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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235 “Aliens and Suspicious Characters mingling with the Natives”: JW to Jefferson, December 23, 1805, PTJ.

236 “You will therefore with as little delay as possible repair to the Territory of New Orleans”: Dearborn to JW, May 6, 1806, American State Papers, Military Affairs, L.C.

237 “Bruff, Lucas &c say it is done to get me out”: JW to Samuel Smith, June 17, 1806, ibid.

CHAPTER 23: THE GENERAL AT BAY

The sources for the Burr Conspiracy are those cited earlier.

238 “General Wilkinson being expressly declared”: Quoted in Crackel, Mr. Jefferson’s Army .

239 “Genrl Wilkinson had not left St Louis on 28th July”: Dearborn to Jefferson, September 2, 1806, PTJ.

240 The abortive approach to the naval captains: See Crackel, Mr. Jefferson’s Army.

241 “It is now well ascertained that you are to be displaced in the next session”: Dayton to JW, July 24, 1806, Burr’s Conspiracy exposed , 16.

242 “[Even] if I had no regard for my own health and constitution”: Journal entry, October 16, 1805, Zebulon M. Pike, An Account of Expeditions to the Sources of the Mississippi and Through the Western Parts of Louisiana . . . (Philadelphia: C. & A. Conrad, 1810).

242 “Any number of men who may reasonably be calculated on”: October 2, 1806, Pike to JW, quoted in Hollon, “Zebulon Montgomery Pike and the Wilkinson-Burr Conspiracy.” For evidence that papers taken from Pike suggested that he expected to be taken by the Spanish, Bolton, “Papers of Zebulon M. Pike.”

243 “It must appear strange to you, friend Briggs”: Deposition of Isaac Briggs, Memoirs , vol. 2, Appendix 53.

244 “The time looked for by many”: JW to Adair, September 27, 1806.

245 Swartwout’s arrival and transfer of the letter was described by both JW and in Cushing’s deposition at Burr’s trial. T. Carpenter, Trial of Colonel Aaron Burr , 236, 355.

245 Burr’s letter was, according to the modern editor of his papers, Mary-Jo Kline, probably written by Dayton. However, for all practical purposes it was Burr’s, and he did not demur when Chief Justice Marshall explicitly referred to it as Burr’s letter.

CHAPTER 24: HIS COUNTRY’S SAVIOR

The sources are those cited earlier for the Burr Conspiracy.

247 The events were described by Cushing and JW at Burr’s trial. T. Carpenter, Trial of Colonel Aaron Burr.

248 “If I had faultered [ sic ]”: Memoirs , 2:326.

249 “The agency of the Army”: John Randolph, February 1808, quoted in Crackel, Mr. Jefferson’s Army.

249 Deposition of Eaton: Louisiana Gazette , March 8, 1807, quoted by Wilkinson, “Paper Prepared and Read.”

250 “I have never, in my whole life”: JW to Jefferson, October 21, 1806, Memoirs , vol. 2, appendix 95.

251 “I had not formed a decided opinion”: Memoirs , 2:327.

251 Donaldson’s letter: Ibid., appendix 98.

253 “a deep, dark and wide-spread conspiracy”: JW to Jefferson, November 12, 1806, ibid., appendix 100.

253 “I have made up my mind to perish”: JW to Freeman, November 12, 1806, ibid., appendix 101.

253 “you are surrounded by disaffection”: JW to Claiborne, November 12, 1806, ibid., 2:328.

253 “Integrity of the Union is menaced”: JW to Samuel Smith, November 12, 1806, quoted in Hay, Admirable Trumpeter , 259. This letter ends with a wild swipe at one of his St. Louis enemies, Judge Return J. Meigs, “a poor, pimping, hypocritical Yankee.”

253 “spring like Leonidas”: JW to José de Iturrigaray, November 12, 1806, ibid.

254 “I confess I approached him with caution”: Deposition of Isaac Briggs, Memoirs , vol. 2, appendix 53.

CHAPTER 25: THE GENERAL REDEEMED

The sources are those cited earlier for the Burr Conspiracy. Much of the detail of JW’s “reign of terror” in New Orleans comes from Charles Gayarré’s History of Louisiana . 256 “Two days after the receipt of General Wilkinson’s information”: Jefferson’s message to Congress, January 27, 1807, PTJ.

257 “Under circumstances so imperious”: Quoted in Gayarré, History of Louisiana , 163.

257 “Burr may come”: Mead to Claiborne, December 24, 1806, ibid., 169.

258 JW and Claiborne’s exchanges: Ibid., ch. 3.

259 “This was acknowledging the fact”: Ibid., 173.

261 “dispose of the troops in such manner”: Dearborn to JW, November 27, 1806, American State Papers.

261 “After a most arduous journey”: Briggs testimony, Memoirs , vol. 2, appendix 53. 262 “in a nation tender as to anything infringing liberty”: Jefferson to JW, February 3, 1807, ibid., appendix 30.

262 “A strict observance of the written laws”: Jefferson to John Colvin, September 20, 1810, PTJ.

263 “I have never attempted to justify”: JW to Clark, May 24, 1807, Clark, Proofs , 153.

CHAPTER 26: TWO TRAITORS ON TRIAL

Among the Burr Conspiracy sources cited earlier, Daniel Clark’s Proofs and Carpenter’s shorthand version of Burr’s trial in September were particularly useful for this chapter.

264 JW’s approach to Folch, and the latter’s testimony in his support, are detailed in Folch, “An Interview of Governor Folch with General Wilkinson.”

265 “to forget any personal animosity towards the Governor”: Clark, Proofs , note 65.

265 The exchange of veiled menaces between JW and Clark are the subject of notes 70 to 76 in Clark, Proofs .

266 “As to any projects or plans”: Testimony of George Poindexter, Carpenter, Trial of Colonel Aaron Burr , 273.

266 “Our ground of defence is”: Ibid., 390.

266 “Why, something would have been done”: Adair quoted in Burr’s Conspiracy exposed , 25.

267 “he would lash General Wilkinson into tortures”: Quoted in Carpenter, Trial of Colonel Aaron Burr , 356.

268 “The president has undertaken to prejudge”: Martin to Marshall at the grand jury hearing, quoted in Adams, History of the United States .

268 “treason against the United States”: Chief Justice John Marshall, Ex Parte Bollman and Ex Parte Swartwout, 8 U.S. 4 Cranch 75 (1807).

268 “Wilkinson strutted into court”: Washington Irving, quoted in Hay, Admirable Trumpeter , 274.

269 “I was introduced to a position within the bar”: JW to Jefferson, ibid., 276.

269 “He is a very slight man but of the common stature”: William Plumer, letter to his son, February 22, 1803, quoted in Albert Beveridge, The Life of John Marshall (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1965), 83.

270 “Your enemies have filled the public ear”: Jefferson to JW, Memoirs , vol. 2, appendix 30.

270 Proceedings of the September trial are taken from Carpenter, Trial of Colonel Aaron Burr.

272 “he must hang Mr. Burr”: Ibid., 390.

272 “He exhibited the manner of a sergeant”: Blennerhassett, quoted in Hay, Admirable Trumpeter , 275.

CHAPTER 27: THE WAR WITH RANDOLPH

Randolph’s hostility enmeshed JW in a series of inquiries. Because JW’s biographical works, A Plain Tale , Memoirs , and Burr’s Conspiracy exposed , are composed of the arguments that he deployed in rebuttal, they are central to this and the following chapters.

276 “I can distinctly trace the source of my persecutions”: Memoirs , vols. 2, 3.

276 “I recognize no right to hold me accountable”: Jacobs, Tarnished Warrior , 218.

276 “I denounce John Randolph”: Quoted in Crackel, Mr. Jefferson’s Army .

277 The story of the Annapolis party: Memoirs 2:7.

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