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THE WAR OF INDEPENDENCE
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THE WAR OF INDEPENDENCE
The events of 1773 and 1774 had culminated in a revolutionary crisis.
And the events of 1775 were to determine weather the differences between
England and the colonies would be compromised or fought out on the
battlefield. In 1774, the colonists gave an ominous hint that it might
be too late for compromise when they organized extra-legal provincial
congresses to act as state governments. In fact most of the delegates to
the First Continental Congress had been appointed by these governments.
In April 1775 General Gage received orders to arrest some of the leaders
of the Massachusetts patriots. Gage decided to go beyond these orders
and to seize the military stores his spies had informed him were being
assembled in the village of Concord. He neither caught the rebel
leaders, nor completely destroyed the military supplies. A troop of 700
British regulars did reach Concord on April 19, 1775 after scattering
some slight resistance at Lexington. And they managed to destroy some of
the riffles and ammunition that the colonists had been unable to hide.
Then, as the British turned back to Boston, they were set upon by angry
Minute Men who peppered them from behind fences and trees. After the
raid, the British counted 273 dead, wounded, and missing; the Americans
had lost 93. Far more important than the skirmish itself were the
propaganda possibilities it dropped into the patriots’ hands. They
concocted chilling reports of British atrocities and rapine, and
convinced many of the colonists that Britain was thirsting for American
blood.
On May 10, 1775, the Second Continental Congress met in Philadelphia. By
June, 65 delegates had arrived, representing all 13 colonies. None of
them could have imagined that they were to continue in session with only
brief recesses for the next 14 years. They were a distinguished group;
sitting among them were the men who were to be the first three
presidents of the United States.
The Congress would support the action Massachusetts had taken, and yet
there was no formal resolve that the Continental Congress creates a
Continental army, whose existence was recognized only in an off-hand
announcement of the Congress.
The Congress was almost unanimous in choosing Washington as
commander-in-chief of the American forces. Like many an American leader
to come, Washington had some qualities to satisfy every group.
The choice of Washington as commander-in-chief was a fortunate one.
True, Washington did not turn out to be a brilliant tactician. His
courage, tenacity, honesty, and dignity were in the long run more vital
to success than was military genius.
Now that a commanding general had been named, the Second Continental
Congress turned to the delicate task of defining just what is policy was
to be toward Britain. On July 6, 1775, it set forth the reasons for
resisting General Gage in a “Declaration of the Causes and Necessity
of Taking up Armsâ€Â.
At the same time, Congress adopted the “Olive Branch Petitionâ€Â,
which had been drawn up by John Dickinson. Here we have a measure of the
wide division of opinion among the delegates. This petition put the
blame for the colonial disorders on the King’s ministers, and begged
the King to keep Parliament from further tyranny until a plan of
reconciliation could be worked out. Apparently the moderates still hoped
that Parliament would repeal the Coercive Acts withdraw the redcoats,
and renounce its claim to legislate for the colonies. But the petition
reached George III in August he refused to receive it, brushing it aside
on the grounds that it had been written by a disloyal and illegal group.
He responded with a proclamation of his own, announcing that the
Americans were to be considered rebels and that all loyal persons should
refrain from offering them any assistance.
While the politicians were still debating in Philadelphia, soldiers had
thrown themselves into action in the field. After the crippled British
troops had made there way from Concord back to Boston, hundreds of
American militiamen came streaming in from the countryside to take up
positions on the heights overlooking Boston. General Gage strengthened
by fresh troops, decided that he would drive the patriots from Breed’s
Hill. And in the engagement of June 17, 1775, now known as the Battle of
Bunker Hill, he did manage to dislodge the Americans, but at a frightful
cost. This was the bloodiest battle of the war. The Americans lost
almost 400 men, and the English more than 1,000. Two weeks later,
General Washington arrived outside Boston to take command of loosely
organized companies he had yet to forge into a fighting army. He had
heavy cannon pulled all the way from recently captured fort Ticonderoga
in New York, and in March, 1776, he had them mounted on Dorchester
Heights overlooking Boston.
In May, 1775, the Vermonter Ethan Allen had made an unauthorized but
successful raid against the British posts at Crown Point and
Ticonderoga. Now Washington decided to take Quebec and try to win
control of all Canada.
In accordance with his plan, two separate forces, one led by Richard
Montgomery and the other by Benedict Arnold, invaded Canada in the fall
and winter of 1775. The able Montgomery took Montreal and went on to
meet Arnold outside Quebec. The combined forces now made a heroic
assault upon Quebec against superior numbers in a blinding snowstorm on
December 31, 1775. Montgomery was killed, Arnold was wounded, and the
attack failed. Arnold retired to Ticonderoga, which he reached in June.
The expedition had been a ghastly fiasco, with about 5,000 men lost.
The average Englishman had no heart for the fight against the colonials,
and there was nothing like a national draft. So the government was
obliged to look around for foreign mercenaries in order to assemble the
troops that were needed in America. The Empress of Russia refused to
supply soldiers, but six petty princes in south and west Germany were
happy to sell the services of their subjects for cash. Almost 30,000
mercenaries ultimately served with the British army in America. Colonial
propagandists, notably Benjamin Franklin, were quick to exploit this
move, and their protests were echoed by America’s sympathizers in
Parliament.
The British resolution to press the war vigorously, coupled with the
announcement that mercenaries had been hired to help fight it, stiffened
the will of those Americans how had already taken a stand for
independence. Even a year after Lexington and Concord most Americans had
not decided that freedom from England was what they really wanted.
Early in 1776 there appeared in Philadelphia a pamphlet from the hand of
Thomas Paine which did much to push public opinion to accept what had in
fact become inevitable. In clear and persuasive prose, Paine listed the
advantages the colonies would enjoy once they had formed themselves into
an independent nation: free trade with the countries of the world,
release from Britain’s European conflicts, freedom from having to
appeal to a court 3,000 miles away.
M
6, the Congress at Philadelphia voted for independence. On July 4, it
adopted the Declaration of Independence, which had been drawn up chiefly
by Thomas Jefferson.
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