Sunday, August 18, 2024

ARP324 Newburgh Conspiracy


Last week, we covered the effective end to the war in the south, when the British evacuated Charleston, South Carolina in December 1782.  After that, the only significant British presence in the United States was the main army in and around New York City.  

General Washington’s greatest foe in 1782 was the fight against the idea that the war was over.  Over the course of that year, all Americans waited for word from Europe about the peace negotiations.  Officers and men wanted to go home and Congress and the states were sick of paying for an army.

Despite this, Washington faced a very real British army in New York that consisted of thousands of Regulars, Hessians and loyalists.  He needed to have an army that was ready to confront this enemy.  Washington continued to conduct regular drills, rejected most requests for furloughs, and continually hounded Congress for more uniforms, shoes, food, and supplies.

With the British still reeling from the surrender at Yorktown, Washington, and many others, believed that one final blow would end the war more quickly.  In early 1782, Washington was pushing for another joint campaign with the French army under Rochambeau against New York City, or even  possibly Charleston.  

Rochambeau’s Army

In July, Washington received word that the French army that had been encamped near Yorktown since the battle the previous fall, was marching up to New York.  He also received word that a French naval squadron was sailing to North America from the West Indies. 

Washington met with Rochambeau in Philadelphia to discuss a possible fall campaign.  He was disappointed to learn that Rochambeau had no plans for another campaign.  Instead, he simply planned to move the French Army into New York and await word on the peace negotiations.  Still hopeful, The Continental Army moved to Verplanck’s Point, on the east bank of the Hudson River, about a day’s march from the British lines at the northern tip of Manhattan.

Word of the Evacuation of Charleston and the expected evacuation of New York meant that Rochambeau had no interest in sending his army into a fight to take ground that would be given away in a few months.  After a few weeks, the French army marched to Boston. There, the army awaited transports to take them to the West Indies, where they would either invade Jamaica, or perhaps cooperate with Spain on another target.  The French army would depart from Boston on Christmas Day, 1782, headed for the West Indies.

Winter Quarters

Without any military campaign that year, keeping the soldiers busy was critical for other reasons.  Men left with little to do typically turned to drinking and fighting with each other.  A fair percentage of soldiers simply deserted. 

By late 1782, it was not only the enlisted soldiers, but also the officers, who voiced greater discontent.  Unlike enlisted men, officers could resign their commissions and go home.  The ability to keep an army in the field depended on a reliable officer corps.

Earlier in the war, when things were desperate and Congress had no way to pay anyone, Congress passed resolutions offering pensions, eventually offering all officers a pension of half-pay for life if they served until the end of the war.  Many officers were still holding out for that promise.

The growing concern, though, was that Congress would simply refuse to honor that promise, much like it had refused to honor the promises of pay and adequate support while the army was in the field.

The Continental Army went into winter quarters in October of 1782.  The bulk of the army moved north from Verplanck’s Point to an area around the towns of Newbergh and New Windsor, two relatively small communities on the western bank of the Hudson, a few miles north of West Point.  

Enlisted men had to build their own quarters.  Timothy Pickering, the Quartermaster General, procured the use of 1600 acres west of New Windsor to build the winter encampment.  The men would build log huts with 1100 square feet of living space divided among two rooms.  Each cabin would house 16 men ,with one fireplace for heat.  

Those rooms must have been pretty miserable, especially when you consider you were bunking with 15 other men who probably had not had a bath in months.  The men also had a bad habit of urinating inside the house much of the time.  Even if they did not appreciate the health aspects, you would think the stench alone would be enough to discourage that behavior.  Yet it appears to have been a common practice.

Gates Returns

While many soldiers wanted to return home, one officer was returning to duty.  Major General Horatio Gates had left service after his embarrassing performance at the Battle of Camden, South Carolina, in 1780.  After his army’s defeat and Gates fleeing his own army, Congress had suspended his service pending an inquiry.

That inquiry or court martial never materialized, so Gates sat at home in Virginia awaiting a new assignment.  Many in Congress hoped the general would simply resign.  But Gates had no intention of that.  In February 1782, Gates wrote to Washington to congratulate him on Yorktown and to ask about what role he might play in the next campaign.  Washington brushed off Gates with a letter saying that the Secretary of War Benjamin Lincoln, would be responsible for any new assignments.  

That was actually good for Gates because Lincoln and Gates got along well.  Lincoln had served under Gates at Saratoga, and after surrendering an army at Charleston in 1780, Lincoln appreciated a general’s need for rehabilitation.  Lincoln recommended that Gates be returned to active duty.  Gates traveled to Philadelphia to lobby for his new assignment.  A congressional committee made up of Richard Henry Lee, John Rutledge, and Ezekiel Cornell, held hearings with General Gates over several days in August.  Gates managed to round up several officers who supported his return to duty.  

On the committee’s recommendation, Congress repealed its resolution that Gates face a court enquiry and that he return to duty with the main army.  Based on his seniority, Gates was second in command of the Continental Army, behind only George Washington.  After Congress cleared his name, Gates returned home to Virginia for a few weeks.  He then traveled to New York where Washington gave him command of the right wing of the army, in charge of the New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut lines.

Almost as soon as he arrived, Gates started complaining about housing.  Officers typically took over local homes, often forcing the residents to cram themselves into one or two bedrooms.  Gates wanted a house owned by John Ellison.  General Henry Knox had lived there for a while, but it was currently  being used by the Director of the military hospital, Dr. John Cochran.  The doctor refused to vacate, even threatening to challenge Pickering to a duel over the matter.  Pickering, as Quartermaster General, was responsible for procuring Gates’ quarters.  Gates wrote to several delegates in Philadelphia about the matter, before Pickering was finally able to evict Cochran and move Gates into the house.

Petitions and Grievances

While Gates was pleased with his return to duty, other officers remained deeply concerned about the coming end of the war.  Officers were owed back pay.  Many of them had fronted their own money to pay for the needs of those under their command and expected Congress to provide reimbursement.  Many of them had also given up years of service, meaning they were personally bankrupt and had no jobs to return to when the war ended.

Many were relying on the promises of a pension that they had received years earlier. But they already saw that some officers who already retired due to illness or injury, were not receiving their promised pensions.  Many saw that their years of service and sacrifice might be rewarded simply by being discarded, and possibly even facing debtors’ prison.

The officers of the Massachusetts line began working on a strategy to demand their pensions.  They initially planned to send a delegation to Congress, but learned that Congress had already tabled any discussion of pensions until at least January, 1783.  

Instead, they opted to petition the Massachusetts state legislature.  They were pretty confident that Massachusetts would deny their petition.  But that at least meant that when they could petition Congress, that Congress could not give the expected response of "go speak with their state government first."

The officers sent a delegation to Boston in September.  They got the runaround for several months.  Eventually they learned that Samuel Osgood, a Massachusetts delegate to the Continental Congress, had written state officials to inform them that if they offered any pensions, they would not get any credit toward the state’s share of war expenses.  The Massachusetts legislature then tabled their own discussion of pensions in order to wait and see what Congress would do.

After returning to camp, the Massachusetts officers recruited General Henry Knox to voice their concerns.  They also reached out to officers from Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, and New Hampshire .  The officers of the Rhode Island line, who were stationed in Albany, would join the group later.

The Knox Committee asked officers to submit their complaints.  Most of the complaints centered around the obvious: lack of pay, poor living standards, and the lack of confidence that they would receive their promised pensions.  Most officers noted that they planned to resign soon if these matters were not addressed to their satisfaction.

The Committee met at Hortons Tavern in New Windsor during late November and early December, in an attempt to summarize the complaints into a single petition.  The committee documents essentially said that in joining the Army, they had made a contract. The government was not keeping up its obligations.  As they continued to work on drafts, the focused more on the frustration and misery that the men were feeling.

In December, the committee finalized its Memorial to Congress. The point of the document the level of desperation that the army was reaching.  One famously quoted paragraph reads: 

We have borne all that men can bear; our property is expended, our private resources are at an end, and our friends are wearied out and disgusted with our incessant applications. We therefore most seriously and earnestly beg that a supply of money may be forwarded to the army as soon as possible. The uneasiness of the soldiers, for want of pay, is great and dangerous; any further experiments on their patience may have fatal effects.

Fourteen officers, including Henry Knox and three other generals, signed the document on December 7th.  The committee appointed three officers, Major General Alexander McDougall from New York, Colonel John Brooks from Massachusetts, and Mattias Ogden of New Jersey to carry the Memorial to Philadelphia.  Before leaving, committee members had to take up a collection to try to help the three officers cover their travel expenses.

The group arrived in Philadelphia on December 29.  By that time, Congress had already ended its session until January.  The officers still met with Robert Morris, superintendent of finance, and with other key delegates who were still in town.

When Congress reconvened on January 6, it received the officers and their Memorial, and appointed a grand committee, with one delegate from each of the 13 states, to consider the problem.  Three days later, McDougal wrote to Knox that Congress had received the memorial positively, but the fact remained that it simply did not have the money to keep its promises.

The following day, the officers met with the grand committee.  The basic gist was that Congress didn’t have the money they owed to the army and asked the officers what they thought would happen if the demands were not met.  The officers essentially said that the army was on the verge of mutiny, that officers had already put down several, and that with officers’ morale so bad, it was not clear that they could stop another one.  Colonel Brooks warned “a disappointment might throw them blindly into extremities.”  There was some discussion about eliminating the pension and giving a lump sum payment for a few years instead. But since Congress had no money for a lump sum, it didn’t seem like a useful solution.

The grand committee formed a subcommittee to work with Morris to come up with some response.  Morris could not make any promises on just about anything  Instead he focused on just trying to pay the army their pay for one month, January.  Morris offered payment to the soldier of 50 cents per week.  Since a private was supposed to make $6.67 per month. Offering to actually pay that out that one month's pay over four months seems rather pathetic.  Yet it was more than the men were used to receiving.  For the officers, Morris offered a choice. Either they could accept pay in the form of his paper Morris Notes, or they could wait until after the enlisted men got paid, and then receive specie  for one month, some time after that. Essentially, Morris was only offering to pay their January salaries some time in April, with no promise of back pay, front pay, or anything else.

As Congress considered the matter, those in winter camp continued to suffer.  A local sheriff arrested the Quartermaster General, Timothy Pickering for unpaid debts.  Pickering’s signature was on just about every promissory note issued by the army.  Since New York did not provide any immunity for officers engaged in official duties, one creditor attempted to use this local collection practice to collect what the army owed him.  This was another sign of disrespect to the army.  To the officers, they were giving everything, and the public simply did care.

Temple of Virtue

To keep the army busy, Washington ordered the construction of a new building.  This new building could be used for larger meetings or other events.  It was 110 feet long by 30 feet wide.  Washington simply called it  the “New Building”.  Others began to call it the “Temple of Virtue.” A reference to some Masonic literature from the time.  The Temple opened on February 6, 1783 occasioned by a parade, after which officers listened to a sermon preached by Reverend Israel Evans.  Washington used the celebration as an opportunity to pardon several prisoners and ordered the issuance of an extra half-cup of rum to each soldier.

Around this same time rumors of peace began to arrive.  The King’s November address to Parliament, where he recognized that they colonies in North America were now "free and independent states” was falling on delighted ears.  While this was a cause for celebration, it also made clear that a need for a resolution to the problem of paying the army was closer than ever.

On March 8, Colonel Walter Stewart returned from Philadelphia after several months of sick leave.  Stewart was the inspector general for the northern department, and also a former aide to General Horatio Gates.  The night after his return to camp, Stewart met with about a dozen officers at Gates' headquarters to give them the latest news from Philadelphia.  He brought word that Congress was still dithering on how to respond to the memorial and that Congress was not even paying the interest on its debts anymore.  

The officers decided to call a larger meeting at the Temple of Virtue two days later, to consider what next steps the army should take to get what it was owed.  Gates’ aide de camp, Major John Armstrong, wrote a notice for the meeting - although it was circulated anonymously.

The notice simply said that a fellow soldier wanted to address the officers.  But the tone of the notice made clear this was going to focus on the frustration that had been building over Congressional inaction.  Here is a short snippet from the notice:

After a pursuit of seven long years, the object for which we set out, is at length brought within our reach.—Yes, my friends, that suffering courage of yours, was active once; it has con­ducted the United States of America, through a doubtful and a bloody war—it has placed her in the chair of independency, and peace returns again to bless—Whom? A country willing to redress your wrongs, cherish your worth, and reward your services?—A country courting your return to private life, with tears of gratitude and smiles of admiration?—Longing to divide with you that independency which your gallantry has given, and those riches which your wounds have preserved?—Is this the case? Or is it rather a country that tramples upon your rights, disdains your cries, and insults your distresses?

The following morning, this anonymous pamphlet began spreading all over camp.  The mutinous language of the notice was of concern enough. But of similar concern to General Washington was the fact that he was not even notified of this army-wide meeting of officers.  It seemed clear that this was an effort to bypass Washington’s efforts to keep the army under control. 

Hours before the meeting was supposed to begin, Washington issued his general orders for March 11, condemning the meeting as disorderly, and instead notified the army that there would be a meeting four days later on March 15 for the Committee that had met with Congress to provide a report on progress to the officers.

Washington then dashed off letters, including one to the President of Congress, Elias Boudinot, urging Congress to come up with a solution to the pay and pension issues right away.. He also wrote to Alexander Hamilton, where he was more direct about his concerns of an uprising, and his suspicion that Colonel Stewart had consulted with others in Philadelphia about stirring up the army in order to get Congress to act.

Everyone seemed well aware that the army was at a precipice. Frustrated officers seemed sick of Congress’ failure to live up to its promises.  With a peace treaty expected any day, the army might be disbanded without getting any of the things it was promised.  Many wanted to refuse any orders to disband and to use the military’s power to take what they were owed.

In the days leading up to the meeting, officers argued with one another about whether to remain patient and respect the civil authority, or whether it was time to act.  Washington met with many officers over these days.  Although meetings were private and we don’t have a record of what was discussed, we can be confident Washington was trying to both calm the situation and probably also determine which senior officer were still with him.

Washington’s orders from the 11th only said that a senior officer would address the officers on Saturday.  When the meeting began, General Horatio Gates called the meeting to order, with over 100 officers present.

Everyone was shocked when Washington personally entered the Temple of Virtue shortly after the meeting began.  Washington never spoke to large groups, and rarely even ever spoke at length.  His presence underscored the importance of this moment.

As he spoke to the men, Washington essentially condemned the attempt to reject military discipline.  The anonymous letter calling a meeting without going through the commander, the threats to refuse lawful orders to disband, the distrust of Congress as the lawful government, seemed to go against everything they had fought for and sacrificed.

To back up his views, Washington tried to read from several documents, including a recent letter he had received from a member of congress.  After stumbling over the first few lines, he paused and put on his glasses.  Most of the men were shocked because they had never seen him wear glasses before. He commended in doing so “Gentlemen, you will permit me to put on my Spectacles, for I have not only grown gray but almost blind in the service of my country.”

With that line, the audience burst into tears.  Washington had underscored his own sacrifice to the cause of liberty and was begging his men to not let all of that be thrown away.

After Washington completed his address, the officers resolved unanimously thank the commander for his address, to express continued confidence in the justice of Congress, that they would rely on Washington to continue discussions with Congress, and would reject with disdain the propositions of the anonymous pamphlet. With that, the Continental Army's flirtation with mutiny was set aside, at least for now.

Next week, we’ll take a look at why Congress was having so much trouble addressing the concerns of the army.

- - -

Next Episode 325 Threat of Peace

Previous Episode 323 Evacuation of Charleston

 Contact me via email at mtroy.history@gmail.com

 Follow the podcast on Twitter @AmRevPodcast

 Join the Facebook group, American Revolution Podcast 

 Join American Revolution Podcast on Quora 
 
Discuss the AmRev Podcast on Reddit

American Revolution Podcast Merch!

T-shirts, hoodies, mugs, pillows, totes, notebooks, wall art, and more.  Get your favorite American Revolution logo today.  Help support this podcast.  http://tee.pub/lic/AmRevPodcast


American Revolution Podcast is distributed 100% free of charge. If you can chip in to help defray my costs, I'd appreciate whatever you can give.  Make a one time donation through my PayPal account. You may also donate via Venmo (@Michael-Troy-20) or Zelle (send to mtroy1@yahoo.com)


Click here to see my Patreon Page
You can support the American Revolution Podcast as a Patreon subscriber.  This is an option making monthly pledges.  Patreon support will give you access to Podcast extras and help make the podcast a sustainable project.

An alternative to Patreon is SubscribeStar.  For anyone who has problems with Patreon, you can get the same benefits by subscribing at SubscribeStar.

Help Support this podcast on "BuyMeACoffee.com"


Visit the American Revolution Podcast Bookshop.  Support local bookstores and this podcast!





Signup for the AmRev Podcast Mail List

* indicates required

Further Reading

Websites

“General Orders, 29 August 1782,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/99-01-02-09301

Head, David “The Officers’ Spirited Memorial: A Prelude to the Newburgh Conspiracy” Journal of the American Revolution, Nov. 14 ,2019. https://allthingsliberty.com/2019/11/the-officers-spirited-memorial-a-prelude-to-the-newburgh-conspiracy

“General Orders, 11 March 1783,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/99-01-02-10811

Wensyel, James W. “The Newburgh Conspiracy” American Heritage Magazine, April/May 1981. https://www.americanheritage.com/newburgh-conspiracy

The Newburgh Incident: https://research.colonialwilliamsburg.org/foundation/journal/Autumn14/civilian.cfm

Newburgh Conspiracy: https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/newburgh-conspiracy

Washington Newburgh Address: https://www.gilderlehrman.org/sites/default/files/inline-pdfs/t-2437.09443.pdf

Kohn, Richard H. “The Inside History of the Newburgh Conspiracy: America and the Coup d’Etat.” The William and Mary Quarterly, vol. 27, no. 2, 1970, pp. 188–220. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1918650

Nelson, Paul David. “Horatio Gates at Newburgh, 1783: A Misunderstood Role.” The William and Mary Quarterly, vol. 29, no. 1, 1972, pp. 143–58. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1921331

Skeen, C. Edward, and Richard H. Kohn. “The Newburgh Conspiracy Reconsidered.” The William and Mary Quarterly, vol. 31, no. 2, 1974, pp. 273–98. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1920913

Haggard, Robert F. “The Nicola Affair: Lewis Nicola, George Washington, and American Military Discontent during the Revolutionary War.” Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, vol. 146, no. 2, 2002, pp. 139–69. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1558199

Washington, George THE LAST OFFICIAL ADDRESS, OF HIS EXCELLENCY General WASHINGTON, TO THE Legislatures of the United States. TO WHICH IS ANNEXED, A COLLECTION OF PAPERS RELATIVE TO HALF - PAY, AND COMMUTATION OF HALF - PAY, Granted by CONGRESS to the OFFICERS of the ARMY. HARTFORD: PRINTED BY HUDSON AND GOODWIN. M.DCC.LXXXIII (1783) (from Oxford Text Archive). https://ota.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/repository/xmlui/bitstream/handle/20.500.12024/N14414/N14414.html

Free eBooks
(from archive.org unless noted)

Cutler, William Parker Life, Journals and Correspondence of Rev. Manasseh Cutler, LL. D, Cincinnati, R. Clarke & Co. 1888. 

A Collection of papers, relative to half-pay and commutation of half-pay, granted by Congress to the officers of the army. Compiled, by permission of His Excellency General Washington, from the original papers in his possession.  Fishkill, NY: Samuel Loudon, 1783. 

Books Worth Buying
(links to Amazon.com unless otherwise noted)*

Head, David A Crisis of Peace: George Washington, the Newburgh Conspiracy, and the Fate of the American Revolution, Pegasus Books, 2019.

Martin, James Kirby & Sean Hannah Leading with Character: George Washington and the Newburgh Conspiracy, George Washington Leadership Inst. 2017. 

Richards, Dave, Swords in Their Hands: George Washington and the Newburgh Conspiracy, Pisgah Press, 2015. 

* As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.


Sunday, August 11, 2024

ARP323 Evacuation of Charleston


The last time we looked in on Charleston was in Episode 316.   The Continental Army under Nathanael Greene maintained a blockade around Charleston by land, confronting any foraging parties that dared to move outside the city.  The British still control the waters and could supply the garrison by sea.  In August, Colonel John Laurens had been killed in one of the confrontations led against foraging parties.

Even in the fall of 1782, Greene remained on alert for a new British offensive. The British had consolidated more soldiers in Charleston after evacuating Savannah, Georgia earlier that summer.  The British naval victory in the West Indies had removed the French fleet as a threat and gave the British more flexibility in where they might provide reinforcements for a new offensive.

Continued Skirmishing

Skirmishing between the two sides continued into the fall.  At the end of August, just days after Laurens’ death, a patriot detachment from General Francis Marion’s battalion under the command of Captain George Sinclair Capers attacked a detachment of loyalist dragoons.

British Evacuate Charleston, 1782
Another concern for the Americans was the Cherokee, who had remained British allies and had several times attempted to provide support for the Charleston garrison.  In mid-September General Andrew Pickens and Colonel Elijah Clark led a force of over 400 militia into the back country to destroy several Indian villages that were seen as potential support areas for future Indian raids.

There also remained the concern of loyalists still living within the American lines.  In October, patriots received intelligence regarding a meeting of loyalists at Saltketcher swamp. They sent a militia company commanded by Captain John Carter to break up that meeting.  The militia rode into a loyalist ambush.  After a brief but fierce skirmish, the loyalists retreated into the swamp.

One of the final skirmishes of any size took place when the British deployed a foraging party to James Island in search of firewood.  Colonel  Tadeusz Kosciuszko led a force of 70 Continentals to harass the foraging party.  When the Continentals arrived, they discovered the foragers were accompanied by a much larger force. They faced over 300 British soldiers, along with an enemy field cannon.

Despite being outnumbered more than four to one, the Americans attacked.  In a relatively short exchange of fire, the Americans lost five killed, including Captain William Wilmont of the Maryland line, and five more wounded, including Lieutenant John Markland of the Pennsylvania line.  Colonel Kosciuszko found himself in the thick of the fighting.  The enemy shot and shattered a spontoon that he was holding. A British dragoon nearly killed Kosciuszko before another American soldier cut down the dragoon.  After the battle, Kosciuszko found four bullet holes in his coat. Following this brief encounter, the Americans withdrew.

Evacuation

The continued fighting would not impact the final outcome.  Months earlier, the British Commander in North America, General Guy Carleton, had begun preparations for the evacuation of Charleston.  Carleton had succeeded General Henry Clinton after the British surrender at Yorktown.  His primary mission was to wrap up British operations and leave with as little further harm as possible.

General Carleton was not happy with his mission, and in fact requested to be relieved of command.  The fall of the North Government made clear that the British army was not going to carry out any further military operations.  The general also had authority to try to negotiate some sort of peace with America if it would agree to some sort of continued relationship with Britain.  Since the Americans made clear that was a non-starter, Carleton’s efforts as a peace commissioner came to a quick end.

Carlton wrote to his superiors in London that he did not want “only to be employ’d as a mere Inspector of Embarkations.”  He demanded that he be transferred to a combat role in Europe.  Prime Minister Shelburne’s Home Secretary Thomas Townshend denied the general’s request and persuaded him that he had a duty to clean up the remaining forces in America.

The process of removing tens of thousands of soldiers from the North American continent, along with tens of thousands of loyalist civilians and their property was no easy task in the age of sail, especially when the enemy was still ready to fight.  

By November, when the battle of James Island took place under Colonel Kosciuszko, British transport ships were already in Charleston Harbor, preparing for evacuation. The British commander in Charleston, General Alexander Leslie, had already tried to establish a temporary truce with the Americans, only to be denied.  With the British evacuation imminent, the British attempted to establish a few agreements. 

One such agreement was on behalf of the British merchants in Charleston.  They obtained permission from General Leslie, and from South Carolina Governor John Mathews, to remain in the city for 18 months after evacuation in order to dispose of their goods and to collect debts owed to them.

Another concern for the Americans was the removal of about 5000 slaves that were under British possession in Charleston.  Many of these had either run away or been captured by British or loyalist soldiers.  The Americans demanded the return of these people, and other captured property looted by the British.  General Leslie agreed in general that he would try to prevent the removal of any looted property, including slaves.

The Americans, however, continued to push the British.  During the first couple of weeks of December, the British began loading men and supplies onto the various ships they had available.

On the night of December 12, and into the morning of December 13, General Anthony Wayne led a division of soldiers toward Charleston.  He led 300 light infantry, along with 80 cavalry from the corps previously led by Colonel Light Horse Harry Lee and Colonel John Laurens.  He also had two 6 pounder field cannons.  

Wayne crossed the river north of town at Ashley Ferry, marching south toward the British fortifications.  General Greene had ordered him to do whatever he could to harass the enemy as they prepared to evacuate.

Before Wayne’s force reached the British lines, General Leslie sent a note, carried by a local civilian.  Leslie told Wayne that if the Americans allowed the British to evacuate without further harassment, the British would not destroy Charleston, and would not fire on the American troops once the British were aboard their ships in the harbor.  If, however, the Americans did attack, Leslie said he would not be held accountable for the consequences.

Wayne acceded to this and pulled back to have his men make camp until the following day. The British agreed to fire a signal cannon on the morning of December 14, when they had evacuated and when the Americans could advance to take possession of the town.

That same day, General Greene moved the bulk of his army across Ashley Ferry, toward Charleston as well.  Greene received word of the deal and camped his army a few miles behind Wayne’s encampment.  With Greene were Governor Mathews and General Moultrie.  Part of the army had already crossed the river while a portion of them remained on the other side of the river overnight.

The following morning, the British fired their signal cannon and Wayne began to march his troops south toward Charleston.  At about 11:00 AM, Wayne reached the British outer fortifications, about a mile and a half north of the southernmost tip of the Charleston peninsula. The lead troops saw a few Hessian Jägers still guarding the main gate into town, and who began to fall back at the sight of the enemy.  The Americans approached to speak with them, learning that General Leslie had ordered all civilians to remain in their homes in order to minimize interference with the final evacuation and to avoid any misunderstandings that might cause a firefight.

British gunships remained on alert in the Ashley and Cooper Rivers, on both sides of the city, ready to open fire if the Americans tried to attack any of the final soldiers evacuating Charleston. As the British withdrew south toward the docks, Wayne advanced. On a few occasions, the British called out that Wayne was getting a little too close.  He would halt his men and allow the British a little more space, trying to leave about 200 yards between the two sides..

Wayne’s men observed the final British soldiers withdraw south of the city gates, and march to Gadsden’s Wharf on the Cooper River for final boarding.  Wayne then deployed his men in smaller detachments around town to reconnoiter and make sure everything was clear.

As Wayne’s soldiers spread out through Charleston, General Greene, along with Generals Gist and Moultrie, and Governor Mathews, along with the privy council and leading citizens, began marching toward the city from a point about nine miles to the north.  At around 3:00 PM the group, which included about 50 VIP accompanied by 80 cavalry, entered Charleston.

 Some went to survey the town. Others met up with friends who had remained in Charleston during the occupation.  Just offshore were over 130 enemy ships preparing to depart to open sea.

Liberation

For many civilians the departure of the British was a welcome event for celebration.  For many loyalists left behind, it was only the beginning of a nightmare.  Despite the time and ships, many loyalist civilians had to be left behind.  Over 5000 soldiers, including loyalist militia, nearly 4000 white civilians and over 5000 slaves had been evacuated.  General Leslie had ignored his promise not to prevent the removal of captured slaves.  

Even so, many loyalists decided to remain in Charleston. For many, the thought of leaving their homes, to be settled on some island in the West Indies, where most new inhabitants died of disease within a few months, or moving to frigid Canada, was too much to bear. They chose to take their chances under the new patriot government.

A British officer wrote his own description of the the evacuation of civilians, which I will read: 

The inhabitants and merchants who thought proper to remain in town were directed to keep within their houses; all stores and warehouses were shut up. The streets formerly crouded and chearful to the view, now presented one mournful scene of the most complicated wretchedness. The poor, unhappy loyalists whom the British government, not many months before, had most solemnly pledged its faith to protect in their persons and properties, were now to be left victims to their merciless enemies, or to be sent on board vessels for the West Indies, to encounter, with their distressed families, every misfortune, and to suffer every species of indigence and want in a strange land. Many, indeed, remained in the town, preferring the risk of immediate death to the cruel uncertainty of adhering any longer to a government, whose perfidy and treachery stands unparalleled in the annals of history. 

But by far the greater number, whose activity in the cause of their King and the British constitution, left no hopes for mercy, embarked. As these past the windows of their friends and acquaintances, in their way to the places of embarkation, they silently, with grief unutterable, bowed their last farewell. This melancholy salute was returned with feelings that could only be expressed by tears and sobs. A gloomy despair sat on every countenance, and all was wretchedness and woe. The scene was too affecting for description, too great for human feelings. 

Even the most obdurate and unprincipled of your patriots, had he been present at this awful view, must have felt some remorse for the part he has acted, and lamented the falsities he has palmed on parliament as facts, and which have brought the most complicated ruin and misery on thousands and thousands, whose only crime has been loyalty to the King, and affection for their Parent Country.

Throughout the whole of this transaction, tho' the most melancholy one I ever beheld, it must be observed to the honour of the officer who commanded, that the whole has been conducted with the utmost attention and humanity, as far as it rested with him. Certain places were appointed for embarkation. Centinels were fixed to prevent plunder being taken off by the soldiers and seamen. The vessels were all searched and whatever plunder was found, was returned to the inhabitants of the town from whom it was taken."

According to other accounts, the Americans treated the local with civility.  The British who remained in port for several more days noted that the Americans were polite enough not to raise their flag over the city, and even returned to the fleet a few sailors who had missed the final evacuations.

At least one loyalist account painted a very different picture of the turnover of the city. Some said that the Americans hanged as many as 24 loyalists before the British ships sailed away.  They also say that at least 130 loyalists who remained in Charleston were rounded up and imprisoned.  One account reports loyalists being whipped, tarred and feathered, dragged by horses, dunked in ponds, etc. These accounts, however, were hotly disputed.  They seem to go against the majority of the accounts written.  Most witness accounts on both sides report that the turnover was well organized and civil.  These accusations of ill-treatment seem to come from people who were not eyewitnesses themselves.

Another account noted that four loyalists had been killed some time after the evacuation.  These were what we would call today revenge killings by men who had grudges with the individuals involved.  In all four cases, the murderers were prosecuted as criminals.

Return to Peace

By the following Monday, Greene declared the city open for business and restored to civilian rule.  When Greene wrote to Washington a few days later, he reported: “The people are once more free, and I hope will manifest their gratitude by a vigorous exertion in support of the common cause.”  

A month later, the South Carolina legislature resumed its session in Charleston, opening on January 24, 1783.  Governor Mathews, in his remarks at the opening of the session, noted his agreement to allow certain merchants to remain in Charleston for 18 months, and that they would be protected from any retributions.  For other loyalists, who remained in Charleston without permission, he declared:

After my entrance into this town, I found a number of persons here, who had formerly been citizens of this State, but who had continued to reside under the British Government in Charlestown, until its Dissolution; whose cases it was thought advisea[ble] We by the Privy Council, to refer to the General Assembly. It is therefore left with you to decide on their future Destiny.

There are also in this town, a number of persons, who are British Subjects, and who remained here after the evacuation without any condition on the part of this State. I have considered most of them as prisoners to the State, and have parolled them accordingly, untill the meeting of the Legislature. It now remains with you to determine on their several cases.

For the most part, it seems that South Carolina was finally ready to put the war behind it and return to peaceful civilian rule.  Many of those who left with the British fleet, however, were permanently banned from returning.  British records show that the majority of civilians who left went to Jamaica or East Florida.  Only about 10%  of the total went to England, Halifax, or New York.  

The slaves that departed mostly remained enslaved by loyalist or British masters.  Some of them were sold to plantations in other parts of the West Indies.  A small portion of the slaves who had escaped patriot masters and provided service to the British army remained free and were resettled along with other loyalist evacuees.

Charleston did not learn about the preliminary peace treaty until April of 1783.  Until then Governor Mathews focused, in part, on rebuilding Charleston’s defenses in anticipation of another possible attack. After word of the treaty arrived, most of those plans were shelved.

General Moultrie, writing an account many years later, described the evacuation as a glorious event:

I cannot forget that happy day when we marched into Charlestown with the American troops: it was a proud day to me, and I felt myself much elated, at seeing the balconies, the doors and windows crowded with the patriotic fair, and aged citizens and others, congratulating us on our return home, saying, 'God bless you, gentlemen! you are welcome home, gentlemen!' Both citizens and soldiers shed mutual tears of joy.

It was an ample reward for the triumphant soldier, after all the hazards and fatigues of war, which he had gone through, to be the instrument of releasing his friends and fellow citizens from captivity, and restoring to them their liberties and possession of their city and country again.

This fourteenth day of December, 1782, ought never to be forgotten by the Carolinians; it ought to be a day of festivity with them, and it was the real day of their deliverance and independence.

While the war itself was winding to an end, the coming peace raised new controversies, particularly from the Continental Army, which wanted the country to keep its promises for the service of its soldiers.  

Next week, we’ll see how General Washington deals with a potential revolt by the army in Newburgh, NY.

- - -

Next Episode 324 Newburgh Conspiracy 

Previous Episode 322 LBI Massacre

 Contact me via email at mtroy.history@gmail.com

 Follow the podcast on Twitter @AmRevPodcast

 Join the Facebook group, American Revolution Podcast 

 Join American Revolution Podcast on Quora 
 
Discuss the AmRev Podcast on Reddit

American Revolution Podcast Merch!

T-shirts, hoodies, mugs, pillows, totes, notebooks, wall art, and more.  Get your favorite American Revolution logo today.  Help support this podcast.  http://tee.pub/lic/AmRevPodcast


American Revolution Podcast is distributed 100% free of charge. If you can chip in to help defray my costs, I'd appreciate whatever you can give.  Make a one time donation through my PayPal account. You may also donate via Venmo (@Michael-Troy-20) or Zelle (send to mtroy1@yahoo.com)


Click here to see my Patreon Page
You can support the American Revolution Podcast as a Patreon subscriber.  This is an option making monthly pledges.  Patreon support will give you access to Podcast extras and help make the podcast a sustainable project.

An alternative to Patreon is SubscribeStar.  For anyone who has problems with Patreon, you can get the same benefits by subscribing at SubscribeStar.

Help Support this podcast on "BuyMeACoffee.com"


Visit the American Revolution Podcast Bookshop.  Support local bookstores and this podcast!





Signup for the AmRev Podcast Mail List

* indicates required

Further Reading

Websites

Barnwell, Joseph W. “The Evacuation of Charleston by the British in 1782The South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine, 1910. 

Books Worth Buying
(links to Amazon.com unless otherwise noted)*

Maloy, Mark, To the Last Extremity: The Battles for Charleston, 1776-1782, Savas Beatie, 2023. 

* As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.


Sunday, August 4, 2024

ARP322 Long Beach Island Massacre


Doan Newspaper Illustration

Last week we covered some of the final battles on the western frontier.  Further east, by late 1782, the only areas controlled by the British were Charleston, South Carolina and the area around New York City, including most of Long Island.  General Guy Carleton, in command of all British forces in North America was obeying orders to cease all offensive actions and await word of the final peace treaty.

Many loyalists remained with the British.  Even if they saw the cause as lost, they could not go home.  Most of them would be tried for treason and hanged if caught by the authorities now in control of the states.  Several prominent loyalists, such as Governor William Franklin had already left for Britain.

John Bacon

A few loyalists were still living in enemy territory.  These were guerilla fighters who maintained themselves through theft and pillage.  Perhaps the most prominent of these men still in New Jersey was John Bacon.

Before the war, Bacon was a common laborer.  He worked on a farm for the Crane Family in Manahawkin, a tiny village on the South Jersey coast, about half way between what is today Asbury Park and Atlantic City.  There was almost no population in this area, other than a few farms and some native Americans.  During the war the coast attracted smugglers and thieves, making it a dangerous place to live.

There is little known about Bacon before the war, other than a 1775 warrant for debts that he had owed.  At some point he left his employment with Crane and moved his family to Pemberton and joined the Board of Associated Loyalists.  This was the group led by William Franklin which promised 200 acres of land to any man willing to fight for the British in suppressing the rebellion.  

Like many of these loyalists, Bacon (who received a captain’s commission) spent his time attacking the homes of known patriot militia. His focus, however, seemed to be more on robbing them than on killing them or taking prisoners.  He and his men were known variously as the “Pine Robbers” or later the “Refugees”.  

One story tells that Bacon and his gang raided a mill owned by John Holmes, threatening the miller with a bayonet until he revealed his hidden money.  The gang then pillaged the house for anything of value and then left.  Another time, Bacon received a tip that a local shipbuilder named Joseph Soper had just gotten paid for building a ship.  Bacon’s gang raided Soper’s house.  Soper managed to hide in a nearby swamp, but the gang threatened his wife and children until they revealed where Soper had buried the money. Soper, being suspicious of such a robbery, had hidden a smaller portion of the money in one place and a larger portion in another. His wife revealed where the smaller portion was, which seemed to satisfy the gang.

In late 1780, Bacon returned from New York City with three men who had loaded up a whale boat with produce that they sold to the British.  Near Toms River, the local militia stopped the boat and attempted to arrest the men.  Bacon shot the militia officer Lieutenant Joshua Studson, and managed to escape.  As an aside the three men on the boat had nothing to do with Bacon, other than giving him a ride. They ended up fleeing to British lines.  There, they joining the army then deserted and received amnesty from the Continental Army so that they could return home.

The region where Bacon operated was known, and is still known today, as the Pine Barrens.  This is a large area of southern New Jersey that is largely unpopulated.  The pine forest’s sandy soil made it unsuitable for farming, or much of anything else at the time.  As a wilderness area, men like Bacon could avoid detection easily.

Local militia were well aware of Bacon’s exploits and made him a wanted man.  In late 1782, militia under the command of Captain Reuben Randolph searched for Bacon and his gang.  During a night encounter, Bacon’s loyalists killed one of the militia and wounded another before making their escape.

Long Beach Island Massacre

By the end of 1782, the situation was becoming desperate for the loyalists.  Bacon had received a commission as a loyalist Captain from William Franklin. But by this time, Franklin had fled to London.  Bacon was a wanted man.  If captured, he would almost certainly hang under the government now run by the patriots.

In late October, a Dutch ship ran aground on the north end of Long Beach Island, a barrier island off the coast of southern New Jersey.  The ship had a cargo of tea and other valuables worth an estimated £20,000.  The Alligator, an American privateer, found the abandoned wreck and began moving its cargo on board its own ship.  Because of the size of the cargo, the captain, Andrew Steelman, attempted to recruit several locals to help.  One of the locals informed Bacon.

The crew of the Alligator spent most of the day moving the cargo.  At nightfall, the exhausted crew fell asleep on the beach, with the cargo that was still being moved.  Bacon and his men crept up on the sleeping crew and ruthlessly killed all of them, stabbing and shooting the sleeping sailors.  About 20 men were killed.  The attackers were only stopped when a crew from the Alligator landed and counter-attacked Bacon’s loyalists and chased them away.

The incident, which became known as the Long Beach Island Massacre, focused more attention on Bacon and his gang.  Captain Edward Thomas of the Mansfield Militia and Captain Richard Shreeve of the Burlington County Light Horse were tasked with tracking down Bacon’s loyalists. 

Bacon had found his gang dwindling.  Many of his men made their way to New York, where they would be relocated to Canada.  About two months after the massacre, the militia received word that Bacon was near Cedar Creek.  On December 27th, Bacon and three of his men were at the Cedar Bridge Tavern. The loyalists learned that the militia were about to descend upon them.  Bacon and his men  only had time to build a barricade on the far side of the bridge.  The militia arrived and opened fire.

Although they were outnumbered, the loyalists kept up a defensive fire.  Knowing that surrender would result in their execution, they really had nothing to lose.  The captains thought they would capture Bacon, when suddenly they took fire from another direction.  Several locals opened fire on the militia, allowing Bacon and his men time to retreat.  Bacon escaped.  The militia could only arrest the locals who had attacked them.  Several of the locals were later hanged for aiding Bacon’s escape.

The militia continued the manhunt for Bacon and his gang.  Three months later, on April 3, 1783, Bacon was eating at a public tavern owned by William Rose near Tuckerton.  A seven man detachment from Shreeve’s militia, acting on a tip, found Bacon in the tavern, alone.  The men burst into the tavern and knocked down Bacon before he could raise the musket he had at the ready between his legs.  

Bacon called out for quarter.  The attackers halted and allowed bacon to stand up. Joel Cook was the brother of a man that Bacon had killed previously. Cook just bayoneted Bacon in the side while he was under arrest.  Bacon collapsed, a few moments later, he revived and tried to dash out the back door.  He knocked down another militiaman, John Stewart, who was by the door, and rushed outside.  Stewart managed to get off a shot at Bacon, killing him.

The militia then carried the body to Jacobstown where they paraded them through the street.  They dug a grave in the middle of the street and prepared to bury him there.  Before they could do so, Bacon’s brother showed up and requested the body be turned over for a private burial.  The militia complied, just happy to be rid of John Bacon.

The Doan Gang

Another loyalist outlaw group that I’ve mentioned before was the Doan Gang.  Back in Episode 183, I mentioned some of their exploits. The core of the gang consisted of five Doan brothers, Moses, Aaron, Levi, Mahlon, and Joseph as well a cousin Abraham.  They came from a Quaker family and several of them had lived with Indian tribes before the war.  

The Doans mostly operated in and around their family home in Bucks County, Pennsylvania.  There were times when the danger became too great that they moved into New Jersey.  But Bucks County provided familiar hiding places and friendly neighbors who would help them. Local lore says that Moses Doan was the spy who sent a note to Colonel Rahl at Trenton, warning the Hessians that George Washington planned to attack on the day after Christmas, 1776.  

In addition to spying for the British, much of their time was stealing horses to sell to the British. Like John Bacon, their actions seemed to veer between loyalist guerillas and common criminals.  By 1778, all of the Doans were listed as traitors and had a price on their heads.  Although they were nominally loyalists, their criminal activity did not focus solely on the enemy.  During the British occupation of Philadelphia, Joseph Doan impersonated Lord Rawdon, the British army’s adjutant-general, who was in New York for most of the Philadelphia occupation.  Doan used this guise to dine at the home of some of the wealthiest families in Philadelphia, many of whom were loyalists.  The hosts often discovered missing silverware, cash, and other valuables after “Lord Rawdon’s” visit to their home.

According to one story, in June 1780, the Doans got the British army to attack Elizabethtown, New Jersey, allowing them to loot the town as the British departed.  Abraham Doan allegedly got drunk and killed the local pastor’s wife while she was hiding in her home with her nine children.

In October 1781, the Doans committed one of their most valuable heists.  Just days after Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, the Doan gang tracked down the Bucks County treasurer in Newtown, Pennsylvania.  At gunpoint, they forced the man to open the treasury and made off with over £1300 pounds sterling.  That was more money than a common laborer would earn in a lifetime.  Over the next year, they would rob nine other treasuries in the region.  They also continued to steal horses.

The crime spree gave the gang more notoriety.  Several militia groups focused on capturing the gang.  Colonel William Hart took on this task.  Hart had known the Doans since childhood and knew a great deal about them and their friends and family.  His efforts as well as those of others forced the Doans to flee the region in 1782, for Virginia.  One member of the gang, James Fitzpatrick, opted to stay in Pennsylvania and keep a low profile.  His profile was not low enough.  He was captured, tried, and hanged in Philadelphia.  This underscored the fact that the Doans would be treated as common criminals, not prisoners of war, if captured.  The Doan’s parents were labeled as traitors in November of 1782.  Officials seized their farm and sold it at auction.

The gang returned to Bucks County in the summer of 1783. They made their presence known by robbing several county tax collectors as well as the homes of several wealthy private citizens.  The state assembly passed a resolution declaring that the Doans were “robbers, felons, burglars and traitors” and increased the reward for their capture.

At some point, during an attempted robbery of a tavern, Joseph Doan was shot and captured by the authorities.  He was taken to the prison in Philadelphia to await trial.  His brother Moses allegedly rode his horse off a cliff to avoid capture by a pursuing posse.

After that, the gang laid low at the farm of a man named Halsey, who was a friend of the gang.  Halsey sent his son to go buy flour at a local mill.  The boy mistakenly let out the secret of the gang’s location.  

Death of Kennedy and Doan
Colonel Hart received the tip and rounded up a posse of seven men.  They rode to Halsey’s farm, and burst in on the Doans, who were taken by surprise.  Hart and Moses Doan got into a fight.  Eventually Moses surrendered.  Another member of the posse, Robert Gibson, then took his musket and shot Moses through the heart while he was still laying on the ground.  Doan died instantly. 

Seeing their brother shot in cold blood, Doan’s two brothers, Abraham and Levi, dove through a rear window.  Abraham grabbed Mrs. Halsey to use as a hostage.  Levi grabbed his rifle and demanded that the posse release Moses.  He did not realize his brother was already dead.  When his brother did not come out, Levi fired into the barn, hitting another member of the posse, William Kennedy, who would die from the wound a few days later.

Another local, Philip Hinkle, threw Moses’ body on his horse, carried it to Fisherville where Doan’s parents lived.  He dumped the body at their feet telling them “Here is one of your Tory sons.  He won’t brother any of us soon again.”

The death of William Kennedy only increased the wrath against the Doans.  Kennedy’s funeral was one of the largest the region had ever seen.  A few days later, the Assembly offered a 100 pound reward for the Doan Brothers who remained at large: Abraham, Mahlon, Levy, and Aaron.  The same pronouncement also stated that the family of any man killed while trying to capture any of the Doans would receive £800.

Mahlon was captured in Baltimore about a month later. He escaped prison by cutting off part of his foot to remove a shackle.  He ran from the prison and was never seen again.  Based on the blood trail, most believed that he drowned or bled to death while trying to make his escape.  Years later, however, one of his brothers claimed that Mahlon made his way to New York and eventually to England.  

Joseph Doan was moved to the prison in Newtown.  He was not executed, but remained in custody awaiting trial.  In March, 1784, after the war had ended, he was found guilty and sentenced to hang.  He managed to escape prison and remained at large.  Years later, it was discovered that he moved to New Jersey and lived under the name Grover.  He worked as a school teacher, a profession he had before the war began.  His wife Mary and son Moses joined him, where they lived quietly for many years.

With the war coming to an end, the rest of the gang tried to remain in Pennsylvania, under assumed names and hoping to avoid notice.  Aaron Doan was captured in 1784 and sentenced to death by process of outlawry. This was a medieval concept.  It would later be banned in the US with the passage of the Constitution.  Someone who could not be brought to justice could be declared an outlaw and killed without trial.

Doan’s attorneys took his case to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, former member of the Continental Congress John Dickinson represented Doan.  The court ruled that the finding of outlawry was proper and that Doan could be executed.  Before the execution could take place, the President of Pennsylvania, Benjamin Franklin, commuted the sentence to exile. Doan had to leave the state of Pennsylvania forever.  With that, Aaron Doan left for Canada, never to return.

A few years later, in 1787, Abraham and Levi Doan were arrested. They also were tried, convicted and sentenced to hang.  They made several escape attempts, but were not successful.  This time, there would be no commutation.  The two men were taken out of Philadelphia and hanged.  They were taken to the family graveyard in Plumstead.  The Quaker meeting there refused to allow them to be buried with the other Quakers, so they were buried just outside the graveyard walls.

Over in New Jersey, Joseph Doan, aka Mr. Grover, heard about the executions of this brother and cousin.  He decided it was time for him to leave as well.  His family prepared to move to Canada, but first went home to say goodbye to his parents.  While there a neighbor recognized Joseph and attacked him.  Joseph managed to pull a knife and slit the man’s throat.  Not wanting to kill him, Joseph helped to bandage the wound and got him back to a house before fleeing the area with his family. 

Joseph moved to Canada, near present day Toronto.  There, he resumed work as a school teacher and received a land grant of 200 acres for his service as a loyalist guerilla soldier.   His parents also moved to the region a decade later.  I wish I could say he lived peacefully there for the rest of his life.  But in the War of 1812, Joseph and his brother Aaron both took up arms against the Americans once again.  Joseph once again became a prisoner.  He spent about a year and a half in custody, but was eventually exchanged as a prisoner of war.

Much later, in 1823, he returned to Plumstead, Pennsylvania, and sued for the confiscation of his father’s property during the Revolution.  He was unsuccessful in his suit, but there was also no effort to arrest him.  He lived the remainder of his days in Canada, dying at the age of 92 in 1844.

Next Week, the British get closer to the end in America with the evacuation of Charleston, South Carolina.

- - -

Next Episode 323 Evacuation of Charleston (Available August 11, 2024)

Previous Episode 321 Blue Licks & Fort Henry

 Contact me via email at mtroy.history@gmail.com

 Follow the podcast on Twitter @AmRevPodcast

 Join the Facebook group, American Revolution Podcast 

 Join American Revolution Podcast on Quora 
 
Discuss the AmRev Podcast on Reddit

American Revolution Podcast Merch!

T-shirts, hoodies, mugs, pillows, totes, notebooks, wall art, and more.  Get your favorite American Revolution logo today.  Help support this podcast.  http://tee.pub/lic/AmRevPodcast


American Revolution Podcast is distributed 100% free of charge. If you can chip in to help defray my costs, I'd appreciate whatever you can give.  Make a one time donation through my PayPal account. You may also donate via Venmo (@Michael-Troy-20) or Zelle (send to mtroy1@yahoo.com)


Click here to see my Patreon Page
You can support the American Revolution Podcast as a Patreon subscriber.  This is an option making monthly pledges.  Patreon support will give you access to Podcast extras and help make the podcast a sustainable project.

An alternative to Patreon is SubscribeStar.  For anyone who has problems with Patreon, you can get the same benefits by subscribing at SubscribeStar.

Help Support this podcast on "BuyMeACoffee.com"


Visit the American Revolution Podcast Bookshop.  Support local bookstores and this podcast!





Signup for the AmRev Podcast Mail List

* indicates required

Further Reading

Websites

Wroblewski, Joseph “Captain John Bacon: The Last of the Jersey Pine Robbers” Journal of the American Revolution, Sept. 28, 2021. https://allthingsliberty.com/2021/09/captain-john-bacon-the-last-of-the-jersey-pine-robbers

The Refugee John Bacon https://www.njpinebarrens.com/the-refugee-john-bacon

Jersey Roots: 1782 Massacre on Long Beach Island https://www.app.com/story/news/history/erik-larsen/2014/10/24/erik-larsen-jersey-roots-massacre-long-beach-island/17859885

The Battle of Cedar Bridge is fought https://www.revolutionary-war-and-beyond.com/battle-of-cedar-bridge-is-fought.html

Doan Outlaws https://www.doanefamilyassociation.org/DoanOutlaws.pdf

Plumstead Cowboys: https://buckscounty.gov/DocumentCenter/View/11482/Newsletter-Dec22-Jan23

The Loyalist with the Disfigured Face: 

Part 1: https://uelac.ca/loyalist-trails/loyalist-trails-2021-31

Part 2: https://uelac.ca/loyalist-trails/loyalist-trails-2021-32

Respublica v. Doan, 1 U.S. 86 (1784) https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/1/86

Free eBooks
(from archive.org unless noted)

Brooke, Henry K. Annals of the Revolution: Or, A History of the Doans. John B. Perry, 1843 (Google Books). 

Fort, George F. “An Account of the Capture and Death of the Refugee John BaconProceedings of the New Jersey Historical Society, Vol. 1, 1847. 

Rogers, John P The Doan Outlaws, or, Bucks County's Cowboys in the Revolution, Doylestown Democrat, 1895. 

Salter, Edwin and George Beekman Old Times in Old Monmouth, 1887 (1999 Reprint by Heritage Books).

Books Worth Buying
(links to Amazon.com unless otherwise noted)*

Brooke, Henry K. Annals of the Revolution: Or, A History of the Doans. John B. Perry, 1843 (download on Google Books). 

Rogers, Jennifer Hidden History of Bucks County, The History Press, 2019

* As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.