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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142 The Robert Newman affair was almost certainly contrived by Wayne to destroy JW’s connections to the British in Canada, which he believed had led to the sabotage of the Legion’s supplies. JW’s outrage, after Nolan tracked down Newman and got an inkling of what had happened, crystallized his hatred of Wayne.

143 Wilkinson’s claim for financial reward for defeating Clark: JW to Carondelet, April 30, 1794, Archivo Histórico Nacional, Madrid, estado legajo 3898.

143 “Do not believe me avaricious”: JW to Carondelet, undated, Papeles de Cuba , legajo 2374.

144 The story of Owens, the silver dollars, and the arrest of his murderers was extensively covered in Clark’s Proofs , 17–19, and in the attached affidavit of Thomas Power, Proofs , 115.

147 The political campaign and Sedam’s remark “by many Genl. Wayne has been Sensured”: Nelson, Anthony Wayne , 277.

CHAPTER 15: DEATH OF A RIVAL

In addition to the military sources already cited, the diplomatic background is detailed in Kukla’s A Wilderness So Immense , and JW’s double triumph in securing command of the army and silver from Carondelet is also sourced in War Department documents and Spanish archives.

148 “vile assassin”: Wayne to Knox, January 29, 1795, quoted in Jacobs, Tarnished Warrior.

149 JW’s replies to Knox’s private and public letters: JW to Knox, January 1 and January 2, 1795, WDP.

149 Of Timothy Pickering, David McCullough wrote in John Adams (Simon & Schuster, 2001), “In many ways, Pickering might have served as the model New Englander for those who disliked the type. Tall, lean, and severe looking with a lantern jaw and hard blue eyes, he was Salem-born and bred, a Harvard graduate, proud, opinionated, self- righteous, and utterly humorless,” 472.

150 “If my very damned and unparalleled crosses”: JW to John Adair, August 7, 1795, Clark, Proofs , notes 32. Polishing his frank, open guise, JW described himself as “a man of Mercury, whose heart and tongue are in unison.”

150 For the background to the San Lorenzo treaty, see Kukla, A Wilderness So Immense. 151 In April 1790, JW specifically advised Miró to add a garrison of two hundred to the fort at New Madrid, and fifty oarsmen for the galleys. To the total of his treacherous assistance should be added his betrayal of a reconnaissance party under Major Doughty exploring a route from Kentucky to New Orleans in 1790. After JW warned Miró of their movements and suggested an armed response, Miró sent Creek warriors to attack them, and several in the party were killed. Cox, in “Louisiana-Texas Frontier III,” suggests JW also briefed the Spanish on the proper border to defend during the 1805 negotiations with Monroe and Pinckney.

151 Harry Innes’s correspondence with Gayoso, and his involvement in the Spanish Conspiracy, are covered in detail in Whitaker, “Harry Innes and the Spanish Intrigue: 1794–1795.”

152 Joseph de Pontalba’s memorandum and career in New Orleans, where he lived for eighteen years, are described in Gayarré, History of Louisiana . But his subsequent imprisonment and emotional torture of his wealthy daughter-in- law, ending in her murder and his suicide, is an operatic tragedy that falls outside Gayarré’s canvas.

152 “And G.W. can aspire to the same dignity”: Carondelet to JW, July 16, 1795, legajo 2374.

152 Clark’s Proofs and Power’s affidavit are the primary sources for Carondelet and Gayoso’s contacts with JW, but JW provides his own defensive gloss in Memoirs , volume 2, repeatedly between pages 37 and 219.

154 “This accomplished, you will most probably have me for a neighbour”: JW to Innes, September 4, 1796, Harry Innes Papers, vol. 23.

154 “determination to inculcate”: JW’s general order, December 13, 1795.

155 Power’s second visit to JW was again the subject of Clark’s Proofs and his own testimony and was again rebutted by JW’s Memoirs , vol. 2.

156 The military consequences of the three treaties, Jay, Greeneville, and San Lorenzo, are detailed in Kohn, Eagle and Sword , 183, and Cress, Citizens in Arms , 133.

157 “to get rid of Genl Wayne”: Quoted in Nelson, Anthony Wayne , 291.

157 The drama of smuggling $9,640 past Fort Massac to JW’s bank account was described by Thomas Power in note 36 in Clark, Proofs.

159 “My views at Philadelphia”: JW to Carondelet, September 22, 1796, legajo 2375.

159 JW’s encounter with Andrew Ellicott was described in The Journal of Andrew Ellicott.

160 “I am proud of my little Sons”: Hay, “Letters of Mrs. Ann Biddle Wilkinson.”

160 “The fact is my presence with the army”: Wayne to James McHenry, July 28, 1796, quoted in Nelson, Anthony Wayne , 296.

161 “It is generally agreed that some cavalry”: Washington to the House of Representatives, February 28, 1797, PGW.

CHAPTER 16: THE NEW COMMANDER IN CHIEF

Despite its mendacity, JW’s Memoirs becomes the crucial text during the brief period when his public life as commanding general came close to coinciding with his private interests.

164 “You will endeavour to discover, with your natural penetration”: Carondelet to Power, May 26, 1797, Clark, Proofs , note 38.

164 “General Wilkinson received me very coolly”: Power to Carondelet and Gayoso, undated, Clark, Proofs , note 43.

166 James McHenry’s directive to General James Wilkinson: McHenry to JW, March 12, 1797, WDP.

166 “There is strict discipline observed”: Power to Carondelet and Gayoso, Clark, Proofs , note 43.

166 “In fact the American peasant”: Murray, Travels in North America, 1834, 1835 & 1836 (New York: Harper, 1839), 2: 67–68, quoted in Prucha, “The United States Army as Viewed by British Travelers, 1825–1860.”

167 The challenge of peacetime soldiering in the period is detailed in Ricardo A. Herrera, “Self-Governance and the American Citizen as Soldier, 1775–1861.”

168 The fort “presents a frightful picture to the scientific soldier”: JW to Captain James Bruff, June 1797, quoted in Hay, Admirable Trumpeter , 163.

168 For JW’s disciplinary methods, see general orders issued from Fort Washington, May 22, 1797, and from Detroit, July 4, 20, and November 3, 10, 1797, cited in Hay, Admirable Trumpeter , 148.

169 Carondelet “ought not to be apprehensive”: Power to Carondelet and Gayoso, Clark, Proofs , note 43.

169 For Gayoso’s delaying tactics, see Ellicott, Journal of Andrew Ellicott , and Linklater, Fabric of America.

170 “that there is too much ground to think”: Pickering to Winthrop Sargent, August 1797, quoted in Hay, Admirable Trumpeter , 171.

170 “was strongly attached to the interest and welfare of our country”: Ellicott, Journal of Andrew Ellicott.

170 “a child of my own raising”: JW to Gayoso, February 6, 1797, Clark, Proofs , 42.

171 “You have a warm place in my affections”: JW to Ellicott, September 13, 1797, quoted in Ellicott, Journal of Andrew Ellicott.

171 “the chain of dependence”: JW to McHenry, August 1797. The argument continued through the end of the year, when McHenry proposed new regulations for the army. JW replied January 8, 1798, that they would result in “the destruction of subordination and Discipline.” McHenry then backed off, letting it be known that they were proposals only. WDP.

172 Ellicott’s dispatch to Pickering: Ellicott to Pickering, November 14, 1797, quoted in Catherine van C. Mathews, Andrew Ellicott: His Life and Letters (New York: Grafton Press, 1908), 161–63.

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