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CHAPTER XI Yorktown
The critical stroke of the war was near. In the South, after
General Greene superseded Gates in the command, the tide of war began to turn.
Cornwallis now had to fight a better general than Gates. Greene arrived at
Charlotte, North Carolina, in December. He found an army badly equipped,
wretchedly clothed, and confronted by a greatly superior force. He had,
however, some excellent officers, and he did not scorn, as Gates, with the
stiff military traditions of a regular soldier, had scorned, the aid of
guerrilla leaders like Marion and Sumter. Serving with Greene was General
Daniel Morgan, the enterprising and resourceful Virginia rifleman, who had
fought valorously at Quebec, at Saratoga, and later in Virginia. Steuben was
busy in Virginia holding the British in check and keeping open the line of
communication with the North. The mobility and diversity of the American forces
puzzled Cornwallis. When he marched from Camden into North Carolina he hoped to
draw Greene into a battle and to crush him as he had crushed Gates. He sent
Tarleton with a smaller force to strike a deadly blow at Morgan who was
threatening the British garrisons at the points in the interior farther south.
There was no more capable leader than Tarleton; he had won many victories; but
now came his day of defeat. On January 17, 1781, he met Morgan at the Cowpens,
about thirty miles west from King's Mountain. Morgan, not quite sure of the
discipline of his men, stood with his back to a broad river so that retreat was
impossible. Tarleton had marched nearly all night over bad roads; but,
confident in the superiority of his weary and hungry veterans, he advanced to
the attack at daybreak. The result was a complete disaster. Tarleton himself
barely got away with two hundred and seventy men and left behind nearly nine
hundred casualties and prisoners.
Cornwallis had lost one-third of his effective army. There was
nothing for him to do but to take his loss and still to press on northward in
the hope that the more southerly inland posts could take care of themselves. In
the early spring of 1781, when heavy rains were making the roads difficult and
the rivers almost impassable, Greene was luring Cornwallis northward and
Cornwallis was chasing Greene. At Hillsborough, in the northwest corner of
North Carolina, Cornwallis issued a proclamation saying that the colony was
once more under the authority of the King and inviting the Loyalists, bullied
and oppressed during nearly six years, to come out openly on the royal side. On
the 15th of March Greene took a stand and offered battle at Guilford Court
House. In the early afternoon, after a march of twelve miles without food,
Cornwallis, with less than two thousand men, attacked Greene's force of about
four thousand. By evening the British held the field and had captured Greene's
guns. But they had lost heavily and they were two hundred miles from their
base. Their friends were timid, and in fact few, and their numerous enemies
were filled with passionate resolution.
Cornwallis now wrote to urge Clinton to come to his aid.
Abandon New York, he said; bring the whole British force into Virginia and end
the war by one smashing stroke; that would be better than sticking to salt pork
in New York and sending only enough men to Virginia to steal tobacco.
Cornwallis could not remain where he was, far from the sea. Go back to Camden
he would not after a victory, and thus seem to admit a defeat. So he decided to
risk all and go forward. By hard marching he led his army down the Cape Fear
River to Wilmington on the sea, and there he arrived on the 9th of April.
Greene, however, simply would not do what Cornwallis wished--stay in the north
to be beaten by a second smashing blow. He did what Cornwallis would not do; he
marched back into the South and disturbed the British dream that now the
country was held securely. It mattered little that, after this, the British won
minor victories. Lord Rawdon, still holding Camden, defeated Greene on the 25th
of April at Hobkirk's Hill. None the less did Rawdon find his position
untenable and he, too, was forced to march to the sea, which he reached at a
point near Charleston. Augusta, the capital of Georgia, fell to the Americans
on the 5th of June and the operations of the summer went decisively in their
favor. The last battle in the field of the farther South was fought on the 8th
of September at Eutaw Springs, about fifty miles northwest of Charleston. The
British held their position and thus could claim a victory. But it was
fruitless. They had been forced steadily to withdraw. All the boasted fabric of
royal government in the South had come down with a crash and the Tories who had
supported it were having evil days.
While these events were happening farther south, Cornwallis
himself, without waiting for word from Clinton in New York, had adopted his own
policy and marched from Wilmington northward into Virginia. Benedict Arnold was
now in Virginia doing what mischief he could to his former friends. In January
he burned the little town of Richmond, destined in the years to come to be a
great center in another civil war. Some twenty miles south from Richmond lay in
a strong position Petersburg, later also to be drenched with blood shed in
civil strife. Arnold was already at Petersburg when Cornwallis arrived on the
20th of May. He was now in high spirits. He did not yet realize the extent of
the failure farther south. Virginia he believed to be half loyalist at heart.
The negroes would, he thought, turn against their masters when they knew that
the British were strong enough to defend them. Above all he had a finely
disciplined army of five thousand men. Cornwallis was the more confident when
he knew by whom he was opposed. In April Washington had placed La Fayette in
charge of the defense of Virginia, and not only was La Fayette young and
untried in such a command but he had at first only three thousand badly-trained
men to confront the formidable British general. Cornwallis said cheerily that
"the boy" was certainly now his prey and began the task of catching him.
An exciting chase followed. La Fayette did some good work. It
was impossible, with his inferior force, to fight Cornwallis, but he could tire
him out by drawing him into long marches. When Cornwallis advanced to attack La
Fayette at Richmond, La Fayette was not there but had slipped away and was able
to use rivers and mountains for his defense. Cornwallis had more than one
string to his bow. The legislature of Virginia was sitting at Charlottesville,
lying in the interior nearly a hundred miles northwest from Richmond, and
Cornwallis conceived the daring plan of raiding Charlottesville, capturing the
Governor of Virginia, Thomas Jefferson, and, at one stroke, shattering the
civil administration. Tarleton was the man for such an enterprise of hard
riding and bold fighting and he nearly succeeded. Jefferson indeed escaped by
rapid flight but Tarleton took the town, burned the public records, and
captured ammunition and arms. But he really effected little. La Fayette was
still unconquered. His army was growing and the British were finding that
Virginia, like New England, was definitely against them.
At New York, meanwhile, Clinton was in a dilemma. He was
dismayed at the news of the march of Cornwallis to Virginia. Cornwallis had
been so long practically independent in the South that he assumed not only the
right to shape his own policy but adopted a certain tartness in his despatches
to Clinton, his superior. When now, in this tone, he urged Clinton to abandon
New York and join him Clinton's answer on the 26th of June was a definite order
to occupy some port in Virginia easily reached from the sea, to make it secure,
and to send to New York reinforcements. The French army at Newport was
beginning to move towards New York and Clinton had intercepted letters from
Washington to La Fayette revealing a serious design to make an attack with the
aid of the French fleet. Such was the game which fortune was playing with the
British generals. Each desired the other to abandon his own plans and to come
to his aid. They were agreed, however, that some strong point must be held in
Virginia as a naval base, and on the 2d of August Cornwallis established this
base at Yorktown, at the mouth of the York River, a mile wide where it flows
into Chesapeake Bay. His cannon could command the whole width of the river and
keep in safety ships anchored above the town. Yorktown lay about half way
between New York and Charleston and from here a fleet could readily carry a
military force to any needed point on the sea. La Fayette with a growing army
closed in on Yorktown, and Cornwallis, almost before he knew it, was besieged
with no hope of rescue except by a fleet.
Then it was that from the sea, the restless and mysterious sea,
came the final decision. Man seems so much the sport of circumstance that
apparent trifles, remote from his consciousness, appear at times to determine
his fate; it is a commonplace of romance that a pretty face or a stray bullet
has altered the destiny not merely of families but of nations. And now, in the
American Revolution, it was not forts on the Hudson, nor maneuvers in the
South, that were to decide the issue, but the presence of a few more French
warships than the British could muster at a given spot and time. Washington had
urged in January that France should plan to have at least temporary naval
superiority in American waters, in accordance with Rochambeau's principle,
"Nothing without naval supremacy." Washington wished to concentrate against New
York, but the French were of a different mind, believing that the great effort
should be made in Chesapeake Bay. There the British could have no defenses like
those at New York, and the French fleet, which was stationed in the West
Indies, could reach more readily than New York a point in the South.
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Early in May Rochambeau knew that a French fleet was coming to
his aid but not yet did he know where the stroke should be made. It was clear,
however, that there was nothing for the French to do at Newport, and, by the
beginning of June, Rochambeau prepared to set his army in motion. The first
step was to join Washington on the Hudson and at any rate alarm Clinton as to
an imminent attack on New York and hold him to that spot. After nearly a year
of idleness the French soldiers were delighted that now at last there was to be
an active movement. The long march from Newport to New York began. In glowing
June, amid the beauties of nature, now overcome by intense heat and obliged to
march at two o'clock in the morning, now drenched by heavy rains, the French
plodded on, and joined their American comrades along the Hudson early in July.
By the 14th of August Washington knew two things--that a great
French fleet under the Comte de Grasse had sailed for the Chesapeake and that
the British army had reached Yorktown. Soon the two allied armies, both lying
on the east side of the Hudson, moved southward. On the 20th of August the
Americans began to cross the river at King's Ferry, eight miles below
Peekskill. Washington had to leave the greater part of his army before New
York, and his meager force of some two thousand was soon over the river in
spite of torrential rains. By the 24th of August the French, too, had crossed
with some four thousand men and with their heavy equipment. The British made no
move. Clinton was, however, watching these operations nervously. The united
armies marched down the right bank of the Hudson so rapidly that they had to
leave useful effects behind and some grumbled at the privation. Clinton thought
his enemy might still attack New York from the New Jersey shore. He knew that
near Staten Island the Americans were building great bakeries as if to feed an
army besieging New York. Suddenly on the 29th of August the armies turned away
from New York southwestward across New Jersey, and still only the two leaders
knew whither they were bound.
American patriotism has liked to dwell on this last great march
of Washington. To him this was familiar country; it was here that he had
harassed Clinton on the march from Philadelphia to New York three long years
before. The French marched on the right at the rate of about fifteen miles a
day. The country was beautiful and the roads were good. Autumn had come and the
air was bracing. The peaches hung ripe on the trees. The Dutch farmers who,
four years earlier, had been plaintive about the pillage by the Hessians, now
seemed prosperous enough and brought abundance of provisions to the army. They
had just gathered their harvest. The armies passed through Princeton, with its
fine college, numbering as many as fifty students; then on to Trenton, and
across the Delaware to Philadelphia, which the vanguard reached on the 3d of
September.
There were gala scenes in Philadelphia. Twenty thousand people
witnessed a review of the French army. To one of the French officers the city
seemed "immense" with its seventy-two streets all "in a straight line." The
shops appeared to be equal to those of Paris and there were pretty women well
dressed in the French fashion. The Quaker city forgot its old suspicion of the
French and their Catholic religion. Luzerne, the French Minister, gave a great
banquet on the evening of the 5th of September. Eighty guests took their places
at table and as they sat down good news arrived. As yet few knew the
destination of the army but now Luzerne read momentous tidings and the secret
was out: twenty-eight French ships of the line had arrived in Chesapeake Bay;
an army of three thousand men had already disembarked and was in touch with the
army of La Fayette; Washington and Rochambeau were bound for Yorktown to attack
Cornwallis. Great was the joy; in the streets the soldiers and the people
shouted and sang and humorists, mounted on chairs, delivered in advance mock
funeral orations on Cornwallis.
It was planned that the army should march the fifty miles to
Elkton, at the head of Chesapeake Bay, and there take boat to Yorktown, two
hundred miles to the south at the other end of the Bay. But there were not
ships enough. Washington had asked the people of influence in the neighborhood
to help him to gather transports but few of them responded. A deadly apathy in
regard to the war seems to have fallen upon many parts of the country. The Bay
now in control of the French fleet was quite safe for unarmed ships. Half the
Americans and some of the French embarked and the rest continued on foot. There
was need of haste, and the troops marched on to Baltimore and beyond at the
rate of twenty miles a day, over roads often bad and across rivers sometimes
unbridged. At Baltimore some further regiments were taken on board transports
and most of them made the final stages of the journey by water. Some there
were, however, and among them the Vicomte de Noailles, brother-in-law of La
Fayette, who tramped on foot the whole seven hundred and fifty-six miles from
Newport to Yorktown. Washington himself left the army at Elkton and rode on
with Rochambeau, making about sixty miles a day. Mount Vernon lay on the way
and here Washington paused for two or three days. It was the first time he had
seen it since he set out on May 4, 1775, to attend the Continental Congress at
Philadelphia, little dreaming then of himself as chief leader in a long war.
Now he pressed on to join La Fayette. By the end of the month an army of
sixteen thousand men, of whom about one-half were French, was besieging
Cornwallis with seven thousand men in Yorktown.
"By the end of the month an army
of sixteen thousand men, of whom about one-half were French, was besieging
Cornwallis with seven thousand men in Yorktown."
Heart-stirring events had happened while the armies were
marching to the South. The Comte de Grasse, with his great fleet, arrived at
the entrance to the Chesapeake on the 30th of August while the British fleet
under Admiral Graves still lay at New York. Grasse, now the pivot upon which
everything turned, was the French admiral in the West Indies. Taking advantage
of a lull in operations he had slipped away with his whole fleet, to make his
stroke and be back again before his absence had caused great loss. It was a
risky enterprise, but a wise leader takes risks. He intended to be back in the
West Indies before the end of October.
It was not easy for the British to realize that they could be
outmatched on the sea. Rodney had sent word from the West Indies that ten ships
were the limit of Grasse's numbers and that even fourteen British ships would
be adequate to meet him. A British fleet, numbering nineteen ships of the line,
commanded by Admiral Graves, left New York on the 31st of August and five days
later stood off the entrance to Chesapeake Bay. On the mainland across the Bay
lay Yorktown, the one point now held by the British on that great stretch of
coast. When Graves arrived he had an unpleasant surprise. The strength of the
French had been well concealed. There to confront him lay twenty-four enemy
ships. The situation was even worse, for the French fleet from Newport was on
its way to join Grasse.
On the afternoon of the 5th of September, the day of the great
rejoicing in Philadelphia, there was a spectacle of surpassing interest off
Cape Henry, at the mouth of the Bay. The two great fleets joined battle, under
sail, and poured their fire into each other. When night came the British had
about three hundred and fifty casualties and the French about two hundred.
There was no brilliant leadership on either side. One of Graves's largest
ships, the Terrible, was so crippled that he burnt her, and several others were
badly damaged. Admiral Hood, one of Graves's officers, says that if his leader
had turned suddenly and anchored his ships across the mouth of the Bay, the
French Admiral with his fleet outside would probably have sailed away and left
the British fleet in possession. As it was the two fleets lay at sea in sight
of each other for four days. On the morning of the tenth the squadron from
Newport under Barras arrived and increased Grasse's ships to thirty-six.
Against such odds Graves could do nothing. He lingered near the mouth of the
Chesapeake for a few days still and then sailed away to New York to refit. At
the most critical hour of the whole war a British fleet, crippled and
spiritless, was hurrying to a protecting port and the fleurs-de-lis waved
unchallenged on the American coast. The action of Graves spelled the doom of
Cornwallis. The most potent fleet ever gathered in those waters cut him off
from rescue by sea.
Yorktown fronted on the York River with a deep ravine and
swamps at the back of the town. From the land it could on the west side be
approached by a road leading over marshes and easily defended, and on the east
side by solid ground about half a mile wide now protected by redoubts and
entrenchments with an outer and an inner parallel. Could Cornwallis hold out?
At New York, no longer in any danger, there was still a keen desire to rescue
him. By the end of September he received word from Clinton that reinforcements
had arrived from England and that, with a fleet of twenty-six ships of the line
carrying five thousand troops, he hoped to sail on the 5th of October to the
rescue of Yorktown. There was delay. Later Clinton wrote that on the basis of
assurances from Admiral Graves he hoped to get away on the twelfth. A British
officer in New York describes the hopes with which the populace watched these
preparations. The fleet, however, did not sail until the 19th of October. A
speaker in Congress at the time said that the British Admiral should certainly
hang for this delay.
On the 5th of October, for some reason unexplained, Cornwallis
abandoned the outer parallel and withdrew behind the inner one. This left him
in Yorktown a space so narrow that nearly every part of it could be swept by
enemy artillery. By the 11th of October shells were dropping incessantly from a
distance of only three hundred yards, and before this powerful fire the
earthworks crumbled. On the fourteenth the French and Americans carried by
storm two redoubts on the second parallel. The redoubtable Tarleton was in
Yorktown, and he says that day and night there was acute danger to any one
showing himself and that every gun was dismounted as soon as seen. He was for
evacuating the place and marching away, whither he hardly knew. Cornwallis
still held Gloucester, on the opposite side of the York River, and he now
planned to cross to that place with his best troops, leaving behind his sick
and wounded. He would try to reach Philadelphia by the route over which
Washington had just ridden. The feat was not impossible. Washington would have
had a stern chase in following Cornwallis, who might have been able to live off
the country. Clinton could help by attacking Philadelphia, which was almost
defenseless.
As it was, a storm prevented the crossing to Gloucester. The
defenses of Yorktown were weakening and in face of this new discouragement the
British leader made up his mind that the end was near. Tarleton and other
officers condemned Cornwallis sharply for not persisting in the effort to get
away. Cornwallis was a considerate man. "I thought it would have been wanton
and inhuman," he reported later, "to sacrifice the lives of this small body of
gallant soldiers." He had already written to Clinton to say that there would be
great risk in trying to send a fleet and army to rescue him. On the 19th of
October came the climax. Cornwallis surrendered with some hundreds of sailors
and about seven thousand soldiers, of whom two thousand were in hospital.
The terms were similar to
those which the British had granted at Charleston to General Lincoln, who was
now charged with carrying out the surrender. Such is the play of human fortune.
At two o'clock in the afternoon the British marched out between two lines, the
French on the one side, the Americans on the other, the French in full dress
uniform, the Americans in some cases half naked and barefoot. No civilian
sightseers were admitted, and there was a respectful silence in the presence of
this great humiliation to a proud army. The town itself was a dreadful
spectacle with, as a French observer noted, "big holes made by bombs, cannon
balls, splinters, barely covered graves, arms and legs of blacks and whites
scattered here and there, most of the houses riddled with shot and devoid of
window-panes."
On the very day of surrender Clinton sailed from New York with
a rescuing army. Nine days later forty-four British ships were counted off the
entrance to Chesapeake Bay. The next day there were none. The great fleet had
heard of the surrender and had turned back to New York. Washington urged Grasse
to attack New York or Charleston but the French Admiral was anxious to take his
fleet back to meet the British menace farther south and he sailed away with all
his great array. The waters of the Chesapeake, the scene of one of the decisive
events in human history, were deserted by ships of war. Grasse had sailed,
however, to meet a stern fate. He was a fine fighting sailor. His men said of
him that he was on ordinary days six feet in height but on battle days six feet
and six inches. None the less did a few months bring the British a quick
revenge on the sea. On April 12, 1782, Rodney met Grasse in a terrible naval
battle in the West Indies. Some five thousand in both fleets perished. When
night came Grasse was Rodney's prisoner and Britain had recovered her supremacy
on the sea. On returning to France Grasse was tried by court-martial and,
though acquitted, he remained in disgrace until he died in 1788, "weary," as he
said, "of the burden of life." The defeated Cornwallis was not blamed in
England. His character commanded wide respect and he lived to play a great part
in public life. He became Governor General of India, and was Viceroy of Ireland
when its restless union with England was brought about in 1800.
Yorktown settled the issue of the war but did not end it. For
more than a year still hostilities continued and, in parts of the South,
embittered faction led to more bloodshed. In England the news of Yorktown
caused a commotion. When Lord George Germain received the first despatch he
drove with one or two colleagues to the Prime Minister's house in Downing
Street. A friend asked Lord George how Lord North had taken the news. "As he
would have taken a ball in the breast," he replied; "for he opened his arms,
exclaiming wildly, as he paced up and down the apartment during a few minutes,
'Oh God! it is all over,' words which he repeated many times, under emotions of
the deepest agitation and distress." Lord North might well be agitated for the
news meant the collapse of a system. The King was at Kew and word was sent to
him. That Sunday evening Lord George Germain had a small dinner party and the
King's letter in reply was brought to the table. The guests were curious to
know how the King took the news. "The King writes just as he always does," said
Lord George, "except that I observe he has omitted to mark the hour and the
minute of his writing with his usual precision." It needed a heavy shock to
disturb the routine of George III. The King hoped no one would think that the
bad news "makes the smallest alteration in those principles of my conduct which
have directed me in past time." Lesser men might change in the face of evils;
George III was resolved to be changeless and never, never, to yield to the
coercion of facts.
Yield, however, he did. The months which followed were months
of political commotion in England. For a time the ministry held its majority
against the fierce attacks of Burke and Fox. The House of Commons voted that
the war must go on. But the heart had gone out of British effort. Everywhere
the people were growing restless. Even the ministry acknowledged that the war
in America must henceforth be defensive only. In February, 1782, a motion in
the House of Commons for peace was lost by only one vote; and in March, in
spite of the frantic expostulations of the King, Lord North resigned. The King
insisted that at any rate some members of the new ministry must be named by
himself and not, as is the British constitutional custom, by the Prime
Minister. On this, too, he had to yield; and a Whig ministry, under the Marquis
of Rockingham, took office in March, 1782. Rockingham died on the 1st of July,
and it was Lord Shelburne, later the Marquis of Lansdowne, under whom the war
came to an end. The King meanwhile declared that he would return to Hanover
rather than yield the independence of the colonies. Over and over again he had
said that no one should hold office in his government who would not pledge
himself to keep the Empire entire. But even his obstinacy was broken. On
December 5, 1782, he opened Parliament with a speech in which the right of the
colonies to independence was acknowledged. "Did I lower my voice when I came to
that part of my speech?" George asked afterwards. He might well speak in a
subdued tone for he had brought the British Empire to the lowest level in its
history.
In America, meanwhile, the glow of victory had given way to
weariness and lassitude. Rochambeau with his army remained in Virginia.
Washington took his forces back to the lines before New York, sparing what men
he could to help Greene in the South. Again came a long period of watching and
waiting. Washington, knowing the obstinate determination of the British
character, urged Congress to keep up the numbers of the army so as to be
prepared for any emergency. Sir Guy Carleton now commanded the British at New
York and Washington feared that this capable Irishman might soothe the
Americans into a false security. He had to speak sharply, for the people seemed
indifferent to further effort and Congress was slack and impotent. The outlook
for Washington's allies in the war darkened, when in April, 1782, Rodney won
his crushing victory and carried De Grasse a prisoner to England. France's ally
Spain had been besieging Gibraltar for three years, but in September, 1782,
when the great battering- ships specially built for the purpose began a furious
bombardment, which was expected to end the siege, the British defenders
destroyed every ship, and after that Gibraltar was safe. These events naturally
stiffened the backs of the British in negotiating peace. Spain declared that
she would never make peace without the surrender of Gibraltar, and she was
ready to leave the question of American independence undecided or decided
against the colonies if she could only get for herself the terms which she
desired. There was a period when France seemed ready to make peace on the basis
of dividing the Thirteen States, leaving some of them independent while others
should remain under the British King.
Congress was not willing to leave its affairs at Paris in the
capable hands of Franklin alone. In 1780 it sent John Adams to Paris, and John
Jay and Henry Laurens were also members of the American Commission. The austere
Adams disliked and was jealous of Franklin, gay in spite of his years,
seemingly indolent and easygoing, always bland and reluctant to say No to any
request from his friends, but ever astute in the interests of his country.
Adams told Vergennes, the French foreign minister, that the Americans owed
nothing to France, that France had entered the war in her own interests, and
that her alliance with America had greatly strengthened her position in Europe.
France, he added, was really hostile to the colonies, since she was jealously
trying to keep them from becoming rich and powerful. Adams dropped hints that
America might be compelled to make a separate peace with Britain. When it was
proposed that the depreciated continental paper money, largely held in France
for purchases there, should be redeemed at the rate of one good dollar for
every forty in paper money, Adams declared to the horrified French creditors of
the United States that the proposal was fair and just. At the same time
Congress was drawing on Franklin in Paris for money to meet its requirements
and Franklin was expected to persuade the French treasury to furnish him with
what he needed and to an amazing degree succeeded in doing so. The self
interest which Washington believed to be the dominant motive in politics was,
it is clear, actively at work. In the end the American Commissioners negotiated
directly with Great Britain, without asking for the consent of their French
allies. On November 30, 1782, articles of peace between Great Britain and the
United States were signed. They were, however, not to go into effect until
Great Britain and France had agreed upon terms of peace; and it was not until
September 3, 1783, that the definite treaty was signed. So far as the United
States was concerned Spain was left quite properly to shift for herself.
Thus it was that the war ended. Great Britain had urged
especially the case of the Loyalists, the return to them of their property and
compensation for their losses. She could not achieve anything. Franklin indeed
asked that Americans who had been ruined by the destruction of their property
should be compensated by Britain, that Canada should be added to the United
States, and that Britain should acknowledge her fault in distressing the
colonies. In the end the American Commissioners agreed to ask the individual
States to meet the desires of the British negotiators, but both sides
understood that the States would do nothing, that the confiscated property
would never be returned, that most of the exiled Loyalists would remain exiles,
and that Britain herself must compensate them for their losses. This in time
she did on a scale inadequate indeed but expressive of a generous intention.
The United States retained the great Northwest and the Mississippi became the
western frontier, with destiny already whispering that weak and grasping Spain
must soon let go of the farther West stretching to the Pacific Ocean. When
Great Britain signed peace with France and Spain in January, 1783, Gibraltar
was not returned; Spain had to be content with the return of Minorca, and
Florida which she had been forced to yield to Britain in 1763. Each side
restored its conquests in the West Indies. France, the chief mainstay of the
war during its later years, gained from it really nothing beyond the weakening
of her ancient enemy. The magnanimity of France, especially towards her
exacting American ally, is one of the fine things in the great combat. The huge
sum of nearly eight hundred million dollars spent by France in the war was one
of the chief factors in the financial crisis which, six years after the signing
of the peace, brought on the French Revolution and with it the overthrow of the
Bourbon monarchy. Politics bring strange bedfellows and they have rarely
brought stranger ones than the democracy of young America and the political
despotism, linked with idealism, of the ancient monarchy of France.
The British did not evacuate New York until Carleton had
gathered there the Loyalists who claimed his protection. These unhappy people
made their way to the seaports, often after long and distressing journeys
overland. Charleston was the chief rallying place in the South and from there
many sad-hearted people sailed away, never to see again their former homes. The
British had captured New York in September, 1776, and it was more than seven
years later, on November 25, 1783, that the last of the British fleet put to
sea. Britain and America had broken forever their political tie and for many
years to come embittered memories kept up the alienation.
It was fitting that Washington should bid farewell to his army
at New York, the center of his hopes and anxieties during the greater part of
the long struggle. On December 4, 1783, his officers met at a tavern to bid him
farewell. The tears ran down his cheeks as he parted with these brave and tried
men. He shook their hands in silence and, in a fashion still preserved in
France, kissed each of them. Then they watched him as he was rowed away in his
barge to the New Jersey shore. Congress was now sitting at Annapolis in
Maryland and there on December 23, 1783, Washington appeared and gave up
finally his command. We are told that the members sat covered to show the
sovereignty of the Union, a quaint touch of the thought of the time. The little
town made a brave show and "the gallery was filled with a beautiful group of
elegant ladies." With solemn sincerity Washington commended the country to the
protection of Almighty God and the army to the special care of Congress.
Passion had already subsided for the President of Congress in his reply praised
the "magnanimous king and nation" of Great Britain. By the end of the year
Washington was at Mount Vernon, hoping now to be able, as he said simply, to
make and sell a little flour annually and to repair houses fast going to ruin.
He did not foresee the troubled years and the vexing problems which still lay
before him. Nor could he, in his modest estimate of himself, know that for a
distant posterity his character and his words would have compelling authority.
What Washington's countryman, Motley, said of William of Orange is true of
Washington himself: "As long as he lived he was the guiding star of a brave
nation and when he died the little children cried in the streets." But this is
not all. To this day in the domestic and foreign affairs of the United States
the words of Washington, the policies which he favored, have a living and
almost binding force. This attitude of mind is not without its dangers, for
nations require to make new adjustments of policy, and the past is only in part
the master of the present; but it is the tribute of a grateful nation to the
noble character of its chief founder.
BIBLIOGRAPHY

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