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Field name | Value |
---|---|
Collection Reference Number | GLC00099.050 |
From Archive Folder | Collection of letters, documents & briefs from Edmund Pendleton to the Madisons |
Title | Edmund Pendleton to James Madison re: war in North Carolina and Benedict Arnold's treason |
Date | 17 October 1780 |
Author | Pendleton, Edmund (1721-1803) |
Recipient | Madison, James |
Document Type | Correspondence |
Content Description | Discusses the war in Charlotte and Salisbury, North Carolina, and Benedict Arnold's treasonous act. Mentions Colonel Sumpter [Sumter?], Colonel Tarlton, and General Gates. |
Subjects | Military History Treason Spying Revolutionary War West Point (US Military Academy) Corruption and Scandal Religion Continental Army Battle President |
People | Pendleton, Edmund (1721-1803) Madison, James (1751-1836) Arnold, Benedict (1741-1801) |
Place written | Edmundsbury, Virginia |
Theme | The American Revolution; The Presidency |
Sub-collection | The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859 |
Additional Information | Toward the end of 1780, morale within the Continental Army reached a low point. Troop strength fell to just 6000, and many officers threatened to resign over unpaid wages and inadequate supplies. In September, one of the frustrated officers--Benedict Arnold (1741-1801)--switched to the British side. Earlier in the war, Arnold had been one of the country's most respected and successful military leaders. In 1775, he led 1100 American soldiers into Canada and suffered a serious leg wound in the unsuccessful American siege of Québec. In 1776 he distinguished himself in a American naval battle on Lake Champlain and played a pivotal role in forcing the British surrender at Saratoga in 1777. Arnold, however, also suffered severe disappointments. In 1777, he was passed over promotion, even though he had more seniority than any of the five men Congress named as major generals. The next year, when Arnold was in command in Philadelphia, the executive council of Pennsylvania accused him of using military personnel to perform personal favors. A court-martial cleared Arnold, but ordered George Washington to reprimand him. Angry at his country's ingratitude, Arnold, who was now in command of West Point, agreed to surrender the post to the British commander Sir Henry Clinton. The capture of British Major John André, who was carrying papers sent by Arnold to Clinton, exposed Arnold's treachery. Arnold fled to British protection while André was hanged. Emigrating to England with his wife, he was shocked to find that he was regarded as anything but a hero. To generations of patriots, Arnold stood as the antithesis of George Washington: he was a man who lacked the moral virtue to resist British offers of 10,000 pounds sterling and a generalship. In the following selection, Edmund Pendleton, a leading Virginia jurist who later served in the Continental Congress and as Virginia's governor, views the uncovering of Arnold's treachery as a sign that God favored the American cause. Thomas Paine held a similar view: "I see so many chances the Treason had of succeeding and every chance opposed by an uncontrived something, that I almost feel myself a Predestinarian." |
Copyright | The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History |
Module | Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859 |
Transcript | Show/hide |