One
foppish high fashion style of dress that made its way from England to Virginia
was the so called“Macaroni”.One
contemporary observer wrote:
“They
indeed make a ridiculous figure, with hats an inch in the brim, that do not
cover, but lie upon the head, with about two pounds of fictitious hair, formed
into what is called a club, hanging down their shoulders…. Their legs are at
times covered with all colours of the rainbow; even flesh-coloured and green
silk stockings are not excluded….Such a figure, essenced and perfumed, with a
bunch of lace sticking out under (the) chin, puzzles the common passenger….”
In
1774, Virginian James Mercer claimed that items had been stolen from him by a
“profound knave” named William Foster Crosby, whom he described as “(dressed)
like a Macaroni”
During the
Revolution British soldiers sang the ditty “Yankee Doodle” mocking Americans as
simpletons who thought if you stuck a feather in your cap you were the
embodiment of high fashion.Americans
adopted the song as a song of defiance.By 1781, “Yankee Doodle” had become a song of national pride.
Yankee
Doodle went to town A-riding on a pony Stuck a feather in his cap And called it macaroni.
Yankee Doodle keep it up Yankee Doodle dandy, Mind the music and the step, And with the girls be handy.
The average age of the Continental soldier was 22,
although soldiers varied in age from 15 to 70.
Continental soldiers came from many different
backgrounds and included African Americans and Native Americans.By 1780 persons of color made up as much as
fifteen percent of the Continental Army.Some estimate range as high as twenty five percent.
To fill the ranks, Congress assigned yearly quotas to
each state, which offered recruiting inducements such as bounties and land grants.States that were unable to fill positions
with volunteers resorted to sending members of the state militia, originally
only mustered to serve within the boundaries of the state, to serve with the
Continental Army.
In 1779, the Continental Congress established the blue
uniform coat as the color for the Army, but shortages of dye meant that many
regiments wore brown or green coats until the end of the war.
Regular United States Infantry during the Revolutionary
War were known as “Continentals” or the “Continental Line.”
Massachusetts and
Virginia each furnished the largest of the state Lines.Each state was
responsible for equipping its own soldiers.
At the beginning of the war equipping troops with
proper firearms was a major problem.Although men usually brought their own weapons when mustered (long
rifles or hunting guns), the lack of uniformity among these weapons was a
problem.
The notorious inaccuracy of the musket made the use of
the bayonet a key element in battlefield tactics.
The opposing armies
lined up facing each other in ranks two or three deep and fired in the direction
of the enemy. The musket was highly inaccurate at a distance greater than 80
yards.
Speed in loading and
firing was more important than aiming.The volume of fire was considered the measure of a good army. Presumably
if you fired enough times you were bound to hit someone.
The battlefield
tactics of the time called for reliance on the musket with a bayonet.
Civilian hunting guns
and rifles were not designed to mount a bayonet. If a fight was confined to
shooting, the Americans had an advantage with their longer range rifles.
If a battle ended
with a bayonet charge, of which the British were masters, the Americans would
be outmatched.
In 1777,
General Washington formed a Corps of Riflemen under the command of the
Virginian Daniel Morgan to take advantage of the long range shooting capability
and accuracy of the rifle.These
riflemen were a special unit, protected by regular Line troops when threatened
by bayonets.
The musket
problem was not resolved until 1777.France became the primary supplier of
military style muskets.
Some 102,000 muskets
were delivered to America between 1776 and 1781.By 1777 the entire Continental Line was
equipped with French muskets.
Until the formation of
the Continental Line in 1775, the American colonies had depended on home grown
militias for their day to day protection.
In times of peace the
militia was more of a social or drinking club than a military organization. Discipline
was lax and training sketchy. Even in times of war, militiamen were reluctant
to serve more than a few weeks away from home.Without them, who would work the farm and provide for the family?
Notwithstanding the shortcomings of
the militia, militiamen often provided essential manpower on the ground at key
moments.British commanders had to take
into account the size of militia forces operating against them when planning
campaigns.Such forces might be
unpredictable, and unsteady in a pitched battle against British regulars, but
they could inflict significant damage, especially in guerilla style attacks.
Even though the militia force was large and
useful, General Washington was convinced that ultimate victory over the British
would require the creation of a national, disciplined, professional army.He created this Continental Army which would
serve the American war effort well, with the militia providing significant
support.
The first widely distributed artistic rendition
of the Battle of the Little Bighorn was called “The Battle on the Little Big Horn River: The death struggle of General Custer.” Using a wood engraving based on a drawing by
W.M. Cary, The Daily Graphic: an
Illustrated Evening Newspaper, published
in New York, was able to portray the scene of battle as early as July 19, 1876.
The newspaper, which was the first in America
to publish daily illustrations, may have been the first in print, but the
depiction was not accurate.Custer is
seen standing on a boulder, waving a saber, in a double breasted coat with a
sash, which made him look more like a desperado or a pirate than a soldier.
Many regard Edgar S. Paxon’s “Custer’s Last Stand”
as the best pictorial representation of the battle.Arriving in Montana in 1877, the artist spent twenty years researching, and
eight years painting the monumental work, interviewing nearly one hundred men
on both sides including the Sioux chief Gall.
From these interviews Paxson, in his effort to achieve
historical accuracy, made detailed journals about the equipment, attire,
and physical location of each man on the battlefield.
The painting now resides at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West in
Wyoming.
In 1884 the artists Cassilly Adams completed a painting he
named “Custer’s Last Fight.”The
painting was sold to John Ferber the owner of a saloon in St. Louis, Missouri,
where the picture was prominently displayed. The brewer Adolphus Busch
acquired the painting and the saloon in 1892 when Ferber went broke.
Busch commissioned Otto F. Becker, to produce lithographs
based on the painting to be used as advertising. The first advertising
prints appeared in 1896 with a run of fifteen thousand prints. There have
been eighteen subsequent editions with over one million copies having been
produced. The original Adams painting was destroyed by fire on June 13,
1946.
This painting has been criticized for having many historical
inaccuracies, including what appears to be a Zulu warrior rushing at Custer.
The renowned artist of the American Old West, Charles M. Russell
produced the lithograph “The Custer Fight” in 1903 depicting the battle from
the view of the Native American combatants.
"The Battle of Little
Bighorn" was painted by Kicking Bear in 1898 at the request of the western
artist Frederick Remington.Kicking
Bear fought at the Little Bighorn.His
drawing is a significant view of the battle as seen by Native Americans.
In 1775 Great Britain
depended on the Royal
Navy to maintain trade and project British
power.Throughout the war the British
could strike when and where they would along the virtually undefended American
coastline.
The British army
numbered 48,000 men, about a quarter of the size of the French army.Unlike the navy which depended on
conscription and impressment for manpower, the British Army at the time of the
American Revolution was a volunteer
force.
Volunteers were farm
laborers or the unemployed, and usually in their early twenties.A life in the army provided steady pay,
regular meals and an escape
from poverty.The non-commissioned officers were the backbone of the army and insured
strict discipline and rigorous training.
As
the war progressed, the army expanded rapidly.Some fifty thousand British soldiers fought in America.
Two
short periods ofimpressment were tried, in which
unemployed men were taken into the army.This proved so unpopular in Britain that it was quickly abandoned.
The
British turned to a well-established eighteenth century custom to augment their
numbers namely hiring foreign auxiliaries.
Approximately
30,000 German troops were hired by the British to fight during the American
Revolution. Most of these troops were from the German princely state of
Hesse-Cassel, and hence the term “Hessians” came to be applied to all German
troops in America no matter which princely state from which they may actually have
originated.
Soldierswere
a major export for Hesse-Cassel.Boys
were registered for military service at the age of seven.Men from the ages of sixteen to thirty
presented themselves annually for possible induction.School dropouts, bankrupts, and the
unemployed could be inducted at any time.Life in the Hessian army was marked by harsh discipline, but had
economic benefits.Wages were higher
than farm work and there was a promise of additional official money from the
sale of captured military property.There was also the lure of making money by plundering civilians, which
although officially forbidden was widespread.
Early in the war, the Continental Congress
devised a plan offering fifty acres of land, freedom to practice their
religion, and civil liberties to German deserters.Thousands of former Hessian soldiers did
indeed remain in America after the war.
After betraying his country, Benedict Arnold accepted a commission in the British army. After the war Benedict Arnold was not
celebrated when he arrived in England.
He tried to advise British politicians to continue the fight for America
despite the defeat at Yorktown.Members
of Parliament expressed the hope that the government would never put Arnold at
the head of a part of the British army lest “the sentiments of true honour,
which every British officer (holds) dearer than life, should be (offended).”
Arnold next tried his hand at business.He was turned down for a position in the East
India Company where great fortunes were being made with the explanation that
the purity of his conduct was generally thought low.
In 1785, Arnold tried land speculation in
Canada and trading in the West Indies.The entire family moved to Canada in 1787, where the quarrelsome
Arnold became involved in a series of bad business deals and petty
lawsuits.He became so unpopular that
the townspeople of Saint John, New Brunswick burned him in effigy in front of
his house as his family watched.
The
family returned to London in 1791.In July 1792, Arnold fought a
duel with the Earl of Lauderdale who had impugned his honor.When war broke out with France he outfitted a
privateer and sailed for the West Indies.By 1801 Arnold’s health began to fail.After four days of delirium he died on June 14, 1801 at the age of sixty
leaving debts and a name synonymous with treachery.
Lieutenant Colonel
Banastre Tarleton who led the fearsome Loyalist British Legion returned to England in triumph at the end of the American Revolution. He was universally acclaimed for his legendary exploits
in the American war and became a close friend of the Prince of Wales (the
future King George IV).In 1787 Tarleton
wrote History of the Campaigns of 1780 and
1781 in the Southern Provinces of North America.In 1790 he was elected to Parliament, where he
served for over twenty years. In the
Napoleonic Wars, Tarleton served under the Duke of Wellington reaching the
rank of lieutenant general in 1801.In 1815, he was awarded a baronetcy.
In 2006, four Patriot regimental
colors captured by Tarleton in 1779 and 1780 were auctioned by Sotheby’s in New
York City on Flag Day.Lot No. 1
consisted of one flag.Lot No. 2 consisted of the three regimental
colors of the 3rd Virginia Detachment that Tarleton captured at the
Battle of Waxhaws (also known as The Waxhaws Massacre).Passed down in Tarleton’s family for almost
two hundred and fifty years these battle flags were the last American Revolutionary
War colors known to remain in British hands and the last such colors to remain
in private hands anywhere.The fiercely contested
auction lasted fourteen minutes and raised $17.3 million. The three Virginia
flags sold for $5.0 million.The private
buyer remains anonymous, but the flags have occasionally been exhibited
publicly.
Despite his
defeat at Yorktown, Lord Charles Cornwallis was
cheered when he landed in England on January 21, 1782.He retained the confidence of
successive British governments and was appointed Governor-General and
Commander-in-chief in India in 1786.He
successfully led British forces to victory in the Third Anglo-Mysore War from
1789 to 1792.In 1798 Cornwallis was
appointed Lord Lieutenant and Commander-in-chief of Ireland.The spirit of revolution had swept the
British out of America and now threatened to do the same thing in Ireland.Disaffected Irishmen began to assert their
“constitutional rights” and sought aid from the French who had staged their own
revolution in 1789.A massive force of
26,000 was assembled under Lord Cornwallis which crushed the Irish rebellion
and repulsed a French invasion of Ireland.Following his service in Ireland, Cornwallis was reappointed to India in
1805 where he died of fever at the age of sixty-six not long after his arrival.