As
today is the Fourth of July, I felt it only fitting that I do
something patriotic, and what's more patriotic than a good conspiracy
theory? Nothing notable has happened in our country that hasn't been
clouded (or, to some, sprinkled with sunshine) by a good conspiracy
theory. Was there someone on that grassy knoll? Did John Wilkes
Both really act alone? Did FDR really know about Pearl Harbor before
it happened? Did the FBI have forewarning of 9/11? Who knows? Well,
somebody surely does, but maybe not the ones who purport the juicy
theories.
I
decided (mainly because I'm not beneath loving a good theory or two
myself) to research rumors that might have been running a muck during
those latter years of the 18th
century. And I came across a doozy: Massachusetts writer J.L.
Bell, a leading historian on the Revolutionary War (author of, among
others, THE ROAD TO CONCORD), revealed some interesting tidbits in an
article entitled, “History,
analysis, and unabashed gossip about the start of the American
Revolution in Massachusetts.”
In
an article written on July 19, 1775, The Reverend Ezra Stiles of
Newport reported that on a trip to Paris, British Captain Jno.
Hansen, due to irrelevant (in my view) circumstances, became
intimately acquainted with the French Pretender's secretary. During
a meeting with this unnamed secretary, he – the secretary – left
Capt. Hansen alone in his office. On the secretary's desk was an
unsealed packet. Capt. Hansen read the contents of this packet,
which stated that Lord North and the Earl of Bute (present and past
First Ministers of Britain) said the “plan” was almost finished,
that the “draught of troops for America would soon leave England so
defenseless that the Pretender with 20,000 troops might land and
march all over England.”
Hansen
fled with the packet to England and informed Lord North of the
contends of the packet. Lord North then paid off Capt. Hansen. But
by spring of that year, America was “deluged” in war and Hansen
felt guilty about his part in this. He went to New York where he
told the Congress, which credited the information and sent Capt.
Hansen to show it to the Continental Congress.
Rev.
Stiles concluded in this article that Lord North had regained the
packet from Capt. Hansen. Stiles felt that if Capt. Hansen had
retained custody of the packet he could have convinced the King and
the Nation and “restore tranquility between Britain and America.”
Rev. Stiles went on to surmise that perhaps
the top ministers of the British government had started the trouble
in America just to tie up the British army, letting the Pretender
sail from France and seize power.
Rev.
Stiles wasn't the only one to think along the lines of a conspiracy
theory. Roger Lamb, a sergeant in the British army, wrote in an
article that, in essence, the French supported America in the
Revolution so as to separate Great Britain from the colonies and help
France regain their former station in Europe. He went so far as to
claim France sent “secret emissaries” to the colonies to “spread
dissatisfaction.” The colonists began to gradually change from the
“warmth of attachment to the mother country, which had so
particularly characterized them,” to, well, pissed off. As J.L.
Bell concluded, Sergeant Lamb, writing for a British audience, could
not concede that the American colonists might have felt
dissatisfaction all on their own.
On reading this, my take is we must
thank the French for more than just the Statue of Liberty. Whatever
their reasons for supporting the colonies in their bid for
independence, we appreciate the help. So this fourth of July, tilt
back a Coors Lite with a Perrier chaser, and grill yourself a cheese
burger with a side of escargot. Just a thought.
Nice to see our national enthusiasm for conspiracy theories started back in Colonial times!
ReplyDeleteHappy 4th.
And that the French, as always, were to blame! Happy Fourth, everyone!
ReplyDeleteThe French celebrate their national day only 10 days after ours. We have a lot to thank them for spanning more than two centuries. When Britain sided with the Confederacy, France assisted the Union. They’ve proved a good friend.
ReplyDeleteGood story, Susan. Happy Independence Day and, ten days from now, Happy Bastille Day.
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ReplyDeleteUSA Independence Day Wishes
4th of July 2017
Hope fourth of july 2017 images fireworks had accomplished a task.
ReplyDeleteHappy 4th of July