<h2><SPAN name="V"></SPAN>V</h2>
<br/>
<h3>THE WAR OF INDEPENDENCE, 1775-1783</h3>
<h4>Books for Study and Reading</h4>
<p>References.--Fiske's <i>War of Independence;</i> Higginson's
<i>Larger History</i>, 249-293; McMaster's <i>With the
Fathers.</i></p>
<p>Home Readings.--Scudder's <i>Washington</i>; Holmes's
<i>Grandmother's Story of Bunker Hill;</i> Cooper's <i>Lionel
Lincoln</i> (Bunker Hill); Cooper's <i>Spy</i> (campaigns around
New York); Cooper's <i>Pilot</i> (the war on the sea); Drake's
<i>Burgoyne's Invasion;</i> Coffin's <i>Boys of '76</i>; Abbot's
<i>Blue Jackets of '76</i>; Abbot's <i>Paul Jones</i>, Lossing's
<i>Two Spies.</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<hr style="width: 35%;">
<br/>
<br/>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_14"></SPAN>CHAPTER 14</h2>
<br/>
<h3>BUNKER HILL TO TRENTON</h3>
<p class="side">Advantages of the British.</p>
<p><b>133. Advantages of the British.</b>--At first sight it seems
as if the Americans were very foolish to fight the British. There
were five or six times as many people in the British Isles as there
were in the continental colonies. The British government had a
great standing army. The Americans had no regular army. The British
government had a great navy. The Americans had no navy. The British
government had quantities of powder, guns, and clothing, while the
Americans had scarcely any military stores of any kind. Indeed,
there were so few guns in the colonies that one British officer
thought if the few colonial gunsmiths could be bribed to go away,
the Americans would have no guns to fight with after a few months
of warfare.</p>
<br/>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/114.jpg" width-obs="30%" alt=""><br/>
<b>GRAND UNION FLAG.<br/>
Hoisted at Cambridge, January, 1776. The British Union and thirteen
stripes.</b></p>
<br/>
<p class="side">Advantages of the Americans.</p>
<p><b>134. Advantages of the Americans.</b>--All these things were
clearly against the Americans. But they had some advantages on
their side. In the first place, America was a long way off from
Europe. It was very difficult and very costly to send armies to
America, and very difficult and very costly to feed the soldiers
when they were fighting in America. In the second place, the
Americans usually fought on the defensive and the country over
which the armies fought was made for defense. In New England hill
succeeded hill. In the Middle states river succeeded river. In the
South wilderness succeeded wilderness. In the third place, the
Americans had many great soldiers. Washington, Greene, Arnold,
Morgan, and Wayne were better soldiers than any in the British
army.</p>
<p class="side">The Loyalists.</p>
<p><b>135. Disunion among the Americans.</b>--We are apt to think
of the colonists as united in the contest with the British. In
reality the well-to-do, the well-born, and the well-educated
colonists were as a rule opposed to independence. The opponents of
the Revolution were strongest in the Carolinas, and were weakest in
New England.</p>
<br/>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/115.jpg" width-obs="50%" alt=""><br/>
<b>THE SIEGE OF BOSTON.</b></p>
<br/>
<p class="side">Boston and neighborhood, 1775-76.<br/>
Importance of Dorchester and Charlestown.</p>
<p><b>136. Siege of Boston.</b>--It was most fortunate that the
British army was at Boston when the war began, for Boston was about
as bad a place for an army as could be found. In those days Boston
was hardly more than an island connected with the mainland by a
strip of gravel. Gage built a fort across this strip of ground. The
Americans could not get in. But they built a fort at the landward
end, and the British could not get out. On either side of Boston
was a similar peninsula. One of these was called Dorchester
Heights; the other was called Charlestown. Both overlooked Boston.
To hold that town, Gage must possess both Dorchester and
Charlestown. If the Americans could occupy only one of these, the
British would have to abandon Boston. At almost the same moment
Gage made up his mind to seize Dorchester, and the Americans
determined to occupy the Charlestown hills. The Americans moved
first, and the first battle was fought for the Charlestown
hills.</p>
<p>[Illustration: A POWDER-HORN USED AT BUNKER HILL.]</p>
<p class="side">Battle of Bunker Hill, 1775. <i>Higginson</i>,
183-188; <i>McMaster</i>, 129-130.</p>
<p><b>137. Bunker Hill, June 17, 1775.</b>--When the seamen on the
British men-of-war waked up on the morning of June 17, the first
thing they saw was a redoubt on the top of one of the Charlestown
hills. The ships opened fire. But in spite of the balls Colonel
Prescott walked on the top of the breastwork while his men went on
digging. Gage sent three or four thousand men across the Charles
River to Charlestown to drive the daring Americans away. It took
the whole morning to get them to Charlestown, and then they had to
eat their dinner. This delay gave the Americans time to send aid to
Prescott. Especially went Stark and his New Hampshire men, who
posted themselves behind a breastwork of fence rails and hay. At
last the British soldiers marched to the attack. When they came
within good shooting distance, Prescott gave the word to fire. The
British line stopped, hesitated, broke, and swept back. Again the
soldiers marched to the attack, and again they were beaten back.
More soldiers came from Boston, and a third time a British line
marched up the hill. This time it could not be stopped, for the
Americans had no more powder. They had to give up the hill and
escape as well as they could. One-half of the British soldiers
actually engaged in the assaults were killed or wounded. The
Americans were defeated. But they were encouraged and were willing
to sell Gage as many hills as he wanted at the same price.</p>
<p>[Illustration: FACSIMILE OF A REVOLUTIONARY POSTER.]</p>
<p class="side">Washington takes command of the army, 1775.
<i>Higginson</i>, 188-193.<br/>
Seizure of Ticonderoga and Crown Point.<br/>
Evacuation of Boston, 1776.</p>
<p><b>138. Washington in Command, July, 1775.</b>--The Continental
Congress was again sitting at Philadelphia. It took charge of the
defense of the colonies. John Adams named Washington for
commander-in-chief, and he was elected. Washington took command of
the army on Cambridge Common, July 3, 1775. He found everything in
confusion. The soldiers of one colony were jealous of the soldiers
of other colonies. Officers who had not been promoted were jealous
of those who had been promoted. In the winter the army had to be
made over. During all this time the people expected Washington to
fight. But he had not powder enough for half a battle. At last he
got supplies in the following way. In the spring of 1775 Ethan
Allen and his Green Mountain Boys, with the help of the people of
western Massachusetts and Connecticut, had captured Ticonderoga and
Crown Point. These forts were filled with cannon and stores left
from the French campaigns. Some of the cannon were now dragged by
oxen over the snow and placed in the forts around Boston. Captain
Manley, of the Massachusetts navy, captured a British brig loaded
with powder. Washington now could attack. He seized and held
Dorchester Heights. The British could no longer stay in Boston.
They went on board their ships and sailed away (March, 1776).</p>
<p>[Illustration: SITE OF TICONDEROGA.]</p>
<p class="side">The Canada expedition, 1775-76.<br/>
Assault on Quebec.</p>
<p><b>139. Invasion of Canada, 1775-76.</b>--While the siege of
Boston was going on, the Americans undertook the invasion of
Canada. There were very few regular soldiers in Canada in 1775, and
the Canadians were not likely to fight very hard for their British
masters. So the leaders in Congress thought that if an American
force should suddenly appear before Quebec, the town might
surrender. Montgomery, with a small army, was sent to capture
Montreal and then to march down the St. Lawrence to Quebec.
Benedict Arnold led another force through the Maine woods. After
tremendous exertions and terrible sufferings he reached Quebec. But
the garrison had been warned of his coming. He blockaded the town
and waited for Montgomery. The garrison was constantly increased,
for Arnold was not strong enough fully to blockade the town. At
last Montgomery arrived. At night, amidst a terrible snowstorm,
Montgomery and Arnold led their brave followers to the attack. They
were beaten back with cruel loss. Montgomery was killed, and Arnold
was severely wounded. In the spring of 1776 the survivors of this
little band of heroes were rescued--at the cost of the lives of
five thousand American soldiers.</p>
<br/>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/120.jpg" width-obs="30%" alt=""><br/>
<b>ARNOLD'S MARCH.</b></p>
<br/>
<p class="side">Strength of Charleston.<br/>
Fort Moultrie.<br/>
Attack on Fort Moultrie, 1776.<br/>
Success of the defense</p>
<p><b>140. British Attack on Charleston, 1776.</b>--In June 1776 a
British fleet and army made an attack on Charleston, South
Carolina. This town has never been taken by attack from the sea.
Sand bars guard the entrance of the harbor and the channels through
these shoals lead directly to the end of Sullivan's Island. At that
point the Americans built a fort of palmetto logs and sand. General
Moultrie commanded at the fort and it was named in his honor, Fort
Moultrie. The British fleet sailed boldly in, but the balls from
the ships' guns were stopped by the soft palmetto logs. At one time
the flag was shot away and fell down outside the fort. But Sergeant
Jasper rushed out, seized the broken staff, and again set it up on
the rampart. Meantime, General Clinton had landed on an island and
was trying to cross with his soldiers to the further end of
Sullivan's Island. But the water was at first too shoal for the
boats. The soldiers jumped overboard to wade. Suddenly the water
deepened, and they had to jump aboard to save themselves from
drowning. All this time Americans were firing at them from the
beach. General Clinton ordered a retreat. The fleet also sailed
out--all that could get away--and the whole expedition was
abandoned.</p>
<p>[Illustration: GENERAL MOULTRIE.]</p>
<p class="side">Defense of New York, 1776.<br/>
Battle of Long Island, 1776.<br/>
Escape of the Americans.</p>
<p><b>141. Long Island and Brooklyn Heights, 1776.</b>--The very
day that the British left Boston, Washington ordered five regiments
to New York. For he well knew that city would be the next point of
attack. But he need not have been in such a hurry. General Howe,
the new British commander-in-chief, sailed first to Halifax and did
not begin the campaign in New York until the end of August. He then
landed his soldiers on Long Island and prepared to drive the
Americans away. Marching in a round-about way, he cut the American
army in two and captured one part of it. This brought him to the
foot of Brooklyn Heights. On the top was a fort. Probably Howe
could easily have captured it. But he had led in the field at
Bunker Hill and had had enough of attacking forts defended by
Americans. So he stopped his soldiers--with some difficulty. That
night the wind blew a gale, and the next day was foggy. The British
fleet could not sail into the East River. Skillful fishermen safely
ferried the rest of the American army across to New York. When at
length the British marched to the attack, there was no one left in
the fort on Brooklyn Heights.</p>
<p class="side">Retreat from New York.<br/>
Washington crosses the Delaware.</p>
<p><b>142. From the Hudson to the Delaware, 1776.</b>--Even now
with his splendid fleet and great army Howe could have captured the
Americans. But he delayed so long that Washington got away in
safety. Washington's army was now fast breaking up. Soldiers
deserted by the hundreds. A severe action at White Plains only
delayed the British advance. The fall of Fort Washington on the end
of Manhattan Island destroyed all hope of holding anything near New
York. Washington sent one part of his army to secure the Highlands
of the Hudson. With the other part he retired across New Jersey to
the southern side of the Delaware River. The end of the war seemed
to be in sight. In December, 1776, Congress gave the sole direction
of the war to Washington and then left Philadelphia for a place of
greater safety.</p>
<p class="side">Battle of Trenton, 1776. <i>Higginson</i>, 203;
<i>Hero Tales</i>, 45-55</p>
<p><b>143. Trenton, December 26, 1776.</b>--Washington did not give
up. On Christmas night, 1776, he crossed the Delaware with a
division of his army. A violent snowstorm was raging, the river was
full of ice. But Washington was there in person, and the soldiers
crossed. Then the storm changed to sleet and rain. But on the
soldiers marched. When the Hessian garrison at Trenton looked about
them next morning they saw that Washington and Greene held the
roads leading inland from the town. Stark and a few soldiers--among
them James Monroe--held the bridge leading over the Assanpink to
the next British post. A few horsemen escaped before Stark could
prevent them. But all the foot soldiers were killed or captured. A
few days later nearly one thousand prisoners marched through
Philadelphia. They were Germans, who had been sold by their rulers
to Britain's king to fight his battles. They were called Hessians
by the Americans because most of them came from the little German
state of Hesse Cassel.</p>
<p>[Illustration: Battle of Trenton.]</p>
<p>[Illustration: Battle of Princeton.]</p>
<p class="side">Battle of Princeton, 1777. <i>Source-Book</i>,
149-151.</p>
<p><b>144. Princeton, January, 1777.</b>--Trenton saved the
Revolution by giving the Americans renewed courage. General Howe
sent Lord Cornwallis with a strong force to destroy the Americans.
Washington with the main part of his army was now encamped on the
southern side of the Assanpink. Cornwallis was on the other bank at
Trenton. Leaving a few men to keep up the campfires, and to throw
up a slight fort by the bridge over the stream, Washington led his
army away by night toward Princeton. There he found several
regiments hastening to Cornwallis. He drove them away and led his
army to the highlands of New Jersey where he would be free from
attack. The British abandoned nearly all their posts in New Jersey
and retired to New York.</p>
<br/>
<br/>
<hr style="width: 35%;">
<br/>
<br/>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_15"></SPAN>CHAPTER 15</h2>
<h3>THE GREAT DECLARATION AND THE FRENCH ALLIANCE</h3>
<p class="side">Rising spirit of independence, 1775-76.</p>
<p><b>145. Growth of the Spirit of Independence.</b>--The year 1776
is even more to be remembered for the doings of Congress than it is
for the doings of the soldiers. The colonists loved England. They
spoke of it as home. They were proud of the strength of the British
empire, and glad to belong to it. But their feelings rapidly
changed when the British government declared them to be rebels,
made war upon them, and hired foreign soldiers to kill them. They
could no longer be subjects of George III. That was clear enough.
They determined to declare themselves to be independent. Virginia
led in this movement, and the chairman of the Virginia delegation
moved a resolution of independence. A committee was appointed to
draw up a declaration.</p>
<p>[Illustration: FIRST UNITED STATES FLAG. Adopted by Congress in
1777.]</p>
<p class="side">The Great Declaration, adopted July 4, 1776.
<i>Higginson</i>, 194-201; <i>McMaster</i>, 131-135;
<i>Source-Book</i>, 147-149.<br/>
Signing of the Declaration, August 2, 1776.</p>
<p><b>146. The Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776.</b>--The
most important members of this committee were Benjamin Franklin,
John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson. Of these Jefferson was the
youngest, and the least known. But he had already drawn up a
remarkable paper called <i>A Summary View of the Rights of British
America.</i> The others asked him to write out a declaration. He
sat down without book or notes of any kind, and wrote out the Great
Declaration in almost the same form in which it now stands. The
other members of the committee proposed a few changes, and then
reported the declaration to Congress. There was a fierce debate in
Congress over the adoption of the Virginia resolution for
independence. But finally it was adopted. Congress then examined
the Declaration of Independence as reported by the committee. It
made a few changes in the words and struck out a clause condemning
the slave-trade. The first paragraph of the Declaration contains a
short, clear statement of the basis of the American system of
government. It should be learned by heart by every American boy and
girl, and always kept in mind. The Declaration was adopted on July
4, 1776. A few copies were printed on July 5, with the signatures
of John Hancock and Charles Thompson, president and secretary of
Congress. On August 2, 1776, the Declaration was signed by the
members of Congress.</p>
<p>[Illustration: Battle of Brandywine.]</p>
<p class="side">Battle of Brandywine 1777. <i>McMaster</i>,
137-138.<br/>
Battle of Germantown, 1777.</p>
<p><b>147. The Loss of Philadelphia, 1777.</b>--For some months
after the battle of Princeton there was little fighting. But in the
summer of 1777, Howe set out to capture Philadelphia. Instead of
marching across New Jersey, he placed his army on board ships, and
sailed to Chesapeake Bay. As soon as Washington learned what Howe
was about, he marched to Chad's Ford, where the road from
Chesapeake Bay to Philadelphia crossed Brandywine Creek. Howe moved
his men as if about to attempt to cross the ford. Meantime he sent
Cornwallis with a strong force to cross the creek higher up.
Cornwallis surprised the right wing of the American army, drove it
back, and Washington was compelled to retreat. Howe occupied
Philadelphia and captured the forts below the city. Washington
tried to surprise a part of the British army which was posted at
Germantown. But accidents and mist interfered. The Americans then
retired to Valley Forge--a strong place in the hills not far from
Philadelphia.</p>
<p class="side">The army at Valley Forge, 1777-78.</p>
<p>[Illustration: "The Glorious WASHINGTON and GATES." FROM
TITLE-PAGE OF AN ALMANAC OF 1778. To show condition of
wood-engraving in the Revolutionary era.]</p>
<p class="side">Baron Steuben.</p>
<p><b>148. The Army at Valley Forge, 1777-78.</b>--The sufferings
of the soldiers during the following winter can never be
overstated. They seldom had more than half enough to eat. Their
clothes were in rags. Many of them had no blankets. Many more had
no shoes. Washington did all he could do for them. But Congress had
no money and could not get any. At Valley Forge the soldiers were
drilled by Baron Steuben, a Prussian veteran. The army took the
field in 1778, weak in numbers and poorly clad. But what soldiers
there were were as good as any soldiers to be found anywhere in the
world. During that winter, also, an attempt was made to dismiss
Washington from chief command, and to give his place to General
Gates. But this attempt ended in failure.</p>
<p class="side">Burgoyne's campaign, 1777. <i>Eggleston</i>,
178-179; <i>McMaster</i>, 139-140; <i>Source-Book</i>, 154-157.<br/>
Schuyler and Gates.</p>
<p><b>149. Burgoyne's March to Saratoga, 1777.</b>--While Howe was
marching to Philadelphia, General Burgoyne was marching southward
from Canada. It had been intended that Burgoyne and Howe should
seize the line of the Hudson and cut New England off from the other
states. But the orders reached Howe too late, and he went southward
to Philadelphia. Burgoyne, on his part, was fairly successful at
first, for the Americans abandoned post after post. But when he
reached the southern end of Lake Champlain, and started on his
march to the Hudson, his troubles began. The way ran through a
wilderness. General Schuyler had had trees cut down across its
woodland paths and had done his work so well that it took Burgoyne
about a day to march a mile and a half. This gave the Americans
time to gather from all quarters and bar his southward way. But
many of the soldiers had no faith in Schuyler and Congress gave the
command to General Horatio Gates.</p>
<p class="side">Battle of Bennington, 1777. <i>Hero Tales</i>,
59-67.</p>
<p><b>150. Bennington, 1777.</b>--Burgoyne had with him many
cavalrymen. But they had no horses. The army, too, was sadly in
need of food. So Burgoyne sent a force of dismounted dragoons to
Bennington in southern Vermont to seize horses and food. It
happened, however, that General Stark, with soldiers from New
Hampshire, Vermont, and western Massachusetts, was nearer
Bennington than Burgoyne supposed. They killed or captured all the
British soldiers. They then drove back with great loss a second
party which Burgoyne had sent to support the first one.</p>
<p class="side">Battle of Oriskany, 1777.</p>
<p><b>151. Oriskany, 1777.</b>--Meantime St. Leger, with a large
body of Indians and Canadian frontiersmen, was marching to join
Burgoyne by the way of Lake Ontario and the Mohawk Valley. Near the
site of the present city of Rome in New York was Fort Schuyler,
garrisoned by an American force. St. Leger stopped to besiege this
fort. The settlers on the Mohawk marched to relieve the garrison
and St. Leger defeated them at Oriskany. But his Indians now grew
tired of the siege, especially when they heard that Arnold with a
strong army was coming. St. Leger marched back to Canada and left
Burgoyne to his fate.</p>
<p class="side">First battle of Freeman's Farm, 1777.<br/>
Second battle of Freeman's Farm, 1777.<br/>
Surrender of the British at Saratoga, 1777.</p>
<p><b>152. Saratoga, 1777.</b>--Marching southward, on the western
side of the Hudson, Burgoyne and his army came upon the Americans
in a forest clearing called Freeman's Farm. Led by Daniel Morgan
and Benedict Arnold the Americans fought so hard that Burgoyne
stopped where he was and fortified the position. This was on
September 19. The American army posted itself near by on Bemis'
Heights. For weeks the two armies faced each other. Then, on
October 7, the Americans attacked. Again Arnold led his men to
victory. They captured a fort in the centre of the British line,
and Burgoyne was obliged to retreat. But when he reached the
crossing place of the Hudson, to his dismay he found a strong body
of New Englanders with artillery on the opposite bank. Gates had
followed the retiring British, and soon Burgoyne was practically
surrounded. His men were starving, and on October 17 he
surrendered.</p>
<p class="side">The Treaty of Alliance, 1778.</p>
<p><b>153. The French Alliance, 1778.</b>--Burgoyne's defeat made
the French think that the Americans would win their independence.
So Dr. Franklin, who was at Paris, was told that France would
recognize the independence of the United States, would make
treaties with the new nation, and give aid openly. Great Britain at
once declared war on France. The French lent large sums of money to
the United States. They sent large armies and splendid fleets to
America. Their aid greatly shortened the struggle for independence.
But the Americans would probably have won without French aid.</p>
<p class="side">The British leave Philadelphia 1778.<br/>
Battle of Monmouth, 1778.</p>
<p><b>154. Monmouth, 1778.</b>--The first result of the French
alliance was the retreat of the British from Philadelphia to New
York. As Sir Henry Clinton, the new British commander, led his army
across the Jerseys, Washington determined to strike it a blow. This
he did near Monmouth. The attack was a failure, owing to the
treason of General Charles Lee, who led the advance. Washington
reached the front only in time to prevent a dreadful disaster. But
he could not bring about victory, and Clinton seized the first
moment to continue his march to New York. There were other
expeditions and battles in the North. But none of these had any
important effect on the outcome of the war.</p>
<p>[Illustration: Clark's Campaign 1777-1778]</p>
<p class="side">Clark's conquest of the Northwest, 1778-79. <i>Hero
Tales</i>, 31-41.</p>
<p><b>155. Clark's Western Campaign, 1778-79.</b>--The Virginians
had long taken great interest in the western country. Their hardy
pioneers had crossed the mountains and begun the settlement of
Kentucky. The Virginians now determined to conquer the British
posts in the country northwest of the Ohio. The command was given
to George Rogers Clark. Gathering a strong band of hardy
frontiersmen he set out on his dangerous expedition. He seized the
posts in Illinois, and Vincennes surrendered to him. Then the
British governor of the Northwest came from Detroit with a large
force and recaptured Vincennes. Clark set out from Illinois to
surprise the British. It was the middle of the winter. In some
places the snow lay deep on the ground. Then came the early floods.
For days the Americans marched in water up to their waists. At
night they sought some little hill where they could sleep on dry
ground. Then on again through the flood. They surprised the British
garrison at Vincennes and forced it to surrender. That was the end
of the contest for the Northwest.</p>
<p>[Illustration: WEST POINT IN 1790.]</p>
<p class="side">Benedict Arnold.<br/>
His treason, 1780 <i>Higginson</i>, 209-211; <i>McMaster</i>,
144</p>
<p><b>156. Arnold and André, 1780.</b>--Of all the leaders
under Washington none was abler in battle than Benedict Arnold.
Unhappily he was always in trouble about money. He was distrusted
by Congress and was not promoted. At Saratoga he quarrelled with
Gates and was dismissed from his command. Later he became military
governor of Philadelphia and was censured by Washington for his
doings there. He then secured the command of West Point and offered
to surrender the post to the British. Major André, of
Clinton's staff, met Arnold to arrange the final details. On his
return journey to New York André was arrested and taken
before Washington. The American commander asked his generals if
André was a spy. They replied that André was a spy,
and he was hanged. Arnold escaped to New York and became a general
in the British army.</p>
<br/>
<br/>
<hr style="width: 35%;">
<br/>
<br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />