Colonial leaders were quick to express their outrage over this escalation. On December 4, the
Continental Congress recommended to Virginia that they resist Dunmore "to the uttermost".
Edward Rutledge wrote that the proclamation was more effective in working "an eternal separation between Great Britain and the Colonies... than any other expedient." Virginia's chief statesmen, assembled in the
Fourth Virginia Convention, responded on December 14, 1775, with a declaration that all fugitive slaves would be executed: Newspapers such as
The Virginia Gazette published the proclamation in full, and slave patrols were organized to look for any slaves attempting to take Dunmore up on his offer; Patriot newspapers claimed without evidence that Dunmore was actually planning on selling the escaped slaves in the
West Indies. Ironically, due to the pressing American need for war funds, the penalty of execution for runaways was frequently set aside so that they could be sold into slavery in the West Indies or
Bay of Honduras. The American historian
Gary B. Nash argued that "Dunmore's Proclamation reverberated throughout the colonies and became a major factor in convincing white colonists that reconciliation with the mother country was impossible", and noted that Dunmore became an "African Hero" who led Black Americans across the Thirteen Colonies to challenge the existing racial hierarchy. Estimates of the number of slaves that reached Dunmore vary, but generally range between 800 and 2,000. The escaped slaves Dunmore accepted were enlisted into what was known as
''Dunmore's Ethiopian Regiment''. The only notable battle in which Dunmore's regiment participated was the
Battle of Great Bridge in early December 1775, which was a decisive British loss. Dunmore's dream of a massive slave army was ultimately unrealized, as his forces were decimated by outbreaks of
smallpox and
typhoid fever almost as soon as they started gathering in cramped ships and encampments. When Dunmore finally left the colony in 1776 he took only 300 former slaves with him, all that remained of about 2,000 that had flocked to his promise of freedom. In 1779, British General
Sir Henry Clinton issued the
Philipsburg Proclamation, which freed slaves owned by American Patriots throughout the rebel states, even if they did not enlist in the British Army. It resulted in a significantly larger number of runaways. It is estimated that approximately 20,000 attempted to leave their owners and join the British over the course of the entire war. At the end of the war, the British relocated about 3,000 former slaves to
Nova Scotia. ==See also==