"
It is not my intention to contradict this assertion, but
only to intimate some considerations, which tend to induce
a supposition, that though none of General Conway's letters
to you contain the offensive passage mentioned, there might
have been something in them too nearly related to it, that
could give such an extraordinary alarm.
It is not my intention to contradict this assertion, but
only to intimate some considerations, which tend to induce
a supposition, that though none of General Conway's letters
to you contain the offensive passage mentioned, there might
have been something in them too nearly related to it, that
could give such an extraordinary alarm.
Hamilton - 1834 - Life on Hamilton - v1
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x000275470 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www.
hathitrust.
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? 126 THE LIFE OF
displayed more devotion to the cause of the revolution, in
none was it more difficult to silence the clamours of the dis-
contented. The superior population, -- the larger quotas
furnished to the army, -- the more faithful discharge of the
public burthens, were among the topics which their pride
naturally dwelt upon, and not without reason; for one state
alone furnished a fourth of the troops which sustained
the revolution: and not less just than forcible was the de-
claration of Hamilton, when, to express his high respect
for her exertions, he said "that Massachusetts was the
pivot on which the revolution turned. " The consciousness
of this gave rise to claims of superiority, which were che-
rished by several of the leading individuals of that part of
the country, who, by encouraging these sentiments served
their own popularity at home, and, as they imagined, con-
firmed their title to a preponderance in the confederacy.
The calamities which befel the army on the invasion of
Canada, and the series of disasters which followed the
battle of Long Island, were alike attributed by them to the
incapacity of the commander-in-chief; and they were only
waiting until some officer should be presented to the na-
tion in a favourable point of view, to support him as a rival
for public confidence, and the highest command.
It has been mentioned that the capture of Lee removed
Him from the public eye, and that the same party then di-
rected their attention to General Gates. The evacuation
of Ticonderoga, by St. Clair, though wholly unknown to
General Schuyler, was a reverse of fortune magnified and
misrepresented, and the opportunity of bestowing on their
favourite so important a command, outweighed every con-
sideration of delicacy to Schuyler, and was the more rea-
dily embraced because it was contrary to the known wishes
of Washington, the judgment of Jay, and the feelings of
New-York, which had evinced a steady determination to
support the commander-in-chief. The hostility of this party,
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? HAMILTON. 127
which was disarmed by the success at Trenton, began to
indicate itself anew after the affair of Germantown, when
the misconduct of part of the troops called forth censures
from head quarters, and led to numerous arrests.
On such occasions, the bravest officers cannot always
escape unmerited obloquy; and, unfortunately, individuals
were found among them who too readily listened to over-
tures to join the cabal.
Letters, written under feelings of irritation, were address-
ed to the northern army, and circulated throughout the
country. The newspapers were called in aid to dissemi-
nate the poison, and as soon as the victory of Saratoga was
announced, the designs of the faction, which was known as
the "Monster Party," were openly evinced in the most as-
siduous attentions to Gates, and extravagant eulogiums on
his conduct, and in marked disrespect of Washington, and
undisguised censures of his policy.
Among the most active partizans of the opposition, were
a few foreigners, who arriving in this country with preten-
sions to the first grades in the army, had been found not to
possess any real title to preferment. Of these, the foremost
was Thomas Conway, who appearing before congress with
the rank of Colonel in the French army, and decorated with
the cross of the order of Saint Louis, -- a vain, weak intri-
guer, had been, in the preceding spring, elected to the com-
mand of a brigade. Soon understood by Washington,
Conway became his enemy, and opened a correspondence
with Gates, in which, by flattering his vanity, and ridicu-
ling the commander-in-chief, he confirmed him in the idea
that he might easily supplant him.
Winter had now closed in, and while Washington was
engaged in efforts to provide for his famishing and almost
naked army, a communication was received from General
Gates, marked with all the insolence of anticipated triumph.
A paragraph in a letter from Conway to Gates, "in which
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? 128 THE LIFE OF
General Washington's conduct was made the subject of
free discussion and injurious remark, was the first occur-
rence which called forth the attention of the commander-in-
chief; to this correspondence Gates lent a willing ear, and
his answers to General Conway's letters were very much
the echoes of the sentiments those letters contained. "* The
inquiries which ensued on the disclosure of this correspond-
ence alarmed Gates, who with a view to fix the imputation
on General Washington of having practised indirect means
to arrive at the contents of his confidential correspondence,
wrote him the letter referred to, throwing out an imputa-
tion that the extracts had been "stealingly copied," which
was transmitted to him through the hands of the President
of Congress.
GATES TO WASHINGTON.
Albany, December 8th, 1777.
SIR,
I shall not attempt to describe what, as a private gentle-
man, I cannot help feeling, on representing to my mind the
disagreeable situation in which confidential letters, when
exposed to public inspection, may place an unsuspecting
correspondent; but as a public officer, I conjure your ex-
cellency to give me all the assistance you can, in tracing
out the author of the infidelity which put extracts from
General Conway's letters to me into your hands.
Those letters have been stealingly copied, but which of
them, when, and by whom, is to me yet an unfathomable
secret.
There is not one officer in my suite, nor amongst those
who have free access to me, upon whom I could, with the
least justification to myself, fix the suspicion, and yet my
uneasines may deprive me of the usefulness of the wor-
* Statement of facts, by Colonel Troup, who was an aid of Gates.
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? HAMILTON. 129
thiest men. It is, / believe, in your excellency's power to
do me and the United States a very important service by
detecting a wretch who may betray me, and capitally in-
jure the very operations under your immediate directions.
For this reason, sir, I beg your excellency will favour me
with the proof you can procure to that effect. But the crime
being eventually so important, that the least loss of time
may be attended with the worst consequences, and it being
unknown to me whether the letter came to you from a mem-
ber of congress or an officer, I shall have the honour of
transmitting a copy of this to the president, that the congress
may, in concert with your excellency, obtain as soon as pos-
sible a discovery which so deeply affects the safety of the
states. Crimes of that magnitude ought not to remain un-
punished. I have the honour to be, with the greatest respect,
Your excellency's most humble
And most obedient servant,
Horatio Gates.
His Excellency General Washington.
Washington thus replied:
WASHINGTON TO GATES.
Valley Forge, January 4th, 1777.
SIR,
Your letter of the 8th ultimo, came to my hands a few
days ago, and to my great surprise informed me that a copy
of it had been sent to congress,-- for what reason I find my-
self unable to account; but as some end, doubtless, was in-
tended to be answered by it, I am laid under the disagree-
able necessity of returning my answer through the same
channel, lest any member of that honourable body should
harbour an unfavourable suspicion of my having practised
some indirect means to come at the contents of the confi-
dential letters between you and General Conway.
vol. i. 17
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? 130 THE LIFE OF
I am to inform you, then, that Colonel Wilkinson, on his
way to congress, in the month of October last, fell in with
Lord Stirling at Reading, and not in confidence, that I ever
understood, informed his aid-de-camp, McWilliams, that
General Conway had written thus to you: "Heaven has
been determined to save your country, or a weak general
and bad counsellors would have ruined it. " Lord Stirling,
from motives of friendship, transmitted the account, with
this remark, -- " the enclosed was communicated by Colo-
nel Wilkinson to Major McWilliams. Such duplicity of
conduct I shall always think it my duty to defeat. "
In consequence of this information, and without having
any thing more in view than merely to show that gentleman
that I was not unapprized of his intriguing disposition, I
wrote him a letter in these words: "Sir, A letter which I
received last night, contained the following paragraph in a
letter from General Conway to General Gates, he says, --
'heaven has been determined to save your country, or a
weak general and bad counsellors would have ruined it. '
I am," &c.
Neither this letter, nor the information which occasioned
it, was ever directly or indirectly communicated by me to
a single officer in this army out of my own family, except-
ing the Marquis de la Fayette, who having been spoken to
on the subject by General Conway, applied for, and saw,
under injunctions of secrecy, the letter which contained Co-
lonel Wilkinson's information. So desirous was I of con-
cealing every matter that could in its consequences give the
smallest interruption to the tranquillity of this army, or afford
a gleam of hope to the enemy by dissensions therein.
Thus, sir, with openness and candour, which I hope will
ever characterize and mark my conduct, have I complied
with your request. The only concern I feel upon the occa-
sion, finding how matters stand, is, that in doing this, I have
necessarily been obliged to name a gentleman whom I am
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? HAMILTON. 131
persuaded, (although I never exchanged a word with him
on the subject,) thought he was rather doing an act of jus-
tice, than committing an act of infidelity; and sure I am,
that till Lord Stirling's letter came to my hands, I never
knew that General Conway (whom I viewed in the light of a
stranger to you,) was a correspondent of yours, much less
did I expect that I was the subject of your confidential let-
ters. Pardon me, then, for adding, that so far from con-
ceiving that the safety of the states can be affected, or in
the smallest degree injured by a discovery of this kind, or
that I should be called on in such solemn terms to point out
the author, that I considered the information as coming from
yourself, and given with a friendly view to forewarn, and,
consequently, forearm me against a secret enemy; or in
other words, a dangerous incendiary, in which character,
sooner or later, this country will know General Conway.
But in this, as in other matters of late, I have found myself
mistaken. I am, sir,
Your most obedient servant,
Geo. Washington.
The Hon. Major General Gates.
GATES TO WASHINGTON.
SIR,
The letter of the 4th inst. which I had the honour to re-
ceive yesterday from your excellency, has relieved me from
unspeakable uneasiness. I now anticipate the pleasure it
will give you when you discover that what has been con-
veyed to you for an extract of General Conway's letter to
me, was not an information which friendly motives indu-
ced a man of honour to give, that injured virtue might be
forewarned against secret enemies. The paragraph which
your excellency has condescended to transcribe is spurious.
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? 132 THE LIFE OF
It was certainly fabricated to answer the most selfish and
wicked purposes.
I cannot avoid sketching out to your excellency the his-
tory of General Conway's letter from the time that it came
to my hands, by Lieutenant-Colonel Troup, my aid-de-
camp, to whom General Conway delivered it at Reading,
on the 11th of October, to this time, as far as it has affected
me, and the officers of my family.
That letter contained very judicious remarks upon that
want of discipline which has often alarmed your excel-
lency, and I believe all observing patriots. The reasons
which, in his judgment, deprived us of the success we would
reasonably expect, were methodically explained by him;
but neither the weakness of any of our generals, nor "bad
counsellors," were mentioned, and consequently cannot be
assigned or imagined as part of those reasons to which
General Conway attributed some of our losses. He wrote
to me as a candid observer, as other officers in every ser-
vice write to each other for obtaining better intelligence
than that of newspapers, and that freedom renders such
letters thus far confidential in some measure. The judg-
ment of the person who received them points out to him,
according to time and circumstances, the propriety or im-
propriety attending their being communicated when no
particular injunction of secrecy was requested.
Particular actions, rather than persons, were blamed,
but with impartiality; and I am convinced that he did not
aim at lessening, in my opinion, the merit of any person.
His letter was perfectly harmless: however, now that va-
rious reports have been circulated concerning its contents,
they ought not to be submitted to the solemn inspection of
those who stand most high in the public esteem.
Anxiety and jealousy would arise in the breast of very
respectable officers, who, rendered sensible of faults which
inexperience, and that alone may have led them into,
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? HAMILTON. 133
would be unnecessarily disgusted, if they perceived a pro-
bability of such errors being recorded.
Honour forbids it, and patriotism demands, that I should
return the letter into the hands of the writer. I will do it,
but at the same time I declare that the paragraph conveyed
to your excellency as a genuine part of it, was in words as
well as in substance, a wicked forgery.
About the beginning of December I was informed that
letter had occasioned an explanation between your excel-
lency and that gentleman. Not knowing whether the whole
letter or part of it had been stealingly copied, but fearing
malice had altered its original features, I own, sir, that a
dread of the mischiefs which might attend the forgery I
suspected would be made, put me for some time in a most
painful situation. When I communicated to the officers in
my family the intelligence I had received, they all entreat-
ed me to rescue their characters from the suspicions they
justly conceived themselves liable to until the guilty person
should be known. To facilitate the discovery, I wrote your
excellency; but unable to learn whether General Con-
way's letter had been transmitted to you by a member of
congress, or a gentleman in the army, I was afraid much
time would be lost in the course of the inquiry, and that the
states might receive some capital injury from the infidelity
of the person who I thought had stolen a copy of the ob-
noxious letter, was it not probable that the secrets of the
army might be attained and betrayed through the same
means to the enemy?
For this reason, sir, not doubting that congress would
most cheerfully concur with you in tracing out the crimi-
nal, I wrote to the president, and enclosed to him a copy of
my letter to your excellency.
About the same time I was forwarding these letters, Bri-
gadier General Wilkinson returned to Albany. I informed
him of the treachery which had been committed, but I con-
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? 134 THE LIFE OF
cealed from him the measures I was pursuing to unmask
the author. Wilkinson answered, he was assured it never
would come to light, and endeavoured to fix my suspi-
cions on Lieutenant-Colonel Troup, who said he might
have incautiously conversed on the substance of General
Conway's letter with Colonel Hamilton, whom you had
sent not long before to Albany. I did not listen to this in-
sinuation against your aid-de-camp and mine. I considered
it ungenerous; but the light your excellency has just as-
sisted me with, exhibiting the many qualifications which
are necessarily blended together by the head and heart of
General Wilkinson, I would not omit this fact. It would
enable your excellency to judge whether or not he would
scruple to make such a forgery as that which he now stands
charged with, and ought to be exemplarily punished. To
attempt sowing dissensions among the principal officers of
the army, and rendering them odious to each other by false
suggestions and forgeries, is, in my opinion, a crime of the
first magnitude, and involves with it all the consequences of
positive treason. That the forgery now in view was ma-
chinated for injuring General Conway, and perhaps myself,
in your judgment, is now evident to me; and I trust the
detection will operate, as it ought to operate, upon your ex-
cellency, as well as the members of the congress before
whom your letter necessitates me to lay this answer. The
station of the calumniator seems to justify your excellency
for having believed till now that the extract was genuine:
and yet, sir, I cannot help wishing you had sent me a copy
of it immediately after your explanation with General
Conway.
Would that your excellency's prediction relative to him
had not been inserted in your letter which came to me un-
sealed, through the hands of congress. I sincerely wish the
detection of this forgery may render us all more cautious;
and that to procure a fair and dispassionate explanation
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? HAMILTON. 135
whenever insinuations are made to the prejudice of respect-
ed characters, may become an established rule in society,
as well as in public business throughout the United States.
I am with unfeigned respect, sir,
Your excellency's most humble and
Most obedient servant,
Horatio Gates.
January 23d, 1778.
This extraordinary attempt, after having substantially ad-
mitted in his first letter the genuineness of the extract from
Conway's letter, to induce the belief that it was a forgery,
and a forgery committed by Colonel Wilkinson, a member
of his own staff, was thus commented upon.
WASHINGTON TO GATES.
Head Quarters, Valley Forge, February 9th, 1778.
sir:
I was duly favoured with your letter of the 23d last
month, to which I should have replied sooner, had I not
been delayed by business that required my more imme-
diate attention.
It is my wish to give implicit credit to the assurances of
every gentleman; but on the subject of our present cor-
respondence, I am sorry to confess, there happens to be
some unlucky circumstances which involuntarily compel
me to consider the discovery you mention, not so satisfac-
tory and conclusive as you seem to think it. *
+ In a private letter from General Washington to Mr. Jay, dated April 14,
1779, he observes, "I discovered very early in the war, symptoms of coldness
and constraint in General Gates' behaviour to me. These increased as he rose
into greater consequence, but we did not come to a direct breach till the begin-
ning of last year. This was occasioned by a correspondence, which I thought
made rather free with me, between him and General Conway, which acci-
dentally came to my knowledge. The particulars of this affair, you will find
delineated in the packet herewith, endorsed 'Papers respecting General Con-
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? 136 THE LIFE OF
I am so unhappy as to find no small difficulty in recon-
ciling the spirit and import of your different letters, and
sometimes the different parts of the same letter with each
other.
It is not unreasonable to presume, that your first informa-
tion of my having notice of General Conway's letter, came
from himself; there were very few in the secret, and it is
natural to suppose, that he being immediately concerned,
would be the most interested to convey the intelligence to
you. It is also far from improbable, that he acquainted you
with the substance of the passage communicated to me;
one would expect this, if he believed it to be spurious, in
order to ascertain the imposition and evince his innocence,
especially as he seemed to be under some uncertainty as to
the precise contents of what he had written, when I signi-
fied my knowledge of the matter to him. If he neglected
doing it, the omission cannot easily be interpreted into any
thing else than a consciousness of the reality of the extract,
if not literally, at least substantially. If he did not neglect
it, it must appear somewhat strange that the forgery re-
mained so long undetected, and that your first letter to me
from Albany, of the eighth of December, should tacitly re-
cognise the genuineness of the paragraph in question; while
your only concern at that time seemed to be, the "tracing
out the author of the infidelity, which put extracts of Gene-
ral Conway's letters into my hands. " Throughout the
whole of that letter, the reality of the extracts is, by the fair-
est implication, allowed, and your only solicitude was to find
out the person who brought them to light. After making
the most earnest pursuit of the author of the supposed
treachery, without saying a word about the truth or false-
hood of the passage, your letter of the twenty-third ultimo,
way. ' Besides the evidence contained in them of the genuineness of the of-
fensive correspondence, I have other proofs still more convincing, which having
been given me in a confidential way, / am not at liberty to impart. "
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? HAMILTON. 137
to my great surprise, proclaims it in words, as well as sub-
stance, a "wicked forgery.
"
It is not my intention to contradict this assertion, but
only to intimate some considerations, which tend to induce
a supposition, that though none of General Conway's letters
to you contain the offensive passage mentioned, there might
have been something in them too nearly related to it, that
could give such an extraordinary alarm. It may be said,
if this were not the case, how easy, in the first instance, to
declare there was nothing exceptionable in them, and to
have produced the letters themselves in support of them?
This may be thought the most proper and effectual way of
refuting misrepresentations, and removing all suspicion.
The propriety of the objections suggested against submitting
them to inspection, may very well be questioned; the vari-
ous reports circulated concerning their contents were, per-
haps, so many arguments for making them speak for them-
selves, to place the matter upon the footing of certainty.
Concealment, in an affair which had made so much noise,
though not by my means, will naturally lead men to con-
jecture the worst, and it will be a subject of speculation
even to candour itself. The anxiety and jealousy you ap-
prehend from revealing the letter, will be very apt to be
increased by suppressing it. It may be asked, why not
submit to inspection a performance perfectly harmless, and
of course conceived in terms of proper caution and delicacy?
Why suppose that "anxiety and jealousy" would have ari-
sen in the breasts of very respectable officers, or that they
would have been necessarily disgusted at being made sen-
sible of their faults when related with judgment and impar-
tiality by a candid observer? Surely they could not have
been unreasonable enough to take offence at a performance
so perfectly inoffensive, "blaming actions rather than per-
sons," which have evidently no connexion with one ano-
ther, and indulgently "recording the errors of inexperience. "
vol. i. 18
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? 138 THE LIFE OF
You are pleased to consider General Conway's letters
as of a confidential nature, observing, that "time and cir-
cumstances must point out the propriety or impropriety of
communicating such letters. " Permit me to inquire, whe-
ther, when there is an impropriety in communication, it is
only applicable with respect to the parties who are the sub-
ject of them? One might be led to imagine this to be the
case, from your having admitted others into the secret of your
confidential correspondence, at the same time that you
thought it ineligible it should be trusted to those officers
whose actions underwent its scrutiny. Your not knowing
whether the letter under consideration "came to me from
a member of congress or from an officer," plainly indicates
that you had originally communicated it to at least one of
that honourable body; and I learn from General Conway,
that before his late arrival at York-Town, it had been com-
mitted to the perusal of several of its members, and was
afterwards shown by himself to three more. It is some-
what difficult to conceive a reason, founded in generosity,
for imparting the free and confidential strictures of this in-
genuous censor on the operations of the army under my
command, to a member of congress; but, perhaps, "time
and circumstances pointed it out. " It must be indeed ac-
knowledged, that the faults of very respectable officers, not
less injurious for being the result of inexperience, were not
improper topics to engage the attention of members of con-
gress.
It is, however, greatly to be lamented, that this adept in
military science, did not employ his abilities in the progress
of the campaign, in pointing out those wise measures which
were calculated to give us "that degree of success we
might reasonably expect. " The United States have lost
much by that unseasonable diffidence, which prevented his
embracing the numerous opportunities he had in council, of
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? HAMILTON. 130
displaying those rich treasures of knowledge and experi-
rience he has since so freely laid open to you. I will not
do him the injustice to impute the penurious reserve, which
ever appeared in him on such occasions, to any other cause
than an excess of modesty; neither will I suppose he pos-
sesses no other merit than of that kind of sagacity, which
qualifies a man better for profound discoveries of errors
that have been committed, and advantages that have been
lost, than for the exercise of that foresight and provident
discernment, which enable him to avoid the one and anti-
cipate the other; but, willing as I am to subscribe to all his
pretensions, and believe that his remarks on the operations
of the campaign were very judicious, and that he has saga-
ciously descanted on many things that might have been
done, I cannot help being a little sceptical as to his ability
to have found out the means of accomplishing them, or to
prove the sufficiency of those in our possession. These
minutiae, I suspect, he did not think worth his attention,
particularly as they might not be within the compass of his
views.
Notwithstanding the hopeful presages you are pleased to
figure to yourself of General Conway's firm and constant
friendship to America, I cannot persuade myself to retract
the prediction concerning him, which you so emphatically
wish had not been inserted in my last. A better acquaint-
ance with him than I have reason to think you have had,
from what you say, and a concurrence of circumstances
oblige me to give him but little credit for the qualities of his
heart, of which, at least, I beg leave to assume the privi-
lege of being a tolerable judge. Were it necessary, more
instances than one might be adduced from his behaviour and
conversation, to manifest that he is capable of all the ma-
lignity of detraction, and all the meanness of intrigue, to
gratify the absurd resentment of disappointed vanity, or to
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? 140 THE LIFE OF
answer the purposes of personal aggrandizement, and pro-
mote the interest of a faction.
I am, with respect, sir,
Your most obedient servant,
Geo. Washington.
Major General Gates.
To this biting sarcasm, which no man conscious of his
innocence would have brooked, General Gates gave the
following submissive reply.
GATES TO WASHINGTON.
SIR,
I yesterday had the honour to receive your excellency's
letter of the 9th instant, and earnestly hope no more of that
time, so precious to the public, may be lost upon the sub-
ject of General Conway's letter. Whether that gentleman
does or does not deserve the suspicions you express, would
be entirely indifferent to me, did he not possess an office of
high rank in the army of the United States; for that rea-
son solely, I wish he may answer all the expectations of
congress.
As to the gentleman, I have no personal connexion with
him, nor had I any correspondence previous to his writing
the letter which has given offence, nor have I since written
to him, save to certify what I know to be the contents of
the letter. He, therefore, must be responsible;-- as I
heartily dislike controversy, even upon my own account,
and much more in a matter wherein I was only accident-
ally concerned. In regard to the parts of your excellency's
letter addressed particularly to me, I solemnly declare, that
I am of no faction, and if any of my letters, taken aggregately
or by paragraphs, convey any meaning which, in any con-
struction, is offensive to your excellency, that was by no
means the intention of the writer. After this, I cannot be-
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? HAMILTON. 141
lieve your excellency will either suffer your suspicions, or
the prejudices of others, to induce you to spend another
moment upon the subject.
With great respect, I am, sir.
Your excellency's most obedient, humble serv't,
Horatio Gates.
"General Wilkinson," says Colonel Troup, "by his acti-
vity and talents, and by the influence he had acquired over
Gates' mind, rendered himself very important in the ope-
rations which led to the convention of Saratoga. The con-
sequent kindness of Gates honoured Wilkinson with being
the bearer of Gates' despatches to congress; and, during
this event, Wilkinson, in carrying the despatches, loitered
so long on his way that the intelligence preceded him,
"which Induced '^oger Sherman^ a shrewd member from
Connecticut, to move in Congress that Wilkinson should
be complimented with a pair of spurs. In the course of
some weeks afterwards, Gates was informed that the sub-
stance of the correspondence was known to General Wash-
ington.
"The information excited such unpleasant feelings in the
breast of General Gates, as to impel him to make inqui-
ries among the gentlemen of his family to discover the
traitor. These gentlemen positively disavowed all know-
ledge of the traitor, and declared their inability even to
suggest any clue to his detection.
"It cannot be matter of surprise, in the absence of all
other evidence, that circumstances so colourable should have
made a serious impression on General Gates. The impres-
sion was more serious against Colonel Hamilton than Co-
lonel Troup; for the former, though very young, had, by
his extraordinary talents, and the correctness of his con-
duct, acquired a standing at head-quarters that kindled the
jealousy of some officers who were inclined to think unfa-
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? 142 THE LIFE OF
vourably of General Washington. Not long after, the mys-
tery was unravelled by satisfactory proof that General
Wilkinson was the traitor. It appeared that in going to
congress with despatches, he fell in with a part of General
Washington's army at Reading: there, in a convivial party
of which an aid of Lord Stirling was one, Wilkinson dis-
closed the substance of the correspondence, and his lord-
ship on receiving the fact from his aid, hastened to commu-
nicate it to General Washington, whereby the honour of
Colonel Troup and Colonel Hamilton were left without
the shadow of reproach.
"The treachery of Wilkinson had the effect of severing
the ties which had long bound him and General Gates to
each other; and in the end it likewise produced a duel be-
tween them, which fortunately terminated without the
shedding of blood. "
The communications with Gates were closed on the 24th
February, 1778, with a cold, dignified, and withering as-
sent to his humble proposition to bury all that had passed
in oblivion.
WASHINGTON TO GATES.
Valley Forge, February 24th, 1778.
Sir:
I yesterday received your favour of the 19th instant. I am
as averse to controversy as any man; and had I not been
forced into it, you never would have had occasion to im-
pute to me even a shadow of a disposition towards it.
Your repeatedly and solemnly disclaiming any offensive
views in these matters which have been the subject of our
past correspondence, makes me willing to close with the
desire you express, of burying them hereafter in silence;
and, as far as future events will permit, oblivion.
My temper leads me to peace and harmony with all
men; and it is particularly my wish to avoid any personal
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? HAMILTON. 143
feuds or dissensions with those who are embarked in the
same great national contest with myself; as every differ-
ence of this kind must, in its consequences, be injurious.
I am, Sir,
Your most obedient servant,
George Washington.
Major General Gates.
This correspondence, written on the part of Washing-
ton, with a master's hand, while it covered Gates with
shame and confusion, afforded to Hamilton abundant cause
of exultation in so triumphant a vindication of his own cha-
racter, and of the conduct of his chief.
The justice of General Washington's charge that a fac-
tion existed both in congress and the army, has never until
recently been made a subject of doubt.
The proceedings of congress, the attestation of the few
survivors of the revolution, and the confidential corres-
pondence of the officers, place the fact beyond all question.
It rests, exclusive of other evidence, on the testimony of
Washington, Greene, and La Fayette, Colonels Harrison,
Hamilton, and Laurens.
On the seventeenth of October, 1777, congress, departing
from their established practice of confining such powers to
their own body, determined to create a Board of War, to
consist of three persons, not members of congress, which,
among various other duties, was directed "to superintend
the several branches of the military establishment;" all
officers were enjoined to observe its directions, and the states
were recommended to give this board all necessary assist-
ance in the execution of the business of their department.
On the thirty-first of October, Colonel Wilkinson announ-
ced officially to congress the capture of Burgoyne, of which
they had been previously advised; and a committee, con-
sisting of Samuel Adams, Richard Henry Lee, and Mr. Ro-
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? 144 THE LIFE OF
berdeau, was appointed to prepare a recommendation to the
states to set apart a day of thanksgiving for this signal suc-
cess, which on the ensuing day was reported to congress,
and breathed all the deep-toned fervour of religious enthu-
siasm which mark the character of Samuel Adams.
On the fourth of November, resolutions of thanks to Ge-
neral Gates and to the officers serving under him, which this
important event justly called for, were passed by congress.
The friends of Gates were not content with this; and not-
withstanding he had volunteered through Wilkinson an apo-
logy for the terms of the capitulation, which had already
called forth the loudest public reprobation, and than which
nothing could have been more futile; "that the reduction
of Fort Montgomery, and the enemy's progress up the river
endangered the arsenal at Albany, a reflection which left
him no time to contest the capitulation," these terms were
"pronounced honourable and advantageous to the states. "
At the same time, the committee to whom the motion for
directing the future operations of the army under General
Gates was referred, brought in a report, which, after de-
bate, was committed, and Mr. Duer added to the com-
mittee; and, on the ensuing day a report was introduced,
upon which it was resolved, "that General Washington be
informed that it is the earnest wish of congress to regain
the possession of the forts and passes of the Hudson river,"
and that for that purpose General Gates should remain in
command in that quarter, and that Putnam join the main
army with such a detachment from Gates' army "as Gene-
ral Washington may think can be spared, not exceeding twen-
ty-five hundred men, including Colonel Morgan's corps. "
Authority was given Gates to order such of the continental
troops and militia as were posted near the Hudson to join him;
and he was empowered to call on the several states for such
number of militia as he shall judge necessary, to maintain
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? HAMILTON. 145
the posts on the river, "to the end that his army may be in
readiness to pursue such operations as congress shall direct. "
He was also authorized to ask all farther means he required.
The governor and council of New-York were directed to be
furnished with copies of these resolutions; to appoint a com-
mittee to assist Gates, which committee were requested and
empowered to call on the states of New-Hampshire, Mas-
sachusetts, Rhode-Island, Connecticut, New-York, and New-
Jersey, to furnish such number of men as he should require
for this object; and farther authority was given to him to
call for all the necessary aids to reduce Ticonderoga and
Fort Independence; to which was added a resolution, --
"That if General Washington, after consulting General
Gates and Governor Clinton, shall be of opinion that a lar-
ger reinforcement can be detached to the main army, con-
sistent with the attainment of the objects, (previously speci-
fied,) in such case he be directed to order such farther rein-
forcements to the main army, as may be thought conducive
to the general welfare, any thing in the preceding resolution
to the contrary notwithstanding. "*
In debating the last resolution, it was moved after "di-
rected" to insert "with their concurrence" which was ne-
gatived by a vote of all the states except Massachusetts and
one vote from Rhode-Island, and the general resolutions
were adopted by every state except Massachusetts, which
was divided, and by one vote from Rhode-Island. f
* This resolution appears on the journals as a part of the report of this
committee. This would seem to be an error; -- as its effect is to defeat the
intention of the report, the probability is, that it was proposed to be appended
to the report with that view, and that on that motion the amendment was sug-
gested.
f The votes were as follows : -- For inserting "with their concurrence. "
Affirmative. --Messrs. Samuel Adams, John Adams, Gerry, Marchant,
Dyer. --5.
Negative. --Messrs. Folsom, Lovell, Law, Williams, Duanc, Duer, Elmer,
VOl. I. 19
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? 146 THE LIFE OF
The importance of drawing reinforcements, at this time,
from the northern army, and the disastrous consequences
which resulted from General Gates' conduct, have been seen
in the previous chapter.
Early in the month of October, General Vaughan, in or-
der to create a diversion in favour of Burgoyne, moved up
the Hudson, came in sight on the fifth, and on the night of
the sixth of that month attacked the Forts Clinton and Mont-
gomery. The former, a circular height, defended by a line
for musketry, with a barbet battery in the centre of three
guns, and flanked by two redoubts: the latter, "strongly
fortified by nature, almost inaccessible in itself, and suffi-
ciently manned," were both, "after a feeble and unskilful de-
fence, carried by storm," and the greater part of the troops
captured, with the loss of cannon and stores of immense
value, and of two frigates. Governor Clinton, who com-
manded, a man of courage, and, on most occasions, active
and vigorous, having escaped.
On the fifteenth of the same month, the enemy made a
descent on Esopus, which, with a barbarity that affixed in-
famy on the expedition, was burnt to the ground; no de-
fence other than the scattered firing of the inhabitants being
offered, while a large body of troops remained unemployed
in the vicinity.
While Gates assigned to Hamilton "a projected attack on
Ticonderoga, and the importance of the arsenal at Albany,"
as the pretext for maintaining an army around him, the re-
covery of these fortresses was deemed by his party in con-
Morris, Roberdeau, Clingan, Smith, Rumsey, Jones, F. L. Lee, Harvie, Perm,
Harnett, Laurens. --18.
For the general resolution.
Affirmative. --Messrs. Folsom, J. Adams, Lovell, Law, Williams, Dunne,
Duer, Elmer, Morris, Clingan, Smith, Rumsey, Jones, F. L. Lee, Harvie,
Penn, Harnett, Laurens. --18.
Negative. --Messrs. S. Adams, Gerry, Marchant, Dyer, Roberdeau. -- 5.
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? HAMILTON. 147
gress a more adequate reason; but it was a wholly insuffi-
cient one.
On the first of November, Washington had addressed an
official letter to that body, informing them that he had writ-
ten to Generals Dickinson and Forman, to afford every aid
in their power to the posts on the Delaware; mentioning
the mission of Hamilton to Gates; that the enemy were
stronger than he had supposed; that reinforcements were
coming in to General Howe, while by the departure of the
Virginia militia, he had no aid to the continental troops other
than a body from Philadelphia and a few from Maryland,
and giving indisputable reasons for his not attempting to dis-
lodge the enemy from Philadelphia.
Notwithstanding these circumstances, the Cabal had given
to Gates an independent command; had limited, by its first
resolution, the succours which Washington was to receive to
two thousand five hundred men, although he had deemed
nearly three times that number necessary to enable him to give
a decisive blow to the enemy; and had sought by the last, to
render the extent of the reinforcements, and the measures of
the main army dependent on the concurrence of an inferior
and a rival; as to whom it was the intention, that he should
add to his newly-earned honours, the easy recovery of the
Highland passes, "to the end that his army might be in rea-
diness to pursue such operations as congress shall direct;"
while, in the mean time, the fall of the posts on the Delaware,
and the undisturbed possession of Philadelphia by the ene-
my, would have produced such invidious contrasts, and art-
fully excited discontent would have become so loud, and
calumny so bold, that an apparent deference to public opin-
ion might have justified the sacrifice of Washington.
The refusal of the commander-in-chief to march directly
to Philadelphia, on the embarkation of Howe, in the pre-
ceding spring, was one of the earliest avowed causes of
dissatisfaction.
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? 126 THE LIFE OF
displayed more devotion to the cause of the revolution, in
none was it more difficult to silence the clamours of the dis-
contented. The superior population, -- the larger quotas
furnished to the army, -- the more faithful discharge of the
public burthens, were among the topics which their pride
naturally dwelt upon, and not without reason; for one state
alone furnished a fourth of the troops which sustained
the revolution: and not less just than forcible was the de-
claration of Hamilton, when, to express his high respect
for her exertions, he said "that Massachusetts was the
pivot on which the revolution turned. " The consciousness
of this gave rise to claims of superiority, which were che-
rished by several of the leading individuals of that part of
the country, who, by encouraging these sentiments served
their own popularity at home, and, as they imagined, con-
firmed their title to a preponderance in the confederacy.
The calamities which befel the army on the invasion of
Canada, and the series of disasters which followed the
battle of Long Island, were alike attributed by them to the
incapacity of the commander-in-chief; and they were only
waiting until some officer should be presented to the na-
tion in a favourable point of view, to support him as a rival
for public confidence, and the highest command.
It has been mentioned that the capture of Lee removed
Him from the public eye, and that the same party then di-
rected their attention to General Gates. The evacuation
of Ticonderoga, by St. Clair, though wholly unknown to
General Schuyler, was a reverse of fortune magnified and
misrepresented, and the opportunity of bestowing on their
favourite so important a command, outweighed every con-
sideration of delicacy to Schuyler, and was the more rea-
dily embraced because it was contrary to the known wishes
of Washington, the judgment of Jay, and the feelings of
New-York, which had evinced a steady determination to
support the commander-in-chief. The hostility of this party,
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? HAMILTON. 127
which was disarmed by the success at Trenton, began to
indicate itself anew after the affair of Germantown, when
the misconduct of part of the troops called forth censures
from head quarters, and led to numerous arrests.
On such occasions, the bravest officers cannot always
escape unmerited obloquy; and, unfortunately, individuals
were found among them who too readily listened to over-
tures to join the cabal.
Letters, written under feelings of irritation, were address-
ed to the northern army, and circulated throughout the
country. The newspapers were called in aid to dissemi-
nate the poison, and as soon as the victory of Saratoga was
announced, the designs of the faction, which was known as
the "Monster Party," were openly evinced in the most as-
siduous attentions to Gates, and extravagant eulogiums on
his conduct, and in marked disrespect of Washington, and
undisguised censures of his policy.
Among the most active partizans of the opposition, were
a few foreigners, who arriving in this country with preten-
sions to the first grades in the army, had been found not to
possess any real title to preferment. Of these, the foremost
was Thomas Conway, who appearing before congress with
the rank of Colonel in the French army, and decorated with
the cross of the order of Saint Louis, -- a vain, weak intri-
guer, had been, in the preceding spring, elected to the com-
mand of a brigade. Soon understood by Washington,
Conway became his enemy, and opened a correspondence
with Gates, in which, by flattering his vanity, and ridicu-
ling the commander-in-chief, he confirmed him in the idea
that he might easily supplant him.
Winter had now closed in, and while Washington was
engaged in efforts to provide for his famishing and almost
naked army, a communication was received from General
Gates, marked with all the insolence of anticipated triumph.
A paragraph in a letter from Conway to Gates, "in which
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? 128 THE LIFE OF
General Washington's conduct was made the subject of
free discussion and injurious remark, was the first occur-
rence which called forth the attention of the commander-in-
chief; to this correspondence Gates lent a willing ear, and
his answers to General Conway's letters were very much
the echoes of the sentiments those letters contained. "* The
inquiries which ensued on the disclosure of this correspond-
ence alarmed Gates, who with a view to fix the imputation
on General Washington of having practised indirect means
to arrive at the contents of his confidential correspondence,
wrote him the letter referred to, throwing out an imputa-
tion that the extracts had been "stealingly copied," which
was transmitted to him through the hands of the President
of Congress.
GATES TO WASHINGTON.
Albany, December 8th, 1777.
SIR,
I shall not attempt to describe what, as a private gentle-
man, I cannot help feeling, on representing to my mind the
disagreeable situation in which confidential letters, when
exposed to public inspection, may place an unsuspecting
correspondent; but as a public officer, I conjure your ex-
cellency to give me all the assistance you can, in tracing
out the author of the infidelity which put extracts from
General Conway's letters to me into your hands.
Those letters have been stealingly copied, but which of
them, when, and by whom, is to me yet an unfathomable
secret.
There is not one officer in my suite, nor amongst those
who have free access to me, upon whom I could, with the
least justification to myself, fix the suspicion, and yet my
uneasines may deprive me of the usefulness of the wor-
* Statement of facts, by Colonel Troup, who was an aid of Gates.
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? HAMILTON. 129
thiest men. It is, / believe, in your excellency's power to
do me and the United States a very important service by
detecting a wretch who may betray me, and capitally in-
jure the very operations under your immediate directions.
For this reason, sir, I beg your excellency will favour me
with the proof you can procure to that effect. But the crime
being eventually so important, that the least loss of time
may be attended with the worst consequences, and it being
unknown to me whether the letter came to you from a mem-
ber of congress or an officer, I shall have the honour of
transmitting a copy of this to the president, that the congress
may, in concert with your excellency, obtain as soon as pos-
sible a discovery which so deeply affects the safety of the
states. Crimes of that magnitude ought not to remain un-
punished. I have the honour to be, with the greatest respect,
Your excellency's most humble
And most obedient servant,
Horatio Gates.
His Excellency General Washington.
Washington thus replied:
WASHINGTON TO GATES.
Valley Forge, January 4th, 1777.
SIR,
Your letter of the 8th ultimo, came to my hands a few
days ago, and to my great surprise informed me that a copy
of it had been sent to congress,-- for what reason I find my-
self unable to account; but as some end, doubtless, was in-
tended to be answered by it, I am laid under the disagree-
able necessity of returning my answer through the same
channel, lest any member of that honourable body should
harbour an unfavourable suspicion of my having practised
some indirect means to come at the contents of the confi-
dential letters between you and General Conway.
vol. i. 17
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? 130 THE LIFE OF
I am to inform you, then, that Colonel Wilkinson, on his
way to congress, in the month of October last, fell in with
Lord Stirling at Reading, and not in confidence, that I ever
understood, informed his aid-de-camp, McWilliams, that
General Conway had written thus to you: "Heaven has
been determined to save your country, or a weak general
and bad counsellors would have ruined it. " Lord Stirling,
from motives of friendship, transmitted the account, with
this remark, -- " the enclosed was communicated by Colo-
nel Wilkinson to Major McWilliams. Such duplicity of
conduct I shall always think it my duty to defeat. "
In consequence of this information, and without having
any thing more in view than merely to show that gentleman
that I was not unapprized of his intriguing disposition, I
wrote him a letter in these words: "Sir, A letter which I
received last night, contained the following paragraph in a
letter from General Conway to General Gates, he says, --
'heaven has been determined to save your country, or a
weak general and bad counsellors would have ruined it. '
I am," &c.
Neither this letter, nor the information which occasioned
it, was ever directly or indirectly communicated by me to
a single officer in this army out of my own family, except-
ing the Marquis de la Fayette, who having been spoken to
on the subject by General Conway, applied for, and saw,
under injunctions of secrecy, the letter which contained Co-
lonel Wilkinson's information. So desirous was I of con-
cealing every matter that could in its consequences give the
smallest interruption to the tranquillity of this army, or afford
a gleam of hope to the enemy by dissensions therein.
Thus, sir, with openness and candour, which I hope will
ever characterize and mark my conduct, have I complied
with your request. The only concern I feel upon the occa-
sion, finding how matters stand, is, that in doing this, I have
necessarily been obliged to name a gentleman whom I am
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? HAMILTON. 131
persuaded, (although I never exchanged a word with him
on the subject,) thought he was rather doing an act of jus-
tice, than committing an act of infidelity; and sure I am,
that till Lord Stirling's letter came to my hands, I never
knew that General Conway (whom I viewed in the light of a
stranger to you,) was a correspondent of yours, much less
did I expect that I was the subject of your confidential let-
ters. Pardon me, then, for adding, that so far from con-
ceiving that the safety of the states can be affected, or in
the smallest degree injured by a discovery of this kind, or
that I should be called on in such solemn terms to point out
the author, that I considered the information as coming from
yourself, and given with a friendly view to forewarn, and,
consequently, forearm me against a secret enemy; or in
other words, a dangerous incendiary, in which character,
sooner or later, this country will know General Conway.
But in this, as in other matters of late, I have found myself
mistaken. I am, sir,
Your most obedient servant,
Geo. Washington.
The Hon. Major General Gates.
GATES TO WASHINGTON.
SIR,
The letter of the 4th inst. which I had the honour to re-
ceive yesterday from your excellency, has relieved me from
unspeakable uneasiness. I now anticipate the pleasure it
will give you when you discover that what has been con-
veyed to you for an extract of General Conway's letter to
me, was not an information which friendly motives indu-
ced a man of honour to give, that injured virtue might be
forewarned against secret enemies. The paragraph which
your excellency has condescended to transcribe is spurious.
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? 132 THE LIFE OF
It was certainly fabricated to answer the most selfish and
wicked purposes.
I cannot avoid sketching out to your excellency the his-
tory of General Conway's letter from the time that it came
to my hands, by Lieutenant-Colonel Troup, my aid-de-
camp, to whom General Conway delivered it at Reading,
on the 11th of October, to this time, as far as it has affected
me, and the officers of my family.
That letter contained very judicious remarks upon that
want of discipline which has often alarmed your excel-
lency, and I believe all observing patriots. The reasons
which, in his judgment, deprived us of the success we would
reasonably expect, were methodically explained by him;
but neither the weakness of any of our generals, nor "bad
counsellors," were mentioned, and consequently cannot be
assigned or imagined as part of those reasons to which
General Conway attributed some of our losses. He wrote
to me as a candid observer, as other officers in every ser-
vice write to each other for obtaining better intelligence
than that of newspapers, and that freedom renders such
letters thus far confidential in some measure. The judg-
ment of the person who received them points out to him,
according to time and circumstances, the propriety or im-
propriety attending their being communicated when no
particular injunction of secrecy was requested.
Particular actions, rather than persons, were blamed,
but with impartiality; and I am convinced that he did not
aim at lessening, in my opinion, the merit of any person.
His letter was perfectly harmless: however, now that va-
rious reports have been circulated concerning its contents,
they ought not to be submitted to the solemn inspection of
those who stand most high in the public esteem.
Anxiety and jealousy would arise in the breast of very
respectable officers, who, rendered sensible of faults which
inexperience, and that alone may have led them into,
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? HAMILTON. 133
would be unnecessarily disgusted, if they perceived a pro-
bability of such errors being recorded.
Honour forbids it, and patriotism demands, that I should
return the letter into the hands of the writer. I will do it,
but at the same time I declare that the paragraph conveyed
to your excellency as a genuine part of it, was in words as
well as in substance, a wicked forgery.
About the beginning of December I was informed that
letter had occasioned an explanation between your excel-
lency and that gentleman. Not knowing whether the whole
letter or part of it had been stealingly copied, but fearing
malice had altered its original features, I own, sir, that a
dread of the mischiefs which might attend the forgery I
suspected would be made, put me for some time in a most
painful situation. When I communicated to the officers in
my family the intelligence I had received, they all entreat-
ed me to rescue their characters from the suspicions they
justly conceived themselves liable to until the guilty person
should be known. To facilitate the discovery, I wrote your
excellency; but unable to learn whether General Con-
way's letter had been transmitted to you by a member of
congress, or a gentleman in the army, I was afraid much
time would be lost in the course of the inquiry, and that the
states might receive some capital injury from the infidelity
of the person who I thought had stolen a copy of the ob-
noxious letter, was it not probable that the secrets of the
army might be attained and betrayed through the same
means to the enemy?
For this reason, sir, not doubting that congress would
most cheerfully concur with you in tracing out the crimi-
nal, I wrote to the president, and enclosed to him a copy of
my letter to your excellency.
About the same time I was forwarding these letters, Bri-
gadier General Wilkinson returned to Albany. I informed
him of the treachery which had been committed, but I con-
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? 134 THE LIFE OF
cealed from him the measures I was pursuing to unmask
the author. Wilkinson answered, he was assured it never
would come to light, and endeavoured to fix my suspi-
cions on Lieutenant-Colonel Troup, who said he might
have incautiously conversed on the substance of General
Conway's letter with Colonel Hamilton, whom you had
sent not long before to Albany. I did not listen to this in-
sinuation against your aid-de-camp and mine. I considered
it ungenerous; but the light your excellency has just as-
sisted me with, exhibiting the many qualifications which
are necessarily blended together by the head and heart of
General Wilkinson, I would not omit this fact. It would
enable your excellency to judge whether or not he would
scruple to make such a forgery as that which he now stands
charged with, and ought to be exemplarily punished. To
attempt sowing dissensions among the principal officers of
the army, and rendering them odious to each other by false
suggestions and forgeries, is, in my opinion, a crime of the
first magnitude, and involves with it all the consequences of
positive treason. That the forgery now in view was ma-
chinated for injuring General Conway, and perhaps myself,
in your judgment, is now evident to me; and I trust the
detection will operate, as it ought to operate, upon your ex-
cellency, as well as the members of the congress before
whom your letter necessitates me to lay this answer. The
station of the calumniator seems to justify your excellency
for having believed till now that the extract was genuine:
and yet, sir, I cannot help wishing you had sent me a copy
of it immediately after your explanation with General
Conway.
Would that your excellency's prediction relative to him
had not been inserted in your letter which came to me un-
sealed, through the hands of congress. I sincerely wish the
detection of this forgery may render us all more cautious;
and that to procure a fair and dispassionate explanation
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? HAMILTON. 135
whenever insinuations are made to the prejudice of respect-
ed characters, may become an established rule in society,
as well as in public business throughout the United States.
I am with unfeigned respect, sir,
Your excellency's most humble and
Most obedient servant,
Horatio Gates.
January 23d, 1778.
This extraordinary attempt, after having substantially ad-
mitted in his first letter the genuineness of the extract from
Conway's letter, to induce the belief that it was a forgery,
and a forgery committed by Colonel Wilkinson, a member
of his own staff, was thus commented upon.
WASHINGTON TO GATES.
Head Quarters, Valley Forge, February 9th, 1778.
sir:
I was duly favoured with your letter of the 23d last
month, to which I should have replied sooner, had I not
been delayed by business that required my more imme-
diate attention.
It is my wish to give implicit credit to the assurances of
every gentleman; but on the subject of our present cor-
respondence, I am sorry to confess, there happens to be
some unlucky circumstances which involuntarily compel
me to consider the discovery you mention, not so satisfac-
tory and conclusive as you seem to think it. *
+ In a private letter from General Washington to Mr. Jay, dated April 14,
1779, he observes, "I discovered very early in the war, symptoms of coldness
and constraint in General Gates' behaviour to me. These increased as he rose
into greater consequence, but we did not come to a direct breach till the begin-
ning of last year. This was occasioned by a correspondence, which I thought
made rather free with me, between him and General Conway, which acci-
dentally came to my knowledge. The particulars of this affair, you will find
delineated in the packet herewith, endorsed 'Papers respecting General Con-
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? 136 THE LIFE OF
I am so unhappy as to find no small difficulty in recon-
ciling the spirit and import of your different letters, and
sometimes the different parts of the same letter with each
other.
It is not unreasonable to presume, that your first informa-
tion of my having notice of General Conway's letter, came
from himself; there were very few in the secret, and it is
natural to suppose, that he being immediately concerned,
would be the most interested to convey the intelligence to
you. It is also far from improbable, that he acquainted you
with the substance of the passage communicated to me;
one would expect this, if he believed it to be spurious, in
order to ascertain the imposition and evince his innocence,
especially as he seemed to be under some uncertainty as to
the precise contents of what he had written, when I signi-
fied my knowledge of the matter to him. If he neglected
doing it, the omission cannot easily be interpreted into any
thing else than a consciousness of the reality of the extract,
if not literally, at least substantially. If he did not neglect
it, it must appear somewhat strange that the forgery re-
mained so long undetected, and that your first letter to me
from Albany, of the eighth of December, should tacitly re-
cognise the genuineness of the paragraph in question; while
your only concern at that time seemed to be, the "tracing
out the author of the infidelity, which put extracts of Gene-
ral Conway's letters into my hands. " Throughout the
whole of that letter, the reality of the extracts is, by the fair-
est implication, allowed, and your only solicitude was to find
out the person who brought them to light. After making
the most earnest pursuit of the author of the supposed
treachery, without saying a word about the truth or false-
hood of the passage, your letter of the twenty-third ultimo,
way. ' Besides the evidence contained in them of the genuineness of the of-
fensive correspondence, I have other proofs still more convincing, which having
been given me in a confidential way, / am not at liberty to impart. "
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? HAMILTON. 137
to my great surprise, proclaims it in words, as well as sub-
stance, a "wicked forgery.
"
It is not my intention to contradict this assertion, but
only to intimate some considerations, which tend to induce
a supposition, that though none of General Conway's letters
to you contain the offensive passage mentioned, there might
have been something in them too nearly related to it, that
could give such an extraordinary alarm. It may be said,
if this were not the case, how easy, in the first instance, to
declare there was nothing exceptionable in them, and to
have produced the letters themselves in support of them?
This may be thought the most proper and effectual way of
refuting misrepresentations, and removing all suspicion.
The propriety of the objections suggested against submitting
them to inspection, may very well be questioned; the vari-
ous reports circulated concerning their contents were, per-
haps, so many arguments for making them speak for them-
selves, to place the matter upon the footing of certainty.
Concealment, in an affair which had made so much noise,
though not by my means, will naturally lead men to con-
jecture the worst, and it will be a subject of speculation
even to candour itself. The anxiety and jealousy you ap-
prehend from revealing the letter, will be very apt to be
increased by suppressing it. It may be asked, why not
submit to inspection a performance perfectly harmless, and
of course conceived in terms of proper caution and delicacy?
Why suppose that "anxiety and jealousy" would have ari-
sen in the breasts of very respectable officers, or that they
would have been necessarily disgusted at being made sen-
sible of their faults when related with judgment and impar-
tiality by a candid observer? Surely they could not have
been unreasonable enough to take offence at a performance
so perfectly inoffensive, "blaming actions rather than per-
sons," which have evidently no connexion with one ano-
ther, and indulgently "recording the errors of inexperience. "
vol. i. 18
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? 138 THE LIFE OF
You are pleased to consider General Conway's letters
as of a confidential nature, observing, that "time and cir-
cumstances must point out the propriety or impropriety of
communicating such letters. " Permit me to inquire, whe-
ther, when there is an impropriety in communication, it is
only applicable with respect to the parties who are the sub-
ject of them? One might be led to imagine this to be the
case, from your having admitted others into the secret of your
confidential correspondence, at the same time that you
thought it ineligible it should be trusted to those officers
whose actions underwent its scrutiny. Your not knowing
whether the letter under consideration "came to me from
a member of congress or from an officer," plainly indicates
that you had originally communicated it to at least one of
that honourable body; and I learn from General Conway,
that before his late arrival at York-Town, it had been com-
mitted to the perusal of several of its members, and was
afterwards shown by himself to three more. It is some-
what difficult to conceive a reason, founded in generosity,
for imparting the free and confidential strictures of this in-
genuous censor on the operations of the army under my
command, to a member of congress; but, perhaps, "time
and circumstances pointed it out. " It must be indeed ac-
knowledged, that the faults of very respectable officers, not
less injurious for being the result of inexperience, were not
improper topics to engage the attention of members of con-
gress.
It is, however, greatly to be lamented, that this adept in
military science, did not employ his abilities in the progress
of the campaign, in pointing out those wise measures which
were calculated to give us "that degree of success we
might reasonably expect. " The United States have lost
much by that unseasonable diffidence, which prevented his
embracing the numerous opportunities he had in council, of
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? HAMILTON. 130
displaying those rich treasures of knowledge and experi-
rience he has since so freely laid open to you. I will not
do him the injustice to impute the penurious reserve, which
ever appeared in him on such occasions, to any other cause
than an excess of modesty; neither will I suppose he pos-
sesses no other merit than of that kind of sagacity, which
qualifies a man better for profound discoveries of errors
that have been committed, and advantages that have been
lost, than for the exercise of that foresight and provident
discernment, which enable him to avoid the one and anti-
cipate the other; but, willing as I am to subscribe to all his
pretensions, and believe that his remarks on the operations
of the campaign were very judicious, and that he has saga-
ciously descanted on many things that might have been
done, I cannot help being a little sceptical as to his ability
to have found out the means of accomplishing them, or to
prove the sufficiency of those in our possession. These
minutiae, I suspect, he did not think worth his attention,
particularly as they might not be within the compass of his
views.
Notwithstanding the hopeful presages you are pleased to
figure to yourself of General Conway's firm and constant
friendship to America, I cannot persuade myself to retract
the prediction concerning him, which you so emphatically
wish had not been inserted in my last. A better acquaint-
ance with him than I have reason to think you have had,
from what you say, and a concurrence of circumstances
oblige me to give him but little credit for the qualities of his
heart, of which, at least, I beg leave to assume the privi-
lege of being a tolerable judge. Were it necessary, more
instances than one might be adduced from his behaviour and
conversation, to manifest that he is capable of all the ma-
lignity of detraction, and all the meanness of intrigue, to
gratify the absurd resentment of disappointed vanity, or to
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? 140 THE LIFE OF
answer the purposes of personal aggrandizement, and pro-
mote the interest of a faction.
I am, with respect, sir,
Your most obedient servant,
Geo. Washington.
Major General Gates.
To this biting sarcasm, which no man conscious of his
innocence would have brooked, General Gates gave the
following submissive reply.
GATES TO WASHINGTON.
SIR,
I yesterday had the honour to receive your excellency's
letter of the 9th instant, and earnestly hope no more of that
time, so precious to the public, may be lost upon the sub-
ject of General Conway's letter. Whether that gentleman
does or does not deserve the suspicions you express, would
be entirely indifferent to me, did he not possess an office of
high rank in the army of the United States; for that rea-
son solely, I wish he may answer all the expectations of
congress.
As to the gentleman, I have no personal connexion with
him, nor had I any correspondence previous to his writing
the letter which has given offence, nor have I since written
to him, save to certify what I know to be the contents of
the letter. He, therefore, must be responsible;-- as I
heartily dislike controversy, even upon my own account,
and much more in a matter wherein I was only accident-
ally concerned. In regard to the parts of your excellency's
letter addressed particularly to me, I solemnly declare, that
I am of no faction, and if any of my letters, taken aggregately
or by paragraphs, convey any meaning which, in any con-
struction, is offensive to your excellency, that was by no
means the intention of the writer. After this, I cannot be-
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? HAMILTON. 141
lieve your excellency will either suffer your suspicions, or
the prejudices of others, to induce you to spend another
moment upon the subject.
With great respect, I am, sir.
Your excellency's most obedient, humble serv't,
Horatio Gates.
"General Wilkinson," says Colonel Troup, "by his acti-
vity and talents, and by the influence he had acquired over
Gates' mind, rendered himself very important in the ope-
rations which led to the convention of Saratoga. The con-
sequent kindness of Gates honoured Wilkinson with being
the bearer of Gates' despatches to congress; and, during
this event, Wilkinson, in carrying the despatches, loitered
so long on his way that the intelligence preceded him,
"which Induced '^oger Sherman^ a shrewd member from
Connecticut, to move in Congress that Wilkinson should
be complimented with a pair of spurs. In the course of
some weeks afterwards, Gates was informed that the sub-
stance of the correspondence was known to General Wash-
ington.
"The information excited such unpleasant feelings in the
breast of General Gates, as to impel him to make inqui-
ries among the gentlemen of his family to discover the
traitor. These gentlemen positively disavowed all know-
ledge of the traitor, and declared their inability even to
suggest any clue to his detection.
"It cannot be matter of surprise, in the absence of all
other evidence, that circumstances so colourable should have
made a serious impression on General Gates. The impres-
sion was more serious against Colonel Hamilton than Co-
lonel Troup; for the former, though very young, had, by
his extraordinary talents, and the correctness of his con-
duct, acquired a standing at head-quarters that kindled the
jealousy of some officers who were inclined to think unfa-
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? 142 THE LIFE OF
vourably of General Washington. Not long after, the mys-
tery was unravelled by satisfactory proof that General
Wilkinson was the traitor. It appeared that in going to
congress with despatches, he fell in with a part of General
Washington's army at Reading: there, in a convivial party
of which an aid of Lord Stirling was one, Wilkinson dis-
closed the substance of the correspondence, and his lord-
ship on receiving the fact from his aid, hastened to commu-
nicate it to General Washington, whereby the honour of
Colonel Troup and Colonel Hamilton were left without
the shadow of reproach.
"The treachery of Wilkinson had the effect of severing
the ties which had long bound him and General Gates to
each other; and in the end it likewise produced a duel be-
tween them, which fortunately terminated without the
shedding of blood. "
The communications with Gates were closed on the 24th
February, 1778, with a cold, dignified, and withering as-
sent to his humble proposition to bury all that had passed
in oblivion.
WASHINGTON TO GATES.
Valley Forge, February 24th, 1778.
Sir:
I yesterday received your favour of the 19th instant. I am
as averse to controversy as any man; and had I not been
forced into it, you never would have had occasion to im-
pute to me even a shadow of a disposition towards it.
Your repeatedly and solemnly disclaiming any offensive
views in these matters which have been the subject of our
past correspondence, makes me willing to close with the
desire you express, of burying them hereafter in silence;
and, as far as future events will permit, oblivion.
My temper leads me to peace and harmony with all
men; and it is particularly my wish to avoid any personal
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? HAMILTON. 143
feuds or dissensions with those who are embarked in the
same great national contest with myself; as every differ-
ence of this kind must, in its consequences, be injurious.
I am, Sir,
Your most obedient servant,
George Washington.
Major General Gates.
This correspondence, written on the part of Washing-
ton, with a master's hand, while it covered Gates with
shame and confusion, afforded to Hamilton abundant cause
of exultation in so triumphant a vindication of his own cha-
racter, and of the conduct of his chief.
The justice of General Washington's charge that a fac-
tion existed both in congress and the army, has never until
recently been made a subject of doubt.
The proceedings of congress, the attestation of the few
survivors of the revolution, and the confidential corres-
pondence of the officers, place the fact beyond all question.
It rests, exclusive of other evidence, on the testimony of
Washington, Greene, and La Fayette, Colonels Harrison,
Hamilton, and Laurens.
On the seventeenth of October, 1777, congress, departing
from their established practice of confining such powers to
their own body, determined to create a Board of War, to
consist of three persons, not members of congress, which,
among various other duties, was directed "to superintend
the several branches of the military establishment;" all
officers were enjoined to observe its directions, and the states
were recommended to give this board all necessary assist-
ance in the execution of the business of their department.
On the thirty-first of October, Colonel Wilkinson announ-
ced officially to congress the capture of Burgoyne, of which
they had been previously advised; and a committee, con-
sisting of Samuel Adams, Richard Henry Lee, and Mr. Ro-
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? 144 THE LIFE OF
berdeau, was appointed to prepare a recommendation to the
states to set apart a day of thanksgiving for this signal suc-
cess, which on the ensuing day was reported to congress,
and breathed all the deep-toned fervour of religious enthu-
siasm which mark the character of Samuel Adams.
On the fourth of November, resolutions of thanks to Ge-
neral Gates and to the officers serving under him, which this
important event justly called for, were passed by congress.
The friends of Gates were not content with this; and not-
withstanding he had volunteered through Wilkinson an apo-
logy for the terms of the capitulation, which had already
called forth the loudest public reprobation, and than which
nothing could have been more futile; "that the reduction
of Fort Montgomery, and the enemy's progress up the river
endangered the arsenal at Albany, a reflection which left
him no time to contest the capitulation," these terms were
"pronounced honourable and advantageous to the states. "
At the same time, the committee to whom the motion for
directing the future operations of the army under General
Gates was referred, brought in a report, which, after de-
bate, was committed, and Mr. Duer added to the com-
mittee; and, on the ensuing day a report was introduced,
upon which it was resolved, "that General Washington be
informed that it is the earnest wish of congress to regain
the possession of the forts and passes of the Hudson river,"
and that for that purpose General Gates should remain in
command in that quarter, and that Putnam join the main
army with such a detachment from Gates' army "as Gene-
ral Washington may think can be spared, not exceeding twen-
ty-five hundred men, including Colonel Morgan's corps. "
Authority was given Gates to order such of the continental
troops and militia as were posted near the Hudson to join him;
and he was empowered to call on the several states for such
number of militia as he shall judge necessary, to maintain
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? HAMILTON. 145
the posts on the river, "to the end that his army may be in
readiness to pursue such operations as congress shall direct. "
He was also authorized to ask all farther means he required.
The governor and council of New-York were directed to be
furnished with copies of these resolutions; to appoint a com-
mittee to assist Gates, which committee were requested and
empowered to call on the states of New-Hampshire, Mas-
sachusetts, Rhode-Island, Connecticut, New-York, and New-
Jersey, to furnish such number of men as he should require
for this object; and farther authority was given to him to
call for all the necessary aids to reduce Ticonderoga and
Fort Independence; to which was added a resolution, --
"That if General Washington, after consulting General
Gates and Governor Clinton, shall be of opinion that a lar-
ger reinforcement can be detached to the main army, con-
sistent with the attainment of the objects, (previously speci-
fied,) in such case he be directed to order such farther rein-
forcements to the main army, as may be thought conducive
to the general welfare, any thing in the preceding resolution
to the contrary notwithstanding. "*
In debating the last resolution, it was moved after "di-
rected" to insert "with their concurrence" which was ne-
gatived by a vote of all the states except Massachusetts and
one vote from Rhode-Island, and the general resolutions
were adopted by every state except Massachusetts, which
was divided, and by one vote from Rhode-Island. f
* This resolution appears on the journals as a part of the report of this
committee. This would seem to be an error; -- as its effect is to defeat the
intention of the report, the probability is, that it was proposed to be appended
to the report with that view, and that on that motion the amendment was sug-
gested.
f The votes were as follows : -- For inserting "with their concurrence. "
Affirmative. --Messrs. Samuel Adams, John Adams, Gerry, Marchant,
Dyer. --5.
Negative. --Messrs. Folsom, Lovell, Law, Williams, Duanc, Duer, Elmer,
VOl. I. 19
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? 146 THE LIFE OF
The importance of drawing reinforcements, at this time,
from the northern army, and the disastrous consequences
which resulted from General Gates' conduct, have been seen
in the previous chapter.
Early in the month of October, General Vaughan, in or-
der to create a diversion in favour of Burgoyne, moved up
the Hudson, came in sight on the fifth, and on the night of
the sixth of that month attacked the Forts Clinton and Mont-
gomery. The former, a circular height, defended by a line
for musketry, with a barbet battery in the centre of three
guns, and flanked by two redoubts: the latter, "strongly
fortified by nature, almost inaccessible in itself, and suffi-
ciently manned," were both, "after a feeble and unskilful de-
fence, carried by storm," and the greater part of the troops
captured, with the loss of cannon and stores of immense
value, and of two frigates. Governor Clinton, who com-
manded, a man of courage, and, on most occasions, active
and vigorous, having escaped.
On the fifteenth of the same month, the enemy made a
descent on Esopus, which, with a barbarity that affixed in-
famy on the expedition, was burnt to the ground; no de-
fence other than the scattered firing of the inhabitants being
offered, while a large body of troops remained unemployed
in the vicinity.
While Gates assigned to Hamilton "a projected attack on
Ticonderoga, and the importance of the arsenal at Albany,"
as the pretext for maintaining an army around him, the re-
covery of these fortresses was deemed by his party in con-
Morris, Roberdeau, Clingan, Smith, Rumsey, Jones, F. L. Lee, Harvie, Perm,
Harnett, Laurens. --18.
For the general resolution.
Affirmative. --Messrs. Folsom, J. Adams, Lovell, Law, Williams, Dunne,
Duer, Elmer, Morris, Clingan, Smith, Rumsey, Jones, F. L. Lee, Harvie,
Penn, Harnett, Laurens. --18.
Negative. --Messrs. S. Adams, Gerry, Marchant, Dyer, Roberdeau. -- 5.
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? HAMILTON. 147
gress a more adequate reason; but it was a wholly insuffi-
cient one.
On the first of November, Washington had addressed an
official letter to that body, informing them that he had writ-
ten to Generals Dickinson and Forman, to afford every aid
in their power to the posts on the Delaware; mentioning
the mission of Hamilton to Gates; that the enemy were
stronger than he had supposed; that reinforcements were
coming in to General Howe, while by the departure of the
Virginia militia, he had no aid to the continental troops other
than a body from Philadelphia and a few from Maryland,
and giving indisputable reasons for his not attempting to dis-
lodge the enemy from Philadelphia.
Notwithstanding these circumstances, the Cabal had given
to Gates an independent command; had limited, by its first
resolution, the succours which Washington was to receive to
two thousand five hundred men, although he had deemed
nearly three times that number necessary to enable him to give
a decisive blow to the enemy; and had sought by the last, to
render the extent of the reinforcements, and the measures of
the main army dependent on the concurrence of an inferior
and a rival; as to whom it was the intention, that he should
add to his newly-earned honours, the easy recovery of the
Highland passes, "to the end that his army might be in rea-
diness to pursue such operations as congress shall direct;"
while, in the mean time, the fall of the posts on the Delaware,
and the undisturbed possession of Philadelphia by the ene-
my, would have produced such invidious contrasts, and art-
fully excited discontent would have become so loud, and
calumny so bold, that an apparent deference to public opin-
ion might have justified the sacrifice of Washington.
The refusal of the commander-in-chief to march directly
to Philadelphia, on the embarkation of Howe, in the pre-
ceding spring, was one of the earliest avowed causes of
dissatisfaction.
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-08-20 04:05 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/uva. x000275470 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
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