- 10
[André, John]
Description
- paper and ink
8vo (7 1/4 x 4 1/4 in.; 185 x 110 mm). Engraved portraits of André and Benedict (not originally issued with the pamphlet) bound in; lacks half-title, initial and terminal blanks, light browning, minor dampstaining at lower outside corners. Half green morocco over green marbled boards, marbled endpapers, spine lettered gilt; lightly rubbed.
Provenance
Literature
Condition
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Catalogue Note
"He was more unfortunate than criminal" wrote Washington to Comte de Rochambeau on 10 October (Firtzpatrick 20:151). Furnished with a pass from Arnold, André successfully crossed American works at Stony and Verplanck's Points but on the morning of the 23rd, he was captured by three rogue militia men near Tarrytown. He was delivered to Mabie's Tavern in Tappan, New York, on 28 September. The following day he was interrogated by the Board of General Officers which included Nathaniel Greene, Henry Knox, the Marquis de Lafayette, and the Baron von Steuben. Found guilty, he was hanged on 2 October as a common spy, despite his request for a military firing squad.
In addition to the trial proceedings, the book includes letters from George Washington, Henry Clinton, André, and Arnold. The proceedings were published in several cities including New York, Norwich, Hartford, Exeter, and Providence, but the Philadelphia edition is the official version. Scarce, the last copy of the Philadelphia imprint to sell at auction was in 1970.