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Foreign News January 27, 1776

The Virginia Gazette

Richmond, Williamsburg, Richmond County, Virginia

What is this article about?

A letter from Germany dated August 10, 1775, expresses widespread German admiration for American defiance against British oppression in the Revolutionary War. It highlights German immigrants' support, hopes for hired troops to desert, praises the Continental Congress, and suggests bribing key British figures like Lord Bute to end the conflict.

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PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 2.

Extract of a letter from GERMANY, August 10, 1775.

All Germany is fixed in admiration, wonder, and amazement, at the firm, determined, heroic spirit of the brave Americans, and are exceedingly pleased with the undaunted opposition they make against the several attacks of the formidable arms of England employed to deprive them of their just rights to natural liberty, and to shackle them in chains of slavery and subjection ever after; and this will be the miserable consequence should they subdue you by their fleets and armies.

Great numbers of Germans live in America, and they highly experience a happy country, the sweets of freedom and liberty, and which they did not enjoy here under their petty arbitrary rulers; these men will exert every nerve in support of the righteous cause of freedom, so sweet to them. Their numerous friends and relations here are constantly and most ardently supplicating the great Divine Ruler of all events to interpose and assist you with the almighty arm, and to set at naught all the wicked enslaving attempts of your enemies, but they hope you will not fold your arms, and depend altogether on the efficacy of your praying friends, but that you will make use of defensive means, and they hope and believe that providence will be propitious to your cause, which you have already had an earnest of, and that your oppressors may be discomfited. We wish that as England is going to hire foreign troops, in vain hope of subduing you (their own men becoming enervated and spiritless so soon as they tread American soil) that they could obtain Germans to be sent on this errand; for in that case we foresee the event would turn in your favour, as you have an extensive country for Germans to cultivate, and no people love profitable labour better, or are better adapted for the purpose, which America has long experienced, and we know that they would soon drop their fire arms, and betake themselves to the cultivation of lands. We think highly of the wisdom of your American Congress, and of all their good regulations throughout that extensive continent, and we cannot enough admire the decent, loyal, yet manly and spirited language contained in all their petitions and supplications to the Throne, and cannot enough detest the indecent treatment and scornful reception they have met with from those haughty men who guide all the movements of the nation.

But we assure you that the unison chord has not been hit upon by your Congress, or all would long ere this have been well with America, and few would have known the true cause of the army and fleet returning to England. Two or three hundred thousand pounds, judiciously applied, would have wrought this miracle, and saved millions, which, for want of this knowledge, you are now expending in warlike preparations. France, Spain, Holland, and Germany have long been acquainted with this prudent secret, and have frequently administered this specific with the wished for success. Money has removed mountains; it has turned the course of rapid rivers; it has built a barrier in China from Tartary, of fifteen hundred miles in length, and surely it will influence the pliable yielding hearts of men. I hope this method will be adopted yet, it will never be unseasonable, for the English are as greedy and ravenous after money as a hungry wolf is after a fat sheep; their Kings are not proof against its fascinating charms, and we know that they have been bribed to the prejudice of England. Touch but Bute's palm, and all will be right; he is the arch fiend, and has all the imps at his command. We believe him to be a Jesuit, and we know he is a blood relation of the banished Stuart King, and we believe he has been long working schemes to bring in one of that family to be again King of England. May his schemes all fail, and may he be transformed, not into a pillar of salt, but into a man of stone, as a lasting infamous monument for posterity to gaze upon.

What sub-type of article is it?

War Report Political Diplomatic

What keywords are associated?

German Admiration American Revolution Hired Troops Bribe Bute Continental Congress British Oppression

What entities or persons were involved?

Bute Stuart King

Where did it happen?

Germany

Foreign News Details

Primary Location

Germany

Event Date

August 10, 1775

Key Persons

Bute Stuart King

Event Details

Germans express admiration for American resistance to British attempts to enslave them, note German immigrants' support for freedom, pray for American success, hope hired German troops would desert to farm American lands, praise the American Congress's wisdom and petitions, and suggest bribing British officials like Bute to resolve the conflict and prevent further war expenditures.

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