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riverside sanctuary
to GW's headquarters
In
the mid-1600s, more than 50 years after Hudson sailed up his
river, Governor Dongan of the Province of New York bought
the land we now know as the Town and City of Newburgh from
a group of Native Americans (Favata 24). Back in Europe, in
the Rhenish, or Lower Palatinate region of Germany, treacherous
weather and Louis XIV's forces conspired to remove the Lutheran
Palatine community from their homes. They fled to England,
where a sympathetic Queen Anne agreed to provide them with
2100 acres from Governor Dongan's agreement, or "patent,"
in New York. As a result, in 1709 a group of more than 50
Palatines landed in Newburgh Bay and resumed their lives in
this place along the Hudson River called "Palatine Parish
Patent." Their tenure was brief; having struggled through
the years primarily as farmers, by the 1740s most of the original
settlers had either moved farther west or died off. By 1743,
the year the ferry started, the Scots took over and changed
the town's name to the Scottish "Newburgh." One
of the most prominent of the Scottish residents was Jonathan
Hasbrouck, a landowner and businessman, who bought a large
tract of land and built a home that would later become George
Washington's headquarters.
Newburgh and the American Revolution
Little did John Hasbrouck expect
that his home would be a place from which George Washington
would change the course of the country. In fact, some consider
the birthplace of America to be NOT in Philadelphia, but in
Newburgh (Haines 13). Regardless of where America was born, "Newburgh's
history is indissolubly bound up with that of the great struggle
for freedom from foreign dominion," writes John Nutt
in Newburgh: Her Institutions, Industries, and Leading
Citizens (23).
Shortly after
Jonathan Hasbrouck died in 1779, Washington showed up at the
doorstep of Hasbrouck's widow, along with 180 of his weathered
soldiers. They camped on Hasbrouck's estate and around Newburgh
to rest. Washington wanted to maintain a strong army after
the British surrender while planning to disband at the signing
of the peace treaty (Project Profile). From his new
home in Newburgh, Washington made one of the most pivotal
decisions in American history.
In May 1782, Washington
received a letter from Colonel Lewis Nicola, a leader of the
secret British conspiracy to bring down the Republic, that
suggested America adopt the English system of government,
a monarchy. The letter claimed that Republics were the least
stable form of government and the least capable of securing
the rights and freedom of individuals (Haines 13). America
could never become prosperous under a republican form of government,
Nicola urged. He suggested Washington become King.
Upon reading these
words, Washington was aghast. He wrote:
"Nothing in the course of the war has
given me more painful sensation than your information of
their being such ideas existing in the army as you expressed,
and I must view with abhorrence and reprehend with severity
… I must add that no man possesses a more sincere
wish to see ample justice done to the army than I do, and
as far as my powers and influence in a Constitution may
extend, they shall be employed to the utmost of my abilities
to effect it, should there be any occasion."
Meanwhile, his
officers were upset with Congress regarding their overdue
salaries. The conspirators leveraged their anger to send anonymous
letters, known as the Newburgh Letters, which would circulate
amongst the army with the aim of turning them against Congress
and Washington. But Washington skillfully diffused the conflict.
On March 14, 1783, from his office in the Hasbrouck house,
Washington wrote his monumental Newburgh
Address.
He outlined four
major points … "an indissoluble union of the States,
a sacred regard to public justice, the establishment of an
adequate army during peace, and a pacific and friendly disposition
among the people of the States which should induce them to
mutual concessions for the advantage of the community."
This address "outlined the principles on which the new
government of the United States was subsequently established.
The Republic was not in being , nor would it have been had
he not willed it" (Haines 13).
On April 19, 1783,
General Washington's ordered a "cessation of hostilities"
from his headquarters in Newburgh. During this period Washington
wrote letters to each of the 13 state legislatures setting
forth his ideas for the federal government. These Circular
Letters, which were reprinted at that time throughout the
states and in London, eventually influenced the development
of the U.S. Constitution (Project Profile).
Washington
sent his soldiers home, but some chose to settle in Newburgh
along with families who fled from New York City when it was captured
by the British. As a result, by 1790, Newburgh's population
reached 2,365.
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