Letters from an American - December 19, 2024
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These are the times that try men's souls.
The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service
of their country.
But he that stands by it now deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.
These were the first lines in a pamphlet that appeared in Philadelphia on December 19th, 1776,
at a time when the fortunes of the American patriots
seemed at an all time low.
Just five months before,
the members of the Second Continental Congress
had adopted the Declaration of Independence,
explaining to the world that the representatives
of the United States of America,
in general Congress assembled,
do solemnly publish and declare
that these United Colonies are,
and of right ought to be,
free and independent states,
that they are absolved from all allegiance
to the British crown and that
all political connection between them and the state of Great Britain is and
ought to be totally dissolved. The nation's founders went on to explain why
it was necessary for them to dissolve the political bands which had connected
them to the British crown. They explained that their vision of human government
was different from that of Great Britain.
In contrast to the tradition of hereditary monarchy
under which the American colonies had been organized,
the representatives of the United States
on the North American continent believed
in a government organized according to the principles
of natural law.
Such a government rested on the self-evident concept that all men are created equal, that
they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Governments were created to protect those rights and rather than deserving loyalty because of tradition,
religion or heritage, they were legitimate only
if those they governed consented to them.
And the American colonists no longer consented
to be governed by the British monarchy.
This new vision of human government was an exciting thing to declare in the heat of a
Philadelphia summer after a year of skirmishing between the colonial army and British regulars.
But by December 1776, enthusiasm for this daring new experiment was ebbing.
Shortly after, colonials had cheered news of independence in July as local leaders read
copies of the Continental Congress's declaration in meeting houses and taverns in cities and
small towns throughout the colonies, the British moved on General George Washington and the
troops in New York City.
By September, the British had forced Washington and his soldiers to retreat from the city,
and after a series of punishing skirmishes across Manhattan Island, by November the Red
Coats had pushed the Americans into New Jersey.
They chased the Colonials all the way across the Delaware River into Pennsylvania.
By mid-December, things looked bleak for the Continental Army, and the revolutionary government
it backed. The 5,000 soldiers with Washington who were still able to
fight were demoralized from their repeated losses and retreats and since
the Continental Congress had kept enlistment short so as not to risk a
standing army, many of the men would be free to leave the army at the end of the
year, further weakening it. As the British
troops had taken over New York City and the Continental soldiers had retreated,
many of the newly minted Americans outside the army were also having doubts
about the whole enterprise of creating a new independent nation based on the idea
that all men were created equal. Then things got worse. As the American soldiers crossed into Pennsylvania,
the Continental Congress abandoned Philadelphia on December 12th out of fear of a British invasion,
regrouping in Baltimore, which they complained was dirty and expensive.
These are the times that try men's souls. The author of the American crisis was Thomas Paine,
whose January 1776 pamphlet, Common Sense,
had solidified the colonists' irritation
at the king's ministers into a rejection of monarchy itself,
a rejection not just of King George III, but of all kings.
In early 1776, Paine had told the fledgling Americans,
many of whom still prayed for a return
to the comfortable neglect they had enjoyed
from the British government before 1763,
that the colonies must form their own independent government.
Now he urged them to see the experiment through. He explained that he
had been with the troops as they retreated across New Jersey and,
describing the march for his readers, told them that both officers and men,
though greatly harassed and fatigued, frequently without rest, covering or
provision, the inevitable consequences of a long retreat,
bore it with a manly and martial spirit,
all their wishes centered in one,
which was that the country would turn out
and help them to drive the enemy back.
For that was the crux of it.
Paine had no doubt that patriots
would create a new nation eventually, because the cause of human self-determination was just.
But how long it took to establish that new nation would depend on how much effort people put into success.
I call not upon a few, but upon all. Not on this state or that state, but on every state. Up and help us, lay your shoulders to the
wheel. Better to have too much force than too little when so great an object is at stake,"
Payne wrote. Let it be told to the future world that in the depth of winter, when nothing but hope
and virtue could survive, that the city and the country,
alarmed at one common danger,
came forth to meet and to repulse it.
In mid-December, British Commander General William Howe
had sent most of his soldiers back to New York
to spend the winter,
leaving garrisons across the river in New Jersey
to guard against Washington advancing.
On Christmas night, having heard that the garrison at Trenton was made up of Hessian auxiliaries who were exhausted and unprepared for an attack,
Washington and 2,400 soldiers crossed back over the icy Delaware River in a winter storm.
They marched nine miles to attack the garrison,
the underdressed soldiers suffering
from the cold and freezing rain.
Reaching Trenton, they surprised the outnumbered Hessians,
who fought briefly in the streets before surrendering.
The victory at Trenton restored
the Colonials' confidence in their cause.
Soldiers reenlisted, and in early January,
they surprised the British at Princeton, New Jersey,
driving them back.
The British abandoned their posts in central New Jersey,
and by March, the Continental Congress
moved back to Philadelphia.
Historians credit the battles of Trenton and Princeton
with saving the revolutionary cause.
There is no hard proof that Washington had officers
read the American crisis to his troops
when it came out six days before the march to Trenton,
as some writers have said, but there is little doubt
that they heard it one way or another.
So too did those wavering loyalists.
Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered,
Paine wrote in that fraught moment.
Yet we have this consolation with us,
that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph.
What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly.
It is dearness only that gives everything its value.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.