Silas Deane Arrested for
Treason
by Jeff Provine
Author
says: please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not
necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).
On March 4th 1776,
just one day out of port, an American merchant ship bound for France was
stopped by a British frigate in a chance sighting. The naval captain
decided to conduct a search for contraband, unstamped goods, or, as a
possibility, treasonous materials put forth by the growing American
Rebellion.
During the search, officers came upon a series of letters in the care of
Silas Deane, a merchant from Connecticut masquerading as a trader from the
Bahamas, which endorsed him as a representative of the Continental
Congress to France. Further reading and interrogation proved that Deane
was meant to garner French and European Please
click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.support in the form of arms,
supplies, cash, and even soldiers. Deane was taken aboard the frigate, and
the merchant ship was sent on its way, told not to return to America and
give word of Deane's capture.
Silas Deane, born December 24, 1737, had been a proponent of the American
movement from nearly its beginning. He had come from a wealthy farming
family and made a name for himself after graduating from Yale through
practicing law and teaching. Further, he married the widow Mehitable Webb,
gaining from her a family of six, a mansion, and a thriving merchant
business. Elected as a representative to the Continental Congress, Deane
was instrumental along with John Adams of Massachusetts in establishing
the significance of an American Navy (some of which would be built at his
father-in-law's shipyard). Deane himself would donate a great deal to the
cause, helping to finance the men who would seize a great victory at
Ticonderoga. While on the secret Committee of Correspondence, Deane would
be chosen to go to France on an undercover diplomatic mission to gain
international support from what had been an enemy at war only a decade
before.
"This wouldn't have been good for the Revolution,
however, at the same time France would have been looking for ways to take
advantage of Britain's troubles, and figuring out ways to aid the
colonists would have been an obvious move. " - reader's commentsNotice
of Deane's capture did not come to the Continental Congress until nearly
two months after the fact. In the meantime, the Americans had been
enjoying a good deal of victories such as a raid on the Bahamas by marines
and the British evacuation of Boston. The growth of support was enough to
push through the Declaration of Independence as a reaction to Britain's
declaration of a blockade, legally a wartime action. However, it would be
some time before the Americans could put together another secret mission
to France, eventually sending Philadelphian Benjamin Franklin and, later,
John Adams. Without an initial framework, the Americans asked too much and
would ultimately be turned away with little more than a pittance and a few
nobles-turned-mercenary.
Meanwhile, the tide of war turned against the Americans. In the south,
Cherokee encouraged by the British attacked in an arc all along the
frontier. Battles in the north under Washington and Arnold were repeated
defeats. In constant retreat, the soldiers took winter camp in 1777 at
Valley Forge, where Washington struggled to train with almost no money or
equipment. Without a successful gamble as he had taken with the surprise
attack on the Hessian soldiers, Washington lost the majority of his
troops. By 1778, the war had gone off the battlefield and to smaller
struggles primarily in the south and frontier. British troops suppressed
rebellion fully in 1779, and, in 1780, former general Benedict Arnold
assisted in the proceedings to clear misguided rebels from the true
instigators. Men like Thomas Paine and Samuel Adams were hanged while
others such as Washington, Adams, and Jefferson were stripped of property
and shipped to new colonies in Australia.
Silas Deane would similarly be punished by sharp fines, long stints in
prison, and a new life of hard labor in South Africa. His second wife,
Elizabeth, had died in 1777, but his fortunes would grow again as he
remarried and became an effective administrator with his loyalties proven.
He would never see his native America again.
The colonies would return to British loyalties, gradually looking to
Redcoats as protectors from Indian attacks and alliance rather than their
imperialist enemies. Other revolts would take place in the course of the
nineteenth century, each ushering in new schemes of private rights and
systems of government, similar to revolts that would be fought what would
become the Dominion of Canada. Still, the Great Experiment of
republicanism proved a failure, and the ideals of rule without a king
would be held only by mad anarchists or communists, who would ultimately
create autocratic dictators rather than constitutional royals who would
act as an anchor in a world changing at an increasing speed.
Author
says in reality Silas Deane arrived in France and established
negotiations with the French Foreign Minister, Comte de Vergennes. He
secured two hundred brass cannons, thirty mortars, weapons, ammunition,
tents, and gear for 30,000 men, in addition to key figures such as Lafayette
and Baron von Steuben who would train Americans to military prominence.
However, upon the arrival of Franklin and Arthur Lee, Deane was accused of
profiteering, disgraced without proof, bankrupt, and barred from the United
States as a traitor. He would die of mysterious illness in 1789 after
finally settling affairs in Europe, possibly poisoned by double agents. To
view guest historian's comments on this post please visit the
Today in Alternate History web site.
Jeff Provine, Guest Historian of
Today in Alternate History, a Daily Updating Blog of Important Events In
History That Never Occurred Today. Follow us on
Facebook,
Squidoo, Myspace and
Twitter.
Imagine what would be, if history had occurred a bit
differently. Who says it didn't, somewhere? These fictional news items
explore that possibility. Possibilities such as America becoming a Marxist
superpower, aliens influencing human history in the 18th century and Teddy
Roosevelt winning his 3rd term as president abound in this interesting
fictional blog.

Sitemetre
 |