Mini
Lecture: 7-1 The Early Years of the War

Ř The American desire to gain rights
and liberties led them to fight for independence from Britain.
Ř Today those same rights and
liberties are protected by the U.S. Constitution.

ONE AMERICAN'S STORY: In search of liberty, Haym Salomon moved from Eastern Europe to America sometime between 1764 and 1775. He was Jewish and he was from Poland. Arriving in New York City, Salomon soon became a successful merchant and banker. After the war broke out, Salomon supported the Patriot cause.
When the British captured New York in 1776, many Patriots fled but Salomon stayed. The British arrested him as a spy. Salomon spoke many languages. The British thought he could help their supply officers deal with foreign merchants, so they let him out of prison. Salomon used this opportunity to help other prisoners escape.
In 1778, the British wanted to arrest Salomon again, so he fled to Philadelphia. His earlier time in the cold, damp prison had permanently damaged his health. Even so, he continued to aid the Patriots. He loaned the new government more than $600,000, which was never repaid.
Like Salomon, many people made hard choices about which side to support during the Revolutionary War.
Americans
Divided:
The issue of
separating from Great Britain divided American society. Opinion polls did not
exist in the 1700s, so we don't know exactly how many people were on each side.
But historians estimate that roughly one third were of Americans were
Loyalists, roughly one third were Patriots, and one third were neutral. It is
hard to know for sure, different sources estimate different numbers. Our Textbook estimates 20 % Loyalists and
40% and 40 %. Regardless of what source
you use the bottom line was most Americans did not support the Revolution.

Both Patriots and
Loyalists came from all walks of life and all parts of America. In general, New
England and Virginia had high numbers of Patriots. Loyalists were numerous in
cities, in New York State, and in the South.
Many Loyalists worked for the British government or were clergy in the
Church of England. Some Quakers were Loyalists, although many wanted peace.
Their faith taught that war was wrong.
The war divided Native Americans, too. For instance, some
Iroquois nations fought with the British and others with the Americans. Those
Native Americans who joined the British feared that if the Americans won, they
would take Native American land. Some Native Americans who lived near colonists
and interacted with them sided with the Americans.
African Americans also fought on both sides. At first, slave owners feared that African
Americans who had guns might lead slave revolts. Therefore, few states allowed
African Americans to enlist, or sign up with the army. Then a British governor offered freedom to
any enslaved person who joined the British army. Many slaves ran away to fight
for the British. In response, most states began to accept African-American
soldiers. In all, about 5,000 African Americans served in the Continental Army.
Many African Americans who did so hoped that American independence would bring
greater equality.
Differences over the war split families, too. For example,
Benjamin Franklin's son William took Britain's side. The father and son stopped
speaking.
Creating an
Army:
Because not everyone supported the war, raising an army was
difficult. The army also faced other problems. In June 1775, George Washington
became the commander of the Continental Army. At first, this new national army
was formed from state militias, made up of untrained and undisciplined
volunteers.
After Congress created the Continental Army, men began to
enlist, but most of them didn't stay long. At the start of the war, Congress
asked men to enlist only for one year. Later Congress did lengthen the term of
service. When the soldiers' time was up, they went home. As a result,
Washington's army never numbered more than 17,000 men.
Congress's inability to supply the army also frustrated
Washington. The soldiers needed everything, blankets,
shoes, food, and even guns and ammunition. Angrily, Washington wrote, "Could I
have foreseen what I have, and am likely to experience, no consideration upon
earth should have persuaded me to accept this command."
Many women tried to help the army. Martha Washington and
other wives followed their husbands to army camps. The women cooked, did laundry,
and nursed sick or wounded soldiers. A few women even helped fight. Mary Hays
earned the nickname "Molly Pitcher" by carrying water to tired
soldiers during a battle. Deborah Sampson dressed as a man, enlisted, and
fought in several engagements.
Building an army was
crucial to Washington's plan. To the British, the Americans were disorganized,
inexperienced rebels. The British thought that if they won a decisive battle,
the Americans would give up.
By contrast, Washington's main goal was to survive. To do
so, he needed to keep an army in the field, win some battles, no matter how
small, and avoid a crushing defeat. He knew he could not hope to win a major
battle until he had a large, well-equipped army.
Struggle for
the Middle States:
Washington had
forced the British to retreat from Boston in March 1776. He then hurried his
army to New York City, where he expected the British to go next. One British
goal was to occupy coastal cities so that their navy could land troops and
supplies in those cities. From there, they could launch their military
campaigns.
Washington's hunch was correct. In July 1776, Britain's
General William Howe arrived in New York with a large army. Then in August,
more soldiers arrived, including about 9,000 Hessian mercenaries. British
soldiers usually signed up for life-which discouraged enlistment. So Britain
needed mercenaries, whom it hired from the German states.
For several months,
the British and American armies fought for New York State. Finally, the British
forced Washington to retreat through New Jersey. By December, when the American
army crossed the Delaware River into Pennsylvania, it was in terrible
condition.

Charles Willson Peale, a Philadelphia painter who watched the
crossing, saw one muddy soldier who "had lost all his clothes. He was in
an old, dirty blanket jacket, his beard long, and his face so full of sores he
could not clean it." To Peale's shock, the soldier called his name. He was
Peale's brother!
Political writer Thomas Paine also witnessed the hard
conditions and the soldiers' low spirits on the retreat. To urge them to keep
fighting, Paine published the first in a series of pamphlets called The American Crisis.
A VOICE
FROM THE PAST
“These are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and
the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their
country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and
woman.”
Thomas Paine, The American Crisis
Washington hoped a victory would encourage his weary men. He
also knew that he must attack the British quickly because most of his soldiers
would leave once their enlistments ended on December 31.
Late on December 25,
1776, Washington's troops rowed across the icy Delaware River to New Jersey.
From there, they marched in bitter, early morning cold to Trenton to surprise
the Hessians, some of whom were sleeping after their Christmas celebration. The
Americans captured or killed more than 900 Hessians and gained needed supplies.
Washington's army won another victory at Princeton eight days later. These
victories proved that the American general was better than the British had
thought. The American army began to attract new recruits.

Britain's
Strategy:
Meanwhile, the British were pursuing a strategy to seize the
Hudson River Valley. If successful, they would cut off New England from the
other states. The strategy called for three armies to meet at Albany, New York.
General John Burgoyne would lead a force south from Canada. Lieutenant Colonel
Barry St. Leger would lead his army from Lake Ontario down the Mohawk Valley.
Burgoyne expected General Howe to follow the Hudson north from New York City.
Burgoyne left Canada in June 1777 with an army that included
British, Hessians, and Iroquois. In July, they captured Fort Ticonderoga.
Called "Gentleman Johnny" by his soldiers,
Burgoyne enjoyed traveling slowly and throwing parties to celebrate victories.
After Ticonderoga, his delays gave the Americans time to cut down trees to
block his route. They also burned crops and drove off cattle, leaving the
countryside bare of supplies for the British troops.
Things grew rougher during the last 25 miles of Burgoyne's
march to Albany. On a map, the route looked easy, but it crossed a swampy
wilderness. The army had to build bridges and roads. Burgoyne took four weeks
to reach the Hudson. Still confident, he looked forward to meeting up with St.
Leger and Howe in Albany. On August 4, Burgoyne received a message from Howe.
He would not be coming north, Howe wrote, because he had decided to invade
Pennsylvania to try to capture General Washington and Philadelphia- where the
Continental Congress met. "Success be ever with you," wrote Howe. Yet
Burgoyne needed Howe's soldiers, not his good wishes.
Howe did invade
Pennsylvania. In September 1777, he defeated but did not capture Washington at
the Battle of Brandywine. Howe then occupied Philadelphia. In October,
Washington attacked Howe at Germantown. Washington lost the battle, however,
and retreated.

Battles
along the Mohawk:
As Burgoyne received Howe's message, St. Leger faced his own
obstacle in reaching Albany. In the summer of 1777, he was trying to defeat a
small American force at Fort Stanwix in the Mohawk River valley of New York.
St. Leger's forces included Iroquois led by Mohawk chief Joseph Brant.
Brant and his sister, Molly, had strong ties to the British.
Molly was a British official's wife, and Joseph was a convert to the Church of
England. Both Joseph and Molly tried to convince the Iroquois to fight for the
British, who upheld Iroquois rights to their land.
During August 1777, American general Benedict Arnold led a
small army up the Mohawk River. He wanted to chase the British away from Fort
Stanwix. Arnold sent a captured Loyalist and some Iroquois who were American
allies to spread the rumor that he had a large army.
The trick worked.
St. Leger's troops were afraid they were about to be outnumbered. The army retreated
so fast that it left behind tents, cannon, and supplies. Because of St. Leger's
flight and Howe's refusal to follow the strategy, no one was left to rendezvous
with Burgoyne.
Saratoga, a
Turning Point:
By this time, Burgoyne's army was running out of supplies,
and it needed horses. The general sent a raiding party into Vermont to see what
it could find. The raiding party encountered New England troops, who badly
defeated it at the Battle of Bennington on August 16, 1777.
Despite this setback, Burgoyne's army headed slowly toward
Albany. On the way, it met a powerful Continental Army force led by General
Horatio Gates. Gates's soldiers were waiting on a ridge called Bemis Heights,
near Saratoga, New York. There the Americans had created fortifications, behind
which to fight. A Polish engineer had helped the Americans do this.
Burgoyne would have to break through the fortifications to
proceed to Albany. On September 19, he attacked. While Gates commanded the
Americans on the ridge, Benedict Arnold led an attack on nearby Freeman's Farm.
His men repeatedly charged the British and inflicted heavy casualties. Still,
the British held their position.
On October 7th, another battle broke out. Again Arnold led
daring charges against the British. Although hundreds of muskets were firing at
him, he galloped through the battlefield "like a madman," a sergeant
later said. Frightened, Burgoyne's Hessian mercenaries began to fall back.
Eventually, a bullet tore into Arnold's leg and stopped him. Even so, the Americans
forced Burgoyne to retreat.

Burgoyne's army moved slowly through heavy rain to a former
army camp at Saratoga. By the time they arrived, the men were exhausted. Some
fell in the mud and slept in their wet uniforms. The Continental Army then surrounded
Burgoyne's army and fired on it day and night without stopping. Burgoyne
decided to surrender. The series of
conflicts that led to this surrender is known as the Battles of Saratoga.
The Battles of Saratoga had two very different consequences.
As Benedict Arnold was recovering from his wound, he married a woman who was a
Loyalist. Over time, Arnold came to feel that Congress had not rewarded him
enough for his heroic actions at Saratoga and other battles. Influenced by his
bitterness and his wife, he betrayed his army. In 1780, he agreed to turn over
an American fort to the British. Although his plot was discovered before he
could carry it out, he escaped. Even today, the name Benedict Arnold is used to
mean traitor.
On the positive
side, the victory at Saratoga was a turning point in the Revolution. It caused
European nations to think that the Americans might win their war for
independence.