The American Commissioners to Lord North, 12 December 1777
The American Commissioners to Lord North
Printed in The London Evening Post, January 24–27, 1778
Passi, near Paris, Dec. 12, 1777.
My Lord,
From motives of duty, and an earnest desire of mitigating the calamities of war, we proposed, near a year since, to the King of Great Britain’s Ambassador here, an Exchange of prisoners in Europe. The answer we received must have been made known to your Lordship, and the world will judge of its decency.7 It would have been honourable for that noble Lord, and happy for thousands, who have since suffered unnecessarily, if he had considered that moderation is a mark of wisdom, and humanity an ornament to the highest station. These are the sentiments at least which have governed the Congress and people of the United States. They have wished that this war, into which they entered with reluctance, might be distinguished by the humanity with which it was conducted; and that compassion might heal the wounds that were inflicted. The records of Congress, my Lord, are filled with proofs of tender care and attention, not only to the wants, but to the comfort and accomodation of their prisoners.
We have wished in vain to find such instances in the acts of the British Government; for unhappily all we have seen on this subject is, the public declaration of the governors and general who was chosen to commence this war, that the American officers and soldiers should be treated with equal indignity, and all devoted, without distinction, to the most ignominious fate, in terms too low for us to repeat. We have never heard of this proceeding having been censured by the government from which he derived his authority. Neither has the invitation to the Indian savages, at a public treaty, to drink the blood, and feast upon the body of those whom you called your subjects, been ever disavowed.8
It is an universal complaint, that the practices of those in authority under you, have been conformable to the principles of these public acts.
Col. Parker, a gentleman of rank, was thrown into a common gaol in Boston, covered over with wounds, where he perished unpitied, for want of the common comforts which his situation and humanity required.
Colonel Ethan Allan was dragged, in chains, from Canada to England, from England to Ireland, from Ireland to Carolina, and from thence to New York; at a time when the officers taken from you, in the same expedition, were treated not only with lenity, but every possible indulgence.
The barbarous treatment of Mr. Lovel, in Boston, has no parallel.9 Of the prisoners made in Fort Washington, two thirds of them perished by the unexampled cruelty and rigours of their captivity. Even in England, the severities which the American prisoners suffer, are, according to the testimony of every one we have seen, of the most grievous kind. Stripes have been inflicted on some, to make them commit the deepest of all crimes, the fighting against the liberties of their country. Numbers are now groaning in bondage in Africa and India, to which they were compelled by menaces of an immediate ignominious death; as contrary to every rule of war among civilized nations, as to every dictate of humanity.
It is with the greatest regret we mention these cruelties. For the honour of humanity we hope they will not be committed again. Your Lordship must know, that it is in the power of those we have the honour to represent, to make ample retaliation upon the numerous prisoners of all ranks in their possession; and we warn and beseech you not to render it their indispensible duty. Upwards of 500 British seamen have been generously treated, set at liberty by our cruizers in these seas, and sent at the public expence to their country. We trust, you will think yourselves bound to dismiss an equal number of seamen, taken in the service of the United States.
We also desire, that a person appointed by us, may have permission to furnish the subjects of the United States, who are in your prisons, with the necessaries they may want from time to time; and that a general cartel may be immediately settled, by which the unfortunate on both sides may be relieved as soon as possible from the miseries of imprisonment.
We must beg a speedy answer, that we may transmit, without delay, the determination of your court to our constituents.
We have the honour to be with the highest respect, My Lord, Your Lordship’s most obedient, And most humble servants,
Benjamin Franklin,
Silas Deane,
Arthur Lee
Commissioners Plenipotentiary from the Independent and United States of America.1
To the RIGHT HON. LORD NORTH, First Lord of the Treasury, Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Principal Minister of the King of Great Britain.
7. Above, XXIII, 554 n.
8. These appear to be exaggerated references to Gage’s proclamation in June, 1775, and Burgoyne’s two years later; one is printed in 4 Force, Amer. Arch., II, 968–70, and the other is briefly summarized above, XXIV, 468 n. Neither bears out the commissioners’ description of it.
9. Lieut. Col. Moses Parker was wounded in the knee and captured at Bunker Hill; his leg was amputated in prison—unnecessarily, it was said at the time—and he died in consequence. Richard Frothingham, History of the Siege of Boston . . . (4th ed., Boston, 1873), p. 176; Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., 1st ser., VII (1863–64), 252–3. The hardships of Ethan Allen he described himself: Ethan Allen’s Narrative of the Capture of Ticonderoga, and of His Captivity and Treatment by the British . . . (5th ed., Burlington, Vt., 1849), pp. 15–50. James Lovell was imprisoned in Boston after the Battle of Bunker Hill, on a charge of spying, and then sent to Halifax; he was with Allen there and on the subsequent voyage to New York, and then was exchanged: ibid., pp. 29, 32; DAB.
1. At the foot of the letter appears the reply to it, which we suspect was oral rather than written and was transmitted through Hartley to Thornton: “The answer received from the government the 3d of January, 1778, on the subject of the American prisoners, is to the following effect: “His Majesty’s servants do not approve of the proposal of Inspectors. They understand the establishment of the prisoners to be what is usual and proper in such cases; if there has been any neglect, they have given strict orders to have it rectified, and they will always be ready to redress any complaints that shall be made. The prisoners shall be permitted to receive, under proper regulations, any charitable donations in their favour. Besides this, government are disposed, and have it in their intentions, as opportunity shall offer, to exchange them in America against British prisoners there. If any complaints are made through the hands of Mr. H——y, or through any other proper channel, they will be taken into consideration, according to the case, and redressed.”