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You Never Forget Your First

Page 8

by Alexis Coe


  1775

  George Washington

  Thomas Gage

  1776–1777

  George Washington

  Sir William Howe

  1778–1781

  George Washington

  Sir Henry Clinton

  1781

  George Washington

  Lord Charles Cornwallis

  1782–1783

  George Washington

  Sir Guy Carleton

  WASHINGTON’S Revolutionary Battles AT A GLANCE

  First in war doesn’t mean best in war. After Washington died, hundreds of eulogies praised his brilliance as a battleground tactician and strategist. But from the outset, Washington was well aware of his own limitations and anxious about those of his officers; even the Thigh Men acknowledge that Washington “lost more battles than any victorious general in modern history.”2 And yet, his performance as a military leader has been the subject of hundreds of biographies and thousands of books. This section will instead focus on his feats off the battlefield, with a brief review of his major battles in the table on the next page.

  YEAR

  BATTLE

  OUTCOME

  AMERICAN TROOPS & CASUALTIES

  BRITISH TROOPS & CASUALTIES

  SUMMARY

  April 19, 1775–

  March 17, 1775

  Siege of Boston

  Won

  Troops: 11,000

  Killed or Wounded: 469

  Captured: 30

  Troops: 9,400

  Killed or Wounded: 1,160

  Captured: 35

  “My God, these fellows have done more work in one night than I could make my army do in three months,” British Commander General William Howe declared when daylight revealed that 49 patriot cannons were pointed at his men from Dorchester Heights. Howe, along with 11,000 redcoats and Loyalists, would leave on what would be known as “Evacuation Day.”

  August 27, 1776

  Battle of Long Island

  Lost

  Troops: 10,000

  Killed: 300

  Wounded: 650

  Captured: 1,100

  Troops: 20,000

  Killed: 63

  Wounded: 314

  Captured: 0

  Despite Washington’s attempt to fortify Brooklyn Heights and Lower Manhattan, Howe took advantage of the unguarded Jamaica Pass to the east and attacked Americans from the rear and sides. Washington, humiliated, was supposedly the last man evacuated from Brooklyn.

  September 15, 1776

  Battle of Kip’s Bay

  Lost

  Troops: 450

  Killed or Wounded: 60

  Captured: 367

  Troops: 4,000

  Killed or Wounded: 12

  Captured: 0

  Burn or abandon New York? Washington’s council of war urged him to evacuate, but as British-allied Hessians approached, he was seen hitting panicked militiamen with the flat of his sword to stop them from fleeing. When the enemy got too close, he finally listened to his aides and headed up to Harlem—with the British bugling “Gone Away,” a fox-hunting tune celebrating an animal’s imminent capture.

  September 16, 1776

  Battle of Harlem Heights

  Won

  Troops: 1,800

  Killed: 30

  Wounded: 100

  Captured: 0

  Troops: 5,000

  Killed: 90

  Wounded: 300

  Captured: 0

  During the first open battlefield victory for the Americans, Washington sent for reinforcements and successfully executed a flank attack.

  October 28, 1776

  Battle of White Plains

  Lost

  Troops: 13,000

  Killed: 50

  Wounded: 150

  Captured: 17

  Troops: 5,000

  Killed: 47

  Wounded: 182

  Captured: 4

  A flank attack by the British on Washington’s encampment meant another withdrawal.

  November 16, 1776

  Battle of Fort Washington

  Lost

  Troops: 2,900

  Killed or Wounded: 53

  Captured: 2,818

  Troops: 8,000

  Killed or Wounded: 458

  Captured: 0

  Washington, stationed across the river, insisted on inspecting its defense, and left no more than thirty minutes before British and Hessian forces overwhelmed the fort’s garrison.

  November 20, 1776

  Evacuation of Fort Lee

  Lost

  Troops: 2,000

  Killed or Wounded: 0

  Captured: 160

  Troops: 4,000

  Killed or Wounded: 0

  Captured: 0

  “Fort Lee was always considered as only necessary in connection with [Fort Washington],” the general wrote to John Hancock a day before ordering the fort’s evacuation. That may have been true, but it also meant forfeiting dozens of cannons, hundreds of tents, and a thousand barrels of flour.

  December 26, 1776

  Battle of Trenton

  Won

  Troops: 2,400

  Killed or Wounded: 0

  Captured: 0

  Troops: 1,500

  Killed or Wounded: 22

  Captured: 918

  Following a series of defeats, Washington led a daring crossing of the Delaware River in the middle of the night—and a winter storm. His determined force attacked the Hessians at 8 a.m. The enemy, still recovering from Christmas celebrations, offered but a brief defense that left their commander mortally wounded.

  January 2, 1777

  Second Battle of Trenton

  Won

  Troops: 1,000

  Killed or Wounded: 50

  Captured: 5

  Troops: 2,000

  Killed or Wounded: 40

  Captured: 5

  The British returned to reclaim Trenton but, with only one bridge to attack from, were repelled three times. By the next morning, Washington had slipped away with the main body of his force for an attack on Princeton.


  January 3, 1777

  Battle of Princeton

  Won

  Troops: 4,500

  Killed: 25

  Wounded: 60

  Captured: 0

  Troops: 1,200

  Killed: 20

  Wounded: 60

  Captured: 230

  Washington’s arrival reinvigorated fatigued patriot troops, who followed him into battle and successfully pushed the British back, threatening their supply lines and claiming much of New Jersey.

  September 11, 1777

  Battle of Brandywine

  Lost

  Troops: 14,600

  Killed: 200

  Wounded: 300–600

  Captured: 400

  Troops: 15,500

  Killed: 583

  Wounded: 93

  Missing: 6

  A devastating loss that allowed the British to conquer Philadelphia, then the capital of the United States.

  September 16, 1777

  Battle of the Clouds

  Draw

  Troops: 9,500

  Killed or Wounded: 0

  Captured: 0

  Troops: 12,000

  Killed or Wounded: 0

  Captured: 0

  Washington hoped to rebuff General Howe’s advances, but was thwarted by a torrential downpour that dampened ammunition and washed out roads.

  October 4, 1777

  Battle of Germantown

  Lost

  Troops: 11,000

  Killed: 152

  Wounded: 521

  Captured: 438

  Troops: 9,000

  Killed: 71

  Wounded: 448

  Missing: 14

  When Howe divided his army and encamped outside of Philadelphia, Washington took a chance. The battle lasted five hours and shook the victors, but the Continental Army ultimately failed; their flanking columns were late to arrive and the British-occupied Cliveden mansion turned out to be as strong as a fortress.

  December 6–8, 1777

  Battle of White Marsh

  Draw

  Troops: 6,000

  Killed or Wounded: 40

  Captured: 0

  Troops: 8,000

  Killed or Wounded: 56

  Captured: 0

  Hoping for one decisive victory before winter, Howe marched his army sixteen miles from the capital to Washington’s encampment. After skirmishes and failed flanking, Howe decided that his counterpart was stronger than he realized, and withdrew.

  June 28, 1778

  Battle of Monmouth

  Draw

  Troops: 12,000

  Killed: 72

  Wounded: 161

  Missing: 130

  Died of Heatstroke: 37

  Troops: 10,000

  Killed: 147

  Wounded: 170

  Died of Heatstroke: 60

  When Sir Henry Clinton (who succeeded Howe) moved his troops from Philadelphia to New York, Washington instructed General Charles Lee (his principal subordinate) to harass them from the rear. But after just a few hours, Lee retreated. Washington, usually so self-controlled, loudly cursed him upon arrival. After night fell, the redcoats left for New York, but Washington was none the wiser, duped by burning fires masking their departure. Despite that, Washington claimed it was a victory.

  September 15–October 19, 1781

  Siege of Yorktown

  Won

  Troops: 20,000

  Killed or Wounded: 400

  Captured: 400

  Troops: 9,725

  Killed: 156 Wounded: 326

  Captured: 7,980

  Missing: 70

  When the British withdrew a significant force from New York to reinforce troops in Yorktown, Virginia, Washington headed south. French allies helped Americans capture key points, and by sea, their ships, which controlled access to the Chesapeake Bay, prevented British naval assistance and reinforcements. Lord Cornwallis surrendered in less than thirty days.

  CHAPTER 9

  Hardball with the Howe Brothers

  The British didn’t see themselves as invaders in 1776, but they showed up, just the same, with the largest invasion force they had ever mustered—400 ships carrying 32,000 troops, enough to block off America’s key waterways and starve it of military supplies.

  The flotilla was led by Admiral Richard Howe, who’d earned the nickname “Black Dick” because he was said to smile only when a lot of people were about to die. With help from Loyalists on the ground, Black Dick would teach a violent lesson to the “rascally banditti” and “firebrands of sedition” who had taken up arms against the sovereign.1 He announced his arrival on the Hudson with a two-hour cannonade.

  George Washington, meanwhile, had little artillery, no cavalry, and no naval support; a total of perhaps 19,000 troops served under his command.

  King George III had told his ministers that “blows must decide” whether the Americans “submit or triumph,” but Parliament decided to make one last attempt at diplomacy—or the appearance of it, anyway.2 It instructed William Howe, general of the Royal Army and brother to Black Dick, to offer the commander in chief of the Continental Army (which one imagines he said while miming scare quotes) a final chance to avoid leading the thirteen colonies into certain death, destruction, and degradation. He entrusted a letter to Lieutenant Philip Brown, who set out to deliver it on a small boat bearing a white flag.3

  IDEALISM DOESN’T PAY THE BILLS

  Massachusetts firebrand Samuel Adams argued the cause of liberty would sustain an army, but Washington worried that volunteer soldiers would lead to frequent turnover. Unlike Adams, whose politically active father prospered in real estate and the brewery business, Washington knew that idealism couldn’t feed a soldier’s family or pay his debts. “After the first emotions are over,” he warned John Hancock, untrained civilian recruits could not be expected to forfeit “private interest to the common good.” (After all, that’s how the British Army had lost him.) “To expect then the same Service from Raw, and undisciplined Recruits as from Veteran Soldiers is to expect what never did, and perhaps never will happen.”4 And he was right; by mid-1776, half of the Continental Army had deserted. It would take years before Congress—wary of the cash and land grants it would take to secure a trained, professional army—gave Washington what he wanted.

  The British were eager to reach a resolution. War was always expensive, but in this case there was a small chance it could be ruinous; the enemy’s power was unknowable. What if the patriots had made soldiers of the two million male colonists in America? Even if the Continental Army had managed to enlist just 5 percent of the population, those 100,000 men would outnumber the Royal Army by a factor of four to one. And although the patriots’ lack of a navy put them at a distinct disadvantage, their great advantage was supplying locally,
whereas those of the British were 3,000 miles away.5 There would be travel delays, to be sure, exacerbated by however long it took Parliament to approve every replenishment. The conflict would drag on, and the longer it did, the weaker Britain would become, perhaps tempting the French or Spanish to get involved. And if that happened, the British would be fighting a war against both their own colonies and their old enemies.

  Washington was expecting Howe’s overture. He dispatched Colonels Henry Knox, Joseph Reed, and Samuel Webb, who approached to rendezvous with Brown’s boat between Staten Island and Governors Island. Brown, the British lieutenant, said that he had a letter for “Mr. Washington,” to which Reed replied, “Sir, we have no person in our army with that address.” Brown asked him to look at the letter, addressed to “George Washington, Esqr.,” and again Reed rejected it. “You are sensible, sir, of the rank of General Washington in our army?” he asked. “Yes, sir, we are,” Brown admitted.

  Acknowledging Washington’s rank would mean recognizing America as a sovereign nation, and that was a nonstarter. The Howe brothers, for all their guns and ships, and ships with guns, didn’t have much bargaining power. The Royal Army was open to reconciliation or battle, and nothing else. They could offer Washington pardon, but only in exchange for a total and complete “dissolution of all rebel political and military bodies, surrender of all the forts and posts, and restoration of the King’s officials.”6 It was a bad offer for Washington as an individual and for America as a country. He refused.

  “So high is the vanity and the insolence of these men!” Ambrose Serle, General Howe’s personal secretary, declared. But Howe didn’t share Serle’s disdain.7 If anything, he was curious about this previously loyal colonist, who was already proving fearless in the face of a global superpower. He sent another letter, this time generously adding two “etceteras” to the address. “George Washington, Esq, etc., etc.” was promptly declined again, but this time Washington agreed to meet British Colonel James Paterson. Colonel Paterson was blindfolded and taken to Knox’s temporary home in New York, at No. 1 Broadway. Washington insisted that his Life Guards, a sort of proto–Secret Service, stand watch.

 

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