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George Washington's Rules of Civility
By Cliff Dickinson

George Washington did not have what we call quote "quick intelligence."   He was not known for being able to think fast on his feet.  This does not mean Washington was not bright; he just did not process information rapidly.   His lackluster performance in the critical military campaign of 1776 of New York was largely due to the fact that his adversary evaluated tactical situations and reached decisions faster.  Washington's three victories in the Revolution followed periods where he was afforded time to deliberate.  His seven defeats came in fluid, rapidly developing battlefield situations.

Washington was very well trained in mathematics.  In fact, few college graduates today, unless they major in math, become so well informed in that subject.   But Washington was not a man of letters, or science, or of the law.  He was neither a phrase maker, nor an original thinker.  He never prepared a treatise on government or politics.  Instead, conviction, leadership skills and vision, all acquired through personal experience, carried Washington from the farmlands of Virginia to the battle fields of the War for independence and eventually, to the first presidency of the US.

Gentility and courtesy were also important elements of Washington's success.   Before the end of his public life, he could converse with heads of state and common soldiers.  He knew how to behave in royal courts and local taverns.   He knew how to conduct himself in virtually every situation.  Washington's principles of decorum were few and simple, the most important of which was "to be honest and just...and to exact it from others".  These maximums were instilled in him at a relatively young age.

Before his sixteenth year, George Washington had copied by hand, 110 Rules of Civility and Decent Behavior in Company in Conversation.  They were based on a code of personal conduct composed by French Jusuits in 1595 and translated into English in 1640.  The rules were copied by an adolescent Washington as part of an assigned exercise in penmanship.  They proved to be a formative influence in the development of his character.  The initial Rules of Civility included guidelines for behavior and pleasant company, appropriate actions in formal situations, and general courtesies.  Washington carried them with him for the rest of his life.

Today many of these rules sound a little fussy, if not downright silly.   Some are outdated and humorous.  Many are practical.  Others are timeless.  Let me offer a few examples of each.

Humorous:  Spit not in the fire, nor stoop low before it.   Neither put your hands into the flames to warm them, nor set your feet upon the fire, especially if there be meat before it.  In other words, don't spit in the kitchen and don't put your hands to close to a flame.

Shake not they head, feet, nor leg; role not the eyes; lift not one eyebrow higher than the other; wry not to mouth; and bedew no man's face with your spittle by approaching to near him when you speak.  Don't make strange faces at people, and when you get excited, make sure you're not spitting on anyone.

Kill no vermin as fleas, lice, ticks etc. in the sight of others; if you see any filth or thick spittle, put your foot dexterously upon; if it be upon the cloths of your companions, put it off privately; and if it be upon your own clothes, returned thanks to him who pushes it off.  Don't squish bugs around other people; and if there's gunk on your friends cloths take it off when people aren't looking; also, if someone takes gunk off your clothes, thank them for it.

Do not puff up your cheeks; loll not out the tongue, rub the hands, or beard, thrust out the lips, bite them, or keep the lips too open or close.   Don't do weird stuff with your mouth.

When in company, put not your hands to any part of the body, not usually discovered.   Don't fidget or scratch your private parts in public.

Practical:  It is unbecoming to stoop too much to one's meat.   Keep your fingers clean and when foul, wipe them on a corner of your table napkin.   Bring your food to your mouth, not your mouth to your food.  Keep your hands clean by using your napkin.

Let your discourse with men of business be short and comprehensive.   When you speak, be concise.

Undertake not to teach your equal in the art and himself professes, it savors of arrogance.  It's pretty arrogant to assume you can teach a friend something he already knows.

Take all admonitions thankfully in what time or place so ever given, but afterwards, not being culpable, take a time and place convenient to let him know it that gave them.  If you get blamed for something you didn't do, make sure your conscience is clear, then tell the person who blamed you that you did nothing wrong.

The gestures of the body must be suited to the discourse you are upon.   The way you gesture with your hands should match what you're talking about.

Do not laugh too much or too loud in public.  Do not laugh too much or too loud in public.

Timelessness:  When a man does all he can, though it succeeds not well, blame not him that did it.  When a person does his best and fails, do not criticize him.

Reproach none for the infirmities of nature, nor delight to put them that have in mind thereof.  Don't be mean to people about how they look, don't call attention to other people's problems, and if someone is not as lucky as you, don't rub it in.

Speak not of evil of the absent, for it is unjust.  Don't talk about someone behind their backs.

When you deliver a matter, do it with passion and with discretion, however mean the person be you do it to.  When you take up a task, do it with all your heart, even if there is little reward.

Undertake not what you cannot perform, but be careful to keep your promise.   Don't promise more than you can deliver, and make sure yo follow through.

Every action done in company to be with some sign of respect to those who are present.   Respect others.

When you speak of God or his attributes, let it be seriously and with reverence.   Honor and obey your natural parents although they be poor.  Don't take God's name in vain; Honor your parents even if they aren't rich.

Labor to keep alive in your breast that little celestial fire called conscious.   Work on listening to your conscience.

In his book on Washington, Richard Brookhiser wrote that "all modern manners in the Western world were originally aristocratic.  Courtesy meant behavior appropriate to the court; chivalry comes from chevalier - a knight".  In leading a revolution, George Washington dedicated himself to freeing America from a court's control.  One of his greatest victories may have been in proving that manners could survive the operation.

A gentleman is someone who makes others feel comfortable.  Goof manners are simply a matter of common sense and courtesy.  Today, unfortunately, there are many quick to dismiss them as outdated and more appropriate to an era of quill pens and powdered wigs.  The truth is that manners reflect a focus increasingly difficult to find in a world of cellular phones, express lanes, business lunches, and political correctness.

Fussy or not, the rules of civility represent more than just manners.   They all have in common a focus on other people, rather than a narrow regard for self-interest.  The rules represent small sacrifices that everyone should be willing to make for the good of community and the sake of living together.   Without realizing it, the Jesuits who wrote them, and the young man who copied them, were outlining and absorbing a system of courtesy appropriate to everyone.

When the company for whom the decent behavior was to be performed expanded to the nation, George Washington was ready.  Mason Locke Weems got it right when he wrote in his biography of the first president that it was "no wonder everybody honored him who honored everybody".

Mr. Dickinson made his presentation to the Sons of the American Revolution on November 11, 2004.  He has taught American History at St. Christopher's School for twenty years.  Mr. Dickinson is a frequent book reviewer for the Richmond Times Dispatch, for five summers performed archival work at the Museum of the Confederacy and for ten summers worked as a National Park Service ranger.  Cliff has a MA degree from Edinboro University near Erie, Pennsylvania.  Cliff, his wife Crystal, daughter and son live in Richmond, Virginia.




Freedom in 1776, Freedom Since Then, and Freedom Forever
A Tribute to the Spirit of Nathan Hale
by Ralph Nelson, State Historian for the Delaware Society SAR, 2005

This is a big topic, and we have a short time to talk about it.  What will you remember?  What will you do?  Listen, learn, and act accordingly!

Freedom.  What is it?  We may define freedom as being able to do what you want to do (that doesn't hurt anyone) – such as walking down the street with a group of your friends, singing a popular song.  We might also define freedom as having resources that ensure that you won't have to face an unpleasant situation – such as having enough food at home that you won't starve.   There are many meanings, and each generation has a duty to create, maintain, and extend our freedoms.

Several years have passed since September 11, 2001, when mail containing anthrax spores was sent to many members of Congress on the same day that four simultaneously-hijacked jetliners killed thousands of people in the World Trade Towers and the Pentagon.   Do you remember what happened during those days?

Did you feel fear as you watched the towers collapse or as you opened your mail during the next month?  Do you feel that your freedom is threatened by conflicts in the Middle East or by the AID's epidemic?  I certainly felt my freedom was threatened by world events when I was a child during WWII.   Here is my advice to help you secure as much freedom of action and freedom from fear in the next fifty years as I have had in the last fifty years.

IN 1776 FREEDOM MEANT SECURING THE RIGHTS OF ENGLISH MEN

Nathan Hale was a 20-year-old college Yale graduate teaching school in New London when he joined the Connecticut militia on July 6, 1775.  He became a captain in the 19th Continental Regiment on Jan 1, 1776.  After the British captured New York City he volunteered to spy on British troop dispositions there.

He was discovered on September 21, 1776, and hanged the next day.  The spirit of his dedication is indicated by what he supposedly said to his captors, "I regret that I have but one life to give for my country".  Nathan Hale had no children and thus no descendants today, but six of his nine brothers served in the American army, and his uncle – Benajah Strong – served in the militia and the Connecticut legislature.  Some of their descendants are members of the SAR and DAR.  What was Nathan Hale fighting for?

In the US, we sometimes say to our children – "One day you might grow up to be President".  Suppose you lived in Connecticut in 1770.  Could you have said to a child in 1770 "You might grow up to be King?"  Absolutely not, and you also couldn't have said "a member of parliament" or "an officer in the Royal Navy" or even "be manager of a factory".  The privileges of governance, national defense, and manufacturing were reserved for people who lived in the mother country (England), while colonists were allowed only limited control over local matters.  The residents of Connecticut were second class citizens in 1770, and any office that involved activities outside of their colony was forbidden to them.  But the King of England began to extinguish all self-governance and prestige that the colonists had previously been allowed.  In response the colonists rebelled against what they rightfully perceived was a movement to enslave them to agents of the crown.  Nathan Hale was fighting for the freedom to participate in governing the nation and for the freedom to be considered for any office or work in the nation.

SINCE 1776 WE HAVE EXTENDED FREEDOM TO MORE U.S. CITIZENS

The Declaration of Independence starts with the words "We hold these truths to be self-evident..."  This declaration was based on the philosophy of natural rights, a philosophy developed by Europe intellectuals but never implemented by any government.  After the U.S. acquired independence from England our legislators argued and compromised and published discussions to gain popular support for a structure of representative governance that would survive the natural passions and greed of humankind.  The original Constitution simply described the functions and structure of the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of a national government, but it neither mentioned nor protected what the rebellious colonists had fought and died to secure – individual freedoms.  Several states refused to ratify the Constitution until the Bill of Rights – the first ten amendments – was added to protect these freedoms.

Fifty years ago I was about your age, and while you might have said to "You might grow to be President" to me, you probably wouldn't have said it to my sister, or to my Catholic cousins, or to my college classmate Leon Nelson – who was a great basketball player, but was the wrong color to be considered a potential President of the United States.

The elite group of men who led us to break away from England and who wrote the Declaration of Independence were not ready to implement the sweeping social changes implied by the phrase "all humans should have equal rights and freedoms".   The compromises they made to solidify support for the Constitution denied large groups of people the right to vote, although they might still benefit from "certain inalienable rights" protected by the first ten Amendments.  And for a century after explicit slavery was ended by a Civil War that killed tens of thousands of young men, nationwide racism prevented full participation by people of color in voting and in employment.

The rights of women to vote and to have their work rewarded without regard for their gender or marital status also required a struggle lasting over a hundred years to end explicit discrimination, and this battle is also not yet over.   However, the basic principle is now fairly well established – all citizens have a claim to basic rights and all citizens should have a fair chance to develop and to use their talents and to be equitably rewarded and recognized for their achievements.  No one in the US should be a second class citizen.

Here are two people who are remembered for their actions to extend freedom.

Martin Luther King was a Christian leader who led large numbers of youth to take nonviolent action to help the nation realize that they majority culture cannot achieve freedom if a significant minority is denied equal opportunity to vote and to work.  Just as earlier political activists adapted the philosophy of natural rights from Europe, King adapted the tactic of nonviolent action from political activists in India.  We should remember that we owe much to the rest of the world, and the rest of the world should remember that they owe much to us.

Diana, Princess of Wales, was frequently in the news because of her royal wedding at age 19, her international travels in elegant clothes, her marital troubles, and her tragic death caused by a drunk driver.  Her contribution to freedom was in raising significant support for clearing the minefields that maim dozens of people every day and prevent use of large areas of land.  She is included in this talk because she is a descendant of Benajah Strong, the uncle of Nathan Hale.  Thus Diana's son, Prince William of England is a descendant of both the patriot Benajah Strong and also of bad old King George the III, whose actions caused the American Revolution.  Thus Prince William is eligible to join the Sons of the American Revolution.  Times change, and the descendants of old enemies can and do marry and work together.

FREEDOM FOREVER REQUIRES SECURING FREEDOM WORLDWIDE

The good news is that the success of our revolution has encouraged many other colonies and nations to throw off the chains of foreign or domestic enslavement.   In most cases the price of liberty was high.  Thousand os men died in France, in Russia, and in China as revolutionaries drunk with power went far beyond governmental reform and attempted to kill off whole classes of people.   In many colonies such as Ireland and Hungary self-governance was not achieved until after several revolts were crushed, during which many of the leaders were hanged or shot.

The bad news is that a successful USA can be viewed with jealous hatred when frustrated people living under oppressive regimes feel that if we are not actively aiding them we must be working against them.  And an oppressive leader rightfully fears that a successful USA may inspire his subjects to make a successful revolt.   Now that international travel is easy a state or even an individual can obtain and deliver powerful weapons anywhere, and the USA is threatened in many ways that would have been impossible 50 years ago.  A prank by a student in Malaysia nearly shut down the Internet, and a small group willing to commit suicide caused the deaths of thousand of people in the USA in 2001.

One approach to the world's problems is to collect all the people of one type in one place (while excluding all others) and to surround this with a high wall to prevent any interaction that might challenge their prejudices or provoke a fight with their neighbors.  This did not work when the Allies divided up Europe after WWII.  The Berlin Wall was finally destroyed by the cooperative effort of people on BOTH sides of the wall.  It didn't work when England divided India to create a separate homelands for the Hindus (in India) and for the Moslems (in Pakistan).  It hasn't worked in Ireland or in Israel.   I doubt that building exclusive communities will provide long-term stability for the multiple cultures within the U.S.

Success in 1776 was achieved because people worked together for the common good and viewed as personal freedoms their differences in belief and language and culture – rather than considering them to be threats.  We can secure freedom from foreign attack on our institutions only by extending to the whole world the freedoms that were first own for the elite group in the USA and were later extended to most citizens.

So, what can you do?  There's another old saying, "All it takes for evil to succeed is for a few good people to do nothing".  Our system of governance is based on the responsible implementation of informed public opinion by elected representatives.  The government will fail without an informed public.   Do you care enough about your freedom to become informed?  Will you care enough to vote?  Are you willing to hold elective office?  Will you effectively encourage others to do likewise?

The American Revolution took place about 225 years ago.  I hope that on the 400th anniversary someone like me will be here talking to someone like you about freedom.  But there will only be a 400th anniversary if you take the hard path of your forebears and act to utilize freedom and to advance freedom.



 
The Revolutionary War Battle of Petersburg, Virginia
by Robert P. Davis
April 2003 lecture by Robert P. Davis to the Sons of the American Revolution – Richmond Chapter.  All right reserved by Robert P. Davis; one time publication granted.

Setting the Stage -

The Revolutionary War Battle of Petersburg, Virginia occurred on April 25, 1781, shortly before the Battle of Yorktown and the end of the war.  Until 1780, most all battles and campaigns of the revolution had occurred in the north and to the south of Virginia.  Up to this time, Virginia remained almost totally ignored by the British as their conquest to subdue the American patriots was directed more to primary cities and ports.  Neither could the King's army bring the Americans to a set-piece battle.  General Washington was biding his time to train his army and subsequently ally with the French, and then find some ground that would be ultimately advantageous to the American Army.

In 1779, Sir Henry Clinton, the Commander in Chief of the British Army in America, moved a large army to the south, capturing Charleston, South Carolina.   Upon his departure, he left Lord Charles Cornwallis in command of the British southern theater of the war.  Following several battles with the remaining American army in the south, which culminated with the disastrous defeat of General Gates, Cornwallis was then confronted by a new American general in the person of Major General Nathaniel Greene.

Washington had sent Greene to the south to reconstitute the army after its defeat under Gates.  While British forces occupied much of the north and the south, they controlled little while the American army remained elusive.   Concurrently, Virginia, which stretched to the Ohio Valley at that time, remained untouched and was essentially a breadbasket of the colonies and a major line of communication between the north and the south – a road today known as U.S. Route 1.

Virginia had a tremendous amount of public stores in warehouses, and one of the foundries in the colonies, at Westham on the James River near Richmond.   Additionally, Virginia had the vast wealth of several prominent families, and equally important, Virginia had tobacco.  At the time of the revolution, it should be remembered, the United states was almost totally broke.   Tobacco was relied on as the primary medium of exchange in Europe, and that product, for the most part, was being raised in Virginia and exported out of the Chesapeake Bay.

Clinton eventually recognized that Virginia and its line of communication had to be dealt with.  He first sent a raid on the Chesapeake Bay in 1779 under the combined command of Commodore Sir George Collier and Major General Edward Matthew that burned Norfolk.  This raid was a hit and run action and no British post was established.  In 1780, Clinton sent a small invasion force under Major General Alexander Leslie into the Chesapeake to establish a post at Portsmouth and attempt to interdict Virginia's resources.  Leslie was, however, lacking aggressiveness and was suddenly called to the south to reinforce Cornwallis.  Therein, until December 1780, the British still had no force in Virginia and the American lines of communication remained open.

In December 1780, Clinton determined that he needed a bolder plan to establish a post in the Chesapeake Bay and make British presence known in Virginia.   He had just acquired a new and aggressive field officer who he thought could do the job.  That new British Brigadier General was none other than Benedict Arnold.

Arnold was a proven fighter and exceptional field commander, albeit a turncoat from the American army.  Arnold alone can be credited by the American side with action that resulted in the major British loss following the two battles of Saratoga.  It was he that led the attach which finally resulted in the capture of four thousand British troops under Lieutenant General John Burgoyne in 1778.

On New Years Eve 1780, Arnold arrived in the Chesapeake Bay with a small army which he immediately sailed up the James River and landed at Westover Plantation, on the north side of the river.  From there he promptly marched toward Richmond, where he destroyed the foundry and numerous supplies and warehouses – then burned the city in the first week of January 1781.  Arnold then returned to Portsmouth where he established a defended British post and, considering his personal danger, ensconced himself to avoid capture by his previous employers and hanging as a traitor.

It should be understood that in early 1781, Virginia had no regular continental army troops in the state – only Virginia militia.  There were basically two corps, one under Brigadier General Thomas Nelson, Jr. operating on the north side of the James River, and a second corps under Brigadier General Peter Muhlenberg operating on the south side of the James River.  Overall command of American forces in Virginia had been relegated to Major General the Baron von Steuben.  Steuben had been left in Virginia by Greene, on his way to the south, to attempt to ensure that Virginia lived up to its promise to continue supplying the army in the south.

Incidentally, Peter Muhlenberg was a Lutheran minister (his father was instrumental in bringing the Lutheran Church to America) and it was he that stood at the pulpit saying, "There is a time to pray and a time to fight, and that time has come now", while removing his preacher's robe to show his Continental Army colonel's uniform.

Being on the south side of the James River, it fell to Muhlenberg to deal with Arnold's force in Portsmouth.  However, Muhlenberg's force was too small to attack, but it was sufficient to temporarily contain the British.

Arnold, seeing that he and his army were in jeopardy, appealed to Clinton, in New York, for reinforcements.  Clinton, having an understandable small trust in Arnold, had just obtained another available field commander, recently exchanged from the captivity with convention troops of Saratoga.  This new, and battlefield proven officer was Major General William Phillips.   Clinton quickly dispatched Phillips with reinforcements to the Chesapeake Bay.

Phillips arrived at Portsmouth in late March 1781 with the reinforcements and a small fleet of naval ships.  He immediately took command of all British forces in Virginia, with orders from Clinton to break the American line of communication through Virginia, hopefully taking the American pressure off Cornwallis in North Carolina.

On 18 April 1781, Phillips launched his own campaign up the James River.   His campaign began with 2,500 seasoned British regulars, twenty-three ships and thirteen gunboats.  Phillips first targeted Williamsburg, then marched to Yorktown and captured a large concentration of artillery there.   From there they burned the State Naval docks on the Chickahominy river.

At the time of the revolution, the Virginia State Navy was about the largest navy in America.  Unfortunately, the state could not get enough sailors on board the ships and get them to sea.  Consequently, when it became known that the British were on the move, the Virginia fleet was moved upriver to Osborne's Landing near Dutch Gap in Chesterfield County.

After burning the docks, Phillips sailed to Westover Plantation stopping there over the night os April 23rd, the guest of the notorious loyalist Mary Willing Byrd, the widow of the devout patriot, William Byrd.  On April 24th all troops re-boarded the ships, moved farther up-river landing at City Point at the confluence of James and Appomattox Rivers.

At this time, General Steuben was having problems raising sufficient militia to defend against the British invasion.  Steuben knew that Petersburg would be a British target due to the large stores of supplies in the warehouses and being a military stop-over point for troops moving between the north and south.   Petersburg was also exporting more goods at this time than Richmond, being supplied by bateau boats coming down the river from the mountains.  With this knowledge, Steuben ordered Muhlenberg's Corps, which had been tailing Phillips' river-borne force up-river into Petersburg.  Muhlenberg's troops arrived there on April 23rd and started to establish the battle lines when they heard of Phillips's landing at City Point.

While the history books only mention the Battle of Petersburg as a skirmish, it actually classifies as a full-blown battle by Revolutionary War standards – involving 3,500 men engaged for upward of three hours.

Interestingly, General Steuben had no misapprehensions about winning the upcoming battle.  He was well aware that his militia would lost against such an overwhelming adversary.  However, according to his later statement, his intent was to put up a reasonable defense of the town and still get out with his army and equipment intact.  His reasoning was to prevent the civilian populace from any intimidation by seeing the British taking the town unopposed.

Therefore, Steuben, in concert with Muhlenberg, established the defensive positions for the roughly 1,200 militia of their command.  To meet the British first attacks, he placed two of his five regiments on Poor's Creek, nearby the present day Virginia Linen Company.  He then placed two more regiments on the west side of Lieutenant Run, along what is now Madison Street.

The fifth, Goode's Regiment, was left to the north of the Appomattox to provide rear security for the ultimate and planned withdrawal from Petersburg, and to guard Pocahontas Bridge.  This was the only bridge across the Appomattox River for about twenty miles and imperative for the army to cross the river.   It was, however, only about 15 feet wide and 35 feet long.

The Battle begins -

On the morning of April 25th Phillips put his two-thousand five-hundred troops on the march from City Point to Petersburg, and concurrently brought eleven of his of his gunboats up the Appomattox River.  These gunboats, incidentally, were built similar to the ones Benedict Arnold had constructed on Lake Champlain in 1777, when the American Army was fighting the British invasion that led to the Battle of Saratoga.  The boats were large enough to carry about 100 troops or a large amount of supplies and equipment, and mount a small cannon on the bows.

The British marched up the River Road (now known mostly as Puddledock Road) to the road junction, today known as Route 36 or East Washington Street, toward the town of Blandford (now east Petersburg).  As they reached this point, Phillips saw the Virginia Militia drawn up on the east edge of Blandford, on the opposite bank of Poor's Creek.  While it had been proven through past experience that the Virginia militia would frequently "fire two volleys and run like hell", Phillips was not about to take this defensive line for granted.

The British launched their first attack and, as Phillips had guessed, the Americans stood fast, giving forth a heavy volley of firing.  In fact, the Americans were so inspired, they gave several cheers across their line as the British retreated under their heavy firing.

It was only after Phillips launched his counter-attack, bringing his artillery into action (two three-pounders and two light six-pounders), did Steuben order a withdrawal of the militia from the first line.  He ordered those two regiments to fall back across Lieutenant Run onto the second line of defense.   The militia executed the withdrawal in a considerably orderly fashion – by the book, with each unit covering the other's retreat.  The Virginia militia had held their overwhelming opponents for somewhat over one-half of an hour.

As the British pressed the Americans through Blandford, Steuben's two pieces of artillery were finally able to join the fray.  After considering the limitations of his planned avenue of retreat, Steuben had placed his artillery on the "Heights" (now Colonial Heights), on the north side of the Appomattox River.   From this position they could assist in the battle, and not be in danger of loss when the retreat occurred.  The guns had a range of about one mile and could fire rounds into the town of Blandford itself.

Just prior to forcing the American withdrawal from its first line, Phillips sent the Queen's Rangers and a battalion of the light infantry on a wide sweep around behind the American's right flank.  The effort was to hopefully get behind the American lines and cut off their retreat across the river.   Lieutenant Colonel John Graves Simcoe march this division around Well's Hill, crossing Lieutenant Run nearby the Southside Regional Medical Center and then northward along the present South Sycamore Street.  This attempt proved to little avail, since the march was quite time consuming and by the time they got close enough to the American's rear, the militia was already in full retreat to the river.

As the American first line reconstituted itself with the second line, along the western hill-crest above Lieutenant Run Valley, the British army regrouped itself on a new line along the present North Crater Road.  Phillips then ordered an assault against the (now) four regiments of militia across the valley.   Several attacks were repelled by a withering fire from the Virginians.

By this time, Phillips had moved his artillery forward and emplaced them on a high point overlooking the valley, at a point where Washington Street now crosses Interstate 95.  This gave the British an unrestricted enfilading fire across the entire American lines.

It was at this point that Steuben determined that his small army had done all that it could to defend the city and, at least, prove to the invaders that they would gain no ground for free.  Steuben then ordered a general retreat across the Appomattox River and northward into Chesterfield County.

The militia again retreated in the greatest of order, despite the fact that the British troops pressed hard on them.  The narrow Pocahontas Bridge, located in the present area of the old Petersburg train station, proved to be the singular obstacle to the retreat – threatening any type of rapid withdrawal.   Nonetheless, militia units provided each other with covering fire, while units still south of the bridge became entangled in much hand-to-hand combat.

As the militia got to the north of the river, they marched through Pocahontas and then onto the heights into Chesterfield County.  The retreat remained orderly until the British artillery found the range to the road over which the militia was marching.  Once the enemy guns were brought to bear on the backs of the escaping Americans, pandemonium set in and the retreat turned into a rout – the fleeing soldiers dispersed in all directions, not to be reorganized until one-to-two days later.

It is worthy of a few notes here: first, the area of Pocahontas, while being a part of Petersburg, was one of the first free Black communities in the United States; second, at the time of the American Revolution, free Blacks were enlisted in the army and permitted to fight right along-side whites in most any unit, and slaves were also permitted to enlist with the permission and agreement from their owners for their freedom on fulfillment of (their enlistment there are at least three known Black soldiers who fought in the battle); and a last note to those observing the area today, the north channel of the Appomattox River flows, did not exist in the 18th century, it was only kept in place in the 1930's for flood control.

Once the whole of the American force had crossed the Pocahontas Bridge, they took up the bridge planks of the bridge to prevent the enemy from any immediate following of them.  The Virginia militia held two-and-one-half times their number for nearly three hours.  General Phillips had been right in not under-estimating the steadfastness of the American soldier.

The Aftermath –

The British had no desire to immediately follow Steuben's army, as they next had to secure and search the city.  Therefore they remained overnight and the following day.  Phillips had previously issued orders to his army the civilian populace and their property was under the protection of the army, and that none were to be seized except those under arms or property of military value.  Steuben, however, had managed to remove most all the military stores from Petersburg, with the exception of a large volume of tobacco stored in local warehouses.  Most of these warehouses were owned by the widow Bowling, whose son commanded a company of cavalry during the battle, north of the Appomattox River.

Phillips established his headquarters in Bollingbrook, the Bolling home on East Hill.  Upon moving into the house, General Arnold warned the widow about Phillip's quick temper and not to upset him.  During her appeal to Phillips, not to destroy her warehouses or the tobacco, she managed to upset the general and get herself and her daughters locked up in one wing of her own home.

On the 26th, Phillips got the city leaders together and told them he would spare the warehouses from the torch only if they would move all of the tobacco into the streets.  Reluctantly, the city obliged, and all of the tobacco was burned.  His sparing the warehouse was in theory an appeal to the those "fence-sitters" who might remain loyal to the British crown.   However, as happens with many military operations, one British soldier did not get the word, and he set fire to one warehouse near the present Farmer's Market.

On April 27th Phillips marched north with his whole army.  He sent Arnold to Osborne's Landing on the James River, with half the men to take care of the Virginia navy ships they knew were anchored there.  Phillips, himself, marched to Chesterfield County Courthouse.  He burned a lot of stores and a range of one-hundred and sixty barracks in the area being used for militia training.  Phillips then marched to Osborne's to regroup the whole army later in the day.

When Arnold's force arrived at Osborne's, they found the Virginia ships anchored in the river, but only two or three could be manned with crews.  In an effort to prevent a heavy battle, Arnold sent a message to the American commander, across the river, offering a deal in which the Americans would give up half the ships and British would take their half and be on their way.  The deal was turned down and a battle ensued.  After considerable firing and maneuvering, Arnold's troops managed to capture a couple of the ships.   Seeing they could not save their ships, the American commander ordered the remaining ships to be set-a-fire or scuttled.  This turned out mostly unsuccessful and Arnold wound up capturing the majority of the ships with their valuable cargoes.

With his army re-constituted, Phillips then marched his army toward Richmond on the 28th.  They attacked and burned many warehouses and the Westham foundry, capturing many more supplies and equipment.  Unknown to Phillips, who was planning to attack Richmond the following morning, General Lafayette, was on the march to Richmond, bringing 1,500 American regulars from Annapolis to join with Steuben's army.

On the morning of April 29th the British awoke to find the glistening of American bayonets on Shockhoe Hill.  Rather than risk an unnecessary slaughter of his, thus-far, victorious army, Phillips determined that his successful campaign had accomplished its mission.  He then ordered the whole army and its ships back down the James River toward their base at Portsmouth.

About the same day Phillips started feeling sick.  By the time that his flotilla reached the confluence with the Chickahominy river with the James River, he had become bedridden with a high fever.  While anchored at that point, Phillips received orders from General Cornwallis, in North Carolina, to meet him in Petersburg.

Cornwallis had spent several months trying to destroy Greene's army in the Carolinas, but had been unsuccessful – even after the large battle at Guilford Court House in North Carolina.  Rather than further expend his rapidly depleting army, he decided on a different tack.

Cornwallis and Phillips were close friends, as well as being two brilliant military minds.  In what could be construed as a type of conspiracy, the two had concluded that the overall British strategy in America was lacking deliberate aims and goals to bring the war to a decisive end.  It was their feeling that merging their two armies would provide a strong enough force to ultimately split the American colonies, and as a minimum give Great Britain total control of the south.  Therefore, Cornwallis began moving his army north to join Phillips.  In his last order to his army, Phillips ordered it's return to Petersburg, where they arrived on the 9th of May.

At this same time, Lafayette and Steuben had a secondary mission to accomplish.   Steuben had been safeguarding 200,000 rounds of ammunition destined for General Greene.  In order to get this ammunition into North Carolina, past the British armies of Phillips and Cornwallis, a diversion was necessary.   On the 10th, Lafayette sent a battalion of troops with two artillery pieces back to the Heights, overlooking Petersburg.  From the Heights, they began a bombardment of the city.  The intent was to keep British heads down while Steuben's troops did an "end-run" across Goode's Bridge (twenty miles west of Petersburg) with the ammunition.  The diversion worked.

During the barrage, Phillips lay dying in Bollingbrook, his previous headquarters after the battle.  He was moved to the basement of the house during the bombardment, just as a cannon ball struck the house.

On the morning of the 13th General Phillips died of the fever, which has subsequently been diagnosed as probably either malaria or typhus.  On the orders of General Benedict Arnold, Phillip's body was secretly buried in Blandford church graveyard later that evening.

Cornwallis arrived in Petersburg two days later to find his old friend had died, and from there, as history has shown, Cornwallis would eventually maneuver through Virginia and end up in Yorktown where he was forced to capitulate his army in the following October.

In conclusion let me state:  we all must constantly seek the full truth of history – a task which is endless.  The truth of history needs to get out, unblemished of personal interests and mythical interpretation.   We need to perpetuate this history, particularly that of the American Revolution, for the education and interest of our people.  There are many battlefields and other sites of the Revolutionary War that are still laying unprotected, un-researched, and un-interpreted that need help from organizations such as yours.   It is my feeling that, while you do perpetuate the honor and memory of our Revolutionary War ancestors, it should be a mandated mission to also get involved to assist where possible with identifying and protecting any and all Revolutionary Wary sites in or near your local areas.

Here in Virginia, one could observe that no other war was ever fought on our soil other than the Civil War.  That is not so – as we all know.   I urge you to join with your communities and local historical groups to lend what assistance you can.



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