This volume covers the middle months of the siege of Boston when
George Washington faced the delicate task of disbanding one army
and recruiting another, all within musket shot of the British
forces. Throughout the fall of 1775, assisted and sometimes
thwarted by congressmen, New England officials, and fellow
officers, Washington laid plans not merely to keep a besieging
force around Boston and provide his men with winter necessities but
also to remodel the army to make it more efficient and truly
continental, intermixing officers and men without regard to their
colonial identity. The numerous official letters Washington wrote
and received during this period, his daily general orders, the
records of his councils of war, and the minutes of his important
October conference reveal a competent military administrator and a
committed patriot attempting to create a professional American army
which would transcend the narrow localism of the colonial past well
in advance of the Declaration of Independence.
Unwilling to risk an attack on the main British army in Boston
during the fall of 1775, Washington encouraged and monitored two
major offensive efforts elsewhere: the outfitting of a small fleet
of armed vessels to disrupt the flow of British supplies by sea to
Boston and Canada and the two-pronged invasion of Canada led by
Richard Montgomery and Benedict Arnold. Washington also dealt with
the treasonous intrigues of Benjamin Church and John Connolly and
with the burning of the seaport of Falmouth. He also received
several unsolicited schemes for attacking the British fleet in
Boston harbor, a steady stream of personal pleadings for
discharges, and a laudatory verse written by the black poet Phillis
Wheatley.
Substantial portions of Washington's correspondence for this
period concern his personal business and family affairs. Most
notable are the fourteen letters from his Mount Vernon manager,
Lund Washington. They offer rare views into the daily operations of
the plantation as well as into Washington's finances and land
dealings. They provide valuable information about plans for
remodeling the mansion house, proposals for defending it against
British attack, and Martha Washington's travels culminating in her
journey to join her husband at Cambridge.
General
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