Выбрать главу

47 “The Prospect is chilling”: John Adams diary, September 16, 1777, AFP. Crammed into a small, German-speaking town, other delegates voiced equally depressed comments, for example, Cornelius Harnett of North Carolina: “It is the most Inhospitable Scandalous place I ever was in.”

47 “and poaching in the heavyest Rain”: John Adams to Abigail Adams, October 28, 1777, AFP.

48 JW’s account of the dinner party with Stirling is studiously vague—“conversation too copious and diffuse for me to have charged my memory,” Memoirs, 1:331–32— so it is not entirely clear whether he or McWilliams misquoted Conway’s letter to Gates.

49 “Had I known that he had fallen in love”: Adams to Thomas McKean, November 26, 1815, AFP.

49 The figures for British armaments captured at Saratoga are taken from the official returns to Congress, October 31, 1777, JCC.

49 “make the best and most immediate use of this intelligence”: Letter by Richard Henry Lee and James Lovell to the U.S. representatives in France, October 31, 1777.

50 “Your Name Sir will be written”: Henry Laurens to Horatio Gates, November 5, 1777, JCC.

50 “I have not met with a more promising military genius”: Gates to John Hancock, October 20, 1777, JCC. On November 6, 1777, the Continental Congress meeting in the courthouse of York, Pennsylvania, passed the following resolution: “That Colonel James Wilkinson, adjutant general in the northern army, in consideration of his services in that department, and being strongly recommended by General Gates as a gallant officer, and a promising military genius . . .” JCC.

50 “My dear General and loved Friend” JW to Gates, November 1, 1777, Memoirs, 1:335. JW also referred to his discomfort at finding Congress had already heard unofficially from the generaclass="underline" “Through the industry of your friends, whom you indulged with copies the articles of the treaty (with their diabolical comments I suppose) reached the grand army before I did the Congress.”

51 Gates “was too polite to make the Lieut. General and his troops prisoners of discretion”: Quoted in David Duncan Wallace, The Life of Henry Laurens (New York, 1915), 247.

51 “Had an Attack been carried”: JW to Congress, November 3, 1777, manuscript letter in Papers of the Continental Congress.

52 “a weak General or bad Counsellors”: Washington to Conway, November 4, 1777, GWP.

52 “Your modesty is such”: Conway to Washington, November 5, 1777, GWP.

52 “your generosity and frank disposition”: General Thomas Mifflin to Gates, November 28, 1777, Memoirs, 1:371.

52 “No punishment is too severe”: Gates to Mifflin, December 4, 1777, PCC.

53 “Those letters have been stealingly copied”: Gates to Washington, December 8, 1777, GWP.

53 “I am under the disagreeable necessity”: Washington to Gates, January 4, 1778, GWP.

53 “read [Conway’s] letter publicly in my presence”: Memoirs, 1:372–73. JW’s full self-exculpation was wonderfully sinuous: “Conscious as I was that I had never spoken of that letter with evil intentions, or at all except when it was mentioned to me; and considering it, as it really was, nothing more than the vehicle of the opinions of an individual . . . which General Gates himself had not treated confidentially because he had read it publicly in my presence as matter of information from the grand army; I felt no personal solicitude about it, nor could I ascribe to it the importance which was subsequently given to it; and therefore I did not dream of the foul imputations it was destined to draw down upon me, and the strife and trouble it would occasion me.”

53 “communicated by Colonl. Wilkinson to Major McWilliams”: Washington to Gates, January 4, 1778, GWP.

54 “I never had any sort of intimacy”: Gates to Washington, January 23, 1778, GWP.

54 In an attempt to clear up the inconsistency between Conway’s letter and JW’s misremembered version, Stirling asked him to produce the original letter. Stirling to Wilkinson, January 6, 1778, Memoirs, 1:382–83. JW replied angrily, “I may have been indiscreet, my Lord, but be assured I am not dishonourable.”

54 “I always before heard”: Abraham Clark to William Alexander, January 15, 1778, PCC. In this letter Clark voiced an oddly prescient suspicion: “If he betrayed the Confidence of his Pattron he may do the same by his Country.”

55 “dissention among the principle Officers of the Army”: Ibid.

55 “I earnestly hope no more of that time”: Gates to Washington, February 19, 1778, GWP.

55 “I am as averse to controversy”: Washington to Gates, February 22, 1778, GWP.

55 “the very improper steps”: Anthony Wayne to Colonel Walter Stewart, quoted in Stewart’s letter to Gates, Memoirs, 1:390. JW also quoted General Charles Lee’s comment to Gates, March 29, 1779: “With respect to Wilkinson, I really think he had been a man more sinned against than any.”

55 “I ever was sensible of Wilky’s volatility”: Ibid.

55 “Your generous Conduct at Albany”: Colonel Robert Troup to JW, quoted in JW’s letter to Washington, March 28, 1778, GWP.

55 “General Gates had denounced me”: Memoirs, 1:385. The version of what happened between him and Gates is inescapably JW’s. It can be partially confirmed by Gates’s reply, quoted in full in the Memoirs, and by JW’s letter of March 28, 1778, to Washington, in which he recounted substantially the same sequence of events.

57 “My Lord shall bleed for his conduct”: JW to Gates, February 22, 1778, Memoirs, 1:385–86.

57 “flitted away like a vision of the morn”: Ibid., 1:391.

57 “passed in a private company during a convivial Hour”: JW to Stirling, March 18, 1778, ibid., 1:391–92.

57 “under no injunction of secrecy”: Stirling to JW, ibid., 1:392.

58 “he seemed a good deal surprized”: Washington to Stirling, March 21, 1778, GWP.

58 “after the act of treachery”: JW to Laurens, March 29, 1778, Memoirs, 1:409–10.

58 “improper to remain on the files of Congress”: Quoted in Jacobs, Tarnished Warrior, 47.

58 JW passes over the second duel, but Jacobs’s description in Tarnished Warrior is taken from contemporary accounts: New York Packet (Fishkill, NY), September 17, 24, October 8, 1778; and Continental Journal and Weekly Advertiser, November 12, 1778.

CHAPTER 6: LOVE AND INDEPENDENCE

JW’s recollections skip over the period between his leaving the army and his arriving in Kentucky almost six years later. However, his period as clothier general is well documented in the War Department Papers, as well as the Papers of George Washington and Papers of the Continental Congress. The Biddle family connections are based on Radbill, “The Leadership of Owen Biddle and John Lacey,” and Hay, “The Letters of Mrs. Ann Biddle Wilkinson.” The main sources for Pennsylvania politics are Wood, Creation of the American Republic; Reed, Life and Correspondence of Joseph Reed; William S. Hanna, Benjamin Franklin and Pennsylvania Politics (Stanford, CA: 1964); and Ireland, “The Ethnic- Religious Dimension of Pennsylvania Politics, 1778–1779.”

62 JW’s ownership of Trevose: Jacobs, Tarnished Warrior, 55–59.

62 land “sold for three pounds an acre”: Benjamin Franklin, “Information to those who would remove to America,” September 1782, Writings, 8:603–14.

62 For Arnold’s time in Philadelphia, see Randall, Benedict Arnold.