I. THE NEW JERSEY CONVENTION
FROM the day that he
landed in America until the Revolution Witherspoon was a high type of
British colonist. Scotchman as he was, he was British in sentiment and
devotion. But he was likewise American to the core. He early perceived
the possibilities of the new country. Its resources amazed him. The rich
fertility of the soil, especially that which lay inland along the
streams appealed to him in contrast with the less productive land in
Scotland. He was delighted with the men whom he met and with the towns
they had built. His admiration was not effusive, but his practical eye
saw the evident advantages that would accrue from hard work. Clergyman
and educator though he was, following professions not conducive to
business sagacity, he had no hesitation in engaging in such enterprises
as he thought would be profitable. He became one of a company which
obtained from the crown a. large grant of land in Nova Scotia.
Witherspoon appears to have had friends at court to whom, as in the case
of the charter for the Widows' Fund, he could apply for aid. Whether he
used this friend on this occasion I do not know. But he used his own
name freely, as he might very properly, to advertise, not only his land
in Nova Scotia but the general advantages in America, for the purpose of
encouraging emigration. When John Adams was at Princeton in 1774,
Witherspoon said the Congress ought to urge every colony to form a
society to encourage Protestant emigration from the three kingdoms of
Great Britain. It was this motive more largely than the hope of making
money that induced him to join the Nova Scotia land company. When his
name appeared in the advertisements in Scotch papers, some of his old
enemies in that land took occasion to attack him. Ordinarily he let such
things pass, but as . injury might be done to possible emigrants induced
to come to America by other land speculators and as he was accused of
being an enemy to his country, he felt obliged to reply. The charge
narrowed down to this, to use his own words: "Migrations from Britain to
America are not only hurtful but tend to the ruin of that country;
therefore, John Witherspoon, by inviting people to leave Scotland and
settle in America is an enemy to his country." In a long letter to the
Scots Magazine he shows the folly of such an argument. His only reason
for going into the company, he declares, was "that it would give people,
who intended to come out, greater confidence that they should meet with
fair treatment, and that I should the more effectually answer that
purpose, one of the express conditions of my joining the company was,
that no land should be sold dearer to any coming from Scotland than I
should direct," surely a fine evidence of his associates' confidence in
his integrity. He felt obliged to make this stipulation because many
wildcat schemes were advertised abroad offering land at a rental per
acre which equalled the value of the acre itself. Land in America was
remarkably cheap compared with the price in Scotland, but Witherspoon
reminded his readers that the value of it depended more upon its
neighbourhood than upon its quality. The letter displays an
astonishingly intimate acquaintance with the details of real estate,
most unexpected in one whose chief repute was due to theological
learning. Already he caught the import of the drift of population inland
to the rich soils towards and beyond the mountains. As for the charge
that he is an enemy to his country he replies, "I cannot help thinking
it is doing a real service to my country when I show that those of them
who find it difficult to subsist on the soil in which they were born,
may easily transport themselves to a soil vastly superior to that." His
hope was, not that Scotland should send out men who would take up large
tracts and become landed proprietors on a large scale, but that farmers,
willing to work the land themselves might take small holdings. It is
shameful, he feels, for men to deceive intending settlers, and protests
against the unjust charges of his enemies. "For my own part," he
concludes, "my interest in the matter is not great; but since Providence
has sent me to this part of the world, and since so much honour has been
done me as to suppose that my character might be some security against
fraud and imposition, I shall certainly look upon it as my duty to do
every real service in my power, to such of my countrymen as shall fall
in my way, and that either desire or seem to need my assistance."
The result was that many
Scotch families settled in Nova Scotia, whose descendants compose to-day
the sturdiest and most upright portion of the population. His profits
from the venture were not large, but sufficient to induce him to invest
again in New Hampshire lands by which he is believed to have lost money.
American interests of every kind suffered from the dense ignorance of
the British. Not only in political matters, but also in religious,
ignorant critics proved very annoying to the American Church. Already I
have called attention to the Synod's custom of sending a letter annually
to Scotland. The American Presbyterians were independent of the
established Church of Scotland, nor did they seek to be placed under
Scottish jurisdiction, as the Episcopalians sought to have the Church of
England control the colonial church. But they recognized the close
relationship existing between the Presbyterianism of the two countries.
Witherspoon kept up a correspondence with friends in Scotland,
especially those in Glasgow and Edinburgh. The Scots Magazine came to
him regularly, and his friends often sent him copies of other
periodicals which might be of interest to him. In a copy of the Scot's
Magazine late in 1770, was a letter commenting severely upon a sermon
preached at Boston by Dr. Joseph Lathrop, on the "outrage" known as the
Boston Massacre, which was in reality a justifiable defense of British
soldiers against a Boston mob, but which the overwrought people seized
upon as an example of British tyranny. Dr. Lathrop's sermon, which was
published and circulated, served to fan the flames. While it was
probably correct in its general presentation of the popular feeling
about the incident in particular, and towards the British in general,
the sermon was unwise and also unfair, in its picture of the occasion
itself. John Adams was one of the lawyers who secured the acquittal of
all the soldiers but two, who were let off with a light fine. The
populace began the trouble, and the soldiers acted in self-defense. The
presence of the soldiers served to exasperate the people, but the
conflict itself was caused by the latter. In any event the British
public condemned the American attitude. But this writer in the Scots
Magazine made the mistake of using Dr. Lathrop's sermon to strike at the
Synod of New York and Philadelphia. The annual letter from the Synod had
been received a short time before, "on the reading of which," says the
author, "I could not help thinking if we may judge of the American
Church from the sample here given that our church derives no great
honour from her western progeny; but I hope the stock is better than the
sample." That was too much for Witherspoon. He tells the writer that his
criticism has only served to be-tray his ignorance. The Synod of New
York and Philadelphia does not extend as far as Boston. He does not mean
to disclaim connection with the churches of New England. "They are a
most respectable part of the Church of Christ. Nor do I think that any
part of the British empire is at this day equal to them for real
religion and sound morals." And he begs the magazine not to publish
anything upon American affairs unless the writers understand them.
In private letters also
he found it necessary to assure his friends that the people of America
were quite as respectable, fully as civilized, and often more learned
than many at home in Scotland and England. It was his opinion in 1774
that the Continental Congress might wisely employ capable writers to
inform the British public by pamphlets and through the newspapers, of
the real condition of American politics. He himself reminded the British
that if they persisted in taxing the growing trade of America, which was
contributing to British prosperity, more than the trade of any other
foreign country, they would lose rather than gain. He defied Great
Britain to produce a man more loyal than himself to the crown, and avows
that for this very reason he maintains the rights of America. Instead of
distressing and alienating the colonies, the government should attach
them to itself. For American strength and prosperity meant British
strength and prosperity. "That you may not pass sentence upon me
immediately," he says in an article " On Conducting the American
Controversy," written in 1773, "as an enemy to the royal authority, and
a son of sedition, I declare that I esteem His Majesty King George the
Third, to have the only rightful and lawful title to the British crown.
. . . I will go a little further and say that I not only revere him as
the first magistrate of the realm, but I love and honour him as a man
and am persuaded that he wishes the prosperity and happiness of his
people in every part of his dominions. Nay, I have still more to say, I
do not think the British ministry themselves have deserved all the abuse
and foul names that have been bestowed on them by political writers. The
steps which they have taken with respect to American affairs, and which
I esteem to be unjust, impolitic, and barbarous to the highest degree,
have been chiefly owing to the two following causes: 1. Ignorance, or
mistake occasioned by the misinformation of interested and treacherous
persons employed in their service. 2. The prejudices common to them,
with per-sons of all ranks in the Island of Great Britain." Ignorance
and prejudice lay at the bottom of the whole bad business. Witherspoon
said in the same article, "A man will become an American by residing in
the country three months."
"I have often said to
friends in America, on that subject, it is not the king and ministry so
much as the prejudices of Britons with which you have to contend. Spare
no pains to have them fully informed. Add to the immovable firmness with
which you justly support your own rights a continual solicitude to
convince the people of Great Britain that it is not passion, but reason
that inspires you. Tell them it cannot be ambition, but necessity, that
makes you run an evident risk of the heaviest sufferings, rather than
forfeit for yourselves and your posterity the greatest of all earthly
blessings." Witherspoon condemns "the shameless, gross, indecent and
groundless abuse of the king and his family," but he adds that, "Far
greater insults were offered to the sovereign within the city of London
and within the verge of the court, than were ever thought of or would
have been permitted by the mob in any part of America."
From the outset
Witherspoon kept himself well informed on American affairs. He
sub-scribed regularly for three papers, one published in New York,
another in Philadelphia and a third, the New Jersey State Gazette.
Besides these papers he read numerous pamphlets, some of which he
bought, others being the gifts of friends who knew his interest in all
public questions. Politics, trade, emigration, religion, domestic
relation, foreign questions, all the various items presented in a
newspaper, even to the personalities and correspondence, were carefully
noted by him. He was a frequent contributor to the papers, sometimes
over his own name, often using a pseudonym.
From the beginning he
perceived the righteousness of the American claims, and the utter
futility of the stupid measures adopted by the British government
towards the colonies. He abstained from any reference to political
matters in the pulpit. In his private letters to friends in Scotland he
frankly expressed his opinions, and in personal interviews with other
Americans his sympathies for America were freely spoken. The boys of
Princeton College knew what their president thought. The trustees might
adopt rules of caution to prevent rash statements by the young orators,
but Witherspoon's enforcement of this rule was never beyond the letter
of the law. In 1769, while the crisis was still impending, Princeton had
taken a middle ground in conferring the degree of LL. D. upon two
Americans whose writings had attracted wide attention, John Dickinson,
the author of "Letters of An American Farmer," and Joseph Galloway,
whose adherence to the British crown carried him over to the Tory side.
Dickinson had written most powerfully against the fatal course of
England and Galloway had plead most strongly for colonial caution,
deploring the sentiment in favour of resistence by force, or of
independence. Later as a member of the Congress of 1774 he urged upon
that body a union of the colonies in a general congress under control of
the crown. But the temper neither of America nor England was ready to
entertain that suggestion.
Witherspoon's first
public appearance in connection with the American cause was at New
Brunswick, where a convention assembled July 21, 1774. He represented
Somerset County. Among other members of the convention were Jonathan
Baldwin, the steward of Princeton College, Wm. P. Smith, John Kinsey,
Wrn. Livingston, trustees of the college, Jeremiah Halsey,. a
Presbyterian minister, besides other trustees and close friends.
Witherspoon and Livingston urged the convention to adopt a resolution
against paying for the tea which Great Britain would force upon America.
The resolutions as adopted, however, were not as strong as Witherspoon
desired. To us who read them to-day, as to the angry ministers of Great
Britain, they are strong enough. Of course they declare the loyalty of
all Jerseymen to King George, but the men of the convention declare that
they feel bound to oppose the measures of the crown by all
constitutional means in their power. They announced that, in their
opinion, it was the duty of all Americans heartily to unite in
supporting Massachusetts in resisting the invasion of her charter
rights, the trial of supposed offenders by the courts of other colonies,
or of Great Britain. New Jersey pledged herself " firmly and inviolably
to adhere to the determinations of the Congress," and earnestly
recommended "a general non-importation and a non-consumption agreement"
and that the several county committees should collect subscriptions for
the relief of the oppressed people of Boston.
Without waiting for the
general convention of the province to act, several counties had in
dependently adopted resolutions, copies of which having come into the
governor's hands, he had notified the Earl of Dartmouth of them. His
letter betrays no very great alarm. He doubts whether the people of the
province will enter into a non-importation agreement and thinks the
Congress to be summoned "will apply to his Majesty for the repeal of the
Boston Port Act, and endeavour to fall upon measures for accommodating
the present differences between the two countries and preventing the
like in future." How little he or the British ministers understood the
temper of the people is already known to us. But the same mistake is
made more apparent by a reading of Witherspoon's opinion, as that is
found in a series of suggestions published by him as the proper course
for the Congress to pursue. These were written in 1774, two years before
he became a member of the Congress. He thinks, "It is at least extremely
uncertain whether it could be proper or safe for the Congress to send
either ambassadors, petition, or address, directly to king, or
parliament, or both. They may treat them as a disorderly,
unconstitutional meeting—they may hold their meeting itself to be
criminal— they may find so many objections in point of legal form, that
it is plainly in the power of those, who wish to do it, to deaden the
zeal of the multitude in the colonies by ambiguous, dilatory, frivolous
answers, perhaps by severer measures." "There is not the least reason as
yet to think that either the king, the parliament, or even the people of
Great Britain, have been able to enter into the great principles of
universal liberty, or are willing to hear the discussion of the point of
right without prejudice." This estimate of the temper of the British is
quite in accord with the conviction which Samuel Adams had reached six
years ago, but it seems to have been shared by very few other public
men. One of the resolutions adopted by the New Jersey convention had
been "That the grateful acknowledgments of this body are due to the
noble and worthy patrons of constitutional liberty, in the British
Senate, for their laudable efforts to avert the storm they behold
impending over a much injured colony, and in support of the just rights
of the king's subjects in America." The Princeton Scotchman did not
think such a resolution would avail anything in the present condition of
English politics. The speeches of Englishmen in favour of granting the
American claims were unavailing, nor did the colonists receive any
further encouragement from their parliamentary friends, nor much advice
as to the best way to proceed. Of the British statesmen in power
Witherspoon said, " They have not only taken no pains to convince us
that sub-mission to their claims is consistent with liberty among us,
but it is doubtful whether they expect, or desire, we should be
convinced of it. It seems rather that they mean to force us to be
absolute slaves, knowing ourselves to be such by the hard law of
necessity. If this is not their meaning, and they wish us to believe
that our lives and properties are quite safe in the absolute disposal of
the British Parliament, the late acts with respect to Boston, to ruin
their capital, destroy their charter, and grant the soldiers a right to
murder them, are certainly arguments of a very singular nature." He
thinks, therefore, "that the great object of the approaching Congress
should be to unite the colonies and make them as one body in any measure
of self-defense; to assure the people of Great Britain that we will not
submit voluntarily, and convince them that it would be either impossible
or unprofitable for them to compel us by open violence." He submits to
the consideration of the Congress resolutions which are unsurpassed for
boldness and flat positiveness by any other statements of the period.
Profess loyalty to the king, but declare " not only that we esteem the
claim of the British Parliament to be illegal and unconstitutional, but
that we are firmly deter-mined never to submit to it, and do
deliberately prefer war with all its horrors and even extermination
itself to slavery rivetted on us and on our posterity." It is not
remarkable, that when the Massachusetts congressmen reached Princeton on
their way to Philadelphia, they felt they had come to an oasis in the
desert. At New York and several places in Northern New Jersey, they were
reviled and hooted, threats were made against them as disturbers of the
peace and rebellious advocates of independence. But at Princeton the
atmosphere was clear. Witherspoon received them cordially, entertained
them at his house with wine, and drank coffee with them at their
lodgings. The students showed the influence of their president.
The other recommendations
urged the closest union of the colonies, so that none should make a
separate peace, "and continue united till American liberty is settled on
a solid basis"; that a non-importation agreement, too long delayed,
should be entered into immediately, as well as a non-consumptive
agreement. After suggesting measures for encouraging desirable
immigrants he insists that the legislature of every colony should put
their militia on the best footing; that all Americans provide
them-selves with arms " in case they should be reduced to the hard
necessity of defending themselves from murder and assassination." These
strong resolutions had their effect in further stiffening the backbone
of Jerseymen like Richard Stockton and others who had not been ready to
go so far, so that eighteen months later Stockton was willing to go to
Congress, where he signed the Declaration of Independence. A seventh
resolution suggested "an earnest and affectionate address to the British
army and navy urging them, as Britons, not to bring reproach upon
themselves as the instruments of enslaving their country." And lastly,
the necessity of union being so important in his mind, he begs the
Congress to see to it that all the colonies effectually cooperate for
the common defense.
Witherspoon's resolute
and unyielding spirit directed the attention of the country and of the
government to New Jersey. The colony moved cautiously, but steadily in
the general interest. In Scotland such accounts of Witherspoon's share
in the opposition were spread that he was cautioned by his friends and
decried as a political firebrand by his enemies.
For the next year and a
half Witherspoon was most energetic as the head of the Somerset County
committee of correspondence. This committee kept a watchful eye upon
suspicious people in their midst and corresponded, not only with
committees of other counties in New Jersey, but also with the Council of
Safety in other colonies.
During this time events
were rapidly coming to a head elsewhere. The Congress met at
Philadelphia September 5, 1774, and for four weeks considered carefully
a declaration of rights claiming for the people of America "a free and
exclusive power of legislation in their provincial legislatures where
their rights could alone be preserved in all cases of taxation and
internal polity." They declared that they would never permit themselves
to be deprived of certain other rights, demanding the repeal of those
acts of Parliament by which these had been infringed. They then formed
an association for preventing commercial intercourse with Great Britain
and charged the committees of correspondence to inspect the imports at
all custom-houses. Three addresses were prepared, one to the king, one
to the people of Great Britain, the last to the people of America. After
appointing the loth of May, 1775, for the meeting of a second Congress,
inviting Canada and Florida to join them in that meeting, the Congress
adjourned on the 26th of October.
The reception given these
proceedings in England was exactly such as Witherspoon had intimated.
Chatham might declare the papers of the Congress equal to any state
papers ever composed, but he and his friends were unable to change the
mind of the House of Commons, which answered the appeals of the Congress
by resolving to send io,000 troops under General Howe to suppress the
rebellious colony of Massachusetts. That Howe had declared himself a
friend of America and, perhaps sincerely, believed he might be received
as the bearer of Lord North's olive branch, did not smooth the feelings
of the Americans. The idea of the ministry seemed to be that this method
would appease the aroused colonists and save the pride of England.
During all this time the men of America were meeting almost daily on the
village drill- grounds, and collecting arms and ammunition. New Jersey
was not behind the other colonies in this respect, nor Somerset County
lacking in military zeal. When news of the engagements at Lexington and
Concord spread over the land and troops from every colony instantly
began the march to Boston, some of Witherspoon's students hastened to
enlist, one of them his own son James who, however, had been graduated
in 177o. Another son, John, of the class of 1773, had studied medicine
and became a surgeon in the Continental army, serving from 1776 until
near the close of the war. On the 10th of May, 1775, the day that the
second Congress assembled at Philadelphia, Ticonderoga was captured and
the Congress were under the necessity of providing, not for a possible,
but an actual war. The temper of the Congress was shown by the choice of
John Hancock as president, upon whose head a price had been set by the
king, and in appointing George Washington Commander-in-chief of the
Continental forces assembled and gathering at Boston. There on the 17th
of June, before Washington could arrive, the battle of Bunker Hill was
fought, a dearly bought victory for the British, who began to realize
that their task would not be so easy as the confident General Gage had
imagined. During the summer of this year Witherspoon worked hard at the
effort to furnish the five companies of minutemen allotted to Somerset
County and in nominating officers for them. He did not yet feel
justified in becoming a member of the New Jersey Congress which met at
Trenton in October. He remained at Princeton endeavouring to carry on
the college, but with little success. In the prevailing excitement few
students attended college and it was impossible to hold a meeting of the
trustees, many of whom were members of committees of correspondence for
their several counties.
Little fighting was done
during the summer and the following winter, except in Canada. Washington
strengthened his positions about Boston without any serious conflict of
arms with the British, but pursued such fine tactics that the British
were obliged to evacuate the city in March. But Witherspoon was alert in
his own sphere and took part in the war of pamphlets, although not so
conspicuously as did some others. In January Thomas Paine, held in odium
and undeserved horror for his infidel writings, published a pamphlet
called "Common Sense" in which, with coarse language and vulgar
invective, he defended the American cause. Although not finely written,
it was an able paper. Washington said that it "worked a powerful change
in the minds of many men." A hundred thousand copies were quickly sold,
and its influence was undoubted. Witherspoon was magnanimous enough to
acknowledge its merits while he criticised the style of it. And when an
attack was made upon it by another pamphlet, "Plain Truth," the
energetic president of Princeton took up his caustic pen to defend
"Common Sense." He wastes no words in coming to the heart of Paine's
argument—who, says Witherspoon, "wrote it to shew that we ought not to
seek or wait for a reconciliation which in his opinion is now become
both impracticable and unprofitable, but to establish a fixed regular
government and provide for ourselves. 'Plain Truth,' on the contrary,
never attempts to shew that there is the least probability of obtaining
reconciliation on such terms as will preserve and secure our liberties;
but has exerted all his little force to prove that such is the strength
of Great Britain that it will be in vain for us to resist at all. I will
refer it to the impartial judgment of all who have read this treatise,
whether the just and proper inference from his reasoning is not that we
ought immediately to send an embassy with ropes about our necks, to make
a full and humble surrender of ourselves and all our property to the
disposal of the parent state. This they have formally and explicitly
demanded of us, and this with equal clearness we have determined we will
never do. The question then is this: Shall we make resistance with the
greatest force, as rebel subjects of a government which we acknowledge,
or as independent states against an usurped power which we detest and
abhor?" This is Witherspoon's first public declaration in favour of
independence.
On the 17th of May, in
conformity with the suggestion of Congress already mentioned, he
preached a sermon on "The Dominion of Providence over the Passions of
Men." He began by saying, "There is not a greater evidence either of the
reality or power of religion than a firm belief in God's universal
presence. The ambition of mistaken princes, the cunning and cruelty of
oppressive and corrupt ministers, and even the inhumanity of brutal
soldiers, however dreadful, shall finally promote the glory of God." "If
your cause is just, if your principles are pure, if your conduct is
prudent you need not fear the multitude of opposing hosts. If your cause
is just you may look with confidence to the Lord and entreat Him to
plead it as your own. You are all my witnesses that this is the first
time of my introducing any political subject into the pulpit. At this
season, however, it is not only lawful but necessary, and I willingly
embrace the opportunity of declaring my opinion, without any hesitation,
that the cause in which America is now in arms is the cause of justice,
of liberty and of human nature. So far as we have hitherto proceeded I
am satisfied that the con-federacy of the colonies has not been the
effect of pride, resentment, or sedition, but of a deep and general
conviction that our civil and religious liberties, and consequently, in
a great measure, the temporal and eternal happiness of us and of our
posterity depended on this issue."
Keenly aware of the
necessity of union and executive authority he said, "If persons of every
rank instead of implicitly complying with the orders of those whom they
themselves have chosen to direct, will needs judge every measure over
again, if different classes of men intermix their little private views,
if local, provincial pride and jealousy arise, you are doing a greater
injury to the common cause than you are aware of." "He is the best
friend to American liberty who is most sincere and active in promoting
pure and undefiled religion." "Whoever is an avowed enemy to God I
scruple not to call an enemy to his country."
Nothing is gained, he
thinks, by railing at the English "as so many barbarous savages. Many of
their actions have probably been worse than their intentions. I do not
refuse sub-mission to their unjust claims because they are corrupt or
profligate, although probably many of them are so, but because they are
men, and therefore liable to all the selfish bias inseparable from human
nature." "If, on account of their distance and ignorance of our
situation they could not conduct their quarrel with propriety for one
year, how can they give direction and vigour to every department of our
civil constitutions from age to age?"
The sermon was published
with a dedication to John Hancock, President of Congress, ac-companied
by an address to the natives of Scotland residing in America. There was
some necessity for this. Scotch merchants of Norfolk, Virginia, had
refused to enter into the non-importation agreement, and in South
Carolina Scotchmen had taken up arms for the king. A printer of Glasgow,
Scotland, issued the sermon with embellishments wherein the famous
champion of ecclesiastical rights is scarrified as a firebrand, rebel
and traitor.
2. THE DECLARATION OF
INDEPENDENCE
Witherspoon had been
active in the various meetings of his county almost from the begin-ning,
and had attended one provincial assembly, as I have already stated. On
the 11th of June, 1776, he took his seat as a member of the Provincial
Congress of New Jersey, at Burling-ton, and opened the session with
prayer.
The first question of
urgent importance to come before this session of the legislature was a
letter from the Continental Congress suggesting each colony's quota of
militia to be furnished to serve until the following December, New
Jersey's number being 3,300, to reinforce the army in New York, now
threatened by the enemy. The British were coming close to New Jersey and
Washington followed the letter of Congress by an earnest recommendation
that New Jersey immediately carry this resolution into effect. A
committee to do this was promptly appointed and did its work well.
The fear of tyranny by a
few over the many, the dread of power falling into the hands of a small
number of men, prompted some of these Jerseymen to move that two-thirds
be a quorum of the Provincial Congress. Witherspoon combated that idea.
It was difficult to secure so large a quorum, it would be easy for a few
disaffected men to stay away and thus prevent the transaction of
business, and he himself believed that in such times it was best to
dismiss such fears and lodge the power in the hands of a capable few
rather than in the keeping of many. A majority was declared to be a
quorum and business proceeded with dispatch.
The royal governor of New
Jersey was Will-iam Templeton Franklin, son of the famous Benjamin
Franklin. As a servant of the crown he endeavoured to fulfill his duties
with, fidelity. He was a resolute man and the deputies found that he
intended to ignore them. He had appointed a meeting of the General
Assembly of the province for the zoth of June. The members of this
Congress were irregularly chosen and Governor Franklin refused to
recognize them. They therefore adopted a series of resolutions declaring
that the governor's proclamation ought not to be obeyed, being "in
direct contempt and violation of the resolve of the Continental
Congress"; that Franklin was an enemy to the liberties of this country;
and that his salary should cease. The Congress ordered the various
treasurers to account to the Congress for all moneys in their hands.
Then Col. Nathaniel Heard was ordered to take a copy of the resolution
to Governor Franklin, and in order that the affair "be conducted with
all the delicacy and tenderness which the nature of the business will
admit" request him to sign a parole, promising to remain in the province
and to keep his engagements with fidelity. Governor Franklin did not
appreciate the "delicacy and tenderness" of the Congress and not only
refused to sign the parole but ordered Colonel Heard to go about his
business. The good colonel thereupon promptly placed a guard of sixty
men about the house and sent a courier post haste to Burlington asking
for further instructions from the Congress. He was ordered to bring the
governor to Burlington at once, and a notice of their action was sent to
the Continental Congress asking that body if it would not, in their
opinion, be "for the general good of the United Colonies" if Governor
Franklin should be removed to some other colony where he "would be
capable of doing less mischief."
When Franklin appeared
under Colonel Heard's guard before the New Jersey Assembly he denounced
them hotly as a rebellious body, so that some of the deputies lost their
tempers. Witherspoon so far forgot himself on that warm June day as to
taunt Franklin with his illegitimate birth, a circumstance for which the
governor was plainly not responsible. Witherspoon regretted his hasty
and indelicate language but never found himself in a position where he
could apologize to Franklin in person. On the 10th of June a letter was
received from the Continental Congress recommending the Jerseymen to
examine the governor and if they conclude that he should be confined the
Congress will direct the place of his confinement. He was finally sent
to Connecticut to become the charge of Governor Trumbull, never
submitting to the American Government. His last days were spent in
honourable retirement in England.
On Friday the 21st of
June the New Jersey Congress resolved to form a government of their own,
but the committee to prepare a draft of the constitution was not
appointed until the 24th. In the meantime, on Saturday the 22d, five
delegates were appointed to represent New Jersey in the Continental
Congress, of whom Witherspoon was one. It has generally been supposed,
and has often been publicly' said, that Witherspoon had much to do with
framing the constitution of New Jersey. I find no evidence to support
this statement. He was not a member of the committee, which was
appointed two days after his election to the Continental Congress. It is
true that he did not arrive at Philadelphia until the 28th. If the
committee on the constitution desired to consult him they might have had
opportunity, but they were not appointed until late in the afternoon of
Monday the 24th. It is gratuitous to suppose that Witherspoon remained
at Burlington long after his appointment, and quite likely that, before
proceeding to Philadelphia, he went to Princeton, which would account
for the interval of almost a week between his appointment and his
arrival at Philadelphia. That he was a slow traveller is very evident
from his almost invariable tardiness. Even on the supposition that he
remained at Burlington to advise the committee on the constitution, of
which I have been unable to find the slightest evidence, he could not at
the very longest, have spent over two days with them. It seems,
therefore, that with every desire to give Witherspoon credit for all his
work, he cannot be said to have had any great share in the actual
preparation of the constitution of New Jersey. On July 2, 1776, the day
of the adoption of the constitution he was sitting in the Continental
Congress at Philadelphia, taking part in the debates upon the resolution
for independence which had been brought before the Congress eighteen
days previously. His instructions by the New Jersey Congress empowered
him and his associates to vote for independence if they should consider
it necessary and expedient, promising the support of the whole force of
the colony, but "always observing that, whatever plan of confederacy you
enter into, the regulating the internal police of this province is to be
reserved to the colony legislature."
On the day of the
entrance of the New Jersey delegation into Independence Hall, as it has
ever since been called, the postponed resolution came up for
consideration. A further postponement was suggested so that the newly
arrived members might learn the arguments that had been made upon the
question. Witherspoon brushed aside this plea, declaring that the
subject was not new, he needed no more time, nor further instructions;
he was ready to vote at once. It was decided, however, to postpone the
vote until Monday, the 1st of July. On that day, after a Sabbath whose
peace had probably been irksome to some of the eager members, the men
upon whose decision rested such momentous consequences, which they fully
appreciated, assembled again in the hall. The president of the Congress,
John Hancock, stated the order of the day, and the secretary, Charles
Thompson, read once more the resolution for independence.
"For a moment," it is said, "there was profound silence." Then John
Adams rose in his place. The hush of that little assembly was so intense
as to be almost painful to the over-strained men, but it was followed by
a speech, remembered for its impetuosity and power, which seemed to
carry everything before it, declaring that "independence was the first
wish and the last instruction of the communities they represented." John
Dickinson, celebrated as the author of "Letters of a Pennsylvania
Farmer," fulfilled his promise to the Assembly of Pennsylvania, although
he overlooked the popular feeling expressed in conventions and mass
meetings, and spoke at length against the resolution. His patriotism and
devotion to the American cause were never questioned, but when he said
the country was not ripe for it, Witherspoon broke in upon the speaker
exclaiming, "Not ripe, sir! In my judgment we are not only ripe but
rotting. Almost every colony has dropped from its parent stem and your
own province needs no more sunshine to mature it." The debate continued.
On Tuesday the 2d of July the Continental Congress finally voted to
sever the connection of the American colonies from Great Britain. A
committee, of which Thomas Jefferson was chairman, was appointed to draw
up a declaration embodying the decision and the reasons for it. This was
brought in on the 4th to be signed by the delegates. Although the
resolution had already been adopted there was some hesitation about
finally signing it. Then Witherspoon rose. One writer describing the
scene calls him an aged patriarch, a term hardly applicable to a man
only fifty-four years of age, with twenty years of active life still
before him. Although his hair was tinged with gray and his appearance
one of great dignity, he could hardly be called venerable. The only
clergyman in the Congress, of most impressive manner and acknowledged
learning, he received marked attention as he proceeded in a brief speech
of great eloquence to give his opinion. "There is a tide in the affairs
of men, a nick of time. We perceive it now before us. To hesitate is to
consent to our own slavery. That noble instrument upon your table, which
insures immortality to its author, should be subscribed this very
morning by every pen in this house. He that will not respond to its
accents and strain every nerve to carry into effect its provisions is
unworthy the name of free-man.
"For my own part, of
property I have some, of reputation more. That reputation is staked,
that property is pledged, on the issue of this contest; and although
these gray hairs must soon descend into the sepulchre, I would
infinitely rather that they descend thither by the hand of the
executioner than desert at this crisis the sacred cause of my country."
The declaration was
signed and the colonies finally and forever committed to independence.
Everywhere the people received the news with greatest joy, ringing the
bells, firing their guns, and building bonfires. The tension was past
and great relief was felt.
3. WORK IN CONGRESS
The Congress settled down
resolutely to the serious business of providing for the army, making
strong alliances with foreign nations, and securing recognition from
them. Ten days after the declaration was signed Lord Howe, whose brother
was in command of the British forces in America, landed at Staten Island
where General Howe was awaiting his arrival before beginning the attack
upon New York. It was announced that Lord Howe had come as the bearer of
an olive branch. The anxious Congress and people feared lest some of the
timorous or time-serving Americans might be induced to withdraw their
support of independence. Every state had its British faction, and New
Jersey had been made aware of the presence of many tories by petitions
from various townships, urging the Provincial Congress not to break
loose from Great Britain. That was before the fatal fourth of July. Even
later, however, there were not wanting men who clung to the hope that
Lord Howe might propose terms which the Ameri-cans could accept. Before
beginning active military operations, he sent a message to Washington
addressing him as a private gentleman. Washington refused to receive it;
and after repeated attempts to persuade him to confer, Lord Howe finally
made an attack upon the American army on Long Island. The story of
Washington's defeat, his masterly retreat and escape without losing a
man or a gun, on the night of the 29th of August, is already familiar to
every American schoolboy. Among those who had been captured in the
battle was General Sullivan, a brave and capable officer. Lord Howe
thought that a message to Congress, borne by General Sullivan, might
receive some attention. General Sullivan, therefore, having given his
parole, appeared before the Congress, with the promise that Lord Howe
would use his influence with the Parliament to have the obnoxious
measures repealed, but that he would like to confer with some of the
members of the Congress as private gentlemen. Poor Sullivan was roundly
rated by John Adams for consenting to bear such a message. The proposal
was debated hotly by the Congress. Some were in favour of granting the
desired interview. None of them would listen to any basis but the
recognition of independence. Witherspoon spoke strongly against the
proposal. He felt that nothing would be gained by it. "It is plain," he
said, "that absolute, unconditional submission is what they require us
to agree to, or mean to force us to. The king has not laid aside his
personal rancour; it is rather increasing every day." "It has been
admitted that there is not the least reason to expect that any
correspondence we can have with him will tend to peace." "Lord Howe
speaks of a decisive blow not being yet struck; as if this cause
depended upon one battleI Neither loss nor disgrace worth mentioning has
befallen us. In short, sir, from anything that has happened I see not
the least reason for our attending to this delusive message. On the
contrary, I think it is the very worst time that could be chosen for us,
as it will be looked upon as the effect of fear, and diffuse the same
spirit, in some degree, through different ranks of men. The tories, our
secret enemies, I readily admit, are earnest for our treating. They are
exulting in the prospect of it; they are spreading innumerable lies to
forward it. It has brought them from their lurking holes; they are
taking liberty to say things in consequence of it which they durst not
have said before. In one word, if we set this negotiation on foot, it
will give new force and vigour to all their seditious machinations. In
cases where the expediency of a measure is doubtful, if I had an
opportunity of knowing what my enemies wished me to do, I would not be
easily induced to follow their advice.
"As to the Whigs and
friends of independence, I am well persuaded that multitudes of them are
already clear in their minds, that the conference should be utterly
rejected; and to those who are in doubt about its nature, nothing more
will be requisite than a full and clear in-formation of the state of the
case which I hope will be granted them.
"As to the army I cannot
help being of opinion, that nothing will more effectually deaden the
operations of war than what is proposed. We do not ourselves expect any
benefit from it, but they will. And they will possibly impute our
conduct to fear and jealousy as to the issue of the cause; which will
add to their present little discouragement, and produce a timorous and
despondent spirit."
It was decided, however,
against the opinion of Witherspoon and others, to send a committee to
confer with Lord Howe. Franklin, Rut-ledge and doughty John Adams
accordingly repaired to Staten Island, where they were most courteously
treated by Lord Howe. But as they demanded recognition of independence
as a preliminary, before entering upon any negotiations for peace, the
conference came to nothing.
Shortly after this the
British took possession of New York, and, in a series of operations in
which Washington displayed his great military genius, despite the
necessity of retiring in the face of a superior force, Lord Howe
compelled the Americans to begin their retreat across the Jerseys. The
interference of Congress in ordering General Greene to hold Fort
Washington at all hazards lost that fort and its reinforced garrison, a
disaster which, added to General Lee's treachery, almost brought
complete ruin to the American cause. It should have taught the members
of Congress what Witherspoon always earnestly advocated, that the
commander-in-chief should never suffer interference in military
operations by the civilians of the Congress, whose duty was not only to
confide in his wisdom, but to respond to his demands for supplies as
fully and speedily as possible, and give him a free hand in his
direction of the campaign. It was long, however, before Congress learned
the wisdom of letting Washington alone.
In those trying days
personal anxieties beset Witherspoon. His two elder sons were in the
army. James Witherspoon was with the northern army, which had retreated
to Ticonderoga. He wrote to his father that he and a companion had gone
through the forest to St. John's on a scouting expedition. The place
they found in possession of the enemy and they were in great danger of
being captured. Finding hiding- places in the woods, however, they
succeeded in eluding their pursuers; but, having lost their way, they
nearly starved, having but one biscuit apiece for three days.
Witherspoon, however, devoted himself assiduously to the work assigned
him, serving, it is said, on more committees than any other man in
Congress.
While Washington was
engaged in operations about New York, the Congress set about doing what
it could to supply the army. Teamsters charged extortionate prices.
Wagons and horses were scarce. The army was in great need. The situation
became so serious that Witherspoon and two others were appointed a
committee, early in October of 1776, to consider a plan for providing
for this part of the public service so that "the demands of the army
might be speedily met and all oppression by private persons effectually
prevented." Eight days later he was added to the committee on clothing,
whose business it was to provide the soldiers with clothing and
blankets. It is impossible now to trace the work of these committees.
The stories of the sufferings of the Continental army due to scarcity of
food and lack of clothing prove that the committee was not able to meet
all the demands. But, on the other hand, such information as can now be
obtained gives evidence of Witherspoon's indefatigable efforts to obtain
the needed supplies, and his appointment on these committees is a
tribute to his practical ability in fields where theologians are not
supposed to be competent. His was a many-sided nature. Washington
thanked him both by letter and in person on several occasions for his
efficient services to the army. In a country as thickly settled as the
North during the civil war in the sixties of the nineteenth
century, under a government whose organization may fairly be supposed to
have gained some ability, and with facilities for transportation vastly
superior to that existing at the time of the Revolution, the armies of
the North were often poorly supplied. It is greatly to the credit of the
Scotch clergyman that he so far succeeded in his efforts as to receive
the thanks of Washington.
One of the most important
committees of Congress was that known as the Board of War. A section of
this board was known as the secret committee of correspondence, to which
were entrusted the communications with foreign powers, whose assistance
against England might be secured, although they were at peace with that
country. France was the traditional enemy of Great Britain, and her
foreign minister, Vergennes, had sent to America large sums of money for
the purchase of arms. The Congress had appointed Silas Deane its
European agent, and in October, 1776, he was joined by Arthur Lee, who
had been for many years the English agent of Virginia. At the same time
Franklin was sent to Paris, and his place on the secret committee was
taken by Witherspoon, who remained a member of it as long as there was
any need of secrecy in the relations between France and America. France
was at peace with England, but was ready to assist her foes in every
possible way. The delicacy of the position of the secret committee is
apparent. Direct correspondence with France was out of the question, and
this was carried on through the agents and commissioners of Congress.
The secret committee urged upon Franklin to secure from the French
government the right for men-of-war and privateers to carry their prizes
into French ports and there dispose of them. It was against all
principles of neutrality to permit this and might bring France into war
with England, as indeed it did at last. Letters between the Congress and
the foreign governments went by various routes, sometimes direct to
France in an American man-of-war; sometimes by way of St. Eustatius or
Martinique, in the French West Indies, either on neutral trading vessels
or privateers. In order that these letters might not fall into the hands
of the British they were addressed to merchants or other private
citizens. Military supplies from France were shipped to similar
destinations and afterwards transhipped to America in merchant vessels
or men-of-war, which would land at such American ports as were not
blockaded by British ships. Flints, powder, blankets, arms, saltpetre
and other cargoes were landed at ports all along the coast from Maine to
Florida and from them carried overland. To meet the great expense of
these voyages and cargoes, consignments of American goods were often
carried to be sold in foreign lands. These were, of course, liable to
capture. The secret committee were compelled to trust the details to
their agents both at home and abroad, sending men to receive the cargoes
on arrival in America and notifying their correspondents of shipments.
Tobacco, rice, indigo, wheat and flour were in great demand in France
and brought good profits.
Letters were often lost.
Silas Deane, the agent in Paris, complains of the committee's failure to
write. Carmichael, in Amsterdam, cheered the Congress by the information
that the Dutch stoutly informed England that their ports were open to
the commerce of all nations on equal terms. America might secure a loan,
he wrote, if such success should attend her military operations as to
make it evident that independence might likely be secured, or if either
France or Spain should acknowledge America's independence. A Swiss
banker, Grand, assured him that his banking house would accept American
notes at a fair discount.
Information about America
was much sought after, its geography, rivers, mountains, wild game,
agriculture, industries, seaports. This information must be supplied if
possible. The agents, especially Silas Deane, were relied on for
credentials of French and other foreign officers coming to seek service
in the American armies. For some reason, the committee were unable to
get their letters through to their distressed and embarrassed agent at
Paris. And the greatest credit is due to him for his untiring and
successful efforts in the service of his country. Without frequent
instructions, sometimes not hearing from the committee for months, he
was thrown upon his own judgment. In 1777, having made offers to French
officers unauthorized by Congress he was recalled. One of these officers
was de Kalb, who afterwards rendered such valuable aid to Washington,
and another more famous, was Lafayette.
Witherspoon could not
give all his time in Congress to the work of the secret committee. On
the 22d of November he was one of three sent to confer with Washington
upon the military situation. The commander-in-chief had asked for
authority to appoint officers without the formal approval of Congress.
The civilians, fearful of a military tyranny, even from one so
unambitious of power as Washington, jealously guarded their control of
the army. Witherspoon did not share this dread. He felt that a commander
in the field must be free, as far as possible untrammelled by a civilian
body like Congress, whose main duty was to supply the necessary means of
support. He so far prevailed upon his associates that they sent with the
committee blank commissions for the general to fill out at his
discretion with the names of those whom he desired to take the places of
the officers whose terms had expired. Witherspoon fulfilled the duty and
returned to Philadelphia just in time to join the Congress in their
flight to Baltimore to escape the British. Washington, however, saved
Philadelphia for the time by his clever stroke at Trenton, his victory
at Princeton and escape to the heights about Morristown.
The first letter, now
extant, sent by the secret committee to 'Franklin, Deane and Lee after
October, 1776, was written December 21st, from Baltimore. It gave a
hopeful account of the war and thanked the commissioners for their
labours. If a loan can be procured, it should be done in order to keep
up the credit of the paper currency. Two million pounds sterling at six
per cent. is the amount Congress authorizes Deane to secure. On the same
date Robert Morris wrote from Philadelphia giving a gloomy account of
the war, the fear of the people, the boldness of the tories and the
information that Philadelphia is well-nigh depopulated of all but the
Quakers.
For the next few months
Witherspoon did no work on the secret committee. In December he went to
Princeton to look after his private affairs. In the middle of the night
of the 6th he was roused by news of the approach of the British. Hastily
summoning his family and servants, they all escaped under cover of the
darkness saving only so much of their valuables "as could be carried on
one team." His house was left in charge of Mr. Montgomery, a tutor in
the college. Although the British ransacked the house and carried off
all the cattle from the place, his books were preserved and little
damage done to the furniture. That his life was in danger is quite
evident from the treatment of another clergyman, whom the British
mistook for Witherspoon. Coming upon Rev. Mr. Rosborough near
Washington's crossing they " pierced him through and through with their
bayonets and mangled him in the most shocking manner," although he had
denied the identity and "fell upon his knees and begged for his life."
So Witherspoon wrote to his son. "Some of the people of Princeton," he
added, "say they thought they were killing me and boasted that they had
done it when they came back."
The intense feeling of
hatred and enmity with which the British regarded Witherspoon is shown
in an account of an incident said to have occurred in July, 1776. The
story is told by Dr. McLean in his history of the college, and is quoted
from Frank Moore's "Diary." "Just before the thunder-storm last week the
troops on Staten Island were preparing figures of Generals Washington,
Lee and Putnam, and Dr. Witherspoon, for burning in the night. The
figures had all been erected on a pile of fagots, the generals facing
the doctor and he represented as reading to them an address. All of
them, excepting General Washington, had been tarred and prepared for the
feathers when the storm came on and obliged the troops to find shelter.
In the evening, when the storm was over, a large body of the troops
gathered around the figures which, being prepared, were set on fire amid
the most terrible imprecations against the rebels. One of the party
seeing that Generals Putnam and Lee and Dr. Witherspoon burned furiously
and were almost consumed, while General Washington was still standing
with the tar burning off, ran away frightened and was soon followed by
most of his companions. Next morning the figure was found as good as it
ever was, a fact which caused a good deal of fear among the Hessian
troops, most of whom were superstitious, and it was not until some of
the officers told them the cause of its not burning that they appeared
contented. The reason was that having no tar on it before the rain
commenced, it became saturated with water and the tar only would burn."
While the Congress sat at
Baltimore Wither-spoon visited the military prison in that city. He
found it in a wretched condition, unfit for even the worst enemies of
the country. He urged Congress to remedy the abuse and was placed upon a
committee to do so. With what success he laboured we cannot learn. What
a Tory satirist thought of the action and of Witherspoon in particular,
is shown in the following lines by Jonathan Odell:
"Known in the pulpit by
seditious toils, Grown into consequence by civil broils, Three times he
tried, and miserably failed To overset the laws—the fourth prevailed.
Whether as tool he acted or as guide, Is yet a doubt—his conscience must
decide. Meanwhile, unhappy Jersey mourns her thrall, Ordained by vilest
of the vile to fall; To fall by Witherspoon!—O name, the curse Of sound
religion and disgrace of verse. Member of Congress we must hail him next
'Come out of Babylon' is now his text. Fierce as the fiercest, foremost
of the first, He'd rail at kings, with venom well nigh burst; Not
uniformly grand—for some bye-end, To dirtiest acts of treason he'd
descend; I've known him seek the dungeon dark as night, Imprisoned
Tories to convert or fright; Whilst to myself I've hummed in dismal
tune, I'd rather be a dog than Witherspoon. Be patient, reader—for the
issue trust; His day will come—remember, heaven is justI "
Such diatribes were
characteristic of Revolutionary literature. We shall see Witherspoon
himself dipping his pen in bitter vituperation. For the present he
continued at his work in Congress. His committee for regulating the
impressing of wagons into the public service worked as faithfully as
they could but made no report. On the 19th of January, 1777, his claim
of $105.78 for wood taken by the troops during their wintry visit a
month before was ordered paid. Shortly after this he went to Princeton
and from there to Pequea to bring home his wife and daughter, writing
from there. to his son David, that they were all well. By the 12th of
February he was again at Baltimore, but left for Princeton twelve days
later. March 19th finds him in Congress again upon a committee to
examine charges made by Silas Deane against Dr. Williamson, an American
citizen, whom Deane accused of treachery. The committee carefully sifted
the charges without discovering any taint of treason.
Early in the spring of
1777 Congress was again in Philadelphia, but through the summer
Witherspoon was seldom present. September found him present in time to
join the others in that rapid, panicky ride to Easton, Pennsylvania,
when Witherspoon's horse rode at an unaccustomed gallop, his rider being
assured that a squadron of British cavalry were close behind. Nor was
Easton comfortable, the British following them there, and even towards
Lancaster, through which city they passed to their long wintry session
at York.
In Congress he continued
his unremitting service on various committees. One of these conferred
with General Gates as to charges made by that officer against General
Schuyler whose command of the Northern Army Gates coveted. The committee
discovered the motives of Gates and exonerated Schuyler, which so
angered the former that he forgot himself, or rather betrayed his real
self, refused to serve in a subordinate capacity, wrote his infamous
letter to Washington, and behaved so outrageously before the committee
that he was turned out of the room. Witherspoon never had any sympathy
with Gates, nor with that meddling opposition to Washington which was
for a time kept alive by the Adamses and Lees. Later, also, in 1779, he
was one of those who voted to retain Schuyler in the service, one of the
finest generals and noblest gentlemen in America. The news of Burgoyne's
surrender reached the Congress at York before the arrival of the courier
whom Gates had sent with his report. When the tardy trooper finally
arrived some one suggested that Congress should present him with a
sword. Witherspoon interposed, saying in his Scotch brogue, "I think
ye'll better gie the lad a pair o' spurs." Nevertheless he joined the
others in bestowing the sword and in voting to Gates a medal and the
thanks of Congress.
While Washington was at
Valley Forge keeping a close watch on Howe, shut up in Philadelphia,
Witherspoon, with a committee of Congress visited the army by order of
Congress "to consult with the general as to the best plans for
preserving the health and discipline of the troops." As a result of that
visit Congress could do little. How far they fully appreciated the
situation is shown in a letter written to the commissioners abroad in
January, 1778. "General Washington's army is in huts to the westward of
the Schuylkill, refreshing and recruiting during the winter."
Witherspoon was nevertheless indefatigable in his all too fruitless
efforts to relieve the situation at Valley Forge. Congress was helpless
in the face of conditions which made it well-nigh im-possible to furnish
supplies from a sparsely settled country where there were few roads, the
better part of the population unable even in times of peace to produce a
large surplus of grain and cattle.
Letters from the
commissioners covering their labours at foreign courts continued to pour
in upon Congress. These naturally fell to the committee on foreign
affairs. No more interesting correspondence can be found relating to the
Revolution. But its mass of details would only burden a work like this.
The committee of foreign affairs was not well organized. Irregularity of
attendance left many letters unanswered, to the excusable exasperation
of the commissioners. But those gentlemen were not left in doubt as to
the needs of America. They were urged to use all their ability to secure
money. Until 1781, when Robert Morris became Superintendent of Finance,
there was practically no other financial policy than to make
requisitions on the states which were never honoured in full, sometimes
for money, sometimes for supplies. Not infrequently during the entire
conduct of the war, a state government paid the quota of money demanded
by Congress in military supplies at its own estimate. Paper currency was
issued again and again before Morris took charge. Witherspoon and Lovell
for the committee of foreign affairs wrote to Izard, the commissioner to
Italy, "Our apprehensions of danger to our liberties are reduced to the
one circumstance of the depreciation of our currency from the quantity
which we have been obliged to issue." Izard is ordered to use every
exertion to secure a foreign loan.
Another item of small
importance entrusted to the committee was to direct the commissioners at
Paris "to apply to the court of France for an extension of the leave of
absence to such French officers as may be employed in the service of
such state." But the disorganized condition of the committee continued
until at last it became necessary to place the foreign affairs in the
hands of a secretary, Robert R. Livingston being chosen to that office
in September, 1781.
For good or for ill the
thirteen colonies were united in a war for independence, but this union
was not regarded by any of them as permanent. Each clung more or less
tenaciously to its independence of the others. The evils of this
sentiment weakened the discipline of the army, hampered the operations
of finance and distracted the diplomacy of the Congress. Without a
centralized authority there could be no efficient service in any
department. But the best that could be done was to adopt the Articles of
Confederation which bound the colonies loosely together during the war,
but was not sufficient to unite them after peace was won. The question
came before Congress in the fall of 1777. Witherspoon was heartily in
favour of a strong and permanent confederation which was opposed by
several of the colonies, notably South Carolina, New York, and
Massachusetts, under Samuel Adams. These states clung to their
independence. As early as July 30th, Witherspoon had said to John Adams
that there must be a confederation if the object of the war was to be
attained. From the outset he advocated a strong executive, and
deprecated the loose methods which dissipated the energy of the
government. All of the delegates felt the need of union for the purposes
of the war. Witherspoon plead for a permanent union. Warmly contending
for the preservation of the separate states, he plead equally for their
close and abiding union. When the various articles came to be voted on
he agreed that each state should have one vote, not as some of the
larger states would have liked, that the voting power of each state
should be proportionate to its population or extent. When it came to
determining "the quota to be paid for the common welfare and defense,"
he supported the proposition that the quota should be proportionately to
the value of the land. With equal consistency he opposed the measure
which was adopted fixing the number of delegates to represent each state
at not less than two nor more than seven. In his opinion, since each
state could have but one vote, each state should determine for itself
how many delegates to send to Congress. He maintained that enough would
be sent to protect the interests of the state, and no more than it
deemed necessary or cared to pay for.
But these Articles of
Confederation were too loose, even during the war. In 1780 Washington
wrote that there must be a closer union. "We can no longer drudge along
in the old way." Of the evils of the system as felt in the army he said,
"There can be no radical cure till Congress be vested by the several
states with full and ample powers to enact laws for general purposes. In
February, 1781, Witherspoon proposed that Congress assume the power to
regulate commerce and lay duties on imports. The proposal was negatived,
but Congress finally agreed that the several states be re-quested to
vest Congress with power to levy a duty of five per cent. on articles of
foreign growth and manufacture. This was the first tariff legislation of
the American Congress, al-though it never was fully enforced. It was not
until March, 1781, that the Articles of Confederation were ratified by
the last of the states, Maryland, whose neighbour, Virginia, had been
one of the steadiest supporters of a strong union, under the lead of
Madison, who had been a pupil of Witherspoon at Princeton.
We are fortunate in
having a speech by Witherspoon on this subject. Among other things he
said, "The absolute necessity of union, to the vigour and success of
those measures on which we are already entered, is felt and confessed by
every one of us, without exception; so far, indeed, that those who have
expressed their fears or suspicions of the existing confederacy proving
abortive have yet agreed in saying that there must and shall be a
confederacy for the purposes of, and till the finishing of this war. So
far is well; and so far it is pleasing to hear them express their
sentiments. But I entreat gentlemen to consider how far the giving up
all hopes of a lasting confederacy among these states, for their future
security and improvement, will have an effect upon the stability and
efficacy of even the temporary confederacy which all acknowledged to be
necessary? I am fully persuaded that when it ceases to be generally
known, that the delegates of the provinces consider a lasting union
impracticable, it will greatly derange the minds of the people and
weaken their hands in defense of their country."
He was urgent for an
immediate confederacy early in the war. "Every day's delay, though it
adds to the necessity, augments the difficulty and takes from the
inclination." He looked to the future, saying, " It is not impossible
that in future times all the states in one quarter of the globe may see
it proper by some plan of union, to perpetuate security and peace: and
sure I am, a well-planned confederacy among the states of America may
hand down the blessings of peace and public order to many generations."
"Every argument from honour, interest, safety and necessity conspire in
pressing us to a confederacy."
In 1777 the committee of
Foreign Affairs needed a secretary. Because of his advocacy of
independence some one suggested Thomas Paine. Witherspoon opposed Paine,
not on account of his infidel opinions, for Wither-spoon had commended
some of Paine's writings, notably, "Common Sense," but because of his
distrust of Paine's character saying to John Adams that he was a
drunkard and unreliable. Paine was elected, but gave such poor
satisfaction that he was requested to resign.
It was later than this
that Witherspoon wrote the piece of invective to which I referred. From
the beginning of the agitation that culminated in the Declaration of
Independence no man in America had been more fervent in his prayers for
the triumph of the cause than Rev. Jacob Duch & pastor of the united
parishes of Christ Church and St. Peter's, Philadelphia. So earnest was
he that Congress invited him to open that body with prayer. But when the
army of the colonists suffered those depressing reverses which withered
the courage of the shallow-soiled type to which Duche belonged, he lost
heart. When, finally, the British entered Philadelphia, he opened to
them the church in which he had prayed and preached so fervently for the
Americans and used his eloquence to laud the British government. Duche
was the author of a series of letters purporting to come from a young
Englishman bearing the astonishing name of Tamoc Caspipina in which
things American are described for titled correspondents at home with all
admiration for the new land and everything in it, especially the
representatives of the Church of England. But the letter which he wrote
to George Washington after the British occupation of Philadelphia,
urging the general to persuade Congress to yield, or if Congress will
not yield, then to use his power as head of the army to compel them to
submission, was his most fatal error. Wash-ington promptly sent the
letter to Congress. Duche's somersault disgusted and enraged the hardy
patriots. Witherspoon gave vent to his scorn in a series of questions
and answers which form a list of epithets which exhaust the vocabulary
of opprobrium, which he called Caspipina's Catechism. Witherspoon was
not suspected of being its author, but I found the manuscript of it
among his papers.
Q. Who is a Fox ?
A. The Rev. Jacob Duchę.
Q. What is your reason
for that opinion?
A. Because he walks the
street in the habit of a clergyman with the gestures of a petit maitre.
He is a turncoat, because
after being chaplain of Congress he entered the service of Howe; a
robber deserving of the gallows because he pocketed the pay of Congress
when he was an enemy to their cause; he was a hypocrite, a fool, a
rogue, a blasphemer, a pedant; a sycophant, because he licked the feet
of the New England delegates; a conceited creature, a liar and an ass.
Then the question is asked, "How comes it that so many inconsistencies
meet in one man?" It seems to be unanswerable except on one supposition.
"I can give no other account of it but that if God Almighty has given a
man a topsy-turvy understanding no created power will ever be able to
set it right end uppermost." In answer to the last question: "What is
your opinion of him now?" the reply is, "That he is a wretch without
principle, without parts, without prudence, and that by one unexpected
effort he has crept up from the grand floor of contempt to the first
story of detestation."
Poor Duche departed for England, not having the courage to face his
former friends when they returned to Philadelphia. Nor did he appear
there again until 1792 when old, paralytic, broken-hearted, he returned
to spend the last six years of his life in the city where he had given
such an exhibition of strength and weakness, and to be buried beside his
wife in St. Peter's churchyard.
Some of the acts of
Congress are excusable for many reasons. But it hardly seems possible to
justify the action taken by that body in the case of Burgoyne's
soldiers. When that unfortunate general surrendered it was agreed
between himself and General Gates that his troops, having surrendered
their arms and colours and given their parole, as they all did, should
be turned over to General Howe and transported to England. From the
victorious army and its officers the defeated British and Hessians had
received only kindness. But when the colours of a regiment had been
discovered hidden in the baggage belonging to it, and when General Howe
suggested that it would be easier to disembark the prisoners at Newport
than at Boston, Congress took alarm, and suspected that Howe intended to
use the soldiers against New York instead of sending them back to
England. Congress further ordered that the supplies which had been
furnished these troops should be paid for in gold, refusing to accept
Continental paper money. When Burgoyne wrote to Gates complaining that
his quarters were not comfortable he used the expression "the public
faith is broke." Upon this some of the Congressmen took alarm, declaring
that if Burgoyne considered the agreement broken he evidently would not
abide by it. The result was that while Burgoyne was exchanged and
permitted to go home to England his soldiers were never sent away.
Witherspoon voted on all the questions relating to the convention with
Burgoyne as if he believed the British general had violated its terms.
One of the worst incidents connected with the affair was that in which
the Congress insisted that the supplies furnished the captives should be
paid for in gold, not in the paper currency of the Congress. Whether
Witherspoon assented to this feature of the case I cannot say, but the
resolutions adopted forbidding the soldiers to debark until they should
sign a parole giving a description of their place of abode are in
Witherspoon's handwriting, he having been one of the committee to
consider the matter.
Through the winter he served on various committees, to inquire into the
treatment of prisoners and non-combatants by the enemy, to see about the
purchase of salt, to ex-amine letters from various persons, to revise
the rules for the business of Congress, to consider the best way of
securing clothing for the army and to examine the pay rolls and
arrearages of the New Jersey militia. As a result of one of these
investigations the clothier-general was ordered to suspend the purchase
of clothing. There was extravagance and waste, if not fraud, in this
department, and the board of war took up the matter and straightened the
affairs. Later he served upon a committee to rectify abuses in the
post-office. In the spring he spoke earnestly against the custom of
creating unnecessary offices, and especially the method of paying
commissions for work done in the public service and in the army,
maintaining that the practice led to unnecessary expense and
inefficiency. For this method he recommended the substitution of the
contract system, which resulted in a reduction of five per cent. in the
expenses.
When Robert Morris
assumed control of the finances he found his own department and many
others burdened with so many useless officials that less than a third
were required to transact the business, and the discharge of the others
saved great sums of money not only in the salaries but in the more
economical service in every way.
Witherspoon was the only
clergyman in the Continental Congress and always wore the distinctive
dress of his calling. He frequently officiated as chaplain and often
preached in one of the Presbyterian churches of Philadelphia. John Adams
records his impression of a very excellent sermon "On redeeming time,"
which he heard with great pleasure in 1777, although he remarks that
Witherspoon's memory seemed to be less sure than formerly, which Adams
attributes to the necessity of the hasty preparation of his speeches in
Congress which he did not have time to write fully and commit to memory.
In July, 1778, the question came before Congress whether that body might
appoint an ecclesiastic to office. Over the Protestants of that day hung
the dread of ecclesiastical domination, and every indication of its
possibility was viewed with alarm. Witherspoon, devoted to his own
church and uncompromisingly hostile to church establishment in America,
did not share the fears of his fellow Congressmen and declared that
Congress had no right to inquire into the church relations of its
officers.
From his work in Congress
he turned in the fall of 1778 to compose one of his pieces of biting
sarcasm in an attack upon Benjamin Towne, publisher of the Pennsylvania
Evening Post, who had supported the Congress in his paper until the
arrival of the British in 1777. Throughout their stay he filled his
columns with attacks upon Congress in general and its members and the
officers of the army in particular. He courted the favour of General
Howe, and conducted the Post as a pro-British organ. Upon the departure
of the English and the return of the Congress, Towne, instead of leaving
as Galloway, Duche and others did, professed to have returned to the
cause of America, and sought to prevent the confiscation of his paper.
Witherspoon entertained nothing but contempt for the cowardly printer.
His mock recantation was sent to the Fish Kill Gazette where it would be
most likely to fall under the notice of the British in New York. It is a
covert attack upon James Rivington, publisher of The Royal Gazette of
New York. Poor Towne is mercilessly scored and presented as a snivelling
coward, with no character nor patriotism, ready to fall in with any man
or party, good or bad, who will further his interests. He is made to
say, in his recantation that "I never was nor ever pretended to be a man
of character, repute or dignity."
An occasion arose in the
autumn for testing the hold which Washington had upon the confidence of
the Congress. Some time before this he had opposed a suggestion of
Congress that prisoners who were willing should be enlisted to serve in
the American army. There were numbers of deserters from the British,
especially among the Hessians, who were willing to take such service.
Washington had opposed this on the very best grounds, and Congress had
accepted his view. In the summer of 1778, however, Count Pulaski, the
gallant Polish general who had rendered notable service in the American
army, formed his famous legion of nondescript men, many of them English
and Hessian deserters, reckless fellows, but daring soldiers. They were
not easily controlled and often spread terror in the neighbourhood of
their quarters, by their bold foraging and riotous ways. Congress wished
to call him to account for it, but Witherspoon opposed any interference
and supported the advice of Washington who told Congress that despite
its contradiction of his previous opinion, and although he didn't like
it and thought it bad discipline, he would let it go, considering
Pulaski's energy and bravery. Witherspoon's uniform policy in military
matters was for Congress to let Washing-ton alone, as far as was
possible, in his management of the campaigns.
In the fall of 1779
Witherspoon refused a re-election to Congress on the ground that he
could not bear the expense and, more particularly, that he might attend
to his private affairs and his duties at the college. Washington was at
Morristown with his army. In the spring of 1780, he made requisitions
for supplies from the counties of New Jersey. Witherspoon interested
himself in furnishing Somerset's quota and received the personal thanks
of Washington, who likewise said he did not like to suggest to Congress
what Witherspoon suggested to him, namely, that the certificates or
receipts given for supplies might be received as taxes, but he promised
to do what he could towards having them redeemed in good money.
Witherspoon was again in
Congress in the autumn serving on various committees; helping to prepare
Dana's commission, as minister to Russia; conferring with the French
minister, Gerard, on the subject of Laurens' mission, which involved the
terms of peace; looking after the publication of two hundred copies of
the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation,
alliances between the United States and France, and the constitutions of
the several states, all to be bound together in boards. His attendance
upon the sessions was, however, very irregular. Timing his absences so
that he might not miss any of the more important discussions, he was
present to protest against the practical repudiation of the continental
currency by some of the states and to vote a loud ay in favour of some
stronger additions to the Articles of Confederation, although he
regretted that the union was not closer and more permanent. In one
instance his vote was a mistake when he voted against Morris's summary
removal from office of the supernumerary clerks, whose presence was
crippling the treasury. But his executive ability was recognized by his
being chosen one of a committee to devise ways and means to carry on the
campaign. This committee suggested that the states should support the
treasury of the United States with funds for which the treasurer was
ordered to draw upon them for three millions, duly and fairly
proportioned. This was all very well, but Morris, with no authority to
enforce the decrees of Congress, the confederacy being so loose, had
great difficulty in collecting the quotas. Some of his letters betray
the deepest disgust, and he speaks his mind very freely to the
delinquent state governments. When some of them, through their
representatives in Congress, suggested that contributions of clothing
should be credited to them in lieu of money due, Witherspoon joined
Morris in opposing such a demoralizing step, and had a very poor opinion
of such statesmanship.
Finally when Morris
brought in his plan for a national bank, Witherspoon gave his hearty
support to this, one of the most efficient of the great financier's
plans for placing the finances of the country on a sound basis.
Witherspoon's views of finance and of money will be discussed in
succeeding pages. An affair of a personal nature demanded his attention
this year. He learned that his son, John, had been taken prisoner by the
British. I have already stated that John Witherspoon, Jr., was a
physician. He served in the Continental army and this year attempted to
go abroad to purchase surgical instruments and necessary medicinal
supplies. He took passage on the privateer De Graaf, which was captured
at St. Eustatius by the British. Because of his father's prominence the
son was treated with extraordinary harshness in a London prison. When
Wither-spoon learned of his son's plight he wrote to Franklin, who was
able to secure the young man's release, and, when that was, after some
trouble, finally effected, took care of him in Paris until his father
'sent money for his expenses. In November Franklin was able to start the
young physician on his homeward way, and wrote to his father, " I hope
you will have the pleasure of receiving with this your long absent son,
who appears to me a valuable young man. On the receipt of your letter I
wrote to a friend in London to furnish him with what money he should
have occasion for to bring him hither; and here I delivered to him the
second of your letters of credit whereby he has been enabled to repay
me."
4. STEPS TOWARDS PEACE
As early as February,
1778, George Johnstone, an Englishman friendly to America, wrote to
Robert Morris that the peace party in the Parliament seemed to be in the
ascendant. In the same month the British ministry suddenly re-versed its
policy, repealed all the obnoxious acts, resistance to which had caused
the war, and sent three commissioners to treat for peace.
They came too late, nor
did they offer acceptable terms. The same year Spain's offer to mediate
in the struggle was rejected by England, and the war went on. But in
March of the next year the French minister in the United States, Gerard,
suggested to the Congress that they draw up instructions for their
plenipotentiaries, setting forth what they would demand and what they
would yield. Then began a very earnest debate. Of course the one thing
which they would never yield was independence. What Witherspoon wrote
from his quiet home at Princeton in 1780 was felt by every member of the
Congress in 1779, that they would never give up "though our condition
were ten times worse than it is." Then came the question of boundaries
and of certain other rights. Witherspoon was not present during the
earlier discussion, when it was decided to insist on what is practically
our present northern boundary, the free navigation of the Mississippi,
and the privilege of fishing on the coasts of Newfoundland. The first
point was claimed by Virginia, because of her supposed interest in the
northwest territory, and especially because nobody wanted England on the
upper Mississippi. The second point was felt to be necessary for the
trade of the western territory, while the third was made in the interest
of the fishermen of New England. Later in the spring Spain gave notice
that she would not grant any rights on the Mississippi. A committee, of
which Wither-spoon was one, was appointed to consider this delicate
question, and, as a result of the deliberation, Congress agreed not to
insist on this right but only to insist that England be shut out of the
Mississippi altogether. Until peace was finally secured the terms were
discussed in all phases and with varying modifications. John Adams, who
had been sent to Holland in 1777 to treat with that country, was later
appointed a plenipotentiary to negotiate for peace with England and make
a treaty of commerce. It was expected that he would confer with the
French, but he proceeded at first without reference to France. By the
terms of the French alliance America was under obligations to make no
terms which did not include France, but the Americans did not know that
the French had a secret treaty with Spain, which country had been
dragged into the war. Adams' positive and independent manner gave
offense to the French court, which tried to have him recalled. Failing
in that, which was opposed by the Congress, Gerard was ordered to secure
such modification of his instructions as would make him subject to the
directions of the French court. The story of all this negotiation is
told by Witherspoon in a manuscript which I have found among his papers
and which, so far as I know, has never been published. He speaks at
first hand, for he was one of the committee to examine the
correspondence between Adams and the Duke de Vergennes, foreign minister
of France, and to confer with Gerard upon many features of the delicate
situation. His account of it is as follows: Sir, I now sit down
agreably to your request to recollect and commit to writing the
circumstances most worthy of notice at the time of Congress in agreeing
to the final instructions to our commissioners for negotiating peace,
and to point out the views which seemed to me chiefly to have governed
that body and induced them to direct our commissioners to be ultimately
guided by the opinion and judgment of the court of France.
It will not be improper
to premise some short remarks upon the state of things from the
be-ginning of the war both before and after the French alliance.
It was from the first
appearance of things coming to extremities admitted by all that the
chief if not the only quarter from which we were to look for foreign aid
was France, as also that foreign aid was necessary—that is to say that
unless we had foreign aid we could not expect to establish our
independence but after many years of suffering, a depopulated country
and a deluge of blood and that most probably some of the states
themselves might have been lost.
I do not remember any
difference of opinion worth mentioning upon either of these two points.
Therefore our views were directed to France—there was a much greater
difference of opinion whether we should offer our alliance to any other
Power.
When application was made
to France that Court proceeded with the utmost caution. It was easy,
however, from the whole intercourse to perceive two things. (1) That
both the court and nation of France were very desirous that we should be
supported and succeed. (2) That at the same time they were exceedingly
doubt-ful whether it was safe for them to involve themselves much with
us, or openly to take a part.
This backwardness was
plainly from two different causes which seemed to have almost equal
influence. (1) Jealousy of us lest we should not adhere to our
resolutions but draw back and make peace with England. (2) Necessary
fear of the power of England and particularly its naval force. They have
hardly even yet been wholly free from either of these apprehensions.
The affairs of the United
States were never in a more critical situation than in December, 1776,
when Congress went to Baltimore. There never was a greater need for, or
greater anxiety to obtain, foreign aid. The number that attended
Congress then was small, but their measures were decided and, I believe,
judicious. I do not remember one word of despondency to have fallen from
any member or the most distant hint of a desire to make submission to
England, but the means of persuading France to interpose effectually
were the great subject of deliberation and discussion. At that time
there was a letter or letters mentioned from a person in France which
intimated that we should make propositions to France to induce them to
support us in an effectual manner and even this sentiment, was spoke of
as coming from that quarter, that if we would put France in the place of
England they would certainly protect us. This came from no official
persons, nor was directed to any official body, nor had we any reason to
suppose that it was done at the suggestion of the Court of France. I do
not believe it was. The proposition was not worthy of being taken into
consideration.
There were, however, some
persons in Congress who reasoned in this manner: It is plain we cannot
be supported without foreign aid. There is no place to which we can
apply with probability of success but France. We know she is disposed to
assist us, but we have given no sufficient inducement to that power to
interfere. We have offered nothing to France but what we have offered to
every other nation. The proposals mentioned were to offer France an
exclusive trade with the United States for a limited time or to offer
them an exclusive trade in some particular articles or to offer them in
distinction from other nations a promise of freedom from imposts, etc.
After a very deliberate
and accurate discussion it was the opinion of a very considerable
majority of Congress to make no such proposals; that they were contrary
to the very spirit of our undertaking, that if we were to be independent
we would be independent of all the world, that to separate the United
States from England was an object of itself sufficiently interesting to
France, that it did not appear from any communications made to our
commissioners that the Court of France desired any such preferences, but
that their slowness and caution were from other causes.
Therefore Congress sent
the most solemn assurances that we never would give up or, in the least
degree, recede from the Declaration of Independence. Soon after this
instructions were given to our commissioners to propose to the Court of
France that if they would enter into the war with us we would assist to
the utmost of our power in the conquest of the West Indies by furnishing
provisions and stores for the fleets and armies of the King of France
and by any other way in our power and that all such conquests should
remain with France. One of the copies of these instructions was taken on
the passage, published in London, republished in Charlestown, South
Carolina, and from these papers published in Philadelphia, yet neither
friends nor enemies discerned or suspected from them the nature of the
important debate which had preceded them.
Soon after the capture of
Burgoyne, the Court of France came to a determined resolution to support
us vigorously; the first authentic assurance of this was contained in
letters from our commissioners of date December 6, 1777, and reached us
about the last of January, 1778, though the treaty was not subscribed
till the 6th of February that year.
It is easy to see from
the treaty itself that the French Court were still somewhat apprehensive
of the issue, for they put in the eighth article that they were not to
lay down their arms till the Independence of America shall have been
formally or tacitly assured, etc.
In the year 1779, when
the first proposal was made of attempting a treaty of peace under the
mediation of the Emperor and King of Spain, Congress was called upon to
consider and determine upon what terms of peace they would be willing to
accept, and at the same time to be prepared for war. At that time, in a
very large and full conference with M. Gerard, the French minister, he
particularly and strongly recommended to Congress not to be too high in
their demands and indeed discovered an apprehension that we might mar
the treaty by being so. Probably this might be occasioned or augmented
by some rash publications at that time insisting that we ought not to
make peace without having Canada, Florida and Nova Scotia added to us.
The minister took great pains to represent to Congress that much would
depend upon the opinion the mediating powers might form of our temper
and disposition, and that it was plain England took all possible pains
to represent us as an ambitious people that wanted to extend their
bounds, and would be dangerous to other nations. In this conference also
he told us that the events of war were uncertain, that, therefore, we
ought not to be too confident and particularly he used the expression
that it was hard to say what might be the effect of a decisive victory
at sea. If Rodney's victory in the West Indies had happened two years
sooner than it did its effect would have been perhaps fatal to us.
From this state of
things, and all that followed, I am convinced that nothing could be more
false than the supposition of some persons that France wanted the war to
continue for the purpose of ambition and the greater humiliation of her
enemy. On the contrary, France always discovered a desire to have the
war terminated, and listened to any proposal for this purpose, perhaps
prompted or suggested the offers of mediation from Spain, the Emperor
and Russia. This was the natural consequence of the two causes above
assigned for her slowness and caution in entering upon the war.
Mr. John Adams was chosen
for the purpose and a commission for negotiating a peace with Great
Britain was given to him alone. The instructions at first sent to him
contained descriptions of our claims as to territory and made the
following particulars essentially necessary to our making peace:—the
extension of our bounds to the forty-fifth degree of latitude north and
to the Mississippi westward—the right of fishing on the banks of New
Foundland and a free navigation of the Mississippi to the mouth.
When Mr. Adams was in
France he thought it best to intimate to the Court of England as from
himself that he had a commission for negotiating peace. The Court of
France was of opinion that that term was not proper, that things were
not sufficiently ripe for it and that no such separate intimation should
be made and that it might encourage England in the expectation of
England's making a separate treaty with America and dividing the allies,
a thing which they earnestly desired and made repeated attempts to
accomplish. In a correspondence between Mr. Adams and the D. de
Vergennes on this subject and also on the subject of the act of Congress
of the 18th of March, '80, estimating the continental currency at forty
per cent., Mr. Adams mentioned his opinions with a tenaciousness which
gave great offense to the Court of France, and indeed such was the
manner of his entering upon these subjects that he was finally forbid to
continue it by an express order de par de le Roi.
In the year 1781 Congress
entered upon the reconsideration of the instructions formerly sent to
Mr. Adams, particularly the making essential conditions of the [
boundary, of the fishing in Newfoundland and the free navigation of the
Mississippi—the last of these we learned from our ministers was very
disagreable to the Court of Spain, another one, the fishing, not very
agreable to the Court of France, who had not the right by treaty
themselves and the other we had reason to suspect that England might be
very timorous upon, nor did we know what might be the sentiments of the
mediating powers or the Powers of Europe in general as to our right or
the expediency of our having such extensive dominions. It was also to be
considered that as none of these particulars was specified in the
alliance with France the question was necessarily reduced to this form,
whether though France should not support us in these claims we would
continue the war ourselves unless they were granted.
In this situation after
much and long discussion it was at last resolved as to all the three to
depart from making them absolute and essential conditions lest at our
distance it should be a bar to an otherwise honourable peace.
The spirit, therefore of
the final instructions was that [high claims] should still serve to them
what we wished and thought we ought to obtain but from a desire of peace
we left it to our ministers in conjunction with our allies to do what
circumstances should discover to be wisest upon the whole. When these
matters were interesting them the minister of France often intimated
both to committees in conference with him and to particular members of
Congress that it would be highly agreeable to his court that Congress
should leave nothing in general or undetermined but say expressly upon
any particular what they would or what they would not yield. It could
not surely be known with certainty whether this arose chiefly or only
from their jealousy of Mr. Adams or whether they preferred upon the
whole that as little should be left discretionary as possible lest blame
should be laid upon themselves.
When the instructions
were therefore agreed upon communications were made of them to the
minister of France and the directions were given in the same manner as
always had been done to our minister to make the most free and candid
communications of all his proceedings to the Court of France and to
avail himself of the assistance, friendship and influence of that court
in all his transactions. Then a difficulty arose which was trying
indeed; it appeared that this was not sufficient in the present
instance—the minister read to the committee the letters of the D. de
Vergennes upon the subject of Mr. Adams, complaining of him in the
strongest terms and expressing their fears of the negotiations being
marred by his stiffness and tenaciousness of purpose. It was natural to
suppose and probably was supposed by the members of the committee that
the minister wished Congress would take that commission from Mr. Adams
and give it to some other though no such thing was read to the committee
from D. de Vergennes nor proposed by the minister himself.
When this matter was
reported to Congress a very serious deliberation was taken upon it. What
Mr. Adams had done by which he had incurred the displeasure of the
minister of the king of France had been undoubtedly from his zeal and
attachment to the interest and honour of the United States, his ability
and his unshaken fidelity were well known. In such a case to displace a
minister merely because he had given umbrage to some at the court where
he resided by an excess of well meant zeal seemed to be a most
pernicious example and possibly would have the worst effects upon
succeeding ministers and therefore ought not to be done. The writer of
this memorial of facts in particular was clearly of opinion that Mr.
Adams judged [wrong] in bello the points which he contested in his
correspondence with the D. de Vergennes the reasons for which need not
be mentioned yet he was clearly of opinion to sacrifice a minister of
unquestionable integrity ought not in any event to be submitted to
merely because he had had more zeal than good manners and [assuring
presence]. Therefore it was proposed that a clause should be added to
the instructions to this purpose and that he should do nothing without
the consent and approbation of the Court of France.
Another committee was
appointed to confer with the minister and make this communication. But
in conference this also was in his opinion insufficient. He repeated the
fears they had of difficulties with Mr. Adams and insisted that by this
new clause he was only bound negatively, that he could not indeed do
anything without the consent of the Court of France but he might
obstruct every measure and unless he was perfectly satisfied effectually
prevent any-thing being done.
When this was reported to
Congress the matter appeared exceedingly delicate and difficult. It was
discussed at great length. All the objections against removing Mr. Adams
were argued in their full force. But on the other hand it appeared
humiliating at least if not dangerous to deliver ourselves entirely to
the Court of France. However after full deliberation it was agreed by
the majority in Congress that he should be absolutely guided by the
opinion and judgment of the Court of France.
As this particular
resolution appeared so dubious to several worthy members of Congress and
there were so many attempts to reconsider and revoke it and as it [in
the meantime] was the subject of discussion by the public at large, it
seems necessary to recollect, while circumstances are fresh in our minds
and to record, the necessity or the reasons that induced the plurality
to embrace it. It is not intended in this [rather long] memorial to
attempt distinguishing between the opinions of one member and another,
but just to mention as many as possible of the sentiments that were
proposed and advanced by those who finally voted for it.
It was plain that from
the first rise of the controversy we had been greatly indebted to the
Court of France. They had interposed effectively and seasonably in our
cause. They had exerted themselves with much vigour and zeal. They had
put themselves to very great expense upon our account. At the very time
when this debate was agitated our most necessary expenses were supported
by them, and even the subsistence and support of many delegates in
Congress was from bills drawn upon France. We had accustomed ourselves
by many public and authentic acts to call the King of France our great
and generous ally. Perhaps there were as humiliating expressions in many
of the public acts and proceedings as could be in this resolution which
might well be considered as the effect of grateful and generous
sentiments.
Let us now follow
Witherspoon's course as we can trace it through the journals of
Congress. When, in June, 1781, it was proposed to associate other
commissioners with Adams, Witherspoon opposed it in a very vigorous
speech, as he had opposed the recall of Adams. He was very grateful to
the French, as he tells us in the memorial just quoted. But he was not
willing that the Congress should be bound hand and foot to them. He
contended that one commissioner was sufficient and that Adams was the
proper one. He had earnestly opposed Vergennes' suggestion that they
might enter into a truce with Great Britain for twenty years, New York
to be given to the United States, Georgia and South Carolina to the
English. In the end it was determined to associate four others with
Adams, only three of whom joined him, namely, Franklin, Jay and Laurens,
although the latter arrived just in time to sign the preliminary treaty.
Witherspoon had nominated Reed of Pennsylvania.
On the 6th of June, 1781,
Witherspoon offered the following further instructions to the minister
who was to negotiate on behalf of the United States :
"But as to disputed
boundaries and other particulars we refer you to our former
instructions, from which you will easily perceive the desires and
expectations of Congress, but we think it unsafe at this distance to tie
you up by absolute and peremptory directions upon any other subject than
the two essential articles above mentioned (namely, the navigation of
the Mississippi and a free port or ports below the thirty-first parallel
of latitude). You will therefore use your own judgment and prudence in
securing the interest of the United States in such manner as
circumstances may direct and as the state of the belligerent and
disposition of the mediating powers may require.
"You are to make the most
candid and confidential communications upon all subjects to the
ministers of our generous ally, the King of France, to undertake nothing
in the negotiations for peace without their knowledge and concurrence,
and to make them sensible how much we rely upon his majesty's influence
for effectual support in everything that may be necessary to the present
security or future prosperity of the United States of America."
After this motion had
been debated all day it was lost by a very narrow vote. But the whole
question was referred to a committee which, the next day, reported it
favourably with the following additions:
"1. You are to use your
utmost endeavours to secure the limits fixed exactly according to the
description in your former instructions.
"2. If that cannot be
obtained it is the wish of Congress that a peace be made without fixing
northern and western limits, but leaving them to future discussion.
"3. If that is also found
impracticable and boundaries must be ascertained you are to obtain as
advantageous a settlement as possible in favour of the United States."
To the first of these
additions every member assented; the second received the vote of every
state except New Hampshire and half of Massachusetts, while the third
was lost by a narrow vote.
Then Witherspoon's
original motion came up again, and after being vigorously threshed over,
both sections were adopted. This did not end the matter. On the 9th of
June he moved to instruct the commissioners that they might agree to a
truce with England "provided that Great Britain be not left in
possession of any part of the thirteen United States." The negotiations
dragged along and the war continued. In May, 1782, Congress felt that
England was trying to detach France, not suspecting the French agreement
with Spain. By August the attitude of Spain was so suspicious that Jay
was authorized to sign a treaty with her " or go to any part of Europe
his health might demand," which meant a breach of negotiations. About
the same time Lee endeavoured to have the instructions of July, '8i,
reconsidered, with the result that finally they were practically
unchanged. A further discussion of Witherspoon's position is not
necessary. But from a study of his action it is plain that with the
others, he was tenacious of every right for which the war had been
waged, that he strove to avoid any claims which might endanger the
prospects of peace, and that he thought the Congress in honour bound to
be guided by their ally, France. How the American commissioners finally
broke their instructions and made a separate treaty with England
regardless of France is no part of this story. When the news of it first
reached the Congress many members, Witherspoon among them, as also were
Madison, Livingston and Hamilton, were ready to censure the
commissioners. "When, however," says Wharton, " the treaty of peace in
itself so advantageous arrived, and when it appeared that France made no
official complaint of the action of the commissioners, and was even
ready to make a new loan to the United States, then Livingston, Madison
and Hamilton concurred in holding that no vote of censure should be
passed." Witherspoon held the same opinion.
Certain writers have
condemned the Congress as composed of stupid blunderers, commenting upon
their weakness, pointing scornfully at their mistakes. Such criticism is
unfair. When one considers that these men were practically untried
novices in the larger affairs of statesmanship and diplomacy it is
marvellous that they succeeded as well as they did. Of public finance
they had known little; of military operations on a large scale they knew
less. The difficulties of Congressional direction of warfare are the
common experience of revolutionists. Cromwell had to deal with them. The
commander-in-chief of the Confederate army, Robert E. Lee, felt their
hindering clutches. But such experiences are inevitable in a
representative government. A government as well organized as that of the
United States at the time of the Spanish war, of England during the Boer
war, was unable to maintain a perfect commissariat. The men of the
Continental Congress deserve all praise for their fidelity to the trust
reposed in them. Had they not been ready to sacrifice their private
business, and run the risk of losing, as some of them did lose, their
private fortunes, the struggle for independence would never have
succeeded. Without the Congress there would have been no Confederacy;
there would have been no treaty making power; there would have been only
a military dictatorship which disunion and the lack of foreign support
would have broken to pieces. As Witherspoon himself said, "Those who
know how fluctuating a body the Congress is and what continual changes
take place in it, as to men, must perceive the absurdity of their making
or succeeding in any such attempt" as the war for independence. That
they did succeed is due to the ability and fidelity of men like
Witherspoon as well as of men like Washington. |