Washington Writes A Protest Letter–April 17, 1776

Cover art for April 17, 1776: detail of the letter from Washington to the NY Committee of Safety. via Village Preservation, a group dedicated to preserving the heritage and cultural history of the Greenwich Village area.

One of the things I really appreciate about reading documents from this era is just how polite they were; George Washington’s letter to the NY Committee of Safety, when you read between the lines is an admonition wondering if that august body had lost their damn minds.

One of the best examples of this is the Declaration of Independence itself. As Aaron Sorkin describes it in an episode of The West Wing:

[N]ever has a war been so courteously declared. It was on parchment with calligraphy, and “Your Highness, we beseech you on this day in Philadelphia to bite me, if you please.”

However, we’re getting ahead of ourselves; that doesn’t happen for another couple of months (and not when you think!).

At any rate, Washington was correct in his assessment that it didn’t make a ton of sense for New York to supply the British while at the same time opposing them. At the same time he didn’t accuse them directly; he played it very cool and suggested that the NY Committee of Safety could get a lot of credit if they’d do as he suggested.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *