The Seven Years’ War had enlisted
England’s rich help in men and money. A
powerful army of one hundred thousand men, composed
of English soldiers, of twenty-four thousand Hessians,
of Hanoverians and Brunswickers, enabled Frederick
of Prussia to continue a resistance which otherwise
he could not have maintained for two years. The
North German states were not Prussian vassals, but
allies of England for a hundred years, on the basis
of common political aims. Hesse, as the stronghold
of the Protestants of North Germany, had been in close
alliance with England at a time when Brandenburg was
little thought of. The ancient military glory
of Hesse during the Thirty Years’ War was so
great that Gustavus Adolphus on landing in Germany
had asked for a Hessian, Colonel Falkenburg, as military
governor of Magdeburg. For a century and a half
Hessian soldiers fought shoulder to shoulder with
the English troops, mainly against France. That
they should again act together in America was not more
surprising than that the Sardinian Italians should
cooeperate with the French in the Crimea. The
same statesmanlike wisdom was shown in Cassel and
in Turin, and led to a like result. The little
Hesse of 1866 must not be confused with the old Hesse,
which was an important factor in German politics.
In almost every war of the last century Hesse had taken
part with its army of twenty-four thousand men, an
important contingent at that time and one that made
Hesse the object of many invitations to close alliance.
In the Seven Years’ War, England joined Frederick
the Great, so, too, did the Hessians and the other
German allies. It fared badly with Hesse, repeatedly
it was overrun and often held by the French, while
its army was serving in Westphalia and Hanover; the
Elector died away from his home and was succeeded
by his son; none of the eastern provinces of Prussia
suffered like Hesse.
The Elector Frederick had been educated
on the Rhine, and shortly before the outbreak of the
Seven Years’ War was the guest of the Archbishop
Elector of Cologne. Political honors have been
made the reason of the Elector of Saxony’s change
of his Protestant faith that he might secure
the throne of Catholic Poland. Vanity and want
of patriotic pride have led German princesses to win
Russian husbands at the sacrifice of their Protestant
faith, while no Russian princess has ever given up
her church for the sake of a foreign husband.
Frederick of Hesse changed his religion from purely
personal reasons and in perfect honesty. It was
long concealed from his father, a strong Protestant,
ruling the church in the spirit of his ancestor Maurice.
An accident revealed the secret, and violent was the
anger of the sturdy Protestant father. At first
he wanted to exclude his son from the succession,
but this required an appeal to the Emperor, who naturally
would refuse. The elder prince then, with the
approval of his Parliament, made a close alliance
with England, and this added to the security of his
son’s English marriage. The eldest son of
that marriage, later on Elector William, was to rule
in Hanau, free from any influence of his Catholic
father, under the protection of an English garrison,
so that his home was temporarily separated from Hesse,
and put under strict protection of its church rights.
Parliament, people, and army all took an oath to abide
by this, and Elector Frederick always kept his Catholic
predilections strictly personal, never influencing
the old Protestant rule; indeed, out of his own purse
he completed the Reformed church in Cassel begun by
his father, and endowed it.
In 1762 Elector Frederick returned
home at the head of the Hessian army, and Hessian
administration replaced that of the foreign invaders;
but the treasury was empty, the resources of the state
exhausted, and the population reduced one-half.
The country had been laid waste. The Elector
declined all show, and quietly reoccupied his ancestral
castle on January 2, 1763. The Parliament was
summoned, and again exercised its constitutional rights
to examine and criticise the financial statements of
the government. These showed that the only resource
for the needs of the army was the claim against England
for unpaid subsidies, amounting to 10,143,286 thalers.
The government was authorized to reduce the army and
to apply any saving thus effected for pressing civil
needs. The representative in London was instructed
to urge the prompt payment of the debt due for Hessian
forces in English service. The matter was warmly
discussed in Parliament, and only in 1775 was the debt
discharged in part to the amount of 7,923,283 thalers.
In 1772 a short supply of food led to the establishment
of public warehouses, where flour bought abroad was
sold at cost price.
The agricultural condition, however,
was a very unfavorable one, and in 1775 England first
broached a renewal of the old alliance, with a view
to the employment of Hessian troops in the case of
war in America. The project of American independence
was heartily disapproved of in Germany and even in
republican Switzerland. It was turning colonies
into rival states. Then, too, in seeking an alliance
with France and Spain, America was turning to the
hereditary enemies of Germany. The course of the
English Whigs in endorsing the American rebels was
condemned as a mere party move against the Tory ministry,
crippling the government. Moser, the historian,
represented the current opinion of Germany when he
described the Yankees as perjured subjects. The
modern and advanced German prefers Mirabeau to Moser, vice
to virtue. The threats of that French agitator
against Germany have no more historical value than
the declamation of Victor Hugo during the Franco-Prussian
war of 1870-71. Moser’s was the general
opinion of his time. As to the English offer,
the Elector was personally against taking part in
the war: he wanted peace to restore prosperity
to the land, to which he was contributing freely out
of his own means, while he took almost nothing for
his own wants. He objected to sending the army,
composed almost entirely of his own subjects, far away,
and if he had anticipated a seven years’ struggle
he would never have consented. His Parliament
was anxious to hasten the payment of the balance due
by England, which had only of late quickened its remittances.
Without a new English alliance it would be long before
the country could recover from the exhaustion of the
Seven Years’ War. Prussia had recouped its
exhausted treasury by the booty of the Polish division
in 1772. England’s offer could not be refused.
At that time Hesse was tempted by an offer of a share
of the Polish treasure in return for a loan of Hessian
troops to Prussia, which it sturdily rejected.
As far back as 1757 the King of Prussia
had asked leave to buy eight hundred Hessian recruits
to take the place of that number of Saxon Catholic
prisoners of war, who had been forced into the Prussian
service to turn against their own king and country
and had all escaped; but the old Elector of Hesse
peremptorily refused permission. Prussia denounced
the treaty by which the Hessian army served as allies
of the British, but wanted to buy the individual soldiers
as so many slaves. The young Elector openly disapproved
the partition of Poland and refused any offer from
Prussia. The feeling through Hesse-Cassel was
strongly against Prussia and just as strongly friendly
to England, and this was clearly shown in the debates
and action of the Hessian Parliament and in the reports
of the Hessian representative in London, Schlieffen.
The request of England was finally agreed to.
The Hessian troops went to America with the full approval
of their country, in accordance with the wishes of
its legal representatives, in joyful courage, bent
on winning new laurels at the side of their old allies.
The first meeting with the enemy,
soon after the landing of the first Hessian division
under Lieutenant-General Heister, was a glorious one
for his troops. At Flatbush Washington’s
army was driven at the point of the bayonet almost
to destruction, most of the American leaders captured,
and nearly all their flags taken. The Hessian
grenadiers who at Minden had attacked the French cavalry
with the bayonet had lost nothing of the vigor they
had shown in the Seven Years’ War.
The war might have been finished in
one campaign and the loss of the Colonies prevented,
for at least two-thirds of the population of America
looked on old England as the true source of liberty,
but were coerced by the rebellious minority.
But the English commander, Lord Howe, was a Whig,
and forbade Heister’s pursuit and use of his
victory. Howe ordered defensive lines to be fortified
against the broken force of Washington’s army.
This turned the tables. Washington enlisted a
new army, largely by the promise of liberal head-money
to recruits, and France and Spain appeared on the
scene. The Yankees alone never could have achieved
their independence. The Colonies then had only
two and a half million white population. The
Americans of to-day are the children of later immigrants,
to a great extent the grandchildren of the very men
who resisted the causeless rebellion, and even of
those who fought against it. The anger of the
Yankees wreaked itself on their adversaries by publishing
the greatest untruths, the shallowest, idlest lies,
that at first were unnoticed in Germany, but gradually,
especially after the French Revolution, passed into
German reactionary literature. These are now the
stock in trade of modern historical writers.
In spite of clear proof from the Hessian archives,
these vamped-up stories are repeated and renewed.
England paid into the Hessian state
treasury, not to the Elector himself, between 1776
and 1783, besides indirect expenses, 21,276,778 thalers
as subsidy money, and of this 2,203,003 thalers
were arrears from the Seven Years’ War.
Of this amount part went to pay the difference between
the war footing and the peace footing expense of the
Hessian army for eight years. The soldiers received
the high English pay without deduction, often in gold,
as is shown by reports, pay lists, and money accounts.
The exceptions to the advantage of the war-chest were
very rare, and for these the troops gained in a larger
proportion at home. The wealth of the Hessian
army in America is shown by the fact that in the first
three and a half years of the war the common soldiers
sent home through the regular channels some 600,000
thalers, and at least two or even three times
that amount by mail or other facilities. The
idea of a sale of these troops is absurd and ridiculous.
Just as in other wars where allied
troops serve together, so did the Hessians fight on
the side of the English in America, with the advantage
of not serving in unwholesome climates. They served
under their own officers and were subject only to
Hessian laws of war. The troops could not be
divided unless in case of necessity; the supremacy
of the Hessian state was never touched. If there
were a “sale,” then there must have been
a re-sale to their own country. At the beginning
of the American war the Elector recommended to his
Parliament the establishment of a war fund of 4,549,925
thalers for future state requirements. His
wisdom secured a thoroughly good government, and at
his death a national reserve fund of 12,473,000 thalers,
while he had relieved the people of taxes to the amount
of 8,255,000 thalers, practically a saving of
20,000,000 for the people. All he asked in return
was an increase of his civil list of half of one per
cent. He had found the country a waste; he left
it a blooming, prosperous garden; he deserved the
praise of Mueller, the historian, and he earned the
love of his people, who in his lifetime made voluntary
gifts for a memorial to testify the gratitude of his
country for his services.
At this time Frederick the Second
[of Prussia] made another effort to draw Hesse within
the influence of his policy. In 1779 he asked
the Elector to send troops against a threatened Austrian
advance from Belgium, then still under the Hapsburgs,
so as to leave Prussia a free hand against its old
enemy, and Prussia promised to pay subsidy for the
force thus helping it against Austria. The Elector
was supported by his Parliament in refusing thus to
be tempted to violate his loyalty to the Emperor Joseph,
for whom he had always felt profound respect.
Frederick the Second was stirred to
great anger, as he had made the Elector the honorary
colonel of the Prussian regiment stationed at Wesel,
and wrote to Voltaire: “If the Elector were
of his way of thinking, he would not have hired his
troops to England, but to Prussia; but the Elector
was a Catholic and therefore loyal to the Emperor.”
His real anger was thus confusing England with the
Catholic powers. But it was a great good fortune
that, thanks to the wise policy of its sensible Elector,
Hesse was spared a renewal of the horrors of the Seven
Years’ War, which its unquiet neighbor would
have gladly invited, to its own great injury.
The contrast between the two cousins
and namesakes was a very marked one, for Elector Frederick
was an orthodox Christian, King Frederick a follower
of Voltaire. The Swiss historian, Mueller, republican
as he was, wrote from Cassel to his Swiss home in
terms of strong praise of the Hessian corps of officers,
of their scientific and social culture; the Hessians,
he said, are sound, honest folk, warlike and courageous, all
the peasants have served in the army, and in every
village the men show the good effects in their manly
strength and love of discipline. Almost every
one can speak of his own or his father’s service
in Sicily, in the Morea, in Scotland, Flanders, Hungary,
or Germany, under Morisini or Prince Eugene or Maurice
of Saxony or Ferdinand of Brunswick.
And now in the New World the Hessians
showed their old valor and discipline, one
regiment surrounded in a forest by eight thousand
Americans fought its way out. After a march of
five hundred miles, without bread or wine or brandy,
almost barefooted, in burning heat, after fording
seven streams, often up to the neck in water, the Hessians
fought so well that Lord Cornwallis praised them beyond
all his other troops; and such a preference from the
British commander reconciled his Hessians to all their
trials. Mueller, as a faithful historian, loved
to record their brave deeds. He says the country
is poor, but that is due to the never ending German
wars. The Seven Years’ War had left the
country waste to a degree that the Swiss, always living
in peace, could hardly realize. But the Hessians
are industrious, and the country flourished in 1781
under the Elector Frederick, a man of kindly nature
and the best intentions, and yet many foreigners criticise
him unfairly. Why should a Swiss object to a
crowned head? The government is as well suited
to the country as a republic to Switzerland, and even
there no one has more personal freedom than the Hessian
citizen. People and country are unusually attractive.
No men were ever finer than the Hessian soldiers;
they are worthy of their ancestors, made famous by
Tacitus. It is thus that a republican describes
the country of this excellent prince, who had healed
the wounds inflicted by the Seven Years’ War,
encouraged arts and sciences, and supported, when
he did not found, many charitable institutions, and
not only did not enrich himself, but during and through
the American war was able to relieve his country of
many millions of taxes, and to lay the foundation
of a large reserve for the expenses of the government.
The administration was so painfully careful that,
in spite of the interruption of Napoleon’s kingdom
of Westphalia, the accounts were so kept as to show
satisfactorily just what proportion of the revenue
belonged to the nation and what to the sovereign.
All that Hesse has of material as
well as intellectual advantages it owes to Elector
Frederick, from hospitals to art galleries. In
his day the visitor might think that Cassel was equal
to Sparta and Athens. He died all too soon for
the honorable love of his faithful subjects. He
never ceased to mourn over the long absence of his
army, his dear subjects. Instead of a year’s
service, it lasted for nine years, although the last
years of the war were comparatively free from bloodshed,
and spent in occasional skirmishes and in marching
to and fro through vast regions. The Elector
often wanted to put an end to the alliance with England,
but his ministers and his Parliament held firmly to
it. He did insist on replacing the losses of
the Hessians by foreign enlistments, to which he had
once so patriotically objected, but now men from beyond
his borders poured in with the hope of joining the
Hessian army and thus seeing the wonderland, America.
Anxiety, years of longing and quiet grief, weighed
on his noble heart, so that a few months after the
return of the last of his soldiers he died suddenly.
He saw once more the old victorious flags that had
waved in triumph at Minden and Crefeld, at Flatbush,
White Plains, Fort Washington, and Gildford [sic]
Court-House; he saw them once again and died.
The circumstances of the enlistment
of the Hessian troops may be explained thus:
German and other European countries had for centuries
strengthened their armies by enlisting men. Hesse,
and later Brandenburg Prussia, made service compulsory,
and thus, in the years that followed the Thirty Years’
War, filled their armies with their own subjects.
Still, voluntary enlistments continued and do so still.
But no country cared for the enlisted man and for
his protection from acts of violence at the hands of
officers as Hesse-Cassel did, and yet no country has
been so much blamed for its dealing with its soldiers.
Personally, the Elector was opposed to all enlistments,
both at home and from outside, and he tried hard to
limit it after the close of the Seven Years’
War. When, however, in 1777, the Hessian Parliament
concluded its treaty of alliance, which provided for
Hessian troops to serve in the British army, it was
necessary to increase the force, and there was a rush
of volunteers from all parts of Germany, and the Elector
republished an order of December 16, 1762, substantially
as follows: “Officers guilty of enlisting
men by force or unfair means will be dismissed the
service; non-commissioned officers and privates for
the like offence will receive corporeal punishment,
and the orders of their superiors will not protect
them. Soldiers enlisted by force or trick shall
be released at once without expense to them or any
charge for food or pay, which shall be collected from
the officer responsible for such illegal enlistment.”
No foreign subject was ever retained
in the Hessian service against his will. All
those who voluntarily enlisted for the American war
were, on their return, regularly and honorably discharged,
and received as a reward half a month’s pay
at the high English rate as the personal gift of the
Elector. All of this is proved by the official
records. During his whole reign the Elector made
a steadfast effort to prevent forcible enlistment,
and went so far in opposition to neighboring sovereigns,
who acted differently, that once, at least, this led
to a formal declaration of war.
His conduct was met by false reports
industriously spread abroad to his injury. Frederick
of Prussia knew that the Hessian government neither
could nor would allow Hessian subjects to be enlisted
against their will in foreign service. With consent
of the Parliament, Hessian troops could serve as allies
for a time regulated by treaty with any friendly power,
but the State could never sell its individual citizens
into foreign service. King Frederick could never
introduce in Hesse the servitude that put his Brandenburg
and Pomeranian subjects at his beck and nod. As
early as 1760 the Hessian troops took the oath under
the Hessian constitution, but the Prussian and Brandenburg
people were helplessly bound to the nobility and princes
as chattels down to 1808, and it was not until 1848
that the Prussian constitution, as the outcome of a
revolution, gave the people the protection which the
Hessians had always enjoyed.
The Elector was libelled as no prince
was ever before in history. He spent freely and
largely of his own private means to help his subjects,
yet an American, in his “History of the Trade
in Soldiers by German Princes,” tries to show
that the Elector of Hesse enriched himself by many
millions out of the treasury. The German historian
Schlosser, with equal indifference to the truth, charges
the Elector with putting in his own pocket the money
earned with blood and wounds and life by the brave
Hessians in the Seven Years’ War, and that given
as compensation for the injury done his country and
its capital, making no return to the poor sufferers,
and that the American war produced still worse results, neither
the English pay nor the money for wounds received by
the soldiers enriched anybody but the Prince.
This charge is utterly baseless. The fact is
that compensation for wounds was first introduced in
the wars of Napoleon, and the money paid for dead
and wounded soldiers under all the treaties of the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries was given as
compensation for the bounty lost by the enlisted men,
and was used for the military hospitals, and never
intended for the soldiers. The Elector, whose
statue still stands in Cassel, was worthy of his great
ancestors, and kept alive the grateful memory of his
and their subjects. They have always been free
men, without any trace of bad government. Their
conduct during the French Revolution showed their
patriotism.
After this “Defence” was
first published, it was submitted to Mr. Frederich
Kapp, the Prussian American, who had attacked the Elector
of Hesse in his books, and his charges were referred
to the leading authority on Hessian history, who fully
refuted them. To further substantiate the character
of the Elector, reference is made to the funeral sermon
of the Free Masons’ Lodge of Cassel on the death
of the noble prince. Kapp’s books, especially
his “Soldaten-Handel” [Dealing in Soldiers],
are full of sneers at him and at his son, and although
Kapp disproves and discredits the “Urias"
letter, it is on technical and not moral grounds that
he relieves the Elector of the disgraceful charge
of dealing in the blood and bones of his subjects
out of avarice. He does not contradict Mirabeau’s
appeal to the Hessians, full as it is of party hostility.
Kapp repeats the false charge that the Elector made
money by false lists, so as to draw pay for more soldiers
than were really in service, overlooking the fact
that the annual and semi-annual muster-rolls made this
impossible. He says the expenses of fitting the
soldiers for the field were not paid by the Elector,
although the money was taken from their pay. He
charges the German princes whose soldiers were in
the English army with cheating the contractors for
supplies. He accepts the apocryphal story told
by Seume of the illegal violence with which men were
forced into the service, yet in all of these and many
other matters Kapp is altogether wrong.
No less an authority than Moser, the
historian, long ago pointed out that the Americans,
with Franklin at their head, had perjured themselves.
The Hessians wrote home their contempt for the leaders
and the people of America from actual personal observation.
From Washington down the greatest unfairness was shown
to the “Loyalists,” who were driven into
exile, stripped of all their property. He it was
who tried to tempt the Hessians to desert, who proposed
to burn New York, who ordered the execution of Andre,
who wanted Aspill [Asgill], an entirely innocent man,
put to death, and connived at the robbery of the Hessian
prisoners of their English pay, prevented their exchange,
and kept the stores and clothing sent for them.
In Schloezer’s “Letters” are found
the unfavorable opinions of the Americans written
home by Captain Wagner, wounded at the side of Count
Donop; in Wiederhold’s “Diary,” Philadelphia
is described as a “confluenz canaillorum,”
as bad as Sodom and Gomorrha, those who had escaped
the gallows in Europe being warmly welcomed in the
New World. Ewald warned the people of a suburb
of Philadelphia that there was no honor among them;
and Bauermeister, a British adjutant-general, was
equally emphatic. Pfister, in his “History
of the American Revolutionary War,” gives many
details of the bad conduct of the leaders and people
of the young republic.
Dr. Kapp’s false charges relate
to (1) the enlistment and service of Hessian troops;
(2) the frauds practised on them on their discharge;
(3) the approval by the Hessian Parliament of the
treaty with Great Britain; (4) the payment by England
of the amount claimed on account of the Seven Years’
War; (5) the distribution of English pay among Hessian
soldiers; (6) the relief of Hessian taxes; (7) the
charge that the Elector received for troops enlisted
in the British service some 60,000,000 thalers;
(8) and “blood” money for the wounded.
Much of our [the pamphleteer’s] information
is of a confidential kind, but there are plenty of
printed books, etc., that, he says, bear him
out biographies of the Elector, sermons
on his death, by Raffius, Roques, Rommel, and Pfister,
the resolutions of the Guilds on the accession of
his successor, all expressing grief for the death
of his father; Schlieffen’s “Memoirs,”
“Ephemera” of 1785, with Lith’s “Campaigns
of the Hessians,” Schloezer’s “Correspondence
and Annals,” John Mueller’s “Letters,”
the “Military Library of 1789,” Ewald’s
“Life” in Manvillon’s Military Journal
for 1821, Pfister’s “North American War
of Independence,” Eelking’s “History,”
the Hessian papers of the time, the papers of the
Hessian Historical Society, v. Och’s “Observations,”
Valentini’s “Recollections,” “Debates
of the Parliament of Hesse,” the treaties with
England, the rewards and honors paid by the King of
England to German officers and soldiers, even Kapp’s
writings. There are many unpublished documents,
diaries of officers and enlisted men, of pay and quarter-masters,
and journals in the archives and offices of Hesse,
public and private.
Kapp charges that the Elector reserved
the right, forbidden, it is true, to his officers,
of filling the ranks of his regiments going to America
by compulsory enlistment, and that his subjects fled
to Hanover to escape it. Schlieffen and Faucit,
the former the Hessian, the latter the English agent,
and Suffolk, the English minister of war, had a long
correspondence on the subject. The answer to
this is that Hesse had passed stringent laws on this
subject as far back as 1733, renewed them with increased
penalties in 1762, and they were enforced in one case
by punishment which included loss of rank and imprisonment
and exile. Again, 1767 and 1773 saw republication
of these regulations. Losses by desertion or irregular
discharge were so small that only thirty out of twelve
thousand were so reported, and these cases all took
place near Hanover, where it was easy to take refuge
and find shelter. Enlistment of foreigners, that
is, other than the subjects of the Elector, who were
all liable to be called into service, was introduced
by him solely and openly in order to relieve his own
people and to fill their places with volunteers.
Even the desertions in America were due to the temptations
offered by the fruitful farms and the ease with which
the Hessian soldier was made an American citizen, the
husband of an American wife, and the father of American
children. Captain von der Lith, in
a pamphlet on the “Campaign of the Hessians in
America,” says the soldiers welcomed the news
of the departure for that land of promise. Lieutenant-Colonel
Grebe says that young men left school and college
and office and trade to go to America with the Hessian
army. Faucit was surprised at the readiness with
which the men went on board ship, singing and hurrahing
for the Elector. He reported to the Elector that
he could do anything with such men. Some regiments
did not lose a single man. So, too, with the
Anspach troops; their Lieutenant-Colonels von Gall
and von Kreuzburg and other officers were surprised
at the light-hearted soldiers, who acted as if they
were on a pleasure tour. The Prussian General
von Gaudi wrote to the Elector that by order of
his King he had sent clever recruiting officers to
try to tempt the Hessian soldiers to leave and go
into the Prussian service, but he did not succeed
in getting a single man. Not a Hessian would leave
his colors, for under them they were satisfied, got
high pay, and were going to America. Another
Prussian, General Valentini, says the Hessian troops
learned much that was of value in their campaign in
America, and helped to renew the prosperity of their
native country and improve its condition.
Prince Charles of Hesse reported that
in the war of the Bavarian Succession he lost out
of his Prussian division ten thousand men in two months
by desertion. The Hessian army lost only eight
per cent. in ten years. It is utterly untrue
that when the Hessian troops were under orders to
go to America, desertion by crowds fleeing into Hungary
and Poland was prevented only by threatening the fathers
with chains and the mothers with prison, as Kapp seriously
writes.
Kapp says that the Hessian soldiers
who returned home at the end of their service received
as a reward half a month’s pay, but the Elector
received from England a whole month’s pay.
Did he put the other half in his own pocket, or did
he pay it all, as well as the extra half month’s
pay out of his own pocket, over to his soldiers?
The answer is, that there is a great difference between
the allowance of a year’s subsidy after the peace
to the treasury of Hesse as compensation, and the
voluntary gift, by the Elector, to the foreign soldiers
who had enlisted in his service, of extra pay as reward
for good conduct. They had no claim, yet the Elector,
following the English custom, gave them an extra allowance
as compensation, after deducting the expense of their
equipment and clothing. Kapp asks for reference
to any official report of the action of the Hessian
Parliament in favor of making an alliance with England
giving the Hessian troops, and urging the Elector
to make the treaty under which this was done.
The answer is that the Duke of Brunswick set the example,
and the Hessian Parliament urged the Elector to secure
the payment of the outstanding balance due for the
Hessian forces serving in the Seven Years’ War,
and to do this by a new alliance with England, providing
for a Hessian contingent. It was Schlieffen,
the Prime Minister, who in the Hessian Parliament
urged the English treaty as a means of refilling the
state treasury, so exhausted that it was at the end
of its resources. The Elector hesitated, but
yielded to the urgent wish of all his ministers and
the Parliament. Abundant evidence is found in
the records of the Hessian army and the Parliament.
Kapp asks what authority there is for the statement
that, at the outbreak of the American war, England
owed Hesse 10,143,286 thalers arrears for subsidies
due for Hessian troops serving in the Seven Years’
War, and paid 2,220,003 thalers. Kapp says
the English authorities, especially the exhaustive
parliamentary debates, show that Hesse claimed only
L41,820 (278,000 thalers) for hospital moneys,
which was disputed and denied by England, until in
its need of soldiers it agreed to pay it, although
saying that it was a dishonest claim and had long
before been fully satisfied. The answer to this
is that there were long and intricate negotiations
on this subject. The war, before the accession
of Elector Frederick, had left the country burdened
with a debt of 2,559,000 thalers, which the Parliament
tried to meet by a tax of fourteen and a half per
cent., but the Elector reduced it so as to relieve
his poor people. In 1772 England paid 900,000
thalers as compensation, to be divided between
the Elector and the country, but the former yielded
any claim to it and added 600,000 thalers out
of the moneys paid him as subsidy, so that the treasury
was enabled to pay off 1,500,000 of the debt.
Later there was paid a further sum of 2,220,000 thalers,
and still later 672,000 thalers for the people
and places on furnishing official proof of special
losses. This led to a special mission to England
and a long discussion with the money-saving English
treasury over the claims for compensation which ran
up to millions. The greater part was absolutely
rejected, much reduced to a six per cent. basis, and
Schlieffen at last forced to accept L41,820 for the
actual outlay of 300,000 thalers for hospital
expenses. No doubt the foundation of the large
savings of the Hessian state treasury and of the Elector
was the money obtained as subsidy for the American
war. The Elector raised his country from poverty
by using this money for the improvement of his capital
and its great neighboring palace, for royal roads,
for parks and open places, for churches, museums,
lyceums, and seminaries, theatres, city halls, hospitals,
art galleries, and schools, medical colleges, infants’
and orphans’ homes, libraries, and the two universities,
Marburg and Rinteln, for opera and chapel. The
source of all this expenditure was of course the English
subsidies. The charge that the Elector had laid
aside 56,000,000 as his private fortune is clearly
disproved by the fact that in 1831 the whole estate
of the Elector amounted to only 14,000,000 to 16,000,000,
although Kapp says the Elector Frederick left 60,000,000,
mostly subsidy money, but partly profit on lotteries,
yet the official records show that during the fourteen
years of the lottery the whole profit was only 93,000
thalers. The accounts show that in 1775 the
treasury had to its credit in all 4,549,925 thalers,
much in doubtful claims growing out of the earlier
wars, and, in 1785, at the death of Elector Frederick,
it had 12,473,000 thalers. In other words,
after the Seven Years’ War this little country
of 300,000 people earned an average of 1,000,000 thalers
a year by subsidies, and by the American war it was
enabled to save 18,000,000, out of which much was spent
in public improvements. England was very slow
to admit its liability for the losses inflicted on
Hesse as its ally in the Seven Years’ War, but
it soon learned to value and pay generously for its
help in supplying a fine body of troops for its American
war.
At the outbreak of the American war
England owed Hesse 10,143,286 thalers in arrears
for its services since 1764, of which 2,559,000 was
due in 1760, making the total Hessian debt on the
former date 7,425,965 thalers.
England paid 900,000 thalers first, and later
on 2,220,000 thalers, and Hesse still claimed
L41,820 for hospital expenses; but there was still
due to Hesse 3,128,000 thalers for its increased
debt, and 300,000 for losses by fire and the sword,
and 150,000 for local expenditures, and 914,772 for
the expenses of the Hessian army.
Mr. Kapp says it is claimed that the
Elector paid his troops the full English pay, but
his authorities show that they got only three-fourths
of it, although he had promised Suffolk not to reduce
it to one-half in the American war, as he had done
in the Seven Years’ War. He certainly broke
faith by a reduction of even a quarter. That the
Hessian soldiers did receive the full English pay
is attested by the treaties with England and by the
moral honesty of the Hessian Elector. The fact
was attested at the time by daily experience, and
cannot be contradicted by a perjured soldier, for
the rate of pay was better for the Hessian than for
the English soldiers, and they knew it too well to
be put off with anything less than the full amount.
The regular pay was increased by regular additions
for winter clothing, food, lodgings, baggage, forage,
and other such expenses, while both English and Hessian
soldiers were supplied free of cost with wood, etc.,
and divided fairly all booty. The proportionate
charges for arms, etc., were higher in the English
than in the Hessian army, but as compensation each
man of the yaeger regiment was given extra pay of
L1 a month.
The English troops in Gibraltar began
their pay with L1 9_s._ for the sergeants, the Hessian
troops with L1 14_s._ The general officers alike received
L59, while the Hessian company commander’s pay
was increased from L13 to L19 by special allowances.
The second lieutenant in the English service got L5
2_s._, the Hessian one shilling more, and in addition
there were extra monthly allowances for
lieutenants 8 thalers, for captains 32 thalers,
for generals 180 thalers. The higher officers
retained their Hessian rank with its pay. The
Hessian commander-in-chief drew his English monthly
pay of L121 and the Hessian pay of L182. Captain
Ewald, of the famous yaegers, is on record as notifying
his company commanders that their pay was a guinea
a day in addition to their share of booty. For
provisions got in the country where the troops were
serving there was no charge. The yaegers received
each twenty English shillings’ worth a month
and his side arms; the line soldier, twelve and a
half shillings. There never was an army so well
paid as the Hessians in the English service in America.
A married subaltern could support his family at home
and live well. Ewald says the company commanders
did this and saved money besides. Even the enlisted
men saved sums reported at 170 and 300 and 525 and
even 700 thalers. The pay department showed
that thirty staff officers and six captains saved
106,350 thalers. The highest savings’
report shows that four colonels had 24,000 thalers,
two others had 26,800 thalers, and the two last
Hessian commanders had, between 1781 and 1784, 11,000
and 15,000 thalers to their credit. General
von Mirbach sent home during the first sixteen months
of his service in America savings to the amount of
6000 thalers. Indeed, the older officers
left at home complained bitterly of their hard fate
in losing this advantage, and the total gain of the
Hessian troops from extra English allowances may well
be estimated at more than 2,000,000 thalers.
Schlieffen reported to the Elector in 1779 that up
to that time, about three and a half years from the
outbreak of the American war, the Hessian enlisted
men had sent home through the pay officer almost 600,000
thalers, and the mechanics accompanying the Hessian
army to America over 637,000 thalers. Kapp’s
book is full of rumors that the Hessian troops in
America were unfairly treated, but that is absolutely
untrue.
The English government dealt directly
with the Hessian government; the Hessian soldiers
fought alongside the English soldiers as their allies;
their pay was regulated by the treaties made by the
Hessian sovereign and approved by the Hessian Parliament.
These provided fully for the pay and food and equipment
and care of the Hessian troops at the expense of England,
but on the basis provided by the treaties with Hesse
and other allies. Mr. Kapp asks for particulars
of the taxes released by the Elector. These amounted
to 2,170,140 thalers, besides 56,000 thalers
in the reduced interest on loans to public institutions, the
reduction of allowances to Hessian princesses of 159,466
thalers, and a reduction of war taxes of 204,000
thalers. Appropriations for the relief of
the people injured by storms amounted to anywhere
between 500 and 740,000 thalers; then there were
paid for forage 147,000 thalers, for servants
90,000 thalers, and for arrears of 1,090,827
down to 1785, 300,000 were allowed and cancelled,
and a debt of 116,000 for the administration was paid.
Mr. Kapp denies that he charged the
Elector with putting 60,000,000 in his pocket, for
the whole amount received by him for his troops was
only 22,000,000. This charge is found in the
writings of Vehse, Loeher, Menzel, Scherr, Weber,
and others who have tried to discredit the Elector
Frederick. Kapp does say that the Elector left
an estate of 60,000,000, made partly out
of the profits of the lottery founded in 1777, but
mainly out of the American war. But the lottery
only earned in all the fourteen years of its existence
93,000 thalers, which were paid over to the War
Office; the only other source was the sale of soldiers
to England.
Kapp says that pay for wounded soldiers
began in the treaty with Brunswick in 1776, although
it was implied in the Hessian treaty at the time of
the war of the Spanish Succession that three wounded
men counted the same as one dead man, at about
51 thalers at modern rates. It is true that
there were such provisions in the earlier Brunswick
and Hanau Treaties, but Schlieffen had them struck
out of the new Hessian Treaty of 1775. Dead men
were replaced by living men and the injured and disabled
by well men, while the latter went into the Invalid
Corps and were duly cared and provided for.
The contemporary accusations are perpetuated
by Schlosser, who says in his history that England
paid a premium that went into the Elector’s pocket
for every limb that was lost, and this is
absolutely false. The Elector to the last day
of his life made provision for the disabled soldiers.
Such charges are made by Germans who ought to go to
the Hessian archives and there find the truth.
A fair statement ought to satisfy the modern reader
that the great majority of American citizens of our
own day have little in common with the perjured Yankees
of the Revolution, and are, indeed, descendants of
the men who fought against, rather than of those who
fought for independence. The rebels turned against
England and denounced it as a tyrant, although to
it America owed Magna Charta and the Habeas Corpus
Act. The treatment of the Indians by American
governments shows how far they departed from the example
of the mother country. The English Whigs in and
out of Parliament were allowed a license and freedom
of speech which were denied the American Tories by
their brethren who proclaimed liberty. The Hessians
had for two hundred years been allies of England and
naturally helped it against the hostility of France
and Spain. Hessians fought at the side of English
troops against Louis XIV. of France, and helped to
put down the Stuart rising in Scotland, and in the
Seven Years’ War; the American Revolution was
but another outbreak of the same hostility to England,
and if Hessian troops had not served in America, it
would have been a missing link in the chain of the
wise, real German policy of close alliance with old
England. The story of the American Revolution
that ended in the independence of the American Colonies
is largely drawn from French writers, yet they never
seem to regret their own loss of Canada. American
writers attack the German allies of England, forgetting
or ignoring the fact that this was no new relation,
but one that had existed for two centuries, and that
England and all European states paid for the foreign
troops in their service. The Yankees, used to
making money by hook and crook, could not but look
on the subsidies provided by regular treaties as a
sale and bargain of the soldiers of one country to
another which paid for them at so much a head.
The Yankee fairy stories about the superiority of
their native troops may be easily answered, for the
famous Virginia cavalry were completely defeated and
driven from the field by Hessian foot yaegers, mounted
for the occasion, and not cavalry at all. In
good old times no German would have falsified the
facts as to his own countrymen when he could have verified
them from the official records. These show that
at one time it was proposed to surrender the subsidies
in exchange for a large stretch of land in Canada,
where a Hessian settlement was to be established.
If that had been carried out, Hesse might have been
spared the sorrows of 1806 and 1866.
For many years all of the charges
discreditable to the Hessians have been drawn from
the “Autobiography” of Seume. Much
of it was invented by his friend and editor Clodius.
It is from beginning to end a false and libellous
production. Seume became a friend and admirer
of the French Jacobins and repented his service against
the Yankees, so he invented the story that he had
been forced into the ranks against his will. The
fact is that no such compulsion could have been exercised
in the face of the orders of the Elector, nor could
any young man of Seume’s intelligence have failed
to know and exercise his rights.
Seume tells another falsehood in reference
to affairs at Ziegenhain. There was a garrison
at that place of two companies of infantry and some
artillerymen, and four hundred recruits, part of the
Eighth Division, on its way from Cassel to America,
and a handful of yaegers under instruction. Some
of the recruits planned a mutiny, and intended to kill
a sentry and steal the regimental funds. Their
plan was discovered and reported by one of the yaegers.
A court-martial sentenced two of the mutineers to the
gallows and others to chains. Elector Frederick,
whose weak point was kindness, reduced the sentence
of a dozen of the offenders to whipping, and that
of the men sentenced to be hung to imprisonment.
This is record evidence, yet Seume says there were
fifteen hundred recruits who were all at once charged
with intending to rob and run away, among them old
service men. Some of them had been sergeants
and corporals in the Prussian army, yet Seume, nineteen
years old and who had never carried a musket, was
chosen robber captain. A worthless tailor from
Goettingen betrayed the plot rather than help carry
the plunder to the next village. The Elector did
show mercy to some, but only to enjoy the protracted
misery of the men in jail. Now, if Seume knew
of any such plot, he perjured himself by violating
his oath in failing to report the fact.
In May, 1782, he says there was an
outbreak among the troops at Cassel. A body of
recruits from Ziegenhain was increased by an equal
number from the then Hessian fortress at Rheinfels,
all on their way to America. At that time there
were complaints of the poor quality of the recruits
sent to the Hessian regiments serving in America,
where the war had been going on from 1776. These
new recruits were worn-out old soldiers and mere tramps,
tempted by the large bounty offered by the American
recruiting officers and the high wages promised by
Pennsylvania farmers. They were a discredit to
the old Hessian regiments with their faithful soldiers,
sons of the soil. But the Elector took these
strangers in order to relieve his own people of the
stress and burden of the war. To satisfy himself,
he inspected these new recruits and told them that
any man who wanted his discharge could have it on
returning the clothing and money given him. Seume
could have had his release then if he had asked for
it, but he stayed by the colors. Then the troops
were sent to the port of embarcation, at
Bremerlehe, not at Muenden, as Seume says. The
recruits were transferred to General Faucit, of the
English army, and put on English transports.
Seume says that he said at Rinteln, on the way, that
he was a Prussian subject, and was afraid that at Muenden
he would be recognized, and, as it was Prussian territory,
he would be arrested, and he therefore asked to be
allowed to march by another route. Why was he
so much afraid of the Prussians? Presumably because
there was a warrant out for his arrest for some violation
of law while he was a student at Leipsic. As
to his account of his voyage, it is taken almost word
for word from the diary of a Waldeck corporal, Steuernagel,
who had six years earlier made the journey to India
and America, and was a great story-teller.
The official reports of Colonel Hatzfeld,
in command of the detachment to which Seume belonged,
and of Commissary Harnier, contain the real facts.
The squadron consisted of six vessels for the Hessian
recruits, two transports for freight, and eight more
troop-ships, and two more with stores, and three frigates
as convoy. The names of the ships and the directions
as to the care and food of the men are all recorded.
There were over one thousand men and a great number
of women, wives of the soldiers with their children,
all part of the Hessian force, this was
the ninth year of the war and the eighth and last
detachment. Next in command to Colonel Hatzfeld
was Major von Prueschenk; of captains, lieutenants,
and ensigns there were ten, among them
two Muenchhausens. The younger one took a friendly
interest in Corporal Seume at Halifax. The fleet
left the Weser on June 9 and 10, 1782, and the landing
at Halifax, in spite of storms and fog and French
men-of-war, was made on August 13 without any noteworthy
incident, according to the official reports. Seume,
however, made the voyage last twenty-two weeks, when
in fact that is thirteen weeks longer than it actually
lasted, and he declares they never sighted land nor
got fresh food, yet there was no unusual death-rate,
although Steuernagel complains of the close quarters
in the over-crowded ships. On August 19 Colonel
Hatzfeld inspected the men with a view to distributing
the recruits in the companies and regiments for which
they were needed, and not a man was missing from the
lists made out when the men embarked and when they
disembarked. Just about as true is Seume’s
account of the return voyage, which took twenty-three
days to England and forty to the German port of Cuxhaven.
Seume had a very comfortable time in America, thanks
to the help of Lieutenant von Muenchhausen. He
might have become a Hessian officer, and yet he says
it was difficult for any one not a nobleman to get
a commission. A glance at the Hessian army list
shows that this was not true, for a large proportion
of the officers were plain citizens, not of noble
families. At this very time Frederick of Prussia
said publicly that plain citizens had not the proper
feeling of honor necessary to make good officers.
Seume’s own colonel, Hatzfeld, and Huth, Rall,
Kellermann, Ewald, all men of note and high command,
were not nobles, but plain citizens. Seume’s
whole service as a Hessian soldier was only for two
years. During this time he rose from the ranks
to corporal, then to quarter-master, and finally to
sergeant, and as he took his discharge in that grade,
his complaints are much more discreditable than if
he had remained in the ranks, he perjured
himself trebly by deserting. Why did he desert?
When the returning troops landed at Bremerlehe they
heard that the soldiers who were not natives of Hesse
must either re-enlist or be discharged with half a
month’s pay. The Hessian soldiers, of course,
returned to the pay and allowances of the peace footing.
Hessian soldiers were so well treated
that in the last century there was no other army with
so few deserters. Why, then, did Seume desert?
Why, eight days before the return to Cassel, did he
throw away his good name and his pay and his property?
Because in a fit of drunkenness he had made himself
liable to sharp punishment for his neglect of duty
as commissary sergeant, and for fear of the consequences
he fled. In ordinary conditions he would never
have abandoned the Hessian colors. He makes his
fault worse by lying, pretending that he
and others enlisted from Prussian territory were afraid
that they would be returned to Prussia and be forced
to the hard service in its ranks, and this he says
although he knew perfectly well that there was an
order published at Bremerlehe which was perfect protection
for him and men in exactly his position. Having
told one falsehood as to his reason for deserting,
he adds another to justify the first, and thus puts
himself clearly beyond the pale of credit for any of
his statements. He wants to pose as a martyr,
and to do so vamps up unfounded charges against
the Elector of Hesse.
Between 1783 and 1810 Seume thought
it more to his credit to try to forget and make others
forget that he voluntarily entered the Hessian service,
and pretended that he had been forced into it, as a
palliation for serving against the Yankees, and boasted
of his desertion, as if that, too, was to his credit.
He pretends to give the replies he an utterly
unknown, unimportant enlisted man made
to captains, colonels, and generals. Any such
answer would soon have brought down the punishment
prescribed by the articles of war for insubordination.
In later life Seume paid dearly for
the sins of his youth, and he did not atone
for them by publishing his own autobiography.
He had no reason to find fault with the Hessian service;
it was only after he had left it that his real troubles
began. It is well known how Prussia for eighty
years tyrannized over Northern Germany, weighing heavily
on its overburdened people, threatening them until
Hanover, Brunswick, Hesse, Saxony, and Poland were
all forced to forbid its enlistment of men within
their borders. It was during these trying times
that Seume was taken by force to Emden, in East Prussia,
and there put into a Prussian regiment as a common
soldier. Twice he deserted, once when
he was on duty as a sentry, and he was
condemned by court-martial to the awful penalty of
running the gauntlet, the whipping by a whole line
of soldiers. He escaped, finally, by violating
his parole. In his Prussian uniform he paid the
penalty for the oath to the Hessian flag which he had
broken first.