Andro Linklater - An Artist in Treason - The Extraordinary Double Life of General James Wilkinson

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For almost two decades, through the War of 1812, James Wilkinson was the senior general in the United States Army. Amazingly, he was also Agent 13 in the Spanish secret service at a time when Spain's empire dominated North America. Wilkinson's audacious career as a double agent is all the more remarkable because it was an open secret, circulated regularly in newspapers and pamphlets. His saga illuminates just how fragile and vulnerable the young republic was: No fewer than our first four presidents turned a blind eye to his treachery and gambled that the mercurial general would never betray the army itself and use it too overthrow the nascent union—a faith that was ultimately rewarded.
From Publishers Weekly
Anyone with a taste for charming, talented, complex, troubled, duplicitous and needy historical figures will savor this book. A Revolutionary War general at age 20, James Wilkinson (1757–1825), whom few now have heard of, knew everyone of consequence in the early nation, from Washington on down. But he squandered his gifts in repeated and apparently uncontrollable double dealing, betrayals (he spied for Spain), conspiracies and dishonesty in the decades following the war. Wilkinson seemed to pop up everywhere, always trying to make a deal and feather his nest. To those ends, he would as soon turn on those whom he had pledged to help as be traitor to the army he served. The only man he remained true to was Jefferson, who in the end spurned him. No one trusted him, as no one should have. Linklater (
) skillfully captures this sociopathic rogue who, for all his defects, still commands attention from everyone trying to understand the 50 years after 1775. His charisma reaches across two centuries to perplex and fascinate any reader of this fast-paced and fully researched work.

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67 “Address of Confidence”: Jacobs, Tarnished Warrior , 62.

68 “Direct the Commander-in Chief”: New York’s 1780 petition cited by Baack, “Forging a Nation State.”

68 “I should be wanting in Personal Candour”: JW to Samuel Huntington, president of Congress, March 27, 1781, PCC.

69 “I think General Wilkinson too desponding”: Reed to General Lacy, commander of the Pennsylvania militia, quoted in Hay, Admirable Trumpeter , 52.

69 “It is a pity so good an officer is lost to the service”: Nathanael Greene to Clement Biddle, June 26, 1780, quoted in Reed, Life and Correspondence.

69 without “cash or credit”: Wilkinson to Henry Lee, quoted in Davis, “By Invitation of Mrs. Wilkinson,” 156.

CHAPTER 7: THE KENTUCKY PIONEER

For JW’s early years in Kentucky, the Harry Innes Papers are indispensable. Yet the chaos of land titles as illustrated in Abernethy, Western Lands and the American Revolution ; Aron, How the West Was Lost ; Sakolski, Great American Land Bubble ; and Dunaway, “Speculators and Settler Capitalists”— allied to JW’s habitual exaggeration—lend mystery to his speculations.

71 “The vallies are of the richest soil”: John William de Braham, “De Braham’s Account,” in Early Travels in the Tennessee Country: 1540–1800 , ed. Samuel Cole Williams ( Johnson City, TN, 1928).

71 “more frequent than I have seen cattle in the settlements”: “The Adventures of Colonel Daniel Boon,” in John Filson, The Discovery, Settlement and Present State of Kentucké (Wilmington: James Adams, 1784).

71 “The country might invite a prince” quoted in Archibald Henderson, The Conquest of the Old Southwest etc , 1740–1790 (New York: Century, 1920).

72 “A person not quite tall enough”: Humphrey Marshall, History of Kentucky , 1:165.

72 For JW’s links to Hugh Shiell, see Hay, “Letters of Mrs. Ann Biddle Wilkinson.” 73 JW’s “wonderful address” in borrowing money: William Leavy, “A Memoir of Lexington and Its Vicinity,” Kentucky Historical Society Register 40 (April 1942).

73 JW’s traveling hardships were described in “Letters of General James Wilkinson,”

Kentucky Historical Society Register 24 (September 1926).

73 John Lewis dealings: July 3, 1784, agreement with JW for locating land, John Lewis papers, First American West:The Ohio River Valley, 1750–1820, LoC.

73 “Be sure you bring a double stock of great variety”: JW to Scott, July 4, 1784, ibid.

74 “Our country is now a continued Flower Bed”: JW to Scott, quoted in Hay, Admirable Trumpeter , 62.

74 “It is impossible for me to describe the torture,” “I feel so Stupid”: Ann Wilkinson to John Biddle, February 14, 1788, Hay, “Letters of Mrs. Ann Biddle Wilkinson.”

74 A detailed study of Kentucky’s chaotic system of land registration and confusion over multiple claims appears in Wilma A. Dunaway, “Speculators and Settler Capitalists,” in Appalachia in the Making: The Mountain South in the Nineteenth Century (University of North Carolina Press, 1995). In 1821 Judge Joseph Story attributed the confusion to the decision to allow settlers to appropriate land “by entries and descriptions of their own, without any previous survey under public authority, and without any such boundaries as were precise, permanent, and unquestionable.” “An address delivered before Members of the Suffolk Bar” (Boston, 1829).

76 “And when arrivd at this Heaven in idea”: “Memorandum of M. Austin’s Journey from the Lead Mines in the County of Wythe in the State of Virginia to the Lead Mines in the Province of Louisiana, 1796–1797,” American Historical Review 5 (1899–1900): 525–26.

76 “The titles in Kentucky w[ill] be Disputed for a Century”: Quoted in Dunaway, “Speculators and Settler Capitalists.”

76 “under the necessity of employing about £40 of your cash”: JW to Shiell, “Letters of James Wilkinson.”

76 “far from affluent”: Memoirs , 2:109.

77 The many Danville conventions were made necessary by the impossibility of achieving any agreement between the large speculator settlers and the smaller landholders whose titles were less secure. The arguments could be as fierce as they were inscrutable.

77 “There is nothing which binds one country”: GW to Richard Henry Lee, August 22, 1785, GWP.

77 “The People of Kentucky alone,” “I pleased myself”: JW to James Hutchinson, “Letters of James Wilkinson.”

78 “They shall be Informed”: JW to unknown correspondent, April 1786, quoted in Hay, Admirable Trumpeter , 77.

79 “throw them into the hands eventually of a foreign power”: James Monroe to James Madison, quoted in Harry Ammon, James Monroe: The Quest for National Identity (Richmond: University of Virginia Press, 1990).

79 “this country will in a few years Revolt”: Harry Innes to Patrick Henry, quoted in Linklater, Fabric of America , 98.

79 “an outrage . . . generally disavowed”: JW to Francisco Cruzat, quoted in Whitaker, “James Wilkinson’s First Descent to New Orleans in 1787.”

CHAPTER 8: SPANISH TEMPTATION

From the moment that JW descended to New Orleans, his actions become the subject of at least three differently motivated accounts: JW’s version in volume 2 of his Memoirs , designed to demonstrate his patriotism; Daniel Clark’s Proofs of the Corruption of General James Wilkinson and His Connexion to Aaron Burr, composed, as the title suggests, to prove the opposite; and the relevant legajos in the Papeles Procedentes de Cuba , together with some other documents in the Archivo General de Indias, written in triplicate to show that JW’s influence and information were being used to Spain’s best advantage. Apart from those already cited, the later historians involved are William Shepherd, an early pioneer in the Spanish archives, Isaac Joslin Cox, and Arthur P. Whitaker.

81 “a considerable annual supply of tobacco”: Memoirs , 2:113.

82 “thence round the western shores of Lakes Erie and Huron”: John Jay’s account of negotiations with the Spanish envoy Count d’Arande in Paris in July 1782, quoted in The Life of John Jay: With selections from his correspondence and miscellaneous papers by his son, William Jay (1833: repr. 2000), Bridgewater, VA: American Foundation Publications, 2:472.

82 JW’s first journey to New Orleans: Arthur P. Whitaker, “James Wilkinson’s First Descent to New Orleans in 1787,” Hispanic American Historical Review 8, no. 1 (February 1928).

83 Humboldt’s estimate might have been too low; silver production in Mexico mint in 1783 is estimated to have been 23.1 million pesos in Stanley J. Stein and Barbara H. Stein, Apogee of Empire: Spain and New Spain in the Age of Charles III (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003).

83 Navarro’s dispatch dated September 25, 1780, No. 23, cited in Whitaker, “The Commerce of Louisiana and the Floridas at the End of the Eighteenth Century.” See also Navarro to Marquis de la Sonora, minister for the treasury and the Indies: “The only way to check them [the Americans] is with a proportionate population, and it is not by imposing commercial restrictions that this population is to be acquired, but by granting a prudent expansion and freedom of trade.” February 12, 1787, quoted in Gayarré, History of Louisiana .

84 Miró and Navarro to Antonio de Valdes y Bazan, September 25, 1787, Papeles de Cuba, legajo 3893A, cited in Shepherd, “Wilkinson and the Beginnings of the Spanish Conspiracy.” This document, given the number 13 reservado (secret) among papers sent to Madrid by Miró and Navarro, gave rise to JW’s nom d’espionnage . In another document from Navarro to the king, dated April 30, 1789, JW is referred to as “a person endowed with high talents, and in whom the aforesaid [western] settlements have placed their hope of future happiness; and he informed the governor and myself that it was the intention of all to put themselves under the protection or vassalage of his Catholic Majesty.” Museo-Biblioteca de Ultramar, Madrid, Papeles relativos á la I.uisiana , vol. 3, quoted Shepherd, “Wilkinson and the Beginnings.” The reference to Kentucky being prepared to seek protection as “vassals” of the Spanish king was the major difference between the “First Memorial” as sent to Madrid and as referred to later by JW.

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