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CHAPTER V The Loss of Philadelphia
Though the outlook for Washington was brightened by his success
in New Jersey, it was still depressing enough. The British had taken New York,
they could probably take Philadelphia when they liked, and no place near the
seacoast was safe. According to the votes in Parliament, by the spring of 1777
Britain was to have an army of eighty-nine thousand men, of whom fifty-seven
thousand were intended for colonial garrisons and for the prosecution of the
war in America. These numbers were in fact never reached, but the army of forty
thousand in America was formidable compared with Washington's forces. The
British were not hampered by the practice of enlisting men for only a few
months, which marred so much of Washington's effort. Above all they had money
and adequate resources. In a word they had the things which Washington lacked
during almost the whole of the war.
Washington called his success in the attack at Trenton a lucky
stroke. It was luck which had far-reaching consequences. Howe had the fixed
idea that to follow the capture of New York by that of Philadelphia, the most
populous city in America, and the seat of Congress, would mean great glory for
himself and a crushing blow to the American cause. If to this could be added,
as he intended, the occupation of the whole valley of the Hudson, the year 1777
might well see the end of the war. An acute sense of the value of time is vital
in war. Promptness, the quick surprise of the enemy, was perhaps the chief
military virtue of Washington; dilatoriness was the destructive vice of Howe.
He had so little contempt for his foe that he practised a blighting caution. On
April 12, 1777, Washington, in view of his own depleted force, in a state of
half famine, wrote: "If Howe does not take advantage of our weak state he is
very unfit for his trust." Howe remained inactive and time, thus despised,
worked its due revenge. Later Howe did move, and with skill, but he missed the
rapid combination in action which was the first condition of final success. He
could have captured Philadelphia in May. He took the city, but not until
September, when to hold it had become a liability and not an asset. To go there
at all was perhaps unwise; to go in September was for him a tragic mistake.
"Washington...had always the
faith that a cause founded on justice could not fail."
From New York to Philadelphia the distance by land is about a
hundred miles. The route lay across New Jersey, that "garden of America" which
English travelers spoke of as resembling their own highly cultivated land.
Washington had his headquarters at Morristown, in northern New Jersey. His
resources were at a low ebb. He had always the faith that a cause founded on
justice could not fail; but his letters at this time are full of depressing
anxiety. Each State regarded itself as in danger and made care of its own
interests its chief concern. By this time Congress had lost most of the able
men who had given it dignity and authority. Like Howe it had slight sense of
the value of time and imagined that tomorrow was as good as today. Wellington
once complained that, though in supreme command, he had not authority to
appoint even a corporal. Washington was hampered both by Congress and by the
State Governments in choosing leaders. He had some officers, such as Greene,
Knox, and Benedict Arnold, whom he trusted. Others, like Gates and Conway, were
ceaseless intriguers. To General Sullivan, who fancied himself constantly
slighted and ill-treated, Washington wrote sharply to abolish his poisonous
suspicions.
Howe had offered easy terms to those in New Jersey who should
declare their loyalty and to meet this Washington advised the stern policy of
outlawing every one who would not take the oath of allegiance to the United
States. There was much fluttering of heart on the New Jersey farms, much
anxious trimming in order, in any event, to be safe. Howe's Hessians had
plundered ruthlessly causing deep resentment against the British. Now
Washington found his own people doing the same thing. Militia officers,
themselves, "generally" as he said, "of the lowest class of the people," not
only stole but incited their men to steal. It was easy to plunder under the
plea that the owner of the property was a Tory, whether open or concealed, and
Washington wrote that the waste and theft were "beyond all conception." There
were shirkers claiming exemption from military service on the ground that they
were doing necessary service as civilians. Washington needed maps to plan his
intricate movements and could not get them. Smallpox was devastating his army
and causing losses heavier than those from the enemy. When pay day came there
was usually no money. It is little wonder that in this spring of 1777 he feared
that his army might suddenly dissolve and leave him without a command. In that
case he would not have yielded. Rather, so stern and bitter was he against
England, would he have plunged into the western wilderness to be lost in its
vast spaces.
Howe had his own perplexities. He knew that a great expedition
under Burgoyne was to advance from Canada southward to the Hudson. Was he to
remain with his whole force at New York until the time should come to push up
the river to meet Burgoyne? He had a copy of the instructions given in England
to Burgoyne by Lord George Germain, but he was himself without orders.
Afterwards the reason became known. Lord George Germain had dictated the order
to cooperate with Burgoyne, but had hurried off to the country before it was
ready for his signature and it had been mislaid. Howe seemed free to make his
own plans and he longed to be master of the enemy's capital. In the end he
decided to take Philadelphia--a task easy enough, as the event proved. At
Howe's elbow was the traitorous American general, Charles Lee, whom he had
recently captured, and Lee, as we know, told him that Maryland and Pennsylvania
were at heart loyal to the King and panting to be free from the tyranny of the
demagogue. Once firmly in the capital Howe believed that he would have secure
control of Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. He could achieve this and be
back at New York in time to meet Burgoyne, perhaps at Albany. Then he would
hold the colony of New York from Staten Island to the Canadian frontier. Howe
found that he could send ships up the Hudson, and the American army had to
stand on the banks almost helpless against the mobility of sea power.
Washington's left wing rested on the Hudson and he held both banks but neither
at Peekskill nor, as yet, farther up at West Point, could his forts prevent the
passage of ships. It was a different matter for the British to advance on land.
But the ships went up and down in the spring of 1777. It would be easy enough
to help Burgoyne when the time should come.
It was summer before Howe was ready to move, and by that time
he had received instructions that his first aim must be to cooperate with
Burgoyne. First, however, he was resolved to have Philadelphia. Washington
watched Howe in perplexity. A great fleet and a great army lay at New York. Why
did they not move? Washington knew perfectly well what he himself would have
done in Howe's place. He would have attacked rapidly in April the weak American
army and, after destroying or dispersing it, would have turned to meet Burgoyne
coming southward from Canada. Howe did send a strong force into New Jersey. But
he did not know how weak Washington really was, for that master of craft in war
disseminated with great skill false information as to his own supposed
overwhelming strength. Howe had been bitten once by advancing too far into New
Jersey and was not going to take risks. He tried to entice Washington from the
hills to attack in open country. He marched here and there in New Jersey and
kept Washington alarmed and exhausted by counter marches, and always puzzled as
to what the next move should be. Howe purposely let one of his secret
messengers be taken bearing a despatch saying that the fleet was about to sail
for Boston. All these things took time and the summer was slipping away. In the
end Washington realized that Howe intended to make his move not by land but by
sea. Could it be possible that he was not going to make aid to Burgoyne his
chief purpose? Could it be that he would attack Boston? Washington hoped so for
he knew the reception certain at Boston. Or was his goal Charleston? On the 23d
of July, when the summer was more than half gone, Washington began to see more
clearly. On that day Howe had embarked eighteen thousand men and the fleet put
to sea from Staten Island.
"Howe was doing what able
officers with him, such as Cornwallis, Grey, and the German Knyphausen, appear
to have been unanimous in thinking he should not do."
Howe was doing what able officers with him, such as Cornwallis,
Grey, and the German Knyphausen, appear to have been unanimous in thinking he
should not do. He was misled not only by the desire to strike at the very
center of the rebellion, but also by the assurance of the traitorous Lee that
to take Philadelphia would be the effective signal to all the American
Loyalists, the overwhelming majority of the people, as was believed, that
sedition had failed. A tender parent, the King, was ready to have the colonies
back in their former relation and to give them secure guarantees of future
liberty. Any one who saw the fleet put out from New York Harbor must have been
impressed with the might of Britain. No less than two hundred and twenty-nine
ships set their sails and covered the sea for miles. When they had disappeared
out of sight of the New Jersey shore their goal was still unknown. At sea they
might turn in any direction. Washington's uncertainty was partly relieved on
the 30th of July when the fleet appeared at the entrance of Delaware Bay, with
Philadelphia some hundred miles away across the bay and up the Delaware River.
After hovering about the Cape for a day the fleet again put to sea, and
Washington, who had marched his army so as to be near Philadelphia, thought the
whole movement a feint and knew not where the fleet would next appear. He was
preparing to march to New York to menace General Clinton, who had there seven
thousand men able to help Burgoyne when he heard good news. On the 22d of
August he knew that Howe had really gone southward and was in Chesapeake Bay.
Boston was now certainly safe. On the 25th of August, after three stormy weeks
at sea, Howe arrived at Elkton, at the head of Chesapeake Bay, and there landed
his army. It was Philadelphia fifty miles away that he intended to have.
Washington wrote gleefully "Now let all New England turn out and crush
Burgoyne." Before the end of September he was writing that he was certain of
complete disaster to Burgoyne.
Howe had, in truth, made a ruinous mistake. Had the date been
May instead of August he might still have saved Burgoyne. But at the end of
August, when the net was closing on Burgoyne, Howe was three hundred miles
away. His disregard of time and distance had been magnificent. In July he had
sailed to the mouth of the Delaware, with Philadelphia near, but he had then
sailed away again, and why? Because the passage of his ships up the river to
the city was blocked by obstructions commanded by bristling forts. The naval
officers said truly that the fleet could not get up the river. But Howe might
have landed his army at the head of Delaware Bay. It is a dozen miles across
the narrow peninsula from the head of Delaware Bay to that of Chesapeake Bay.
Since Howe had decided to attack from the head of Chesapeake Bay there was
little to prevent him from landing his army on the Delaware side of the
peninsula and marching across it. By sea it is a voyage of three hundred miles
round a peninsula one hundred and fifty miles long to get from one of these
points to the other, by land only a dozen miles away. Howe made the sea voyage
and spent on it three weeks when a march of a day would have saved this time
and kept his fleet three hundred miles by sea nearer to New York and aid for
Burgoyne.
Howe's mistakes only have their place in the procession to
inevitable disaster. Once in the thick of fighting he showed himself
formidable. When he had landed at Elkton he was fifty miles southwest of
Philadelphia and between him and that place was Washington with his army.
Washington was determined to delay Howe in every possible way. To get to
Philadelphia Howe had to cross the Brandywine River. Time was nothing to him.
He landed at Elkton on the 25th of August. Not until the l0th of September was
he prepared to attack Washington barring his way at Chadd's Ford. Washington
was in a strong position on a front of two miles on the river. At his left,
below Chadd's Ford, the Brandywine is a torrent flowing between high cliffs.
There the British would find no passage. On his right was a forest. Washington
had chosen his position with his usual skill. Entrenchments protected his front
and batteries would sweep down an advancing enemy. He had probably not more
than eleven thousand men in the fight and it is doubtful whether Howe brought
up a greater number so that the armies were not unevenly matched. At daybreak
on the eleventh the British army broke camp at the village of Kenneth Square,
four miles from Chadd's Ford, and, under General Knyphausen, marched straight
to make a frontal attack on Washington's position.
In the battle which followed Washington was beaten by the
superior tactics of his enemy. Not all of the British army was there in the
attack at Chadd's Ford. A column under Cornwallis had filed off by a road to
the left and was making a long and rapid march. The plan was to cross the
Brandywine some ten miles above where Washington was posted and to attack him
in the rear. By two o'clock in the afternoon Cornwallis had forced the two
branches of the upper Brandywine and was marching on Dilworth at the right rear
of the American army. Only then did Washington become aware of his danger. His
first impulse was to advance across Chadd's Ford to try to overwhelm Knyphausen
and thus to get between Howe and the fleet at Elkton. This might, however, have
brought disaster and he soon decided to retire. His movement was ably carried
out. Both sides suffered in the woodland fighting but that night the British
army encamped in Washington's position at Chadd's Ford, and Howe had fought
skillfully and won an important battle.
Washington had retired in good order and was still formidable.
He now realized clearly enough that Philadelphia would fall. Delay, however,
would be nearly as good as victory. He saw what Howe could not see, that
menacing cloud in the north, much bigger than a man's hand, which, with Howe
far away, should break in a final storm terrible for the British cause.
Meanwhile Washington meant to keep Howe occupied. Rain alone prevented another
battle before the British reached the Schuylkill River. On that river
Washington guarded every ford. But, in the end, by skillful maneuvering, Howe
was able to cross and on the 26th of September he occupied Philadelphia without
resistance. The people were ordered to remain quietly in their houses. Officers
were billeted on the wealthier inhabitants. The fall resounded far of what Lord
Adam Gordon called a "great and noble city," "the first Town in America," "one
of the Wonders of the World." Its luxury had been so conspicuous that the
austere John Adams condemned the "sinful feasts" in which he shared. About it
were fine country seats surrounded by parklike grounds, with noble trees,
clipped hedges, and beautiful gardens. The British believed that Pennsylvania
was really on their side. Many of the people were friendly and hundreds now
renewed their oath of allegiance to the King. Washington complained that the
people gave Howe information denied to him. They certainly fed Howe's army
willingly and received good British gold while Washington had only paper money
with which to pay. Over the proud capital floated once more the British flag
and people who did not see very far said that, with both New York and
Philadelphia taken, the rebellion had at last collapsed.
Once in possession of Philadelphia Howe made his camp at
Germantown, a straggling suburban village, about seven miles northwest of the
city. Washington's army lay at the foot of some hills a dozen miles farther
away. Howe had need to be wary, for Washington was the same "old fox" who had
played so cunning a game at Trenton. The efforts of the British army were now
centered on clearing the river Delaware so that supplies might be brought up
rapidly by water instead of being carried fifty miles overland from Chesapeake
Bay. Howe detached some thousands of men for this work and there was sharp
fighting before the troops and the fleet combined had cleared the river. At
Germantown Howe kept about nine thousand men. Though he knew that Washington
was likely to attack him he did not entrench his army as he desired the attack
to be made. It might well have succeeded. Washington with eleven thousand men
aimed at a surprise. On the evening of the 3d of October he set out from his
camp. Four roads led into Germantown and all these the Americans used. At
sunrise on the fourth, just as the attack began, a fog arose to embarrass both
sides. Lying a little north of the village was the solid stone house of Chief
Justice Chew, and it remains famous as the central point in the bitter fight of
that day. What brought final failure to the American attack was an accident of
maneuvering. Sullivan's brigade was in front attacking the British when
Greene's came up for the same purpose. His line overlapped Sullivan's and he
mistook in the fog Sullivan's men for the enemy and fired on them from the
rear. A panic naturally resulted among the men who were attacked also at the
same time by the British on their front. The disorder spread. British
reinforcements arrived, and Washington drew off his army in surprising order
considering the panic. He had six hundred and seventy-three casualties and lost
besides four hundred prisoners. The British loss was five hundred and
thirty-seven casualties and fourteen prisoners. The attack had failed, but news
soon came which made the reverse unimportant. Burgoyne and his whole army had
surrendered at Saratoga.
BIBLIOGRAPHY

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