dunkirk and represented
Washington at his finest as a commander—cool
in crisis, bold in execution,
and innovative.
Meanwhile Howe once again dawdled, his hallmark as a commander in the war, but Washington again defied the
advice of his senior officers that he abandon Manhattan. On September 15 Howe finally landed a force
at Kip’s Bay and quickly overran New York City on the lower end of the island. A quarter
the city mysteriously burned on September 21, a conflagration that may or may not have been set by Washington operatives in the city.
Washington retreated north across the Harlem River out of Manhattan and into Westchester County where troops under Putnam and General Alexander McDougall on October
28 put of a stiff resistance at the heights near White Plaines that caused Howe so many casualties that he
eventually abandoned the village.
Washington’s main army was not engaged and he had time to organize a
further retreat.
Instead of pursuing Washington, Howe turned back south and
attacked the remaining Continental bastion in Manhattan, Ft. Washington. Washington had left it to the discretion of the commander on the
scene, New Jersey Colonel Robert Magaw
with 3000 men whether to evacuate the post.
Magaw believed he could make a stand from the well entrenched
position. Before Washington himself
could arrive on the scene to assess the situation, Howe attacked from three
sides with overwhelming force and naval
support. After some stiff
resistance, Magaw was forced to surrender the post and his garrison on November
16. Three days later Washington ordered
Ft. Lee across the river abandoned, essentially ending the campaign around New
York.
Leaving most of his New England troops behind in the
highlands above the Hudson to guard supply lines and deter a British dash up
the river, Washington crossed over to New Jersey with most of his surviving
army at Peekskill. Howe chased him across New Jersey and
Pennsylvania with elements of his army through November and early December, but
declined to march out of the city in full force and risk a winter
campaign. European
gentlemen soldiers did not fight in the winter.
Instead he built a string of outposts as forward strong points and
planned a move against Washington and the Continental capitol at Philadelphia
for spring.
That is when
Washington with his beaten and
demoralized army, planned one of the most audacious attacks in history which not only surprised his enemy but gave him a much needed victory which probably saved his command.
Washington and
most his remaining army—90% of those who had fought on Long Island were gone
due to death, injury, capture, desertion, or the expiration of short term
Militia enlistment—were in desperate condition and camped on the Pennsylvania
side of the Delaware River hoping
desperately to block any British move against Philadelphia. He received some reinforcements—2,000 troops
under General Sullivan and 800 from Ft. Ticonderoga under General Horatio Gates on December 20.
About the same
time a spy in Washington’s elaborate intelligence operation brought word that
three battalions of Hessians under Col.
Johann Rall were posted across the river at Trenton, New Jersey and that Rall had failed to fortify his
position confident that any attack by the rag-tag Continentals could be repelled at bayonet point. Washington hatched a bold and desperate plan.
He knew that the
Christmas loving Germans would be
celebrating on December 25 and would probably not be in either great shape or on the lookout for an attack the next morning. On the other hand Christmas was not a major holiday for most of his own
troops. And they had nothing in camp
with which to celebrate anyway.
Washington planned a surprise crossing
of the Delaware under cover of night
after which he would split his main force into two columns under Generals
Sullivan and Greene who would attack Trenton from both sides of the town at
dawn.
Emanuel G Leutze 's George Washington Crossing the Delaware River, painted in 1851 was wildly romantic and inaccurate but became American icon anyway. |
Washington’s friend,
Philadelphia physician Benjamin Rush who
was with the army as a volunteer surgeon
reported seeing a not scrawled by the General that said “Victory or Death” which became the password of the operation
To get the men
across, the turned once again to the Marblehead men under Col. Glover to man
the boats. Each man was issued 60 rounds
of musket balls and powder and three days ration. Field guns were also to be taken across by
the boats. There were delays in assembling and the weather turned foul—a
pelting sleet and wind resulting in choppy water which was also partially
iced over. Despite not being able to
complete the crossing before dawn, all troops made it across without the loss
of a single life despite some falling overboard, as did the important
cannon. Unlike the famous picture, Washington did
not foolishly stand up in the boat that carried him and his horse.
The men, many of
them shoeless with rags tied around
their feet marched rapidly south to a road junction about two miles from
Trenton where Green and Sullivan’s columns split. Sullivan took the river road and Green swung
around to attack the town from the rear.
Each column sent a 40 advance guard ahead. On the march some curious locals
enthusiastically grabbed their hunting muskets and joined the troops.
On the march
Washington was surprised to encounter a local Militia band of 50 men under Adam
Stephens who unaware of the planned attack, had just executed their own surprise
hit and run raid against an isolated Hessian picket post. Washington was
furious that Stephens may have inadvertently alerted Rall but it was too late
to turn back. Stephens and his men fell
in line with the troops and continued the march. For his part Rall thought the small raid was
the attack that some local Tories had warned him that the Continentals were
preparing. The ease with which it was
repelled led him to conclude that the threat had been exaggerated. He took no action to put his post on alert.
Washington inspects the Hessian colors after the victory at Trenton by Edward Percy Moran, c. 1914. |
Outposts about a
mile from Trenton were attacked about 8 am and quickly routed. Sullivan and Green’s columns attacked the
city itself as planned and Henry Knox brought his artillery to bear. The surprise was effective. The Hessians, the finest professional troops
in Europe, tried to organize a defense but were quickly overwhelmed. A detachment of British Dragoons was also quickly scattered. There was sharp fighting and Rall rallied his
regiment outside of town and organized a bayonet counter attack on the
town. Washington, watching from nearby
heights led the reserve down to meet the charge while Knox’s men recaptured
cannon which had changed hands turning it on the Hessians. Taking positions in the cover of houses,
Green’s men peppered the Germans
from three sides. Rall was mortally wounded and forced to
surrender. Another regiment tried to
make a break out, but was surrounded and captured by Sullivan. The whole battle was over in less than an
hour. It was an overwhelming American victory.
The Continentals
suffered only two dead—both of exposure on
the march not enemy fire—and five wounded including the commanding general’s
cousin Captain William Washington and
a young Lt. James Monroe, the future
President. The Hessians lost 22 dead,
including all four colonels, 83 wounded and almost 900 captured. In addition the Continentals came into possession
of all of the enemy’s arms, munitions, rations, and critical
supplies like boots and greatcoats.
Washington
learned that a secondary attack across
the Delaware to the north under General John
Cadwalader and Militia under General
James Ewing had been prevented from crossing by the bad weather and not
having the experienced Marblehead boatmen.
Their combined 2,800 men had been expected to join Washington at Trenton
where a united army could then push on against Princeton and New Brunswick. That left Washington with only 2,400 effectuals exposed to a possible
counter attack by Howe. He prudently
decided to withdraw back across the river with his spoils and prisoners.
The victory
after the drubbing in New York re-assured Congress and buoyed moral in the army. Re-enlistments
increased, desertion decreased, and the colonies were able to recruit fresh bodies for the Line regiments.
But Washington
was not yet done. With his re-united
army he re-crossed the Delaware at Trenton on December 29. After a sharp skirmish at Assunpink Creek on
January 2, he swung around an army under Cornwallis
sent by Howe to find and punish him.
The next day after Washington personally led the troops of fallen General Hugh Mercer after rallying them
and panicked Militia driving two brigades of the British back on Cornwallis near
Trenton. Meanwhile Sullivan captured the
city and a sizable detachment held up in Nassau
Hall, the main building of the College
of New Jersey.
Washington then
marched to Morristown and finally
went into winter quarters. Stung by three defeats to the Continentals in
a few days and hectored by attacks on his supply lines and isolated outposts by
the New Jersey Militia, Howe ordered Cornwallis and most of the other troops to
fall back to New York.
Thus ended
Washington’s first campaign season, a mixed bag of triumph, disaster, and redemption. Everyone now recognized it would be long war and Washington realized that
above all he must keep and army in the
field no matter what setbacks in hopes of bleeding the Treasury and
eroding support of the war in Parliament.
He would concentrate on training
and equipping his troops and cultivating a reliable and loyal
officer corps. He learned to
distrust Militia, which had broken and run too often, and lean heavily on his
Continental Line. Six long, eventful
years of war stretched ahead.
Tomorrow: War,
More War, Intrigue, and the World Turned Upside Down.
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