American Theatre from November 1, 1775, to December 7, 1775

Summary

By the end of October, 1775, resistance to the oppressive actions of British naval and military forces had become widespread from Machias, on the northern coast of Massachusetts' Province of Maine, to Savannah, in Georgia. Royal authority in all thirteen colonies had collapsed, with Provincial Congresses or Committees of Safety taking over the reins of government. Three Colonial Governors - William Franklin in New Jersey, Robert Eden in Maryland and Sir James Wright in Georgia, still occupied their ornate offices, shorn of all power, their correspondence intercepted, their every movement shadowed. Five more — John Wentworth in New Hampshire, William Tryon in New York, John Murray, Earl of Dunmore, in Virginia, Josiah Martin in North Carolina, and Lord William Campbell, in South Carolina, driven from their seats of government, had fled to the protection of the ships of war, where Tryon and Dunmore maintained an uneasy semblance of authority extending no further than the reach of the guns in His Majesty's ships.

Regiments were being raised in every Province to reinforce Washington's army hemming the British in the narrow confines of Boston or the northern forces under Schuyler closing in on beleaguered St. John's in Canada. Other regiments, under direction of Provincial Congress or Committee, were being employed for local defense and offense — to crush Dunmore in Virginia, and Martin in North Carolina; to keep Tryon on shipboard in New York harbor, and Campbell in like plight at Charleston; and to suppress the back-country insurrections of Tories and Indians in the wildernesses of the western Carolinas.

Ports evacuated by the enemy were being fortified. Powder, saltpetre and muskets were unloading from small ships, which had slipped hrough the ineffective enemy blockade with their precious cargoes into remote inlets along the far-flung shore line of the Continent. Committees of Observation were rigorously en­forcing the regulations of the Continental Association.

Initial efforts at sea were beginning to show results. Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and South Carolina boasted of naval vessels in commission or being outfitted. Washington's fleet of armed schooners were all cruising against the enemy's supply ships, and the birth of a Continental Navy had come in October with authorization for the conversion of four merchantmen to ships of war at Philadelphia. This was followed by legislation on November 10 creating the Marine Corps.

Esek Hopkins was named to command the first Continental fleet and the other officers were commissioned including John Paul Jones, first lieutenant of the flagship Alfred.

Captains commissioned were Dudley Saltonstall, Alfred; Abraham Whipple, Columbus; Nicholas Biddle, Andrew Doria; and John Burroughs Hopkins, Cabot. The Continental Congress, laboring daily in long, productive sessions, and at night in various hard-working committees, was hammering together the diversified, yet universal, interests of thirteen colonies into a unified whole, dedicated to the rights and liberties of America.


 

Dear Sir, ー According to your request I wrote you sometime since respecting our machine,2 supposing it was gone to the eastward. On finding that on proof of the navigation one instrument failed performing what was expected from it I then by letter acquainted you the proceeding was delayed until that could be repaired; which when done, another proof has been made which... Continue Reading
Date: 7 December 1775
Volume: Volume 2
We have been down in the sloop Liberty, examining the river as low as Slaughter's Landing, and find the depth of water, from there to this post, greatly to exceed the information we had had. We also took a view of Pooploop's kill, and found its situation the best by much for any defensive works in the Highlands. A little to the north of the house on the hill, is a place where a battery of heavy... Continue Reading
Date: 7 December 1775
Volume: Volume 2
We have just heard the following verbal account, brought by the eastern post, viz. ー That one of our provincial armed vessels had just taken and brought into ———— a store ship from England, from which they had taken the following articles, said to be as suitable for our present occasion, as if they had been sent according to an invoice from the Continental Congress, and that General Washington,... Continue Reading
Date: 7 December 1775
Volume: Volume 2
A number of applications was this day Read for Supplying the officers & men employed on Board the armed Boats with Provisions and other Necessaries, as set forth in an advertisement from this Board the 30th November last. And Mr. Francis Wade having offered to supply them at the Rate of 4s. 11p man per week, which being the lowest terms, Resolved,That the said Mr. Francis Wade be, and he is... Continue Reading
Date: 7 December 1775
Volume: Volume 2
Your Offer to negociate our public Business in the foreign West Indies is very readily accepted2 and we have no Doubt but that your discreet Managemt of it will be essentially servicable to your Country ー As it is necessary before you enter on this Service that the Terms should be ascertained we now supply the Omission in your proposal as to your own Reward by proposing that you shall... Continue Reading
Date: 7 December 1775
Volume: Volume 2
You will proceed in the Sloop [blank] to Martinico, which is to be your place of Residence. & there having disposed of the Cargo, you will purchase on the Credit of this Province Gunpowder Gunlocks Good Muskets fitted with Bayonets. Lead. 5 Tons, Salt Petre ー Sulphur ー Gun flints In the Purchase of these Articles you will be governd in the Quantity by the Proceeds of the several Cargoes which... Continue Reading
Date: 7 December 1775
Volume: Volume 2
On Application from William Gibs, for Leave to Charter a Vessel in this River, to load with Naval stores, that he has at Cape Lookout & Bogue & intends to bring round here if allowed by this Committee, he having already obtained permission from the Committee of Safety for the District of New Bern, to ship a quantity of Naval Stores that he had cast away on the 2d September last ー It is... Continue Reading
Date: 7 December 1775
Volume: Volume 2
Mr President laid before the Council the following copies of letters which he had dispatched this morning, by George Dittinger: Charles-Town, Dec. 6th, 1775. Gentlemen ー Having received information, that through sickness of some and absence of other members of your board, the intended repairs at Fort Lytleton are scarcely yet begun; and knowing the necessity for putting that place in the best... Continue Reading
Date: 7 December 1775
Volume: Volume 2
South Carolina By this Public Instrument of Protest, be it known and manifest to all Persons, to whom these Presents shall come that on this Day being the Seventh Day of December One Thousand seven hundred & Seventy five, Before me Fenwicke Bull one of his Majestys Justices assigned to keep the Peace and a Notary Public by lawfull Authority appointed, duly Admitted, and sworn personally... Continue Reading
Date: 7 December 1775
Volume: Volume 2
I do hereby certify, that at the desire of his Excellency Lord William Campbell, I detained the bearer hereof, Mr. [Matthew] Floyd, two nights, on board his Majesty's ship Cherokee, under my command; as the circumstance of his coming on board with the messenger of the Council of Safety, made it highly suspicious, that he did not come with any message from his Majesty's faithful and loyal subjects... Continue Reading
Date: 7 December 1775
Volume: Volume 2

Pages

Subscribe to American Theatre from November 1, 1775, to December 7, 1775