iassaxfrasdis Historical Sotwtjj. REPORT EXCHANGES OF PRISONERS DURING THE AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR. V Class gv&/ Book til *£L ■> ■ ; APPOINTED BY THE MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY EXCHANGES OF PRISONERS THE AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR. BOSTON: PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY 1861. Eutered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1861, by THE MASSACHUSETTS HISTOKICAL SOCIETY, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts. BOSTON: riUNTED BY JOHN WILSON AND SON, 22, School STREET. MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. At a stated meeting of the Massachusetts Histori- cal Society, held Dec. 12, 1861, the President, Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, in the chair, it was voted, That — Jared Sparks, LL.D., Hon. Edward Everett, Geo. T. Curtis, Esq., Col. Thos. Aspinwall, Hon. Richard Frothingham, Joseph Willard, Esq., Hon. Lorenzo Sabine, Rev. Geo. E. Ellis, D.D., and William Brigham, Esq., be a Committee to inquire and report to what extent an exchange of prisoners, during the American Revo- lution, was effected by the action of the Kings Govern- ment on the one side, and the Continental Congress on the other side, or by and between the respective military commanders ; and especially to ascertain and report, whether, by such exchanges, the rights of sovereignty claimed by the Crown were supposed in England to have been in any way impaired or set aside. CHANDLER ROBBINS, Becordivg Secretary. REPORT. At a special meeting of the Massachusetts Historical Society, held Dec. 19, 1861, the President, Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, in the chair, Mr. Curtis submitted the following Report. The Committee who were instructed to make the inquiries embraced by the foregoing vote have had the subject under consideration, and respectfully submit the following Re- port : — It is not necessary for us to remind the Society, that the war of the American Revolution was conducted, on the part of the King's Government, as against rebellious subject Pro- vinces. The great question at issue, after actual hostilities had commenced, was, whether the allegiance claimed to be due from the people of the Colonies to the Crown, upon the principles of the law of England, should be continued, or should be dissolved by a successful Revolution. The British Government, on the one hand, sought to maintain its authority by force of arms : the people of the Colonies, on the other hand, sought to secure and maintain their independence by the same means. Your Committee do not conceive it to be any part of their duty, under the vote above recited, to seek for analogies between the causes which produced the Ameri- can Revolution, and the alleged reasons on which the people of the seceded States of this Union are now acting in their efforts to separate themselves from the operation of the con- G MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. stitution and laws of the United States. If we were to seek for such analogies, we should not find them ; for there is obviously one broad distinction between the two cases, founded on the fact, that the Government of the United States has not given, and is not charged to have given, cause for this revolt. But inasmuch as every government, that has the mis- fortune to encounter a serious revolt of large and organized masses of its people which it is obliged to meet by conducting the operations of actual war, is also obliged to consider how far, and on what occasions, it can relax its rights of sove- reignty, and deal with its subjects who take part in the revolt as ordinary prisoners of war, — your Committee do conceive that the precedents of exchanges to be found in the action of the British Government, during the war of the American Rev- olution, are important subjects of inquiry at the present time. While we disclaim any purpose of suggesting to the Federal Government what policy it should pursue towards any pri- soners now in its hands, or that may hereafter be under its control, we venture to believe that our facilities for a careful investigation of the principles on which the most important civil war of modern times was conducted, on the part of the sovereign and parent country, may and should be employed at this period in the public service. The great interests of civilization and humanity require that this war should be so conducted as to secure its legitimate objects at the least ex- pense of human suffering ; and whatever tends to throw light upon the principles on which a government may safely conduct such a Avar ought not to be withheld by those who have the means of exhibiting it. We proceed, therefore, without further preface, to state the general course of action adopted by the Government of Great Britain, after the com- mencement of actual hostilities between the people of the Colonies and the Crown. To some extent, an exchange of prisoners began before General Washington took the command of the Revolutionary EXCHANGE OF PRISONERS. 7 forces at Cambridge. Prisoners were captured on both sides during the engagement that is commonly called the battle of Lexington (April, 1775). The British prisoners were taken charge of by the Local Committee of Safety. Certain prominent citizens among the patriots were also seized by the royal authorities ; and, among them, John Brown of Providence. On the 28th of April, the Provincial Congress ordered Samuel Murray, a son of a mandamus councillor, and certain British officers held as prisoners of war, to be sent under guard to Providence, and delivered to Hon. Stephen Hopkins, or any other friend of Mr. Brown, to be made use of to obtain the liberty of Mr. Brown and two others, who were then on board a British ship-of-war at Newport. On the 6th of June, there was an exchange of prisoners at Charlestown, — Warren, who then was the virtual executive officer of Massachusetts, and General Putnam, conducting the business on the American side ; and Major Moncrief on the side of the British, who landed from the " Lively." On the 12th of June, General Gage issued a proclamation, characterizing those in arms as rebels and traitors, but pro- mising pardon to all on submission, excepting Samuel Adams and John Hancock. Five days later, thirty American prison- ers were captured at the Bunker- hill Battle. They were lodged in Boston Jail ; but they were not proceeded against in the courts as traitors, or subjected to the punishment threat- ened in the proclamation. On the 23d of August, 1775, the king's proclamation de- clared the Colonies to be in open rebellion against the Crown ; and all the king's officers, civil and military, were ordered to give information of such persons as should be found aiding and abetting those who were in arms against the Government, or holding any correspondence with them, " in order to bring to condign punishment the authors, perpetrators, and abettors of such traitorous designs." 8 MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. This proclamation was soon known and published in America ; and, on the 7th of December, the Congress issued a counter proclamation, declaring — " That whatever punishment shall he inflicted upon any persons in the power of our enemies, for favoring, aiding, or abetting the cause of American liberty, shall be retaliated in the same kind and degree upon those in our power who have favored, aided, or abetted, or shall favor, aid, or abet, the system of ministerial oppression. The essen- tial difference between our cause and that of our enemies might jus- tify a severer punishment : the law of retaliation will unquestionably warrant one equally severe." — Jov/rncds of Congress, Dec. 6, 1775. The two parties were thus brought face to face in the field : the one acting as a sovereign to suppress a rebellion, and determined to apply all his judicial powers of punishment, as well as his executive powers of dispersing the rebellious forces ; the other acting upon revolutionary principles to. accomplish its independence by arms. The one could, of course, make no concession of belligerent rights, beyond those which actual war renders unavoidable, if a civil war is to be conducted between sovereign and subject with reasonable regard to the usages of civilized warfare : the other claimed all the rights of belligerents, as well as those of an independ- ent sovereignty, — staking their lives upon their power to maintain both of these positions. Before we proceed to detail the action taken on the subject of prisoners, it is important, as a further illustration of the position of the English Government, to notice a measure adopted after the Avar had been for some time in progress, and after it was deemed necessary to arm the Crown with extraordinary powers with reference to the custody and de- tention of prisoners. The law and the custom of England required that any man imprisoned on a criminal charge, within the realm, should be brought to a speedy trial, or be discharged on habeas corpus. The same law and custom obtained in the Colonies ; but, in most of them, no means for the detention or EXCHANGE OF PRISONEES. 9 trial of prisoners, charged with offences against the Crown, existed after the war had actually begun. To obviate these inconveniences, and to furnish power to confine American prisoners anywhere within the king's dominions, the minister (Lord North), on the 6th of February, 1777,— " Moved, in the House of Commons, for leave to bring in a bill to enable his majesty to secure and detain persons charged with or suspected of the crime of high treason committed in America, or on the high seas, or the crime of piracy. He prefaced the motion by observing, that, during the present war in America, many prisoners had been made, who were in the actual commission of the crime of high treason ; that there were others guilty of that crime, who might be taken, but who, for want of sufficient evidence, could not at present be securely confined ; that it had been customary in cases of rebellion, or danger of invasion from without, to enable the Crown to seize sus- pected persons ; that he would not, however, be thought to hint at any present necessity of intrusting ministers with such a power in general. The times were happily different from those which called for such ex- ertions in their utmost extent. Neither rebellion at home nor foreign war were at present to be apprehended. For these reasons, it was not meant to ask the full power usually obtained in former cases of rebellion ; but, as the law stood at present, it was not possible for Government officially to apprehend the most suspected person. An- other circumstance, which required an immediate remedy, was, that the Crown had at present no means of confining rebel prisoners, or those taken in the crime of piracy on the high seas, but in the com- mon jails : a measure not only inconvenient, but impracticable. In the present state of affairs, it was absolutely necessary that the Crown should be enabled to confine prisoners under those descriptions, and to provide for their security, in the same manner that was practised with respect to other prisoners of war, until circumstances might make it advisable to proceed against them criminally. Such, he said, were the purposes of the bill." — Annual Register, vol. xx. p. 53. This bill became a law, by a very large majority of both houses ; * and it shows several important things : — * 17 Geo. III. chap. 9. By successive acts, it was continued until Jan. 1, 1783. 2 10 MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. 1st, That the Government intended to reserve and exercise all its sovereign judicial powers of punishment. 2d, That it meant to punish for treason or for piracy, ac- cording as the prisoners captured might be amenable to the law of England from being taken on the land; or from being taken on the sea, cruising against British commerce. 3d, That it was intended to have the trials for such offences take place at the pleasure of the Crown ; thus holding the prisoners in a position to be dealt with as criminals or as ordinary prisoners of war, as the Executive Government might find expedient. These purposes are not left to mere conjecture ; for as the Government proceeded under a statute which armed the Crown with unusual powers, and as the grant of those powers can be explained only by what we have said as to their purposes, those purposes are just as plainly apparent from the provisions of the act as if they had been expressly declared. Indeed, the minister, in the course of the debate, could only defend himself against the charge, that a man could not know, under this bill, whether he was to be treated as a felon or as a prisoner of war, by repeating, that it was necessary to give the Crown the extraordinary power of holding persons arrested until circumstances might make it advisable to proceed against them criminally. This very significant observation shows, quite plainly, that the power to treat the prisoners as prisoners of war or as criminals, according to the exigencies of policy, was what the minister sought and obtained. The treatment which different prominent Americans re- ceived, who were made prisoners in the course of the war, was exactly in accordance with the double powers thus ob- tained by the Crown. One of the earliest prisoners was our unfortunate countryman, Colonel Ethan Allen, who was cap- tured in a rash attack upon Montreal, Sept. 24, 1775 ; and who was handed over to the local commander of the British forces, — General Prescott. Prescott, as is well known, EXCHANGE OF PRISONERS. 11 treated bis prisoner with great indignity and rigor. Not long afterwards, Prescott was himself taken prisoner by tbe Americans, in Ebode Island. As soon as tbe treatment to which Allen was subjected was known to Congress and to General Washington, the latter, on the 18th of December, 1775, wrote to Sir William Howe, announcing that whatever fate Allen should undergo would be meted out to General Prescott ; at the same time intimating, that he (Washington) was ready to enter into an exchange of prisoners, Congress having resolved that an exchange was proper, " citizens for citizens, officers for officers of equal rank, and soldier for soldier." Sir William replied (Dec. 23), that the limits of his command did not extend to Canada, and that he knew nothing of the case of Allen ; but he took no notice of that part of Washington's letter which related to a general exchange. But, on the next day, Sir William wrote to the Secretary for the Colonies, enclosing the retaliatory proclamation of Congress, and saying that he should not enter upon exchanges without the king's orders. — Sparks's Writings of Washington, iii. 201-204. Previous to this, — and, in fact, soon after he was taken, — Allen was sent to England in irons as a traitor, and was confined for some time in Pendennis Castle. This, of course, took place before Lord North's Act, already referred to, was passed ; and it was doubtless in pursuance of general orders to the British commanders in America, that Allen and his companions were carried to England. The inconvenience of holding them in prison subject to inquiries by habeas corpus, and the condition of things at the close of the year 1776, were evidently the causes of the enactment of the law just mentioned. About midsummer, 1776, Lieutenant-Colonel Campbell, a member of Parliament and a gentleman of fortune, was cap- tured in a transport, in Boston Harbor, with a body of two hundred and ten Highlanders. Colonel Campbell was con- signed to Concord Jail. At the close of the campaign of 1776, 12 MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. the British had an aggregate of nearly five thousand American prisoners in their hands, while the Americans held an aggre- gate of nearly three thousand British prisoners. But, although the balance was thus largely in favor of the British, an event occurred, before the close of the year, which made it neces- sary for the English Government to consider whether they would, in defiance of the retaliatory measures threatened by Congress, proceed to use their powers of trial and punish- ment ; or whether, in justice to their own officers and men then in the hands of the Americans, they would permit exchanges as of prisoners of war. This event was the capture of Major-General Charles Lee, the officer next in rank in the American Army to Washington, on the 12th December, 1776. Sir William Howe believed, apparently with great sincerity, that Lee was amenable to military punishment as a deserter, because he had held a commission in the British Army ; and Lee was treated accordingly with great severity, as a person liable to be tried by court-martial for the high military crime of desertion. This drew from General Washington a vigorous remonstrance, coupled with the threat, that any injury done to Lee would be severely retaliated upon the Hessian and British officers in the hands of Congress. At the same time, he offered to exchange five Hessian officers for General Lee ; and, if that should be refused, he demanded that Lee should be enlarged on his parole. This step was taken by General Washington, by order of Congress, Jan. 13, 1777. Lee was not exchanged at that time, or enlarged upon his parole, but was held for trial as a deserter. Thus this matter stood at the close of the year 1776 and the beginning of 1777. But it is now necessary to go back, and ascertain to what extent, and under what circumstances, there had been, pre- vious to this time, any arrangements or agreements about exchanges : bearing in mind the prominent cases of Colonel Allen, who was carried to England as a traitor, and against whom Lieutenant-Colonel Campbell was afterwards offered in EXCHANGE OF PRISONERS. 13 exchange ; and the case of General Lee, then held in New- York as a deserter, for whose safety five Hessian officers were held as hostages by the Congress. We have seen that Sir William Howe, in December, 1775, when in command at Boston, did not feel himself authorized to make an exchange of prisoners without the king's express orders. We shall see, however, presently, that in January, 1777, he had for some time had, to use his own language, some " agreement with the enemy for exchange of prisoners." What was this agreement ? and on what authority did he make it? On the 20th of July, 1776, Sir William Howe sent his adju- tant, Lieutenant-Colonel Paterson, to have a personal interview with General Washington. A careful memorandum of what took place at this interview was preserved by Washington, and may be found in the Appendix to the fourth volume of Mr. Sparks's edition of his w 7 orks. It was a curious scene. The British officer, with the instincts of a gentleman, addressed General Washington constantly by the title of " Excellency," and did his best to explain the circumstances which had led Sir William formerly to write to him as " George Washington, Esq., &c, &c, &c. : " but the explanation was an awkward one ; and as he brought with him the same letter, with its objectionable address, Washington again declined to receive communications so superscribed. This led to a verbal com- munication of the topics of his errand ; in the course of which, Colonel Paterson referred to a paper which he took from his pocket. One of the subjects related to an exchange of pri- soners ; and Colonel Paterson stated, that he now had autho- rity to accede to a particular exchange, which had previously been proposed. In consequence of this interview, Washing- ton, on the 30th of July, wrote to Sir William Howe, informing him that Congress not only approved of this particular ex- change, but wished to negotiate a general exchange of " Continental officers for those of equal rank, soldier for sol- 14: MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. dier, sailor for sailor, and citizen for citizen." He also men- tioned the case of Colonel Allen as one for which Congress were particularly anxious to provide. On the 1st of August, Sir William replied with great courtesy, addressing his letter to General Washington, and agreeing to the mode of exchange proposed (excepting as to seamen, concerning whom he re- ferred General Washington to the admiral), but excluding deserters from the scope of the agreement. This arrangement, it should be remembered, took place within a few weeks after the Declaration of Independence, and six months before the passage of Lord North's Act. The British general knew that he was dealing in this matter with the American Commander-in-chief, who, he also knew, was acting under the orders of Congress." Now, it is not to be supposed that Sir William Howe assumed an authority in 1776 which he did not consider that he possessed in 1775, or that he acted without the king's permission. He was a com- mander of great intelligence and prudence, a faithful servant of the Crown, and fully conversant with the duties of his posi- tion ; and, although we cannot trace in any of his published correspondence with General Washington any reference to a new authority on the subject of exchanging prisoners, there can be no rational doubt that he had received such authority, and that a search in the London War Office would disclose it. When, too, we connect his course with that subsequently pursued by the ministry in obtaining from Parliament power to hold prisoners, for the present, without trial, and with their directions respecting Lee and Allen, we cannot doubt that they had discovered a principle on which exchanges could be permitted, in a civil war, of men amenable to punishment as criminals, when it suits the convenience of the sovereign to treat them as prisoners of war. It is proper here to mention, briefly, how this agreement between General Howe and General Washington operated, down to the time when the exchange of Lee and Allen was permitted by the King's Government. EXCHANGE OF PRISONERS. 15 This period extends from August, 1776, to May, 1778. It would occupy altogether too much space to detail the very nu- merous exchanges made between the two commanders during this interval, or to describe the various difficulties attending particular cases. The whole of the important facts may be found in the fourth and fifth volumes of Mr. Sparks's collec- tion of Washington's writings, and the Appendices of those volumes. From these sources, it is apparent that great num- bers of exchanges were made from time to time, in the course of a correspondence, a large part of which is occupied with mutual complaints of the treatment received by the prisoners on each side. Sufferings, for which the command- ing generals were not responsible, of course were endured on both sides ; but although it is occasionally sharp, and even stern, probably there is no military correspondence between opposite commanders, in the history of any country, more elevated, and more marked with a spirit of humanity, and a desire to relieve suffering, than that between Generals Washington and Howe which covers this period. It is interesting to observe, that this humane and accomplished British general, for whose character Washington did not hesi- tate to express both " respect and reverenpe," and who was prosecuting the war of a sovereign against rebellious subjects, was particularly earnest in insisting on the most liberal appli- cation of the rules of war in respect to exchanges of prison- ers. He was anxious to have even a daily exchange, so as to include stragglers ; but Washington denied that the custom of war required, or that the interest of an army would admit of it. To this, Sir William replied : — " You are pleased to say, the usage of war does not allow of an immediate exchange of prisoners ; Avhich I can by no means agree to, the contrary being ever the custom of armies between which an exchange of prisoners has been determined, as far as the nature of business may permit. And in respect to stragglers from your army, since you have been pleased to say I might have set you examples of returning them, T am to inform you that no persons under that 16 MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. description have fallen into my hands. Such men as have been lately taken in arms, as well as those who have been longer in con- finement, are solely detained for the arrival of your prisoners, in consequence of assurances received from you on that subject." — Nov. 11, 1776. Your Committee do not deem themselves competent to decide on the military point on which these two eminent com- manders thus differed ; but it is evident, that, whatever Sir William Howe's motive may have been, he, as the military representative of his Government in conducting the war, insisted upon applying what he understood to be the rules of war to the relations of the two armies w r ith each other, although one of those armies was composed of rebels in the eye of British law and in his own opinion. Such continued to be the relations of the two armies in reference to exchanges, under the agreement of August, 1776, down to the time when the case of General Lee made a refer- ence to his Government by General Howe necessary to the safety of the British and Hessian officers then in the hands of Congress. For the particulars respecting Lee's exchange, we are indebted to Mr. Sparks's researches in the English State- paper Office. Dec. 20, 1776, Sir William Howe wrote to Lord George Germain : — " General Lee, being considered in the light of a deserter, is kept a close prisoner ; but I do not bring him to trial, as a doubt has arisen, whether, by a public resignation of his half-pay prior to his entry into the Rebel Army, he is still amenable to the military law as a deserter : upon which point I shall wait for information ; and, if the decision should be for trial on this ground, 1 beg to have the judges' opinion to lay before the court. Deserters are excluded in my agree- ment with the enemy for exchange of prisoners." To this the minister replied : — " As you have difficulties about bringing General Lee to trial in America, it is his majesty's pleasure that you send him to Great Britain by the first ship-of-war." EXCHANGE OF PRISONERS. 17 Sir William Howe wrote, in answer to this order : — " Washington declines to exchange the Hessian field-officers taken at Trenton, or Lieutenant-Colonel Campbell, unless Lee is recognized as a prisoner of war. Lee is therefore detained for further instruc- tions ; being apprehensive that the close confinement of the Hessian officers Avould be the consequence of sending Lee to Britain, and that this would occasion much discontent among the foreign troops." — Letter, July 8, 1777. This measure of caution was approved, and the minister replied : — " His majesty consents that Lee (having been struck off the half- pay list) shall, though deserving the most exemplary punishment, be deemed as a prisoner of war ; and may be exchanged as such, when you may think proper." — Letter, Sept. 3 (Sparks's Writings of Washington, vol. iv. p. 276, note). Lee was accordingly exchanged for General Prescott at some time in April, 1778. It is to be observed, that this consent to treat as a prisoner of war a man who was held in England to have deserved exemplary punishment as a deserter, was given six months before our treaty of alliance with France had elevated us into the posture of a nation waging war in conjunction with an ally. We were still the " rebels " we had been declared to be by the Proclamation of 1775, — a character in which we never ceased, indeed, to be regarded in the view of the king and his ministers, and in the popular judgment of the British nation, until the Preliminary Treaty put an end to the pretension. Yet General Lee's imputed criminality, both as a traitor and a deserter, was all waived, in order to prevent the military inconvenience and the sufferings of British officers which would have resulted from treating him otherwise than as a prisoner of war. Allen was sent back to America, as a prisoner of war, in 1776. He was not under the control of Sir William Howe 18 MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. when that officer sent his adjutant to General Washington to propose an exchange of prisoners. Allen and about forty other Americans, taken in Canada, arrived in England, Dec. 22, 1775 ; and were immediately lodged in Pendennis Castle as traitors. The " Annual Register " states, that " whilst their friends in London were preparing to bring them up by habeas corpus, to have the legality of their confinement discussed, they were sent back to North America to be exchanged." — An. Beg., vol. xviii. p. 187. At length, Allen and the men who had been captured with him were put on board the fleet com- manded by Sir Peter Parker, which sailed from Cork in February, 1776. They were taken first to North Carolina, and afterwards to Halifax, where they remained till October, when they were transferred to New York. In the spring of 1778, Allen, being then within the limits of General Howe's command, was by him exchanged for Lieutenant - Colonel Campbell on the 5th of May, 1778. — See Life of Allen, in the Library of American Biography, by Mr. Sparks. From the foregoing statements, it will be apparent, that both before and after the passage of Lord North's Act respect- ing American prisoners, by the sanction of his Government, Sir William Howe was permitted to exchange prisoners with the American General ; that, after a commitment on a charge of treason, Allen and his companions were returned from England to America as prisoners of war ; and that Lee, who was considered in England as a deserter, was converted into a prisoner of war, and exchanged as such. It now remains for us in this connection, before the termi- nation of General Howe's service in America, to state the reasons why a general cartel was not entered into between the Continental Congress on the one side, and the King's Government on the other. Such an arrangement, to last during the war, and to embrace all prisoners on both sides, was desired by Congress and General Washington. After much negotiation, it failed, for reasons sufficiently stated by EXCHANGE OP PRISONERS. 19 Mr. Sparks in a note to his fifth volume, page 316, as follows : — " Commissioners from General Washington and General Howe met at Germantown on the 31st of March, 1778, where they remained three days. They met again, April 6, at Newtown, in Bucks County. A difficulty arose, at the outset, concerning the nature of the powers contained in General Howe's commission. It was given on no other authority than his own ; whereas the commission from General Washington expressly specified, that it was ' in virtue of full powers to him delegated.' This defect was objected to by the American commissioners, and the subject was referred to General Howe, who declined altering the commission ; declaring at the same time, ' that lie meant the treaty to be of a personal nature, founded on the mu- tual confidence and honor of the contracting generals ; and had no intention, either of binding the nation, or extending the cartel beyond the limits and duration of his own command.' As this was putting the matter on a totally different footing from that contemplated in Genei-al Washington's commission, by which Congress and the na- tion were bound, and as General Howe's commissioners refused to treat on any other terms, the meeting was dissolved, without any progress having been made in a cartel. It was intimated by the British commissioners, as a reason why General Howe declined to negotiate on a national ground, that it might imply an acknowledg- ment inconsistent with the claims of the English Government." The inferences proper to be drawn from this occurrence, we conceive to be, not that the English Government were unwilling to exchange prisoners, or to sanction an exchange of prisoners, to any extent required by their military con- venience, or by the duty which they owed to their own people, but that they were unwilling to make a total sur- render of their political and judicial rights by entering into a national cartel embracing all prisoners, and extending through the war ; that they considered a reservation of their sovereign powers of judicial trial and punishment to be en- tirely consistent with exchanges upon military principles, concerted between the commanding generals ; and that this mode of exchange left them free to act towards any prisoners 20 MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. then in England, or that might be afterwards brought there, according to the provisions of the act which Lord North had carried through Parliament in the previous winter. The date of the final termination of this first negotiation respecting a national cartel decisively supports this view of the principles on which the ministry acted. The negotiation broke off on the 6th of April, 1778. Lee, Allen, and many others, were exchanged between Generals Washington and Howe after this date, under their general agreement, which had been in operation since Aug. 1, 1776. In the following year (1779), when Sir Henry Clinton had taken the place of Sir William Howe, a second attempt was made to arrange a general cartel ; and here we are able still more accurately to appreciate the concessions which the British Government was willing or unwilling to make. On the 14th of March, 1779, General Washington proposed to General Clinton the settlement of a general cartel by commissioners. Commissioners were appointed on both sides, and they met at Amboy on the 12th of April. In the instruc- tions given by Sir Henry Clinton to the British commis- sioners, he said, " You will take care not to admit of any preamble, title, or expression, tending to the acknowledgment of independency on Great Britain." After adding some ex- plicit directions on the details of the exchanges to be agreed upon, he continued : — " Should it be objected by the enemy's commissioners, that the cartel being between Sir Henry Clinton and General Washington, and not between nations at war, it would be in force only during their holding the command of the two armies, an article may be framed to express, that it should rest with Great Britain and the Congress to give it stability during the Avar by a ratification within the space of months." This was going very far ; for, although any express or implied admission of independency was excluded, the British general was willing that the cartel should extend through EXCHANGE OF PRISONERS. 21 the war, if his Government should consent. In the report of the British commissioners to their General, they said, — " They (the American commissioners) disclaim all intention to draw us into an acknoAvledgment of their independence, and have fully satisfied us that the preamble may be couched in terms not repugnant to our general mode of expression with respect to them." But the negotiation came to nothing, partly on account of the difficulties respecting the convention troops, and partly in consequence of disputes respecting the prisoners' ac- counts. In January, 1780, General Washington was informed by the minister of France, that the court of London, on account of the difficulty in procuring men, had instructed their com- mander-in-chief to treat for a cartel on a national footing, rather than fail to obtain a re-enforcement of their army by a release of their prisoners in the hands of the Congress. Washington did not credit this information, but thought it his duty to repeat the experiment ; but he instructed his commissioners to do nothing unless the British commissioners should come with national powers. Another meeting took place at Amboy, on the 31st of March, 1780; but this time the effort again failed, because Washington insisted on what was equivalent to a national recognition. On this point, we quote the following remarks made by Mr. Sparks on this occurrence (vol. vii. note, p. 3) : — " It turned out that the enemy had not the remotest idea of treat- ing on national grounds. Perhaps it was not to be expected ; and yet, as there could be no fair exchange except on terms of equality, it would seem that the difficulty lay more in the form of words than in the substance of the thing. " The national faith was as much plighted on one side as the other, and the king was as much bound in honor to confirm the con- tracts of his generals as Congress was to sanction those of General Washington. The difference was, that Congress pledged themselves beforehand to abide by his acts ; whereas the British commanders took care so to express all the instructions to their commissioners as '2'2 MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. to make it appear that these instructions emanated from no higher authority than themselves. If a consent to treat on national grounds, as it was called, would seem to imply the political independence of the Americans, it should have been likewise considered, that the course pursued was a standing reproach upon them as rebels ; and, if the former was unpalatable to one party, the latter must have been equally so to the other. It was a case, therefore, which required mutual concessions, especially as both parties, in regard to the matter in hand, stood on equal grounds, had the same interests at stake, and would be equally benefited or injured by the result. It was not a subject in which political considerations ought to have interfered. Justice and humanity had superior claims. There might and should have been an explicit understanding, that agree- ments for the exchange of prisoners should have no bearing on the other relations between the parties, and that the great points at issue should rest on precisely the same foundation as if no occurrences of this sort had taken place. " Upon this basis, there could never have been any substantial political obstacles in the way of an equitable exchange of prisoners ; but there were reasons, perhaps, why neither party was inclined to propose such a basis, or even to adopt it if proposed." The exchanges, however, during the years 1779 and 1780, went on as before, without any general cartel, and by the action of the commanders-in-chief, through commissaries of prisoners, or by direct correspondence between the generals. In November, 1780, as many as a hundred and forty American officers and four hundred and seventy-six privates were ex- changed at one time. Among the officers were Major-General Lincoln ; Brigadier-Generals Thompson, Waterbury, and Du- portail ; and Lieutenant-Colonel Laurens. This brings us to the period when Henry Laurens, father of the officer just mentioned, President of Congress, and the intended minister of the Congress to the Hague, was captured off the coast of Newfoundland, carried to London, and com- mitted to the Tower on a charge of treason. Before this event, some thousands of prisoners had been exchanged in America upon the principles and in the mode above described ; EXCHANGE OF PRISONERS. 23 that is to say, while the British Government was unwilling to make that species of convention durante hello, which is known to the public law as a cartel between nations at war, they constantly permitted exchanges, under the rules of war, for purposes of military convenience, and in relief of the suffer- ings of their own officers and privates in captivity. Had they not saved the point which distinguishes between an admission of sovereignty and an admission of the physical fact of temporary military force, there would have been gross inconsistency and impropriety in treating Mr. Laurens other- wise than as a prisoner of war. As it was, they had reserved the right, upon their principles of allegiance, to make him amenable to the«law of England; but Mr. Laurens, after suf- fering a long and severe confinement of fifteen months, was released on bail as the prospect of peace drew near, and was finally exchanged for Lord Cornwallis just before the prelimi- nary articles of peace were signed. With respect to the American prisoners who were carried to England, your Committee find, that, under the operation of Lord North's Act, they were, in general, committed to jail as traitors or pirates. Their treatment was so rigorous, and their condition so bad, that, after the Earl of Abingdon had brought the subject before the House of Lords, a public meet- ing was held in London, Dec. 24, 1777, at which the sum of eight hundred pounds was subscribed for their relief. Among the persons who interested themselves in their behalf was David Hartley, who corresponded with Dr. Franklin on the subject. In August, 1778, Hartley succeeded in obtaining from the Admiralty an engagement respecting English pri- soners under Franklin's control in France, of which he gives the following account to Franklin (Franklin's Works, vol. viii. p. 295): — Golden Square, 14th August, 1778. Dear Sir, — I wrote to you, as long ago as the 14th of the last month, to tell you that the administration here had given their con- 24 MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. sent to the exchange of prisoners at Calais ; and that they would agree t<> give any ship on your part a free passport from Brest to Calais, upon your sending to me a similar assurance that any British ship going to Calais, and for the purpose of the exchange, should have free entrance without molestation, and free egress with the pri- soners in exchange. I have again received a confirmation of these assurances from the Board of Admiralty here : and we are now waiting for your answer; after the receipt of which, the exchange will he forwarded with all expedition. Great delays, however, were interposed by the English Admiralty ; and this arrangement was not carried out. Frank- lin believed that the delay was occasioned in part by the efforts of the English to persuade the American prisoners to enter the king's service. At length, in lf80, Paul Jones came into the Texel with five hundred English prisoners on board of his privateers. Dr. Franklin proposed to exchange them ; but this proposition was refused by the English Admi- ralty, in the expectation, as Franklin believed, that they could recapture them on their way to France. But, Paul Jones's squadron remaining longer in Holland than was expected, the British ministry procured an exchange of those prisoners with the French Government for an equal number of Frenchmen ; and Franklin was persuaded to give them up, on a promise of having an equal number of English delivered to his order at Morlaix. But this promise was not kept; and the English Government refused to exchange other Englishmen for Americans, unless they had been taken by American crui- sers. In 1782, the number of American prisoners confined in England was not far from eleven hundred. In April of that year, in consequence of a proposition sent over by Dr. Frank- lin, an act of Parliament was passed, empowering the king, notwithstanding their commitment for treason, to consider them as prisoners of war, and exchange them as such. A carefnl examination of Dr. Franklin's correspondence satisfies your Committee, that, although he never succeeded EXCHANGE OF PRISONERS. 25 in obtaining the execution of any considerable agreement for exchanges with the British ministry, partial exchanges, to some extent, were effected either by or through him, or with the commanders of the American privateers. In general, however, the Amei'ican prisoners were held in England under the authority of the Act passed in February, 1779, and which we have referred to as Lord North's Act. Your Committee are not aware that any American taken during the war of the Revolution was actually put upon trial for treason or piracy. Probably, had the struggle terminated differently, some trials and executions for both of those offences would have taken place ; for it is an undoubted maxim of all governments, that the sovereign who succeeds in suppressing a revolt may reserve for punishment those whom he sees fit to punish, although, in the course of the struggle, he may have made any number of military exchanges for reasons of temporary policy. Such exchanges are made in his own interest and for his own convenience, and involve of themselves no concessions to the political pretensions of his enemies. They are made from a pure principle of justice to his faithful subjects who expose their lives and liberties in his service, and for the re-enforcement of his own military strength. If a sovereign could not make them, when carry- ing on a war to preserve the integrity of his dominions against domestic enemies, it would follow that he must wage such a war without one of the most important of the means which belong to him in all other wars ; and it would be just as reasonable to suppose that they involve an admission of the political claims of the enemy in a foreign Avar, as it is to make that supposition when the war is between two parts of the same nation. Certainly, great care should be taken, in making such exchanges, to exclude all political admissions ; and your Committee are satisfied that the precedents of the American Revolution amply show that this can be done. Those precedents show, that, where the exchanges are made •26 MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. by direct negotiation and correspondence between the com- manding generals, no political admission can be implied. Where it is necessary to appoint commissioners for a gon<-val or a limited exchange, to continue for a greater or lesser period, the powers exchanged may be so framed as to exclude any such admission; and, if the enemy insists on not treating with such an exclusion from the powers, the parties can fall back upon the first-mentioned mode of exchanging man for man, by the direct correspondence of the generals in com- mand. Your Committee, therefore, respectfully submit the fore- going statements, as furnishing, in their opinion, a sufficient answer to the inquiries propounded by the vote of the Society. J a red Sparks. Edward Everett. Geo. T. Curtis. Thos. Aspinwall. Richard Frothingham. Joseph Wilxard. Lorenzo Sabine. George E. Ellis. Wm. Brigiiam. Voted unanimously, That this Report be accepted, and placed on file, and published under the direction of the Committee by whom it was prepared. Attest : CHANDLER ROBBIXS, Becording Secretary. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS