Sir Henry Clinton - A Klos Family Project - revolutionary war
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Henry Clinton
British General
Sir Henry Clinton, British general, born in 1738; died in Gibraltar, Spain,
23 December, 1795 and was the son of George Clinton colonial governor of New
York. George Clinton was the youngest son of Francis, sixth Earl of
Lincoln, and appointed commodore and governor of Newfoundland in 1732. On 21
May, 1741, he became governor of New York, and entered on the duties of the
office in September, 1743. His want of skill in civil affairs peculiarly exposed
him to the tumults and commotions of colonial government. In his controversies
with the assembly, instigated by Chief-Justice James DeLancy, Colden, afterward
lieutenant governor, was his champion with the pen, his chief opponent being
Horsmanden. Clinton was succeeded, in October, 1753, by Sir Osborne, and
afterward became governor of Greenwith hospital. He was vice-admiral of the red
in 1745, and admiral of the fleet in 1757; became a captain of the guards in
1758, and served in Hanover during the remainder of the seven years' war.
Henry Clinton in May, 1775, having attained the rank of major general,
he was sent to Boston, along with Burgoyne and Howe.
In the following winter he went on an expedition to North Carolina to co-operate
with the loyalists there and redeem the colony for the king. Sir Peter Parker,
with the fleet and re-enforcements from Ireland, was to join him there, but was
detained by contrary winds and did not reach the American coast till 3lay. The
overwhelming defeat of the Tories at Moore's Creek in February made Clinton
think it unsafe to land in North Carolina. He cruised up and down the coast
until Parker's arrival, and it was then decided to go south and capture
Charleston. On 28 June they attacked Fort Moultrie, in Charleston harbor, and
were totally defeated.
Clinton then sailed for New York and took part in General
Howe's campaigns from the battle of Long
Island to the capture of Philadelphia. When Howe sailed for Chesapeake bay
in the summer of 1777, Clinton was left in command of New York. About this time
he was made K.C.B. In September he stormed Forts Clinton and Montgomery, on the
Hudson river, and sent a force to relieve Burgoyne at Saratoga, but too late to
be of any avail. On Sir William Howe's resignation, 14 April, 1778, Clinton was
appointed commander-in-chief of his majesty's forces in America, with the rank
of lieutenant-general.
In June he evacuated Philadelphia, and on his retreat through New Jersey
fought an indecisive battle with Washington at Monmouth Court-House. In
December, 1779, he set sail for South Carolina, taking Lord
Cornwallis with him, and leaving General Knyphausen in command of New York.
In the spring he invested Charleston, and on 12 May succeeded in capturing that
City, together with the whole southern army of 6,000 men under General
Lincoln. This was one of the heaviest blows dealt to the Americans during
the revolutionary war, and it may well have consoled Sir Henry Clinton for his
humiliating defeat before Charleston in 1776.
Leaving Cornwallis in command at the
south, Sir Henry returned to New York, and during the summer matured, in concert
with Benedict Arnold, the famous scheme for the
treasonable surrender of West Point. He accomplished nothing more of a military
nature, as his army in New York was held in virtual blockade by Washington. In
October, 1781, Sir Henry set sail for Chesapeake bay with a large naval and
military force, to relieve Lord Cornwallis, but
did not arrive in the neighborhood until after the surrender; on hearing of
which, without landing, he returned to New York. He was soon afterward
superseded by Sir Guy Carleton, and returned to England in June, 1782. He was
elected to parliament, and afterward made governor of Limerick. In 1793 he was
appointed to the command of Gibraltar. He wrote "A Narrative of the
Campaign in 1781 in North America" (London, 1783; reprinted, Philadelphia,
1865); a rejoinder to Lord Cornwallis's " Observations" on the
aforesaid ; and "Observations on Stedman's History of the American
War" (London, 1794).