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Open Anthology of The American Revolution: Letter from Embarkation Commissioners to General Washington

Open Anthology of The American Revolution
Letter from Embarkation Commissioners to General Washington
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. Questions to Guide Your Reading
  7. The Virginia Settlement
    1. Starving Time
    2. An Indentured Servant’s Letter Home
    3. Bacon’s Manifesto
  8. The Puritans of New England
    1. Early Education Laws
    2. Limits of Toleration
    3. Prologue to “The Tenth Muse”
    4. Connecticut’s “Blue Laws”
    5. Records of the Trial and Execution of Sarah Good
    6. Two Letters of Gov. William Phips
  9. The Old Colonial System
    1. Articles of Confederation of the United Colonies of New England
    2. The Navigation Act of 1660
    3. Commission of Sir Edmund Andros for the Dominion of New England
    4. Boston Revolt of 1689
    5. Bars Fight
    6. Albany Plan of Union
    7. The Way to Wealth
  10. The Revolution
    1. Second Treatise of Government
    2. Chart of Battles, Leaders, and Congresses During the Revolutionary War
    3. Petition from the Massachusetts House of Representatives to the House of Commons (in response to the Sugar Act)
    4. Patrick Henry’s Resolutions Against the Stamp Act
    5. Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania, To the Inhabitants of the British Colonies
    6. After the Boston Tea Party: Cartoons
    7. Continental Congress’s Declaration of Rights and Grievances against Great Britain
    8. Articles of Association
    9. The Alternative of Williamsburg
    10. Petition of the New York Assembly to George III
    11. Address from Joseph Warren
    12. The Charlotte Town Resolves
    13. The Olive Branch Petition
    14. His Excellency General Washington
    15. Oath of Allegiance to the King George III
    16. Letter from George Washington to John Hancock
    17. Common Sense
    18. Resolve of the Continental Congress Regarding State Governments
    19. Richard Henry Lee Resolution for Independence
    20. Appointment of Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and John Adams to Draft the Declaration of Independence
    21. Adoption of the Lee Resolution
    22. The Declaration of Independence of the United States of America
    23. The American Crisis
    24. Draft Notice
    25. Treaty of Alliance with France
    26. Address of the Congress to the Inhabitants of the United States of America
    27. Establishment of the American Army
    28. Marquis de Lafayette’s Oath of Allegiance
    29. Letter of John Adams to the President of Congress
    30. Details from a Providence (RI) Town Meeting About Quartering of Troops
    31. Letter from Elizabeth Burgin to Reverend James Calville
    32. Letter from General George Washington to Congress Announcing the Victory at Yorktown, Virginia
    33. Benjamin Franklin’s Draft of Preliminary Articles of Peace
    34. Treaty of Paris
    35. Minutes of a Conference between George Washington and Guy Carleton
    36. Letter from Joseph Warren to Benjamin Franklin
    37. Articles of Confederation
    38. Northwest Ordinance
    39. Thomas Walke’s Account of Capturing his Runaway Slaves in New York City
    40. General Washington’s Instructions to Commissioners of Embarkation
    41. Letter from Embarkation Commissioners to General Washington
    42. An Address to the Negroes In the State of New-York
    43. Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil of Slavery
    44. Testimony of Deborah Sampson Gannett
  11. Appendix 1: More Readings

57

Letter from Embarkation Commissioners to General Washington

June 14, 1783

Egbert Benson and Daniel Parker

Background

George Washington appointed Egbert Benson, William S. Smith, and Daniel Parker to be Commissioners of Embarkation and oversee the British evacuation from the United States at the conclusion of the Revolutionary War. Benson and Parker sent this letter from New York City to General Washington, reporting that the British were not following the agreements made in the treaty that ended the war.

Per the Preliminary Articles of Peace, signed in Paris on November 30, 1782, the United Kingdom was to return all property seized during the War, including slaves. After trying to restore a horse taken from a Mr. James Vanderburgh, the commissioners reported that “We conceive it is now reduced to a certainty, that all applications for the delivery of property will be fruitless, and We shall therefore desist from them.”

The commissioners also reported on former slaves being evacuated by the British and asked Washington what to do about it. Per the treaty, the United States demanded the return of escaped slaves. But Sir Guy Carleton, commander of British forces during the Revolutionary War, countered that, under the King’s orders, slaves reaching British lines were to be freed. Sir Carleton intended to keep the promise of freedom that was made to African Americans who joined and fought for the British.

Britain evacuated about 3,000 enslaved African Americans, indentured servants, and freedmen to the British colony of Nova Scotia in Canada along with British soldiers. They carefully recorded all persons boarding British ships in New York.

Background Courtesy: “Letter from Embarkation Commissioners to General Washington” from the National Archives, Original License CC 4.0 BY NC SA

Sir

We do ourselves the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your Excellency’s Letter of the 2d instant, covering the Act of Congress of the 26th ult, and we also do ourselves the honor to transmit your Excellency a Copy of a Memorial which we presented to Sir Guy Carleton on Monday last, to which we have not as yet received any answer, except a verbal message by his Deputy Secretary, that he did not conceive an answer at this time necessary. –

Your Excellency will recollect, that in answering our claim for Restitution in the Case of Mr. Vanderburgh, Sir Guy Carleton intimated an impropriety in the claim, as the property was not suggested to be in danger of being sent away, this left room for an idea that possibly, property

about to be sent away would be restored, and We apprised your Excellency, that We should take the first fair occasion which should present itself, to remove all doubt on this point, and with this view we made the requisition in behalf of Mr. Lot; and We conceive it is now reduced to a certainty, that all applications for the delivery of property will be fruitless, and We shall therefore desist from them. –

That part of the Memorial which is in the nature of a Remonstrance is in consequence of the Resolution of Congress, and your Excellency’s Letter, which accompanied it.

Yesterday We assisted in Superintending an Embarkation, consisting of fourteen Transports bound to Nova Scotia, having on board, as nearly as we could estimate, about three thousand souls

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Souls, among which were, at least, one hundred and thirty Negroes, who appear to be property of the Citizens of the United States, and as this Embarkation was made since we presented our Memorial, and as it were in the face of it, We submit it to your Excellency, whether it is necessary for us further to Remonstrate to Sir Guy Carleton against his permitting Slaves, the property of American Subjects, to leave this place, and could wish to receive your Excellency’s directions on that subject –

We have the honor to be [illegible]

Egbt. Benson
Danl Parker

New York
June 14th 1783

His Excellency
General Washington

Commissioners at New York to Genl. Washington
New York 14th June 1783[1]


  1. Accessed at https://www.docsteach.org/documents/document/embarkation-commissioners-to-washington ↵

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