Far the Gazette or the United States. No. XV. Mr. Ffnno, AFTER the long period which has elapsed fmoe the- publication of my observations on the calumny aduaucfd agamll thefouthern ltntes,l imagined I had .done with the fubjeift. »But -a reply, whietf vtfU have pul.lifhed from the Minerva, venders some fur ther, remarks neceflary on my part. The writer of them fays my numbers " soon convinced him, that 1 did not know what 1 was about, and that it was idle totake any notice of me." Had •he perfilted in this opinion, he would have spared me some time and - I request the readers' particular attention' to "the ongin of the controverfjrbetween us, in order to enable him accurately to decide the quediou at if ' file :— T his wrfter aflTerted that " the -northern states fought the battles of the southern, during.the late war. 1 Utyfed, cleathed, and supported the army. They fecund independenceThefeaflertions, which were advanced without any qualification, limitation,doubt or exception, I controverted, and adduced the mod copious and unanswerable proofs, drawn verbatim from Ramsay and Gordon, that thev were untrue. I freely avow, that when I began the invediga tiori, I had no idea how utterly and absolutely un founded they were, tl fuppofedii not only pofiible but highly probable, that considerable portions of the American armies at the southward, might have ■been drawn from the northern states. But the reader may readily conceive my astonishment, at finding that there was not even the .moll didant shadow of foundation for the aTertions ; that the southern states, in the fulled .and mart unbounded ■latitude of the words, fought their own battles ; that in those awful " times that tried men's fouls," they were almod literally abandoned by the gene ral government. j. When the invsfion of South Carolina took place, *' The North Carolina and Virginia continentals, amounting to 1500 men, and also two frigates, a twenty gun flrip, and a (loop of war, were ordered from the Northward, for the defence of Charleftown. This was sll the aid th.it tould be expeftedfrom Cingreft." Ramsay's South- 1 Carolina, vol. ii. page ,7. Though Congress ivns unable to fend either men or money for the relief \ of the southern slates, they did what was equivalent, 1 they sent then a general whose head was a council, ( and whose military talents were equal to a rein- < forcement." Ramsay s America, vol. ii. p. 229. < Ard to make the calumny appear the more com- 1 pletely monstrous, that there were more southern ' troops in the battles of Germantown and Brandy- a wine, than, on the fulled examination, I could dif* f cover, of northern troops engaged to the southward, J during the whole war, except at Yorktown. r 1 faall not pretend to aecount for the motives e that jed to this misdatement; nor is it neceflaryto t call the reader's attention to its flagitious tendency, ] particularly at a time when the paflions and p»eju- f dices of the northern fe&ion of the union, were in- a dudrioufly and insidiously excited and arrayed a- h • gaind their southern brethren and fellow citizens, t by a series of the mad wanton and intemperate a- h bufe—abufe which, though to the fuperficial, it si may have the appearance of plausibility, Ido not n hffitate to paonounee utterly unfounded. Except e the fcunility lavished on the Scotch in the North a Briton, I never knew of so indecent an attack f made on one part of a nation, in the Gazettes of h another part. It might not be time ill spent to re- h fl jft on the general degradation' of the American 1 chara&er, in the eyes of the-European world, from u the diflemination of such black and malignant de- E fcriptions of so large a portion . | felted numbers of veteran troops. In this batttle the. American forces were only 9JO men, and they took 810 prisoners, and 1500 Hand of arms. I might easily add to the glsnous lift.— I might trace Gen. Greene's army over the bur ince ning far.ds of North and-South.Carolina, by their Tiny bloody footftepJ. I Might dwell on the gallant de had feat of the British armament which attacked Sulli yofu van's Island, defended by only 374 men. And fur- shall the laurels of such heroes be tarnished by an rof anonymous writer in a newspaper ! O (hame ! that where is thy bluth ? was To corroborate his former aflertjons, he advan- Ited ces another. " Burgoyne, with an army of deu ime ble the flrength of that which laid wade three or four southern dates for two years, marched several the miles into the country, and maintained himfelf a rto week or two after leaving the late,before he was com if- pelledto surrender with his whojearmy." Are we never to -have done with alfe/tions un ites supported by truth or the tellimony of hidory ? var. Phe force under Burgoyne is dated by Gordon hey at " more than 7000 men." Vol. ii. p. 204. 'ere Ramsay fays, in nearly the fame words " the regu ubt lar troops, Britifli and German,allotted to this icr lod vice, were upwards of 7000." Vol. ii. p. 25. Tim Stedman, a later hidorian, and one wljo had the ex ue. amination of the orderly books of Burgoyne's ar ga- my, makes them amount to " 7183 men" exdlulive un- of the corps of artillery. Vol. i. p. 357. — ble Now, reader, let us examine if this army be " dou of ble the drength of that wade the fouth ave em states." 'I' e Gen. Clinton, when he took Charledon, had an at army of above 9000 men, the flower of the Britilh ant troops on the continent. Ramsay's American the Revolution, vol. ii. p. 155. It will require some led new arithmetical calculations to prove that 7000 s ; men ate '• double" 9000. Such power of figures, if properly applied to the public debt, might be made to produce wonderful effe&s. ith Lord Cornwallis had at one time " under his nd orders, above i t,OOO men." Gordon's Ame- j ;n, rica, vol. iii. p. 135. Subsequent to this, he re- I op ceived a reinforcement of 2000 men, under General ] he Philips. ibid v 178. This gave him 1 tat At his furrertder, after all his lodes in- killed, pri- i. h- fouersprevioufly taken, and deserters, of whom the ;fs number was very considerable, his army was 7000 ief llrong. Ramsay's America, vol. ii. 272. Yet it, we are now affuted, that " Burgoyne's army was il, double the drength" of Cornwall's. To which n- emotion shall we yield, astonishment or indignation, 9. at such palpable and glaring aberrations from hifto n- rieal truth ? rn Burgoyne " maintained himfelf a week or two, y- after leaving the lake." The writer's abilities at : if- fubdradlion und division are equal to those be pof- 1 d, .fefles in addition or multiplication. After having j made 7000 double 13,000, it, is not surprising that ! 88 entire months should be reduced to " a week or 0 two." Let as examine this matter minutely. Gen. f, Burgoyne took Tieonderoga, the 6th of July 1- from which time to the 16th of Odlober, the day 1- of his surrender, was above fourteen weeks. To J- heighten New England bravery at the expence of 1 s, that of the southern people—to " build up their ■' 1- house, by pulling down that of their neighbours," I it fourteen weeks are reduced to one or,two. I do I >t not deem it neceflary to take much notice of the 1 >t expression " after quitting the lake" for, if it ha 6 ' h any meaning, as applied here, it mud be, that jf- I k fore that event his (hipping on the lake protected ' >f him from his aflailants ; which is not the fact ; for < was no ' niolefted for many weeks after he left I n 1 iconderoga. However, to remove all cavils, let ! n us calculate from the time of arrival at Fort Edward, which was on the 30th of July—this « i- leaves a period of eleven weeks. . a 1- As the capture of Gen. Burgoyne's army by the t - northern dates is blazoned forth, for the purpose of t t compelling the southern dates to " hide their di- F . ininifhed heads''—l (hall be pardoned for a (hort 1 invedigation of its caiile«. To lessen the glory of b - those who performed such an effentral service to their y - country, in a day when her fun rose in clouds and tl 1- darkness, is not my intention. I acknowledge the «1 branery displayed in it. I acknowledge its impor- o f tant effedh on the residue of the war. But as, by n -| 8 perversion of, ideas, it seems to b? the A t opinion of many, that the reputation of New Eng -3 .and: cannot be fnfliciently resplendent, without tar- tl nifhing or annihilating that of the southern states, " - particularly Virginia, it becomes a duty to place I this business in a proper point of light. 01 s Geo..Burgoyne, whatever may have been his oi t bravery, was deficient in some of the mod import- fa : ant qualifications requilite for the entcrprize he fit 1 •undertook. He was both rash and head ft rang, fit : Larly in his career, he committed some egregious so errors, which rendered his subsequent fate inevitable, ca He harralfed his men by forcing his way through th ; an almott impassable country, indead of returning ca to I iconderoga, and using the navigation of lake E St. George..(ip.) When he determined on the at- on tack of Bennington, he was informed bv a loyatid 1 t,U j n ri Cd r W L ', Ch theeountr y^ that 3000' men would he be indifpeufibly necessary for the expedition. f Ml ] at He lent only 6co, and these Tieavy swrned Ger mans, under Baum, commander, who underdood to not the language, and who was unable t" didin- tic gmfh a fnend from an enemy. (12.) When Baum flilcovered his imminent danger, and sent an express ba for a "reinforcement, he dispatched Breyman with 600 more Germans, armed like the former, and an who marched f.xteen miles in twenty four hours. j(J3,J By Ins error and their dilatorinefs, the rein- th, forcement under Breymah arrived jud after Baum fer . had been defeated, and became themselves an easy lar conned to an enemy ftufhed with viclory. OthtT errors, almod as fatal, might be pointed out. Bu w, I fear to be tedious. " Ut cles B i! d h 8 hk inW P aC 7' , there natural obfla. for ir, his way, of which the southern invaders cef ! nature ,dM - Tl ' C im .0 the A™ c °untry gave inedimablc advantages ab< In lfr r ; C " n CeS ' L Perh3 P S thcre hardly an untortiued country in the world in k butercft enemies have never chared him'witW the de- of induftryr-he advanced very link more than J In mile & day in his progress from Skeenefborough to jjo Fort Edward. (14-) And I will venture an affer iiiid tion, for the truth of which 1 appeal to any man conversant in tactius, that ten thonfarid men would ,ur- {land a fairer chance of overrunning and subduing ieir such a level champaign country, as Virginia and de- the Carolinas, than 30,000 would such a trad as jlli- lies from Skeene/boiough to Saratoga, where na- Uid ture has done more towards defence, than the ut an mod fkilland bravery could afford. le ! " The principal means of defence were furnifhed by the northern states. The British bent their force, an- on that account, agairjl the northern Jlates —and '»«• a great propoition of the refinance made to that or force, was,of course, made ia the northers Hates." rral To this paragraph I can, without any'facrifice of If a truth, pay the compliment, of declaring it to be >m- equally true with the others. The British did not bend their force again/l the riorthtrny Jlates. Except un- the ill managed invasion of Burgoyne, ahd a few ' predatory incursions, neither intended nor expe&ed lon to produce any pirmahent effect, the nofthern states, 34. properly -so called, had aimed a total respite for >u- above fix years of 'he war. The Britilh bent cr- their force" chiefly against the southern states. jj. Thither they sent their bravett, mod enterprfing, sx- and molt experienced Generals—their Cornwallifes, ar- their Tarletons, their Fergufons, their Rawdong. ive Thither they were allured by the hopes of plunder — and ot easy conqucft. There they made by far >u- the greated exertions. 'To the succour of these :h- dates, molt invitingly exposed to insult and invasion, by their numerous navigable rivers, their scattered an population, their extraordinary number of slaves, ifh who were tempted to rife againd their mader*— an Congress, as I have already shewn, was for the ne mod part of the war unable to contribute. jo " I will venture another assertion," adds this ;s , writer, " which I btfieve to be the trutb, that >e the force which ravaged three or four southern dates, during whole campaigns, could not have remained lis on the territory of the fmallejl of the eajlern Jlates, ie. i beyond the reach of their Ihips guns, and exposed 'e- 1 to the force of that Jlate only, for two weeks". al ] This is as wild and extravagaat an assertion. asanv Oj | man ever haarsr3ed in~SIa lo.ber denies. General ri. j Burgoyne's army, as we have already seen, was at he no time equal to the southern invaders—they were jo fourteen weeks from their capture of Ticondercga, et and eleven from their arrival at Fort Edward, in as the date of New-York, which is certainly as pow ;h erful, at leajl, as one of " the fmallejl of the eajlern 0j Jlates" —they were "exposed" not •'to the force 0 . of that date alone"—but tottha force of all New England, and even to some of the southern troops. 0, (iS-) Yet we are now told that the force that ra- , at j vaged the southern dates could not lemain on the ,f. territory of " the fmalled of the eadem dates for ig two weeks''—yes, readers, for two weeks! that , jt is the precise time fixed for them by a writer, who , r j has lately assured his readers, that he " Eas always 1 n. | good authority for what he affetis," and that tho' j _ his " enemies may contradi£t, they can not disprove < ,y his assertions 1" o It gives me no small pleasure, that I have been 1 >f indrumental in inducing this writer, after theabufe 1 ir which he has so profufely thrown upon the southern e " states, to break forth at length in fheir praise. He t 0 fays: " far be it from me to derogate from the t e' honour or merits of the southern troops. They is were excellent troops, though their numbers were t .. small and no better ojjicers ever commanded men t d than those Jlates furnijhed." Had the means of r r oefence cxifted in the southern states, the brave of c 1 fi= e ' s ment 'oned by Hanington, Morgan, Marion, t jPiekens, Lee, W. Wafliington, and others would ii t loon have commanded those means, and expelled v s the enemy. No better officers ever lived. They £ did all they could do." How their well earned a e though extorted praises can be made to confid with n f the idea, that " the northern states secured inde pendence," it is not my province to demonstrate. n t ihe " southern troops wert excellenf—and "no ir f better officers ever lived, than their c.mmvnders," ai r yet, mrabile diaii! " the northern states fought a, I their battles." This is only borrowing a little of e< ■ the humbug by which, to gratify the prediledion een very gravely per- re : luaued that America was conquered in Germany, vi • In a former pap who are/J Un andHh < P" hti < editors, as by the fouthm Jt lan are buyers, and who contribute their full n, 0 m „ < h < r „ T rf . the r t^snr ,n 5 i" undeital ««S J have been influenced hi ...d wifli to promote, as far as a fewdffuhorv :as promote the general welfare. How fa, I u na- succeeded, the public will decide. 1 should kT ut offered some apology for adducing proofs of^ might appear felf-evident. But that the n m ' led of apology is done away- by an examination oft ve, publications in our papers s O/ s o me iao nth. p ast ' ind which ,t w,l appear, that the mo st obvious -J hat controvertible maxims maxims rendered f lc ? ed £ s. the uniform support of the wisest and bed men r of every age and nation, have been, to fcrv. the be poses of the moment, treated witH as much derifio™ no the fabrications of G.orge Pfalmanazer ohe :pt ravings of Ri,chard Brothers. Z M,y, 3 . , n6 . HARR.NGTON. , es, io. Ramsay, p. 34, For 11. Stedman, vol. I. 368. ent 12. Ibid. 371. es. Ibid. ig, 14. Ramsay 11. 34. es, rj. Among the American forces at the capt„ re is. of Burgoyne, was the celebrated Morgan', rifiU er corps, and other troops from the southward. - ar 16. American Minerva, May 6, 1796. IfONGRESS^ cd :s ' HOUSE of representatives - _ Thurfdy, May 26. J.IT 7 fa ! d '" h ? ; und « flood Harrrifon,& Sterret had received information refpe&inu- tU n. bill of exchange which led them ,0 wist * - at draw their petition, he should move that the com" :s, mittee of claims be discharged from the further con! . -d f,deration of the fa,d petition, and that leave' bt "j «' Ven ;° , vv,thdraw 'he fame; which was granted :d accordingly. ° " ca Mr, T»cy also made reports on the petition. >f al on the petition of John Marie de 80-de, a«i n fl ,h " ' at petitioner ; which were severally twice r«d in e ordered to be committed to committees of the whole' a, to-m®rrow. 0 in He tf lfo reported a bill for the relief of J olm , f ,e y™ ' whl = h twice read and ordered to n be commuted to committees of the whole to-day he hotife took up the amendments yefterdav f m a committee of the whole on the bill for ?. fat,|fy,ng certain demands oceaGoned by the -trials e i°fe M ***** >e pay -to Marshals, Jurors, and Witneffee, and to al.