The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789 (110 page)

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Authors: Robert Middlekauff

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

BOOK: The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789
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after all, had been formed from towns and villages. Some, clearly, had known one another all their lives.
20

 

Elsewhere, especially in the thinly settled southern colonies, companies were usually composed of men -- farmers, farmers' sons, farm laborers, artisans, and new immigrants -- who did not know one another. They were, to use a term much used in a later war, companies of "stragglers" without common attachments, with almost no knowledge of their fellows. For them, even bunched tightly in line, the battlefield was an empty, lonely place. Absence of personal bonds, and their own parochialism, coupled to inadequate training and imperfect discipline, often led to disintegration under fire.
21

 

According to conventional wisdom the nearer the American militia were to home the better they fought, fighting for their homes and no one else's. Proximity to home, however, may have been a distraction which weakened resolve. For the irony of going into battle and perhaps to their deaths when home and safety lay close down the road could not have escaped many. Almost every senior American general commented on the propensity of the militia to desert -- and if they were not deserting they seemed perpetually in transit between home and camp, usually without authorization.

 

Paradoxically, of all the Americans who fought, the militiamen best exemplified in themselves and in their behavior the ideals and purposes of the Revolution. They had enjoyed independence, or at least personal liberty, long before it was proclaimed in the Declaration. They instinctively felt their equality with others and in many places insisted upon demonstrating it by choosing their own officers. Their sense of their liberty permitted, even compelled, them to serve only for short enlistments, to leave camp when they liked, to scorn the orders of others -and especially those orders to fight when they preferred to flee. Their integration into their society drove them to resist military discipline; and their ethos of personal freedom stimulated hatred of the machine that served as the model for the army.
They were not pieces of a machine,

 

____________________

 

20

 

For a fine study of a Massachusetts town and its militia, see Robert A. Gross,
The Minutemen and Their World
( New York, 1976); and for a general view of the colonial militia, John Shy, "A New Look at the Colonial Militia",
WMQ
, 3d Ser. , 20 ( 1963), 175-85, is outstanding.

 

21

 

The conclusions in this paragraph were suggested by Edward C. Papenfuse and Gregory A. Stiverson, "General Smallwood's Recruits: The Peacetime Career of the Revolutionary War Private",
WMQ
, 3d Ser., 30 ( 1973), 117-32. The Nathanael Greene Papers in the Huntington Library contain materials which tend to confirm these impressions.

 

and they would serve it only reluctantly and skeptically. At their best, at Cowpens, for example, they fought well; at their worst, at Camden, they fought not at all. There, they were, as Greene said, "ungovernable."
22
What was lacking in the militia was a set of professional standards, requirements and rules which might regulate their conduct in battle. What was lacking was professional pride. Coming and going to camp as they liked, shooting their guns for the pleasure of the sound, the militia annoyed the Continentals, who soon learned that most could not be trusted.

 

The British regulars were at the opposite pole. They had been pulled out of society, carefully segregated from it, tightly disciplined and highly trained. Their values were the values of the army for the most part, no more and no less. To be sure, the officers were in certain respects very different from the men. They embodied the style and standards. of gentlemen who believed in service to their king and who fought for honor and glory.

 

With these ideals and a mission of service to the king defining their calling, British officers held themselves as aloof as possible from the peculiar horrors of war. Not that they did not fight. They sought combat and danger, but by the conventions which shaped their understanding of battle, they insulated themselves as much as possible from the ghastly business of killing and dying. Thus the results of battle might be long lists of dead and wounded, but the results were also "honourable and glorious", as Charles Stedman described Guilford Court House, or reflected "dishonour upon British arms," as he described Cowpens. Actions and gunfire were "smart" and "brisk" and sometimes "hot," and occasionally a "difficult piece of work." They might also be described lightly -Harlem Heights was "this silly business" to Lord Rawdon. To their men, British officers spoke a clean, no nonsense language. Howe's terse "look to your bayonets" summed up a tough professional's expectations.
23

 

For all the distance between British officers and men, they gave remarkable support to one another in battle. They usually deployed carefully, keeping up their spirits with drum and fife. They talked and shouted and cheered, and coming on with their bayonets at the ready "huzzaing," or coming on "firing and huzzaing" they must have sustained a sense

 

____________________

 

22

 

Greene to Governor Reed
, March 18, 1781, Greene Papers, HL. On Feb 3, 1781, Greene wrote Governor Nash that 20,000 militia would not provide 500 effective troops, the way they "come and go," ibid.

 

23

 

Stedman,
History of the American War
, II, 383, 360;
Rawdon to the Earl of Huntington
, Aug 3, 1775, Sept 23, 1776, Hastings Papers, HL.

 

of shared experience. Their ranks might be thinned by an American volley but on they came, exhorting one another to "push on! push on!" as at Bunker Hill and the battles that followed.
24
Although terrible losses naturally dispirited them, they almost always maintained the integrity of their regiments as fighting units, and when they were defeated, or nearly so as at Guilford Court House, they recovered their pride and fought well thereafter. And there was no hint at Yorktown that the ranks wanted to surrender, even though they had suffered dreadfully.

 

The Continentals, the American regulars, lacked the polish of their British counterparts, but at least from Monmouth on, they showed a steadiness under fire almost as impressive as their enemy's. And they demonstrated a brave endurance: defeated, they retired, pulled themselves together, and came back to try again. These qualities -- patience and endurance -- endeared them to many. For example, John Laurens, on Washington's staff in 1778, wanted desperately to command them. In what amounted to a plea for command, Laurens wrote: "I would cherish those dear, ragged Continentals, whose patience will be the admiration of future ages, and glory in bleeding with them."
25
This statement was all the more extraordinary coming from Laurens, a South Carolina aristocrat. The soldiers he admired were anything but aristocratic. As the war dragged on they came increasingly from the poor and the propertyless. Most probably entered the army as substitutes for men who had rather pay than serve, or as the recipients of bounties and the promise of land. In time, some, perhaps many, assimilated the ideals of the Revolution. As Baron von Steuben observed in training them, they differed from European troops in at least one regard: they wanted to know why they were told to do certain things. Unlike European soldiers who did what they were told, the Continentals asked why.
26

 

Continental officers aped the style of their British counterparts. They aspired to gentility and, often failing to achieve it, betrayed their anxiety by an excessive concern for their honor. Not surprisingly, like their British counterparts, they also used the vocabulary of the gentleman in describing battle.

 

Their troops, innocent of such polish, spoke with words from their immediate experience of physical combat. They found few euphemisms for the horrors of battle. Thus Private David How, September 1776,

 

____________________

 

24

 

Rawdon to the Earl of Huntington
, June 20, 1775, Hastings Papers, HL.

 

25

 

To his father, March 9, 1778, in William Gilmore Simms, ed.,
The Army Correspondence of Colonel John Laurens in the Years 1777-1778
( New York, 1867), 136.

 

26

 

Sheer and Rankin,
Rebels and Redcoats
, 354.

 

in New York, noted in his diary: "Isaac Fowls had his head shot off with a cannon ball this morning." And Sergeant Thomas McCarty reported an engagement between a British foraging party and American infantry near New Brunswick in February 1777: "We attacked the body, and bullets flew like hail. We stayed about 15 minutes and then retreated with loss." After the battle inspection of the field revealed that the British had killed the American wounded -- "the men that was wounded in the thigh or leg, they dashed out their brains with their muskets and run them through with their bayonets, made them like sieves. This was barbarity to the utmost." The pain of seeing his comrades mutilated by shot and shell at White Plains remained with Elisha Bostwick, a Connecticut soldier, all his life: A cannon ball "cut down Lt. Youngs platoon which was next to that of mine[;] the ball first took off the head of Smith, a Stout heavy man and dashed it open, then took Taylor across the Bowels, it then Struck Sergeant Garret of our Company on the hip [and] took off the point of the hip bone[.] Smith and Taylor were left on the spot. Sergeant Garret was carried but died the Same day now to think, oh! what a sight that was to see within a distance of six rods those men with their legs and arms and guns and packs all in a heap[.]"
27

 

The Continentals occupied the psychological and moral ground somewhere between the militia and the British professionals. From 1777 on their enlistments were for three years or the duration of the war. This long service allowed them to learn more of their craft and to become seasoned. That does not mean that on the battlefield they lost their fear. Experience in combat almost never leaves one indifferent to danger, unless after prolonged and extreme fatigue one comes to consider oneself already dead. Seasoned troops have simply learned to deal with their fear more effectively than raw troops, in part because they have come to realize that everyone feels it and that they can rely on their fellows.

 

By winter 1779-80 the Continentals were beginning to believe that they had no one save themselves to lean on. Their soldierly qualifications so widely admired in America -- their "habit of subordination,"
28
their patience under fatigue, their ability to stand sufferings and privations

 

____________________

 

27

 

Henry B. Dawson, ed.,
Gleanings from the Harvest-held of American History
, IV: [
Diary of David How
] ( Morrisania, N.Y., 1865), 28; Jared C. Lobdell, ed., "The Revolutionary War Journal of Sergeant Thomas McCarty", New Jersey Historical Society,
Proceedings
, 82 ( Newark, N.J., 1964), 45; Powell, "Bostwick's Memoirs",
WMQ
, 3d Ser., 6 ( 1949), 101.

 

28

 

Laurens to his father
, Jan 14, 1779, Simms, ed.,
Army Correspondence
, 108.

 

of every kind -- may in fact have led to a bitter resignation that saw them through a good deal of fighting. At Morristown during this winter, they felt abandoned in their cold and hunger. They knew that in America food and clothing existed to keep them healthy and comfortable, and yet little of either came to the army. Understandably their dissatisfaction increased as they realized that once again the suffering had been left to them. Dissatisfaction in these months slowly turned into a feeling of martyrdom. They felt themselves to be martyrs to the "glorious cause." They would fulfill the ideals of the Revolution and see things through to independence because the civilian population would not.
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