Recruiting Instructions for John Stake
Document 1792Recruiting instructions issued by the War Dept. and handwritten note regarding the pay of non-commissioned officers.
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*Recruiting* INSTRUCTIONS
For Captain John Stake — of the Squadron
of light dragoons
in the Service of the United States.
SIR,
If you accept the appointment of which I have notified you, You are immediately to commence the recruiting service in the State of, New York & New Jersey — The principal rendezvous will be at Elizabeth Town New Jersey —
You will recruit for the service of the country, and no foreigners to be inlisted: you will engage none but active, healthy, young men—the yeomanry of the country of good character, so to [undecipherable].
Your recruits will be furnished by — M. Elias B. Dayton of Elizabeth Town — with rations, barracks, barrack utensils, straw and fuel; and also with such necessary medicinal assistance as they may require.
The recruiting Service is Sometimes abused, both as it respects the individuals recruited and the public at large,—that is, recruits are unwarily and unworthily entangled, contrary to their intentions: Such men generally desert the Service, at some critical moment, or Serve grudgingly, and Set bad examples to others; or, undesirable persons are engaged, who are constitutionally defective and unfit for the hardships incident to a military life.
Although a recruiting officer may require peculiar talents to obtain uncommon Success, yet it is in the power of every officer to conduct himself with candor, integrity and industry.
In order therefore to avoid the errors of this business, the following instructions are to Serve as the general rules and principles of your conduct:
1st. The recruits are to be inlisted for three years, unless Sooner discharged.
2d. Each recruit is to receive a bounty of Eight Dollars—but no part of this Sum is to be advanced until the recruit Shall have been fairly inlisted and Sworn before a Magistrate, according to the form herein prescribed, and then only the Said Sum is to be advanced in Such proportions as the judgment of the recruiting officer Shall dictate, until experience Shall in Some degree have ascertained the fidelity of the recruit. Any money advanced contrary to this direction, will be at the risque of the recruiting officer.
3d. Every recruiting officer will be allowed the Sum of Two Dollars, for the trouble and expence of inlisting each recruit;—provided however, that Such allowance will not be made for any recruit who Shall desert before he Shall march from the rendezvous of the troops in the State where he Shall have been recruited.
4th. The utmost fairness is to be used by the recruiting officers, in engaging these recruits; no individual therefore is to be inlisted in a State of intoxication, or be Sworn until after he Shall have been inlisted for the Space of twenty four hours.
5th. Each recruit (musicians excepted) must be five feet and five inches in height, without Shoes;—he must also be healthy, robust, and Sound in his limbs and body, in all respects; and to ascertain which he must be thoroughly examined, previously to inlistment, by a Physician or Surgeon;—but if, notwithstanding this direction, a recruit Should have any Secret defects at the time of his inlistment, the expence of his cure, if retained in Service, Shall be deducted from his pay.
6th. Each recruit, before he is Sworn, is to have distinctly read to him the rules and articles of war against mutiny and desertion, and relative to the administration of justice; and also the Act of Congress of the 30th of April 1790, establishing the rations, clothing, and compensation in cases of disability; and the Act of the 5th March 1792, establishing the pay; after which he is to take the following oath before a Magistrate, to wit:
"I A. B. do Solemnly Swear (or affirm, as the case may be) to bear true allegiance to the United States of America, and to Serve them honestly and faithfully against all their enemies or opposers whosoever, and to observe and to obey the orders of the President of the United States of America, and the orders of the officers appointed over me according to the articles of war."
7th. Each recruit (musicians excepted) must be above eighteen and under forty five years of age.
8th. No negro, mulatto, or Indian, to be inlisted.
9th. All the recruiting [undecipherable] will be the arbiters of their conduct, or [undecipherable] of good character for honesty and fidelity and who have been Some years in [strikethrough: [undecipherable]]. Any recruiting officer inlisting a vagrant, or trasient person, who Shall desert before marching to the place of rendezvous, Shall Substitute out of his pay the loss Sustained by Such desertion,—it is therefore important that the officers be attentive on this point, as a compliance with this order will be rigidly exacted. The public [undecipherable] will be better Served by a Small army of brave, robust, and faithful Soldiers, than by a multitude of ragamuffins.
10th. As Soon as the recruits Shall be assembled at the Rendezvous, they are to be taught, by gentle methods, regularity of conduct, as it Shall respect cleanliness of their persons, diet and rooms, and also due Subordination, and they are to be exercised at least four hours in every day, in the attitudes and other first principles of a Soldier.
11th. The commanding officer at each place of rendezvous must make out, on every Saturday, a return of the number of recruits under his command, and of the number joined during the course of the week, and transmit the Same to the War-Office by the next post; and also Such information as he may possess, of any officers under his command out on the recruiting Service.
12th. You, or the commanding officer of Elizabeth Town, —
You are likewise to Sign receipts for the iSsue of all rations, and other necessary Supplies for the troops, and on each Saturday, the daily returns made in the week are to be taken up, and one general return to be made out and Signed for the rations received in the [undecipherable] of the week, [undecipherable] the daily iSsues.
13th. No allowance is to be made for the expences of a recruit, until he Shall join at the rendezvous, the bounty being considered as adequate for that object.
These instructions are to regulate the conduct of the field officers and all others therein concerned, but they are more particularly given to you as captain or commanding officer of the [undecipherable] to be raised in — New York, — New Jersey, — all others under your orders.
The recruits will be mustered and critically inspected as Soon as possible after the company Shall be completed, and any deviation from these instructions will be noticed.
The clothing, arms and ammunition, for your recruits will be furnished [undecipherable]
It is expected that you will exert yourself in the highest degree in obtaining your proportion of the company about to be raised.—Any remarkable deficiency arising from want of due industry, on your part, will be reported to the President of the United States, and Such conduct may be considered by him as a just cause for withholding your commission, in pursuance of the power vested in him by law.
The establishment of the troop, the articles of war, and blank inlistments are herewith transmitted.
[strikethrough: [undecipherable] of the United States in the city of Philadelphia this [undecipherable] day of [undecipherable]]
You will observe by the bill the [undecipherable] has established [undecipherable] non commissioned Officers, this will be a good reason that you Should not place any man of the quality of a [undecipherable] character.
Given at the War Office of the United States in the City of Philadelphia this — 20th — day of March — 1792.
H Knox
[undecipherable]
[marginalia: Recruiting Instructions / for Capt John Stake / [undecipherable] March 1792]
Type
Typed Document
Description
Recruiting instructions issued by the War Dept. and handwritten note regarding the pay of non-commissioned officers.
Date
03/29/1792
Author
Sent from
Philadelphia
Repository
Collection
Document number
1792032900001
Page start
1
Notable persons
Henry Knox
Captain John Stake
Elias B. Dayton
President of the United States
Squadron
light dragoons
cavalry
foreigners
young men
recruits
recruiting officer
physician
surgeon
Negro
mulatto
Indian
vagrant
transient person
musicians
subalterns
Notable locations
Philadelphia
United States
New York
New Jersey
Elizabethtown, New Jersey
Philadelphia
barracks
Notable items
rations, barrack utensils, straw
fuel
medicinal assistance
allowance
state of intoxication
clothing
rendezvous
supplies for the troops
daily returns
arms and accoutrements
blank inlistments

