CHAPTER XV YORKTOWN AND HER NEIGHBORS The James, between
Richmond and the sea, is a tawny and sluggish stream, fringed with
willow and
cypress and shut in by low-lying mead and meadow, but it flows through
a land
rich in memories of a noble and stirring past, — a land where
Englishmen first
made successful lodgement on New World soil, where amid their rich
acres dwelt
and ruled those Cavalier planters who were princes in all save the
name, and
where in later years marched and fought the armies of three great wars.
Shirley
and Westover, Berkeley and Brandon, — what a quaint and pleasant sound
all
these names have! — break the storied way to the site of vanished
Jamestown,
and thence with historic Williamsburg lying between, it is but little
more than
a score of miles to Yorktown, scene of Cornwallis's surrender and
birthplace of
a nation. It was on a clear, balmy
morning of the early spring that we left Richmond and drifted slowly
down the
James on the pleasurable pilgrimage that was to end three days later at
Yorktown. Soon the spires and roofs of the sloping seven-hilled city
fading
into the fleecy western sky were lost to view, and the steamer at the
end of an
hour came about abreast of Drewry's Bluff, or Fort Darling, its crest
flanked
with earthworks, now silent, grass-grown, and dismantled, but
thirty-five years
ago the challenge and menace of the Federal gunboats lying below. Then Drewry's Bluff also
drifted astern, and the boat pushing leisurely ahead passed another
reminder of
the Civil War, — Dutch Gap, a canal several hundred feet in length, cut
by
Butler when ascending the river with his gunboats in order to avoid a
horseshoe
of seven miles. Other interesting memories cling to the narrow
peninsula thus
converted into an island, for it was here that, in 1612, Sir Thomas
Dale laid
out a town, defended by palisades and watch-towers, which in honor of
the then
Prince of Wales he called the City of Henricus. However, no vestige
remains of
the city or of the “university” established there in the days when
Henricus
still gave promise of prosperity and greatness. A little way below the
site of hopeful Sir Thomas's lost village is Varina, — the Aiken's
Landing of
the Civil War, — where Pocahontas passed a part of her brief married
life, and
then a halt is made at Shirley, a typical manor-house of the middle
colonial
period, long the lordly home of the Carter family, whose members,
intermarrying
with the Byrds, the Wickhams, and the Randolphs, played their part, and
a
worthy one, in the life and history of their time. The olden James
River
planters built for the future as well as for the present, and Shirley,
although
erected before the eighteenth century was born, bears well its weight
of years.
At once massive and simple in design, with foundation-walls from three
to four
feet in thickness, it is a square, three-storied structure, built of
alternating glazed and dull brick, and with sharp-sloping roof cut by
dormer-windows.
Broad stone steps lead up to the doorways, and spacious porticoes, one
of them
rising to the second story, flank the eastern and western sides of the
house.
Brick was also used in the construction of the several outbuildings,
arranged
in a hollow square, perhaps for purposes of defence in case of attack,
and even
the dovecote, a peak-roofed turret set upon the ground, is of the same
durable
material. The founder of Shirley — he
sleeps beneath a massive tomb in the family burialground not far from
the
mansion — was Edward Hill, “Collonel and Commander in Chiefe of the
Countys of
Charles City and Surrey, Judge of his Majestye's high Court of
Admiralty, and
Sometime Treasurer of Virginia.” His portrait, preserved at Shirley,
shows us a
handsome, masterful man clad in crimson velvet, lace, and a flowing
peruke,
and, if the limner painted true, the charm of physical beauty was also
the
portion of his granddaughter, who gave her heart and hand to a member
of the
Carter family, in whose possession Shirley and its broad acres have
ever since
remained. The mansion's interior corresponds with its exterior, and its
wainscoted walls boast other portraits than those just mentioned.
Carters,
Byrds, and Randolphs give silent greeting to the visitor, nor should
mention be
omitted of a fine replica of Peale's full-length portrait of Washington
standing out against the smoke and tumult of a battle scene. The owners
of
Shirley take pardonable pride in its history and careful preservation,
and with
its wide-spreading lawn, its curious boxhedged garden, and its pleasing
Old
World air, it promises to long remain a rare and eloquent survival of
the
colonial era. Across the James from
Shirley is City Point, the port of Petersburg, and destined to remain
forever
celebrated for its part in the Civil War. Here was enacted the closing
act of
the great drama, and there stands on the summit of the steep bluff, at
the base
of which the Appomattox joins the James, the low, rambling,
bullet-riddled
house used as head-quarters by General Grant at that time. Near City
Point once
stood the manor-house of Cawsons, the birthplace of brilliant and
hapless John
Randolph, whose home in later years we shall come upon at another stage
of our
pilgrimage. Cawsons was destroyed early in the century, but the
Randolphs were
at one time the owners of vast estates along the James and the
Appomattox, and
the whole region about City Point is indissolubly bound up with their
name. Westover House, another
splendid reminder of colonial Virginia, comes into view soon after
passing City
Point. The patent of Westover was originally granted to the Pawlet
family, and
sold by Sir John Pawlet, in 1665, to Theodore Bland, whose tomb and
armorial
bearings may still be seen on the estate. From Bland's descendants it
passed by
purchase to the Byrds, and with the name of Colonel William Byrd,
second of
that line in America, it is now invariably associated. The first
William Byrd
was a shrewd young Cheshireman, who secured from the crown a grant of
land
covering nearly the whole sight of modern Richmond and of Manchester on
the
opposite bank of the James. There he built for himself a fortified
dwelling,
which he called Belvidere, and throve so well in his new home that when
he
died, in 1704, he left his son and namesake one of the richest men in
the colonies. To this second William
Byrd, educated in England and there called to the bar of the Middle
Temple, was
reserved a brilliant and exceptional career, as courtier, author,
traveller,
and patron of the arts, fairly entitling him to high rank among the
leaders of
his time, and eloquently epitomized in the stately periods of the
inscription
upon the shaft above his grave in the rear of Westover House.
“Eminently
fitted,” this inscription tells us, “for the service and ornament of
his
country, he was made Receiver general of his Majesty's revenues here,”
— an
office his father had held before him, — “was thrice appointed publick
agent to
the Court and ministry of England, and being thirty-seven years a
member at
last became President of the Council of this Colony. To all this were
added a
great elegancy of taste and life, the well-bred gentleman and polite
companion,
the splendid Oeconomist and prudent father of a family, with the
constant enemy
of all exhorbitant power and hearty friend to the liberties of his
country.” Truly a remarkable man to
merit an eulogium of this sort, but contemporary records prove that
Colonel
Byrd deserved it. He was thirty years of age when he became master of
Westover,
where his father had builded and dwelt during the closing years of his
life,
and, save for occasional absences in England, he resided there until
his death
in 1744, dispensing a royal hospitality and playing an active and
sagacious
part in public affairs, ever ready with pen, purse, and brain to serve
his king
and his province. He was one of the commissioners who, in 1728, fixed
the
boundary-line between North Carolina and Virginia, and five years later
he laid
out near his father's little fortress of Belvidere a town “to be called
Richmond,” thus giving a site and name to Virginia's present capital. The sprightly Marquis de
Chastellux, visiting Westover in 1782, wrote of it as “surpassing all
other
estates on the river in the magnificence of its buildings, the beauty
of its
situation, and the pleasures of its society,” and the latter-day
visitor finds
no cause to quarrel with this description. The present mansion,
restored in
1749 by the son and namesake of the second William Byrd, is a
substantial
three-story structure, situated, perhaps, a hundred yards from the
river's
bank; fronted by a broad, closely-kept lawn, and with a line of noble
trees
caressing the dormer-windows of its roof. At each end of the grounds
are
elaborate gates of hammered iron, with the arms of the Byrd family
curiously
inwrought, and there is yet a third gate, above which perch leaden
eagles with
outstretched wings, larger and more elaborate in decoration, and
capable of
giving entrance to the most ponderous chariot. Everything else is on
the same
lordly scale. Moreover, by its present proprietor, one of the most
successful
planters in the State, Westover has been restored to much of its
pristine
dignity. And what stirring days the old house has seen! Bacon and his
men,
bivouacking here on their daring forays against the Indians, ate,
drank, slept
upon their arms, and rode away; Benedict Arnold, on his way to capture
Richmond, in 1781, landed and slept at Westover, and in the old nursery
on the
ground-floor Cornwallis quartered the horses of his troopers, while,
during the
Civil War, several generals of the Union army, notably McClellan, made
their
head-quarters at the mansion so popular with the soldiers of earlier
revolutions. As Westover recalls the
Byrds, so Berkeley on the north side of the James, and Brandon and
Upper
Brandon on the south, stand as monuments to the American Harrisons.
Upper
Brandon is still occupied by a representative of the original family,
but has
never fully recovered from the shocks and ravages of the Civil War.
Brandon,
erected in 1725, and the birthplace of the first President Harrison,
also
suffered heavily in war-time, but is still one of the most delectable
nooks in
the Old Dominion. It has remained in the Harrison family since its
foundation.
Fronting a sweep of the James two miles wide, a broad avenue, with an
old-fashioned
border of box, leads from the house to Brandon wharf. On either side of
this
avenue is an extensive lawn, dotted with flowers, shrubs, and trees. In
the
middle of the irregular brick structure is the oldest part of Brandon
House,
built of English brick by the father of Colonel Benjamin Harrison,
signer of
the Declaration of Independence, and friend of Washington. This part is
two
stories and a half high. Antique dormer-windows are on the top of the
slanting
roof, and four round brick columns support the roof of the porches,
which are
of the same height as the two stories, and which ornament both the
river and
landward entrances to the house. Brandon House took its name from the
Duchess
of Brandon, friend and kinswoman of the first Harrison of Brandon.
Additions
have been made to the house from time to time. Two wings connected with
the
main building by long halls, one used as a billiard-room and the other
as a
tenpin-alley, now constitute the entire house, which contains fifteen
large
rooms, and is partly enveloped in a luxuriant growth of ivy. On entering the house one
finds himself in a large square hall hung with stag-horns, rusty old
swords,
ancient-looking guns, and other implements of hunting and warfare. This
opens
on one side to a drawing-room of magnificent proportions; on the other
to an
equally large dining-room, both filled with handsome old furniture,
some of
which antedates the Revolution, the sideboard in the dining-room being
weighted
down with silver of a unique and ancient pattern. Hung in these two
rooms are
Brandon's rarest treasures, — its family portraits. Some of these are
of
unusual interest, and several were painted from life by Sir Peter Lely.
The
collection includes the portraits gathered by Colonel William Byrd,
whose son married
a daughter of Benjamin Harrison, which when Westover was sold were
conveyed to
Brandon. Among these portraits is one of the Duke of Albemarle, painted
by Sir
Peter Lely; one of Colonel William Byrd, and another of the beautiful
Evelyn
Byrd, one of Virginia's old-time belles. She was beloved by the Earl of
Peterborough, but her father opposed the marriage, and she died young.
Tradition says that her heart was broken. Between her portrait and that
of Lady
Betty Claypole, daughter of Oliver Cromwell, hangs a fine portrait of
Colonel
Benjamin Harrison, taken when he was a delicate, slender-looking young
man. On the opposite wall is a
portrait of Mrs. Benjamin Harrison, who was Miss Anne Randolph, painted
by Sir
Thomas Lawrence. In the dining-room are portraits of Lord Fairfax, Sir
Robert
Southwell, Sir Robert Walpole, the Duke of Orrery, and the Duchess of
Brandon.
The walls of both rooms are literally covered with pictures, including
besides
those mentioned interesting portraits of many of the Harrisons and
Randolphs of
past generations. The library is in one wing of the house, and contains
a large
collection of rare books. The Byrd Memoirs in manuscript, beautifully
bound,
give almost a complete history of early Virginia, and a turning of
their
quaintly-worded pages is one of the many pleasures that falls to the
lot of the
pilgrim so fortunate as to become the guest of the present gracious
mistress of
Brandon House. Our river journey had fit ending at the
site of
ancient Jamestown, on what was once a peninsula, but is now an island
in the
James. At the present time all that remains of the first successful
English
colony in America are a neglected graveyard and the crumbling walls of
a ruined
church, but the charm Jamestown still holds for the visitor is unique
and
lasting. The little church now in ruins was built in 1609. Here often
came to
worship Captain John Smith, Admiral of New England and doughty slayer
of Turks,
and those hopeful yet unruly followers whom he taught to earn their
bread by
the sweat of their brows, and within its walls pious Robert Hunt, the
first
English-speaking missionary to preach the gospel of Christ in America,
— let
his name be ever honored! — joined the “good and blessed” Pocahontas in
wedlock
to the young and handsome planter, John Rolfe. Privations overcame
Hunt, and he
died three years after he landed with Smith at Jamestown, but the
church of
which he was the first pastor continued to be used as a house of
worship until
the civil war which ended in the execution of Charles I., during which,
together with Jamestown, it fell into the hands of Bacon and his rebel
followers, and was fired, though not totally destroyed. Ruined Tower of
Jamestown
Church All about the site of
vanished Jamestown Nature for two centuries has been slowly yet
steadily
reclaiming her own. Not far from the ruined church we came upon a few
old slabs
which mark the resting-place of some of the Jamestown pioneers, most of
whom
died during the first twenty years of the colony's history. These
stones, moss-grown
and black with age, have been cracked and riven by the roots of the
trees
spreading under them, and with the inscriptions, save in one or two
instances,
no longer legible, serve only to add to the romance of the place. A little way from this
burial-ground is the only other remaining relic of Jamestown, — the great house built by Sir William
Berkeley, and now the home of the owner and postmistress, as she is
also the
sole white inhabitant of Jamestown Island. In this house Berkeley lived
for
thirty years as royal governor, and here, like the narrow-minded and
self-satisfied bigot that he was, he sat down, and thanking God that
there were
no printing-presses in America, beseeched Him that none might be
suffered to
enter for centuries to come. Berkeley was driven from his home by Bacon
and his
men, and came near falling a victim to the progressive spirit against
which he
had fought and prayed, but in the end he reëstablished his government
at
Williamsburg, and Charles II., in staying all too tardily the bloody
hands of
the old man's blind revenge, cynically declared that the governor had
hanged
more men in the Virginia wilderness for abetting Bacon than he himself
had put
to death for the murder of his father, Charles I. Other shades than those of
Smith and Berkeley haunt this island of Jamestown. “There were brave
men before
Agamemnon,” and it is now known that eighty years before the arrival of
the
English it was the site of an attempted settlement by the Spaniards.
Recent
researches in the royal library at Simancas in Spain have disclosed
that in the
summer of 1526 one Lucas Vasquez de Ayllon, a Spanish captain who
“aspired to
the glory of discovering some new land and making it the seat of a
prosperous colony,”
sailed from San Domingo with three large ships and six hundred persons
of both
sexes, and, after touching on what is now the South Carolina shore,
entered and
proceeded up the James. Fifty miles from its mouth he landed, and on
the future
site of Jamestown founded a settlement which he christened San Miguel
de
Guan-dope. But ill-luck from the first attended the venture. De Ayllon
died in
October, 1626; his followers mutinied against their new commander, and
the
colony was speedily abandoned. Less than a quarter of the colonists in
the end
regained the island of San Domingo. The rest had died of fever, cold,
and
privation. The tender carrying De Ayllon's body foundered at sea, and
the ocean
rolls above the resting-place of the adventurer whose keel had tracked
its
waters in profitless quest of wealth, fame, and honors. Leaving Jamestown Island,
where our stay had been made doubly pleasant by the generous welcome of
its
owner, we crossed to the north shore, and took carriage for the drive
over a
cool forest road to Williamsburg, — long the colonial capital of
Virginia. and
the site of old William and Mary College. It is hardly too much to say
of it
that it is the most charmingly antique town in America, — certainly it
is the
most charming in the Old Dominion. Duke of Gloucester is the name of
the main
street of the village, which broadens at its centre into an open square
called
Court-House Green, where stands an ancient temple of justice, modelled
by the
graceful hand of Sir Christopher Wren, and surrounded by fine colonial
residences, among them those of John Randolph and Beverly Tucker, and
Chancellor Wythe's old house, where his wicked nephew poisoned him.
Farther up
Duke of Gloucester Street is another square — Palace Green — faced by other historic mansions, including
the old palace of the royal governors and the house used by Washington
as his
head-quarters just before the siege of York-town. Nearly opposite to Palace
Green is the powder-magazine of colonial days, in appearance very like
the
Martello towers at Quebec, save that it is octagonal instead of round.
It is
called the “Powder-Horn,” and was built by Sir Alexander Spotswood, the
deputy
or lieutenant of George Hamilton, Earl of Orkney, governor and
commander-in-chief of the colony. There had been great rejoicing in the
colony
when Governor Spotswood arrived, because he brought with him the habeas
corpus
act. This act had been refused by the governors at times when their
deputies
had taken it on themselves to exercise it on their own authority. So it
was a
matter of rejoicing when a deputy came bringing it in his own name.
However, it
was not long before there was an open quarrel between Spotswood and the
House
of Burgesses, because they would not grant certain money that he asked
for
necessary defence. Two years later, having gained the confidence of the
people
by his wise measures, the Assembly granted him all he asked, and in
1714 the
statute was passed ordering the erection of the magazine. Sixty years later the
“Powder-Horn” became the scene of the first overt act of the
Revolution. In the
winter of 1775, when the clouds of war were gathering thick and fast, a
plan
was formed by the royal authorities to disarm all the colonies. In
pursuit of
this plan, on the night of April 20, 1775, a number of marines, who had
been
concealed in the palace at Williamsburg, moved the powder from the
magazine to
the “Magdalen,” a man-of-war on the James River. The removal of the
powder was
discovered by the citizens early in the morning. Duke of Gloucester
Street was
crowded at once, and threats were made. A deputation was sent to the
palace
demanding the return of the powder. They found the place in a state of
defence,
many arms lying around. Lord Dunmore, the governor, gave some
untruthful
excuse, and pledged his honor that if the powder was needed in
Williamsburg it
should be returned in half an hour. The news of the removal of the
powder
spread like wildfire. Patrick Henry raised three hundred men, “Hanover
Volunteers,” and marched towards Williamsburg, their numbers increasing
as they
went. Dunmore was obliged to go to meet them and to compromise the
matter by
paying for the powder. The House of Burgesses
assembled on June 1, 1775. Lord Dunmore made a polite address and
presented
Lord North's “Conciliatory Plan.” A committee was appointed to report
upon it,
and Thomas Jefferson was selected to write the report. Suddenly, from a
most
unexpected quarter, on June 5, came a sound that ended all discussion.
On that
night some young men went to the magazine to procure arms. Lord Dunmore
had
before this delivered up the keys of the magazine. They unlocked the
door, and
as they pushed it open it pulled a concealed cord that discharged a
spring-gun.
Three of the young men were wounded. The Assembly was aroused to
intense
excitement. Persons were officially appointed to examine the magazine.
It was
done cautiously, and under the floor several barrels of powder were
found
buried. Duke of Gloucester Street was again crowded by excited
citizens, and
again threats were made. Before the day dawned Lord Dunmore and family
had fled
to the man-of-war “Fowey” at Yorktown, never to return to Williamsburg,
and the
disputed powder, seized without delay by the colonists, was put to use
in the
war that followed, while Patrick Henry was speedily installed in
Dunmore's
place as the first governor of the State of Virginia. Turning from the
“Powder-Horn,” now owned and kept in repair by the women of
Williamsburg, the
next place of interest reached in our leisurely ramble down Duke of
Gloucester
Street was the ancient, ivy-hidden church of Bruton parish, — the
oldest
Protestant house of worship in use in America. It is built in shape of
a cross,
and was planned by Sir Christopher Wren. It stands in the midst of a
beautiful
grove of elms, surrounded by tombs and monuments of the dead, as if
dreaming of
the faded glories of the past. Williamsburg people tell you that Queen
Anne
went to see the bell for its tower cast and threw her silver ornaments
in the
molten bronze. Many curious things are seen in and near this old
church. In a
house across the Green are kept the communion services given by Queen
Anne and
George III., and in the church itself is placed the font which held the
water
into which the minister dipped his fingers when he baptized Pocahontas.
In its
floor are tablets over graves showing that lords, dukes, knights, and
chancellors are resting there, among them a modern slab to the memory
of the
Confederates who were killed in the battle of Williamsburg. “They died
for us”
it is here declared. Theodore Winthrop, of Massachusetts, it will be
remembered, fell in that battle, and his body rested for several years
in
Bruton church-yard, among the graves of colonial worthies whom
Virginians still
delight to honor. At the end of Duke of
Gloucester Street stands the restored and lately reopened William and
Mary
College. The second college in America, Harvard having been the first,
it was
chartered in 1961, Queen Mary persuading her husband to endow it with
two
thousand pounds per year in money, twenty thousand acres of land, and
one penny
per pound upon all the tobacco exported from Maryland and Virginia,
together
with all the fees and profits arising from the office of
surveyor-general,
which was to be controlled by the president and faculty. In 1698 the
college
building, planned by Wren, was finished and the new seat of learning
named
William and Mary, in honor of the generous king and queen. For many
years
thereafter it was the centre of intellectual life in the Old Dominion.
Three
Presidents were graduated within its walls and one chief-justice, and
many
other distinguished men can claim it as their alma mater. The college buildings were
burned in 1705. They were rebuilt at once, but were burned again and
again, the
last time in 1862. However, the fires that have afflicted the college
buildings
have spared the famous college statue, and it stands serenely in the
middle of
the college green. Norborne Berkeley, Baron de Botetourt,
governor-general of
Virginia, arrived at Hampton Roads, eight weeks out from Portsmouth, in
October, 1768, and so pleased the people of the colony that they soon
afterwards erected a marble statue to him in front of the college. It
represents him in court dress with a short sword by his side, and,
although it
has suffered some degree of mutilation, it still is a fine specimen of
the
sculptor's art. William and Mary during the last half-century has had a
checkered history. Some years ago it had dwindled to proportions that
threatened its speedy death, but more recently has taken new lease of
life, and
now promises a long future of usefulness. At the other end of Duke
of Gloucester Street, one mile distant from the college, is the site of
the old
House of Burgesses. Nothing is left of it save the foundation of bricks
and
masses of broken plaster from its walls. It was here that Henry's
eloquence
competed with Otis's at Boston for the rank of first orator of the
Revolution,
and it was here occurred a most interesting episode in the life of
Washington.
For faithful performance of public duties the House of Burgesses voted
him a splendid
sword and belt, and they were presented by Edmund Randolph, then
president of
the House, in an eloquent and impressive speech, which so overcame
young
Washington that in his effort to reply he could not utter a word.
Randolph came
to his rescue. “Sit down, Mr. Washington,” said he, “your modesty is
only
equalled by your bravery, and that very far surpasses any words I have
to
express it.” Close to the site of the
old Capitol is the famous Red Lion Hotel, a long building with hip-roof
and
dormer-windows, now far gone in the process of decay. Near by is the
site of
the Raleigh Tavern, which Williamsburg people say was a grand place.
Nothing
can now be seen of this famous old tavern except the foundation of the
massive
pillars which supported its piazza, it having been pulled down years
ago and a
large brick store built upon the site. It was in the ballroom of this
Raleigh
Tavern that Patrick Henry made his great speech denouncing British
wrongs
placed upon her colonies, and in its delivery won for himself a place
among the
master orators of all time. Those were Williamsburg's
palmiest days, but when the capital was moved to Richmond in 1779 the
towns
glory was taken from it. Yet it has not suffered decay. Indeed, it has
accomplished one of the most difficult things in the life of man or
town, for
it has fallen gracefully into mossy age. Beauty and quiet now brood
over it,
and we found a single afternoon of spring all too short a time to idle
among
its ancient houses or linger under the stately elms that give graceful
shade to
Court and Palace Greens, but time pressed, and under the mellow glow of
a
westering sun we left Williamsburg behind us and took to the winding
road,
which ere night came on led us to the broad estuary of the York River
and to
Yorktown, another sleepy old village that seems by some miracle to have
escaped
the influence of the nineteenth century. Little York, now nearing
the end of its second century of existence, was never a populous place
even
when it thrived the most, but it was the political and trading centre
of one of
the eight boroughs into which Virginia was originally divided, and
during the
sixty years immediately preceding the Revolution an influential factor
in the
direction of affairs. The town's first settler was Thomas Nelson, a
canny
Scotch trader, who established there a store which for two generations
yielded
to those called by his name a never-ending harvest of golden guineas.
This
store was destroyed during the war of 1812, but the custom-house where
the
Nelsons' goods were entered — it was, it
is said, the first of its kind erected in America — still stands near
the water
front, with moss-covered roof, thick walls, and massive oaken doors and
shutters. Less than a stone's throw
away stands the dwelling, with its lofty chimneys and solid walls,
builded by
Scotch Tom when riches had come to him with age, after which he died
and was
buried, — his tomb remains one of the notable relics of the village, —
but not
until he had founded a family from which issued in the third generation
General
Thomas Nelson, one of the most brilliant of that body of great men who
stand a
splendid cluster of stars against the early dawn of the country's
history. This
Thomas Nelson, third of the name, though educated at Eton and
Cambridge, when the
Revolution came joined the side of the ultra patriots, was a
conspicuous member
of all the decisive conventions, and as a delegate to that of 1776
signed the
great Declaration. Finally, in 1780, he succeeded Henry as governor of
his
State, with almost dictatorial power to manage both her military and
civil
policy. “His popularity was unbounded,” says the historian, and, he
might have
added, so were the general's patriotism and generosity, for when,
Virginia's
credit being low, money was wanted to pay the troops and run the
government,
Nelson borrowed millions on his personal security and went on; and
again, when
regiments mutinied and refused to march, he raised money and paid them,
although in so doing he wrecked his own and his children's fortunes. Recalling the career of
this uncommon man, one rejoices that the triumphant close of the seven
years'
struggle in which he bore so fine a part was pitched at the place most
closely
associated with his name and fame. The story of what happened at
Yorktown in the
fall of 1781 grows more lustrous with the years. Only a few months
before the
patriot cause had seemed a doubtful if not a hopeless one. The army of
the
South had been defeated and driven back into Virginia, only by forced
marches
escaping complete destruction; Virginia, the backbone of the
Revolution, had
been swept by two invasions; and Cornwallis with his army was marching
triumphantly through her borders, trying by every means he could devise
to
bring his only opponent, the youthful Lafayette, to an engagement. Had
the
French officer proved as reckless as the British commander believed
him, the
end would have come before De Grasse with his fleet anchored in the
Chesapeake.
He was no novice in the art of war, however, and at length Cornwallis,
wearied of
trying to catch him, retired to Yorktown, and intrenching himself,
awaited reënforcements
from the North. It was at this critical
moment that kindly Providence directed the French admiral to the
Virginia
coast, and Washington, finding himself possessed of a force such as he
had
never hoped for in his wildest dreams, and knowing that he could count
on the
new reënforcements for only a few weeks, resolved to put his fate to
the touch
and win if possible by a single bold cast of the die. Accordingly, he
withdrew
from New York and came down to Jersey as if to get near his ovens, a
move which
so misled the British commander that he did not suspect its ulterior
object
until he learned that the patriot army was well on its way to Virginia.
In the
last days of September the American commander arrived before Yorktown
and began
a siege memorable for the bravery and determination with which it was
prosecuted. The expected relief did
not come to Cornwallis, and ere the end of the third week his troops
marched
out with cased colors, prisoners of war. A monument, unveiled with
imposing
ceremonies some years ago, now marks the spot where this event took
place, and
a short way from the town still stands the old weather-beaten mansion
known as
the Moore House, in the sitting-room of which were drawn up the
articles of
capitulation of the British army. This house, now tenantless and
falling into
decay, was historical even then, for it had been the country residence
of
Governor Spotswood, who, as the great Marlborough's aide-de-camp, had
carried
the news of Blenheim to England, and who later had come to the Old
Dominion to
rule it for a time with a soldier's courage and decision and the
foresight of a
statesman able to see beyond the fret of small minds over little things. The Nelson House, used by
Cornwallis as his head-quarters during the last days of the siege,
after his
first had been shelled to pieces, still bears the iron scars made by
the
American cannon, pointed at it by order of General Nelson, who when
told that
the British general was lodged there, offered five guineas to the
gunners for
every shot which should strike it. Otherwise it is well preserved; and
what a
glorious company of shades haunt its high wainscoted rooms! Washington
and
Mason and Jefferson received cordial welcome from its master, while
Lafayette,
returning in his old age, the honored and revered guest of the mighty
nation he
had helped to create, slept here and added another to the many
associations
which already surrounded the mansion. Growth and activity went
out from Yorktown along with the patriot troopers, and to-day, with its
few old
brick houses scattered among modern shanties, it is the sleepiest of
sleepy
villages, — a place where modest poverty dwells content and strife and
hurry
are alien things. Peaceful be its slumbers amid green and quiet fields,
for it
has well earned the rest that is the right of honored age. |