George Washington Papers

To George Washington from George Clinton, 13 June 1780

From George Clinton

Kingston [N.Y.] 13th June 1780

Dear Sir

Your Excellency’s Letter of the 10th Instant addressed to Lieut. Governor Cortlandt was delivered to me Yesterday Evening and I immediately, forwarded by Express, your Letter to Brigr Genl James Clinton and urged him to the utmost Expedition in his march to West Point.1 I enclose your Excellency a Copy of a Letter from my Brother of the 10th Instant giving the particular Disposition of the Regiments of his Brigade;2 by which it appears that Colo. Gansevoort’s was imployed in escorting a Supply of Provisions to Fort Schuyler. As this appeared to me to be a business of too much Importance to admit of delay or be entrusted to the care of a weak Party I have therefore taken the Liberty of advising him to continue this Regiment on that Service until it shall be accomplished; which I hope will meet your Excellency’s Approbation. I am apprehensive that the other three Regiments (they having previous to the Receipt of your Excellency’s Order marched to the respective Stations mentioned in my Brothers Letter) will not be able to reach West Point on as early a Day as might have been expected. The Militia in the Vicinity of the Posts in the Highlands were before I left Poughkeepsie, put under Orders to hold themselves in constant Readiness to take the field on the shortest Notice & on the Signals of Alarm being given—those on the West Side of the River are to repair to West Point and those on the East Side are to rendezvous at Fishkill & there wait for further Orders. Of this I apprised General Howe at the Time. I now write to him on the Subject3 and if it should be thought necessary by your Excellency I will immediately order such part of them to West Point as your Excellency or General Howe may direct until the arrival of Genl Clinton’s Brigade.

Your Excellency’s several Letters of the 23d & 28th Ultimo & 2d Instant4 were received & opened by Lieut. Governor Cortlandt in my Absence and such of them as were proper to be communicated to the Legislature with the Letters from the Committee of Congress of the 25th Ulto were laid before them5 and I am happy in being able to assure your Excellency that they give me Reason to hope that they will yield a Compliance with the Requisitions made of this State on this important Occasion, except in the Article of Forage of which this State is entirely exhausted.

The moment I closed my last Letter to Genl Schuyler which has been communicated to your Excllency I embarked for Albany with an Intention to intercept the Enemy under Sir John Johnson in their Retreat from Tryon County or to succour Fort Schuyler, if invested, which I then apprehended might have been the Case.6 On my arrival at Albany I soon had Reason to believe that the Report of a Force having marched against that Post was merely calculated to favor Sir John Johnson’s Incursion and as the Militia had collected he had retired about 6 Miles from Johnstown and was preparing to return to Canada by a Route more Northward than that by which he entered the Country I therefore directed Colo. Van Schaick who was at Fort Hunter to march forward & hang close upon & harrass his Rear, to afford time for me to gain his Front with the Militia to the North of Albany which I expected to have been able to effect by striking into Jessups Patent from Fort Edward:7 But before my Letter reached Colo. Van Schaick the Militia in that Quarter, being out of Provisions and finding Sir John retiring, were returning home; which was also the case with those who had assembled & I expected to have found at Fort Edward. Under these Circumstances I found it necessary to alter my Plan, to that of passing Lake George and meeting the Enemy on the Borders of Lake Champlain; which, as the Enemy appeared to be much fatigued by their long March & it was to be presumed would move slow as soon as they were advanced such a Distance as to conceive themselves out of Danger, I conceived might still be practicable. I accordingly reassembled the Militia and with the Levies stationed at Fort Edward & a Detachment of Warner’s Regiment crossed Lake George:8 but tho’ I had a force, superior to that of the Enemy, advanced as far as Bullwaggers Bay below Crown Point,9 the Place at which the Enemy embarked, within eight Days after my leaving this Place I was so unfortunate as to find, judging by the Information of our Scouts & by the appearance of the Bushes & Bark the Enemy had prepared to hut themselves but did not put up & by other Marks as well as the sailing of their Vessels, we were about six Hours too late. I would fain hope however, that the Attempt tho’ unsuccessful may be attended with the good effect of deterring the Enemy from a similar Enterprize as it will at least discover to them the Danger which may attend it. I think it my Duty to inform your Excellency that on my Request I was joined by a Party of 240 of the Militia of the Grants under Colo. Warren & Major Allen whose Behavior on this Occasion in every Respect was very agreable to me.10 I beg your Excellency will pardon me in troubling you with this long Detail, as I wish it only to be received as an appology for not succeeding in an Attempt which I gave you Reason to believe was practicable & which undoubtedly might have been effected had I found Matters in the Train I had reason to have expected.11 I have the Honor to be with the greatest Respect & Esteem Dear Sir Your Excellency’s most Obedt Servant

Geo: Clinton

LS, DLC:GW; ADf, N-Ar: George Clinton Papers. GW’s secretary Robert Hanson Harrison docketed the LS as received on 20 June. GW replied to Clinton on the same day.

2Clinton enclosed a copy of Brig. Gen. James Clinton’s letter to him, dated 10 June at Albany: “I yesterday received a Letter from Capt. Wendell (who had the charge of the Provisions destined for Fort Schuyler & whom I had ordered to halt at Fort Planck until he was joined by Colo. Gansevoort) mentioning that Major Yates had returned from the Flatts and informed him that the late Alarm had been occasioned by a Party of twenty Indians who had burn’t the House of one Staring with one more & three Barns—they took Prisoners a certain Edick & a Girl of seven Years of Age—A Party from Fort Herkeimer sallied out, drove them off & extinguished Orndorf’s House which they had set on fire.

“From this Account it appears that this Party was only intended as a feint to divide our Attention from Sir John. I have however ordered Colo. Gansevoort to proceed with his Convoy up to the Garrison, and detached the fifth Regiment to Caughnawaga, the fourth to Canajoharie & the second to Fort Edward; whatever material may come to my knowlege shall be communicated to you” (DLC:GW).

3On 14 June, Clinton wrote Maj. Gen. Robert Howe. The letter reads in part: “The late Movements of the Enemy towards New Jersey has induced his Excellency Genl. Washington to order my Brother’s Brigade to West Point of which I presume you are aprized. But I fear from their rapid march up, they will not return so soon as coud be wished, or his Excellency the Genl. may be lead to expect as one Divission of them were marched for Tryon County & the other for Fort Edward, before the orders coud possibly reach them and one of the Regiments was detached as an Escort to a Supply of Provission for Fort Schuyler.

“Before I left Poukeepsie to attend the Legislature at this Place [Kingston], I put the Militia of the South End of Ulster, North End of Orange County & of the whole of Dutchess County, under orders to hold themselves in constant Readiness to take the Field on the shortest notice. On the Signal of an alarm being given, those of Ulster & Orange were immediately to repair to West Point & those of Dutchess to rendevouz at Fishkill & there wait for further orders. If I recollect Right I advised you of this at the Time but least I may be mistaken I now mention it that on any Sudden Emergency before the arival of my Brother’s Brigade, the necessary Steps may be taken to avail yourself of their assistance” (Hastings and Holden, Clinton Papers description begins Hugh Hastings and J. A. Holden, eds. Public Papers of George Clinton, First Governor of New York, 1777–1795, 1801–1804. 10 vols. 1899–1914. Reprint. New York, 1973. description ends , 5:820–21).

5For the Committee at Headquarters’s circular letters to the states of 25 May, see GW to the Committee at Headquarters, 25 May, notes 1 and 3.

6Clinton is referring to his letter to Philip Schuyler of 25 May (see Hastings and Holden, Clinton Papers description begins Hugh Hastings and J. A. Holden, eds. Public Papers of George Clinton, First Governor of New York, 1777–1795, 1801–1804. 10 vols. 1899–1914. Reprint. New York, 1973. description ends , 5:754–55). At Clinton’s request, Schuyler, then with the Committee at Headquarters at Morristown, communicated the contents of the letter and its enclosures to GW (see GW to Samuel Huntington, 27–28 May).

For this raid into Tryon County, N.Y., see GW to Huntington, 27–28 May, n.4; see also Goose Van Schaick to GW, 1 June.

7Jessup’s, or Hyde Township, Patent in what is now central Warren County, N.Y., was located on the northern reaches of the Hudson River west of Lake George. The 40,000-acre patent spanned both sides of the river. Ebenezer Jessup and other members of the Jessup family were among the grantees of the patent.

8Col. Seth Warner’s regiment garrisoned Fort George on the southern shore of Lake George.

9Bullwagga (West) Bay, part of Lake Champlain, is located between Crown Point peninsula and the western shore of the lake.

10Gideon Warren (1730–1803), of Tinmouth, Vt., served with Ethan Allen’s “Greene Mountain Boys” and was wounded at Ticonderoga on 10 May 1775. He joined Col. Seth Warner’s regiment as a lieutenant in July 1775. After commanding a company of state troops raised for frontier defense, he became a militia colonel in May 1778. Warren served on Vermont’s board of war in 1781 (see Walton, Vermont Records description begins E. P. Walton, ed. Records of the Governor and Council of the State of Vermont. 8 vols. Montpelier, 1873–80. description ends , 1:216, 260; 2:86, 101).

Ebenezer Allen (1743–1806), of Tinmouth, Vt., joined Warner’s regiment as a lieutenant in July 1775 and became a captain in August 1777. He participated in the Vermont conventions of 1776 and 1777 and held various militia commands from 1778 to the end of the war (see Walton, Vermont Records description begins E. P. Walton, ed. Records of the Governor and Council of the State of Vermont. 8 vols. Montpelier, 1873–80. description ends , 1:228; 2:9, 28, 67). Allen later served four years in the Vermont general assembly.

11For more details of Clinton’s pursuit of the raiders, see Clinton to the Officer commanding the Militia at Castletown & its vicinity, 29 May 1780, in Hastings and Holden, Clinton Papers description begins Hugh Hastings and J. A. Holden, eds. Public Papers of George Clinton, First Governor of New York, 1777–1795, 1801–1804. 10 vols. 1899–1914. Reprint. New York, 1973. description ends , 5:769–70.

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