Thomas Hickey (soldier)

Last updated
Thomas Hickey
Born Ireland
Died(1776-06-28)June 28, 1776
Bowery, New York City
AllegianceUnion flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg  Kingdom of Great Britain (pre-1765)
Flag of the United States (1776-1777).svg  United States (post-1765)
Service/branchUnion flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg  British Army
Gadsden flag.svg Continental Army
Commands held Commander-in-Chief's Guard
Battles/wars Seven Years' War
American Revolutionary War

    Thomas Hickey (died June 28, 1776) was a Continental Army soldier in the American Revolutionary War, and the first person to be executed by the Continental Army for "mutiny, sedition, and treachery".

    Contents

    Born in Ireland, Hickey came to America as a soldier in the British Army and fought as a combat field servant to Major General William Johnson in the Seven Years' War. He later joined the Patriot cause when the American Revolution broke out, and became part of the Life Guard, which protected General George Washington, his staff, and the Continental Army's payroll. Hickey was briefly jailed for passing counterfeit money; during this incarceration, he told another prisoner he was part of a conspiracy. He was later tried and executed for mutiny and sedition against the Continental Army. Plausible, but unverified, reports suggest that he may have been involved in an assassination plot against Washington in 1776.

    Washington made a general announcement:

    The unhappy fate of Thomas Hickey, executed this day for mutiny, sedition, and treachery, the General hopes will be a warning to every soldier in the Army to avoid those crimes, and all others, so disgraceful to the character of a soldier, and pernicious to his country, whose pay he receives and bread he eats. And in order to avoid those crimes, the most certain method is to keep out of the temptation of them, and particularly to avoid lewd women, who, by the dying confession of this poor criminal, first led him into practices which ended in an untimely and ignominious death. [1]

    Conspiracy

    In April 1776, after the conclusion of the Boston campaign, General Washington and the Continental Army marched to New York City and prepared for an anticipated assault on the city by the British Army. The Royal Governor of New York, William Tryon, had been driven out of the city by revolutionary forces and was compelled to seek refuge on a ship in New York Harbor. Nevertheless, the city had many Loyalist residents who favored the British side.

    Thomas Hickey was a private in the Commander-in-Chief's Guard, a unit formed on March 12, 1776, to protect George Washington, his official papers, and the Continental Army's cash. That spring, Hickey and another soldier were arrested for passing counterfeit money. While incarcerated in Bridewell prison, Hickey revealed to another prisoner, Isaac Ketchum, (possibly overheard by two others, Isaac and Israel Youngs) that he was part of a wider conspiracy of soldiers who were prepared to defect to the British once the expected invasion came. [2]

    Arrested by civilian authorities, Hickey was turned over to the Continental Army for trial. He was court-martialed and found guilty of mutiny and sedition. He was hanged on June 28, 1776, at the corner of Chrystie and Grand Streets before a crowd of 20,000 spectators in New York. Hickey was the only person put on trial for the conspiracy. During the trial, David Mathews, the Mayor of New York City and a Loyalist, was accused of funding the operation to bribe soldiers to join the British. Although the charge was never proven, Mathews and 12 others were briefly imprisoned. The initial plan was alleged to include plans to kidnap Washington, assassinate his officers, and blow up the Continental Army's ammunition magazines. These rumors greatly damaged the reputation of Loyalists throughout the nascent United States. [3]

    Military rank

    In the transcript of Court Martial for the Trial of Thomas Hickey and Others on June 26, 1776, Hickey is referred to as a "private sentinel" in Washington's Life Guards, under the command of "Maj. Gibbs". There is reason to suspect this transcript is a copy made shortly after the end of the Revolutionary War when many official papers were being copied for preservation. In Harry Ward's George Washington's Enforcers (2006), he gives Hickey's rank as sergeant, and notes that Captain Caleb Gibbs was not promoted to major until June 29, 1778, two years after Hickey's trial. [4] When enlisted soldiers are convicted, it is normal for their punishment to include a reduction to the lowest rank, private. A postwar transcript would explain why Hickey is listed at his lowest rank and Gibbs is identified at his highest rank.[ citation needed ]

    Assassination plot

    Richmond Hill (built c. 1760, demolished 1849) Richmond Hill Mansion crop.jpeg
    Richmond Hill (built c.1760, demolished 1849)

    Washington's headquarters from May to June 1776 was at Richmond Hill, a suburban villa outside the city. Samuel Fraunces, a tavern keeper whose establishment was about two miles away, provided meals for the general and his officers. Washington hired a housekeeper, a 72-year-old widow named Elizabeth Thompson, who worked at Richmond Hill from June 1776 to December 1781. [5] [6]

    Although Hickey was jailed for passing counterfeit money, and then charged with sedition and conspiracy while in prison, William Spohn Baker, a late 19th-century Washingtonian, believed that the real reason for his execution was involvement in a plot to kill or kidnap Washington:

    Thomas Hickey, one of Washington's Guard, was tried by a court-martial and sentenced to death, being found implicated in a plot to murder the American general officers on the arrival of the British, or at best to capture Washington and deliver him to Sir William Howe. The plot had been traced to Governor Tryon, the mayor (David Mathews) having been a principal agent between him and the persons concerned in it. [7]

    Baker was wrong about the specific crimes of which Hickey was convicted, but in 1776 there was a real rumor of an assassination plot:

    [June 24, 1776.] A most infernal plot has lately been discovered here, which, had it been put into execution, would have made America tremble, and been as fatal a stroke to us, this Country, as Gun Powder Treason would to England, had it succeeded. The hellish conspirators were a number of Tories (the Mayor of ye City among them) and three of General Washington's Life Guards. The plan was to kill Generals Washington and Putnam, and as many other Commanding Officers as possible. [8] [July 13, 1776.] I suppose you have heard of ye execution of one of the General's Guards, concerned in ye hellish plot, discovered here some time past. There was a vast concourse of people to see ye poor fellow hanged. [9]

    Two other contemporaneous references to an assassination plot have been published. [10] A garbled account of an assassination attempt appeared over two years later in a provincial English newspaper, The Ipswich Journal, on October 31, 1778:

    Advise is received from America that two persons, a man and a woman who lived as servants with General Washing ton [ sic ], have been executed in the presence of the army for conspiring to poison their master. [11]

    Fraunces' petition to Congress

    Sam Fraunces, c. 1900 engraving, based on an undated ink sketch attributed to John Trumbull. The ink sketch is privately owned. Sam Fraunces.jpg
    Sam Fraunces, c. 1900 engraving, based on an undated ink sketch attributed to John Trumbull. The ink sketch is privately owned.

    In a March 5, 1785, sworn petition to the U.S. Congress, Samuel Fraunces claimed that it was he who discovered the assassination plot, that he was falsely accused of being part of it and was jailed until his name was cleared. He wrote (in the third person):

    That he [Fraunces] was the Person that first discovered the Conspiracy which was formed in the Year 1776 against the Life of his Excellency General Washington and that the Suspicions Which were Entertained of his agency in that Important Discovery occasioned [sic, occasioned] a public Enquiry after he was made a Prisoner on which the want of positive Proof alone preserved his Life. [13]

    Congress' response to Fraunces' petition downplayed the plot but accepted his role as "instrumental in discovering and defeating" it. [14] For debts incurred during the Revolutionary War, Congress awarded him £2000, [15] a later payment covered accumulated interest, [16] and Congress paid $1,625 to lease his tavern for two years to house federal government offices. [17]

    Phoebe Fraunces legend

    Martha Washington's grandson, George Washington Parke Custis, died in 1857. Two years later, his daughter, Mary Anna Custis Lee, published his memoirs, to which were added extended notes by the antiquarian Benson J. Lossing. One of these notes told the story of an attempt by Hickey to poison Washington:

    When Washington and his army occupied the city, in the summer of 1776, the chief resided at Richmond Hill, a little out of town, afterward the seat of Aaron Burr. [Samuel] Fraunces's daughter was Washington's housekeeper, and she saved his life on one occasion, by exposing the intentions of Hickey, one of the Life-Guard (already mentioned), who was about to murder the general, by putting poison in a dish of peas prepared for his table. [18]

    Custis' actual memoirs did not contain the story—it was added by Lossing—but this distinction is easy for the reader to miss. Lossing repeated the story in an 1870 book, claiming that Washington's housekeeper had testified at Hickey's court-martial:

    The guardsman was tried by a court-martial, and on the testimony of the housekeeper and one of the corps, whom the culprit had unsuccessfully attempted to corrupt, he was found guilty of 'mutiny and sedition and of holding a treacherous correspondence with the enemies of the colonies' and was sentenced to be hanged.[*] [*]These facts were related to a friend of the writer (Mr. W.J. Davis), by the late Peter Embury, of New York, who resided in the city at the time, was well acquainted with the general's housekeeper, and was present at the execution of Hickey. [19]

    Lossing's information was third-hand (as he freely admitted). This story is undermined by the trial minutes of Hickey's court-martial, which contain no housekeeper's testimony. [20] In the January 1876 issue of Scribner's Monthly , John F. Mines repeated Lossing's story and identified the housekeeper. This was more than 99 years after Hickey's execution and was the first time that the name "Phoebe Fraunces" appeared in print. Mines listed no sources for the magazine article. It was nationally read in the patriotic build-up to the 1876 Centennial celebration:

    A daughter of "Black Sam", Phoebe Fraunces, was Washington's housekeeper when he had his headquarters in New York in the spring of 1776, and was the means of defeating a conspiracy against his life. Its immediate agent was to be Thomas Hickey, a deserter from the British army, who had become a member of Washington's bodyguard, and had made himself a general favorite at headquarters. Fortunately, the would-be conspirator fell desperately in love with Phoebe Fraunces, and made her his confidant. She revealed the plot to her father, and at an opportune moment the denouement came. Hickey was arrested and tried by court-martial. [21]

    In 1919, Henry Russell Drowne (great-grandson of Dr. Solomon Drowne, the 1776 chronicler above) repeated the Phoebe Fraunces legend in his history of Fraunces Tavern:

    His [Samuel Fraunces's] daughter Phoebe was Washington's housekeeper in the Mortier House on Richmond Hill, occupied by the Commander-in-Chief as Headquarters, in June, 1776, and it was she who revealed the plot to assassinate Generals Washington and Putnam, which led to the apprehension of her lover, an Irishman named Thomas Hickey, a British deserter, then a member of Washington's bodyguard, in consequence of which he was promptly executed on June 28, 1776. [22]

    Legend refuted

    There is no record of Samuel Fraunces having had a daughter named Phoebe. The name does not appear with those of his children in the baptismal records of Christ Church, Philadelphia, or Trinity Church, New York. His will, dated September 11, 1795, also does not mention a "Phoebe". [23]

    It is well documented that Fraunces' nickname was "Black Sam", [24] but the 1790 U.S. Census for New York lists him as a "Free white male" and a slaveholder. [25] New York tax records list both slaves and indentured servants in his household, [26] and he advertised the sale of a slave in a New York newspaper. [27] If a "Phoebe" ever existed, she may have been a servant employed or enslaved by Fraunces, rather than his daughter.

    Self-published author Charles L. Blockson states that "Phoebe" was the nickname of Fraunces' eldest daughter Elizabeth, but he provides no evidence to support this claim. [28] If the woman in the legend had been Elizabeth Fraunces, she would have been rather young for wartime espionage or a clandestine love affair. Elizabeth's birth date of December 26, 1765, [29] means that at the time of Hickey's execution, she was 1012 years old.

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    References

    1. Washington's general order, June 28, 1776 in Lawrence J. Morris (2010). Military Justice: A Guide to the Issues. ABC-CLIO. p. 15. ISBN   9780275993665.
    2. Freeman, Douglas S. George Washington: A Biography. 7 vols. New York: Scribners, 1948–57, 4:119.
    3. Gillian Brockell (February 17, 2019). "The plot to assassinate George Washington — and how it was foiled". The Washington Post . Retrieved August 2, 2020.
    4. Ward, Harry M. George Washington's Enforcers: Policing the Continental Army. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2001. Chapt. 5, "Washington's Life Guard". p. 60.
    5. Papers of George Washington. Revolutionary War Series, Volume 5, ed. Philander D. Chase [Charlottesville; London: University Press of Virginia, 1993], p. 132n[ clarification needed ].
    6. In a 1783 letter to his aide, Washington asks to be remembered to Samuel Fraunces, and writes: "Pray let me know whether old Mrs. Thompson (our former Housekeeper) is in Town or not." Gen. Washington to Lt. Col. William Stephens Smith, June 18, 1783, in Writings of George Washington 27 (June 1783-November 1784), John C. Fitzpatrick, ed. (1931-44), p. 22.
    7. William Spohn Baker, Itinerary of General Washington from June 15, 1775, to December 23, 1783 (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1892), p. 41.
    8. Dr. Solomon Drowne to his sister Sally Drowne, New York, June 24, 1776; quoted in Henry Russell Drowne, A Sketch of Fraunces Tavern and Those Connected with Its History (New York: Fraunces Tavern, 1919), p. 8.
    9. Dr.Solomon Drowne to his brother William Drowne, New York, July 13, 1776; ibid., p. 10.
    10. Peter T. Curtenius to Richard Varick, New York, June 22, 1776, quoted in Robert Hughes' George Washington (New York: 1927), p. 392; and Joseph Hewes to Samuel Johnson, Philadelphia, July 8, 1776, in William Powell, ed., Correspondence of William Tryon 2 (1768-1818) (Raleigh, NC: 1981), p. 862.
    11. "1778-1779 Ipswich Journal FDLHS Newspaper Archive". The Foxearth and District Local History Society. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
    12. "Portrait of Samuel Fraunces" in Rice, Kym S. (1985). A Documentary History of Fraunces Tavern: The 18th Century. New York: Fraunces Tavern Museum. Appendix B, pp. 33-34.
    13. "Memorials Addressed to Congress, 1775-88", Papers of the Continental Congress, Record Group 360, M.247, Reel 49, National Archives, Washington, D.C.
    14. "Report on Samuel Fraunces Memorial," printed in Journals of the Continental Congress, 28 (Washington, DC: 1933).
    15. "Report of the Committee on Samuel Fraunces", March 28, 1785. Papers of the Continental Congress, National Archives, Washington, DC.
    16. "Report of the Board of the Treasury", March 21, 1786. Papers of the Continental Congress, National Archives, Washington, D.C.
    17. Indenture between Samuel Fraunces and Charles Thompson, Secretary of the Continental Congress, April 7, 1785. Papers of the Continental Congress, National Archives, Washington, D.C.
    18. George Washington Parke Custis and Benson J. Lossing, Private Memoirs of Washington (New York: Edgewood Publishing Co, 1859), p. 411.
    19. Benson J. Lossing, Washington and the American Republic (New York: Virtue & Yorston, 1870), vol. 1, p. 176.
    20. Vandecreek, Drew E. (2001). "Court Martial for the trial of Thomas Hickey and others". Northern Illinois University Libraries . The University of Chicago. Archived from the original on 29 September 2013. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
    21. John F. Mines, "New York in the Revolution," Scribner's Monthly, vol. XI, no. 3 (January 1876), p. 311.
    22. Drowne, H.R. A Sketch of Fraunces Tavern, p. 8.
    23. Philadelphia county records, proven October 22, 1795, Will book X p. 348
    24. "At first we supposed it was only a sham,/Till he drove a round ball thro' the roof of black Sam-", The Poems of Philip Freneau, Written Chiefly During the Late War (1786) p. 321. This refers to the August 23, 1775, night bombardment of Lower Manhattan by the British frigate Asia. Fraunces Tavern was hit by a cannonball.
    25. Heads of Families, First Census of the United States: 1790, State of New York (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, reprinted 1908), p. 117.
    26. G. Kurt Piehler, "Samuel Fraunces," American National Biography (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), vol. 8, pp. 414–415.
    27. The Royal Gazette, August 29, 1778.
    28. "Elizabeth Fraunces as "Phoebe"". Archived from the original on 2018-01-15. Retrieved 2009-04-12.
    29. Records of Christ Church, Philadelphia, list Elizabeth Fraunces' birth, 26 December 1765, baptism, January 27, 1766.

    Further reading

    Primary documents from The American Archives, published online by the Northern Illinois University Libraries: