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Field name | Value |
---|---|
Collection Reference Number | GLC01032 |
From Archive Folder | Documents Relating to 1778 |
Title | Manifesto and proclamation to the members of the Congress [broadside] |
Date | 3 October 1778 |
Author | Clinton, Henry, Sir (1730-1795) |
Recipient | Congress |
Document Type | Broadside |
Content Description | Evans 15832. Double-column format. Issued by the British Peace Commissioners Lord Carlisle, Sir Henry Clinton and William Eden after the failure of their peace initiative. Offered a general amnesty and pardon with internal self-government and the repeal of Parliamentary taxation. |
Subjects | Amnesty Pardon Taxes or Taxation Military History Global History and Civics Revolutionary War Loyalist Continental Congress Congress Government and Civics |
People | Franklin, Benjamin (1706-1790) Clinton, Henry, Sir (1730-1795) Auckland, William Eden, Baron (1744-1814) |
Place written | New York |
Theme | The American Revolution; Creating a New Government; Banking & Economics |
Sub-collection | The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859 |
Additional Information | In May 1778, General Henry Clinton (1738-1795) became commander of chief of British forces. He replaced William Howe (1729-1814), who was occupying Philadelphia. The British ministry ordered Clinton to abandon Philadelphia, go to New York, and dispatch some of his troops to the West Indies. While marching across New Jersey toward New York, patriots attacked neared Monmouth Court House, and Clinton's forces counterattacked. The Battle of Monmouth Court, which ended in a draw, was the last major battle in the North. France, eager to rebuilt its prestige and power after the humiliating defeat in the Seven Years' War, had secretly aided America with money, arms, and supplies, and then in 1778 entered the war, thanks in part of Benjamin Franklin's successful diplomacy. Spain followed France in 1779, hoping to recover Gibraltar and the Floridas. In May 1780, French Count Rochambeau would land at Newport, Rhode Island, with 6000 troops, who would eventually march south to Yorktown in Virginia. Alarmed in February 1778 by France's intervention, Lord North sent commissioners to North America with a peace offer, renouncing the right of taxing Americans. But Congress rejected this offer June 17, since with the French alliance, independence had become an attainable goal. Clinton subsequently offered amnesty to Americans and argued that only France would benefit from continued warfare. Clinton's proclamation of October 3, 1778, represented Britain's last formal attempt at reconciliation, offering the colonists all they had originally wanted. |
Copyright | The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History |
Module | Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859 |
Transcript | Show/hide |