The Continental Congress had always
been anxious to have delegates from the Fourteenth
Colony. But as these never came the Congress
finally decided to send a special commission to examine
the whole civil and military state of Canada and see
what could be done. The news of Montgomery’s
death and defeat was a very unwelcome surprise.
But reinforcements were being sent; the Canadians
could surely be persuaded; and a Congressional commission
must be able to set things right. This commission
was a very strong one. Benjamin Franklin was
the chairman. Samuel Chase of Maryland and Charles
Carroll of Carrollton were the other members.
Carroll’s brother, the future archbishop of
Baltimore, accompanied them as a sort of ecclesiastical
diplomatist. Franklin’s prestige and the
fact that he was to set up a ‘free’ printing-press
in Montreal were to work wonders with the educated
classes at once and with the uneducated masses later
on. Chase would appeal to all the reasonable
‘moderates.’ Carroll, a great landlord
and the nearest approach yet made to an American millionaire,
was expected to charm the Canadian noblesse; while
the fact that he and his exceedingly diplomatic brother
were devout Roman Catholics was thought to be by itself
a powerful argument with the clergy.
When they reached St Johns towards
the end of April the commissioners sent on a courier
to announce their arrival and prepare for their proper
reception in Montreal. But the ferryman at Laprairie
positively refused to accept Continental paper money
at any price; and it was only when a ‘Friend
of Liberty’ gave him a dollar in silver that
he consented to cross the courier over the St Lawrence.
The same hitch occurred in Montreal, where the same
Friend of Liberty had to pay in silver before the
cab-drivers consented to accept a fare either from
him or from the commissioners. Even the name
of Carroll of Carrollton was conjured with in vain.
The French Canadians remembered Bigot’s bad
French paper. Their worst suspicions were being
confirmed about the equally bad American paper.
So they demanded nothing but hard cash argent
dur. However, the first great obstacle had
been successfully overcome; and so, on the strength
of five borrowed silver dollars, the accredited commissioners
of the Continental Congress of the Thirteen Colonies
made their state entry into what they still hoped
to call the Fourteenth Colony. But silver dollars
were scarce; and on the 1st of May the crestfallen
commissioners had to send the Congress a financial
report which may best be summed up in a pithy phrase
which soon became proverbial ’Not
worth a Continental.’
On the 10th of May they heard the
bad news from Quebec and increased the panic among
their Montreal sympathizers by hastily leaving the
city lest they should be cut off by a British man-of-war.
Franklin foresaw the end and left for Philadelphia
accompanied by the Reverend John Carroll, whose twelve
days of disheartening experience with the leading
French-Canadian clergy had convinced him that they
were impervious to any arguments or blandishments
emanating from the Continental Congress. It was
a sad disillusionment for the commissioners, who had
expected to be settling the affairs of a fourteenth
colony instead of being obliged to leave the city from
which they were to have enlightened the people with
a free press. In their first angry ignorance
they laid the whole blame on their unfortunate army
for its ’disgraceful flight’ from Quebec.
A week later, when Chase and Charles Carroll ought
to have known better, they were still assuring the
Congress that this ‘shameful retreat’ was
‘the principal cause of all the disorders’
in the army; and even after the whole story ought
to have been understood neither they nor the Congress
gave their army its proper due. But, as a matter
of fact, the American position had become untenable
the moment the British fleet began to threaten the
American line of communication with Montreal.
For the rest, the American volunteers, all things
considered, had done very well indeed. Arnold’s
march was a truly magnificent feat. Morgan’s
men had fought with great courage at the Sault-au-Matelot.
And though Montgomery’s assault might well have
been better planned and executed, we must remember
that the good plan, which had been rejected, was the
military one, while the bad plan, which had been adopted,
was concocted by mere politicians. Nor were ‘all
the disorders’ so severely condemned by the
commissioners due to the army alone. Far from
it, indeed. The root of ‘all the disorders’
lay in the fact that a makeshift government was obliged
to use makeshift levies for an invasion which required
a regular army supported by a fleet.
On the 19th of May another disaster
happened, this time above Montreal. The Congress
had not felt strong enough to attack the western posts.
So Captain Forster of the 8th Foot, finding that he
was free to go elsewhere, had come down from Oswegatchie
(the modern Ogdensburg) with a hundred whites and
two hundred Indians and made prisoners of four hundred
and thirty Americans at the Cedars, about thirty miles
up the St Lawrence from Montreal. Forster was
a very good officer. Butterfield, the American
commander, was a very bad one. And that made all
the difference. After two days of feeble and
misdirected defence Butterfield surrendered three
hundred and fifty men. The other eighty were
reinforcements who walked into the trap next day.
Forster now had four American prisoners for every
white soldier of his own; while Arnold was near by,
having come up from Sorel to Lachine with a small
but determined force. So Forster, carefully pointing
out to his prisoners their danger if the Indians should
be reinforced and run wild, offered them their freedom
on condition that they should be regarded as being
exchanged for an equal number of British prisoners
in American hands. This was agreed to and never
made a matter of dispute afterwards. But the
second article Butterfield accepted was a stipulation
that, while the released British were to be free to
fight again, the released Americans were not; and
it was over this point that a bitter controversy raged.
The British authorities maintained that all the terms
were binding because they had been accepted by an
officer commissioned by the Congress. The Congress
maintained that the disputed article was obtained
by an unfair threat of an Indian massacre and that
it was so one-sided as to be good for nothing but
repudiation.
‘The Affair at the Cedars’
thus became a sorely vexed question. In itself
it would have died out among later and more important
issues if it had not been used as a torch to fire
American public opinion at a time when the Congress
was particularly anxious to make the Thirteen Colonies
as anti-British as possible. Most of Forster’s
men were Indians. He had reminded Butterfield
how dangerous an increasing number of Indians might
become. Butterfield was naturally anxious to
prove that he had yielded only to overwhelming odds
and horrifying risks. Americans in general were
ready to believe anything bad about the Indians and
the British. The temptation and the opportunity
seemed made for each other. And so a quite imaginary
Indian massacre conveniently appeared in the American
news of the day and helped to form the kind of public
opinion which was ardently desired by the party of
revolt.
The British evidence in this and many
another embittering dispute about the Indians need
not be cited, since the following items of American
evidence do ample justice to both sides. In the
spring of 1775 the Massachusetts Provincial Congress
sent Samuel Kirkland to exhort the Iroquois ’to
whet their hatchet and be prepared to defend our liberties
and lives’; while Ethan Allen asked the Indians
round Vermont to treat him ’like a brother and
ambush the regulars.’ In 1776 the Continental
Congress secretly resolved ’that it is highly
expedient to engage the Indians in the service of
the United Colonies.’ This was before the
members knew about the Affair at the Cedars.
A few days later Washington was secretly authorized
to raise two thousand Indians; while agents were secretly
sent ’to engage the Six Nations in our Interest,
on the best terms that can be procured.’
Within three weeks of this secret arrangement the
Declaration of Independence publicly accused the king
of trying ’to bring on the inhabitants of our
frontiers the merciless Indian savages.’
Four days after this public accusation the Congress
gave orders for raising Indians along ’the Penobscot,
the St John, and in Nova Scotia’; and an entry
to that effect was made in its Secret Journal.
Yet, before the month was out, the same Congress publicly
appealed to ’The People of Ireland’ in
the following words: ’The wild and barbarous
savages of the wilderness have been solicited by gifts
to take up the hatchet against us, and instigated
to deluge our settlements with the blood of defenceless
women and children.’
The American defeats at Quebec and
at the Cedars completely changed the position of the
two remaining commissioners. They had expected
to control a victorious advance. They found themselves
the highest authority present with a disastrous retreat.
Thereupon they made blunder after blunder. Public
interest and parliamentary control are the very life
of armies and navies in every country which enjoys
the blessings of self-government. But civilian
interference is death. Yet Chase and Carroll practically
abolished rank in the disintegrating army by becoming
an open court of appeal to every junior with a grievance
or a plan. There never was an occasion on which
military rule was more essential in military matters.
Yet, though they candidly admitted that they had ’neither
abilities nor inclination’ to command, these
wretched misrulers tried to do their duty both to
the Congress and the army by turning the camp into
a sort of town meeting where the best orders had no
chance whatever against the loudest ‘sentiments.’
They had themselves found the root of all evil in
the retreat from Quebec. Their army, like every
impartial critic, found it in ’the Commissioners
and the smallpox’ with the commissioners
easily first. The smallpox had been bad enough
at Quebec. It became far worse at Sorel.
There were few doctors, fewer medicines, and not a
single hospital. The reinforcements melted away
with the army they were meant to strengthen. Famine
threatened both, even in May. Finally the commissioners
left for home at the end of the month. But even
their departure could no longer make the army’s
burden light enough to bear.
Thomas, the ex-apothecary, who did
his best to stem the adverse tide of trouble, caught
the smallpox, became blind, and died at the beginning
of June. Sullivan, the fourth commander in less
than half a year, having determined that one more
effort should be made, arrived at Sorel with new battalions
after innumerable difficulties by the way. He
was led to believe that Carleton’s reinforcements
had come from Nova Scotia, not from England; and this
encouraged him to push on farther. He was naturally
of a very sanguine temper; and Thompson, his second-in-command,
heartily approved of the dash. The new troops
cheered up and thought of taking Quebec itself.
But, after getting misled by their guide, floundering
about in bottomless bogs, and losing a great deal of
very precious time, they found Three Rivers defended
by entrenchments, superior numbers, and the vanguard
of the British fleet. Nevertheless they attacked
bravely on the 8th of June. But, taken in front
and flank by well-drilled regulars and well-handled
men-of-war, they presently broke and fled. Every
avenue of escape was closed as they wandered about
the woods and bogs. But Carleton, who came up
from Quebec after the battle was all over, purposely
opened the way to Sorel. He had done his best
to win the hearts of his prisoners at Quebec and had
succeeded so well that when they returned to Crown
Point they were kept away from the rest of the American
army lest their account of his kindness should affect
its anti-British zeal. Now that he was in overwhelming
force he thought he saw an even better chance of earning
gratitude from rebels and winning converts to the
loyal side by a still greater act of clemency.
The battle of Three Rivers was the
last action fought on Canadian soil. The American
army retreated to Sorel and up the Richelieu to St
Johns, where it was joined by Arnold, who had just
evacuated Montreal. Most of the Friends of Liberty
in Canada fled either with or before their beaten
forces. So, like the ebbing of a whole river
system, the main and tributary streams of fugitives
drew south towards Lake Champlain. The neutral
French Canadians turned against them at once; though
not to the extent of making an actual attack.
The habitant cared nothing for the incomprehensible
constitutionalities over which different kinds of
British foreigners were fighting their exasperating
civil war. But he did know what the king’s
big fleet and army meant. He did begin to feel
that his own ways of life were safer with the loyal
than with the rebel side. And he quite understood
that he had been forced to give a good deal for nothing
ever since the American commissioners had authorized
their famishing army to commandeer his supplies and
pay him with their worthless ‘Continentals.’
From St Johns the worn-out Americans
crawled homewards in stray, exhausted parties, dropping
fast by the way as they went. ‘I did not
look into a hut or a tent,’ wrote a horrified
observer, ’in which I did not find a dead or
dying man.’ Disorganization became so complete
that no exact returns were ever made up. But
it is known that over ten thousand armed men crossed
into Canada from first to last and that not far short
of half this total either found their death beyond
the line or brought it back with them to Lake Champlain.
It was on what long afterwards became
Dominion Day the 1st of July that
the ruined American forces reassembled at Crown Point,
having abandoned all hope of making Canada the Fourteenth
Colony. Three days later the disappointed Thirteen
issued the Declaration of Independence which virtually
proclaimed that Canadians and Americans should thenceforth
live a separate life.