German general in British service in the American Revolution
Baron Wilhelm von Knyphausen - Hessians - A Klos Family Project
KNYPHAUSEN, Baron Wilhelm yon,
soldier, born in Liitzberg, Germany, 4 November, 1716; died in Cassel, 7
December, 1800. His father was colonel in a German regiment under the Duke of
Marlborough. Knyphausen was educated in Berlin, entered the Prussian military
service in 1734, and in 1775 became a general officer in the army of Frederick
the Great. He came to this country as second in command of an army of 12,000
so-called "Hessians " under General yon Heister (q. v.). With
6,000 soldiers he set sail from Bremen for the port, of New York, and on 18
October landed at Staten island, after a passage of twenty weeks. In 1777
disagreements between General Howe and General yon
Heister caused the latter's recall, and gave Knyphausen the entire command of
the German auxiliaries.
He served in the battles of Long Island,
White Plains, Fort Washington, Brandywine,
and Monmouth. For several years the main body
of his soldiery occupied the upper part of Manhattan island, and during the
temporary absence of Sir Henry Clinton, in 1780,
he was in command of the city. Bodily infirmity and the loss of an eye caused
his retirement in 1782, when he returned to Europe, having, as he said, achieved
neither glory nor advancement.
At the end of his life Knyphausen became military governor of Cassel. He was
a taciturn and discreet officer, who understood the temper of his troops, and
rarely entered on hazardous exploits. His was a hireling army of recruits
gathered from work-houses, and by impressments, and drilled in the use of arms
on shipboard. As he frequently declared, on such forces a judicious commander
could place little reliance; they dwindled less by death than by desertion.
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