Posted on 09/14/2005 10:06:30 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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![]() are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.
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On the night of December 30, 1775, after months of hardship and perseverance against heavy odds, the forces of Brig. Gen. Richard Montgomery and Colonel Benedict Arnold were at last poised to take Quebec. Then a single British cannon shot caused their plan to unravel. ![]() The events that brought Arnold to the St. Lawrence had begun to unfold some 200 miles southwest of Québec at Fort Ticonderoga in late August 1775. By that time, the rebelling American colonists had surrounded Boston--a situation unchanged by the successful but costly British assault on Breed's Hill on June 17--and the Continental Congress was looking for the knockout blow that would make their revolt against the British crown a brief one. The only major British forces around North America were in Florida and the Caribbean islands, as well as 700 more troops in Canada. Most American leaders, political and military, believed the Canadians, who had only been under British rule since 1760, would readily flock to the cause of independence. They were sadly mistaken. Most Canadians could not see much correlation between their situation and that of the 13 colonies to the south. The Americans would learn this the bloody, hard way. Full of optimism for a Canadian venture, the Continental Congress sent a message to the commander of Fort Ticonderoga, Maj. Gen. Philip Schuyler, on June 27, authorizing him to marshal an invasion force and advance into those areas of Canada that he judged "practicable" to seize. Schuyler was suffering from rheumatic gout at the time, and the troops he needed for the operation were just beginning to trickle into the fort. As more soldiers arrived, Schuyler passed Congress' message on to his second-in-command, the energetic Brig. Gen. Richard Montgomery, on August 7. In addition, Montgomery had received word that the British were building a fleet in the area of St. Johns, Quebec, about 20 miles southeast of Montréal on the Richelieu River. At the end of August, two months after the message had arrived from Congress, the 38-year-old Montgomery tired of his ailing commander's recalcitrance. He scrabbled together 1,200 men, a hodgepodge collection of ships, canoes and rowboats, and on August 27 he headed upriver to fight an army from which he, born an Irishman, had resigned only three years before. ![]() General Richard Montgomery Schuyler, who had somewhat regained his mobility, was conferring with Iroquois chiefs at Albany when he learned of Montgomery's march on St. Johns. Traveling up Lake Champlain in a speedy whaleboat, he caught up with the invasion force on September 4 and reassumed command. On the following day, the Americans established a base of operations on Ile aux Noix, 10 miles south of St. Johns. Schuyler had received false reports that indicated the strength of British fort and garrison was greater than it actually was (in fact, the garrison numbered only 700 men, though most were British Army Regulars).On that same day, September 5, he launched an attack, but the Americans were repulsed by a screening party of Indian skirmishers who had deployed outside St. Johns' fort by the British garrison commander, Major Charles Preston. Schuyler retreated several miles back down the Sorel River but sent 500 New York militiamen to stage another assault on September 10, only to learn that they had broken into a panicked run upon making contact with another advance force of fellow Americans. Schuyler's poor health caught up with him once more, and on the 16th he returned to Ticonderoga, leaving Montgomery in charge again. The brigadier brought his small army back to St. Johns. Although the British position was not nearly as strong as Schuyler had believed, it was enough to stop Montgomery. The latter settled down to a siege he believed would take five days. It ended up lasting 55. Eventually, Schuyler was able to send reinforcements and some cannons to Montgomery, who put them all to good use. Major Preston was down to three days' rations inside St. Johns and received word that no relief force was on the way. On November 2, he surrendered. Fort Chambly, just a short distance north, fell quickly to an advance party of Americans. One of those taken prisoner there by the colonists was Lieutenant John André, who, after later being paroled, would gain notoriety in September 1780, when he was caught by rebel militia while carrying documents in which then Maj. Gen. Benedict Arnold offered to hand over his command, West Point, to the British. With his lines of supply and communication secure, Montgomery raced on toward Montréal, which fell to him with astonishing ease on November 13. ![]() While Montgomery had been floundering around St. Johns, General George Washington was impatiently looking for a way to help him. Earlier in the spring, a plan to take Québec had been presented to him. He now dusted it off and gave it to Colonel Arnold, who threw his considerable talents to the task. After studying maps of the region, Arnold thought he could easily get 1,000 men up the Kennebec River, portage across an area known as "The Great Carrying Place" to the Chaudière River, and then head to Québec. On the basis of maps drawn in 1759 by explorer John Montresor, it looked like a three-week journey. Arnold gathered up some 1,050 volunteers, including Aaron Burr and Daniel Morgan, as well as two "Mollies" (camp followers) of Captain William Hendricks' Rifle Company from Cumberland, Penn.: teenaged Jemima Warner, who accompanied her husband James, and Suzannah Grier, wife of Sergeant Joseph Grier. Arnold also ordered the construction of 200 bateaux for transports. They would be awaiting him at the mouth of the Kennebec in what is now the state of Maine. Everything was proceeding smoothly for Arnold so far. The plan was to link up with Montgomery, thus doubling the force. That would give Arnold the 2,000 men he thought necessary to take Québec. ![]() The expedition left Cambridge, Mass., on September 13. Following a short march to Newburyport, they boarded ships that brought them to Gardiner (now in Maine) to take delivery of the bateaux. The boats proved to be the first of many problems that would plague the expedition. A bateau is something of a cross between a canoe and a rowboat, but longer and heavier. To his great distress, Arnold learned that these vessels were more difficult to maneuver than he had been led to believe. Worse yet, the carpenters he had sent ahead to build his fleet had used green wood. The result was a barely seaworthy craft that weighed some 400 pounds. With no alternative, Arnold was forced to make the best of it and issued his marching orders. ![]() He set up three roughly equal divisions of troops, each marching a day apart. Almost immediately, Arnold's schedule was thrown off. The day after leaving Gardiner, Captain Simeon Thayer wrote in his diary, "The river here is very rapid and difficult." The next day's entry reads in part: "The river here is both rapid and rocky. Proceeded to the foot of the falls. Here is the first carrying place we came to." The entry for the third day, September 28, is even more enlightening: "Proceeded about three miles through rapid water. Our men are obligated to wade more than half their time. It begins to be cold and uncomfortable." Thus, Arnold had several problems with which to contend. The maps he had studied during his planning did not accurately describe the rapids and waterfalls that Arnold's men would be forced to portage around. Complicating matters was the deteriorating northern New England weather. Food began to spoil, and potable water was used up. The men drank murky rainwater, causing dysentery and nausea. Jemima Warner and Suzannah Grier caught trout in the Kennebec River, but the fish did not provide fat, which the troops desperately needed as the weather got colder. By the time the expedition reached the Dead River, winter storms and floods made even fishing impossible. Smallpox became a constant, dreaded companion. A number of the men died long before any shots were fired, including Private James Warner. After standing by her ailing husband to the end, Jemima Warner buried his body under some leaves, took up his rifle and powder, and ran 20 miles through a snowstorm to catch up with her company and take his place in the ranks.
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www.uswars.net
www.aubergearnold.qc.ca
www.wcha.org
www.civilization.ca
www.republiquelibre.org
www.clarkbooksmaine.com
www.lib.utexas.edu
www.futura-dtp.dk
www.generalatomic.com
Carleton used the respite to reorganize his disordered troops. It was slowly becoming obvious that the threat to his right flank had disappeared, and he could now concentrate his men better. When Morgan finally got impatient and roused his men again, Carleton was ready.![]() Sir Guy Carleton The Americans pulled themselves through the twisting streets leading to Upper Town as musket fire poured down on them from houses and barricades. The snow for which they had so ardently hoped also worked in favor of the defenders hidden behind their positions. Carleton, meanwhile, maneuvered some men into the unmanned barricade, which had been abandoned by the Americans. The colonists were cut off. The fight went on for three hours as the American column, stretched along the streets, was gradually broken down into smaller and smaller pockets. Ever defiant, Morgan simply refused to surrender and dared the British to come and take his sword. He eventually turned it over to a very frightened priest. Virtually the entire force was captured, except for those like Arnold who were wounded early and sent to the rear. ![]() American Soldier at Quebec Arnold himself endured the crude medical care of his day valiantly and reassured the Canadians that his troops had taken Lower Town and that the time was ripe to join the revolution. The Canadians were less than convinced. After dawn, Arnold got word that the British were moving toward the hospital. He tried to rouse some men for defense, but they responded with an apathy born of suffering, and little was done. Fortunately, Carleton became overly cautious and recalled his men, although there is no doubt their attack would have totally destroyed Arnold's force had they pressed it. With that, the attack on Québec frittered to an end. The total American casualties came to 454, of which 440 were in Arnold's command. All 14 of the casualties in Montgomery's force came from the single cannon shot. Arnold lost 35 troops killed, 33 wounded and 372 taken prisoner, including Daniel Morgan. (Aaron Burr seems to have been ill at the time of the attack, although Arnold later claimed in a letter that he had acquitted himself well both before and afterward.) British losses were a mere 20 killed and wounded. The fledgling American army had suffered its first defeat on the battlefield. ![]() The rest of the adventure was anti-climactic, if long and drawn out. On January 10, 1776, Arnold was promoted to brigadier general and given overall command of what remained of the rebel forces outside Québec. He refused to quit the field and with a handful of men--just 50 to 75--put the city "under siege" again for the remainder of the winter while he recovered from his wound. The siege was, naturally, wholly ineffective, but Carleton decided to sit tight and await reinforcements as soon as the river became navigable. During an exchange of gunfire, which occurred intermittently throughout the siege, Suzannah Grier was shot and killed on April 13. Arnold was relieved on April Fool's Day, 1776, by Brig. Gen. David Wooster, whose boorish behavior antagonized everyone, including Washington, who was miles away. Wooster was relieved on May 1 by Maj. Gen. John Thomas, who learned on the following day that 15 British ships were coming up the St. Lawrence to relieve the city. On May 5, he officially lifted the siege and was preparing his troops for an orderly withdrawal when the first three ships, bearing 400 British troops, approached Québec and spotted the blue flag that Carleton had said he would fly as a signal that his garrison was still holding out. Once the first reinforcements had debarked, Carleton combined them with a roughly equal number of his own troops and led them toward Thomas' men, who panicked and fled, leaving much of their equipment behind. Québec was now safe for the landing of fresh troops--a total of 9,000 British and 4,400 Hessian and Brunswick soldiers, under the overall command of Maj. Gen. John Burgoyne. ![]() A view of Quebec city and its ramparts, including a few burned-out houses in the foreground, after the American attack in 1775. Thomas and his ragged, starving troops retreated to Sorel, where he contacted smallpox on May 21. He died on June 2, and Brig. Gen. John Sullivan, who had just arrived with a column of New York troops, took overall command of the haggard army. Arnold, meanwhile, remained busy despite the blow to his pride over the loss of command. He was made commandant of Montréal and, while serving in that capacity, led a small expedition that -- mostly through bluff but also with a good bit of generalship--secured the release of hundreds of American prisoners from a larger British force. He then returned to Québec, where Sullivan informed him of the arrival of thousands of the expected British reinforcements. In retrospect, it is obvious that the British would never have allowed Arnold to hold Québec, and thus Canada, even had the American expedition been fully successful during the winter and even if Arnold had 2,000 men in the city. Finally realizing the hopelessness of the situation, Arnold agreed that it was time to quit Canada. With the fiasco clearly over, Arnold told Sullivan he would be content to be the last American to leave the country. ![]() The British Army arriving at Quebec, 1776. The surviving Americans followed Montgomery's route back down to Fort Ticonderoga. On the summer evening of June 18, the Canadian border town of St. Johns was burning fiercely along the waterfront, put to the torch by a retreating army. Between the banks of the Sorel River the remnants of the expedition rowed south toward safety. Only two Americans remained in St. Johns. When they heard the beating of British drums in the distance, the men shot their horses and one, Captain James Wilkinson, climbed into a canoe, grabbing a paddle. The second waited until his aide settled in, then pushed off the canoe and climbed in himself. That second man was Brig. Gen. Benedict Arnold, making good on his vow to be the last to leave Canada. |
Hey Sam, good to see you!
Good morning, snippy and everyone at the Freeper Foxhole.
Off to work Bump for the Freeper Foxhole
Regards
alfa6 ;>}
Good morning Snippy and Sam, and every one.
Good Thursday morning to everyone.
Interesting account of the foray into Canada. Too bad we werent successful.
Author Brennan Manning tells of an alcoholic who asked his minister to pray over him to be delivered from his drinking problem. He thought this would be a quick and easy way to overcome his addiction. Recognizing his motive in asking for prayer, the minister replied, "I've got a better idea. Go to Alcoholics Anonymous." He counseled the man to follow the program diligently and read his Bible daily. "In other words," the minister concluded, "do the hard work." Do the hard workthat's what Paul was saying to Timothy when he told him how he should order his life so he could teach believers how they should live. Notice the action verbs: "Pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, gentleness. Fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life" (1 Timothy 6:11-12). Just as there is no easy path to being delivered from alcoholism, so too, there is no effort-free route to Christlikeness. If we really want to become like Jesus, we must keep on doing the hard work. Herb Vander Lugt
This is my constant longing and prayer; Gladly I'll forfeit all of earth's treasures, Jesus, Thy perfect likeness to wear Chisholm Conversion is the miracle of a moment; becoming like Christ is the work of a lifetime.
How Do You Live The Christian Life? |
On This Day In History
Birthdates which occurred on September 15:
0053 Trajan 13th Roman emperor (98-117), second of the "five good emperors"
1613 Duc Francois de la Rochefoucald, Writer
1789 James Fenimore Cooper 1st major American novelist (The Last of the Mohicans)
1830 Porfirio Diaz, soldier, president of Mexico (1877-1911)
1852 Jan E Matzeliger Surinamese inventor (shoe lacing machine)
1857 William Howard Taft Cin, (R) 27th pres (1909-13), chief justice
1876 Frank E Gannett Rochester, newspaper publisher (Gannett)
1881 Ettore Arco Isidoro Bugatti Milan, race car builder (Amaz Bugattis)
1889 Robert Benchley author (My 10 Years in a Quandary)
1890 Dame Agatha Christie mystery writer (Murder on the Orient Express)
1899 Milton S Eisenhower Dwight's brother/Pennsylvania State president
1903 Roy Acuff Maynardville Tenn, country musician (Hee Haw)
1904 Umberto II king of Italy (1946)
1906 Kathryn Murray Jersey City NJ, dancer (Arthur Murray Dance Party)
1906 Penny Singleton Phila Pa, voice (Jane Jetsons)/actress (Blondie)
1907 Fay Wray Alberta, actress (King Kong)
1907 Jack Bailey Hampton Iowa, TV host (Queen for a Day)
1913 John Mitchell Nixon's attorney general who went to jail
1914 Creighton Abrams US, army general (Vietnam War)
1921 Jackie Cooper LA Calif, actor/director ("Our Gang" films,"The Rockford Files")
1924 Bobby Short singer/pianist (Carlisle Hotel)
1925 Blues musician B. B. ("Blues Boy") (Riley B.) King. In the mid-1950s, while King was performing in Twist, Arkansas, some audience members got into a fight over a woman named Lucille. They knocked over a kerosene stove and set the place on fire. Everyboy ran outside...but when King realized he left his guitar inside, he rushed back to retrieve it. From then on, King has named all his guitars "Lucille."
1927 Norm Crosby Boston Mass, comedian/double talker (Liar's Club)
1929 Murray Gell-Mann physicist who predicted quarks
1938 Gaylord Perry baseball player (1972 AL Cy Young winner)
1940 Merlin Olsen UT, NFL tackle (Rams)/sportscaster/actor (Father Murphy)
1941 Miroslaw Hermaszewski 1st Polish space traveler (Soyuz 30)
1946 Oliver Stone NYC, director/conspiracy nut/moral midget (Wall St, Good Morning Vietnam, Platoon)
('Bin Laden was completely protected by the oil companies in this country who told President Bush not to go after him because it would piss off the Saudis.'
Oliver Stone)
1946 Tommy Lee Jones actor (Executioner's Song, Men In Black)
1961 Dan Marino NFL quarterback (Miami Dolphins)
1984 Prince Henry Charles Albert David of Wales, 3rd in British sucession
World War II - Real time + 70 years
September 15, 1935: Nuremberg Laws: Deprived Jews of German citizenship, confining them to status of "subjects." Forbade marriage between Jews and Aryans as well as extramarital relations between them. Prohibited Jews from employing Aryan servants under 35 years of age. Followed by some 13 decreees over the next few years that would outlaw Jews completely.
Beginning with this post I would like to spend the next ten years in a study of WWII day by day. I picked this month to begin because we just passed the sixtieth anniversary of the end of the war. Obviously, there won't be any American involvement to speak of until 1941 + 70 years, or 2011. On the other hand, I am discovering that many of the lessons than can be applied to our current situation stem from events that took place well before the Germans invaded Poland on Sept. 1, 1939.
I won't be heard from much until next March, on the anniversary of Hitler's occupation of the Rhineland. Maybe I can spend some time drumming up interest in the project and deciding if there is enough to make it all worthwhile. I guess I could start a dedicated vanity thread and develop a ping list to go with it. I can just about guarantee that anyone cracked enough to go follow it through will know a lot more about World War II than the average bear. I like the day by day method of studying for a couple of reasons. One, it gives an idea of the scope of the events. Also, it allows plenty of time to contemplate battles and campaigns and even read about them from different sources.
I suppose internet technology will evolve in unimaginable (to me) ways over the next ten years. We may be able to post holographic three dimensional battle maps to each other by VJ Day, 2015.
I am open to comments and suggestions.
Hmmm... I never heard any of this bit of history before. And I thought I knew more about the war for Independence. Didn't know we went up to try to free the Canadians in 75 at all.
Funny, those Canadians don't seem to have changed much. Still not terribly interested in liberty.
Well! I am in good company. If you haven't heard it, I don't feel so lost!
Saratoga brought the French in, of course. No French, no Yorktown.
That's another interesting twist in history to me. We couldn't have done it without them... and yet, we keep having to get their tails out of a sling in the 20th century. Lots of odd things about the french and our relations with them from the first. I could go into a long commentary on that - but I won't.
Odd how tiny things change history so much. Individual personalities are so important.
This is where I see God's Hand. The tiny odd things, to me, are God-incidences. And the individual personalities, well, He formed each of us with a plan and a purpose. I truly believe our nation was His plan and He worked it through many amazing individuals from the Founding Fathers - to the most insignificant of the soldiers - like those ladies Jemima Warner and Suzanna Grier.
Mornin' PE.
Happy Friday!!!
Okay, in this aftermath of Katrina, I will volunteer the information that I evacuated that one!!!
Of course, I was only 3 and it had a lot to do with mama and daddy puttin' me in the car and takin' me to Grama's house till the storm passed.
My mama and daddy are at least a tad brighter than some of those folks in NO.
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