Search Blog Posts

Monday, August 26, 2013

Secret Committee of Correspondence 1776-1783

Surely, we can learn from the history of our “secret correspondence” committee from the colonial period. Put your thinking cap on for that time period and equate that era with the encumbrances of serfdom we have at the present.
Your ancestors knew the score. You don't, but your enemies today beat you to it!


The forces of our present tyranny are taking the same measures to prevent today’s citizenry from becoming sufficiently informed through networks such as cell phones, internet, and yet-to-be created communicative devices. The internet and its social medias are targeted for penetrating, name-harvesting, disruption & ultimately unreliability for its members. Even foreign tyrannies, notably Israel and the UK, have joined our lead.

Follow thru on the efforts taken by the British emperors to stifle our colonial ancestors from the preparations in advance of seeking liberty. Look at today and the parallels are astounding. Our tyrants are ahead of us.

Let’s not make these oversights “Shuda, Cuda, Wuda” moments our sovereign death rattle.



Milestones: 1776-1783

Secret Committee of Correspondence/ Committee for Foreign Affairs, 1775-1777


The Continental Congress established the Committee of Secret Correspondence to communicate with sympathetic Britons and other Europeans early in the American Revolution. The committee eventually came to coordinate diplomatic functions for Continental Congress and served as the clearinghouse for transatlantic communication and public relations.
Benjamin Franklin
 
Congress initially established the Committee of Correspondence on November 29, 1775 to communicate with colonial agents in Britain and "friends in ... other parts of the world." On the committee were Benjamin Franklin, Benjamin Harrison, Thomas Johnson, John Dickinson, and John Jay. They were soon joined by Robert Morris. 

Congress had granted the committee sweeping authority to conduct international diplomacy, including the negotiation of clandestine shipments of arms and other similar activities. Owing to the nature of the correspondence, the members began to add the word "secret" to the committee's title, and soon it was known as the Committee of Secret Correspondence. As its diplomatic duties grew, Congress eventually renamed it the Committee for Foreign Affairs on April 17, 1777.

Of the initial members of the committee, Benjamin Franklin was the most active. Drawing on his extensive European contacts, he began a campaign to rally international support of the American cause. On December 12, 1775 Franklin wrote to Don Gabriel de Bourbon, a scholarly associate, and, more importantly, a prince of the Spanish royal family. In his letter, Franklin strongly hinted at the advantages of a Spanish alliance with the American revolutionaries. Franklin also dispatched similar letters to Americanophiles in France. 

Franklin sent these letters through trusted associates whom he trusted to protect the communications from interception by the British.

The committee was also aided by Arthur Lee, a Virginian living in London whom Congress would later officially appoint as a commissioner. Lee had come into contact with the French playwright Beaumarchais, who was then working as a secret French agent investigating British troubles with the colonies. Lee provided him with information about American successes that would influence the French foreign minister Charles Gravier, comte de Vergennes, to provide the colonies with clandestine shipments of gunpowder and war materiel.

The Committee of Correspondence also worked on American soil. In late 1775, a mysterious French traveler named Achard de Bonvouloir appeared in Philadelphia. He had been dispatched by the French Government to contact the Continental Congress, but publicly disavowed any such mission. The committee made contact with him, and Franklin convinced Bonvouloir that the colonies were seeking independence and were unlikely to reconcile with Britain. Franklin encouraged this representative of the French Government to report to his government that France should seek an alliance with the colonies once they declared their independence, and in the meantime provide the colonies with secret assistance.

Thereafter, the committee continued to correspond with Lee in London, and also with the commissioners in France, after Congress appointed them in the fall of 1776. However, as the British Navy tightened its blockade, communication became increasingly difficult, especially after British forces seized Philadelphia in 1777. Once France formally signed an alliance with the United States in 1778, communications improved. With the alliance also came the appointment of French minister to the U.S., Conrad-Alexandre Gérard de Rayneval, and more duties for the committee.

The committee also found its hands full with infighting among the American commissioners in Europe who clashed on financial matters. Lee suspected the early colonial agent in France, Silas Deane, of financial malfeasance and began a campaign to bring about his recall. Thomas Paine, who had become secretary of the committee, sympathized with Lee. Paine published anonymous pamphlets in which he claimed that Congress possessed documentation of secret French aid that would affirm Lee’s version of events. French minister Gérard intervened, explaining to the committee that France could not formally admit to such aid without risking war with Britain, which it was not ready to do. Congress passed a resolution denying that there had been French aid on January 12, 1778.

The committee continued to coordinate communication between Congress and diplomats in Europe, and sent more representatives to other European courts to encourage their assistance to the American cause. However, by 1780, an overworked Congress had many duties to attend to, and members of the Committee for Foreign Affairs had begun to neglect their duties. James Lovell, now on the committee, wrote to Arthur Lee and John Jay suggesting that Congress establish a Department of Foreign Affairs to handle the day-to-day business of conducting foreign diplomacy. Congressman James Duane also agreed. The committee members brought the suggestion before Congress, which was amenable to the suggestion and created a committee for the establishment of executive departments. Congress finally agreed to establish departments on February 6, 1781, but it was not until August 10 that the new Confederation Congress elected Robert Livingston as Secretary for Foreign Affairs.