A newly discovered letter suggests a Newfoundland named Rebel accompanied both Continental and British officers into battle.
By Julie Flavell Smithsonian Magazine
When Continental Army General Richard Montgomery was slain at the Battle of Quebec on December 31, 1775, he was quickly hailed as a martyr to the cause of liberty. An Irish-born former British Army soldier who had settled in New York two years before the dawn of the American Revolution, he accepted the rank of brigadier general in the Continental Army in 1775, risking it all for the cause of freedom.
His brave death in a hail of bulletsโsword in hand in a blinding snowstorm, crying, โYour general calls upon youโ to his men just moments before being shot downโbecame a rallying point for the Patriot war effort. Yet this heroism contrasted starkly with his soldiersโ abandonment of their commanderโs body in a disorderly retreat. Within weeks, the Continental Congress tried to rectify that blot on American valor, voting to erect a marble memorial to the fallen hero that can still be seen today at St. Paulโs Chapel in New York City, where he would eventually be interred in 1818. Yet in the immediate aftermath of his death, it was Montgomeryโs fate to be laid to rest inside the fortified city he had failed to capture, surrounded by Redcoat enemies.
But a long-overlooked letter written by the sister of British General William Howe reveals that at least one loyal follower remained at Montgomeryโs side after his death. Writing to a close friend, Lady Georgiana Spencer, in 1783, Caroline Howe told the stirring story of the generalโs Newfoundland dog. Her letterโwhich I discovered while researching my 2021 book, The Howe Dynasty: The Untold Story of a Military Family and the Women Behind Britainโs Wars for Americaโsurvives in a box of largely unexplored missives at the British Library in London.
Caroline, an accomplished aristocrat who played chess with Benjamin Franklin in her London drawing room in 1775 as a cover for secret last-minute talks with the British government, promised Spencer the story โwill make you cry.โ Throughout the night of December 31, she wrote, the dog lay upon his masterโs half-frozen corpse, undaunted by the heavy snowstorm. The next morning, when British soldiers ventured onto the battlefield, the dog defended Montgomeryโs body for as long as he could, refusing to let the Redcoat soldiers touch it.
Montgomery was buried under several feet of snow, with only a raised arm still visible. The men who found him realized he was an officer, but full identification had to wait until they carried the corpse into the city. When the body was finally removed from the field, the huge animal followed. He was the only faithful member of the generalโs staff present among an assemblage of British officers and Quebec citizens at Montgomeryโs funeral. The next day, the dog was discovered trying to dig up the dirt on his beloved masterโs grave.
Such outstanding loyalty naturally impressed the British soldiers in Quebec, and the dog was soon adopted by another officer, Major General William Phillips, who named him Rebel. It must have seemed like a good joke for Phillips to call Rebel to heel in the British encampment, but the jest turned sour when they both became prisoners of the Continental Army.
Phillips and his loyal companion were with the British forces who surrendered at Saratoga in October 1777. The major-general was overcome with embarrassment when he found himself shouting โRebel!โ in the company of American General Horatio Gates, and his clumsy effort to convert the call into a whistle raised a laugh among the Continental officers. The London public was equally diverted three months later, when the story reached the British newspapers, where it was a welcome distraction from the grim news of defeat at Saratoga.
Phillips never returned to Britain. A prisoner of war after Saratoga, he was exchanged in October 1780 and returned to active service, only to die of an illness, possibly typhoid, while on campaign in Virginia in May 1781, two years before the conflictโs end. Rebelโs chronicles might have ended there if not for Caroline, who was so delighted by the dogโs adventures that she wrote them down for Spencer in October 1783.
By then, the story had grown to include Rebelโs son, who carried his fatherโs name and, like the older canine, was an army dog. Young Rebel was the loyal follower of British Lieutenant Colonel John Lind, who had also been at Saratoga. It was Lind who relayed the dogsโ tale to Carolineโs sister, Mary Pitt, who met him when he returned home at the end of the war. Together, Lind and young Rebel reached British shores in April 1783.
Whether the original Rebel remained in America or crossed the Atlantic as the companion of another British officer went unrecorded by Caroline, but young Rebel and his master settled down to a life of peaceful leisure in Devon, England. Rebel was remarkably clever, wrote the admiring Caroline, spending his days fishing with Lind, who was a keen angler, and carrying the colonelโs catch home, unsupervised, on command.
โBut one day,โ she went on, โwhen he had received such orders, the [colonel] went home two hours afterwards and found the dog was arrived, but no basket. Upon which he called Rebel, gave him a good scold and asked what was become of the basket. Poor Rebel looked very silly and walked off; in half an hour, he returned, bringing the basket of fish safe. The fact was, he was seen to set down the basket to fight a dog, and in his hurry, after the engagement, he forgot his basket, but very sagaciously went to seek it where he had left it.โ
Itโs no wonder that Caroline recorded the story, for the Howe family was filled with dog lovers. Caroline frequently had her little dog on her lap as she corresponded in her London drawing room, making excuses to Spencer for the resulting โblots and blursโ in her penmanship.
Theย storyย of a dog owned by Carolineโs brother William, by tradition aย little fox terrier named Lila, is better known than Rebelโs. Lila was found behind American lines after theย Battle of Germantownย in October 1777, lost and disoriented. The inscription on the dogโs collar revealed its Redcoat masterโs name. Some of General George Washingtonโs staff officers suggested keeping the animal as a mascot, but the American commander in chief ordered it returned to William with aย polite noteย reading, โGeneral Washingtonโs compliments to General Howe, does himself the pleasure to return him a dog, which accidentally fell into his hands.โ As one of Howeโs officers recounted, the general was so happy to see the pup that he picked it up and put it on his lap.
In the 18th century, military dogs often served as working animals, guarding baggage, tracking the enemy, carrying messages and accompanying their masters into battle. Washington, for example, chose the staghound Sweetlips as his companion during his long military service, bringing her onto the battlefield and to the First Continental Congress in 1774.
Lila and Sweetlips remained by the sides of their beloved masters throughout the conflict. But it was Rebelโs fate, like many caught up in war, to experience captivity and displacement. He was fortunate to end up in the possession of the British military, which had embraced canines as pets, companions and fellow combatants for centuries. Ultimately, his progeny flourished in the household of a wealthy Englishman.
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