Letters from an American - June 13, 2025
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June 13, 2025.
Two hundred and fifty years ago, on June 14, 1775, the Second Continental Congress resolved
that six companies of expert riflemen be immediately raised in Pennsylvania, two in Maryland, and two in Virginia.
That each company consist of a captain, three lieutenants,
four sergeants, four corporals, a drummer or trumpeter,
and 68 privates.
And that each company, as soon as completed,
shall march and join the army near Boston
to be there employed as light infantry
under the command of the chief officer in that army."
And thus, Congress established the Continental Army.
The first Continental Congress, which met in 1774,
refused to establish a standing army,
afraid that a bad government
could use an army against
its people. The Congress met in opposition to the British Parliament's closing of the
Port of Boston and imposition of martial law there, but its members hoped they could repair
their relationship with King George III and simply sent entreaties to the King to end
what were known as the Intolerable Acts.
In 1775, the battles of Lexington and Concord changed the equation.
On April 19, British soldiers opened fire on colonists, just as patriot leaders feared
they might.
In the aftermath of that deadly day, about 15,000 untrained Massachusetts militiamen
converged on Boston and laid siege to the town where they bottled up about 6,500
British regulars. The battles of Lexington and Concord made it clear the
British government endangered American liberties. The Second Continental
Congress met in what's now called Independence Hall
in Philadelphia on May 10, 1775, to address the crisis in Boston. The delegates overcame
their suspicions of a standing army to conclude they must bring the various state militias
into a Continental organization to stand against King George III.
With the establishment of the Continental Army, a British officer, General Charles Lee, resigned
his commission in the British Army and published a public letter explaining that the King's
overreach had turned him away from service in His Majesty's army and toward the Patriots.
Whenever it shall please His Majesty to call me forth to any honorable service against the natural,
hereditary enemies of our country,
or in defense of His just rights and dignity,
no man will obey the righteous summons
with more zeal and alacrity than myself," he wrote.
But the present measures seem to me so absolutely subversive
of the rights and liberties of every individual subject,
so destructive to the whole empire at large,
and ultimately so ruinous to His Majesty's own person,
dignity, and family, that I think myself obliged in
conscience as a citizen, Englishman, and soldier of a free state, to exert my utmost to defeat
them."
After they established a Continental Army, the next thing Congress members did was to name a French and Indian War veteran, Virginia Planter George Washington, Commander-in-Chief.
To Washington fell the challenge of establishing an army to defend the nation, without creating a military a tyrant could use to repress the people. It was not an easy project. The Continental Army was made up of
volunteers who were loyal primarily to the officers they had chosen. And because
Congress still feared a standing army, their enlistments initially were short.
Different units trained with different field manuals, making it hard to turn
them into a unified fighting force. Women came to the camps with their men, often bringing their
children. The women worked for the half rations the government provided, washing, cooking, hauling
water, and tending the wounded. After an initial bout of enthusiasm at the start of the war,
men stopped enlisting, and in 1777, Congress increased the times of enlistment to three years or for the duration of the conflict.
That meant that the men in the Army were more often poor
than wealthy, enlisting for the bounties offered,
and Congress found it easy to overlook those 12,000 people
encamped about 18 miles to the northwest of Philadelphia
in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania for six months
in the hard winter of 1777 to 1778.
The Congress had no way to compel the states
to provide money, food, or supplies for the Army,
and the Army almost fell apart for lack of support.
Supply chains broke as the British captured food or it spoiled in transit to the soldiers.
And wartime inflation meant Congress
did not appropriate enough money for food.
Hunger and disease stalked the camp,
but even worse was the lack of clothing.
More than 1,000 soldiers died,
and about eight or 10 deserted every day.
Washington warned the president of the Continental Congress
that the men were close to mutiny,
even as a group of army officers were working
with congressmen to replace Washington,
complaining about how he was prosecuting the war.
By February 1778, a delegation from the Continental Congress
had visited Valley Forge,
and understanding
that the lack of supplies made the Army, and thus the country, truly vulnerable, set out
to reform the Supply Department.
Then, a newly arrived Prussian officer, Baron Friedrich von Steuben, drilled the soldiers
into unity and better morale.
And then, in May, the soldiers learned that
France had signed a treaty with the American states in February, lending money, materiel,
and men to the cause of American independence. The Army survived.
By the end of 1778, the main theater of the war had shifted to the south, where British officers hoped to recruit loyalists to their side.
Instead, guerrilla bands helped General Nathaniel Green bait the British into a war of endurance
that finally ended on October 19, 1781, at the Battle of Yorktown in Virginia, where
British General Charles Cornwallis surrendered to General Washington
and French Commander Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, Comte de Rochambeau.
The Continental Army had defeated the Army of the King and established a nation based
on the principle that all men were created equal and had a right to have a say in the government
under which they lived.
In September 1783, negotiators concluded
the Treaty of Paris that formally ended the war
and Congress discharged most of the troops still in service.
In his November 2nd farewell address to his men,
Washington noted that their victory against
such a formidable power was little short of a standing miracle.
Who has before seen a disciplined army formed at once from such raw materials, Washington
wrote.
Who, that was not a witness, could imagine that the most violent local prejudices would
cease so soon, and that men who came from the different parts of the continent, strongly
disposed by the habits of education to despise and quarrel with each other, would instantly
become but one patriotic band of brothers.
With the Army disbanded, General Washington himself stepped away from military leadership.
On December 23rd, Washington addressed Congress, saying,
Having now finished the work assigned me,
I retire from the great theater of action,
and bidding an affectionate farewell
to this august body under whose orders I have so long acted, I here offer my commission
and take my leave of all the employments of public life."
In 1817, given the choice of subjects to paint for the Rotunda in the U.S. Capitol
being rebuilt after the British had burned it during the War of 1812, fine artist John Trumbull
picked the moment of Washington's resignation from the Army. As he discussed the project with
President James Madison, Trumbull told the President,
I have thought that one of the highest moral lessons ever given to the world was that presented
by the conduct of the Commander-in-Chief in resigning his power and commission as he did,
when the Army, perhaps, would have been unanimously with him, and few of the people disposed to
resist his retaining the power which he had used with such happy success and such irreproachable
moderation.
Madison agreed, and the painting of a man voluntarily walking away from the leadership of a powerful army,
rather than becoming a dictator, hangs today in the Capitol rotunda.
It is the story of this army, 250 years old today, that President
Donald J. Trump says he is honoring with a military parade in Washington, DC, although it also
happens to be his 79th birthday.
But the celebration of ordinary people who fought against tyranny will be happening not
just in the nation's capital, but all across the country. As Americans participating in at least 2,000 planned, no-kings protests,
recall the principles American patriots championed 250 years ago.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, dead in Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.