In For Want of a Nail, Sobel takes a page from our own history, and has Lord North send a peace commission to the Continental Congress in the spring of 1778 headed by the Earl of Carlisle. In our own history, this came after the surrender of Burgoyne's army at the Battle of Saratoga, and was a desperate attempt by North to forestall a military alliance between the American rebels and the French. In our history, North deliberately deceived the commission's members by failing to tell them that he had ordered General Clinton to evacuate Philadelphia. Had he done so, of course, the commissioners would have known that their mission was doomed to failure, and they would have refused to go. As it was, the mission had already failed before the commissioners set out from London, since the Americans and the French had already signed an alliance in February.
One would expect that a British victory at Saratoga would have made the North ministry more determined than ever to use military force to crush the American rebellion. This would have been consistent with 15 years of previous British policy, which was based on a dismissal of American concerns and contempt for the Americans as people. However, Sobel was evidently interested in exploring a world where the Americans returned to being loyal British subjects, and a long, costly British military campaign in America, even if successful, would have sowed the seeds of lasting enmity between Britain and America. So, instead of military conquest, Sobel shows us a British government willing to use negotiations, and satisfaction of American grievances, to end the war. In the Sobel Timeline, the Carlisle Commission basically offers the Americans the same terms as it did in our history. With the Rebellion going much worse for the Americans, this turns out to be an offer that the Americans can't refuse.
* * *
(this section continues on from the Joseph Galloway section)
In London, rumors of victory
and defeat in America
came hard upon one another’s heels. Word came first of defeat at Bennington, then at Freeman’s Farm, then at Bemis Heights.
All of London held its breath, as if fearing
that the next news from America
would tell of Burgoyne’s surrender to Gates. Instead, news came of Gates’
defeat, and the disintegration of his army. Burgoyne’s victory, along with Howe’s
capture of Philadelphia and his repulse of Washington’s counterattack, raised the prestige of the
North ministry, and discredited those like Burke and Wilkes who had denounced
the ministry’s America
policy. Finally, North received word from Paul Wentworth, his agent in Paris, that the French government had grown discouraged by
the news from America
and was cutting off its supplies of money and arms to the rebels. Wentworth
also reported that he had been approached by Franklin, who wished to negotiate
an end to the Rebellion and the return of the colonies to British rule. [1]
If the Americans had given up hope of winning their
independence, North had given up hope of the military conquest of the
rebellious colonies. Burgoyne’s report on his victory had stressed the failure
of the expected Loyalist uprising to occur, and the stiff resistance he had
encountered from the rebels. He also emphasized the precarious nature of his
occupation of Albany,
and the general anti-British sentiment of the surrounding country. [2] With
these facts in mind, on February 16, 1778, North called a secret meeting of the
Cabinet to discuss a possible negotiated settlement of the conflict. No one
present disagreed with North’s analysis of the general situation: the ministry
had erred badly in its response to the Americans’ growing intransigence in the
Crisis, misreading the temper of the American colonists, and the strength of
Loyalist sentiment. Instead of cowing the Americans into submission, the
ministry’s policies had stiffened the Americans’ resolve to resist, and finally
driven them into open rebellion.
Without revealing the source of his information, North
informed the Cabinet that the Americans were prepared to return to British rule
provided that there was a general settlement of colonial grievances along the
lines of Galloway’s Plan of Union. There were
heated objections from a few members, notably Lord Germain, but a majority of
the Cabinet sided with North, as long as the proposal was seen to emanate from
the ministry rather than the colonists. A month later, a commission headed by
the Earl of Carlisle was sent to the Congress to offer the proposed settlement.
[3]
Events in America
continued to favor the reconciliationists. Disillusioned former soldiers from
the Continental Army blamed the Congress, and the revolutionary state
governments, for the military failures suffered at Saratoga-Albany and Philadelphia. In Virginia, for instance, Governor Patrick Henry was
deposed by Theodorick Bland, who had served as a cavalry commander in the
Continental Army under Washington.
Bland and his supporters (most of whom, like him, were former members of the
Continental Army), raised up Edmund Pendleton in Henry’s place. Pendleton
issued instructions to Virginia’s delegation
to the Congress to support efforts at reconciliation with Britain,
leading to the resignations of the radical members Richard Henry Lee and Joseph
Jones. [4]
Events in Virginia
were echoed elsewhere in the rebellious colonies. By the time the Earl of
Carlisle’s commission arrived in America
in early May, reconciliationists had gained control of the Congress, and Galloway was one of its most prominent members, replacing
Carroll as President on May 23. Under Galloway’s leadership, the Congress
agreed on May 27 to ask Lord North for an armistice based on the Carlisle proposals. Carlisle
sent word to the British military leadership of the agreement, and they began
making preparations for the joint military rule of the reunited colonies that
would cause them to be known as the Four Viceroys. The formal articles for
armistice were signed by Carlisle and Galloway
on June 12, 1778, and over the next two weeks most of the remaining rebel
militia surrendered to their British counterparts. The North American Rebellion
was over. [5]
1. Dame Brook Alyson. Lord
North and His Times (London,
2001), pp. 356-62.
2. Wesley Van Luvender. The
Military Thought and Actions of John Burgoyne (New York, 1944), p. 476-79.
3. Henderson
Bundy. The Carlisle Commission (New York, 2005), pp.
34-36.
4. Patricia Foster Gooch. Virginia in Rebellion, 1775-1778 (Norfolk, 1997), pp.
282-93.
5. Bundy. The Carlisle Commission, pp. 203-11.
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