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Collection Reference Number GLC02437.10138
From Archive Folder The Henry Knox Papers [0065] 16-30 September 1783 
Title Henry Knox to George Washington requesting information regarding an officers' petition to Congress in which officers would be granted lands in place of their back pay
Date 17 September 1783
Author Knox, Henry (1750-1806)  
Recipient Washington, George  
Document Type Correspondence; Military document; Government document
Content Description Knox, Commander at West Point, writes, "I cannot refrain from communicating the joy I feel, and the pleasure manifested by the officers in general, upon the noble testimony of gratitude exhibited by Congress in their resolve concerning the equestrian statue..." Requests information regarding an officers' petition to Congress in which officers would be granted lands in place of their back pay. Assures Washington, "Were the prayer of the petition to be granted, the officers in a very few years would make the swift settlement on the frontiers, and form a strong barrier against the barbarians..." Suggests the creation of the office of master general of ordnance, noting that the current Minister of War (Benjamin Lincoln, Secretary at War) does not predict the appointment of a successor to his post. Asserts that the master general of ordnance would "...reside near Congress to execute such orders as they should think proper for the dignity or security of the republick." Expresses his wish for Washington to keep this letter in confidence. Notes that if he were appointed as master general of ordnance, he would give the post his "zealous assistance." His wife Lucy sends her respectful regards to Martha Washington. Knox's retained draft.
Subjects Revolutionary War  Revolutionary War General  Military History  Monument  Art, Music, Theater, and Film  Congress  Petition  Soldier's Pay  Land Transaction  Frontiers and Exploration  American Indian History  Office Seeker  National Security  First Lady  Continental Congress  
People Knox, Henry (1750-1806)  Washington, George (1732-1799)  Washington, Martha (1731-1802)  Knox, Lucy Flucker (1756-1824)  
Place written West Point, New York
Theme The American Revolution; The Presidency; Government & Politics
Sub-collection The Henry Knox Papers
Additional Information In 1783, Congress voted to commission an equestrian sculpture of George Washington; sculptor Thomas Crawford received the commission in the mid-nineteenth century. Knox became the first Secretary of War in George Washington's cabinet, serving from 1789-1794.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859
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