Volume 12 of the Revolutionary War Series documents Washington's
unsuccessful efforts to capitalize on the American victory at
Saratoga and his decision to encamp the Continental army for the
winter at Valley Forge. The volume opens with the British forces at
Philadelphia, where they had returned following the Battle of
Germantown, and the Continental army, in Washington's words,
"hovering round them, to distress and retard their operations as
much as possible." Recognizing the importance of restricting
communication between General William Howe and the British fleet,
Washington dispatched a brigade to New Jersey to assist in the
defense of Forts Mifflin and Mercer, key components in the American
effort to obstruct the Delaware River.
Upon receiving news of the surrender of British general John
Burgoyne's army to Major General Horatio Gates at Saratoga,
Washington called a council of war to consider his army's options.
Although his generals advised against an immediate assault on
Philadelphia, Washington perceived an opportunity to defeat Howe
and dispatched his aide-de-camp Alexander Hamilton to the northern
department to urge upon General Gates the "absolute necessity" of
sending a "very considerable" reinforcement to the main army. If
those troops arrived before the British could open a supply route
on the Delaware or be reinforced from New York, then the American
forces could "in all probability reduce Genl Howe to the same
situation in which Genl Burgoine now is." There was little further
that Washington could do to strengthen the Delaware River defenses,
however, and despite the determined efforts of Fort Mifflin's
defenders, the Americans were forced to evacuate the fort in
mid-November following a sustained bombardment from British land
and naval artillery. Moreover, British and Hessian troops from New
York arrived before Washington's reinforcement and joined in the
British occupation of Fort Mercer a few days later.
After the fall of the Delaware River forts, Washington and his
generals began extensive deliberations about the related questions
of a possible winter campaign and where to quarter the troops for
the winter. The generals were nearly unanimous that a winter
campaign was not feasible, but they were divided between quartering
the troops at Wilmington, Delaware, or in Pennsylvania along a line
from Bethlehem to Lancaster. Washington settled on the third option
discussed: hutting in the Great Valley of Pennsylvania.
Consequently, the volume closes in December with Washington
establishing his headquarters at Valley Forge, about twenty miles
northwest of Philadelphia. Valley Forge provided the army with an
adequate defensive position to guard against a British surprise
attack, the ability to limit British depredations in Pennsylvania,
and a base to cover Lancaster and York, where the Pennsylvania
state government and the Continental Congress, respectively, had
moved after the evacuation of Philadelphia.
Other subjects arising in the correspondence include Thomas
Conway's reputedly disparaging letter to Gates about Washington; a
variety of army reforms embracing reorganization of the cavalry,
the establishment of a marechaussee, or provost corps, and the
improvement of the lot of the officers and enlisted men; and a
purported British peace proposal. Private correspondence discusses
Mount Vernon and Washington's other landholdings.
General
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