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Nathanael Greene 1742 - 1786 |
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Nathanael
Greene was born on 27 July 1742 (Old Style) in Potowomut, Rhode Island.
The Gregorian Calendar, which is used today, was not
adopted in England or her colonies until 1752. Prior to that year,
March was considered the first month of the year in civil matters as opposed
to January. According to his father's journal, Nathanael was born on
the twenty-seventh day of the fifth month of the year. This makes his
birthday July 27th (Old Style) or May 27th (New Style). He was named
for his father, who was a respected minister of the Society of Friends
(Quakers) and a prosperous businessman. Greene’s mother was Mary
Motte, the second wife of his father. Because of Quaker beliefs about
education, Greene was only taught reading, writing, and business math.
Later, he would comment on this early aspect of his life, "I
lament the want of a liberal Education." But, he
studied vigorously on his own. He made miniature anchors and
other toys to sell in Newport so that he could buy books. Furthermore,
he would receive guidance in his self-education from two influential men.
The first man was Lindley Murray, a young lawyer working for John Jay’s
law firm in New York. Murray would go on to become the country’s
foremost grammarian. The second man was Ezra Stiles, the future
president of Yale.
As relations between England and
thirteen of her colonies in North America deteriorated, Greene was caught up
in the general fervor of resistance in New England. After attending a
military parade in Connecticut, he became an avid reader of military works.
The unlawful seizure of one of the Greene family’s sloops by the H.M.S. Gaspée,
a British revenue schooner, made matters personal.
On 20 July 1774, Greene married
Catharine Littlefield of Block Island. Caty, as she was known by her
friends, was attractive and vivacious and would give him six children.
She was the niece of two future governors of Rhode Island and the daughter
of the deputy to the General Assembly. During the war, she
visited her husband as much as she could and was very popular with his
associates.
In August of 1774, the men of
East Greenwich county formed a militia company, which they later
incorporated under the name Kentish Guards. Although Greene was a
founding member, his participation in the group was challenged because of a
slight limp that he had since childhood. The incident hurt him deeply
and was only settled when an influential member of the Guards and close
friend, James Mitchell Varnum, threatened to resign if Greene was forced to
leave.
In April of 1775, the Assembly of
Rhode Island met at Providence and established an Army of Observation.
Two months later, Greene was given command as a brigadier general of state
troops. There has been much speculation as to why a man who had never
held a military commission was given the command. Less
than a year earlier, this same man's position in a militia company had been
challenged. He led his troops to Boston, where he showed a talent for
assembling supplies and suppressing intercolonial jealousies. On 22
June 1775, he was commissioned as the youngest brigadier general in the
Continental Army. A month later, he took command of Prospect Hill
during the Siege of Boston. But, he missed the Battle of Bunker Hill
on 17 June 1775 while petitioning for more supplies in Rhode Island.
In a letter describing the battle, he exclaimed, "I wish we
could sell them another hill at the same price we did Bunkers Hill."
It was in Boston
that Greene first met George Washington. Even during their initial
meeting, Washington was greatly impressed. Within a year, he would
consider Greene the best of his generals suited to succeed him in case of
his death or capture. The feeling of admiration and respect was mutual
as Greene named his first born in honor of the commander-in-chief.
After the British evacuated Boston, Greene took command of the city.
When the Continental Army moved
to defend New York in early April of 1776, Greene took command of Long
Island. Here, he was placed in charge of the Brooklyn defenses where
the British Army was expected to attack. In August, he was promoted to
the rank of major general, but was bed laden with a fever during the Battle
of Long Island, on 27 August 1776. As a result, he did not see his
first action until the Battle of Harlem Heights on 16 September 1776.
After the battle, he was placed in charge of the American forces guarding
the shores of New Jersey at Fort Lee. This would lead to his most
costly mistake of the entire war. Hoping for another Bunker Hill,
Greene urged his commander to hold nearby Fort Washington, a strategic
bastion for the Continental Army on Manhattan Island. Severely
outnumbered and outgunned, the garrison of three thousand men fell to the
British with little resistance.
Afterwards, Greene played a
prominent role in conducting the retreat of the Continental Army across New
Jersey. He commanded the right wing of Washington’s task force
during the Battle of Trenton on 26 December 1776. He also participated
in the Battle of Princeton on 3 January 1777. In March, Washington
sent Greene to Congress as his emissary to convince them of the pressing
needs of the Continental Army.
At the Battle of Brandywine on 11
September 1777, Greene led his division four miles in under fifty minutes
through broken country to set up a defensive line that allowed Major General
John Sullivan’s division to retreat. Then, he closed his lines and
held the British at bay until nightfall which gave the main force time to
withdraw from the field. At the Battle of Germantown on 4 October
1777, he led the left wing of the army.
On 2 March 1778, Washington
appointed Greene the new Quartermaster General of the Continental Army. The
Quartermaster Department was in shambles and he had to labor long hours just
to keep the Army operating. His reaction to his new assignment is best
summed up with the statement, "No body ever heard of a
quarter Master in History." Washington still consulted
him on matters of strategy and tactics, and he participated in all councils
of war. The next battle that Greene took an active role in was the Battle of
Monmouth on 28 June 1778. On 7 June 1780, he commanded the front line at the
engagement of Connecticut Farms in New Jersey. Two weeks later, he led the
force that repulsed the British at the Battle of Springfield (23 June 1780).
Greene resigned as Quartermaster
General on 26 July 1780 because he did not agree with Congress’s new
policy of requisitioning supplies from the individual states. In late
September of 1780, he presided over the military court that convicted Major
John André, the British officer who was involved in Benedict Arnold's
treason, of spying. A month later, Washington gave Greene command of West
Point. After Major General Horatio Gates was defeated by
the British Army at the Battle of Camden (16 August 1780), Washington
appointed Greene the new Southern Commander.
After their stunning victory at
Camden, the British had undisputed control of the states of South Carolina
and Georgia with a clear path into North Carolina and Virginia. The British
commander, Lieutenant General Charles Earl Cornwallis
established a chain of posts in order to secure his lines of communication
and rally Loyalist support. Greene would have to fight Cornwallis in a
region that was a logistical nightmare. His first priority as Southern
Commander was to rehabilitate an army that was outnumbered, ill-equipped,
and demoralized.
Greene split his force in the
face of a superior enemy by sending a flying army under the command of
Brigadier General Daniel Morgan to threaten Cornwallis and
bolster local militia support. By separating his army, he was maximizing the
limited resources of the land, while keeping the separate units close enough
to unite in order to fight. He would avoid a major engagement with the
British and harass them until he had the advantage and could go on the
offensive. He coordinated his efforts with local patriots such as Francis
Marion, Andrew Pickens, Thomas Sumter,
and Elijah Clarke in petite guerre (partisan operations) against
the British.
Cornwallis reacted by sending a
force under the command of his subordinate, Lieutenant Colonel Banastre
Tarleton, after Morgan in the hope of catching him between the two
British forces. When Greene learned of Tarleton’s pursuit, he wrote to
Morgan, "Col. Tarleton is said to be on his way to pay you
a visit. I doubt not but he will have a decent reception and a proper
dismission." The result was the Battle of Cowpens on 17
January 1781. Morgan soundly defeated Tarleton in the greatest patriot
victory of the war in the South, rivaled only by the repulsion of the
British forces at Charleston in 1776. Then, Morgan reunited with the main
force and the flight to the Dan River began in earnest. When Greene
learned that Cornwallis was in pursuit, he exclaimed, "Then
he is ours!"
The "Race to
the Dan" exemplified the superior mobility of the American Army. In a
month’s time, the Americans marched two hundred miles to North Carolina
eluding the pursuing British in harsh weather. It also exemplified
Greene’s superior use of local geography and contingency planning. Greene
succeeded in escaping the British Army and forced them to overextend their
supply lines in one move.
Cornwallis returned southward to
recruit additional Loyalist support and supplies, while Greene re-crossed
the Dan River and trailed him. The two forces met head-on at the Battle of
Guilford Courthouse on 15 March 1781. Cornwallis succeeded in driving Greene
from the field, but he suffered severe casualties in a Pyrrhic victory. When
the British Parliament learned of the battle, Charles James Fox exclaimed, "Another
such victory would destroy the British Army." Weakened,
Cornwallis withdrew to Wilmington, North Carolina and eventually on to
Yorktown, Virginia, where he was defeated by a joint Franco-American force.
Next, Greene led his army back
into South Carolina and began the 'War of the Posts.' Forces under
his command along with partisans simultaneously attacked various points in
the exposed British line of forts. He led his main army in three more
engagements, the Battle of Hobkirk’s Hill (25 April 1781), the Siege of
Ninety-Six (22 May-19 June 1781), and the Battle of Eutaw Springs (8
September 1781), the bloodiest engagement of the entire war. Although
he succeeded in completely destroying British authority in the southern
states, he never achieved a single tactical victory. His lack of
success in winning a battle is best summed up in his own words, "We
fight, get beat, rise, and fight again."
In only twenty
months, Greene succeeded in capturing all of the British posts taking 3,500
prisoners and splitting the British Army in half, bottling them up in
Charleston and Wilmington. He also played a vital role in the
re-establishment of civil government in the South. A major factor in
his success was an outstanding group of subordinates including: two
Marylanders, Otho Holland Williams and John Eager Howard, two cavalrymen, William
Washington (second cousin of George Washington) and Henry
Lee (father of General Robert E. Lee), and his Polish engineer, Thaddeus
Kosciuszko.
After the war, Greene moved his
family to his new estate, Mulberry Grove, just north of Savannah, Georgia.
He attempted to settle down to the life of a Southern planter, while
spurning attempts by prominent Georgians to involve him in local politics.
He was forced to sell additional property awarded to him by the states of
North and South Carolina in order to solve severe financial problems caused
by the war. Tragically, he died at the age of forty-four on 19 June
1786 of a stroke, possibly caused by overexposure to the sun. His
remains and those of his son, George Washington Greene, rest beneath a
monument in Johnson Square in downtown Savannah. Eventually, Congress
would pay off his debt and erect a monument to his memory in the nation's
capital. It will never be known to what great heights he would
have risen had he lived a longer life.
Recommended readings: (Click on the link to purchase)
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Title: Nathanael Greene : Military Leader || Author: Meg Greene || ISDN: 0-79106-135-3 || Released: December 2000 |
| Nathanael Greene was a patriot in the mold of Paul Revere. Modest to a fault, he was one of George Washington's favorite Generals. Always putting the cause before his own personal glory, he is just now starting to get the recognition as a key player in the struggle for American Independence. This book goes into depth about the man, the myth, and now the legend. |
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