The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789 (85 page)

Read The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789 Online

Authors: Robert Middlekauff

Tags: #History, #Military, #United States, #Colonial Period (1600-1775), #Americas (North; Central; South; West Indies)

IV

At the time Ticonderoga fell and Burgoyne seemed launched on a campaign of glory, a puzzled George Washington sat watching William Howe in New York City apparently preparing for action. Ships crowded the harbor but Howe delayed sending his troops aboard until July 8, and then, when he had loaded some 18,000, he kept ships and troops sitting idle for the next two weeks. The presumption in Washington's headquarters was that the ships would soon sail up the Hudson to support Burgoyne. But when on July 24 they cleared Sandy Hook and disappeared on the Atlantic, most of Washington's colleagues predicted that Philadelphia was their destination. Washington had "strong doubts" -- Howe had given him unpleasant surprises before -- and apparently half expected Howe to return or to turn up in some unexpected place.
The ships

____________________

 

38

 

Ibid.,
526-31
; Bradford, ed., "Napier's Journal",
MdHM
, 57 ( 1962), 321-22.

 

39

 

Ward, II, 533-42.

 

did not return, and on July 31 reports of their appearance off the Delaware Capes reached Washington. Then Howe surprised everyone by once more disappearing on the Atlantic. He had been warned against going up the Delaware, which he was told was defended by heavy fortifications. Speculation in Washington's headquarters and in Congress, which had also regarded Howe's movements suspiciously, now centered on Charleston, South Carolina. "The most general suspicion now is," John Adams wrote his beloved Abigail, "that Howe has gone to Charleston S.C. But it is a wild Supposition. It may be right However: for Howe is a wild General." Washington did not share the expectation that Howe would attack in the south and of course he was right. Early in August eager observers sighted the British convoy entering Chesapeake Bay, and on August 25, Howe began putting his troops ashore on the west side of the Elk River in Maryland. Two days later they had marched to Head of Elk where they rested until the first week in September. Rest was necessary: they had lived in crowded quarters for almost two months, and they had spent half that time at sea in weather that was hotter than most Americans living along the coast could remember.
40

Washington put his army on the march almost immediately after learning of Howe's whereabouts. Aware of the importance of civilian morale, he marched his soldiers through Philadelphia on the way south. To the unpracticed eye, these troops appeared both formidable and yet, as John Adams said, they did not have "quite the Air of Soldiers. They dont step exactly in Time. They dont hold up their Heads, quite erect, nor turn out their Toes, so exactly as they ought. They dont all of them cock their Hats -- and such as do, dont all wear them the same Way."
41
As trivial as these assessments appear, they marked one important flaw in the American army: a lack of hard discipline which assured steady performance in combat. Still, these half-soldiers fought well in the next few weeks though their leaders sometimes failed them.

Howe's soldiers were long accustomed to such discipline, but they sometimes got out of hand when they were among civilians, especially the contemptible American civilians. On the way up the Chesapeake they had encountered friendly Americans who rowed out to the ships with fruit, fowl, and milk for sale. These Marylanders from the eastern shore seemed fearless, unaware apparently that the army sometimes simply took what it wanted.
The civilians in southern Pennsylvania, in con-

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40

 

GW Writings
, IX, 1-6, 9, 21 ("strong doubts"); L. H. Butterfield, ed.,
Adams Family Correspondence
( 2 vols. to date, Cambridge, Mass., 1963- ), II, 321 (on the "wild General").
Adams reports on the weather,
ibid.,
315
.

 

41

 

Butterfield, ed.,
Adams Family Corr.
, II, 328.

 

trast, felt fear and fled, abandoning houses and belongings, cattle, horses, sheep, and grain in the fields. Howe's soldiers dined well in early September; fresh meat appeared in the field mess twice a week, and fruit and vegetables were plentiful. The soldiers enjoyed these days, and some also found the vacant houses irresistible and plundered. Howe realized that this behavior could only erode discipline so vital in battle, and he realized too its effects on American sympathies. He responded with hangings and whippings but not before the news spread over the state and contributed to further alienation and to improved recruiting by the American army.
42

That army strengthened by militia now moved to block the British. After the march through Philadelphia, Washington established temporary headquarters at Wilmington. He ordered several detachments forward to harass the advancing British and Germans; "hanging on" the enemy, the phrase usually employed to describe these harrying attacks, indicates something of their method. Maintaining contact kept Washington informed of the location of his foe, and the small units engaged in "hanging on" tormented enemy pickets and patrols, killing them from ambush, annoying them to the point of fury and eventually of fatigue. Howe moved on, of course, despite the irritations of his troops, and on September 10 he discovered that Washington had decided to stop and fight.
43

Washington strung his army out on the east side of Brandywine Creek, which cut through wooded slopes. The stream itself was an obstacle and could be crossed only at fords. Greene held the center of the American position at Chad's Ford with Anthony Wayne. John Armstrong, with militia from Pennsylvania, occupied the ground to the left, and Sullivan with Stirling and Stephen covered the right. These dispositions made considerable sense: they provided strength at the center where the main road to Philadelphia ran, and they allowed concentration of forces. But they left uncovered Trimble's Ford on the west branch of the Brandywine and Jeffries Ford on the east. The right flank hung open, and behind it a hill which dominated the right and the rear sat unoccupied.
44

The "wild general," William Howe, whose wildness had a predictable

____________________

 

42

 

Bernhard A. Uhlendorf, trans.,
Revolution in America: Confidential Letters and Journals 1776-1784 of Adjutant General Major Baurmeister of the Hessian Forces
( New Brunswick, N.J., 1957), 91-96; Ward, I, 336-37.

 

43

 

GW Writings
, IX, 140-42, 164, 198.

 

44

 

Freeman,
GW
, IV, 469-72; Ward, I, 342.

 

character, sent Knyphausen's Germans up against Chad's Ford to fix Washington's attention, and then from Welch's Tavern and Kennett Square he set out at 4:00 A.M. by back roads for Trimble's and Jeffries Fords. Howe had shown this design before, most recently on Long Island, and he had no reason to suppose that it would fail him now. At ten in the morning Knyphausen's guns spoke in thunderous tone as a prelude, as far as Washington could tell, to an assault across Chad's by the infantry. The American artillery replied; the main struggle seemed to be taking shape at the center. Howe and his colleague Cornwallis, meanwhile, were in the process of turning the American flank. By 2:30 in the afternoon they had their troops over the fords and behind Osborne's Hill. Washington was warned of this move against the end of his unanchored line as early as 9:00 A.M. but failed to heed the warning. When the British appeared on Osborne's Hill, no one could deny that the Americans had been outflanked once again. Sullivan acted rapidly, moving Stephen and Stirling on right angles to the creek and into a position opposite Howe and Cornwallis.

 

Those two seemed in no hurry. Rather, they took their time, shifting their columns into two long lines, barely deigning to notice their enemy's mad scramble to get into position. Once the British were ready, they did nothing but stand in the sunshine, their bayonets sending off flashes when they caught the light. Perhaps they hoped to unnerve the Americans; if so, they failed, but they did impress them. At four o'clock in the afternoon Howe set them in motion -- a march down the hill, not fancy, but stepping out smartly to the tune of the "British Grenadier" played by an accompanying band. The troops of Sullivan, Stirling, and Stephen did not panic, but in their haste to realign themselves they had left a gap of several hundred yards in their lines. Stephen seems to have been mainly responsible for not hooking his left flank to Stirling's right; in any case, the hole there invited British penetration and the British accepted the invitation. Just as the light infantry and the grenadiers began pouring through and rolling up the American left, Nathanael Greene's brigade arrived. The brigade had been dispatched by Washington when he learned of Howe's appearance on his right. Greene's men came on a run that covered four miles in about forty-five minutes.

 

What had begun as a classic eighteenth-century engagement with the British regulars advancing in a dense line, bayonets at the ready, and sent off with the flourishes of the "British Grenadier" soon degenerated into a confusing and nasty fight. Smoke from cannon and muskets contributed to the confusion by obscuring the location of friend and

 

foe. Maintaining the proper interval between units proved difficult too, as the rough terrain broke up formations. A British officer who attempted to recall his impressions of the action resorted to wit which conceded his inability to make sense out of what he had experienced:

Describe the battle. 'Twas not like those of Covent Garden or Drury Lane. Thou hast seen Le Brun's paintings and the tapestry perhaps at Blenheim. Are these natural resemblances? Pshaw! quoth the captain, en un mot. There was a most infernal fire of cannon and musquetry. Most incessant shouting, "Incline to the right! Incline to the left! Halt! Charge!" etc. The balls plowing up the ground. The Trees crackling over one's head. The branches riven by the artillery. The leaves falling as in autumn by the grapeshot.
45

The British units retained their integrity as military organizations; the same cannot be said for all the American regiments once they began their retreat. They found the ground as difficult to traverse as the British did, and when the assault brought the British infantry into close quarters they tended to give way -- as individuals rather than as military units. Sergeant Major John Hawkins of Congress's Own Regiment discarded his knapsack when he was about to be "grabbed by one of the ill-looking Highlanders, a number of whom were firing and advancing very brisk towards our rear." And in his flight in the confusion and the smoke, he lost sight of his regiment and completed his retreat with troops from North Carolina.
46

While the American right fought to hold its position, the center received an attack from across the stream by Knyphausen. The combined force of British and Germans at Chad's Ford had waited until they heard the sounds of the battle upstream. Then they plunged forward into the Brandywine and for a few minutes at least paid a frightful price. Anthony Wayne's and William Maxwell's troops "fought stubbornly," a German officer reported, sending grapeshot and musket balls over the water which was soon "much stained with blood" before the attackers captured the American guns and turned them on their enemy.
47

By darkness the battle had ended on both "fronts." Washington's troops made their way to Chester, and Howe's pulled up short on the

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45

 

For the battle of Brandywine, see Ward, I, 342-54; Freeman,
GW
, IV, 473-89;
GW Writings
, IX, 206-8.
The British officer's comments are from
PMHB
, 29 ( 1905), 368.

 

46

 

Sheer and Rankin,
Rebels and Redcoats
, 272.

 

47

 

Uhlendorf, trans.,
Revolution in America
, iii; Sheer and Rankin,
Rebels and Redcoats
, 270.

 

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