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The FReeper Foxhole Profiles General John Sullivan & the Sullivan Campaign of 1779 - Jan. 17th, 2005
www.state.nh.us ^

Posted on 01/16/2005 8:04:53 PM PST by SAMWolf



Lord,

Keep our Troops forever in Your care

Give them victory over the enemy...

Grant them a safe and swift return...

Bless those who mourn the lost.
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FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer
for all those serving their country at this time.


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U.S. Military History, Current Events and Veterans Issues

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Brigadier General John Sullivan
(1740-1795)

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John Sullivan studied law at Portsmouth (NH) with Samuel Livermore; he married Lydia Worcester at the age of twenty (1760), and practiced law in Berwick (ME) until 1763 when the couple moved to Durham. Their children (three sons and one daughter, plus two who did not survive infancy) grew up in Durham.

In 1772 Sullivan was appointed a major in the New Hampshire colonial militia, and in 1774 he went as a delegate to the Philadelphia (PA) meeting of the First Congregational Congress.

In December 1774 he was the organizer of a group which attacked Fort William & Mary, in Portsmouth Harbor, stealing cannon and ammunition.



In May 1775 Sullivan was a delegate to the Second Continental Congress, and this Congress appointed him a brigadier general in Washington's army (July 1775). He began military service with Washington's army at the siege of Boston (October 1775 - March 1776). In March 1776 he was ordered to join the Northern Army; and upon the death of General John Thomas Sullivan took command of that army. He was replaced by General Gates (July 1776), whereupon Sullivan went to Philadelphia to proffer his resignation to Continental Congress President Hancock. Hancock persuaded Sullivan to stay on.

August 9, 1776 Sullivan was promoted to major general and sent with his men to Long Island. Captured during the Battle of Long Island, Sullivan was sent to Philadelphia carrying overtures of peace from Lord Howe. During peace negotiations Sullivan was exchanged for British General Richard Prescott; he rejoined Washington's army in Westchester County, New York, crossed the Delaware with Washington and fought at Trenton and Princeton (NJ), in December 1776.


According to General John Sullivan, there were too few tools and skilled carpenters available.
"Some of the Brigades who were to furnish me with Carpenters sent me Taylors who had never used an ax in their lives; kept their good Carpenters at home to Build Hutts"
By mid-winter the bridge was completed.


During Winter 1777 Sullivan was in northern New Jersey, skirmishing with British outposts; in March 1777 he returned to New Hampshire to expedite preparations for military operations. July 1, 1777 Sullivan, Nathaniel Greene and Henry Knox protested the rapid promotion to a post above them of a newly arrived French officer, Du Coudray. All three threatened to resign, but the matter was resolved when Du Coudray drowned. The matter did make Sullivan some enemies in Congress, however, and when Sullivan led a failed expedition to Staten Island (August 21/22, 1777) this defeat added to his enemies' dissatisfaction. But Sullivan hurried to Philadelphia to help defend the town against General Howe.

In September 1777 Congress proposed to suspend Sullivan from his command while the Staten Island matter was investigated. Enemies added additional charges of cowardice at Brandywine, but Washington refused to recall Sullivan and the charges were found to be groundless.

During Winter 1777/8 Sullivan was with Washington at Valley Forge (PA); but in August 1778 he put Newport (RI) under siege. The operation depended upon the French fleet defeating the British fleet; when this maneuver failed Sullivan was forced to withdraw to Providence (RI) where he stayed until March 1779. Then he was ordered to go to western Pennsylvania to destroy the Iroquois and their British Loyalist allies. Sullivan practiced a "scorched earth" policy, burning the countryside in a successful campaign that concluded at Elmira, New York; but his health deteriorated and he resigned from the army, November 30, 1779.



Sullivan returned to Congress, meeting in Philadelphia, 1780/81. While he was there his brother, dying from incarceration in a British prison ship, brought him a peace offer from the British. Sullivan told the French minister, Luzerne, of the offer; this action led to charges of bribery, because Luzerne had loaned the destitute Sullivan money. [The bribery charges were made again by the 19th century American historian Bancroft, and the New Hampshire Historical Society appointed a distinguished committee to prepare a "Report on General John Sullivan". This report, authored by the distinguished late 19th century NHHS members Charles H. Bell, W.H.Y. Hackett, J. Everett Sargent, N. Bouton, J.B. Walker, and John Elwyn, appears in NHHS Proceedings, volume 1 (1872-1888), pp. 95-104. The report clears Sullivan.]

Sullivan survived the charges of bribery by our French ally, and in 1782 he was a member of the New Hampshire constitutional convention. He served as attorney general of New Hampshire (1782/86), and also (1785) as Speaker of the House. In 1786 he was elected president of the state; he put down riots against the issuing of paper money and was reelected president in 1787. In 1788 Sullivan acted as chairman of the state convention which ratified the Constitution of the United States, and he was also reelected Speaker of the House. In 1789 he was once again elected President of New Hampshire, and he was also appointed U.S. District Judge of New Hampshire. He held this latter post until his death in 1795.



TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: americanrevolution; biography; chiefbrandt; freeperfoxhole; iraquois; johnsullivan; newton; nj; sullivancampaign; veterans
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To: Matthew Paul

My dad on Aug 1st, 1944.

41 posted on 01/17/2005 7:53:55 PM PST by SAMWolf (Anarchy: Rights without Responsibilities.)
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To: PhilDragoo

Evening Phil Dragoo.

How did our Country change so much?


42 posted on 01/17/2005 7:54:29 PM PST by SAMWolf (Anarchy: Rights without Responsibilities.)
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To: PhilDragoo
Actually, Phil, I see General Washington as very clearly laying out a "roadmap to peace." I liked that the General was serious about having peace, and made no lip service, but went straight to the point.

Want the roadmap to peace? Simple as can be, a three year old understands it instinctively:

"Our future security," Washington wrote, rests on the "Terror" inflicted upon them.

Folks fight because they want to. Fighting means killing. To stop them from killing make it so they don't want to. This cannot be done by paying them off, because they will always want more, and sooner rather than later. Nor can appealing to their "better natures", there is no such thing. Don't ask them to "negotiate" since if they wanted to talk, instead of to kill, then they would be talking, not killing.

Think of it as the gentle art of persuasion. General Sullivan was good at this art, and General Washington was a great master.

Remember that the Iroquois suffered almost no combat deaths. Washington was using nonviolent means. They wouldn't even starve because the British would feed them. General Washington was a brilliant and compassionate man.

Me, I would have given Sullivan much harsher orders. And I would have been wrong to do so.

Would have bean wrong because the force needed to do it my way could not be kept in the field for supply reasons long enough to get the job done. To try would use forces needed to "negotiate" with the British. "Negotiate", as in "Yorktown."

The Cayuga - Oneida business was utterly a master's touch. Pure General Washington.

43 posted on 01/17/2005 8:59:04 PM PST by Iris7 (.....to protect the Constitution from all enemies, both foreign and domestic. Same bunch, anyway.)
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To: PhilDragoo

BTTT!!!!!


44 posted on 01/18/2005 3:06:47 AM PST by E.G.C.
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To: SAMWolf

BTTT!!!!!!!


45 posted on 01/18/2005 3:07:19 AM PST by E.G.C.
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To: Matthew Paul

OOOOOOO, very cool! Thanks Matthew.


46 posted on 01/18/2005 6:20:12 AM PST by Professional Engineer (Have sliderule, will calculate.)
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Comment #47 Removed by Moderator

To: The Mayor
Thanks, I decided to write my own prayer, it was posted on my site today. We are going to be adding some useful links for those who want to use them, in the near future. One of the sites that I am looking at adding will be free republic. I like what you guys are doing here. Lots of good information, and history available here. Thanks for visiting my site, and please pass it on. We are soon adding a POW/MIA star as well to our available displays. We are trying to honor all those who serve, or have served this great country.

God Bless

Jimm
48 posted on 01/19/2005 12:29:58 AM PST by SafeReturn (Praying for Their Safe Return)
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