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Newburgh Conspiracy

The Newburgh Conspiracy was a failed apparent threat by leaders of the Continental Army in March 1783, at the end of the American Revolutionary War. The Army's commander, George Washington, successfully calmed the soldiers and helped secure back pay. The conspiracy may have been instigated by members in the Congress of the Confederation, which circulated an anonymous letter in the army camp at Newburgh, New York, on March 10, 1783. Soldiers were unhappy that they had not been paid for some time and that pensions that had been promised remained unfunded.

The reconstructed Temple at the New Windsor Cantonment State Historic Site in New Windsor, New York, where the critical meeting took place on March 15, 1783

The letter suggested that they should take unspecified action against Congress to resolve the issue. The letter was said to have been written by Major John Armstrong, aide to General Horatio Gates, although the authorship and underlying ideas are subjects of historical debate. Commander-in-Chief George Washington stopped any serious talk of rebellion when he made an emotional address to his officers asking them to support the supremacy of Congress. Not long afterward, Congress approved a compromise agreement that it had previously rejected: it funded some of the pay arrears, and granted soldiers five years of full pay instead of a lifetime pension of half pay.

The motivations of numerous actors in these events are debated. Most historians say that the plot was led by civilians. Their goal was forcing Congress to make good on its long-standing promises to the soldiers. Some historians allege that serious consideration was given within the army to some sort of coup d'état, while others dispute the notion. The exact motivations of congressmen involved in communications with army officers implicated in the events are similarly debated.

Background edit

After the British loss at the Siege of Yorktown in October 1781, the American Revolutionary War died down in North America, and peace talks began between British and American diplomats. The American Continental Army, based at Newburgh, New York, monitored British-occupied New York City. With the end of the war and dissolution of the Continental Army approaching, soldiers who had long been unpaid feared that the Confederation Congress would not meet previous promises concerning back pay and pensions.[citation needed]

 
General Alexander McDougall

Congress had, in 1780, promised Continental officers a lifetime pension of half their pay when they were discharged.[1] Financier Robert Morris had in early 1782 stopped army pay as a cost-saving measure, arguing that when the war finally ended the arrears would be made up.[2] Throughout 1782 these issues were a regular topic of debate in Congress and in the army camp at Newburgh, and numerous memos and petitions by individual soldiers had failed to significantly affect Congressional debate on the subject.[3]

A number of officers organized under the leadership of General Henry Knox and drafted a memorandum to Congress. Signed by enough general officers that it could not be readily dismissed as the work of a few malcontents,[4] the memo was delivered to Congress by a delegation consisting of General Alexander McDougall and Colonels John Brooks and Matthias Ogden in late December 1782. It expressed unhappiness over pay that was months in arrears, and concern over the possibility that the half pay pension would not be forthcoming. In the memo, they offered to accept a lump sum payment instead of the lifetime half pay pension. It also contained the vague threat that "any further experiments on their [the army's] patience may have fatal effects."[1] The seriousness of the situation was also communicated to Congress by Secretary at War Benjamin Lincoln.[3]

Actions of Congress edit

Congress was bitterly divided on the subject of finance, with Rhode Island preventing action. The treasury was empty, and Congress lacked the power to compel the states to provide the necessary funds for meeting its obligations.[5] An attempt to amend the Articles of Confederation to allow Congress to impose an import tariff was decisively defeated by the states in November 1782,[6] and some states had enacted legislation forbidding their representatives from supporting any sort of lifetime pension.[7] Members of the "nationalist" faction in Congress who had supported the tax proposal (including Robert Morris, Gouverneur Morris, James Madison, and Alexander Hamilton) believed that the army funding issues could be used as a lever to gain for Congress the ability to raise its own revenue.[8][9] They took action and Kohn identifies three main leaders of the "conspiracy": Hamilton, Robert Morris, and Gouverneur Morris.[10] Jack N. Rakove emphasizes the leadership of Robert Morris.[11]

 
Gouverneur Morris (left) and Robert Morris (right), portrait by Charles Willson Peale, 1783

The army delegation first met with Robert Morris and other nationalists. The politicians convinced McDougall that it was imperative for the army to remain cooperative while they sought funding. The hope they expressed was to tie the army's demands to those of the government's other creditors to force opposing Congressmen to act.[12]

On January 6 Congress established a committee to address the army's memo. It first met with Robert Morris, who stated that there were no funds to meet the army's demands, and that loans for government operations would require evidence of a revenue stream.[13] When it met with McDougall on January 13, the general painted a stark picture of the discontent at Newburgh; Colonel Brooks opined that "a disappointment might throw [the army] into blind extremities."[14] When Congress met on January 22 to debate the committee's report, Robert Morris shocked the body by tendering his resignation, heightening tension.[7] The Congressional leadership immediately moved to keep Morris's resignation secret.[15]

Debate on a funding scheme turned in part on the issue of the pension. Twice the nationalists urged the body to adopt a commuted pension scheme (one that would end after a fixed time, rather than lifetime), but it was rejected both times. After the second rejection on February 4, a plan to further raise tensions began to take shape. Four days later, Colonel Brooks was dispatched back to Newburgh with instructions to gain the army leadership's agreement with the proposed nationalist plan. The army leadership was also urged by Gouverneur Morris to use its influence with state legislatures to secure their approval for needed changes. On February 12, McDougall sent a letter (signed with the pseudonym Brutus) to General Knox suggesting that the army might have to mutiny by refusing to disband until it was paid. He specifically told Knox to not make any direct steps, but that he should "not lose a moment preparing for events."[16] Historian Richard Kohn is of the opinion that the purpose of these communications was not to foment a coup or military action against Congress or the states, but to use the specter of a recalcitrant army's refusal to disband as a political weapon against the antinationalists. The nationalists were also aware of a significant cadre of lower-level officers who were unhappy with General Washington's leadership and had gravitated to the camp of Major General Horatio Gates, a longtime Washington rival. These officers, Kohn believes, could be used by the nationalists to stage something that resembled a coup if necessary.[17]

 
Colonel John Brooks, 1820 portrait by Gilbert Stuart

The arrival on February 13 of rumors that a preliminary peace agreement had been reached in Paris heightened the sense of urgency among the nationalists.[18] Alexander Hamilton wrote a letter to General Washington the same day, essentially warning him of the possibility of impending unrest among the ranks, and urging him to "take the direction" of the army's anger.[19] Washington responded that he sympathized both with the plight of his officers and men and with those in Congress, but that he would not use the army to threaten the civil government. Washington believed such a course of action would violate the principles of republicanism for which they had all been fighting.[20] It was unclear to the Congressional nationalists whether Knox, who had been a regular supporter of army protests to Congress, would play a role in any sort of staged action. In letters written February 21, Knox unambiguously indicated he would play no such part, expressing the hope that the army's force would only be used against "the Enemies of the liberties in America."[21]

On February 25 and 26 there was a flurry of activity in Philadelphia, which may have been occasioned by the arrival of Knox's letters. The nationalists had had little success in advancing their program through Congress, and continued to use rhetoric repeating concerns over the army's stability.[22] On March 8 Pennsylvania Colonel Walter Stewart arrived at Newburgh.[23] Stewart was known to Robert Morris; the two had previous dealings when Stewart proposed coordinating activities of private creditors of the government,[24] and he was aware of the poor state of affairs in Philadelphia.[25] His movement to Newburgh had been ordered by Washington (he was returning to duty after recovering from an illness) and would not necessarily draw notice. Although his movements at camp are not known in detail, it appears likely that he met with General Gates not long after his arrival. Within hours rumors began flying around the Newburgh camp that the army would refuse to disband until its demands were met.[23]

Call for meeting edit

On the morning of March 10 an unsigned letter began circulating in the army camp. Later acknowledged to be written by Major John Armstrong, Jr., aide to General Gates, the letter decried the army's condition and the lack of Congressional support, and called upon the army to send Congress an ultimatum. Published at the same time was an anonymous call for a meeting of all field officers for 11 a.m. the next day.[23]

 
The Newburgh Address.

Washington reacted with dispatch. On the morning of the 11th in his general orders he objected to the "disorderly" and "irregular" nature of the anonymously called meeting, and announced that there would be a meeting of officers on the 15th instead. This meeting, he said, would be presided over by the senior officer present, and Washington requested a report of the meeting, implying that he would not attend. On the morning of the 12th a second unsigned letter appeared, claiming Washington's agreement to a meeting as an endorsement of the conspirators' position.[26] Washington, who had initially thought the first letter to be the work of individuals outside the camp (specifically citing Gouverneur Morris as a likely candidate), was compelled to admit this unlikely given the speed at which the second letter appeared.[27]

The March 15 meeting was held in the "New Building" or "Temple", a 40 by 70-foot (12 by 21 m) building at the camp. After Gates opened the meeting, Washington entered the building to everyone's surprise. He asked to speak to the officers, and the stunned Gates relinquished the floor. Washington could tell by the faces of his officers, who had not been paid for quite some time, that they were quite angry and did not show the respect or deference as they had toward Washington in the past.[28]

Washington then gave a short but impassioned speech, now known as the Newburgh Address, counseling patience. His message was that they should oppose anyone "who wickedly attempts to open the floodgates of civil discord and deluge our rising empire in blood."[29] He then produced a letter from a member of Congress to read to the officers. He gazed upon it and fumbled with it without speaking. He then took a pair of reading glasses from his pocket, which were new; few of the men had seen him wear them.[30] He then said:

Gentlemen, you will permit me to put on my spectacles, for I have not only grown gray but almost blind in the service of my country.[31]

This caused the men to realize that Washington had sacrificed a great deal for the Revolution, just as much as any of them. These, of course, were his fellow officers, most having worked closely with him for several years. Many of those present were moved to tears,[32] and with this act, the conspiracy collapsed as he read the letter. He then left the room, and General Knox and others offered resolutions reaffirming their loyalty. Knox and Colonel Brooks were then appointed to a committee to draft a suitable resolution. Approved by virtually the entire assembly, the resolution expressed "unshaken confidence" in Congress, and "disdain" and "abhorrence" for the irregular proposals published earlier in the week.[33] Historian Richard Kohn believes the entire meeting was carefully stage-managed by Washington, Knox, and their supporters.[33] The only voice raised in opposition was that of Colonel Timothy Pickering, who criticized members of the assembly for hypocritically condemning the anonymous addresses that only days before they had been praising.[34]

Aftermath edit

General Washington had sent copies of the anonymous addresses to Congress. This "alarming intelligence" (as James Madison termed it) arrived while Congress was debating the pension issues.[34] Nationalist leaders orchestrated the creation of a committee to respond to the news, which was deliberately populated with members opposed to any sort of pension payment. The pressure worked on Connecticut representative Eliphalet Dyer, one of the committee members, and he proposed approval of a lump sum payment on March 20. The final agreement was for a five years' full pay instead of the lifetime half pay pension scheme originally promised.[35][36] They received government bonds which at the time were highly speculative, but were in fact redeemed 100 cents on the dollar (i.e., at full value) by the new government in 1790.[37]

 
John Armstrong, the author of the Newburgh letters

The soldiers continued to grumble, with the unrest spreading to the noncommissioned officers (sergeants and corporals). Riots occurred and mutiny threatened. Washington rejected suggestions that the army stay in operation until the states found the money for the pay. On April 19, 1783, his General Orders of the day announced the end of hostilities against Great Britain. Congress thereafter ordered him to disband the army, since everyone agreed that a large army of 10,000 men was no longer needed, and the men were eager to go home. Congress gave each soldier three months pay, but since they had no funds Robert Morris issued $800,000 in personal notes to the soldiers. Many soldiers sold these notes to speculators, some even before they left camp, in order to be able to make their way home.[38] Over the next several months, much of the Continental Army was furloughed, although many of the rank and file realized it was effectively a disbandment. The army was formally disbanded in November 1783, leaving only a small force at West Point and several scattered frontier outposts.[39]

Discontent related to pay had resurfaced in Philadelphia in June 1783. Due in part to a critical miscommunication, troops in eastern Pennsylvania were led to believe that they would be discharged even before Morris' promissory notes would be distributed, and they marched to the city in protest. Pennsylvania President John Dickinson refused to call out the militia (reasoning they might actually support the mutineers), and Congress decided to relocate to Princeton, New Jersey. There is circumstantial evidence that several participants in the Newburgh affair (notably Walter Stewart, John Armstrong, and Gouverneur Morris) may have played a role in this uprising as well.[citation needed]

Although many acts have been passed since to grant pensions to veterans of the revolutionary war, most notably the Pension Act of 1832, escaped slaves who fought in the war were denied pension, one of whom was Jehu Grant. Grant's 1832 pension application stated that during the Revolutionary War he had escaped from his enslaver, a Loyalist from New England, so that he would not be compelled to serve in the British forces. The application was rejected in 1834 due to Grant being an escaped slave.[40] However, many freed slaves and slaves who enlisted with their owners' permission were granted pensions such as in the case of Jeffrey Brace, who was granted pension in 1821.[41][40]

The main long-term result of the Newburgh affair was a strong reaffirmation of the principle of civilian control of the military, and banishing any possibility of a coup as outside the realm of republican values. It also validated Washington's stature as a leading proponent of civilian control.[42]

Historical analysis edit

Historian Richard Kohn writes that a number of key details about the individuals and their motivations are not known, and probably never will be. For example, it is unclear exactly how much Colonels Brooks and Stewart, the principal messengers in the affair, knew.[43] The intent of the Gates group has been the subject of some debate: Kohn argues that they were intent on organizing some form of direct action (although he disclaims the idea that this would necessarily take the form of a traditional coup d'état), while historian Paul David Nelson claims Kohn's thesis is circumstantial and poorly supported by primary materials.[44] A letter written by General Gates in June 1783 illustrates the disagreement: in the letter Gates writes that the purpose of the events was to pressure Congress. Kohn argues that Gates is writing after the fact to cover his tracks, while Nelson claims Gates is giving a candid account of the affair.[45] Historian C. Edward Skeen writes that Kohn's case is weak because it relies heavily on interpretation of written statements and is not well supported by the actions of the alleged conspirators. He notes, for example, that there is ample evidence suggesting mutinous sentiments were not obviously circulating in the Newburgh camp between the arrivals of Brooks and Stewart;[46] Kohn counters that the relative quiet in camp masked significant undercurrents of unhappiness.[47]

David Cobb, who served on Washington's staff during the affair, wrote in 1825, "I have ever considered that the United States are indebted for their republican form of government solely to the firm and determined republicanism of George Washington at this time."[48] Skeen notes that the event has served to significantly burnish Washington's reputation.[48]

According to a reviewer[49] of A Crisis of Peace: George Washington, the Newburgh Conspiracy, and the Fate of the American Revolution, (2019) by David Head, the book:

casts doubt on the existence of any conspiracy, at least in the sense of an organized challenge to Washington’s command of the army. Head believes the appearance of conspiracy was the product of gossip and private conversations among officers and members of Congress intent on using the officers’ demands to promote a stronger national government. If Head discounts the conspiracy of legend, he makes clear that the disputes over officers’ pay and pensions threatened the legitimacy of the Confederation Congress and the balance of state and federal power, and that Washington sought to protect both. "

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Kohn, "Inside History", p 189
  2. ^ Rappleye, p 288
  3. ^ a b Kohn, "Inside History", p 190
  4. ^ Rappleye, pp 332–333
  5. ^ Fleming, pp 250–252, 262
  6. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", p 191
  7. ^ a b Kohn, "Inside History", p 195
  8. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", pp 191–193
  9. ^ Fleming, p 261
  10. ^ Kohn, "Inside History" p, 193.
  11. ^ Jack N. Rakove, The beginnings of national politics: An interpretive history of the Continental Congress (1979), p. 317
  12. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", p 192
  13. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", pp 193–194
  14. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", p 194
  15. ^ Fleming, p 263
  16. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", p 196
  17. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", pp 198–199
  18. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", p 201
  19. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", p 202
  20. ^ Fleming, p 266
  21. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", p 203
  22. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", p 204
  23. ^ a b c Kohn, "Inside History", p 206
  24. ^ Rappleye, p 302
  25. ^ Fleming, p 267
  26. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", p 208
  27. ^ Skeen and Kohn, pp 286–287
  28. ^ Fleming, pp 269–270
  29. ^ Chernow, ch 35 at note 56
  30. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. General Rufus Putnam: George Washington's Chief Military Engineer and the "Father of Ohio," p. 88, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina. ISBN 978-1-4766-7862-7.
  31. ^ Fleming, p 271
  32. ^ John Rhodehamel (ed.). The American Revolution: Writings from the War of Independence. There was something so natural, so unaffected, in this appeal, as rendered it superior to the most studied oratory; it forced its way to the heart, and you might see sensibility moisten every eye.
  33. ^ a b Kohn, "Inside History", p 211
  34. ^ a b Fleming, p 272
  35. ^ Fleming, pp 272–273
  36. ^ Wright, Robert K. Jr. (1983). The Continental Army. Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, U.S. Army. pp. 177–179. ISBN 0-16-001931-1. OCLC 8806011.
  37. ^ Kohn, Eagle and Sword, p 33
  38. ^ Fleming, p 288
  39. ^ Merrill Jensen, The New Nation: A History of the United States During the Confederation 1781–1789 (1950) pp 54–84
  40. ^ a b Countryman, Edward (2012). Enjoy the same liberty : Black Americans and the revolutionary era. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-0028-9. OCLC 698327988.
  41. ^ The blind African slave, or, Memoirs of Boyrereau Brinch, nicknamed Jeffery Brace. Kari J. Winter, Benjamin F., or 1775–1817 Prentiss. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. 2004. ISBN 978-0-299-20143-2. OCLC 657821122.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  42. ^ Kohn, Eagle and Sword pp 34–39
  43. ^ Kohn, "Inside History", p 220
  44. ^ Nelson and Kohn, pp 145–150
  45. ^ Nelson and Kohn, pp 149–150
  46. ^ Skeen and Kohn, p 279
  47. ^ Skeen and Kohn, p 292
  48. ^ a b Skeen and Kohn, p 288
  49. ^ Bruce A. Ragsdale, "Review" in Journal of American History (March 2021), Vol. 107 Issue 4, pp 989–990.

Bibliography edit

  • Fleming, Thomas (2007). The Perils of Peace: America's Struggle for Survival after Yorktown. New York: Smithsonian Books. ISBN 9780061139109.
  • Fowler Jr, William M. American crisis: George Washington and the dangerous two years after Yorktown, 1781–1783 (Bloomsbury, 2011).
  • Head, David. A Crisis of Peace: George Washington, the Newburgh Conspiracy, and the Fate of the American Revolution (2019).
  • Jensen, Merrill. The New Nation: A History of the United States During the Confederation 1781–1789 (1950) pp 54–84
  • Kohn, Richard H (April 1970). "The Inside History of the Newburgh Conspiracy: America and the Coup d'Etat". The William and Mary Quarterly. 27 (Third Series, Volume 27, No. 2): 188–220. doi:10.2307/1918650. JSTOR 1918650. Kohn believes that it is doubtful that a coup d'état against Congress was ever seriously attempted.
  • Kohn, Richard H. Eagle and Sword: The Federalists and the Creation of the Military Establishment in America, 1783–1802 (1975) pp 17–39
  • Nelson, Paul David; Kohn, Richard H (January 1972). "Horatio Gates at Newburgh, 1783: A Misunderstood Role". The William and Mary Quarterly. 29 (Third Series, Volume 29, No. 1): 143–158. doi:10.2307/1921331. JSTOR 1921331.
  • Rakove, Jack N. The beginnings of national politics: An interpretive history of the Continental Congress (Knopf, 1979) pp 275–329. onlinw
  • Rappleye, Charles (2010). Robert Morris: Financier of the American Revolution. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781416570912. OCLC 535493123.
  • Rhodehamel, John, ed. (2001) [2001]. The American Revolution: Writings from the War of Independence. The Library of America. ISBN 1883011914.
  • Skeen, C. Edward; Kohn, Richard H (April 1974). "The Newburgh Conspiracy Reconsidered". The William and Mary Quarterly. 31 (Third Series, Volume 31, No. 2): 273–298. doi:10.2307/1920913. JSTOR 1920913.

External links edit

  • Library of Congress page on the Newburgh conspiracy
  • Digital Encyclopedia of George Washington article on the Newburgh conspiracy

newburgh, conspiracy, alleged, terrorist, conspiracy, newburgh, york, 2009, bronx, terrorism, plot, failed, apparent, threat, leaders, continental, army, march, 1783, american, revolutionary, army, commander, george, washington, successfully, calmed, soldiers,. For the alleged terrorist conspiracy in Newburgh New York see 2009 Bronx terrorism plot The Newburgh Conspiracy was a failed apparent threat by leaders of the Continental Army in March 1783 at the end of the American Revolutionary War The Army s commander George Washington successfully calmed the soldiers and helped secure back pay The conspiracy may have been instigated by members in the Congress of the Confederation which circulated an anonymous letter in the army camp at Newburgh New York on March 10 1783 Soldiers were unhappy that they had not been paid for some time and that pensions that had been promised remained unfunded The reconstructed Temple at the New Windsor Cantonment State Historic Site in New Windsor New York where the critical meeting took place on March 15 1783The letter suggested that they should take unspecified action against Congress to resolve the issue The letter was said to have been written by Major John Armstrong aide to General Horatio Gates although the authorship and underlying ideas are subjects of historical debate Commander in Chief George Washington stopped any serious talk of rebellion when he made an emotional address to his officers asking them to support the supremacy of Congress Not long afterward Congress approved a compromise agreement that it had previously rejected it funded some of the pay arrears and granted soldiers five years of full pay instead of a lifetime pension of half pay The motivations of numerous actors in these events are debated Most historians say that the plot was led by civilians Their goal was forcing Congress to make good on its long standing promises to the soldiers Some historians allege that serious consideration was given within the army to some sort of coup d etat while others dispute the notion The exact motivations of congressmen involved in communications with army officers implicated in the events are similarly debated Contents 1 Background 2 Actions of Congress 3 Call for meeting 4 Aftermath 5 Historical analysis 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksBackground editAfter the British loss at the Siege of Yorktown in October 1781 the American Revolutionary War died down in North America and peace talks began between British and American diplomats The American Continental Army based at Newburgh New York monitored British occupied New York City With the end of the war and dissolution of the Continental Army approaching soldiers who had long been unpaid feared that the Confederation Congress would not meet previous promises concerning back pay and pensions citation needed nbsp General Alexander McDougallCongress had in 1780 promised Continental officers a lifetime pension of half their pay when they were discharged 1 Financier Robert Morris had in early 1782 stopped army pay as a cost saving measure arguing that when the war finally ended the arrears would be made up 2 Throughout 1782 these issues were a regular topic of debate in Congress and in the army camp at Newburgh and numerous memos and petitions by individual soldiers had failed to significantly affect Congressional debate on the subject 3 A number of officers organized under the leadership of General Henry Knox and drafted a memorandum to Congress Signed by enough general officers that it could not be readily dismissed as the work of a few malcontents 4 the memo was delivered to Congress by a delegation consisting of General Alexander McDougall and Colonels John Brooks and Matthias Ogden in late December 1782 It expressed unhappiness over pay that was months in arrears and concern over the possibility that the half pay pension would not be forthcoming In the memo they offered to accept a lump sum payment instead of the lifetime half pay pension It also contained the vague threat that any further experiments on their the army s patience may have fatal effects 1 The seriousness of the situation was also communicated to Congress by Secretary at War Benjamin Lincoln 3 Actions of Congress editCongress was bitterly divided on the subject of finance with Rhode Island preventing action The treasury was empty and Congress lacked the power to compel the states to provide the necessary funds for meeting its obligations 5 An attempt to amend the Articles of Confederation to allow Congress to impose an import tariff was decisively defeated by the states in November 1782 6 and some states had enacted legislation forbidding their representatives from supporting any sort of lifetime pension 7 Members of the nationalist faction in Congress who had supported the tax proposal including Robert Morris Gouverneur Morris James Madison and Alexander Hamilton believed that the army funding issues could be used as a lever to gain for Congress the ability to raise its own revenue 8 9 They took action and Kohn identifies three main leaders of the conspiracy Hamilton Robert Morris and Gouverneur Morris 10 Jack N Rakove emphasizes the leadership of Robert Morris 11 nbsp Gouverneur Morris left and Robert Morris right portrait by Charles Willson Peale 1783The army delegation first met with Robert Morris and other nationalists The politicians convinced McDougall that it was imperative for the army to remain cooperative while they sought funding The hope they expressed was to tie the army s demands to those of the government s other creditors to force opposing Congressmen to act 12 On January 6 Congress established a committee to address the army s memo It first met with Robert Morris who stated that there were no funds to meet the army s demands and that loans for government operations would require evidence of a revenue stream 13 When it met with McDougall on January 13 the general painted a stark picture of the discontent at Newburgh Colonel Brooks opined that a disappointment might throw the army into blind extremities 14 When Congress met on January 22 to debate the committee s report Robert Morris shocked the body by tendering his resignation heightening tension 7 The Congressional leadership immediately moved to keep Morris s resignation secret 15 Debate on a funding scheme turned in part on the issue of the pension Twice the nationalists urged the body to adopt a commuted pension scheme one that would end after a fixed time rather than lifetime but it was rejected both times After the second rejection on February 4 a plan to further raise tensions began to take shape Four days later Colonel Brooks was dispatched back to Newburgh with instructions to gain the army leadership s agreement with the proposed nationalist plan The army leadership was also urged by Gouverneur Morris to use its influence with state legislatures to secure their approval for needed changes On February 12 McDougall sent a letter signed with the pseudonym Brutus to General Knox suggesting that the army might have to mutiny by refusing to disband until it was paid He specifically told Knox to not make any direct steps but that he should not lose a moment preparing for events 16 Historian Richard Kohn is of the opinion that the purpose of these communications was not to foment a coup or military action against Congress or the states but to use the specter of a recalcitrant army s refusal to disband as a political weapon against the antinationalists The nationalists were also aware of a significant cadre of lower level officers who were unhappy with General Washington s leadership and had gravitated to the camp of Major General Horatio Gates a longtime Washington rival These officers Kohn believes could be used by the nationalists to stage something that resembled a coup if necessary 17 nbsp Colonel John Brooks 1820 portrait by Gilbert StuartThe arrival on February 13 of rumors that a preliminary peace agreement had been reached in Paris heightened the sense of urgency among the nationalists 18 Alexander Hamilton wrote a letter to General Washington the same day essentially warning him of the possibility of impending unrest among the ranks and urging him to take the direction of the army s anger 19 Washington responded that he sympathized both with the plight of his officers and men and with those in Congress but that he would not use the army to threaten the civil government Washington believed such a course of action would violate the principles of republicanism for which they had all been fighting 20 It was unclear to the Congressional nationalists whether Knox who had been a regular supporter of army protests to Congress would play a role in any sort of staged action In letters written February 21 Knox unambiguously indicated he would play no such part expressing the hope that the army s force would only be used against the Enemies of the liberties in America 21 On February 25 and 26 there was a flurry of activity in Philadelphia which may have been occasioned by the arrival of Knox s letters The nationalists had had little success in advancing their program through Congress and continued to use rhetoric repeating concerns over the army s stability 22 On March 8 Pennsylvania Colonel Walter Stewart arrived at Newburgh 23 Stewart was known to Robert Morris the two had previous dealings when Stewart proposed coordinating activities of private creditors of the government 24 and he was aware of the poor state of affairs in Philadelphia 25 His movement to Newburgh had been ordered by Washington he was returning to duty after recovering from an illness and would not necessarily draw notice Although his movements at camp are not known in detail it appears likely that he met with General Gates not long after his arrival Within hours rumors began flying around the Newburgh camp that the army would refuse to disband until its demands were met 23 Call for meeting editOn the morning of March 10 an unsigned letter began circulating in the army camp Later acknowledged to be written by Major John Armstrong Jr aide to General Gates the letter decried the army s condition and the lack of Congressional support and called upon the army to send Congress an ultimatum Published at the same time was an anonymous call for a meeting of all field officers for 11 a m the next day 23 nbsp The Newburgh Address Washington reacted with dispatch On the morning of the 11th in his general orders he objected to the disorderly and irregular nature of the anonymously called meeting and announced that there would be a meeting of officers on the 15th instead This meeting he said would be presided over by the senior officer present and Washington requested a report of the meeting implying that he would not attend On the morning of the 12th a second unsigned letter appeared claiming Washington s agreement to a meeting as an endorsement of the conspirators position 26 Washington who had initially thought the first letter to be the work of individuals outside the camp specifically citing Gouverneur Morris as a likely candidate was compelled to admit this unlikely given the speed at which the second letter appeared 27 The March 15 meeting was held in the New Building or Temple a 40 by 70 foot 12 by 21 m building at the camp After Gates opened the meeting Washington entered the building to everyone s surprise He asked to speak to the officers and the stunned Gates relinquished the floor Washington could tell by the faces of his officers who had not been paid for quite some time that they were quite angry and did not show the respect or deference as they had toward Washington in the past 28 Washington then gave a short but impassioned speech now known as the Newburgh Address counseling patience His message was that they should oppose anyone who wickedly attempts to open the floodgates of civil discord and deluge our rising empire in blood 29 He then produced a letter from a member of Congress to read to the officers He gazed upon it and fumbled with it without speaking He then took a pair of reading glasses from his pocket which were new few of the men had seen him wear them 30 He then said Gentlemen you will permit me to put on my spectacles for I have not only grown gray but almost blind in the service of my country 31 This caused the men to realize that Washington had sacrificed a great deal for the Revolution just as much as any of them These of course were his fellow officers most having worked closely with him for several years Many of those present were moved to tears 32 and with this act the conspiracy collapsed as he read the letter He then left the room and General Knox and others offered resolutions reaffirming their loyalty Knox and Colonel Brooks were then appointed to a committee to draft a suitable resolution Approved by virtually the entire assembly the resolution expressed unshaken confidence in Congress and disdain and abhorrence for the irregular proposals published earlier in the week 33 Historian Richard Kohn believes the entire meeting was carefully stage managed by Washington Knox and their supporters 33 The only voice raised in opposition was that of Colonel Timothy Pickering who criticized members of the assembly for hypocritically condemning the anonymous addresses that only days before they had been praising 34 Aftermath editGeneral Washington had sent copies of the anonymous addresses to Congress This alarming intelligence as James Madison termed it arrived while Congress was debating the pension issues 34 Nationalist leaders orchestrated the creation of a committee to respond to the news which was deliberately populated with members opposed to any sort of pension payment The pressure worked on Connecticut representative Eliphalet Dyer one of the committee members and he proposed approval of a lump sum payment on March 20 The final agreement was for a five years full pay instead of the lifetime half pay pension scheme originally promised 35 36 They received government bonds which at the time were highly speculative but were in fact redeemed 100 cents on the dollar i e at full value by the new government in 1790 37 nbsp John Armstrong the author of the Newburgh lettersThe soldiers continued to grumble with the unrest spreading to the noncommissioned officers sergeants and corporals Riots occurred and mutiny threatened Washington rejected suggestions that the army stay in operation until the states found the money for the pay On April 19 1783 his General Orders of the day announced the end of hostilities against Great Britain Congress thereafter ordered him to disband the army since everyone agreed that a large army of 10 000 men was no longer needed and the men were eager to go home Congress gave each soldier three months pay but since they had no funds Robert Morris issued 800 000 in personal notes to the soldiers Many soldiers sold these notes to speculators some even before they left camp in order to be able to make their way home 38 Over the next several months much of the Continental Army was furloughed although many of the rank and file realized it was effectively a disbandment The army was formally disbanded in November 1783 leaving only a small force at West Point and several scattered frontier outposts 39 Discontent related to pay had resurfaced in Philadelphia in June 1783 Due in part to a critical miscommunication troops in eastern Pennsylvania were led to believe that they would be discharged even before Morris promissory notes would be distributed and they marched to the city in protest Pennsylvania President John Dickinson refused to call out the militia reasoning they might actually support the mutineers and Congress decided to relocate to Princeton New Jersey There is circumstantial evidence that several participants in the Newburgh affair notably Walter Stewart John Armstrong and Gouverneur Morris may have played a role in this uprising as well citation needed Although many acts have been passed since to grant pensions to veterans of the revolutionary war most notably the Pension Act of 1832 escaped slaves who fought in the war were denied pension one of whom was Jehu Grant Grant s 1832 pension application stated that during the Revolutionary War he had escaped from his enslaver a Loyalist from New England so that he would not be compelled to serve in the British forces The application was rejected in 1834 due to Grant being an escaped slave 40 However many freed slaves and slaves who enlisted with their owners permission were granted pensions such as in the case of Jeffrey Brace who was granted pension in 1821 41 40 The main long term result of the Newburgh affair was a strong reaffirmation of the principle of civilian control of the military and banishing any possibility of a coup as outside the realm of republican values It also validated Washington s stature as a leading proponent of civilian control 42 Historical analysis editHistorian Richard Kohn writes that a number of key details about the individuals and their motivations are not known and probably never will be For example it is unclear exactly how much Colonels Brooks and Stewart the principal messengers in the affair knew 43 The intent of the Gates group has been the subject of some debate Kohn argues that they were intent on organizing some form of direct action although he disclaims the idea that this would necessarily take the form of a traditional coup d etat while historian Paul David Nelson claims Kohn s thesis is circumstantial and poorly supported by primary materials 44 A letter written by General Gates in June 1783 illustrates the disagreement in the letter Gates writes that the purpose of the events was to pressure Congress Kohn argues that Gates is writing after the fact to cover his tracks while Nelson claims Gates is giving a candid account of the affair 45 Historian C Edward Skeen writes that Kohn s case is weak because it relies heavily on interpretation of written statements and is not well supported by the actions of the alleged conspirators He notes for example that there is ample evidence suggesting mutinous sentiments were not obviously circulating in the Newburgh camp between the arrivals of Brooks and Stewart 46 Kohn counters that the relative quiet in camp masked significant undercurrents of unhappiness 47 David Cobb who served on Washington s staff during the affair wrote in 1825 I have ever considered that the United States are indebted for their republican form of government solely to the firm and determined republicanism of George Washington at this time 48 Skeen notes that the event has served to significantly burnish Washington s reputation 48 According to a reviewer 49 of A Crisis of Peace George Washington the Newburgh Conspiracy and the Fate of the American Revolution 2019 by David Head the book casts doubt on the existence of any conspiracy at least in the sense of an organized challenge to Washington s command of the army Head believes the appearance of conspiracy was the product of gossip and private conversations among officers and members of Congress intent on using the officers demands to promote a stronger national government If Head discounts the conspiracy of legend he makes clear that the disputes over officers pay and pensions threatened the legitimacy of the Confederation Congress and the balance of state and federal power and that Washington sought to protect both See also editNewburgh letter Lewis Nicola Pension act Business PlotReferences edit a b Kohn Inside History p 189 Rappleye p 288 a b Kohn Inside History p 190 Rappleye pp 332 333 Fleming pp 250 252 262 Kohn Inside History p 191 a b Kohn Inside History p 195 Kohn Inside History pp 191 193 Fleming p 261 Kohn Inside History p 193 Jack N Rakove The beginnings of national politics An interpretive history of the Continental Congress 1979 p 317 Kohn Inside History p 192 Kohn Inside History pp 193 194 Kohn Inside History p 194 Fleming p 263 Kohn Inside History p 196 Kohn Inside History pp 198 199 Kohn Inside History p 201 Kohn Inside History p 202 Fleming p 266 Kohn Inside History p 203 Kohn Inside History p 204 a b c Kohn Inside History p 206 Rappleye p 302 Fleming p 267 Kohn Inside History p 208 Skeen and Kohn pp 286 287 Fleming pp 269 270 Chernow ch 35 at note 56 Hubbard Robert Ernest General Rufus Putnam George Washington s Chief Military Engineer and the Father of Ohio p 88 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina ISBN 978 1 4766 7862 7 Fleming p 271 John Rhodehamel ed The American Revolution Writings from the War of Independence There was something so natural so unaffected in this appeal as rendered it superior to the most studied oratory it forced its way to the heart and you might see sensibility moisten every eye a b Kohn Inside History p 211 a b Fleming p 272 Fleming pp 272 273 Wright Robert K Jr 1983 The Continental Army Washington D C Center of Military History U S Army pp 177 179 ISBN 0 16 001931 1 OCLC 8806011 Kohn Eagle and Sword p 33 Fleming p 288 Merrill Jensen The New Nation A History of the United States During the Confederation 1781 1789 1950 pp 54 84 a b Countryman Edward 2012 Enjoy the same liberty Black Americans and the revolutionary era Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 0028 9 OCLC 698327988 The blind African slave or Memoirs of Boyrereau Brinch nicknamed Jeffery Brace Kari J Winter Benjamin F or 1775 1817 Prentiss Madison University of Wisconsin Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 299 20143 2 OCLC 657821122 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Kohn Eagle and Sword pp 34 39 Kohn Inside History p 220 Nelson and Kohn pp 145 150 Nelson and Kohn pp 149 150 Skeen and Kohn p 279 Skeen and Kohn p 292 a b Skeen and Kohn p 288 Bruce A Ragsdale Review in Journal of American History March 2021 Vol 107 Issue 4 pp 989 990 Bibliography editFleming Thomas 2007 The Perils of Peace America s Struggle for Survival after Yorktown New York Smithsonian Books ISBN 9780061139109 Fowler Jr William M American crisis George Washington and the dangerous two years after Yorktown 1781 1783 Bloomsbury 2011 Head David A Crisis of Peace George Washington the Newburgh Conspiracy and the Fate of the American Revolution 2019 Jensen Merrill The New Nation A History of the United States During the Confederation 1781 1789 1950 pp 54 84 Kohn Richard H April 1970 The Inside History of the Newburgh Conspiracy America and the Coup d Etat The William and Mary Quarterly 27 Third Series Volume 27 No 2 188 220 doi 10 2307 1918650 JSTOR 1918650 Kohn believes that it is doubtful that a coup d etat against Congress was ever seriously attempted Kohn Richard H Eagle and Sword The Federalists and the Creation of the Military Establishment in America 1783 1802 1975 pp 17 39 Nelson Paul David Kohn Richard H January 1972 Horatio Gates at Newburgh 1783 A Misunderstood Role The William and Mary Quarterly 29 Third Series Volume 29 No 1 143 158 doi 10 2307 1921331 JSTOR 1921331 Rakove Jack N The beginnings of national politics An interpretive history of the Continental Congress Knopf 1979 pp 275 329 onlinw Rappleye Charles 2010 Robert Morris Financier of the American Revolution New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 9781416570912 OCLC 535493123 Rhodehamel John ed 2001 2001 The American Revolution Writings from the War of Independence The Library of America ISBN 1883011914 Skeen C Edward Kohn Richard H April 1974 The Newburgh Conspiracy Reconsidered The William and Mary Quarterly 31 Third Series Volume 31 No 2 273 298 doi 10 2307 1920913 JSTOR 1920913 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Newburgh address Library of Congress page on the Newburgh conspiracy Digital Encyclopedia of George Washington article on the Newburgh conspiracy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Newburgh Conspiracy amp oldid 1203858349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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