<h2><SPAN href="#Contents">CHAPTER VII</SPAN></h2>
<h3>Washington and His Comrades at Valley Forge</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">Washington</span> had met defeat in every considerable
battle at which he was personally present. His first appearance in
military history, in the Ohio campaign against the French, twenty-two
years before the Revolution, was marked by a defeat, the surrender of Fort
Necessity. Again in the next year, when he fought to relieve the disaster
to Braddock's army, defeat was his portion. Defeat had pursued him in the
battles of the Revolution—before New York, at the Brandywine, at
Germantown. The campaign against Canada, which he himself planned, had
failed. He had lost New York and Philadelphia. But, like William III of
England, who in his long struggle with France hardly won a battle and yet
forced Louis XIV to accept his terms of peace, Washington, by suddenness
in reprisal, by skill in resource when his plans
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</SPAN></span>
seemed to have been shattered, grew on the hard rock of defeat the flower
of victory.</p>
<p>There was never a time when Washington was not trusted by men of real
military insight or by the masses of the people. But a general who does
not win victories in the field is open to attack. By the winter of 1777
when Washington, with his army reduced and needy, was at Valley Forge
keeping watch on Howe in Philadelphia, John Adams and others were talking
of the sin of idolatry in the worship of Washington, of its flavor of the
accursed spirit of monarchy, and of the punishment which <q>the God of
Heaven and Earth</q> must inflict for such perversity. Adams was all
against a Fabian policy and wanted to settle issues forever by a short and
strenuous war. The idol, it was being whispered, proved after all to have
feet of clay. One general, and only one, had to his credit a really great
victory—Gates, to whom Burgoyne had surrendered at Saratoga, and
there was a movement to replace Washington by this laureled victor.</p>
<p>General Conway, an Irish soldier of fortune, was one of the most
troublesome in this plot. He had served in the campaign about Philadelphia
but had been blocked in his extravagant demands for promotion; so he
turned for redress to Gates, the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</SPAN></span>
star in the north. A malignant campaign
followed in detraction of Washington. He had, it was said, worn out his
men by useless marches; with an army three times as numerous as that of
Howe, he had gained no victory; there was high fighting quality in the
American army if properly led, but Washington despised the militia; a
Gates or a Lee or a Conway would save the cause as Washington could not;
and so on. <q>Heaven has determined to save your country or a weak general
and bad counsellors would have ruined it</q>; so wrote Conway to Gates and
Gates allowed the letter to be seen. The words were reported to
Washington, who at once, in high dudgeon, called Conway to account. An
explosion followed. Gates both denied that he had received a letter with
the passage in question, and, at the same time, charged that there had
been tampering with his private correspondence. He could not have it both
ways. Conway was merely impudent in reply to Washington, but Gates laid
the whole matter before Congress. Washington wrote to Gates, in reply to
his denials, ironical references to <q>rich treasures of knowledge and
experience</q> <q>guarded with penurious reserve</q> by Conway from his
leaders but revealed to Gates. There was no irony in Washington's
reference to malignant
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</SPAN></span>
detraction and mean intrigue. At the same time he said to Gates:
<q>My temper leads me to peace and harmony with all men,</q> and he
deplored the internal strife which injured the great cause. Conway soon
left America. Gates lived to command another American army and to end his
career by a crowning disaster.</p>
<p>Washington had now been for more than two years in the chief command and
knew his problems. It was a British tradition that standing armies were a
menace to liberty, and the tradition had gained strength in crossing the
sea. Washington would have wished a national army recruited by Congress
alone and bound to serve for the duration of the war. There was much talk
at the time of a <q>new model army</q> similar in type to the wonderful
creation of Oliver Cromwell. The Thirteen Colonies became, however,
thirteen nations. Each reserved the right to raise its own levies in its
own way. To induce men to enlist Congress was twice handicapped. First, it
had no power of taxation and could only ask the States to provide what it
needed. The second handicap was even greater. When Congress offered
bounties to those who enlisted in the Continental army, some of the States
offered higher bounties for their own levies
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</SPAN></span>
of militia, and one authority
was bidding against the other. This encouraged short-term enlistments. If
a man could re-enlist and again secure a bounty, he would gain more than
if he enlisted at once for the duration of the war.</p>
<p>An army is an intricate mechanism needing the same variety of agencies
that is required for the well-being of a community. The chief aim is, of
course, to defeat the enemy, and to do this an army must be prepared to
move rapidly. Means of transport, so necessary in peace, are even more
urgently needed in war. Thus Washington always needed military engineers
to construct roads and bridges. Before the Revolution the greater part of
such services had been provided in America by the regular British army,
now the enemy. British officers declared that the American army was
without engineers who knew the science of war, and certainly the forts on
which they spent their skill in the North, those on the lower Hudson, and
at Ticonderoga, at the head of Lake George, fell easily before the
assailant. Good maps were needed, and in this Washington was badly served,
though the defect was often corrected by his intimate knowledge of the
country. Another service ill-equipped was what we should now call the Red
Cross.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</SPAN></span>
Epidemics, and especially smallpox, wrought havoc in the army.
Then, as now, shattered nerves were sometimes the result of the strain of
military life. <q>The wind of a ball,</q> what we should now call
shell-shock, sometimes killed men whose bodies appeared to be uninjured.
To our more advanced knowledge the medical science of the time seems
crude. The physicians of New England, today perhaps the most expert body
of medical men in the world, were even then highly skillful. But the
surgeons and nurses were too few. This was true of both sides in the
conflict. Prisoners in hospitals often suffered terribly and each side
brought charges of ill-treatment against the other. The prison-ships in
the harbor of New York, where American prisoners were confined, became a
scandal, and much bitter invective against British brutality is found in
the literature of the period. The British leaders, no less than Washington
himself, were humane men, and ignorance and inadequate equipment will
explain most of the hardships, though an occasional officer on either side
was undoubtedly callous in respect to the sufferings of the enemy.</p>
<p>Food and clothing, the first vital necessities of an army, were often
deplorably scarce. In a land
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</SPAN></span>
of farmers there was food enough. Its lack in
the army was chiefly due to bad transport. Clothing was another matter.
One of the things insisted upon in a well-trained army is a decent regard
for appearance, and in the eyes of the French and the British officers the
American army usually seemed rather unkempt. The formalities of dress, the
uniformity of pipe-clay and powdered hair, of polished steel and brass,
can of course be overdone. The British army had too much of it, but to
Washington's force the danger was of having too little. It was not easy to
induce farmers and frontiersmen who at home began the day without the use
of water, razor, or brush, to appear on parade clean, with hair powdered,
faces shaved, and clothes neat. In the long summer days the men were told
to shave before going to bed that they might prepare the more quickly for
parade in the morning, and to fill their canteens over night if an early
march was imminent. Some of the regiments had uniforms which gave them a
sufficiently smart appearance. The cocked hat, the loose hunting shirt
with its fringed border, the breeches of brown leather or duck, the brown
gaiters or leggings, the powdered hair, were familiar marks of the soldier
of the Revolution.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</SPAN></span>
During a great part of the war, however, in spite of supplies brought from
both France and the West Indies, Washington found it difficult to secure
for his men even decent clothing of any kind, whether of military cut or
not. More than a year after he took command, in the fighting about New
York, a great part of his army had no more semblance of uniform than
hunting shirts on a common pattern. In the following December, he wrote of
many men as either shivering in garments fit only for summer wear or as
entirely naked. There was a time in the later campaign in the South when
hundreds of American soldiers marched stark naked, except for breech
cloths. One of the most pathetic hardships of the soldier's life was due
to the lack of boots. More than one of Washington's armies could be
tracked by the bloody footprints of his barefooted men. Near the end of
the war Benedict Arnold, who knew whereof he spoke, described the American
army as <q>illy clad, badly fed, and worse paid,</q> pay being then two or
three years overdue. On the other hand, there is evidence that life in the
army was not without its compensations. Enforced dwelling in the open air
saved men from diseases such as consumption and the movement from camp to
camp gave a broader outlook to the farmer's
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</SPAN></span>
sons. The army could usually
make a brave parade. On ceremonial occasions the long hair of the men
would be tied back and made white with powder, even though their uniforms
were little more than rags.</p>
<p>The men carried weapons some of which, in, at any rate, the early days of
the war, were made by hand at the village smithy. A man might take to the
war a weapon forged by himself. The American soldier had this advantage
over the British soldier, that he used, if not generally, at least in some
cases, not the smooth-bore musket but the grooved rifle by which the ball
was made to rotate in its flight. The fire from this rifle was extremely
accurate. At first weapons were few and ammunition was scanty, but in time
there were importations from France and also supplies from American gun
factories. The standard length of the barrel was three and a half feet, a
portentous size compared with that of the modern weapon. The loading was
from the muzzle, a process so slow that one of the favorite tactics of the
time was to await the fire of the enemy and then charge quickly and
bayonet him before he could reload. The old method of firing off the
musket by means of slow matches kept alight during action was now
obsolete;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</SPAN></span>
the latest device was the flintlock. But there was always a
measure of doubt whether the weapon would go off. Partly on this account
Benjamin Franklin, the wisest man of his time, declared for the use of the
pike of an earlier age rather than the bayonet and for bows and arrows
instead of firearms. A soldier, he said, could shoot four arrows to one
bullet. An arrow wound was more disabling than a bullet wound; and arrows
did not becloud the vision with smoke. The bullet remained, however, the
chief means of destruction, and the fire of Washington's soldiers usually
excelled that of the British. These, in their turn, were superior in the
use of the bayonet.</p>
<p>Powder and lead were hard to get. The inventive spirit of America was busy
with plans to procure saltpeter and other ingredients for making powder,
but it remained scarce. Since there was no standard firearm, each soldier
required bullets specially suited to his weapon. The men melted lead and
cast it in their own bullet-molds. It is an instance of the minor ironies
of war that the great equestrian statue of George III, which had been
erected in New York in days more peaceful, was melted into bullets for
killing that monarch's soldiers. Another necessity was paper for
cartridges
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</SPAN></span>
and wads. The cartridge of that day was a paper envelope
containing the charge of ball and powder. This served also as a wad, after
being emptied of its contents, and was pushed home with a ramrod. A store
of German Bibles in Pennsylvania fell into the hands of the soldiers at a
moment when paper was a crying need, and the pages of these Bibles were
used for wads.</p>
<p>The artillery of the time seems feeble compared with the monster weapons
of death which we know in our own age. Yet it was an important factor in
the war. It is probable that before the war not a single cannon had been
made in the colonies. From the outset Washington was hampered for lack of
artillery. Neutrals, especially the Dutch in the West Indies, sold guns to
the Americans, and France was a chief source of supply during long periods
when the British lost the command of the sea. There was always difficulty
about equipping cavalry, especially in the North. The Virginian was at
home on horseback, and in the farther South bands of cavalry did service
during the later years of the war, but many of the fighting riders of
today might tomorrow be guiding their horses peacefully behind the plough.</p>
<p>The pay of the soldiers remained to Washington
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</SPAN></span>
a baffling problem. When
the war ended their pay was still heavily in arrears. The States were
timid about imposing taxation and few if any paid promptly the levies made
upon them. Congress bridged the chasm in finance by issuing paper money
which so declined in value that, as Washington said grimly, it required a
wagon-load of money to pay for a wagon-load of supplies. The soldier
received his pay in this money at its face value, and there is little
wonder that the <q>continental dollar</q> is still in the United States a
symbol of worthlessness. At times the lack of pay caused mutiny which
would have been dangerous but for Washington's firm and tactful management
in the time of crisis. There was in him both the kindly feeling of the
humane man and the rigor of the army leader. He sent men to death without
flinching, but he was at one with his men in their sufferings, and no
problem gave him greater anxiety than that of pay, affecting, as it did,
the health and spirits of men who, while unpaid, had no means of softening
the daily tale of hardship.</p>
<p>Desertion was always hard to combat. With the homesickness which led
sometimes to desertion Washington must have had a secret sympathy, for his
letters show that he always longed for that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</SPAN></span>
pleasant home in Virginia
which he did not allow himself to revisit until nearly the end of the war.
The land of a farmer on service often remained untilled, and there are
pathetic cases of families in bitter need because the breadwinner was in
the army. In frontier settlements his absence sometimes meant the massacre
of his family by the savages. There is little wonder that desertion was
common, so common that after a reverse the men went away by hundreds. As
they usually carried with them their rifles and other equipment, desertion
involved a double loss. On one occasion some soldiers undertook for
themselves the punishment of deserters. Men of the First Pennsylvania
Regiment who had recaptured three deserters, beheaded one of them and
returned to their camp with the head carried on a pole. More than once it
happened that condemned men were paraded before the troops for execution
with the graves dug and the coffins lying ready. The death sentence would
be read, and then, as the firing party took aim, a reprieve would be
announced. The reprieve in such circumstances was omitted often enough to
make the condemned endure the real agony of death.</p>
<p>Religion offered its consolations in the army and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</SPAN></span>
Washington gave much
thought to the service of the chaplains. He told his army that fine as it
was to be a patriot it was finer still to be a Christian. It is an odd
fact that, though he attended the Anglican Communion service before and
after the war, he did not partake of the Communion during the war. What
was in his mind we do not know. He was disposed, as he said himself, to
let men find <q>that road to Heaven which to them shall seem the most
direct,</q> and he was without Puritan fervor, but he had deep religious
feeling. During the troubled days at Valley Forge a neighbor came upon him
alone in the bush on his knees praying aloud, and stole away unobserved.
He would not allow in the army a favorite Puritan custom of burning the
Pope in effigy, and the prohibition was not easily enforced among men,
thousands of whom bore scriptural names from ancestors who thought the
Pope anti-Christ.</p>
<hr class="break" />
<p>Washington's winter quarters at Valley Forge were only twenty miles from
Philadelphia, among hills easily defended. It is matter for wonder that
Howe, with an army well equipped, did not make some attempt to destroy the
army of Washington which passed the winter so near and in acute
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</SPAN></span>
distress.
The Pennsylvania Loyalists, with dark days soon to come, were bitter at
Howe's inactivity, full of tragic meaning for themselves. He said that he
could achieve nothing permanent by attack. It may be so; but it is a sound
principle in warfare to destroy the enemy when this is possible. There was
a time when in Washington's whole force not more than two thousand men
were in a condition to fight. Congress was responsible for the needs of
the army but was now, in sordid inefficiency, cooped up in the little town
of York, eighty miles west of Valley Forge, to which it had fled. There
was as yet no real federal union. The seat of authority was in the State
Governments, and we need not wonder that, with the passing of the first
burst of devotion which united the colonies in a common cause, Congress
declined rapidly in public esteem. <q>What a lot of damned scoundrels we
had in that second Congress</q> said, at a later date, Gouverneur Morris
of Philadelphia to John Jay of New York, and Jay answered gravely, <q>Yes,
we had.</q> The body, so despised in the retrospect, had no real executive
government, no organized departments. Already before Independence was
proclaimed there had been talk of a permanent union, but the members of
Congress had shown no
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</SPAN></span>
sense of urgency, and it was not until November 15,
1777, when the British were in Philadelphia and Congress was in exile at
York, that Articles of Confederation were adopted. By the following
midsummer many of the States had ratified these articles, but Maryland,
the last to assent, did not accept the new union until 1781, so that
Congress continued to act for the States without constitutional sanction
during the greater part of the war.</p>
<p>The ineptitude of Congress is explained when we recall that it was a
revolutionary body which indeed controlled foreign affairs and the issues
of war and peace, coined money, and put forth paper money but had no
general powers. Each State had but one vote, and thus a small and sparsely
settled State counted for as much as populous Massachusetts or Virginia.
The Congress must deal with each State only as a unit; it could not coerce
a State; and it had no authority to tax or to coerce individuals. The
utmost it could do was to appeal to good feeling, and when a State felt
that it had a grievance such an appeal was likely to meet with a flaming
retort.</p>
<p>Washington maintained towards Congress an attitude of deference and
courtesy which it did not always deserve. The ablest men in the individual
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</SPAN></span>
States held aloof from Congress. They felt that they had more dignity and
power if they sat in their own legislatures. The assembly which in the
first days had as members men of the type of Washington and Franklin sank
into a gathering of second-rate men who were divided into fierce factions.
They debated interminably and did little. Each member usually felt that he
must champion the interests of his own State against the hostility of
others. It was not easy to create a sense of national life. The union was
only a league of friendship. States which for a century or more had barely
acknowledged their dependence upon Great Britain, were chary about coming
under the control of a new centralizing authority at Philadelphia. The new
States were sovereign and some of them went so far as to send envoys of
their own to negotiate with foreign powers in Europe. When it was urged
that Congress should have the power to raise taxes in the States, there
were patriots who asked sternly what the war was about if it was not to
vindicate the principle that the people of a State alone should have power
of taxation over themselves. Of New England all the other States were
jealous and they particularly disliked that proud and censorious city
which already was accused of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</SPAN></span>
believing that God had made Boston for
Himself and all the rest of the world for Boston. The religion of New
England did not suit the Anglicans of Virginia or the Roman Catholics of
Maryland, and there was resentful suspicion of Puritan intolerance. John
Adams said quite openly that there were no religious teachers in
Philadelphia to compare with those of Boston and naturally other colonies
drew away from the severe and rather acrid righteousness of which he was a
type.</p>
<hr class="break" />
<p>Inefficiency meanwhile brought terrible suffering at Valley Forge, and the
horrors of that winter remain still vivid in the memory of the American
people. The army marched to Valley Forge on December 17, 1777, and in
midwinter everything from houses to entrenchments had still to be created.
At once there was busy activity in cutting down trees for the log huts.
They were built nearly square, sixteen feet by fourteen, in rows, with the
door opening on improvised streets. Since boards were scarce, and it was
difficult to make roofs rainproof, Washington tried to stimulate ingenuity
by offering a reward of one hundred dollars for an improved method of
roofing. The fireplaces of wood were protected with thick clay.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</SPAN></span>
Firewood
was abundant, but, with little food for oxen and horses, men had to turn
themselves into draught animals to bring in supplies.</p>
<p>Sometimes the army was for a week without meat. Many horses died for lack
of forage or of proper care, a waste which especially disturbed
Washington, a lover of horses. When quantities of clothing were ready for
use, they were not delivered at Valley Forge owing to lack of transport.
Washington expressed his contempt for officers who resigned their
commissions in face of these distresses. No one, he said, ever heard him
say a word about resignation. There were many desertions but, on the
whole, he marveled at the patience of his men and that they did not
mutiny. With a certain grim humor they chanted phrases about <q>no pay, no
clothes, no provisions, no rum,</q> and sang an ode glorifying war and
Washington. Hundreds of them marched barefoot, their blood staining the
snow or the frozen ground while, at the same time, stores of shoes and
clothing were lying unused somewhere on the roads to the camp.</p>
<p>Sickness raged in the army. Few men at Valley Forge, wrote Washington, had
more than a sheet, many only part of a sheet, and some nothing at all.
Hospital stores were lacking. For want of straw
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">167</SPAN></span>
and blankets the sick lay
perishing on the frozen ground. When Washington had been at Valley Forge
for less than a week, he had to report nearly three thousand men unfit for
duty because of their nakedness in the bitter winter. Then, as always,
what we now call the <q>profiteer</q> was holding up supplies for higher
prices. To the British at Philadelphia, because they paid in gold, things
were furnished which were denied to Washington at Valley Forge, and he
announced that he would hang any one who took provisions to Philadelphia.
To keep his men alive Washington had sometimes to take food by force from
the inhabitants and then there was an outcry that this was robbery. With
many sick, his horses so disabled that he could not move his artillery,
and his defenses very slight, he could have made only a weak fight had
Howe attacked him. Yet the legislature of Pennsylvania told him that,
instead of lying quiet in winter quarters, he ought to be carrying on an
active campaign. In most wars irresponsible men sitting by comfortable
firesides are sure they knew best how the thing should be done.</p>
<p>The bleak hillside at Valley Forge was something more than a prison.
Washington's staff was known as his family and his relations with them
were cordial
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">168</SPAN></span>
and even affectionate. The young officers faced their
hardships cheerily and gave meager dinners to which no one might go if he
was so well off as to have trousers without holes. They talked and sang
and jested about their privations. By this time many of the bad officers,
of whom Washington complained earlier, had been weeded out and he was
served by a body of devoted men. There was much good comradeship.
Partnership in suffering tends to draw men together. In the company which
gathered about Washington, two men, mere youths at the time, have a
world-wide fame. The young Alexander Hamilton, barely twenty-one years of
age, and widely known already for his political writings, had the rank of
lieutenant colonel gained for his services in the fighting about New York.
He was now Washington's confidential secretary, a position in which he
soon grew restless. His ambition was to be one of the great military
leaders of the Revolution. Before the end of the war he had gone back to
fighting and he distinguished himself in the last battle of the war at
Yorktown. The other youthful figure was the Marquis de La Fayette. It is
not without significance that a noble square bears his name in the capital
named after Washington. The two men loved each other.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">169</SPAN></span>
The young French
aristocrat, with both a great name and great possessions, was fired in
1776, when only nineteen, with zeal for the American cause. <q>With the
welfare of America,</q> he wrote to his wife, <q>is closely linked the
welfare of mankind.</q> Idealists in France believed that America was
leading in the remaking of the world. When it was known that La Fayette
intended to go to fight in America, the King of France forbade it, since
France had as yet no quarrel with England. The youth, however, chartered
a ship, landed in South Carolina, hurried to Philadelphia, and was a
major general in the American army when he was twenty years of age.</p>
<p>La Fayette rendered no serious military service to the American cause. He
arrived in time to fight in the battle of the Brandywine. Washington
praised him for his bravery and military ardor and wrote to Congress that
he was sensible, discreet, and able to speak English freely. It was with
an eye to the influence in France of the name of the young noble that
Congress advanced him so rapidly. La Fayette was sincere and generous in
spirit. He had, however, little military capacity. Later when he might
have directed the course of the French Revolution he was found wanting in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</SPAN></span>
force of character. The great Mirabeau tried to work with him for the good
of France, but was repelled by La Fayette's jealous vanity, a vanity so
greedy of praise that Jefferson called it a <q>canine appetite for
popularity and fame.</q> La Fayette once said that he had never had a
thought with which he could reproach himself, and he boasted that he has
mastered three kings—the King of England in the American Revolution,
the King of France, and King Mob of Paris during the upheaval in France.
He was useful as a diplomatist rather than as a soldier. Later, in an hour
of deep need, Washington sent La Fayette to France to ask for aid. He was
influential at the French court and came back with abundant promises,
which were in part fulfilled.</p>
<p>Washington himself and Oliver Cromwell are perhaps the only two civilian
generals in history who stand in the first rank as military leaders. It is
doubtful indeed whether it is not rather character than military skill
which gives Washington his place. Only one other general of the Revolution
attained to first rank even in secondary fame. Nathanael Greene was of
Quaker stock from Rhode Island. He was a natural student and when trouble
with the mother country was impending
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</SPAN></span>
in 1774 he spent the leisure which
he could spare from his forges in the study of military history and in
organizing the local militia. Because of his zeal for military service he
was expelled from the Society of Friends. In 1775 when war broke out he
was promptly on hand with a contingent from Rhode Island. In little more
than a year and after a very slender military experience he was in command
of the army on Long Island. On the Hudson defeat not victory was his lot.
He had, however, as much stern resolve as Washington. He shared
Washington's success in the attack on Trenton, and his defeats at the
Brandywine and at Germantown. Now he was at Valley Forge, and when, on
March 2, 1778, he became quartermaster general, the outlook for food and
supplies steadily improved. Later, in the South, he rendered brilliant
service which made possible the final American victory at Yorktown.</p>
<p>Henry Knox, a Boston bookseller, had, like Greene, only slight training
for military command. It shows the dearth of officers to fight the highly
disciplined British army that Knox, at the age of twenty-five, and fresh
from commercial life, was placed in charge of the meager artillery which
Washington had before Boston. It was Knox, who,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</SPAN></span>
with heart-breaking labor,
took to the American front the guns captured at Ticonderoga. Throughout
the war he did excellent service with the artillery, and Washington placed
a high value upon his services. He valued too those of Daniel Morgan, an
old fighter in the Indian wars, who left his farm in Virginia when war
broke out, and marched his company of riflemen to join the army before
Boston. He served with Arnold at the siege of Quebec, and was there taken
prisoner. He was exchanged and had his due revenge when he took part in
the capture of Burgoyne's army. He was now at Valley Forge. Later he had a
command under Greene in the South and there, as we shall see, he won the
great success of the Battle of Cowpens in January, 1781.</p>
<p>It was the peculiar misfortune of Washington that the three men, Arnold,
Lee, and Gates, who ought to have rendered him the greatest service,
proved unfaithful. Benedict Arnold, next to Washington himself, was
probably the most brilliant and resourceful soldier of the Revolution.
Washington so trusted him that, when the dark days at Valley Forge were
over, he placed him in command of the recaptured federal capital. Today
the name of Arnold would rank high in the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</SPAN></span>
memory of a grateful country had
he not fallen into the bottomless pit of treason. The same is in some
measure true of Charles Lee, who was freed by the British in an exchange
of prisoners and joined Washington at Valley Forge late in the spring of
1778. Lee was so clever with his pen as to be one of the reputed authors
of the Letters of Junius. He had served as a British officer in the
conquest of Canada, and later as major general in the army of Poland. He
had a jealous and venomous temper and could never conceal the contempt of
the professional soldier for civilian generals. He, too, fell into the
abyss of treason. Horatio Gates, also a regular soldier, had served under
Braddock and was thus at that early period a comrade of Washington.
Intriguer he was, but not a traitor. It was incompetence and perhaps
cowardice which brought his final ruin.</p>
<p>Europe had thousands of unemployed officers some of whom had had
experience in the Seven Years' War and many turned eagerly to America for
employment. There were some good soldiers among these fighting
adventurers. Kosciuszko, later famous as a Polish patriot, rose by his
merits to the rank of brigadier general in the American army; De Kalb, son
of a German peasant, though
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</SPAN></span>
not a baron, as he called himself, proved
worthy of the rank of a major general. There was, however, a flood of
volunteers of another type. French officers fleeing from their creditors
and sometimes under false names and titles, made their way to America as
best they could and came to Washington with pretentious claims. Germans
and Poles there were, too, and also exiles from that unhappy island which
remains still the most vexing problem of British politics. Some of them
wrote their own testimonials; some, too, were spies. On the first day,
Washington wrote, they talked only of serving freely a noble cause, but
within a week were demanding promotion and advance of money. Sometimes
they took a high tone with members of Congress who had not courage to snub
what Washington called impudence and vain boasting. <q>I am haunted and
teased to death by the importunity of some and dissatisfaction of others</q>
wrote Washington of these people.</p>
<p>One foreign officer rendered incalculable service to the American cause.
It was not only on the British side that Germans served in the American
Revolution. The Baron von Steuben was, like La Fayette, a man of rank in
his own country, and his personal service to the Revolution was much
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</SPAN></span>
greater than that of La Fayette. Steuben had served on the staff of
Frederick the Great and was distinguished for his wit and his polished
manners. There was in him nothing of the needy adventurer. The sale of
Hessian and other troops to the British by greedy German princes was met
in some circles in Germany by a keen desire to aid the cause of the young
republic. Steuben, who held a lucrative post, became convinced, while on a
visit to Paris, that he could render service in training the Americans.
With quick sympathy and showing no reserve in his generous spirit he
abandoned his country, as it proved forever, took ship for the United
States, and arrived in November, 1777. Washington welcomed him at Valley
Forge in the following March. He was made Inspector General and at once
took in hand the organization of the army. He prepared <q>Regulations for
the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United States</q> later, in
1779, issued as a book. Under this German influence British methods were
discarded. The word of command became short and sharp. The British
practice of leaving recruits to be trained by sergeants, often ignorant,
coarse, and brutal, was discarded, and officers themselves did this work.
The last letter which Washington wrote before he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</SPAN></span>
resigned his command at
the end of the war was to thank Steuben for his invaluable aid. Charles
Lee did not believe that American recruits could be quickly trained so as
to be able to face the disciplined British battalions. Steuben was to
prove that Lee was wrong to Lee's own entire undoing at Monmouth when
fighting began in 1778.</p>
<hr class="break" />
<p>The British army in America furnished sharp contrasts to that of
Washington. If the British jeered at the fighting quality of citizens,
these retorted that the British soldier was a mere slave. There were two
great stains upon the British system, the press-gang and flogging.
Press-gangs might seize men abroad in the streets of a town and, unless
they could prove that they were gentlemen in rank, they could be sent in
the fleet to serve in the remotest corners of the earth. In both navy and
army flogging outraged the dignity of manhood. The liability to this
brutal and degrading punishment kept all but the dregs of the populace
from enlisting in the British army. It helped to fix the deep gulf between
officers and men. Forty years later Napoleon Bonaparte, despot though he
might be, was struck by this separation. He himself went freely among his
men, warmed himself at
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</SPAN></span>
their fire, and talked to them familiarly about
their work, and he thought that the British officer was too aloof in his
demeanor. In the British army serving in America there were many officers
of aristocratic birth and long training in military science. When they
found that American officers were frequently drawn from a class of society
which in England would never aspire to a commission, and were largely
self-taught, not unnaturally they jeered at an army so constituted.
Another fact excited British disdain. The Americans were technically
rebels against their lawful ruler, and rebels in arms have no rights as
belligerents. When the war ended more than a thousand American prisoners
were still held in England on the capital charge of treason. Nothing
stirred Washington's anger more deeply than the remark sometimes made by
British officers that the prisoners they took were receiving undeserved
mercy when they were not hanged.</p>
<p>There was much debate at Valley Forge as to the prospect for the future.
When we look at available numbers during the war we appreciate the view of
a British officer that in spite of Washington's failures and of British
victories the war was serious, <q>an ugly job, a damned affair indeed.</q>
The
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</SPAN></span>
population of the colonies—some 2,500,000—was about one-third
that of the United Kingdom; and for the British the war was remote from
the base of supply. In those days, considering the means of transport,
America was as far from England as at the present day is Australia.
Sometimes the voyage across the sea occupied two and even three months,
and, with the relatively small ships of the time, it required a vast array
of transports to carry an army of twenty or thirty thousand men. In the
spring of 1776 Great Britain had found it impossible to raise at home an
army of even twenty thousand men for service in America, and she was
forced to rely in large part upon mercenary soldiers. This was nothing
new. Her island people did not like service abroad and this unwillingness
was intensified in regard to war in remote America. Moreover Whig leaders
in England discouraged enlistment. They were bitterly hostile to the war
which they regarded as an attack not less on their own liberties than on
those of America. It would be too much to ascribe to the ignorant British
common soldier of the time any deep conviction as to the merits or
demerits of the cause for which he fought. There is no evidence that, once
in the army, he was less
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</SPAN></span>
ready to attack the Americans than any other foe.
Certainly the Americans did not think he was half-hearted.</p>
<p>The British soldier fought indeed with more resolute determination than
did the hired auxiliary at his side. These German troops played a notable
part in the war. The despotic princes of the lesser German states were
accustomed to sell the services of their troops. Despotic Russia, too, was
a likely field for such enterprise. When, however, it was proposed to the
Empress Catherine II that she should furnish twenty thousand men for
service in America she retorted with the sage advice that it was England's
true interest to settle the quarrel in America without war. Germany was
left as the recruiting field. British efforts to enlist Germans as
volunteers in her own army were promptly checked by the German rulers and
it was necessary literally to buy the troops from their princes.
One-fourth of the able-bodied men of Hesse-Cassel were shipped to America.
They received four times the rate of pay at home and their ruler received
in addition some half million dollars a year. The men suffered terribly
and some died of sickness for the homes to which thousands of them never
returned. German generals, such as Knyphausen and Riedesel,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</SPAN></span>
gave the
British sincere and effective service. The Hessians were, however, of
doubtful benefit to the British. It angered the Americans that hired
troops should be used against them, an anger not lessened by the contempt
which the Hessians showed for the colonial officers as plebeians.</p>
<p>The two sides were much alike in their qualities and were skillful in
propaganda. In Britain lurid tales were told of the colonists scalping the
wounded at Lexington and using poisoned bullets at Bunker Hill. In America
every prisoner in British hands was said to be treated brutally and every
man slain in the fighting to have been murdered. The use of foreign troops
was a fruitful theme. The report ran through the colonies that the
Hessians were huge ogre-like monsters, with double rows of teeth round
each jaw, who had come at the call of the British tyrant to slay women and
children. In truth many of the Hessians became good Americans. In spite of
the loyalty of their officers they were readily induced to desert. The wit
of Benjamin Franklin was enlisted to compose telling appeals, translated
into simple German, which promised grants of land to those who should
abandon an unrighteous cause. The Hessian trooper who opened a packet of
tobacco might find in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</SPAN></span>
the wrapper appeals both to his virtue and to his
cupidity. It was easy for him to resist them when the British were winning
victories and he was dreaming of a return to the Fatherland with a
comfortable accumulation of pay, but it was different when reverses
overtook British arms. Then many hundreds slipped away; and today their
blood flows in the veins of thousands of prosperous American farmers.</p>
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