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CHAPTER VIII The Alliance with France and its
Results
Washington badly needed aid from Europe, but there every
important government was monarchical and it was not easy for a young republic,
the child of revolution, to secure an ally. France tingled with joy at American
victories and sorrowed at American reverses, but motives were mingled and
perhaps hatred of England was stronger than love for liberty in America. The
young La Fayette had a pure zeal, but he would not have fought for the liberty
of colonists in Mexico as he did for those in Virginia; and the difference was
that service in Mexico would not hurt the enemy of France so recently
triumphant. He hated England and said so quite openly. The thought of
humiliating and destroying that "insolent nation" was always to him an
inspiration. Vergennes, the French Foreign Minister, though he lacked genius,
was a man of boundless zeal and energy. He was at work at four o'clock in the
morning and he spent his long days in toil for his country. He believed that
England was the tyrant of the seas, "the monster against whom we should be
always prepared," a greedy, perfidious neighbor, the natural enemy of France.
From the first days of the trouble in regard to the Stamp Act
Vergennes had rejoiced that England's own children were turning against her. He
had French military officers in England spying on her defenses. When war broke
out he showed no nice regard for the rules of neutrality and helped the
colonies in every way possible. It was a French writer who led in these
activities. Beaumarchais is known to the world chiefly as the creator of the
character of Figaro, which has become the type of the bold, clever, witty, and
intriguing rascal, but he played a real part in the American Revolution. We
need not inquire too closely into his motives. There was hatred of the English,
that "audacious, unbridled, shameless people," and there was, too, the zeal for
liberal ideas which made Queen Marie Antoinette herself take a pretty interest
in the "dear republicans" overseas who were at the same time fighting the
national enemy. Beaumarchais secured from the government money with which he
purchased supplies to be sent to America. He had a great warehouse in Paris,
and, under the rather fantastic Spanish name of Roderigue Hortalez & Co.,
he sent vast quantities of munitions and clothing to America. Cannon, not from
private firms but from the government arsenals, were sent across the sea. When
Vergennes showed scruples about this violation of neutrality, the answer of
Beaumarchais was that governments were not bound by rules of morality
applicable to private persons. Vergennes learned well the lesson and, while
protesting to the British ambassador in Paris that France was blameless, he
permitted outrageous breaches of the laws of neutrality.
Secret help was one thing, open alliance another. Early in 1776
Silas Deane, a member from Connecticut of the Continental Congress, was named
as envoy to France to secure French aid. The day was to come when Deane should
believe the struggle against Britain hopeless and counsel submission, but now
he showed a furious zeal. He knew hardly a word of French, but this did not
keep him from making his elaborate programme well understood. Himself a trader,
he promised France vast profits from the monopoly of the trade of America when
independence should be secure. He gave other promises not more easy of
fulfillment. To Frenchmen zealous for the ideals of liberty and seeking
military careers in America he promised freely commissions as colonels and even
generals and was the chief cause of that deluge of European officers which
proved to Washington so annoying. It was through Deane's activities that La
Fayette became a volunteer. Through him came too the proposal to send to
America the Comte de Broglie who should be greater than colonel or general--a
generalissimo, a dictator. He was to brush aside Washington, to take command of
the American armies, and by his prestige and skill to secure France as an ally
and win victory in the field. For such services Broglie asked only despotic
power while he served and for life a great pension which would, he declared,
not be one-hundredth part of his real value. That Deane should have considered
a scheme so fantastic reveals the measure of his capacity, and by the end of
1776 Benjamin Franklin was sent to Paris to bring his tried skill to bear upon
the problem of the alliance. With Deane and Franklin as a third member of the
commission was associated Arthur Lee who had vainly sought aid at the courts of
Spain and Prussia. France was, however, coy. The end of 1776 saw the colonial
cause at a very low ebb, with Washington driven from New York and about to be
driven from Philadelphia. Defeat is not a good argument for an alliance. France
was willing to send arms to America and willing to let American privateers use
freely her ports. The ship which carried Franklin to France soon busied herself
as a privateer and reaped for her crew a great harvest of prize money. In a
single week of June, 1777, this ship captured a score of British merchantmen,
of which more than two thousand were taken by Americans during the war. France
allowed the American privateers to come and go as they liked, and gave England
smooth words, but no redress. There is little wonder that England threatened to
hang captured American sailors as pirates.
It was the capture of Burgoyne at Saratoga which brought
decision to France. That was the victory which Vergennes had demanded before he
would take open action. One British army had surrendered. Another was in an
untenable position in Philadelphia. It was known that the British fleet had
declined. With the best of it in America, France was the more likely to win
successes in Europe. The Bourbon king of France could, too, draw into the war
the Bourbon king of Spain, and Spain had good ships. The defects of France and
Spain on the sea were not in ships but in men. The invasion of England was not
improbable and then less than a score of years might give France both avenging
justice for her recent humiliation and safety for her future. Britain should
lose America, she should lose India, she should pay in a hundred ways for her
past triumphs, for the arrogance of Pitt, who had declared that he would so
reduce France that she should never again rise. The future should belong not to
Britain but to France. Thus it was that fervent patriotism argued after the
defeat of Burgoyne. Frederick the Great told his ambassador at Paris to urge
upon France that she had now a chance to strike England which might never again
come. France need not, he said, fear his enmity, for he was as likely to help
England as the devil to help a Christian. Whatever doubts Vergennes may have
entertained about an open alliance with America were now swept away. The treaty
of friendship with America was signed on February 6, 1778. On the 13th of March
the French ambassador in London told the British Government, with studied
insolence of tone, that the United States were by their own declaration
independent. Only a few weeks earlier the British ministry had said that there
was no prospect of any foreign intervention to help the Americans and now in
the most galling manner France told George III the one thing to which he would
not listen, that a great part of his sovereignty was gone. Each country
withdrew its ambassador and war quickly followed.
France had not tried to make a hard bargain with the Americans.
She demanded nothing for herself and agreed not even to ask for the restoration
of Canada. She required only that America should never restore the King's
sovereignty in order to secure peace. Certain sections of opinion in America
were suspicious of France. Was she not the old enemy who had so long harassed
the frontiers of New England and New York? If George III was a despot what of
Louis XVI, who had not even an elected Parliament to restrain him? Washington
himself was distrustful of France and months after the alliance had been
concluded he uttered the warning that hatred of England must not lead to
over-confidence in France. "No nation," he said, "is to be trusted farther than
it is bound by its interests." France, he thought, must desire to recover
Canada, so recently lost. He did not wish to see a great military power on the
northern frontier of the United States. This would be to confirm the jeer of
the Loyalists that the alliance was a case of the wooden horse in Troy; the old
enemy would come back in the guise of a friend and would then prove to be
master and bring the colonies under a servitude compared with which the British
supremacy would seem indeed mild.
The intervention of France brought a cruel embarrassment to the
Whig patriot in England. He could rejoice and mourn with American patriots
because he believed that their cause was his own. It was as much the interest
of Norfolk as of Massachusetts that the new despotism of a king, who ruled
through a corrupt Parliament, should be destroyed. It was, however, another
matter when France took a share in the fight. France fought less for freedom
than for revenge, and the Englishman who, like Coke of Norfolk, could daily
toast Washington as the greatest of men could not link that name with Louis XVI
or with his minister Vergennes. The currents of the past are too swift and
intricate to be measured exactly by the observer who stands on the shore of the
present, but it is arguable that the Whigs might soon have brought about peace
in England had it not been for the intervention of France. No serious person
any longer thought that taxation could be enforced upon America or that the
colonies should be anything but free in regulating their own affairs. George
III himself said that he who declared the taxing of America to be worth what it
cost was "more fit for Bedlam than a seat in the Senate." The one concession
Britain was not yet prepared to make was Independence. But Burke and many other
Whigs were ready now for this, though Chatham still believed it would be the
ruin of the British Empire.

Chatham, however, was all for conciliation, and it is not hard
to imagine a group of wise men chosen from both sides, men British in blood and
outlook, sitting round a table and reaching an agreement to result in a real
independence for America and a real unity with Great Britain. A century and a
quarter later a bitter war with an alien race in South Africa was followed by a
result even more astounding. The surrender of Burgoyne had made the Prime
Minister, Lord North, weary of his position. He had never been in sympathy with
the King's policy and since the bad news had come in December he had pondered
some radical step which should end the war. On February 17, 1778, before the
treaty of friendship between the United States and France had been made public,
North startled the House of Commons by introducing a bill repealing the tax on
tea, renouncing forever the right to tax America, and nullifying those changes
in the constitution of Massachusetts which had so rankled in the minds of its
people. A commission with full powers to negotiate peace would proceed at once
to America and it might suspend at its discretion, and thus really repeal, any
act touching America passed since 1763.
North had taken a sharp turn. The Whig clothes had been stolen
by a Tory Prime Minister and if he wished to stay in office the Whigs had not
the votes to turn him out. His supporters would accept almost anything in order
to dish the Whigs. They swallowed now the bill, and it became law, but at the
same time came, too, the war with France. It united the Tories; it divided the
Whigs. All England was deeply stirred. Nearly every important town offered to
raise volunteer forces at its own expense. The Government soon had fifteen
thousand men recruited at private cost. Help was offered so freely that the
Whig, John Wilkes, actually introduced into Parliament a bill to prohibit gifts
of money to the Crown since this voluntary taxation gave the Crown money
without the consent of Parliament. The British patriot, gentle as he might be
towards America, fumed against France. This was no longer only a domestic
struggle between parties, but a war with an age-long foreign enemy. The
populace resented what they called the insolence and the treachery of France
and the French ambassador was pelted at Canterbury as he drove to the seacoast
on his recall. In a large sense the French alliance was not an unmixed blessing
for America, since it confused the counsels of her best friends in England.
In spite of this it is probably true that from this time the
mass of the English people were against further attempts to coerce America. A
change of ministry was urgently demanded. There was one leader to whom the
nation looked in this grave crisis. The genius of William Pitt, Earl of
Chatham, had won the last war against France and he had promoted the repeal of
the Stamp Act. In America his name was held in reverence so high that New York
and Charleston had erected statues in his honor. When the defeat of Burgoyne so
shook the ministry that North was anxious to retire, Chatham, but for two
obstacles, could probably have formed a ministry. One obstacle was his age; as
the event proved, he was near his end. It was, however, not this which kept him
from office, but the resolve of George III. The King simply said that he would
not have Chatham. In office Chatham would certainly rule and the King intended
himself to rule. If Chatham would come in a subordinate position, well; but
Chatham should not lead. The King declared that as long as even ten men stood
by him he would hold out and he would lose his crown rather than call to office
that clamorous Opposition which had attacked his American policy. "I will never
consent," he said firmly, "to removing the members of the present Cabinet from
my service." He asked North: "Are you resolved at the hour of danger to desert
me?" North remained in office. Chatham soon died and, during four years still,
George III was master of England. Throughout the long history of that nation
there is no crisis in which one man took a heavier and more disastrous
responsibility.
News came to Valley Forge of the alliance with France and there
were great rejoicings. We are told that, to celebrate the occasion, Washington
dined in public. We are not given the bill of fare in that scene of famine; but
by the springtime tension in regard to supplies had been relieved and we may
hope that Valley Forge really feasted in honor of the great event. The same
news brought gloom to the British in Philadelphia, for it had the stern meaning
that the effort and loss involved in the capture of that city were in vain.
Washington held most of the surrounding country so that supplies must come
chiefly by sea. With a French fleet and a French army on the way to America,
the British realized that they must concentrate their defenses. Thus the cheers
at Valley Forge were really the sign that the British must go.
Sir William Howe, having taken Philadelphia, was determined not
to be the one who should give it up. Feeling was bitter in England over the
ghastly failure of Burgoyne, and he had gone home on parole to defend himself
from his seat in the House of Commons. There Howe had a seat and he, too, had
need to be on hand. Lord George Germain had censured him for his course and, to
shield himself; was clearly resolved to make scapegoats of others. So, on May
18, 1778, at Philadelphia there was a farewell to Howe, which took the form of
a Mischianza, something approaching the medieval tournament. Knights broke
lances in honor of fair ladies, there were arches and flowers and fancy
costumes, and high-flown Latin and French, all in praise of the departing Howe.
Obviously the garrison of Philadelphia had much time on its hands and could
count upon, at least, some cheers from a friendly population. It is remembered
still, with moralizings on the turns in human fortune, that Major Andre and
Miss Margaret Shippen were the leaders in that gay scene, the one, in the days
to come, to be hanged by Washington as a spy, because entrapped in the treason
of Benedict Arnold, who became the husband of the other.
On May 24, 1778, Sir Henry Clinton took over from Howe the
command of the British army in America and confronted a difficult problem. If
d'Estaing, the French admiral, should sail straight for the Delaware he might
destroy the fleet of little more than half his strength which lay there, and
might quickly starve Philadelphia into surrender. The British must unite their
forces to meet the peril from France, and New York, as an island, was the best
point for a defense, chiefly naval. A move to New York was therefore urgent. It
was by sea that the British had come to Philadelphia, but it was not easy to go
away by sea. There was not room in the transports for the army and its
encumbrances. Moreover, to embark the whole force, a march of forty miles to
New Castle, on the lower Delaware, would be necessary and the retreating army
was sure to be harassed on its way by Washington. It would besides hardly be
safe to take the army by sea for the French fleet might be strong enough to
capture the flotilla.
There was nothing for it but, at whatever risk, to abandon
Philadelphia and march the army across New Jersey. It would be possible to take
by sea the stores and the three thousand Loyalists from Philadelphia, some of
whom would probably be hanged if they should be taken. Lord Howe, the naval
commander, did his part in a masterly manner. On the 18th of June the British
army marched out of Philadelphia and before the day was over it was across the
Delaware on the New Jersey side. That same day Washington's army, free from its
long exile at Valley Forge, occupied the capital. Clinton set out on his long
march by land and Howe worked his laden ships down the difficult river to its
mouth and, after delay by winds, put to sea on the 28th of June. By a stroke of
good fortune he sailed the two hundred miles to New York in two days and missed
the great fleet of d'Estaing, carrying an army of four thousand men. On the 8th
of July d'Estaing anchored at the mouth of the Delaware. Had not his passage
been unusually delayed and Howe's unusually quick, as Washington noted, the
British fleet and the transports in the Delaware would probably have been taken
and Clinton and his army would have shared the fate of Burgoyne.
As it was, though Howe's fleet was clear away, Clinton's army
had a bad time in the march across New Jersey. Its baggage train was no less
than twelve miles long and, winding along roads leading sometimes through
forests, was peculiarly vulnerable to flank attack. In this type of warfare
Washington excelled. He had fought over this country and he knew it well. The
tragedy of Valley Forge was past. His army was now well trained and well
supplied. He had about the same number of men as the British--perhaps sixteen
thousand--and he was not encumbered by a long baggage train. Thus it happened
that Washington was across the Delaware almost as soon as the British. He
marched parallel with them on a line some five miles to the north and was able
to forge towards the head of their column. He could attack their flank almost
when he liked. Clinton marched with great difficulty. He found bridges down.
Not only was Washington behind him and on his flank but General Gates was in
front marching from the north to attack him when he should try to cross the
Raritan River. The long British column turned southeastward toward Sandy Hook,
so as to lessen the menace from Gates. Between the half of the army in the van
and the other half in the rear was the baggage train.
The crisis came on Sunday the 28th of June, a day of sweltering
heat. By this time General Charles Lee, Washington's second in command, was in
a good position to attack the British rear guard from the north, while
Washington, marching three miles behind Lee, was to come up in the hope of
overwhelming it from the rear. Clinton's position was difficult but he was
saved by Lee's ineptitude. He had positive instructions to attack with his five
thousand men and hold the British engaged until Washington should come up in
overwhelming force. The young La Fayette was with Lee. He knew what Washington
had ordered, but Lee said to him: "You don't know the British soldiers; we
cannot stand against them." Lee's conduct looks like deliberate treachery.
Instead of attacking the British he allowed them to attack him. La Fayette
managed to send a message to Washington in the rear; Washington dashed to the
front and, as he came up, met soldiers flying from before the British. He rode
straight to Lee, called him in flaming anger a "damned poltroon," and himself
at once took command. There was a sharp fight near Monmouth Court House. The
British were driven back and only the coming of night ended the struggle.
Washington was preparing to renew it in the morning, but Clinton had marched
away in the darkness. He reached the coast on the 30th of June, having lost on
the way fifty-nine men from sunstroke, over three hundred in battle, and a
great many more by desertion. The deserters were chiefly Germans, enticed by
skillful offers of land. Washington called for a reckoning from Lee. He was
placed under arrest, tried by court-martial, found guilty, and suspended from
rank for twelve months. Ultimately he was dismissed from the American army,
less it appears for his conduct at Monmouth than for his impudent demeanor
toward Congress afterwards.
These events on land were quickly followed by stirring events
on the sea. The delays of the British Admiralty of this time seem almost
incredible. Two hundred ships waited at Spithead for three months for convoy to
the West Indies, while all the time the people of the West Indies, cut off from
their usual sources of supply in America, were in distress for food. Seven
weeks passed after d'Estaing had sailed for America, before the Admiralty knew
that he was really gone and sent Admiral Byron, with fourteen ships, to the aid
of Lord Howe. When d'Estaing was already before New York Byron was still
battling with storms in mid-Atlantic, storms so severe that his fleet was
entirely dispersed and his flagship was alone when it reached Long Island on
the 18th of August.
Meanwhile the French had a great chance. On the 11th of July
their fleet, much stronger than the British, arrived from the Delaware, and
anchored off Sandy Hook. Admiral Howe knew his danger. He asked for volunteers
from the merchant ships and the sailors offered themselves almost to a man. If
d'Estaing could beat Howe's inferior fleet, the transports at New York would be
at his mercy and the British army, with no other source of supply, must
surrender. Washington was near, to give help on land. The end of the war seemed
not far away. But it did not come. The French admirals were often taken from an
army command, and d'Estaing was not a sailor but a soldier. He feared the skill
of Howe, a really great sailor, whose seven available ships were drawn up in
line at Sandy Hook so that their guns bore on ships coming in across the bar.
D'Estaing hovered outside. Pilots from New York told him that at high tide
there were only twenty-two feet of water on the bar and this was not enough for
his great ships, one of which carried ninety-one guns. On the 22d of July there
was the highest of tides with, in reality, thirty feet of water on the bar, and
a wind from the northeast which would have brought d'Estaing's ships easily
through the channel into the harbor. The British expected the hottest naval
fight in their history. At three in the afternoon d'Estaing moved but it was to
sail away out of sight.
Opportunity, though once spurned, seemed yet to knock again.
The one other point held by the British was Newport, Rhode Island. Here General
Pigot had five thousand men and only perilous communications by sea with New
York. Washington, keenly desirous to capture this army, sent General Greene to
aid General Sullivan in command at Providence, and d'Estaing arrived off
Newport to give aid. Greene had fifteen hundred fine soldiers, Sullivan had
nine thousand New England militia, and d'Estaing four thousand French regulars.
A force of fourteen thousand five hundred men threatened five thousand British.
But on the 9th of August Howe suddenly appeared near Newport with his smaller
fleet. D'Estaing put to sea to fight him, and a great naval battle was
imminent, when a terrific storm blew up and separated and almost shattered both
fleets. D'Estaing then, in spite of American protests, insisted on taking the
French ships to Boston to refit and with them the French soldiers. Sullivan
publicly denounced the French admiral as having basely deserted him and his own
disgusted yeomanry left in hundreds for their farms to gather in the harvest.
In September, with d'Estaing safely away, Clinton sailed into Newport with five
thousand men. Washington's campaign against Rhode Island had failed completely.
The summer of 1778 thus turned out badly for Washington. Help
from France which had aroused such joyous hopes in America had achieved little
and the allies were hurling reproaches at each other. French and American
soldiers had riotous fights in Boston and a French officer was killed. The
British, meanwhile, were landing at small ports on the coast, which had been
the haunts of privateers, and were not only burning shipping and stores but
were devastating the country with Loyalist regiments recruited in America. The
French told the Americans that they were expecting too much from the alliance,
and the cautious Washington expressed fear that help from outside would relax
effort at home. Both were right. By the autumn the British had been reinforced
and the French fleet had gone to the West Indies. Truly the mountain in labor
of the French alliance seemed to have brought forth only a ridiculous mouse.
None the less was it to prove, in the end, the decisive factor in the struggle.
The alliance with France altered the whole character of the
war, which ceased now to be merely a war in North America. France soon gained
an ally in Europe. Bourbon Spain had no thought of helping the colonies in
rebellion against their king, and she viewed their ambitions to extend westward
with jealous concern, since she desired for herself both sides of the
Mississippi. Spain, however, had a grievance against Britain, for Britain would
not yield Gibraltar, that rocky fragment of Spain commanding the entrance to
the Mediterranean which Britain had wrested from her as she had wrested also
Minorca and Florida. So, in April, 1779, Spain joined France in war on Great
Britain. France agreed not only to furnish an army for the invasion of England
but never to make peace until Britain had handed back Gibraltar. The allies
planned to seize and hold the Isle of Wight. England has often been threatened
and yet has been so long free from the tramp of hostile armies that we are
tempted to dismiss lightly such dangers. But in the summer of 1779 the danger
was real. Of warships carrying fifty guns or more France and Spain together had
one hundred and twenty-one, while Britain had seventy. The British Channel
fleet for the defense of home coasts numbered forty ships of the line while
France and Spain together had sixty-six. Nor had Britain resources in any other
quarter upon which she could readily draw. In the West Indies she had
twenty-one ships of the line while France had twenty-five. The British could
not find comfort in any supposed superiority in the structure of their ships.
Then and later, as Nelson admitted when he was fighting Spain, the Spanish
ships were better built than the British.
Lurking in the background to haunt British thought was the
growing American navy. John Paul was a Scots sailor, who had been a slave
trader and subsequently master of a West India merchantman, and on going to
America had assumed the name of Jones. He was a man of boundless ambition,
vanity, and vigor, and when he commanded American privateers he became a terror
to the maritime people from whom he sprang. In the summer of 1779 when Jones,
with a squadron of four ships, was haunting the British coasts, every harbor
was nervous. At Plymouth a boom blocked the entrance, but other places had not
even this defense. Sir Walter Scott has described how, on September 17, 1779, a
squadron, under John Paul Jones, came within gunshot of Leith, the port of
Edinburgh. The whole surrounding country was alarmed, since for two days the
squadron had been in sight beating up the Firth of Forth. A sudden squall,
which drove Jones back, probably saved Edinburgh from being plundered. A few
days later Jones was burning ships in the Humber and, on the 23d of September,
he met off Flamborough Head and, after a desperate fight, captured two British
armed ships: the Serapis, a 40-gun vessel newly commissioned, and the Countess
of Scarborough, carrying 20 guns, both of which were convoying a fleet. The
fame of his exploit rang through Europe. Jones was a regularly commissioned
officer in the navy of the United States, but neutral powers, such as Holland,
had not yet recognized the republic and to them there was no American navy. The
British regarded him as a traitor and pirate and might possibly have hanged him
had he fallen into their hands.
Terrible days indeed were these for distracted England. In
India, France, baulked twenty years earlier, was working for her entire
overthrow, and in North Africa, Spain was using the Moors to the same end. As
time passed the storm grew more violent. Before the year 1780 ended Holland had
joined England's enemies. Moreover, the northern states of Europe, angry at
British interference on the sea with their trade, and especially at her seizure
of ships trying to enter blockaded ports, took strong measures. On March 8,
1780, Russia issued a proclamation declaring that neutral ships must be allowed
to come and go on the sea as they liked. They might be searched by a nation at
war for arms and ammunition but for nothing else. It would moreover be illegal
to declare a blockade of a port and punish neutrals for violating it, unless
their ships were actually caught in an attempt to enter the port. Denmark and
Sweden joined Russia in what was known as the Armed Neutrality and promised
that they would retaliate upon any nation which did not respect the conditions
laid down.
In domestic affairs Great Britain was divided. The Whigs and
Tories were carrying on a warfare shameless beyond even the bitter partisan
strife of later days. In Parliament the Whigs cheered at military defeats which
might serve to discredit the Tory Government. The navy was torn by faction.
When, in 1778, the Whig Admiral Keppel fought an indecisive naval battle off
Ushant and was afterwards accused by one of his officers, Sir Hugh Palliser, of
not pressing the enemy hard enough, party passion was invoked. The Whigs were
for Keppel, the Tories for Palliser, and the London mob was Whig. When Keppel
was acquitted there were riotous demonstrations; the house of Palliser was
wrecked, and he himself barely escaped with his life. Whig naval officers
declared that they had no chance of fair treatment at the hands of a Tory
Admiralty, and Lord Howe, among others, now refused to serve. For a time
British supremacy on the sea disappeared and it was only regained in April,
1782, when the Tory Admiral Rodney won a great victory in the West Indies
against the French.
A spirit of violence was abroad in England. The disabilities of
the Roman Catholics were a gross scandal. They might not vote or hold public
office. Yet when, in 1780, Parliament passed a bill removing some of their
burdens dreadful riots broke out in London. A fanatic, Lord George Gordon, led
a mob to Westminster and, as Dr. Johnson expressed it, "insulted" both Houses
of Parliament. The cowed ministry did nothing to check the disturbance. The mob
burned Newgate jail, released the prisoners from this and other prisons, and
made a deliberate attempt to destroy London by fire. Order was restored under
the personal direction of the King, who, with all his faults, was no coward. At
the same time the Irish Parliament, under Protestant lead, was making a
Declaration of Independence which, in 1782, England was obliged to admit by
formal act of Parliament. For the time being, though the two monarchies had the
same king, Ireland, in name at least, was free of England.
Washington's enemy thus had embarrassments enough. Yet these
very years, 1779 and 1780, were the years in which he came nearest to despair.
The strain of a great movement is not in the early days of enthusiasm, but in
the slow years when idealism is tempered by the strife of opinion and
self-interest which brings delay and disillusion. As the war went on recruiting
became steadily more difficult. The alliance with France actually worked to
discourage it since it was felt that the cause was safe in the hands of this
powerful ally. Whatever Great Britain's difficulties about finance they were
light compared with Washington's. In time the "continental dollar" was worth
only two cents. Yet soldiers long had to take this money at its face value for
their pay, with the result that the pay for three months would scarcely buy a
pair of boots. There is little wonder that more than once Washington had to
face formidable mutiny among his troops. The only ones on whom he could rely
were the regulars enlisted by Congress and carefully trained. The worth of the
militia, he said, "depends entirely on the prospects of the day; if favorable,
they throng to you; if not, they will not move." They played a chief part in
the prosperous campaign of 1777, when Burgoyne was beaten. In the next year,
before Newport, they wholly failed General Sullivan and deserted shamelessly to
their homes.
By 1779 the fighting had shifted to the South. Washington
personally remained in the North to guard the Hudson and to watch the British
in New York. He sent La Fayette to France in January, 1779, there to urge not
merely naval but military aid on a great scale. La Fayette came back after an
absence of a little over a year and in the end France promised eight thousand
men who should be under Washington's control as completely as if they were
American soldiers. The older nation accepted the principle that the officers in
the younger nation which she was helping should rank in their grade before her
own. It was a magnanimity reciprocated nearly a century and a half later when a
great American army in Europe was placed under the supreme command of a Marshal
of France.
BIBLIOGRAPHY

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