125966
IS/IarcH to Saratoga
March to Saratoga
General Burgoyne and the American Campaign
1777
HARRISON BIRD
New York Oxford University Press 1963
Copyright 1963 by Oxford University Press, Inc.
Library o Congress Catalogue Card Number: 63-12550
Printed in the United States of America
In grateful memory
of
Sir George and Lady Langton
wliose friendsliip sustained me
1940-1945
Preface
Lieutenant General John Burgoyne's "Thoughts for
Conducting the War from the Side of Canada" de-
veloped an idea that did not originate with that of-
ficer. As early as 1642, the French in Canada had ap-
preciated the tactical value of the Champlain-Hudson
Pass through the Appalachian mountain barrier and
had commenced the building of a chain of forts to
the south from the St. Lawrence outlet of Lake
Champlain. The ultimate French fort was at Ticon-
deroga, which Burgoyne was to capture from its rebel
owners in July 1777. In the year 1666 a tactical plan
brought European soldiers marching from "the side
of Canada" through the natural gap made by the
lake and river valley in an invasion that was a North
American projection of European rivalries. During
the next century and a half, when European wars,
were fought in the New World, the Hudson-Cham-
plain Valley was the classic invasion route between
the rich coastal plain of the Atlantic seaboard and the
arterial St. Lawrence and Great Lakes, giving access
to the heart of the continent. The Hudson-Champlain
Pass ranks with the great invasion routes of the
world: the Belfort Gap, the Low Countries, the Great
Grass Bridge out of Asia, and the Khyber Pass. Its
defiles and crossroads at Ticonderoga and West Point
stand with Gibraltar and Verdun.
In planning either for invasion or defense, the
minds of rulers and their cabinets and generals in-
variably turn to the old routes. This is not for want
of boldness or imagination, but because these are
the only roads for the supply and transport of in-
vasion armies, or for effective defense by forts and
forces. The Mongol Horde marched where their
ponies could graze, and in the nineteenth century
armies advanced along the newly developed rail-
roads which followed the easiest way through the
mountains and along the rivers, while today an army
is geared to the requirements of the airplane, the
helicopter, and the parachute drop zone. In 1777
General Burgoyne's "thoughts" were dictated by the
requirements of his transport and supply. The valid-
ity of these thoughts rested on the fact that Lake
Champlain, the Hudson, and the westward-branch-
ing Mohawk River, in his time and given his transport
of boats and horse-drawn carts, constituted the only
clear way through the mountain barrier dividing the
rebellious colonies on the Atlantic seaboard and the
loyal colony of Canada on the St. Lawrence. The
Hudson-Champlain Pass was the short crossbar that
marked the letter "A" across the geography of British
North America, making it the controlling factor in the
alphabet of British colonial aspiration.
This book is the story of John Burgoyne and his
"thoughts," and of the stalwart men and women who
had a part in putting those thoughts into action along
the old invasion route.
General Burgoyne himself, and many of his com-
rades-in-arms, helped in the writing of this story
through their own accounts of their adventures and
of what befell as they made their way up Lake
Champlain, across the long portage, and along the
southward-flowing Hudson River. Their efforts are
appreciated on every page and in every episode re-
lated in the book; their written work is acknowledged
in the Book List (p. 290) ,
My appreciation is sincere and my thanks are due
to those who introduced me to the "contemporary
sources" mentioned above, and who by their research,
generously shared, into the conditions and events of
the exciting year of 1777, provided the basis for much
of this book. I am ever in the debt of the Fort Ticon-
deroga Museum, its first director, Stephen H. P. Pell,
and its present president, John H. G. Pell, for a life-
time of interest and inspiration engendered in me by
that place. I wish particularly to thank Eleanor Mur-
ray, of Fort Ticonderoga, for giving me of her re-
search and knowledge in connection with the troops
under General Burgoyne. Information on the Tory
troops and the Loyalist corps was generously pro-
vided by Henry I. Shaw of the Company of Military
Collectors & Historians. Through the courtesy of the
National Park Service, operating the Saratoga Na-
tional Historical Park, I obtained a listing of the
American units of General Gates's army, for which I
am grateful. With unfailing generosity, Mrs. John
Nicholas Brown, of Providence, Rhode Island, per-
mitted an unrestricted selection of military prints
from her great collection, adding greatly to the in-
terest of my book and increasing an already sub-
stantial indebtedness which it gives me pleasure to
acknowledge.
In conclusion, I wish to mention by name some
few of the many persons who have helped me in
many divers ways: W. Gillette Bird, John R. Cuneo,
John J. Demers, Dr. Alfred Emerson, Mrs. Lorentz
Hansen, Richard B. Harrington, Edward Mann, Rol-
land Miner, Mrs. Doris Morton, Robert E. Mulligan
(Senior and Junior), J. Y. Shimoda, Miss Claribel
Snody, and Earl Stott.
For my wife, Harriette Jansen Bird, who typed
and otherwise worked with me on the manuscript,
I have no adequate word of praise; only, in retro-
spect, wonder.
Huletts Landing, New York H. B.
December 1962
Contents
i The New Year 1777 3
2 On Your Markers; Fall In! 18
3 On the Left! At the Double! March! 29
4 A Regiment of Foot 44
5 Major Skene's Great Stone House 58
6 The Iroquois Wolf 71
7 The Face of Gentleman Johnny 84
8 The Restless Winds of August 99
9 The Hill Overlooking the Walloomsac 112
10 The Road Beside the Walloomsac
11 At Headquarters 136
A " 1 4 8
13 Reconnaissance 160
14 To the Sound of the Guns 175
15 Action Front! 187
16 Muffled Drums 198
17 General Fraser Eats Breakfast 212
18 No Dinner for the General 225
19 Prisoners of Hope 239
20 The Highland Lament 251
. The World Turned Upside Down 263
Epilogue 273
Chronology 277
British and German Troops 279
The American Army 286
Book List 290
Index 295
Illustrations
THE ILLUSTRATIONS FOLLOW PAGE 144
Lieutenant General John Burgoyne
Major General Baron von Riedesel
Brigadier General Simon Fraser
Burgoyne's Indian Conference on the Bouquet River
German Cartoon of an American Soldier
An American Soldier of the Continental Line
Burgoyne's Surrender at Saratoga, 17 October 1777
British Officer with Light Infantry Cap
Cartoon of a Hessian Grenadier
Major General Horatio Gates
Major General Benedict Arnold
Maps
General Burgoyne's Expedition,
6 July-i/ October 1777
page 30
Colonel Breymann's Battle along the road to
Bennington, Vermont, 16 August 1777
page 98
Colonel Baum's Battle of the Walloomsac,
16 August 1777
page 98
First Battle of Freeman's Farm, Saratoga, New York,
19 September 1777
page 174
Second Battle of Freeman's Farm, Saratoga,
7 October 1777
page 224
March, to Saratoga
1
The New Year
1777
The music of the processional died away quickly, as
if fleeing into the darkest and highest reaches of the
great vault of the cathedral. In its wake a chilled
hush swept down the long nave to settle on the
shoulders of the packed congregation; some shivered.
No head turned to look, as the eight forlorn peni-
tents began their slow walk to the distant altar rail,
where the magnificence of the archbishop of Canada,
robed in his richest garments, awaited their approach.
In almost military array, the eight lined themselves
with bowed heads outside the altar rail, to supplicate
the mercy of the Church under whose anathema they
had existed for almost a year. Around the neck of
each man hung a length of navy rope, tied into a
hangman's noose. The rope signified the secular
crime of treason, to be expiated or forgiven on this
first anniversary of 31 December 1775.
The sentences of the eight men would be forgiven
only when the ceremonies of Church and State had
been completed, and the full measure of warning
drawn from the spectacle of Public Penance. On this
MARCH TO SARATOGA
last day of 1776, the British government of this Ca-
nadian colony could afford to be magnanimous to
traitors. That a Protestant king chose to punish and
forgive his French Canadian subjects through their
own Roman Catholic archbishop was due entirely to
the good sense, political acumen, and loyal efforts of
the governor general of Canada, Guy Carleton.
Twelve months earlier, on 31 December 1775, the
eight penitents now standing humbled before the
altar rail had joined the American rebel army in
the assault on the City of Quebec. That attack by the
heretical Puritan "Bostonais" had been the high-
water mark of the attempt by the thirteen united
American colonies to wrench Canada from her politi-
cal loyalty to Britain.
General Guy Carleton had stood firm, on that night
of the swirling blizzard, and Fortune as well as the
prayers of the archbishop had favored his defense of
Quebec. As the defense of the western barricade had
wavered in the face of attack, a sailor had clapped a
lighted linstock onto the breech of a primed and
loaded cannon. The blast of grapeshot had ended the
life of the American general, Richard Montgomery,
and with his death, the will of his followers. At the
eastern barricade a musket shot had struck the leg
of Brigadier General Benedict Arnold, throwing him,
helpless, into the snow. He was carried back out of
the line of fire by his ardent followers (Arnold
seemed always to inspire ardor when he led men into
battle). Behind an angle of a building, Colonel
Daniel Morgan rallied Arnold's soldiers and led them
THE NEW YEAR 5
in vengeance against the barricade held by the British
and the Canadians. In the melee of the snowy night,
Dan Morgan got himself "cooped" in a warehouse by
General Carleton's sortie, and in the morning gave
himself up a prisoner.
As Carleton had beaten back the assault of Mont-
gomery and Arnold and Morgan during the first hours
of 31 December 1775, so he had withstood the
winter-long investment of Quebec, the last place in
all of Canada firmly under his viceregal suzerainty.
In May 1776 reinforcements for Carleton came out
from England, and with the British fleet of men-of-
war and transports came Major General John Bur-
goyne, "Gentleman Johnny," as he was referred to
with affection by his soldiers. In the same convoy
came Major General Baron Friederich Adolf von Bie-
desel, like Burgoyne a cavalry colonel of experience
and capability.
With eight fresh regiments of good British infantry
and the competent battalions of Brunswickers and
Hesse-Hanauers hired for the occasion, General Guy
Carleton soon drove the tardily reinforced Americans
out of the St. Lawrence Valley. At the foot of Lake
Champlain, Carleton was forced to pause through
the high summer months in order to build a battle
fleet before pushing south along the classic invasion
route up Lake Champlain and Lake George, down
the Hudson River to Albany, and thence to the At-
lantic Ocean at New York. By the end of October
1776 Carleton had gained naval command of Lake
Champlain, and stood with part of his army before
6 MARCH TO SARATOGA
the walls of Fort Ticonderoga. There, under the grid-
iron flag of rebellion, General Horatio Gates and
Benedict Arnold (limping now) awaited him.
Burgoyne wished to give spur to the British army
and ride roughshod over the American rabble, but
Carleton held him back. The latter had a staff officer's
eye to his supply line, and many years of experience
with the northern seasons. Carleton knew the con-
trary temper of the autumn winds and the insidious
forming of the ice, either of which could trap an in-
cautious army caught up the lake too far from its
supply base. Then, too, Carleton did not share the
contempt of his second in command for the American
soldier and for the strategic fort at Ticonderoga which
he held. The season was advanced and the enemy
stanch. Early in November Carleton withdrew down
Lake Champlain, made his fleet secure against the
ice, and sent his army into winter quarters. Ever rest-
less, ever active, Burgoyne sailed back to England,
Now, in the bright warm sunlight of a winter's
morning, General Guy Carleton stood talking with
the archbishop as the congregation filed out of the
cathedral. The eight penitents were nowhere to be
seen. All solemnity was over.
Close behind Carleton on the cathedral steps were
his officers, gray-cloaked British from as far away as
Montreal, and German officers in their blue capes or
white Canadian coats, some with mitre caps as tall
and as flashing bright as the bishop's. All waited the
departure of the personages, so they could hurry off
to prepare for the first of the festivities that were to
begin the new and wonderful year of 1777.
THE NEW YEAR J
The Thanksgiving Service at the cathedral had
started at nine o'clock in the morning. The reception
at Government House, which was a "parade" for all
officers, was scheduled for ten o'clock. Those com-
manding troops were excused early so that they
could fall in with their detachments for the military
review called for eleven. They were bidden to lunch
with the governor and his lady at three o'clock, and
in the late afternoon all would be confusion in the
quarters that the visiting officers shared with the
officers of the Quebec garrison, as everyone dressed
for the great ball.
By six o'clock the winter's night had drawn in.
Amid a silvery jingle of bells, sled after sled drew up
to the door of the auberge, and the high-born of Que-
bec threw aside their fur lap robes to dash between
the pine torches lighting the doorway and into the
warmth of the party rooms. As was to be expected in
a city swollen by an army, there were two gallants
for every lady the odd man being, of course, an
officer. Only two English ladies were present, and
these, being the governor's lovely young lady and her
sister, married to the governor's nephew, were too
exalted for more than the most formal flirtation. The
British grenadiers regretted particularly the absence
of their commander's wife, die sharp-witted, sharp-
featured Lady Harriet herself, like the two Carle-
ton ladies, the daughter of an earl. But Major John
Acland was down sick in his wretched quarters on
the bank of the Richelieu River, and the devoted
Lady Harriet nursed him. So no Quebec lady went
unnoticed through the evening of the New Year's
8 MARCH TO SARATOGA
ball, though she be so provincial as to speak her
French, to awkward-tongued English or German
officers, with the accent of her native Indian tongue.
A concert filled the hours to midnight, and there
was dancing, too, of a desultory nature. The party
was at supper when the magical moment struck, and
the year was 1777.
For the officers the festivities continued for two
more days and nights. There seemed to be so much
for them to do and say, so much to plan for this new
year. The year just closed had carried most of them
from towns along the Rhine or the sleepy little rivers
of England to the walls of Ticonderoga on Lake
Champlain, and they were confident, for the most
part, that 1777 would take them full cycle down the
Hudson and, the futile rebellion having been quashed,
home to shire and dorf .
Colonel Barry St. Leger, a man of the kidney of
the absent Johnny Burgoyne, was host at a stag din-
ner, and a sleigh ride took his guests singing through
the night to the country house of a doctor, whose
reputation as the Lucullus of Quebec was found to
be justified. They made the acquaintance, too, of the
fabulously rich bachelor, Monsieur de la Naudi&re,
who, in the lodges of the Indians, was the son-in Jaw
of the monumental Chevalier St. Luc de la Corne.
At sixty-seven, St. Luc could still call up and lead to
war a thousand savage Indians, and rumor had it
that already his messengers had gone to the western
tribes beyond Montreal and far out on the Great
Lakes to rally the warriors for the approaching cam-
paign.
THE NEW YEAR 9
At last the parties came to an end. The officers re-
turned to their billets and their troops scattered in a
hundred villages from Quebec to Montreal and up
the Richelieu as far as He aux Nois, where the Lake
Champlain fleet lay waiting for the thaw.
Baron Riedesel commanded his Germans from
Trois Rivieres, and out of loneliness, wrote fond and
longing letters to his wife, asking her to join him.
The British troops stationed in and around Montreal
were under the command of Major General William
Phillips, a proud man "the proudest man of the
proudest nation on earth," according to Thomas
Jefferson, who knew him. Phillips was proud of being
a gunner, even more than of being a general officer,
and he was especially proud of the military band
of the Royal Regiment of Artillery, which he himself
had created. On the other hand, plump, little Colonel
St. Leger, who commanded at Quebec, was an in-
fantryman, light of foot, the master of maneuver and
attack, either in the field or on the ballroom floor.
Commanding them all and in command of all Canada
was Guy Carleton.
With all the British in Canada, scarcely anyone
took notice of the Yankees. The soldiery trained and
paraded, drank when they could, gossiped inter-
minably, and fought among themselves; they seized
upon any excuse for a party or sat by the fireside at
their billets, and, whenever possible, kept out of the
way of their corporals and sergeants and captains and
colonels and generals. Only the displaced Tories,
driven from their homes in the Atlantic colonies,
were venegeful. One of these, Samuel McKay, re-
10 MARCH TO SARATOGA
cently escaped from a Connecticut jail, on 3 April
1777 made a raid on the American supply route. The
ambush he laid at Sabbath Day Point on Lake
George killed four rebels; and their captain, wounded
and a prisoner, was carried back to Canada by the
tall, pale Tory ranger.
McKay's raid was the beginning of the campaign.
The winter had been mild and spring came early to
rot the ice on the lakes, where each new patch of
open water increased the apprehension of the Ameri-
cans, watching anxiously to the north from the
bastions of Ticonderoga.
On 6 May, His Majesty's Frigate Apollo dropped
anchor among the last ice floes lingering in the road-
stead at Quebec. She was the first ship of the year to
arrive from England, and aboard her was the express
passenger, Lieutenant General John Burgoyne. It
was the general's third trip across the Atlantic to the
North American theater of war. One of a pack of
major generals sent to help General Thomas Gage
run the hare of rebellion to ground in 1775, Burgoyne
had arrived at Boston aboard the Cerberus. There,
Sir William Howe and Sir Henry Clinton took care of
all the duties requiring the attention of a major
general, so Burgoyne, as junior, employed his time
in writing letters describing the military operations
around Boston. He also wrote a play, in which he
ridiculed the prudery of the Bostonians. In Novem-
ber he returned to London and the House of Com-
mons, where he held the seat for Preston.
THE NEW YEAR 11
The following year Burgoyne came out to Canada
in HMS Blonde, to be commander of troops under
Guy Carleton, the commander in chief in Canada.
Again, the month of November saw Burgoyne on
the stormy Atlantic on his way to the House of
Commons and to the Ministries where plans would
be made for the 1777 campaign in North America.
Now, while the sailors secured the Apollo at her
anchorage, Burgoyne stood on the quarterdeck with
the captain, politely taking his leave as he watched
the government barge pulling out from the quay to
fetch him. He was cloaked, booted, and ready to ride.
Slung over the shoulder of his aide who was waiting
in the waist of the ship, were saddle bags containing
orders, dispatches, and instructions for Carleton.
Dining the long haul up the St. Lawrence the Apollo
had been in touch with shore, and everyone on board
knew that the governor general was upriver with the
army. Burgoyne must hurry to him. The meeting be-
tween the two gentlemen was bound to be some-
what awkward, for the news must be broken to
Carleton that he had been superseded as commander
of the invasion army by Burgoyne himself.
As commander in chief of the expedition designed
as the maul that would split in two the rebellious
Atlantic colonies down the natural fault of the Mont-
real-New York waterline, John Burgoyne stood, his
legs firmly braced, to swing that, maul for the highest
stakes of his already brilliant career. He was fifty-
four years old, with strong features and a decided
jut and clench to his jaw. The weight that he had put
MABCH TO SABATOGA
on in recent years became him, and limited him only
in the choice of horses that could carry him. As a
slim youth he had been accustomed to the heavy
dragoon charger of his regiment. It was not until
1759, when he raised his own regiment of light
dragoons, that he found in the agile animal required
for that new cavalry service the mount to match his
spirit and his image. If he now needed a sturdy
hunter to carry him, it would make little actual differ-
ence, for in Canada a horse fit for a gentleman to
ride was nowhere to be found.
John Burgoyne's career in the cavalry was a logical
one in view of his background: th^t of an old county
family with good, if modest, patronage. His early
elopement with a daughter of the Earl of Derby, a
step which he assured that important Whig family
had not been dictated by opportunism, nevertheless
widened considerably the range within which he
could develop his capacities. First and foremost was
his military life, through which he was in the ken
of the sovereign owing to the high standard main-
tained by his 16th ("Queens") Light Dragoons, as
well as to a brilliant campaign as brigadier general
in Portugal.
He was a hard campaigner and an adroit politician,
who, lacking the ambition to attain cabinet rank, was
free of the constraint of normal party lines. In 1773
Burgoyne had stood as accuser at the impeachment
trial of Robert Clive for the alleged misdeeds of that
soldier-empire builder while in India, and had won
his case. His military career kept him away for long
THE NEW YEAB 13
periods from his seat in the House of Commons,
which he entered in 1761, but when in the House
John Burgoyne was a conscientious member of par-
liament, who voiced his opinions in fine rhetorical
speeches.
Burgoyne's gifted use of words and of resounding
phrases of wit and elegance gave him more than a
passing vogue as poet and playwright. In his varied
pursuits, he epitomized the English gentleman of the
eighteenth century, and that he was successful in
three fields of endeavor the military, the political,
and the literary proves him to have been more
than the casual dilettante, and marks him as one de-
termined to excel.
In his vices, too, John Burgoyne excelled. He gam-
bled more successfully than had his father; he drank
with greater discrimination and capacity than most
officers and gentlemen; and he wenched within the
boundaries of his own class, without prejudice to his
devotion to his own wife.
Thus, it was in admiration of a completely rounded
man of the eighteenth century that his soldiers on
the Peninsula dubbed Burgoyne with a ribald nick-
name and bestowed upon him the truer accolade
of "Gentleman Johnny," which, in 1777, epitomized
the new lieutenant general in Canada.
Guy Carleton, too, was a gentleman and, com-
mensurate with his rank in die army and in the
colonial service, a politician. His removal as com-
mander in chief of the northern striking force was a
political setback, and the promotion of John Bur-
14 MARCH TO SARATOGA
goyne to replace him an intentional rebuke. But the
insult came from the minister in London, not from
the gentleman whose embarrassing duty it was to
deliver it. The orders Burgoyne produced from his
saddle bag, therefore, could be accepted by Carleton
with all the grace of one gentleman losing to another
at cards.
Burgoyne was the logical person to carry out the
campaign as ordered from London. The plans were of
his own devising. They were based upon a fact as old
as the geography of North America itself. When the
great glacier receded it left one geological fault
through the mountain barrier which, in the eighteenth
century, held the thirteen American colonies to the
Atlantic coast. Furthermore, the melting ice left a
chain of lakes in the northern half of the corridor
through the mountains, and in the southern half of
that corridor the glacial freshet had gouged out a
wide river basin. To Burgoyne, and to the exalted
gentlemen pouring over maps in a Whitehall office,
these waterways seemed expressly created to carry
the heavy baggage of a British army. Nor would
the land which divided Lake Champlain and Lake
George, the northward draining lakes from the
Hudson River, flowing to the south, hamper the
passage of a well-equipped expedition. It had been
crossed by the British armies that had conquered
Canada, and even the rabble army of the Americans
traversed its roads freely to supply the fort at Ticon-
deroga.
Twice Burgoyne had prepared for the British cabi-
THE NEW YEAR 15
net plans based on the strategical importance of the
Lake Champlain-Hudson River gap. On his return
from Boston in November 1775 he had written and
presented his "Reflections upon the War in America."
The campaigns of 1776, during which Howe had oc-
cupied New York City and the lower Hudson Valley
while Carleton, with Burgoyne as his second in
command, had reconquered Canada including Lake
Champlain, were a part of these "Reflections." On
his return to London in November of 1776, Burgoyne
had written out his 'Thoughts for Conducting the
War from the Side of Canada." These thoughts
formed the basis for the orders which Burgoyne was
now delivering to Guy Carleton.
The orders called for a three-pronged advance on
Albany, set midway between New York and Mont-
real, the largest and most important inland city in
the American colonies. General Howe, or his second
in command, General Clinton, was to move north-
ward up the Hudson, perhaps with the British fleet,
and would provide a solid British block. Burgoyne
was to be the axe, cleaving swiftly through the Ameri-
can army which awaited the blow at Ticonderoga,
and falling lightly on the block. Like a split balk of
fine wood, the American revolution would then fall
apart, its shattered armies to be gathered up at
leisure. The third force, as outlined in Burgoyne's
"Thoughts," would immediately begin on the tidying
up. Colonel Barry St. Leger would take a small
force, made up for the most part of loyal Ameri-
cans and Iroquois Indians, and proceed in a wide
l6 MAKCH TO SARATOGA
swing around the mass of the Adirondack Mountains
through the Mohawk River Valley which had been
their homeland, to fall on Albany from the west.
Burgoyne expected that St. Leger would draw off
some of the rebel army facing him, and that there
would be a general rising and return to loyalty by the
people of the Mohawk Valley.
The tactical plan of the campaign was reminiscent
of Jeffrey Amherst's final and masterful stroke in the
conquest of Canada in 1759, when, with perfect tim-
ing, he had converged three armies, from three dis-
tant and different directions, upon Montreal. Bur-
goyne's campaign, like Amherst's, depended for its
success upon the concerted movement in time and
space of three separate forces: the forces of Howe,
of St. Leger, and of Burgoyne himself. Specific orders
to Howe, covering this vital aspect of the plan and
his part in it, were drawn up by Lord George Ger-
maine, who, as Colonial Secretary, was responsible
for the conduct of the American war. These orders
were to be sent direct to General Howe, wintering
comfortably with his mistress in New York.
Germaine's orders to Carleton, though less im-
portant to the success of Burgoyne's plans, were more
specific. They called on him to prepare the Champlain
fleet, furnish artillery and stores, recruit a large num-
ber of Canadians and Indians, and, while aiding his
successor in every way, defend all of Canada against
invasion or revolt. This last was to be accomplished
with 3000 soldiers chosen from the "odds and sods"
of the expedition's regiments, and with the remains
THE NEW YEAB 17
of existing regiments from which the elite had been
drafted to Burgoyne and St. Leger. As a soldier
Carleton had no alternative but to comply. This he
did, though he doubted his ability to supply the Ca-
nadians and Indians in the quantity or quality ex-
pected of him. He also doubted the claims of the
Tory refugees as to the number of their fellow sym-
pathizers who would co-operate with the "liberat-
ing" army. Carleton knew the vast extent of forest
distances, as he knew the deceptive seasons of the
north country. He knew the long chance a messenger
took in coming from New York to Montreal, whether
by sea or through the lines of the able Continental
army or the militia watch in each isolated town.
Perhaps Guy Carleton was wisely relieved of the
responsibility of leading an expedition based upon
estimates with which he was at variance. Hope for the
success of Burgoyne's venture lay in the infectious
enthusiasm and the bright spark of that gentleman's
gay conviction. The displaced Carleton was unstint-
ing in his aid.
2
On Your Markers; Fall In!
Ten days after landing at Quebec, Gentleman Johnny
made his entry into Montreal, where he took com-
mand of the right (or British) wing of his army.
On his arrival, there was a formal reception, a
pretty affair of fine uniforms and of musicians play-
ing behind a screen of evergreen boughs, and on the
fourth day, which was 21 May, a Grand Review of
the British line. The massed bands played before the
reviewing stand as Major General Phillips made the
formal presentation of the two brigade commanders.
With each of them in turn Burgoyne walked the
length of their lines, inspecting, exchanging a word
with a subaltern, ramrod-stiff in front of his platoon,
or questioning a sergeant about the food or billets.
The appearance of these men had changed in the
year since Burgoyne had brought them to Canada.
The conventional smartness of their uniforms was
gone. No new clothes had come out to them from
England, so their old long coats had been cut short
and the tails used as patches. The wide-brimmed
tricorne hats had been cut down into jaunty small
18
ON YOUR MASKERS; FALL DSf! 10
caps, to which each regiment had added a distinctive
plume of feathers or horsehair. Though these were
the battalion companies, they now looked like light
infantrymen, representing the British army's com-
promise to meet the challenge^ of American rangers
and riflemen. It was this new appearance of the men
that would cause Burgoyne to publish a general order
reminding them of the British soldier's traditional
reliance on the bayonet, and stressing their superi-
ority in open space and hardy combat.
Not all of the new commander in chiefs first days
in Canada were occupied with froth and show. On
the way up from Quebec he had seen the German
troops of his left wing, and now his orders routed the
regiments out of their billets around Lake St. Pierre.
From his headquarters in the prelate's fine house at
Trois Rivieres, Major General Eiedesel pulled his
battalions together again after the long winter. He
worked with an eye to the east, hoping against hope
that from that direction his little baroness would ar-
rive before he had to set out once again on field
service. Otherwise, he had made arrangements for
her to pass the summer, with their children, in the
hospitable household of the prelate.
The day before the Grand Review, Brigadier Gen-
eral Simon Eraser's advance corps, which was to lead
the army all the way, assembled in cantonment at
Longeuil, across and downriver from Montreal. Across
the river, too, well away from the gay city, the In-
dians in their village of Caunawaga, and their savage
brothers from up the Ottawa in their temporary
2O MARCH TO SARATOGA
camps, made preparations for the campaign in their
own ominous way. They were to go ahead even of
the advance corps, exploring the woods, eyes for
Burgoyne, blinding the eyes of the enemy, and cast-
ing their dark shadow before the bright battalions
of the British regulars.
The forest road from Longeuil to St. Jean, at the
foot of navigation on Lake Champlain, was still deep
in mud at the end of May, and Fraser had to lead
most of his advance corps around and up the Riche-
lieu in order to reach his final muster point. As he
passed through St. Jean, he saw that all was in readi-
ness there. Captain Skeffington Lutwidge, Royal
Navy, had launched his new ship, the Royal George,
and was slinging aboard its battery of twenty-four
iron 12-pound cannon. In the roadstead, tugging at
her anchor cables, rode the veteran Inflexible, twenty
guns, bows on into the swift spring current. In line
behind her, with white canvas furled, was the stately
fleet of Britain's inland navy: the Lady Maria and the
Carleton, named in compliment to the governor gen-
eral and his young wife; the Loyal Convert; and the
three prizes taken the previous October, the Wash-
ington, the Lee, and the gondola New Jersey.
Anchored off the fort was the square, blunt radeau
Thunderer, a vessel of the royal artillery, her mast
restepped this year to make her into a bomb ketch for
the expected siege of Fort Ticonderoga, almost a hun-
dred miles up the lake.
Before it sailed, the battle fleet would lose three of
its number to the transport service the Wash-
ON YOUR MABKEBS; FALL IN! 21
ington, Lee, and Loyal Convert. Even the mighty
Inflexible and the Royal George would become tows
for the ungainly pontoon-bridge-boom that Lieuten-
ant John Schank, engineer and sailor, had designed to
bridge the narrows between Crown Point and the
east shore of the lake. As May gave place to June, it
became known that the Yankees had not rebuilt their
fleet, so there would be no naval battle in 1777* Then,
too, as the staff officers checked and rechecked their
lists, and once more figured their estimates, the neces-
sity for additional transports became apparent. More
and more food would be needed for the hungry
mouths of men and horses, and for the guns of both
siege and field trains of artillery. Supplies of all kinds,
and in vast quantities, must be built up in the first
great depot, to be established at Crown Point, for the
siege and the dash across the land divide and down
the Hudson River.
With the decision in favor of transport, Lieutenant
Schank left unassembled the timbers of the new style
gunboats, brought in pieces from England. He had
enough work in hand, caulking and repairing the
gunboats of '76 and the five hundred bateaux which
would carry the soldiers and their equipment up the
lake, then return for the barrels, kegs, boxes, and
bales. These last were accumulating slowly, due to
the persistent mud on the roads from Montreal and
from Chambly, up around the rapids of the Richelieu.
In Montreal, Lieutenant James Hadden of the
Royal Artillery waited long enough to see the il-
lumination of the city in honor of the king's birthday.
22 MARCH TO SARATOGA
After dark, bonfires were lighted by every house-
holder in his front yard, and the streets were filled
with youthful revelry, the enthusiastic celebrants
smashing the windows of anyone whose fire did not
seem sufficiently large or patriotic to match the glory
of King George and the omnipotence of his army,
so soon to set out to victory. The convoy which
Hadden was to take did not leave Longeuil for St.
Jean until 6 June, the second day after the illmuina-
tions. It was a hard journey. Mud dragged at the
wheels of the newly made carts, and the plunging
horses, straining into their collars to free a mired
wagon, broke the axles fashioned of too green wood,
the iron shoes working loose from the wheels. Not
until nightfall did the carts, worn and battered after
their first day's journey, reach St. Jean. Extensive re-
pairs were needed before they could be sent up the
lake to ply the portage from Ticonderoga to Lake
George, and further on, from Lake George to the
navigable Hudson at Fort Edward.
When possible, dinner began in the early after-
noon and continued course after course until late in
the day. At St. Jean, on 12 June, General William
Phillips was the host. His troops were ready to em-
bark; those of General Fraser were up ahead, and the
Germans were staged all the way down the Richelieu
River to its mouth at Sorel, on the St. Lawrence
River. All the generals were Phillips's guests: Bur-
goyne and Riedesel and the brigadiers. Sir Guy
Carleton, too, had come up for the farewell dinner
ON YOUB MABKERS; FALL IN! 23
and for his official part in the formal leavetalcing on
the morrow.
Confidence in the success of the expedition was
borne in with the patage au Canadien; congratula-
tions flowed out of the wine bottles, from the
madeira through the Rhenish wines of Germany to
the champagne that accompanied the sweet. With
the port, came a messenger from Quebec with the
news of the arrival of a convoy from England, bearing
supplies, reinforcements for regiments, three com-
panies of Hesse-Hanau Jagers and three small
girls with their mother, the Baroness Friederika von
Riedesel. Brandy, obviously, was the drink with
which to toast the major general from Brunswick
and his good fortune. Riedesel was excused, for
though theirs was an army on the move, Burgoyne,
a widower for the past year, knew and could well
understand the feelings of his subordinate. Further-
more, the lady herself had ignored the arrangements
made for her at Trois Rivieres and was on her way
to the Richelieu. It was best for the morale of all
concerned that Riedesel should have a few days'
reunion with his family, while his regiments moved
up under their own competent officers. The in-
domitable little baroness might then settle down to
wait in Canada with the other ladies of the army.
Burgoyne knew the limits of his leadership, and
halted at the perimeter of a hoopskirt!
On 13 June, in front of all the troops, with full
regimental bands playing, and in the presence of the
habitants of St. Jean and the surrounding country-
24 MABCH TO SARATOGA
side, Sir Guy Carleton took the salute in the name of
His Majesty King George the Third. Out in the river,
flying from the high mainmast of the radeau Thun-
derer., was the royal standard, emblazoned with the
heraldry of England, Scotland, Hanover, and ancient
France. In the gentle wind, it billowed lazily and
confidently, for all to see and know where true
loyalty lay. The bateaux of the first brigade were
moving out from shore and forming up in fours, their
oarblades flashing in the sunlight as they hurried
after the vessels of the fleet, already lost to view
beyond the first bend of the river.
Burgoyne and Phillips stepped into their respective
pinnaces, doffed their hats to the royal standard of
their sovereign and to his representatives on shore.
Canada left behind; the expedition was under way.
In full command, John Burgoyne was charging down
the summer fields of glory with seven thousand
veterans at his back.
In actual fact, Burgoyne himself did not leave St.
Jean until 17 June. He watched his regiments as they
went by. He made a point of seeing every soldier of
the main body, and made sure that every soldier
in the army saw him, standing in the stern of his
pinnace as the bateaux rowed past, on the foreshore
as the regiments landed to make camp for the night,
or wandering casually through the company lines
while the cook-fires yet burned. On these occasions,
his orders expressly forbade the formalities due his
rank. Burgoyne stood with Riedesel as the German
ON YOUR MARKERS; FALL IN! 25
division marched up from Chambly, every rank
dressed, the interval an exact eighteen inches, every
man chanting the somber songs of the Rhineland,
which sound so lugubrious to English ears.
With the plan rolling smoothly on the well-greased
axle of discipline, General Burgoyne could turn to
his field desk, which had been taken aboard the Lady
Maria for the journey up to the advance elements of
his army.
High Command called on Lieutenant General Bur-
goyne to prepare the way ahead and to strike with
strategy, like a billhook clearing brush from an un-
tended cart road. With his army moving forward in
a pageant of might, Gentleman Johnny, the play-
wright, penned a Proclamation to the American Peo-
ple. Trumpets blared from the wings, "numerous"
armies and fleets moved across the stage; the "good"
Americans were cosseted; the "Assemblies and Com-
mittees'* were scorned, abhorred, and cast out. Fi-
nally, in a crescendo of rhetoric, this Thor of the
northern armies let loose his threat to "give stretch"
to his savage Indian horde.
The proclamation embodying this threat was only
the prologue of the drama. On 20 June, General Bur-
goyne made his carefully staged entrance upon the
scene.
The Lady Maria anchored in the mouth of the
Bouquet River. The commander in chief went ashore,
where an escort of officers Englishmen, Germans,
Loyal Americans, and Canadians awaited his land-
ing. Burgoyne and his aides wore their full-dress
26 MABCH TO SARATOGA
regimental uniforms. The officers on shore had had
their servants working through the night, brushing
and polishing away the stain of the forest from their
service dress. In all the ruck of uniforms, one man
stood out by dint of his appearance: he was the
Chevalier St. Luc de la Corne, the leader of Bur-
goyne's "Indian horde."
St. Luc was now an old man, a relic of New
France and of all the Indian Wars of those earlier
days. In 1777 he was a Canadian, and though he
wore his Order of St. Louis, as he stood among the
British against whom he had won the Order with
tomahawk and scalping knife, he was a loyal, art-
ful, and ambitious subject of King George. He
controlled the Ottawa Indians; his name and reputa-
tion were known, and his influence felt, in many
more distant lodges.
With all the dignity of an Indian warrior, the
grace of a courtier, and the ease of a gentleman,
St. Luc greeted his general and guided him up a
short trail to the council place. In a clearing, the
old Indian leader had gathered his warriors, who
like their brothers, the white warriors were be-
decked for this ceremonious occasion.
Burgoyne rose to speak. His opening words of
greeting, put together to resound in praise of the
Indians* loyalty to their king, lost nothing in transla-
tion. The chief and the warriors approved. Warming
to his audience, Burgoyne made his first point: as the
rebels had abused the clemency offered them, the
Indians were now granted "stretch" against the "par-
ON YOUR MASKERS; FALL IN! 27
ricides of State." Continuing, Burgoyne modified this
license to a certain extent by pointing out that there
were many loyal and good Americans who were
allies, and therefore inviolate, as were the English
and German officers ranged behind him at the solemn
council. Unfortunately, the British general concluded
his oration in weakness. He forbade the Indians to
kill aged men, women, and children, and prisoners.
He offered a bribe for prisoners, but would demand
an accounting before paying the bounty on scalps,
which were to come only from the dead, killed in
battle. In conclusion, Burgoyne adjured the Indians
to give implicit obedience to his orders.
Moved by the forensic power and the fine, impos-
ing presence of the king's resplendent chief, an old
Indian rose to speak the promise of all the braves.
In the background lurked the interpreters, lieuten-
ants of St. Luc, smirking as they contemplated the
profits in scalp money and loot to be had in the land
of the Yankees and the hated "Bostonais."
Liquor was brought ashore from the Lady Maria
for the war dance, which the European officers
watched with an uneasy loathing.
In the morning the warriors had gone.
On up the lake came the armada of vessels. Each
day a brigade moved forward, landing for the night
at the campsite of the brigade that had gone ahead.
Then a storm held up the advance for three days.
After the hard rain, the black flies came to torment
the men, unable to build their smudge fires of the
wet wood. The Germans, who were accustomed to
28 MARCH TO SARATOGA
oven-baked bread, wasted their ration of flour in
futile attempts at making "fire cakes" like those of
the British. Again on the lake, with a full, wide view
of the armada, confidence and cheer returned. A
watch boat raced north down the lake with word
that General Eraser's advance corps had passed the
narrows, had landed at Button Mold Bay, and were
readying themselves for the assault landing at Crown
Point the following day, 25 June.
The first company of light infantry went over the
bows of their assault boats on schedule, deployed
among the buildings and the outcroppings of rock
along the shore, and looked about them. Quiet, al-
ways held suspect by alert, seasoned troops, was
everywhere. It was deathly still at Crown Point.
Major the Earl of Balcarres, on one knee, his New-
foundland dog "Bateau" sitting, bolt upright, by his
side, ordered a squad to rush the entrance to the fort.
The light infantrymen raised their muskets to the
alert as the squad ran forward over the bridge. All
eyes were on the high ramparts. Nothing happened.
Suddenly, .the men were aware that one of their own
was standing in the entry way, beckoning to them,
and the major, his dog obediently at heel, was
sauntering over the bridge.
Crown Point was deserted.
3
On the Left! At the Double! March!
Twelve miles up the lake from Crown Point, Fort
Ticonderoga barred the way of the British advance.
General Burgoyne's intention was to leave Lake
Champlain at Ticonderoga and go to the Hudson
River by way of Lake George and the long portage,
the traditional route of British armies since 1755.
While still in London, he had decided against the
alternative way, which was via Skenesborough and
the uncertain overland road from there to the Hudson
by way of Wood Creek and Fort Anne. Either way,
Fort Ticonderoga must be taken. It dominated the
fork of the two roads to the south.
Ticonderoga was important to Burgoyne for yet
another reason. Ever since the French had built the
great stone fort in 1755-56, it had been the back gate
to the Atlantic colonies. Its fall to Jeffrey Amherst in
1759 finally had removed the threat of an alien
dagger, constantly pricking the throat of the British
colonists. Americans had fought there side by side
with British regulars, and Ticonderoga's formidable
strength was legendary. When the fort fell to a little
BURGOYNE
EXPEDITION
ON THE LEFT! AT THE DOUBLE! MARCH! 31
band of Green Mountain Boys under their leader,
Ethan Allen, the Americans roared with laughter at
the discomfiture of the British, and took heart in the
success of their revolution. Burgoyne's recapture of
the place would turn the old joke back on the
Yankees.
During the two years of its occupation, the Ameri-
can army had greatly enlarged and extended the
Fort Ticonderoga defense system. The old French
fort on the Ticonderoga Peninsula jutting out from
the west shore of Lake Champlain, had been pro-
vided with shore batteries to bolster its defenses. A
barbette now covered the portage to Lake George,
and gun positions backed up the old French trench
system that covered the western approach. Across
the lake, American engineers had built a new fort of
actual and strategic strength, which they called
Mount Independence. On the lake between the two
posts a bridge had been built and other obstacles
placed to fix the British fleet in a killing ground of
converging cannon fire. To hold this large fortress
against Burgoyne, Major General Arthur St. Clair
was sent by General Philip Schuyler, commander of
the northern department of General Washington's
army. He was a second choice. Horatio Gates, who
had held Ticonderoga in 1776, had refused the com-
mand from Schuyler in a move for higher stakes in
the political game of New England against New
York. In the Continental Congress, Schuyler's New
York star was falling, and he had been given but
twenty-five hundred soldiers to hold Ticonderoga,
32 MARCH TO SARATOGA
whereas five times that number would have been
none too many. Arthur St. Glair, a blue-eyed Scot,
first saw his new command only the day before the
royal standard was run up the mainmast of the Thun-
derer. Those officers of Burgoyne's army who had
been with Wolfe on the Plains of Abraham in 1759
remembered the Yankee general against whom they
were now going, as Lieutenant St. Glair of the British
line. In his position of high rank and command,
Arthur St. Glair thought clearly and without guile,
and was courageous in his decisions. At Ticonderoga
he faced his former comrades in arms without visible
emotion, neither minimizing his desperate situation
in the path of the British colossus nor panicking into
rashness or fright.
General Burgoyne had envisaged the Ticonderoga
position as representing the main American resist-
ance to his plans. In anticipation he had assembled
a siege train which, together with the guns of his
battalions, numbered one hundred and twenty-eight
pieces. This did not include the fleet's permament
armament, much of which could be brought to bear.
In spite of Ticonderoga's small garrison, Burgoyne
gave St. Glair the compliment of a full-scale siege.
He wanted to ensure the capture of the fort with its
garrison of ten regiments, the hard core of the whole
northern army of American Continentals. The Ameri-
can militiamen, as soldiers, were inconsiderable.
On the first day of July the British army began its
advance up both sides of Lake Champlain. The guide
was on the center, Riedesel and his two German
ON THE LEFT! AT THE TOUBLE! MARCH! 33
brigades going up the east shore with Mfcunt Inde-
pendence as their objective; Phillips, with the Eng-
lish, took the west shore. In between were the ships
of the Royal Navy, escorting the guns to their siege
positions.
On the 2 July, Eraser's advance corps began the
movement that would extend Burgoyne's right flank
as far as the sawmill and the American escape route
to Lake George. At nine o'clock that morning a
column of smoke was seen rising from the barbette
battery on Mount Hope. Further on, Fraser and
Phillips could see more smoke, which they judged
to come from the sawmill, the adjacent bridge, and
other works.
Out ahead, the Indians were getting the scent of
battle, wildly scouting the smoke and running back
with exaggerated and conflicting reports as to the
strength of the American force. They had also dis-
covered some liquor. At one o'clock in the afternoon
General Fraser finally ordered out his nephew, Alex-
ander Fraser, with his company of selected rangers
to determine the true state of affairs. An Irish cor-
poral, crawling up to the American outworks in the
old French-built trenches, known as the French lines,
made the first contact with the rebel army. He was
taking aim at a Yankee he had sighted through a sally
port when he in turn was fired upon. Both soldiers
missed, but their shots triggered a whole fusillade
of firing from the French lines, in which the guns on
the fort joined. In the confusion, the Irish corporal
fell and feigned dead, Captain Fraser withdrew his
34 MARCH TO SARATOGA
men, and the Indians fled. An American sortie took
the corporal prisoner. Fraser continued his scout and
found that no Americans remained outside the line of
trenches. Phillips ordered up his brigades, and the
Ticonderoga Peninsula was sealed off. On the ex-
treme left, Riedesel had come up to the marshy creek
behind Mount Independence.
The plan was going well, and Burgoyne had no
need to improvise with orders. With his aide, he rode
around the positions, talking with men cheerfully at
work with pick and shovel, or with drag ropes at the
guns. His particular interest lay on his extreme right
where, beyond the creek, the steep rise of Sugar Loaf
Mountain swept upward to the almost perpendicular
drop at its eastern summit, overlooking the lake and
the two rebel forts. His artillery officer, Major Griffith
Williams, and Lieutenant William Twiss, his en-
gineer, were sent out to determine whether a cannon
mounted on Sugar Loaf could carry into the forts;
further, could Twiss build a road by which guns
could be taken to the mountain top?
In the evening the two officers returned to head-
quarters, tired and hot, but elated at the prospect
from the summit. The view could only * have been
improved if seen over the top of a 12-pounder; and
a road with a stiff climb at the end was en-
tirely possible.
During the night, the guns were moved around
the perimeter of die mountain. British sentries in the
line cursed their passing because the noise they made
might arouse the curiosity of the Yankees, quiet in
ON TOE LEFT! AT THE DOUBLE! MABCH! 35
their own positions. All during the day of the 5 July,
the gunners and the engineer's detail toiled in the
hot, insect-infested woods behind Mount Defiance.
Gun teams snorted down the necks of brush-cutters
and pawed at the slippery bark of the logs. Men took
over from the teams for the last climb to the rocky
summit, and made it by their sweat. By late after-
noon the first gun was being assembled. Below in
Fort Ticonderoga, Major Wilkinson saw the glint of
sun on the brass tube of a telescope. General St. Clair
was looking up at the new commander of his fort.
In the dark early hours of the 6 July, a house
took fire over on Mount Independence. On being in-
formed of this, the brigade major of the day for the
Germans awakened Riedesel. For long minutes the
veteran general stood in front of his tent, watching
the flames of the house burning in the "Yankee" lines.
Then abruptly, he ordered a boat and escort to be
prepared and went in to his tent to dress. A long day
had begun for the baron.
It was just getting light when Brigadier General
Fraser was called to hear the report of three rebel
deserters who had come into the picquet which was
watching the French lines. The deserters said that
the Americans had gone, some by boat to the south,
the main body eastward into the hills on the road
to Hubbardton and the Green Mountains. Fraser's
first order was to beat the alarm, that his corps might
turn out ready for immediate duty.
There were no enemy soldiers behind the French
36 MAECH TO SARATOGA
lines. The gray stone fort was deserted. The boats
had gone from the foreshore, and the storehouses,
forges, and bakeries stood empty, their doors agape,
their interiors in shambles. Running in through the
hospital door, a British lieutenant saw but one figure
in all the gloomy ward; the man, covered with a
blanket, was dead. Outside again, the lieutenant
could look down onto the narrow passage of the lake
with its two bridges leading to Mount Independence.
Out on the pier bridge, a platoon of grenadiers was
forming into single file to cross the charred plank
spanning a gap in the bridge inexpertly made by the
retreating Americans. The lieutenant called his men
together and led them down the bank to the bridge-
head, where General Fraser was marshaling his
troops.
Across the bridge, the grenadier platoon walked
boldly into the American battery covering the ap-
proach. In a shelter lay an American gun crew,
dead or were they drunk? The grenadiers gathered
around in admiration and wonder, as the sergeant
kicked the men out of their stupor. Suddenly a gun
roared, an Indian stumbled back into the group, and
the lieutenant cursed loudly. The cannon which the
drunken Yankees had been left to man had been dis-
charged by the prowling redskin. It had been poorly
laid, in an attempt at covering the bridge, and
through the embrasure the grenadiers could see their
mates of the advance corps approaching.
Mount Independence, too, had been abandoned
by the rebels, but Riedesel was there with a group
ON THE LEFT! AT THE DOUBLE! MAJRCH! 37
of his green-coated riflemen. He had crossed the
creek in time to see the last of the "Yankees" march-
ing off down the track to Hubbardton. While he and
General Fraser discussed the situation, and aides
were sent flying to Burgoyne with the news, the sol-
diers of the advance corps scratched through the
debris of hasty departure and argued over choice bits
like so many fat red hens. The general's house al-
ways a prime focal point for loot had been burned.
It was that which had made the blaze that General
Riedesel had been awakened to see. His estimate had
been a correct one: the Americans had escaped.
Permission to pursue the retreating rebel army did
not reach Fraser, on Mount Independence, until the
sun was well up on a day that promised to be hot.
At the morning alarm he had been able to muster
only half of his advance corps. There was now no
way to gather up his whole force for the chase. In the
confusion that took hold of the invasion army on
discovering the enemy gone, Commodore Lutwidge
had cut the bridges in order to let his big ships go
through. No less eager to pursue than the commodore,
Fraser started off with his light infantry, followed
by elements of the 24th Foot and of the grenadiers.
Riedesel watched them go; then he hurried away
to muster a sufficient number of his Germans to fol-
low in reserve.
Soon Fraser's column was across the flat open
ground back of Mount Independence. The light
infantry was moving fast, and the big grenadiers at
the rear of the column were moving at a jog trot to
38 MARCH TO SARATOGA
close up. If the men expected coolness in the shade
of the forest, they were doomed to disappointment.
The woods were still, and as hot as fur, and the
track, along which they traveled almost at a run,
was deeply rutted; insects tormented faces streaked
with rivulets of sweat. The soldiers had not eaten
since the previous day and were hungry until
thirst claimed their whole attention. At the first hill
the pace slackened, and at one o'clock Fraser called
a halt for rest. Quiet returned to the forest as the
men slept, oblivious to the torment of insects, heed-
less of the stain made by forest mould on white
trousers and pipe-clayed belts.
Later in the afternoon, Riedesel caught up with
the British column. With him were the Jagers, a
handful of von Earner's blue-coated riflemen, and
some grenadiers not more than eighty in all. The
Germans were as tired as the Englishmen had been.
They slumped to the ground, giving a tail of varie-
gated hue to the red and white body of the British
column snaking along the brown slash of the track.
After the two generals had conferred, Fraser
roused his own men and marched them three miles
further toward Hubbardton. The effects of the heat,
hunger, and fatigue were still evident, and the men
were in no condition to fight, not even against the
American rebels who, in all probability, were as ex-
hausted as themselves. On a defensible ridge, Fraser
fell out his corps. As the men settled in, the officers
circulated among them warning of a 3:00 a.m. rev-
eille.
ON THE LEFT! AT THE DOUBLE! MABCH! 39
For two hours, Major Robert Grant of the 24th
Foot led the picquet of light infantrymen down the
forest path into the growing light of dawn. From a
saddle between two small frills, the road dipped into
a valley through which Grant judged that there
probably ran a good brook. They were getting into
the mountains now, and soon could expect to cut
into the north-south road from Crown Point to Hub-
bardton and Castleton. The road was not new to
Major Grant; he had traveled it some twenty years
earlier as a provincial officer, before he had secured
the King's Commission. Now he swung off down the
trail, the light infantrymen, as alert as rangers, close
behind him. At the bottom of the hill, the woods
ended in a clearing. Grant marched out from under
the trees. There was the brook he had expected to
find, its bank lined with American soldiers! The
Yankees were splashing water in their faces and over
their bare chests and shoulders, while in the roughly
cleared field beyond, the rest of the regiment was
preparing breakfast. Behind the major, the light in-
fantry was pouring out of the woods and deploying
without orders. To direct their disposition, Grant
mounted a nearby stump and turning around, gave
the order to fire. At that instant, a rifle ball killed him
dead.
The Americans had been taken completely by sur-
prise. It was Colonel Nathan Hale's New Hampshire
Continentals, who, with the invalids and the strag-
glers, comprised the rear guard. Colonel Hale at-
tempted to organize some land of resistance. But
40 MAECH TO SARATOGA
more and more British debouched from the road, and
he was forced to fall back with his outnumbered
forces. The British line came steadily on, the light
infantry on the left, the 24th on the right. Hale saw
his second in command fall and his men flee into the
woods. He himself was enveloped in the advancing
line of redcoats, and was made prisoner.
Pausing only to fix bayonets, the British line ad-
vanced across the brook. Again in the forest, they
felt the sting of American musket fire, not in volley,
but individual shots from behind trees, rocks, and
bushes. Under control of their officers, the British
advanced cautiously in the line of skirmish forced on
them by the trees, catching the occasional Yankee
in his firing position and stolidly accepting their own
casualties.
General Fraser, his small headquarters group run-
ning after him, had taken over direct command. His
reconnaissance had fixed the position of the main
body of the American rear guard as up a hill in
roughly prepared works, covering the track from
Mount Independence at its juncture with the north-
south road leading to Castleton. On the southern
flank of the American position there was a steep hill
which controlled the entire battle. If the British held
this hill, the Americans' escape route to the south was
cut, and reinforcements could not get through from
St. Glair's main army, presumed to be at Castleton.
On the other hand, if tie Americans held the hill, a
British assault would be caught in enfilade fire. Fraser
wanted that hill.
ON THE LEFT! AT THE DOUBLE! MABCH! 41
The task of taking it was given to Major John
Acland and his grenadiers. It was hands and knees,
push, pull, and scramble up the steep slope. At the
top, the grenadiers barely had time to unsling their
muskets to meet and drive back the Yankees, who
had been sent out to seize the same objective. Red-
faced and bare-headed as he wiped out the sweat-
band of his grenadier's bearskin with his handker-
chief, Acland sent two of his companies to his left
to cover the right flank of the 24th. He could mark
them by their musket fire, as they advanced in the
woods on the other side of the clearing.
They appeared to be meeting with some success,
and Acland was not surprised to see sixty Yankees
come out into the clearing, their guns clubbed in the
generally accepted token of surrender. "Stand with
your arms!" was the order to the two companies of
grenadiers, as they relaxed to accept the rebel pris-
oners. Thirty feet away the Americans stopped; each
side looked the other in the eye. There was a quick
motion in the Yankee line, as clubbed muskets were
swung 'round and fired from the hip in a hard volley
at point-blank range. The impact on the British was
audible in screams, curses, and gasps, as the line
staggered back. Then with a savage roar the gren-
adiers surged forward to carry the long bayonets to
the "sniveling, sneaking, dirty, low-born rebels!" It
was the charge of the wounded bear, and it carried
the big grenadiers in among the dogs that had hurt
them. Back on the starting Hne, redcoats were down,
wounded and dead. When their mates returned,
42 MARCH TO SARATOGA
they could assure the casualtes that they had been
avenged.
There was fire fighting all along the line, from
Acland's grenadiers on the right to the Earl of Bal-
carres, commanding the light infantry half a mile
away on the left. In the center, General Fraser could
sense no gainful advance against the strong fire from
the American position. All his troops were engaged.
None were left with which to reach around on the
American flank. Nearby was General Riedesel, stalk-
ing up and down and cursing at his troops, who had
not run as fast as he to get to the sound of the firing.
At the sound of a hunting horn down the track,
Riedesel raced off to intercept his ] tigers at the brook.
Those English officers who had hunted in Europe
recognized the clear sound of the silver-coiled horn,
and identified the call as the "greeting fanfare." The
music seemed to drift off to the left behind Balcarres,
as the hunting call changed to the faster, more
staccato "veline." Then rifle fire drew volley fire out
beyond the American right, at which the whole
British line moved forward as Riedesel and eighty
of his Germans, Jdgers and grenadiers, turned the
American flank.
With his two colonels now casualties, his escape
road to Castleton cut off, on his right riflemen that a
Green Mountain boy could respect, and battle-wise
regulars coming on in front, Colonel Seth Warner of
the Vermont Continentals did what any experienced
ranger would have done. He cut and ran straight up
the mountain at his back. His men followed, a few
ON THE LEFT! AT THE DOUBLE! MABCH! 43
of them dropping off to climb a tree or to stretch out
along a rock in tie hope of one last aimed shot. The
Battle of Hubbardton was over; there was no pursuit.
All up and down the road stood tired British and
German troops, counting off the scouts and picquets
and guards. The remainder were sent back along
their route from the brook to search out the wounded
and dead. There were many of these. Fifteen officers
had been hit by the considered fire of the Yankees.
Balcarres had been wounded, though not seriously.
As Acland came off his hilltop to report to Fraser, he
limped heavily from a wound in his thigh. There
were many American dead, too. On Acland's hill; a
drummer boy found the body of Colonel Ebenezer
Francis, who had commanded the llth Massachu-
setts Continentals. Even in the untidy disarray of
death in battle, his fine, well-proportioned figure was
remarked upon by the grenadier officers who had
gathered around. Captain Shrimpton was reading
through the dead man's papers when a rifle cracked
and the captain dropped, wounded, over the corpse.
No one saw the hidden rifleman, and no one found
him; only the sharp report of his rifle had been heard.
Soon it began to rain.
4
A Regiment of Foot
While the Hubbardton force was binding up its
wounds on the slopes of the eastern mountains, an-
other of General Burgoyne's regiments was moving
through the rainstorms to the ground where it, too,
would meet the American soldiers in battle. At night-
fall on 7 July, two hundred soldiers of the 9th Regi-
ment of Foot made a fortified bivouac at the mouth of
the defile, where Wood Creek enters the Champlain
Valley. To the south, and in front of the regiment, lay
a bay like the arm of an undulating forest sea, its
shores the dark mountains, its depths the bed of the
Hudson River. A mile beyond the bivouac Fort Anne,
held by the Yankees, was a hostile island.
In its almost one hundred years of existence the
regiment had earned its nickname of "The Fighting
Ninth/' Raised in Gloucestershire in 1685 to put
down the Monmouth Rebellion, it had moved to
Ireland to help in quelling the long-continuing trou-
bles of that pugnacious isle. While it had made up
a part of the English garrison there, many Irishmen
had joined the ranks of the 9th, contributing to the
44
A BEGIMENT OF FOOT 45
fighting reputation of the regiment, both at home
and on expeditions overseas. In 1769 the regiment
had returned to Ireland after seven years* service in
tropical North America. Its ranks were depleted,
both officers and men sickly after long years in the
fever-climate of British Florida, following on the
rigors and casualties of the siege of Havana, on the
island of Cuba. By 1776, when once again the 9th
was called upon this time to go to the relief of
Quebec and to suppress yet another rebellion, it was
fighting fit. Its ranks had been filled by new recruits
from Ireland, from England, and a few men from
George Ill's German kingdom of Hanover. Under
the harsh tutelage of the veteran sergeants, the new-
comers had soon learned the drill and discipline
which imbued them with the spirit of the old 9th of
Foot. Lieutenant Colonel John Hill took the regi-
ment to Canada. As was the custom in the British
army, the titular colonel, Lieutenant General Ed-
ward, Viscount Ligonier, was far too exalted a per-
sonage to concern himself with the command of a
single regiment. In John Hill, the 9th had a metic-
ulous professional soldier with thirty years of com-
missioned service behind him, with little hope of
promotion, but enjoying the respect of his fellows
and the reliance of his superiors.
When, in 1777, the 9th became the senior regi-
ment of Brigadier General Powell's Second Brigade,
it was near full strength of six hundred men. Colonel
Hill, however, had under command only some four
hundred muskets in the eight line companies. As was
46 MARCH TO SABATOGA
the case with colonels commanding other regiments,
Hill's grenadier and light infantry companies had
been seconded into a grenadier battalion and a light
infantry battalion, both of which were under com-
mand of the advance corps. In addition, fifty of the
older soldiers were left behind as a regimental depot
and cadre in Canada.
Upon leaving St. Jean, the 9th had rowed and
sailed itself up Lake Champlain, landing at Crown
Point. The regiment had then marched up to Ticon-
deroga and gone into the line at the barbette battery
on Mount Hope, when, at dawn on 6 July, Burgoyne
discovered that St. Glair's army had escaped him.
Sensing the confusion of the morning, Colonel Hill
fell in the 9th and made it ready for any eventuality.
Thus it was found by a galloping staff officer, who
hurried it down to the boats. Already the great bar-
rier bridge from Ticonderoga to Mount Independ-
ence had been breached, and the tall frigates, the
Royal George and the Inflexible, were tacking in the
wide lake south of the forts, waiting impatiently for
the gunboats and infantry bateaux, so it could begin
the pursuit of those Yankees who had gone by water
to Skenesborough. All during the morning and into
the afternoon, the 9th followed the big ships through
the narrow channel of the Lake Champlain marshes.
The July sun was still high as the pursuing British
came out onto South Bay, and the frigates, safely
through the confining corridor, shook out their white
sails and swanned out over the bay like hoop-skirted
ladies entering a ballroom.
A BEGIMENT OF FOOT 47
A watchboat swung in close to Colonel Hill, with
orders from Burgoyne to land his troops up the bay
on the east shore. The boat then sheared off in search
of Colonel John Lind and Major Squire, of the 20th
and 21st regiments, respectively, who would be
making the landing with Hill's 9th. According to
Burgoyne's plan the three infantry regiments would
cross over the mountain on the east shore of South
Bay and block the road to Fort Anne while the gun-
boats would sail boldly into the Skenesborough basin,
sink the vessels to be found there, and drive the
rebels on shore and up the road, where the infantry
waited to receive them.
Viewed from the lake, the mountain that Colonel
Hill was set to cross was deceptive. Its trees, which
seemed to promise cool shade from the hot July sun,
in reality hid a dense undergrowth that held the day's
heat and sheltered a myriad of buzzing, biting insects.
The slope, which from a distance appeared so gentle,
was in fact either steep or precipitous, with rock out-
croppings and ledges criss-crossed with wind-felled
trees. The landing itself was a wet one, bringing the
soldiers to the foot of the cruel mountain discom-
forted by wet feet and mud-caked legs.
In the vault of the forest, with the bulk of the
mountain intervening, John Hill did not hear the
wild cannonade of the Royal Artillery's gunboats as
they caught the Yankee fleet in the pool below the
falls at Skenesborough and took possession of the
Americans* baggage at the landing place. Above the
beating of his heart and the throbbing in his ears as
48 MARCH TO SARATOGA
he struggled up the mountain, the middle-aged colo-
nel did hear the two great explosions as the American
warships were blown up, one after the other. At these
sounds of distant action, Hill redoubled his efforts to
assault the difficult mountain. His own honor, as well
as that of the regiment, was at stake. With the Royal
Artillery already engaged, Colonel Hill, in effect, was
racing the 20th and the 21st to the expected battle-
ground, in the age-old rivalry, keen as a bayonet, that
is the whetstone of morale.
But the pace up the mountain was slow, and long
before the three regiments had reached the western
summit, the recall gun sounded from the frigates, far
below in the bay. The rebels had gone. The honor of
the action went to the Royal Artillery.
When the 9th marched into Skenesborough at
dusk, they found a sizable frontier town. The falls of
Wood Creek turned a big sawmill. Sheds and ware-
houses lined the shore behind the shipyard, where,
in 1776, General Benedict Arnold had built the fleet
which for a year had held back the British. Three of
Arnold's vessels were now beached and abandoned
below the falls. A large, sprawling, stockaded fort
overlooked the works, and untidy barracks could be
seen by the men of the 9th as they trooped past the
wide-open gate. They passed by a tenant house re-
sembling a dwelling in a Scottish glen; then another,
built in the French Canadian manner. The latter had
a cannon-ball hole alongside the lintel. Across the
water, Major Philip Skene's big stone house could be
glimpsed on the north shore among its shade trees.
A BEGIMENT OF FOOT 49
From the boatloads of baggage being unloaded at its
wharf, and from the activity of staff officers and serv-
ants around the doorway, Colonel Hill judged that
the manor house already had been made army head-
quarters.
The 9th marched through the town, taking the
portage road around the falls to the launching place
on Wood Creek. There the regiment halted, broke
ranks, and made camp.
There were no boats on the foreshore of the stream.
They had all gone south with the sick and wounded
and the women of the rebel army. The healthy had
gone by the road that followed the course of the
creek. Colonel Hill and his adjutant strolled a few
yards up the road in the cool of the late evening, but
turned back where the road entered the woods.
From the 9th*s fortified bivouac, a mile from Fort
Anne, at the entrance to the Hudson Valley, it was
ten miles back to Skenesborough and the comforting
companionship of the 20th and 21st. It was also a
full day's march. All during the hot, humid, shower-
drenched day of 7 July, Colonel Hill's soldiers had
been on the road, working like a corvSe of French
Canadian laborers. Their efforts had cleared a way
through the worst of the delaying damage done to
the road by the retreating Americans, so that now, as
they settled down for the night, they felt secure in
the knowledge that the way behind them was open
for reinforcements in men and packhorse guns,
should the rebels attack in the morning.
5O MARCH TO SARATOGA
The first Yankee to appear on the morning of 8
July was a bedraggled deserter, who came sneaking
in at sun-up, protesting his loyalty to King George.
The man had restless eyes that looked everywhere
and saw everything. Colonel Hill interviewed him
and from the man's obsequious outpourings and
loud volunteering to 'list for a King's soldier culled
the information that at Fort Anne, Colonel Long's
New Hampshire Continentals had been reinforced
by Colonel Van Rensselaer's militia, bringing the gar-
rison up to a thousand men.
With his own troops numbering a scant two hun-
dred (the movement up the Fort Anne road was a
reconnaissance in force by half of a regiment, not a
general advance), Colonel Hill passed the order to
his officers to hold where they stood. To advance his
small force against a reinforced enemy fort would be
foolhardy; to retreat back down the road would be
to invite ambush and attack on an extended column
in thick woods. In their present position, Hill esti-
mated that the 9th could hold until General Burgoyne
sent reinforcements to mount an attack or to extricate
the regiment. All this was put into a situation report,
and sent by messenger to Skenesborough.
When next the colonel had time to notice him, the
Yankee deserter was nowhere to be found. Half an
hour later the Americans attacked.
In front of Hill's field works, where the dense
underbrush thinned out to give a distant view of Fort
Anne on its eminence, the British picquets watched
the Americans form up. Groups of carelessly dressed
A REGIMENT OF FOOT 51
men emerged from behind the fort, drew together for
a moment to cross over a foot-bridge, and then, with
much shouting back and forth, spread out on both
sides of the road leading to the British position. When
once shaken out and away from his neighbor, the in-
dividual American appeared to grow calm with pur-
pose, as the men formed quickly into rough lines.
The military groups of platoons and companies
seemed to have dissolved, and the British saw ad-
vancing toward them many single figures, each one
picking his own way around, or over, or through, the
brush and stumps of the partially cleared ground.
The Yankees carried their muskets carelessly at the
trail, or easily, high across the chest, or jauntily
sloped over their shoulders. None of the muskets had
bayonets. Like the spy of the early morning, the men
had restless, curious eyes; every head in the advanc-
ing line seemed to be constantly turning, looking,
peering, as though expecting to tread on a rattlesnake
at every step. The Americans were silent now, as
they met the fire from the British picquet line. The
volley broke the American line, which retired, drift-
ing back on itself as casually as it had advanced.
A second attack followed quickly on the first, but
this time the officer in command of the picquet ob-
served more obvious and familiar control, as Colonel
Long's Continentals took over the initiative from
Colonel Van Rensselaer's militia. Light blue uniforms
predominated, bayonets caught the glint of the sun,
and back at the bridge two regimental colors were
being shaken out before joining the advancing lines.
52 MARCH TO SARATOGA
Having forced a general deployment of the Yankee
force, the British picquet retired into its own lines.
These consisted of a hastily and ill-prepared screen
of logs and brush on the west side of Wood Creek,
extending a scant two hundred yards from the alders
on the banks of the stream on the left to the foot of a
rocky promontory on the right. Working with camp
axes, knives, and their bare hands, the men of the
9th had succeeded in clearing only a few yards of
brush from their front. It remained a knee-deep
tangle of withering green branches across which the
Yankees must charge into the face of a British volley.
But the British front afforded no ground suitable for
a counter attack with the bayonet. Colonel Hill was
on the defensive.
Quietly, the 9th waited, its men, in rank behind the
barricade, questioning in whispers the men of the
picquet, who already had seen the Yankee soldiers.
The officers, standing calmly and tolerantly behind
their command, sprang to rigid attention as Colonel
Hill came to give each of them a final report and a
word of instruction. Then, as the colonel passed on,
in a little procession with his adjutant and the boy
drummer in a yellow coat, the military tableau
melted back into the natural pose of English gentle-
men oblivious to danger. Under the protecting face
of a rocky ledge, the regimental surgeon waited with
his assistant, Sergeant Robert Lamb, carrying his bag
of instruments, dressings, and medicine. Jane Cromer,
the wife of a soldier, busied herself nearby, clearing
the ground of stones and sticks in order to make a
place for the wounded.
A REGIMENT OF FOOT 53
The surgeon and his assistant were off at the first
crack of enemy musket fire, and heard the British
return volley while bending over their first casualty.
They were still busy with the wounded when the
Americans came on again. Then the two medical men
became separated for a time, as Lamb strove to col-
lect the severely wounded at Jane Cromer's impro-
vised hospital, while the surgeon went off to follow
the fortunes of Lieutenant Richard Westroop's com-
pany in a counter attack.
Temporarily, the whole company was lost to sight
behind the green curtain of underbrush, and only
cries and shouts and the sudden crack of musket fire
marked its progress. At last the troops returned,
elated and triumphant, shoving their prisoners before
them and dragging behind them the battle flags of
Long's Continentals. Lieutenant Westroop failed to
return with his company; a corporal reported having
seen him fall, and on turning over the body, had
found the lieutenant shot through the heart. The
company clamored to return for their officer, but a
seventeen-year-old subaltern steadied the men down
and got them back to their posts, to receive the next
Yankee attack.
The captured flags were sent to Colonel Hill, who
was found on the bank of Wood Creek, anxiously
..listening, and watching the woods on the other side
of the stream. Above the undulation of sound that
washed up and down his battle line in a roar of surf-
like volleys, and the individual American rifle fire
that crackled like a wave receding over the shingle
at Brighton, Hill had. detected the sound of men
54 MARCH TO SARATOGA
calling to each other across the flat calm of Wood
Creek. He listened for confirmation of the fact that
the Yankees were turning his left flank and, by re-
crossing the stream, gaining the rear of his position.
The colonel saw the muzzle flash, felt the passage of
the ball, and heard the shocked exclamation of his
adjutant as the shot struck home. The Americans
were across Wood Creek, and the position of the
British was untenable.
Leaving his adjutant with a wounded shoulder,
Colonel Hill dashed off to organize a general with-
drawal from the left, to a new position on the steep
hill to the rear and right of the 9th.
Captain William Montgomery's company, holding
the British left, were on a front which was temporar-
ily quiet. Squad by squad, the regulars turned from
the barricade and jogged off toward the mountain.
Captain Montgomery himself lay flat on his back,
trying, by cramming a handkerchief into his mouth,
to hold back to a groan the scream in his throat.
Seated hard on the captain's abdomen was Sergeant
Lamb, pressing with strong thumbs on the big artery
in the groin, which already had pumped a stream of
red blood over Montgomery's white buckskin
breeches. The regimental surgeon was working
quickly in the wound to find and tie off the severed
end of the artery.
A hundred yards away, Colonel Van Rensselaer, of
the great colonial family of the Hudson Elver, was
also down in the brush, suffering from a shattered
bone in the leg. For the moment, however, he felt
A REGIMENT OF FOOT 55
little pain, and his heavy Dutch voice could be heard
clearly through the woods, interpreting as retreat the
silence in the British lines, and urging his New York
militia to attack . . . attack . . . attack!
The surgeon had located the end of the artery,
worked a loop of the ligature over it, and had drawn
the knot tight. Captain Montgomery had fainted.
Sergeant Lamb's work with the captain was done.
He and the surgeon hurriedly consulted together, and
as the first Yankee stepped cautiously out through the
underbrush, Lamb rose to his feet and ran for the
mountain. The surgeon was still at work on the
operation in hand, when both he and his patient were
taken prisoner.
British and Americans alike were now short of am-
munition. Already the battle had continued for three
long hours. To the north, toward Skenesborough,
black clouds roiled above the mountains, and there
was a distant rumble of thunder. Against this ominous
continue, the sharp sound of a rifle came like the
snap of a broken fiddle-string in the heavy, still air
that muted the hill and the opposed bands of soldiers.
Somewhere, distantly and vaguely, between the
f ar-off rumble and the nearby quiet, the sound of yet
another instrument was introduced. It was the long,
continuing yell of an Indian war whoop, repeated and
repeated, again and again. With it came a slowly ris-
ing elation among the British, pinned to their hill-
top, while below them the Yankees, on hearing the
eerie sound, picked up their powder horns and shot
bags and slipped away. The Americans were all too
56 MARCH TO SARATOGA
familiar with the war whoop of the savages, which
turned their thoughts to their women and children,
alone in isolated cabins on scattered farms.
Colonel Hill was standing in the middle of the
Skenesborough road when a single British officer, his
uniform coat over his arm, came striding around a
bend in the road. The newcomer stopped short. Then
he threw back his head, gave a "Whoop! Whoop!
Whoop!," and with a grin, bowed to the colonel.
There were no other "Indians." On hearing the sound
of gunfire, those who had started out with the British
had refused to go any further, so the officer had come
on alone, whooping as he came, to inform the 9th that
General Phillips was coming up presently with two
guns and two regiments; the rain had delayed them.
By nightfall the battleground was all but deserted.
Phillips had arrived with his relief force to escort
the battered and Yankee-wise 9th back to Skenes-
borough. The Americans had gone from Fort Anne
all five hundred of them. The deserter/spy had re-
ported at exactly double the Yankee strength at the
fort. General Philip Schuyler had ordered Colonel
Long to hold at Fort Anne until the brass ordnance
could be removed from the fort at the southern end
of Lake George. Long's battle on 8 July had gained
for Schuyler the time he needed.
Fort Anne itself had been burned. Sergeant Lamb
could see the smoke still rising above the trees, as he
and Jane Cromer tried to make their wounded
charges comfortable before night. A deserted hut
A REGIMENT OF FOOT 57
had been discovered on the western slope of the hill,
and it was there that the twenty-three British
wounded had been carried. Through all the follow-
ing week, alone in the woods, Sergeant Lamb cared
for his comrades with all the rude skill at his com-
mand, while Jane Cromer attended to their needs as
iest she could.
5
Major Skene' s Great Stone House
Philip Skene left the Royal George in South Bay and
went immediately to his manor house, so that, as
laird of Skenesborough, he might be on the threshold
to welcome the man who had restored his property
to him General John Burgoyne.
Skene had not been in residence in May 1775
when the Whig rabble had seized his house and
property and taken prisoner his son and two daugh-
ters. Since that topsy-turvy day, Philip Skene him-
self had been jailed as a Tory, but had contrived his
own release and the exchange of his son. In an act
of chivalry curiously at odds with its usual behavior,
the mob later had returned his daughters to him.
Soon afterward, he had gone to London, where, using
the same influence that in the 1760*8 had secured for
him the large key grants of land at the Lake Cham-
plain-Hudson River gateway, he had made his voice
heard in the council shaping the scheme that was to
send Burgoyne through those same grants. Major
Skene had come out to Canada as political adviser to
the expedition. His duty it was to advise the general
58
MAJOR SKENES GREAT STONE HOUSE 59
on local affairs, and to screen and organize the coun-
try people who, according to the major's firm Tory
conviction, would welcome the British soldiers as
liberators from the Whig oppression. His canny
Scotch hope was for a new colony between New
York and Canada, with himself as governor and his
own manor house at the head of Lake Champlain as
its capitol.
Two years of occupation by rebel soldiery had left
the house in no fit condition to receive an illustrious
guest, but the general's own furniture would make it
adequate, even luxurious, as headquarters for the
British officers. The last case of the general's wine
had been carried into the springhouse and the cook-
fires had been lighted in the summer kitchen when
Skene was advised of the approach of the general's
barge. The polished craft, its eight painted oarblades
dipping rhythmically into the water, headed for the
manor house dock, where Burgoyne's host waited to
welcome him. On the other side of the pool, Captain
John Carter, whose gunboats had recaptured Skenes-
borough, ordered a gun salute which brought soldiers
in their shirtsleeves running to the water's edge to
cheer for "Gentleman Johnny."
Between the rising of the sun and its setting on that
6th day of July 1777, General John Burgoyne had
entered in triumph Fort Ticonderoga and Skenesbor-
ough, two of those places which, on a map spread out
on a London dining-table, had seemed so very distant
and so very formidable. Burgoyne's generals, Fraser
and Riedesel, were in close pursuit of a fleeing rebel
60 MAKCH TO SARATOGA
army. On the morrow he would send a force down
the Hudson, to chivvy along the rebel rear guard,
which appeared to have abandoned at Skenesborough
all the baggage of the American army. Tonight he
would dine as the guest of his political adviser, and
would break out a few bottles of his best champagne,
already set in the spring water to cool.
In forcing the fortress of Ticonderoga without a
siege, Burgoyne was in the position of a man who
puts his shoulder to a door he expects to find locked
and barred. Instead of entering the room, he bursts
into it, and through it. It was thus that the general
now found himself at Skenesborough, twenty miles
down a road that he had not intended to follow, with
his army asprawl over a hundred square miles of the
countryside.
While still in England, Burgoyne had seriously
considered marching to the Hudson and Fort Edward
by way of Skenesborough and Fort Anne. Finally,
however, he had decided to take the water route over
the lake, despite the prospect of another siege to
capture the fort at Lake George's southern end. The
Skenesborough-Fort Edward road was only a wagon
track at best, while the portage roads at both ends of
Lake George were well-built highways that had
sustained the travel of many armies for twenty years.
Comfortably ensconced in Major Skene's big house,
General Burgoyne was loath to return to the fort in
the road at Ticonderoga. In the drill with the bayonet
a successful lunge is never followed by a return to
the "on guard** position; instead, the point of the
MAJOH SKENE'S GBEAT STONE HOUSE 61
bayonet continues to be presented, and the advantage
is pressed by short jabs. So, off balance after his wild
thrust through an empty fort at Ticonderoga, Bur-
goyne decided to alter his plans. After regrouping his
battalions at the Skenesborough point, he would jab
through to Fort Edward. At Ticonderoga, the stock-
piling of materiel and transport, which had been
scheduled to run concurrently with the siege, must
be completed as quickly as possible in order to give
weight and strength to the lunge down the Hudson
River to Albany.
On 8 July, in the first move to concentrate the
brigades at Skenesborough, General Riedesel brought
his Germans from the eastern slopes, via the Castle-
ton road. Marching warily along the same forest road
on the following day, General Fraser reunited his
Hubbardton force with the rest of his advance corps
in a camp above the falls at Skene's sawmill. After
extricating Colonel Hill from his victorious dilemma
at Fort Anne, Phillips set the defenses at Skenes-
borough before giving his full attention to the re-
organization of the artillery establishment.
Of the one hundred and twenty-eight cannon, only
sixty-six could, or would, be maintained by the army
after Lake Champlain and the fleet of naval vessels
had been left behind. Thirty-eight guns would march
in the field train; it was a heavy proportion, but
Phillips was a "gunner." A siege train of twenty-eight
pieces would go with the baggage evidence of the
respect in which, since Bunker Hill, Burgoyne held
the Americans as builders of field fortifications.
Beyond Ticonderoga, where the attenuated siege
62 MAKCH TO SABATOGA
train and the heavy baggage of the army would take
the Lake George route, thereby establishing the main
supply line, an adequate supply of horses became the
key to the success of the whole expedition. Horses
were needed, with their drivers and their carts, to
haul the boats over the portage road to Lake George;
later, they would be needed for a like purpose, to
carry yet more boats from Lake George to the Hud-
son. A herd of horses had been driven from Canada
down the west shore of Lake Champlain, and had
reached Ticonderoga. But there were never enough
of the beasts, and army orders had been promulgated,
exhorting, threatening, and expropriating an addi-
tional supply. The Indians were offered inducements
to bring in any horses they might find in the woods,
and Mr. Hoakesly, the wagonmaster general, was
constantly on the alert to conserve the strength and
numbers of his overworked animals.
While his subordinates carried out the tactical
preparations which must be made before his army
could advance in either a jab or a lunge, Burgoyne
moved Riedesel and his whole division to Castleton,
twelve miles east of Skenesborough. This move was
intended to be interpreted by rebel spies as the be-
ginning of a general invasion of New England by way
of the Connecticut River. With such a threat at their
backs, the New Englanders would hesitate to send
troops into New York to bolster the defenses of the
Hudson River line.
Six mean small huts comprised the village of
MAJOR SKENE'S GBEAT STONE HOUSE 63
Castleton. The baron, well acquainted with the
soldier psychology, did not consider it a good pkce
for his Brunswickers and Hanauers. Far better for
the German troops to be in the crowded lakeside
town, even if it meant an occasional fight in the grog-
shops with their British allies. The idleness the men
would find at Castleton, deep in the terrible, un-
familiar wilderness, might well bring on the lassitude
and homesickness that could shatter the brittle Ger-
man discipline, based as it was on fear.
Through the passes of the Green Mountains,
threatened and guarded by Riedesel, lay the town
of Rockingham, surrounded by the fertile country of
the Connecticut. There, so the general's intelligence
sources informed him, many horses could be found, as
well as stores and wagons for the taking. With this in
view, Riedesel proposed to Burgoyne a foraging ex-
pedition for his idle Germans one which would
emphasize the strategic threat to New England, serve
to harass the lurking forces of "Von Werner," as the
baron called Warner, the Yankee colonel of Hubbard-
ton, and, last but not least, produce mounts for the
Brunswick dragoons. With horses, Prinz Ludwig's
Regiment of Dragoons, Colonel Frederick Baum com-
manding, could be made to serve a useful purpose
instead of being the butt of the army's jokes, as they
waddled about in their great boots, dragging their
sabers behind them. But even this appeal by a former
Black Hussar to the colonel of the finest light dragoon
regiment in the British army, brought no action.
Burgoyne was sympathetic but too preoccupied
64 MARCH TO SARATOGA.
with tactical problems for the move south to give any
consideration to Riedesel's plan for an eastern di-
version. Graciously, he sent some bottles of Rhine
wine to his division commander, with the suggestion
that the baroness be sent for, to share in the wine and
in the progress of the expedition to Albany.
The other ladies of the army were also invited to
join their husbands: Mrs. Major Harnage and Mrs.
Lieutenant Reynolds, and, of course, Burgoyne's re-
sponsive friend, the wife of an ambitious and acquies-
cent commissary. Even as the gentlemen waited,
Lady Harriet Acland, without benefit of order or in-
vitation, was coming by fast canoe to nurse the fever
brought on by the deep wound in her husband's
thigh.
Major Acland's grenadiers had made a litter, on
which they had carried him all the difficult way from
Hubbardton to Skenesborough. He fared better than
those wounded with him on the hill at Hubbardton,
who had to wait in brush shelters for doctors to come
to them from Ticonderoga, and then for horse trans-
port to carry them back to the hospital at the fort.
No one came for the wounded in the derelict hut
near Fort Anne. It was a week before Sergeant Lamb
and Jane Cromer felt that those of their patients who
had survived were well enough to undertake the
journey to Skenesborough. The men straggled
through the woods, limping, staggering, supporting
each other, suffering as much from cabin fever as
from the throbbing pain of their wounds.
No one had come near them since the battle except
MAJOR SKENE'S GBEAT STONE HOUSE 65
for a single wounded Yankee, who had lost his way
and stumbled in on the British quite by accident. He
had gone away again, grateful for the care he had
received and keeping the secret of the sick camp in
the woods. But the Americans were never far away.
All day long, and late into the summer evenings,
Lamb and his wounded had heard them on the road,
their presence betrayed by the sound of their tools
axes and saws and picks. At intervals, the soldiers
of the 9th heard the warning shout that preceded
the crashing down across the road of a great hemlock
tree, or the prying loose of a boulder on the moun-
tain, which rolled thunderingly down to Wood Creek.
As one after another, the days of pain and anxiety fol-
lowing the long, hot nights, during which many of the
wounded died, the sounds of demolition receded
southward past the charred ruins of Fort Anne. When
at last Sergeant Lamb broke camp, the distant chunk-
ing of the axes was a sensation rather than a sound,
like an echo, confusing reality with memory.
General Philip Schuyler was fighting General Bur-
goyne with what he had. His plea for reinforcements
had gone unanswered. Schuyler had left the men of
the Mohawk Valley to meet Barry St. Leger's threat
from the west, while he hurried north to give comfort,
if he could not give aid, to St. Clair. Schuyler's troops
were too few to alter St. Glair's decision to give up
Fort Ticonderoga, and they were too late to join in
the rout. Coming up to Fort Edward with Burgoyne
only twenty-three miles away, Schuyler's northern
army stood, seven hundred Continentals and twice
66 MARCH TO SARATOGA
that number of militia. Long and Van Rensseker had
held off the first British foray, while the valuable
guns were being removed from the fort on Lake
George.
Still hoping for, and expecting, reinforcements
from Congress, Schuyler now set his woods-wise
militia to the task of delaying the British. Up the
wagon track they marched in work gangs, their tools
on their shoulders. They approached as near to
Skenesborough as they dared. Then, as they fell
slowly back, they obliterated the road behind them
in a mass of flooded causeways and broken bridges.
Sergeant Lamb heard the Americans at their work;
General Burgoyne appeared to give them no heed.
In the cool of the stone manor, Burgoyne was hew-
ing at his own tall tree behind the American lines,
his tools the pen, the jingling purse, and the four men
who came furtively into the candle-lit room and were
gone before sunrise. Schuyler was under attack by
the New England faction of the Continental Con-
gress and its army. In an attempt to bring down the
mighty Schuyler, Burgoyne was presumed to be in
contact with the New York general, whom he and
Skene hoped to bring back to loyalty in a thundering
crash that would shiver the lesser men of America.
As an Englishman, Burgoyne could not understand
the native loyalty of the Schuylers; nor could Skene,
the transplanted laird, credit it. Schuyler contin-
ued the correspondence (before witnesses) in order
to buy time, heedless of the whispering storm around
him. It was a pretty story that he and St. Clair had
MA JOB SKENTE'S GREAT STONE HOUSE 67
sold Ticonderoga for silver bullets, fired into the fort
by Burgoyne's marksmen! Many loyalties wavered,
but never that of Philip Schuyler.
Almost four weeks had passed since General Bur-
goyne had issued his bombastic proclamation, calling
the Americans back to loyalty to the Crown. A
Yankee burlesque of that proclamation was brought
to the British general at Skenesborough, and he could
read it with genuine amusement six hundred Amer-
ican men came with it. They were quickly absorbed
into the man-hungry Tory regiments, led by such
men as the Jessup brothers, John Peters, Daniel Mc-
Alpin, Francis Pfister, and Colonel Houston of Sara-
toga. Some, with experience as watermen and fa-
miliar with the rivers and their crafts, joined Hugh
Monro's company of bateaumen. Most of the six hun-
dred came without weapons; none had military train-
ing in the British army sense. Their usefulness to
Burgoyne lay in their homely civilian skill as axemen,
to clear the trees from the road to Fort Edward, and,
as pioneers, to rebuild the bridges and drain the
swamps.
With a patrol of rangers and engineers, Lieutenant
Twiss made a survey of the demolitions, measuring
the streams, counting the bridges and culverts to be
rebuilt, and staking out long stretches where it would
be necessary to build corduroy causeways. Writing
on his knee, the engineer officer then made an esti-
mate of the time, in man hours, required to repair
the damage. His report on the twenty-three miles of
road to Fort Edward was a formidable one, but not
68 MABCH TO SARATOGA
discouraging. Burgoyne made his final decision. All
thought of retracing his way over the eighty miles
of road to Ticonderoga, to travel the waterway up
Lake George, could be abandoned.
The army began its march to the Hudson on 24
July. As usual, Fraser's advance corps led, if indeed it
could be called leading. More often than not, the
men stood at ease, slapping mosquitoes, while a gang
of loyalists finished a log bridge with a roadbed of
earth still wet from the marsh out of which it had
hastily been shoveled. The soldiers cursed the "colo-
nials" for the mud that slopped onto their spatter-
dashes, and grumbled (like all soldiers) when called
upon to aid "civilians" in levering a big butt log to
the side of the road. Behind the advance corps and
the laborers, as far away as Castieton, the rest of the
army filed along the road, suffering the long, incom-
prehensible delays, then shuffling on to the next
discouraging halt, a hundred yards, a quarter of a
mile, further on the road to Fort Edward.
Well mounted and debonair, Burgoyne and his
staff made the one bright spot in the long crawling
column. Young officers took hold of their men again
when they saw the colorful group beside the road,
and a spring returned to the step of the soldiers.
On the second night of the march, Burgoyne made
his headquarters at burned-out Fort Anne. The gen-
eral's own wagons had come up; a Brunswick dragoon
with saber drawn walked "sentry go" at the open
flaps of the commanding officer's sleeping tent; din-
ner, served under a great oak tree on china, glass,
MAJOR SKENE'S GEEAT STONE HOUSE 69
and silver from Burgoyne's own mess chest, had been
good. The road from Skenesborough was open to the
brigade guns, and the first o the Germans would be
coming up in the morning.
Riedesel had sent a happy but hasty message to his
baroness, telling her to come with the three little girls
by boat across Lake George. He then gave his com-
plete and absorbed attention to the anxious work of
getting his close-ranked Germans forward, fed, and
ready to fight.
The British column was unmolested, as Schuyler's
Americans fell away before it. Captain Fraser's
marksmen, and the Canadians and provincial rangers
scouting forward to the bluffs above Fort Edward
and the high ground overlooking the portage road to
Lake George, glimpsed the rear guard patrols of the
Continentals, following the flow of the Hudson away
from the flood of Burgoyne's army, cutting a new
channel southward through the forest.
The army was at mess on the evening of the 26th,
when a band of Indians came into the camp, holding
high on frames two raw scalps. One of these, they
insisted, was that of a Yankee officer. The arrival of
the savages interrupted Lieutenant William Digby,
Grenadier Company, 53rd Foot, who was setting
down in his journal the events of the day. David
Jones, officer of Burgoyne's Loyalist troops, and a
long year's journey from the home and the fiancee he
had left behind in the village at Fort Edward, saw
the scalps paraded to the general's tent. Jones sat up
late that night, his back against a hickory tree, scrap-
7O MARCH TO SARATOGA
ing down a new ramrod until it was far too slender
for use. In the woods nearby, the Indians danced out
their victory song.
These were the new Indians Menominees, Win-
nebagoes Chippewas, Sacs and Foxes and wild Sioux
fine tall men from the westernmost of the big lakes,
and from the great plains beyond, St. Luc had sum-
moned them, and their friend Langlade had brought
them east to the White King's war. Charles de Lan-
glade was a half-breed trader, who, in 1755, as a
French cadet, had stood in the mile-long gantlet line
through which General Braddock had led his two
British regiments during the march toward Pitts-
burgh. At the Skenesborough Indian Conference, at
which the western warriors were welcomed to Bur-
goyne's army and the rules of selective scalping were
explained to them, Langlade had stood beside St.
Luc. Afterward, he had affably translated from Sioux
to Chippawa to French, as the British officers bought
trinkets and toys from their new allies things to
be shown, in days to come, to curious guests in Eng-
lish drawing-rooms, in quiet London squares.
It had been easy to think of Burgoyne's Indian
Conference as an entertaining masque on the lawn
of Major Skene's stone manor house, where gentle
savages were but costumed soldiers of the King. The
next day, after sleeping off the effects of the dancing
and the liquor that followed the conference, the In-
dians had gone away. Now, the two dripping scalps
nailed to the tree at Fort Anne served to remind the
British that their savage allies were not far away.
6
The Iroquois Wolf
At the end of the French and Indian War, the coun-
try to the north of Albany enjoyed fifteen years of
peaceful penetration before the American Revolution
turned it once again into a warpath of nations. Many
settlers came to the region, spreading out boldly all
through the valley of the Upper Hudson. Some found
a livelihood along the main stream, others sought out
tributary rivers to turn the millwheels for grinding
the grist, brought to the mills by other settlers from
their outlying farms.
Major Philip Skene, retired from the British army
after the fall of French Canada, built his great stone
manor house at a strategic pass through the moun-
tains a first step toward the realization of a shrewd
Scot's dream of baronial splendor. Other pioneers
were of less pretense. Even Philip Schuyler's farm at
the confluence of Fish Creek and the Hudson River,
with its mansion of sawed boards was, after all, only
a farm.
Towns sprang up, among the first being that at the
great transhipping place, Fort Edward. It was there
72 MARCH TO SARATOGA
that the prosperous widow, Mrs. Sarah Fraser Camp-
bell McNeil, made her home. As a Fraser of the
Frasers of Lovat, Mrs. NcNeil could look with con-
descension upon "pretty Lady Kitty" Duer, daughter
of a Scottish earl and wife of the English Captain
William Duer, who had served on the staff of Lord
Clive of India and who was now the respected justice
of the area.
During the fifteen years of peace, other towns grew
up around the mills on which the farm tracks con-
verged. The millers, the gun-makers, the smiths, the
tanners these worthies built their houses along new
streets and in shaded squares where stood the neat
white village church. At crossroads, innkeepers hung
out their signs, to cater to the hunger and thirst and
the fatigue of travelers in the valley, or of those who
had occasion to go as far away as Manchester or
Bennington, in Vermont, or even further, through the
Green Mountains to the towns along the Connecticut
River.
The outbreak of the revolution in 1775 startled the
communities of the upper Hudson but did not shat-
ter them. In general, their loyalty was to the new
state of New York.
Tory Dr. James Smythe fled to Canada, whereupon
Whig Ezekiel Baldwin took over the doctor's red
house and opened it as a tavern where politicians of
"the right party" could talk.
When, in 1776, young David Jones recruited a
company of militia to help General Gates and Gen-
eral Arnold defend Fort Ticonderoga against the
THE IROQUOIS WOLF 73
British generals Carleton and Burgoyne, he was
hailed and wished godspeed by the patriots gathered
on the lawn outside the tavern to see him march
away. But they cursed David Jones when the news
came that he had marched his men around "Old Ti"
and straight into the British camp, where the whole
company enlisted for the King.
Actually, the people in the valley were neutral.
Their hearts were in their farms, their anxieties were
for their families, and their yearning was for the war
to pass them by. Such a community was the town of
Argyle, in Charlotte County, on the Moses Kill, six
miles east of the Hudson River.
Duncan McArthur had his farm close by Lake
Cossayuna, three or four miles north and east of the
village settlement. He had worked hard since coming
to Argyle, and had prospered. In spite of the war, he
had built a new log house for his wife and growing
family. The house measured twenty by twenty-four
feet, and was situated so as to give a pleasant view
of the lake a much more attractive location than
that of the old cabin, which was down in the hollow
by the brook, at the edge of the first hard acre he
had cleared. Between the cabins was a barn, to which
was attached a split-rail paddock.
On the morning of 25 July 1777, Farmer McArthux
had made arrangements to break the colt that he
had raised from a foal. Two of his neighbors had
come to help him, bringing their wives and families
with them and planning to make a day of it. The
men and boys gathered at the corral, studying the
74 MAKCH TO SABATOGA
suspicious young animal, while the women and girls
busied themselves in moving the family's possessions
from the old cabin to the new one. From the edge of
the woods at the north end of the high pasture, still
uncleared of stumps, the McArthur farm appeared
to be a community of three families. And so it seemed
to Tommo, called "Le Loup," as he watched from the
clearing.
Le Loup was a half-breed French Iroquois, who,
under the old French Canadian government, had
held the rank, or appointment, of interpreter. Unlike
Langlade, under English rule he had gone completely
Indian, with all the vengeance of an outcast making
him a savage among savages. He was the war chief,
or "captain/* of the Christian Iroquois of the St.
Lawrence, which, together with his fluency in his
father's tongue, had given him the right to reply for
his Nation to Burgoyne's oration at the conference
on the Bouquet River.
With a war party of nine Iroquois, Le Loup had
left Skenesborough the day after the western tribes
had been welcomed by the British. He was bent on
loot. Up to the morning of 25 July, the party had
been without success, though or perhaps because
the Indians had followed the injunctions and re-
strictions set on them by Burgoyne. They had taken
one prisoner, a poor specimen, but a man capable of
being used to carry burdens until a horse could be
found, after which he might or might not be
scalped. Near Fort Edward, Le Loup had had a
brush with an American scouting party, and one of
THE IROQUOIS WOLF 75
his warriors had been killed. That night, at his fireless
camp, he had sworn revenge upon the first farm to lie
in their path. Next morning, the direction of the war
party had been to the east and south toward the new
settlements of the BattenMlL
The first farm to come in sight was that of Duncan
McArthur. From his hiding place, Le Loup counted
again: three roofs, three families. Too large a settle-
ment for the nine Iroquois to attack with assurance
of easy success. In the distance, two miles to the
northwest, Le Loup saw a faint haze of smoke above
the trees, indicating another farm, another clearing,
another family. He dropped back from his lookout,
picked up his warriors and the prisoner, and headed
north and west for the Allen place.
George Kilmore, the miller at South Argyle, had
promised his son-in-law, John Allen, the loan of two
of his Negro slaves to help with harvesting the wheat
crop, and had sent them off at sun-up on Friday, 25
July. With them had gone Kilmore's youngest daugh-
ter, with a Negro girl to look after the three Allen
children while the two sisters visited together. The
party was expected to return home that same eve-
ning. When, on Sunday, they had not come back,
George Kilmore was somewhat annoyed, and dis-
patched another of his slaves on horseback to fetch
them home at once.
From the other side of the village, it was no more
than half a mile to the Allen farm. Soon the Negro
returned at a gallop, his yells of "Indians!" rising
above the beat of pounding hooves, as he tore
76 MARCH TO SARATOGA
through the Sunday quiet of the shady street. Still
carrying in his hand the Bible he was reading, the
miller hurried to the door. He knew the message his
man was bringing to him: his family and his slaves
were dead.
The burial party, setting out at once, quickly re-
constructed the raid. The men had come in from the
fields, and all had gathered at the table for the noon
meal. The two older children had been put to bed in
the corner of the one-room cabin; the baby had been
in the high-chair. One of the Negroes had fought
hard at the front door, in a desperate effort to give
the others a chance to escape through the door at
the back of the cabin. The burial party knew this
because of the special mutilation of the body, by
which the Indians acknowledged a brave foe. His
neighbors spared Kilmore other details, telling him
only that the nine dead had been given decent burial.
Scouts had gone at once to the McArthur place
and to the other outlying farms, afraid of what they
would find. Everywhere, it was a quiet day of well-
earned rest, which the scouts* arrival soon turned into
the panic of preparation for immediate flight. By mid-
afternoon, the roads were full of the refugees, who,
as they met and talked together, recalled General
Burgoyne's bombast about "giving stretch*' to his
Indians. The old men, Scots who remembered '45,
found the massacre of the Allen family easy to com-
prehend, and likened Gentleman Johnny to Butcher
Cumberland and all the red-coated Sassenach ilk.
By nightfall, no one in all the Batten Kill was neutral.
THE DROQUOIS WOLF 77
On the Sunday that the settlers of Argyle took
flight and took sides Captain Tommo, Le Loup,
was back in the camp of Burgoyne's army. He had
had his revenge at the Allen farm, which he had
looted after the massacre, and had passed on, his
blood lust sated for that day. In the woods he met the
eight-year-old Alexander boy, who stood and gaped
at the war party as it passed him on its way to Fort
Edward. The fort was still in American hands, so Le
Loup went around it to pick up the Fort Anne road,
down which the road repair gang was working its
way under the protection of Fraser's corps, which
had been joined by St. Luc.
Under imminent threat of engulfment, Fort Ed-
ward was already a barren, gloomy place. It had
never been of great value as a fort, dominated as it
was by higher ground, and it had been allowed to go
to ruin. Schuyler had abandoned the place on 12
July, when St. Glair came up to him with the regi-
ments from Ticonderoga, and had fallen back on the
Moses Kill, six miles south on the east bank of the
Hudson. There he concentrated his 2,2,00 Continen-
tals, who were soon reinforced by Nixon's brigade of
600 Continentals and two good major generals, Ben-
jamin Lincoln and Benedict Arnold. Schuyler had left
his Albany County militia as a rear guard at Fort
Edward, with orders to receive the refugees, keep
contact with the enemy, and retreat only at the last
moment.
By Sunday, 2,7 July, those of the militia who had
not already deserted were restless to be off. The few
78 MARCH TO SARATOGA
patrols they sent out soon made contact with the
enemy. When they fired on a British scout, or drew
fire from them, it was within sound of the fort. From
the pine bluffs, when the wind was out of the north,
the Yankees could hear the chunk of axes, clearing
away the trees that they themselves had felled. All
of the refugees had moved south, and the village was
uninhabited.
Only the Widow McNeil stayed behind in her
house a quarter of a mile north of the fort, on the
road by which her kinsman, General Simon Fraser,
would soon be coming. During these last days the
American patrol avoided the McNeil house, in spite
of the fact the widow's pretty granddaughter lived
there. The captain who had been sent to evacuate
the household had been driven away by the enor-
mously fat Scotswoman, whose voice in anger could
scald a hog. She could save her greetings and her
scolding for her high-and-mighty cousin!
The advance corps was not far away, and was
drawing nearer. Lieutenant David Jones of the Loyal-
ist Volunteers, while carrying out his duties with
Fraser's staff, had prepared the way for his own
homecoming to Fort Edward. On 11 July, before
Langlade brought in the western savages, Jones had
sent a British agent with a letter to Jane McCrea, his
fiancee. His spirits had been high: he told her that
he had come safely through the Battle of Hubbard-
ton, that he was on his way to her, and that, if her
brother was evacuating to Albany, she was to go to
Mrs. McNeil's house and wait for him there. Later,
THE JKOQUOIS WOUF 79
when Burgoyne's Indians had taken the warpath
even before he had seen the first scalps brought in
the young lieutenant had devised a safer plan for the
reunion with his fiancee. He contrived her "capture"
by Indians whom he knew to be trustworthy. As an
escort for the young girl, Jones chose Duluth, a war-
rior from one of the western nations, which, uncor-
rupted by close contact with Europeans, were re-
garded as braver and more humane.
When she received the letter of 11 July, Jane was
placed in a dilemma which she met with all the direct
cunning of an eighteen-year-old girl very much in
love with a man whom she had not seen in a year,
who suddenly had called to her with a faith which
she herself shared. She left the house of her brother,
with whom she had lived for the past seven years,
and went to "visit" her friend Polly Hunter, Mrs. Mc-
Neil's granddaughter. If the girl was determined to
stay behind, she could not be in safer hands than
those of the formidable widow, and under the banner
of the Clan Fraser.
Jane's subterfuge did not end with her brother.
When Duluth, bearing Lieutenant Jones's message,
came to her at the McNeil house on Saturday, 26
July, she arranged to meet the Indian at noon the
following day, at an abandoned cabin not far distant.
Neither Sarah McNeil nor Polly knew of the young
girl's plan.
As it was Sunday, no particular notice was taken
of the fact that Jane was wearing her best dress.
Without drawing attention to herself, she left the
80 MABCH TO SARATOGA
McNeil yard, crossed the road, and started to climb
the hill beyond which Duluth waited at the aban-
doned cabin. She did not know that she was follow-
ing close behind a small American scouting party, led
by Lieutenant Van Vechten. Neither she nor the
Americans knew that, beneath the big pine trees at
the crest of the sandy hill, Le Loup, fresh from the
massacre of the Allen family, lay in ambush. As the
Yankee column bent over the top of the hill, Le
Loup and his Indians opened fire. The lieutenant was
killed at once. His men turned and fled down the hill.
Jane McCrea heard the musket fire, so close at hand;
she heard, too, the screeching war whoop of the
Iroquois as they took up the chase. She ran. At the
road, she turned out of the ruck of running soldiers
and made for the safety of the McNeil house.
The Widow McNeil, too, had heard the firing from
the ambush, and was in search of Jane. As the girl
came in, breathless, she was bustled down into the
cellar, where with Mrs. McNeil and Polly she waited.
The Indians, outdistanced by the scared Ameri-
cans, returned to follow the girl whom they had seen
turn away through the trees, running like a startled
doe. Carefully circling the McNeil house, the war
party closed in. With a rush, Le Loup burst in the
door. The terrified women in the cellar could hear his
footsteps on the floor above them. In the middle of
the room he stopped and looked around for the trap-
door leading to the celkr. Then he took two steps
and lifted the door wide. The two young girls
screamed as the redoubtable widow rose to confront
THE IROQUOIS WOLF 8l
the sweating, painted savage poised, tomahawk in
hand, at the top of her cellar stairs. With the excite-
ment of a kill only a few moments before, even the
terrible ire of Mrs. McNeil could not quench the
battle fever in Le Loup, With a shove, he propelled
the big woman out of the door, the girls after her.
The eight warriors had gathered in the yard, with
two horses they had taken from the Allen farm, and
with the prisoner who had been with the war party
for so long.
Emotions, which had cooled as it appeared to the
frightened ladies that they were to lose only their
possessions, and would be taken as prisoners to the
British, flared again at the moment of departure.
Jane and Polly had been mounted on one of the
horses, but by no amount of effort could the fat Mrs.
McNeil be gotten up on to the other one. She would
have to walk, and in order that her progress might
not be impeded by her clothing, the Indians ripped
off her dress, leaving her almost naked in her shift,
and furiously voluble in her wrath. Quick to anger,
Le Loup pressed forward, menacing the indignant
woman and heaping threats and abuse upon her in
French, Iroquois, and camp English. Common sense
smothered the Scotswoman's wrath, and she turned,
a billowing white mainsail of pride, to lead the pro-
cession to the British camp and to the tent of her
kinsman, Simon Fraser.
So the war party began its return. At the top of
the hill where Lieutenant Van Vechten had died,
Jane McCrea saw Duluth. He had heard the firing
82 MAKCH TO SARATOGA
and, not finding Jane at the rendezvous, had come
in search of her. As her horse approached, Duluth,
who was talking to Le Loup, reached up to grasp the
bridle. The girl sat quietly as the two Indians talked
together in mounting anger. She was calmly con-
fident in the arrangements that her fiance had made
for her safety. Looking forward over the horse's
ears, she saw Mrs. McNeil's uncompromising back
rounding a bend in the trail. Polly did not look back,
as she, too, disappeared from view. Startled, Jane
had no time to cry out as she was jerked from her
horse and Le Loup's tomahawk crashed through the
side of her head.
A man named Albert Baker witnessed the whole
grisly episode from his hiding spot on a pine bluff.
With his small son he had returned to his abandoned
house to recover some tools that had been left be-
hind. Baker saw Jane McCrea die under Le Loup's
hatchet, and saw the Indian scalp her and strip her
of her clothes. He saw the Iroquois roll the body
down the ravine that lay between the Indians and
the bluff where he was hidden. He saw Jane's body
come to rest against the trunk of a fallen tree, then
saw that it lay against another naked body, as white
as that of the girl. As the Indians hurried off after
the rest of the war party, one remained behind. As
Baker and his little son watched, Duluth slipped
down the steep hill and covered the two bodies de-
cently with leaves. Albert Baker waited until the*
Indian finally had disappeared; then he ran to the
fort, carrying his little boy all of the way.
THE IROQUOIS WOLF 83
The Albany County militia buried Jane McCrea
and Lieutenant Van Vechten at sun-down, on the
line of their retreat from Fort Edward. It had been
a restless week-end in, the valley of the Upper
Hudson. Squalls of anxiety and indecision had torn
at the loyalties and conscience of the people there.
The smoke, which had hung over the Allen farm on
Friday morning and had betrayed it, had gone. The
two scalps, brought into Burgoyne's camp on Satur-
day, had fallen to the ground and had been trampled
under the feet of the marching regiments. On Sun-
day, the wind that soughed through the branches
above the hastily dug graves of the murdered girl
and the young lieutenant, killed in action, was rising
to a gale.
7
The Face of Gentleman Johnny
Wrapped in the general's caped cloak, Mrs. McNeil
let loose a torrent of fury and invective upon her
kinsman, Simon Fraser. There was no need for the
evidence: the frightful lock of long, fair hair, which,
when doubled through the tie of Le Loup's loin-
cloth, brushed his leggings below the knee.
Le Loup's was the guilt for the murder of Jane
McCrea. The Iroquois had struck with the cold,
quick blow of the rattlesnake. But the blame for the
murder of Jane McCrea, and of the Allen family, lay
with Burgoyne, who, by shaking the rattle at the
serpent's tail, had thought to control its fangs.
Accepting the responsibility of high command,
Burgoyne reacted to the crime with title whirlwind
of a general disobeyed, and with the lightning of a
gentleman whose honor has been traduced. He
ordered his Indian commander, St. Luc de la Corne,
to deliver up Le Loup to a court-martial; and he sent
an aide to beat the ranks for a soldier with experience
as a common hangman.
In angrily opening to the Iroquois chief the door of
84
THE FACE OF GENTLEMAN JOHNNY 85
traditional British justice and punishment, Burgoyne
momentarily disregarded his first duty, set down in
the hinge phrase of the soldier's creed: ", , . for the
good of the Service/' That clear-eyed highlander,
Brigadier Fraser, cautioned the general to walk warily
among the Indians lest they all go home, leaving the
advance corps blind in the forest. St. Luc, an arrant
old fox, threatened the rape and pillage of civilian
Canada, should the tribes now go home because of
the hanging of their brother Tommo, called Le Loup.
The shrug which the Chevalier gave to his powerful
shoulders disclaimed any desire to restrain his wild
cubs.
Jane McCrea's murderer was pardoned, and a
third Indian Conference was called for 4 August, a
week hence. It was useless to set an earlier date, as
the war parties were still out. One by one they re-
turned, flaunting their scalps and prisoners as they
approached, sorting the gaudy loot at their campfires
and dancing their boastful dances in anticipation of
further rich lands to plunder. When the warriors
squatted down with their mirrors in their hands to
renew the war paint, St. Luc and Langdale came
among them, admonishing them to put away their
packets of bright colors. The British general wished
to have another conference with his red allies. Fol-
lowing behind the two leaders came the interpreters
who directed the small war parties, and to whom was
given a share in the loot. These men from the outer
edges of civilization pictured the plunder of Albany.
Then, as black eyes flamed in eagerness, adroit words
86 MABCH TO SABATOGA
shattered the image, mocked the military role, and
left the impression upon the warriors' simple minds
that the rape of such rich cities was only for the
lordly English. Consequently, the Indians came to
the conference in a sullen mood, and Burgoyne rose
to speak with the gold braid of his epaulets heavy as
bullion on his shoulders.
The conference was saved only by the savages*
admiration for flowery oratory, and by John Bur-
goyne's ability to supply that commodity in fulsome
torrents. Grunts of approval greeted each well-
phrased point of his persuasive appeal, while from
the leaders and the chiefs came a compromise agree-
ment to remain with the army. Nevertheless, the west-
ern nations set off the next day for their far-off
homes. Langdale went with them, while St. Luc
found occasion to return to his Canadian seigniory.
Of the eastern Indians, many stayed on for a while
as scavengers, their scouts ringing the army just be-
yond the provost lines, where helpless English and
German deserters fell prey to them.
Burgoyne was left with the rattles of the snake still
in his hand. The lidless eyes no longer kept his
watch, the venomous fangs were withdrawn, and
the viper-head had turned away from the enemy.
Burgoyne himself was in danger of the swelling
numbness of the rattlesnake's bite.
Captain Lieutenant Alexander Fraser had "gone
native" in the deceptively casual manner of his breed.
For the duration of the Carleton campaign of 1776,
THE FACE OF GENTLEMAN JOHNNY 8/
he had slipped out of the confining regimental coat
of the 9th Foot, to assume direction of the Indian
scouts attached to his uncle Simon Eraser's advance
corps. His companion in this irregular service was a
kindred spirit, Lieutenant Thomas Scott of the 24th.
Together, the two officers had gone into the deep
woods to find out their secret and to learn their ways
and make them their own. Their only disappoint-
ment in the free life of the forest was in the Indians
themselves. The two British officers found the sav-
ages, as soldiers, difficult to manage difficult to the
point of positive detriment to the service. The duty
of scouting was performed by the Indians in an ex-
tremely slipshod fashion. Furthermore, both gentle-
men found the manners of the Indians excessively
crude. Even among the slum-spawned and sod-grown
privates of the British line, they had been accus-
tomed, through leadership, to strike a spark of de-
cency and the will to learn how to perform a duty,
however alien. With the Indians this appeared to
be impossible.
For the campaign of 1777, Fraser and Scott had
conceived, recruited, and organized their own "war
party" of regular British soldiers. Recruits for "Cap-
tain Fraser's Marksmen ' had to be of good character,
sober, active, robust, and healthy or so they came
to be considered. But in no army will the colonel of
a regiment give up such a man, and the original forty
recruits were more aptly described as rebels to dis-
cipline, self-sufficient outcasts, and enemies to the
"System." An officer of young Fraser s type caught
88 MABCH TO SABATOGA
the imagination of such men. They followed him into
his strange element of the wild forest, and emerged
at the outer extremity of Burgoyne's army like a
supple hand, capable of slapping, striking, or gentle
probing.
With his Indians gone or loitering with the camp
followers, General Burgoyne had need of Eraser's
marksmen and many more like them. Having
fought forward of the army, matching aimed fire
with American riflemen outside the walls of Ticon-
deroga and at the road junction at Hubbardton, the
corps had dwindled in number. Now, on the Hudson,
Captain Fraser was offered the pick of the British
army to find replacements for his marksmen. A Swed-
ish baron, Lieutenant Salans, joined the corps at this
time, but his ranger service with his friend of the
9th Foot was to be brief. Fraser found young Philip
Skene to be a likely recruit, and he, too, was invited
to come with the marksmen. Captain Lieutenant
Thomas Scott gave employment to young Joshua
Pell, who, though a colonial, was an acceptable candi-
date for Scott's special section of long-range scouts
and couriers.
If Burgoyne had need of eyes to look around the
next bend of the river to which, at last, he had come;
if he needed to see where the enemy would stand
against him he was equally in need of word from
his friends, Sir William Howe and Barry St. Leger,
who were converging on the predetermined rendez-
vous at Albany. Their approach indeed, their im-
minent arrival must be confirmed.
THE FACE OF GENTLEMAN JOHNNY 89
The face of a commanding general is a mask be-
hind which he suppresses overconfidence and hides
doubts, fears, and disappointments. Lieutenant Gen-
eral Burgoyne's mask was that of "Gentleman
Johnny/* It was an easy face to show in the open
gateway at Ticonderoga, as the victorious army
flowed by in the bright sunlight. At Skenesborough
House, couriers in their strange disguises saw the
face by candlelight in the doorway of the private
office, with a swirl of talk and laughter from the
dining-room beyond wreathing it like laurel; then the
door was closed, shutting away the sound, and only
the gaiety of the face remained as the big man,
resplendent in white and scarlet, strode to his desk.
Now, it was a serious face above the extended hand
that gave the courier urgent dispatches for General
Howe. But it was a kindly face, too, that sent the
messenger over two hundred danger-filled miles to
his destination.
As the fatigue party carried the traps of the gen-
eral and of his companion into the red house on
the bank of the Hudson, where headquarters had
been set up not far from Fort Edward, they still saw
the face of "Gentleman Johnny/* Of the several
couriers who had been sent to Billy Howe, only two
had been heard of: both had been caught by the
rebels and hanged. Word of a third courier came to
General Burgoyne on 3 August, the day before the
final Indian conference. He, too, had been captured,
and the letter that he carried had been found in the
false bottom of his canteen. His fate was not known,
QO MABCH TO SABATOGA
but a fourth courier had managed to get through the
double Yankee lines those that faced Burgoyne
and those that watched Howe and he had re-
turned on 3 August with a letter to General Bur-
goyne from General Sir William Howe.
Billy Howe had written eighteen days before from
his comfortable and well-appointed quarters in New
York City. The somewhat indolent commander in
chief of all the British forces in the Atlantic Colonies
had made what was for him an instantaneous re-
sponse to the announcement of Burgoyne's bloodless
capture of Fort Ticonderoga. After only two nights
of sleeping on the news, Howe wrote the commnader
of his northern army that this was indeed "a great
event/*
The necessity for sending his congratulations
offered Howe an opportunty to acknowledge the
receipt of two earlier letters. The first of these was
written from Plymouth, before Burgoyne set sail for
Canada; the second was from Quebec, written on
Burgoyne's arrival there in May.
Of the grand design, so painstakingly worked out
with Lord George Germaine in his cabinet at the
Royal threshold, there was in Howe's letter no glim-
mer of recognition or response. On the contrary, Gen-
eral Howe announced that, instead of marching north
along the Hudson in concert with the northern
army's descent on Albany, he was going south by sea
to Chesapeake Bay and Pennsylvania! He had al-
ready declared this intention when, in early April, he
had written one of his infrequent letters to Governor
THE FACE OF GENTLEMAN JOHNNY Ql
General Carleton. At that time it had been assumed
by Carleton, as it was by Burgoyne, that General
Howe had not yet received Lord Germain's explicit
orders to proceed to the north, and that, on receiving
the orders, he would act accordingly. But Howe's
congratulatory letter, delivered to Burgoyne on 3
August, gave no indication that any such orders from
London had ever reached him in New York.
By moving the main British force from New
York to Pennsylvania, Billy Howe put yet another
rebel army between himself and Burgoyne. General
Schuyler was on the Upper Hudson, where he faced
the invasion from Canada with only a weak force,
but where, according to Howe's letter, 2500 rein-
forcements were expected momentarily. At Peekskill,
General Israel Putnam, with 4000 soldiers, was in
control of the highlands. Now, General Washington's
Continentals were in New Jersey, beyond which lay
Philadelphia.
Sitting at his headquarters desk at Fort Edward,
with his whole army in inexorable and confident mo-
tion around him, Johnny Burgoyne could see in the
letter from his commander in chief but two points of
faintly glimmering hope for some measure of co-
operation from the south. If Washington turned
north, then Howe would follow him. This offered a
wry picture of Burgoyne as a terrier, holding "at
bay" the phrase was Howe's a thundering herd
of American generals led by Washington, while Gen-
eral Howe himself ambled up from Pennsylvania like
a reluctant, almost somnambulant bear. The other
MARCH TO SARATOGA
possibility of assistance lay with Sir Henry Clinton,
a fearless, able, and active guardsman-general, whom
Howe had left in command of the New York City
garrison with orders to act "as occurrence may di-
rect/' Perhaps the barking of the terrier upriver
would bring the Clinton airedales racing north.
Though General Burgoyne's "Thoughts for Con-
ducting the War from the Side of Canada/' and the
orders from the highest authority, which were to
put those thoughts into effect, seemingly had dis-
appeared, Burgoyne's duty remained clear and simple
and forthright as that of any soldier. To be sure, he
had authored the plan, yet Gentleman Johnny was
only a lieutenant general, under the direction of
superior officers. In Canada, General Carleton had
ordered him to take his army to Albany and there to
put himself under the command of General Howe.
With the objective and purpose of his journey set
so clearly before him, Burgoyne had no need to look
elsewhere in order to see where his duty lay. Then,
too, his own ambitions and hopes were bound up in
the successful completion of the march down the
wilderness river which now carried his fate to its
destiny. In only one field was Lieutenant General
John Burgoyne free to use his own discretion: he was
in full and absolute command of his own army.
Be he subaltern or general, the instinctive thoughts
of an officer are with his command. No matter how
far afield his inner thoughts may whirl, they soon
wind back on an invisible string to wrap themselves
around that strong center pole, his troops. Deep in
THE FACE OF GENTLEMAN JOHNNY 93
speculation, Burgoyne watched through his office
window as a soldier carried a basket of laundry to
the lines for the maid of the lady who rested in the
chamber above. On the road outside the Red House,
the squeak of an axle marked the passage of a cart;
grease for that axle was a matter for the attention of
Captain Money, the quartermaster. Pen in hand, the
general leaned forward to make a note in regard to
grease and wagon maintenance. The question posed
by the soldier and the laundry could wait. Perhaps it
did not yet come within the duties of a chaplain.
Both matters were the responsibility of Burgoyne, as
a commander of troops. His, too, was the responsi-
bility for tomorrow's Indian Conference. He sent
for his adjutant general, Lieutenant Colonel Robert
Kingston, and when that officer appeared, ready to
get down to work with his chief, General Howe's
blandly casual letter was locked away in Burgoyne's
private box.
Burgoyne kept his headquarters at Fort Edward
for a little more than two weeks. They were anxious
and busy days for the general, as he moved about
among his troops, showing an ever cheerful counte-
nance. He kept Howe's letter a secret unto himself.
Perhaps there would be a second letter, with the
welcome news that Howe was approaching up the
Hudson. Meanwhile, he had sent couriers to Clinton
and expected an answer at any moment. Surely, Sir
Henry would come up the river far enough to draw
away some of the Yankee troops that faced the
94 MARCH TO SARATOGA
British, and Burgoyne could give out such news to
his officers and his troops with a face of convincing
cheer. No word had come from Barry St. Leger
either, who now should be well started on his way to
the Mohawk River, on the western approaches to
Albany.
While the general waited, the army worked. All
the stores that had been gathered together at Skenes-
borough had to be carried over the Fort Anne road
to Fort Edward. It was not until 16 August that the
last bateau was hauled out of Wood Creek and
hefted up onto an oxcart, to begin its rough journey
to the Hudson. Simultaneously, a supply line was
being built up Lake George, and more and more
bateaux and gunboats traded back and forth through
that narrow corridor of blue water between the high
green mountains.
Brigadier General Henry Wilson Powell replaced
Brigadier General James Hamilton in command at
Ticonderoga. For the defense of that vital trans-
shipping point, General Powell had one weak British
regiment, the 53rd, and the Brunswick regiment,
Prinz Friedrich, under Lieutenant Colonel Christian
Julius Praetorius. In his aloof, humorless way, Powell
contrived a defense that scattered the thousand men
under his command over the four miles of forts and
roads from Mount Independence to the landing place
on Lake George. He did not forget to bring down the
big guns from Mount Defiance, and dispensed both
justice and punishment in using for the job the rebel
prisoners from Hubbardton and Fort Anne.
THE FACE OF GENTLEMAN JOHNNY 95
Troops other than Powell's were guarding the sup-
ply line. Lieutenant James Hadden saw them on his
way to reinforce Captain Jones's company of artil-
lery, in the new single brigade of General Phillips's
right wing. Hadden's sloop stopped in at Diamond
Island, thirty miles up Lake George, with stores for
Captain Aubrey's two companies of the 47th, sta-
tioned there. The Captain showed the gunner officer
the sighting of his cannon, poured him a drink, and
envied him his place in the army's line of battle.
At Fort George, Hadden saw a busy magazine of
stores. Barrels, bales, boxes, and crates of every size
and shape were piled along the beach. Sailors, with
the help of a work gang of Loyalists, unloaded an-
other convoy of twenty bateaux while Hadden was
waiting for a wagon on which he could throw his box
of clothing, his bed-roll, and his saddle, bridle, and
pistol holsters.
Hadden himself would walk the twelve miles of
portage road. He had no horse with him, and, with
an artilleryman's eye for transport, he could see that
the wagons were overloaded, the horses tired and
underfed, their harness patched with thongs and
broken collars padded with the coats of the drivers..
All along the hot, dusty road, Hadden saw carts
broken down and abandoned by their drivers, can-
nibalized by others who came later, until only a few
boards of the box remained, with perhaps a broken
axle-tree, its hardware carefully removed. The road
from Fort Edward to Fort George was a bottleneck,
holding Burgoyne's army to its beachhead on the
96 MARCH TO SARATOGA
Upper Hudson until a supply of horses sufficient to
work it could be found. Already the lack of horses
had committed the movement of the army to a train
of boats down the river. Those teams which Colonel
Skene had led Burgoyne to expect the Loyalists of
the Upper Hudson Valley would supply were not
forthcoming. They had been driven off in the face of
the Indian raids.
To the east, in the Green Mountains of Vermont,
in the village of Manchester and beyond, was farm-
land rich in horses, oxen, and beef cattle. Ever since
leaving Skenesborough, General Riedesel had wanted
to take his Germans into that country, but per-
mission had been refused. Now, as the need for
bringing supplies from Fort George mounted in
urgency with each passing day, Burgoyne recon-
sidered the plan. At last, he gave his limited consent
for the Brunswick Dragoons alone of the German
contingent to execute a raid toward Manchester for
horses and cattle. Mounted, the troopers could also
be useful as scouts, in the manner of the new-
fashioned cavalry called hussars." For the entry into
Albany, two hundred dragoons all ajangle, the hooves
of their horses striking sparks on the cobbled streets,
would make a fine parade.
Though a Tiorse-soldier," Riedesel grumbled at
this new concept of his raid into Vermont. Neverthe-
less, he went forward to the assembly point to see his
troops off, and so it was that on the 14 August the
devoted baron was at the mouth of the Batten Kill,
eleven miles below Fort Edward, when his indomi-
THE FACE OF GENTLEMAN JOHNNY 97
table baroness and the three little girls drove up to
the door of the Red House at Fort Edward and es-
tablished themselves there. A suggestion of perfume
still remained in the upstairs hall and in the big bed-
room at the front of the house. The baroness sniffed
and turned away down the hall toward the back, her
arms filled with fresh clothing for her much travel-
stained small daughters*
Only that morning, Burgoyne had moved his head-
quarters to the Duer House at Fort Miller. His com-
missary's wife had gone with him.
COL. BAUNTS BATTLE
OF THE WALLOOMSAC
8
The Restless Winds of August
In mid-August, northern New York State lies quietly
under the hot summer sun. The frequent thunder-
showers, rolling up against the warm wind, give little
relief from the heat. Even the trout in the streams
seek a shady bank by which to doze, and cannot be
tempted to the surface even by the fall of the choicest
fly. Only man, with his will to carry out his plans
and schemes, forces the season and pits his sweat
against the sun and rain of summer.
On 13 August 1777, Lieutenant Colonel Friederich
Baum planned to march his raiding force of 700
motley troops from the mouth of the Batten Kill to
Cambridge, fifteen miles away. Though the sun had
scarcely risen, and the shadows of the tall elms fell
far out over the waters of the Hudson, sweat gleamed
on the black faces of his Negro drummers as they
beat out the quick roll of the Assembly for the dra-
goons. One hundred and seventy officers and troopers
of Prinz Ludwig of Brunswick's Dragoon Regiment
lined up to the beat of the drum. The big regimental
sergeant major, whose mustachios bristled up to his
99
100 MARCH TO SARATOGA
ears in a challenge to his men, boomed out the num-
ber to Major Christoph von Maibon, adding a report
in detail as to the whereabouts of the other men;
sick, camp guard, Canadian depot, not on parade.
Maibon looked with distaste at the trousers of striped
ticking and the infantryman's gaiters worn by the
troopers. He held to boots for a cavalryman!
On either side of the dragoons another German
unit had fallen in. On the right, Major von Earner,
though junior, commanded one hundred and fifty
light infantry, his own blue-coated riflemen and von
Geyso's Jagers in green and red, plus a few grena-
diers who only the day before had joined the force.
On the left, a two-gun detachment of Hesse-Hanau
artillery was hitched and limbered, ready to move
off. Lieutenant Bock reported the gunners present.
The rest of Colonel Baum's expeditionary force
was more difficult to account for, being less regi-
mental on parade. Captain Eraser's fifty marksmen
slouched, deliberately seeking rest wherever they
could find it. The Tories, under Colonels Francis
Pfister and John Peters, could hardly be called a mili-
tary unit. They were going east with Baum to recruit
other Loyalists into their skeleton "regiments."
Major Philip Skene, still confident of the basic
loyalty of the local people, was also with the ex-
pedition. Now, in the early morning, he stood with
the headquarters group around the chunky Colonel
Baum. Skene talked easily with the immaculate
Captain de la Naudiere, whose suave grace empha-
sized his catlike movement, as he excused himself to
THE RESTLESS WINDS OF AUGUST 1O1
slip away to join his Canadians. From talking with
his habitants, still gathered about their campfire,
de la Naudiere would learn the true temper of the
Indians who camped nearby.
As Baum gave the order to move out, General Bur-
goyne rode up to take the salute. He was gone again
before the long, straggling queue of women, musi-
cians, and officers* servants took to the Cambridge
road behind the German van. The whole army was on
the move; and Burgoyne would be needed every-
where. With Baum's force off to the east, Fraser's
corps was to cross to the west bank of the Hudson, its
place at the left bank bridgehead being taken by
Breymann's reserve corps of German shock troops.
Phillips was bringing forward the British regiments
from Fort Edward to Fort Miller, and when the main
German contingent once was in motion, Riedesel was
to return to the Duer's House headquarters (on 14
August) to give General Burgoyne the latest reports
on the Lake George supply line.
General Riedesel did not yet know that the desti-
nation of his dragoons had been changed. He had
written the orders for the expedition into Vermont,
setting down in detail the purpose of the raid and
the route that Baum was to follow. The objects of
the "secret expedition" were five: "To try the affec-
tion of the country; to disconcert the councils of the
enemy; to mount the Riedesers Dragoons; to com-
pleat Peter's corps; and to obtain large supplies of
cattle, horses, and carriages." The route was along
three sides of a rectangle, of which the fourth side
102 MARCH TO SARATOGA
would be marched by the main army, down the
Hudson River. Baum's first objective was Manchester,
where Seth Warner's Continentals lurked. General
Burgoyne considered it highly probable that "Mr.
Warner" would retreat before Baum's troops. At the
staff meeting Riedesel had objected to this premise
when the plan was outlined, but had fallen silent be-
fore the scornful conviction with which Burgoyne
and Phillips, the other major general of the expedi-
tion, had expressed their opinion of the "Green Moun-
tain Boys," as Warner's regiment was called. For a
moment, the baron had expected Simon Eraser to
speak up in strong support of his doubts. But the
commander of the British advance corps, who, like
Riedesel, had faced the Continentals at Hubbard-
ton, remained silent, his eyes turned toward the win-
dow. The baron followed the Scotsman's gaze. In
the home pasture beyond a snake-rail fence, a single
shade tree gave shelter from the sun to two of Gen-
tleman Johnny's well-groomed chargers. The tree
was a lofty elm, its green branches arching out like
a fountain in the palace gardens at Potsdam, its
trunk of a diameter to afford ample protection to any
Yankee rifleman.
From Manchester, Baum was to march his force
to Rochester, on the Connecticut River, thence south
to Brattleboro and back to the main army, which
would be somewhere on the great road that followed
the west bank of the Hudson to Albany.
It was not until Colonel Baum was moving his
troops up to the start line at the mouth of the Batten
THE RESTXESS WINDS OF AUGUST 1O3
Kill that his objective was changed to the town of
Benrrington. A messenger from the Tory scout, Cap-
tain Sherwood, had come with the welcome news
that a big rebel magazine, containing all the sup-
plies that Burgoyne so urgently needed, lay in that
Vermont town, guarded only by some four hundred
local militia.
To the men in the close-ranged ranks of the Ger-
man regulars, the new direction of their march meant
fewer miles of hot and dusty track. Bennington, as
they quickly found out, was only twenty-eight miles
away, and by the time the evening halt was called
and they had dressed ranks before dismissal, fifteen
of those miles had passed under their weary feet.
During the day they had heard musket fire, and on
approaching Cambridge the dragoons had halted in
ranks, while the Jdgers and light infantry scouted the
little settlement. Primarily, the deployment had been
an exercise for von Earner's men, intended to impress
the villagers. They had prepared the way for the
parade of the dragoons down the single street of the
town, their arms swinging in unison, every eye look-
ing straight ahead, their rich young voices dutifully
singing the melancholy, hymn-like air to which they
habitually marched. A barefooted, thin-shouldered
woman ran out of a log house to snatch back her
child, who had slipped away to march with the big
men in blue and yellow. Otherwise the town ap-
peared to be empty.
After supper, Pastor Melsheimer of the dragoons
had knocked at the door of the parsonage behind
1O4 MARCH TO SARATOGA
the clapboard church. But the woman who came to
the door could not understand his broken English,
nor had she recognized the Cloth. The pastor had
returned to the headquarters fire, where, through an
interpreter, Colonel Baum was interrogating the few
Yankee men that Captain Fraser and the Indians had
captured during the course of the day.
From the prisoners, Baum learned that, instead of
four hundred rebels guarding the horses and stores
at Bennington, there were eighteen hundred! In a
message sent back to Burgoyne that night, Baum
passed on this new and startling bit of intelligence,
and advised the general that he was proceeding
warily.
Five miles to the south of Cambridge, the Owl
Kill meets the Hoosic River at a right angle, where
the direction of the river's flow changes from north
to west. Above this confluence yet another river, the
Walloomsac, comes from Bennington and the east to
form a ragged but well-defined cross of waterways
where it meets the Hoosic. Baum's road from Cam-
bridge to Bennington crossed to the west bank of
the Owl Kill to meet the Albany road, where, al-
most immediately, it passed over another bridge at a
mill named, appropriately, St. Croix. From that point,
the road followed the north bank of the Walloomsac
to Bennington, except for one short cut across a bend.
It was at St. Croix, its pronunciation corrupted by
the local twang to "Sancoik," that Baum first encoun-
tered the Americans.
Two hundred Yankees crowded into the mill and
THE BESTLESS WINDS OF AUGUST 10$
spread themselves through the surrounding bushes.
They heard the Germans approaching from as far
away as the first bridge, and watched agape as the
head of the first column Jagers in coats of green,
with red facings like those of Seth Warner's Con-
tinentals passed the Albany road and turned to-
ward the bridge over the milirace. The Americans
had little plan and less leadership, so when someone
yelled "They're comin' " and fired his musket, every-
one joined in with a ragged, poorly aimed volley.
The Germans came steadily on, the green-coated
men fanning out to right and left, occasionally drop-
ping to one knee to fire at the mill with their short
brown rifles, steadied by the red slings wrapped
around their arms. The Americans could see no effect
from their own fire. Instead, blue-coated soldiers in
big, black cocked hats trotted, in a compact mass,
up the road toward the bridge. Each man held in his
right hand a gleaming, short, curved sword. A Yan-
kee smashed one of the windows on the safe side of
the mill, away from the charging light infantry, and
clambered out through the broken frame. Others fol-
lowed, piling out of the doors and windows, all of
them bound for the safety of the Bennington road
and the offer of distance that it promised. At first, the
Americans ran; then, as the exhaustion of heat out-
balanced their dread of the men in blue and black,
they dropped into a fast walk which they kept up for
the three miles to the bridge over Little White Creek.
There, the last of the retreating Americans saw
Eleazer Edgerton, the carpenter of Bennington, hat-
1O6 MARCH TO SARATOGA
less as usual and now coatless as well, his sleeves
rolled above his elbows, beckoning them to hurry.
With him were two other Bennington men, busily
prizing the planks of the bridge. The last man
gathered himself to leap over the gap that already
had been made. He sprang forward, stumbled, and
fell; then he picked himself up and ran on. Behind
him, Eleazer and his two friends worked feverishly
to destroy the bridge. Just as the flames caught the
pile of shivered dry planking, the first shots came
from the pursuing German light infantry. His task
completed, Edgerton ducked off into the brush. He
stopped once to shoot back, just to keep the "Hes-
sians" away from his bonfire until it caught a good
blaze.
The hour thus bought by the carpenter of Ben-
nington saved the Sancoik detachment, bone-tired
with the physical weariness that rides the back of
panic. The hour that it required for Baum to cross
Little White Creek with his guns and wagons dulled
the youthful eagerness of von Earner's men. With
their keen swords sheathed, the German light troops
continued to lead the way up the narrow valley
floor of the Walloomsac. Now, the pace of the Ger-
mans had slackened to the workhorse tread of the
dismounted cavalry, as doubt and caution dragged at
the worn heels of Dragoon Lieutenant Colonel Baum.
After the habit of the alert officer, he was studying
the hills that rose steeply on his left, picking out a
defensive position, when a party of Tory scouts came
THE RESTLESS WINDS OF AUGUST IOJ
in with the news that the rebel army had come out
from Bennington and awaited him across the second
Walloomsac bridge that lay beyond. On receiving this
intelligence, Baum's doubts resolved themselves into
decision, his caution solidified into defense, and the
selection of a suitable position moved over from the
side of speculation to that of instant choice. With his
enemy scarcely a mile away, Baum sent a second
message to Burgoyne, this time asking for reinforce-
ments.
Across the bend of the Walloomsac, Baum's enemy,
too, waited for reinforcements. As the hot, still after-
noon wore on and help did not appear, the American
army, too weak to attack, retired in order to Benning-
ton. Tomorrow they would return with their general
to drive the Germans from their hills.
Their general was the almost legendary John Stark.
His frame was tall and spare and supple, though
where his principles were concerned, his back was
hickory-stiff. His face was finely boned, and when
angered or crossed, his jaw firmed and his eyes
sparkled like a hatchet striking on the rock of his
native New Hampshire. John Stark resembled a
tomahawk, and carried himself as such during all the
years of the American Revolution.
By 1775, when he was forty-seven years old, Stark's
military reputation in his native colony was second
only to that of Robert Rogers, whose lieutenant he
had been during the glorious years of fabulous deeds
with Rogers* Rangers. Whereas Rogers had gone
1O8 MARCH TO SARATOGA
away from New Hampshire at the end of the French
and Indian War, Stark had returned to espouse the
cause of his expanding New Hampshire, and to be-
come a part of its heroic legend.
Upon hearing of the battles of Lexington and
Concord, John Stark did what might have been ex-
pected of such a man. And he did it so suddenly
that when his New Hampshire Regiment, recruited
as he rode, was added to the gathering American
army near Boston, Stark had to send home to Eliza-
beth, his wife, for a change of clothing.
Colonel Stark's New Hampshire Regiment fought
with gallantry on the American left at Breed's Hill,
manned the siege lines around Boston, and followed
George Washington when he led the Continental
Army to New York. Colonel Stark took his regiment
north into Canada during the spring of 1776, and
fretted through the long summer of apprehension
that followed that disastrous campaign, while Gates
prepared the defenses at Ticonderoga, and Benedict
Arnold built his fleet to hold Lake Champlain against
Guy Carleton and John Burgoyne.
As a New Englander from the back lots of New
Hampshire, Stark found service difficult on the north-
ern frontier. He was unable to assert himself against
the smooth fagade of General Philip Schuyler's aris-
tocratic New York confidence. Nor would General
Gates, whose military career had been built up of
well-mortised British army brick, heed the old ranger
Stark when the latter expounded upon his military
credo of attack by courageous men confident in their
THE BESTLESS WINDS OF AUGUST 1OQ
firearms. Stark fared better under Washington, who
gave the New Hampshire colonel command of the
right wing of the advance guard at the winter-night
crossing of the Delaware River, and at the dawn at-
tack up the streets of Trenton, where Howe's German
troops slept off the effects of their Christmas cele-
bration.
When the promotion list came out after the winter
campaign of 1776-77, the name of John Stark was
not included. It was the second time the Continental
Congress had passed him over for a general's star.
In anger and protest, Stark resigned his commission
in the Continental Army and went home to New
Hampshire. He was not the first officer to feel such
a slight to his personal honor and to that of his native
state at the hands of a muddling Congress of conniv-
ing delegates from thirteen jealously separate gov-
ernments.
Stark did not remain long in retirement. The corn
crop of 1777 was only musket high when New
Hampshire called him back to arms. Within a week
he had mustered twenty-five companies of rugged
New Hampshire militiamen. Five days more, and
Stark had his brigade on the banks of the Connecticut
River. On 7 August, his men were ready for action,
and Brigadier General Stark took up a position on
Burgoyne's flank at Manchester, in Vermont. Beside
him stood Colonel Seth Warner, who, since Hubbard-
ton, had been left by General Schuyler to watch and
threaten Burgoyne, and if he moved toward New
England, to delay him.
110 MARCH TO SARATOGA
Philip Schuyler knew that Stark had come again
to the war. Schuyler needed the New Hampshire
Brigade on the Hudson, and sent General Benjamin
Lincoln to fetch it. Lincoln, extremely able (and ex-
ceedingly fat!) 3 was one of the two major generals
Washington had sent north to help out against the
invasion from Canada. Each commanded a wing of
Schuyler's army. Benedict Arnold had gone west on
a flying expedition to relieve Fort Stanwix, under
siege by Barry St. Leger. In command of the Ameri-
can right, Benjamin Lincoln had gone into western
New England to bring in the militia there, for a con-
centration of force above Albany. On Burgoyne's
move to Fort Edward, Schuyler now knew that city
to be the British objective.
Perhaps it was unfortunate that Lincoln was one
of the officers promoted over the head of John Stark,
but the circumstances were mitigated to some extent
by the fact that Lincoln was a Massachusetts gen-
eral, and therefore a New Englander. When the two
men met in Manchester on 7 August, Stark was
adamant in his refusal to obey Lincoln's order to
rally his brigade to Schuyler. Stark produced his
orders from the General Court of New Hampshire in
justification of his stand. Benjamin Lincoln read care-
fully the extraordinary orders under which Brigadier
General John Stark was given discriminatory powers
to act either with, or separately from, the Continental
Army. It was obvious to the Massachusetts general
that his fellow New Englander chose to act in-
dependently of the New Yorker, General Schuyler.
THE BEOTLESS WINDS OF AUGUST 111
And in the face of the imminent British onslaught,
there was nothing that Lincoln could do about it.
Prevailed upon by persuasive Massachusetts reason-
ing, Stark remained in Vermont, assuming the role of
a valued ally of standing equal to that of the Con-
tinental Army. Under sympathetic treatment, John
Stark made one concession: he would march his
brigade to Bennington, to await developments (both
political and military) while guarding the stores ac-
cumulating at that place. Stark had a further reason
for leaving Manchester and going on to Benning-
ton, twenty miles away. One of his spies had told
him that Burgoyne, even then, was bound for New
England and was proceeding by way of Bennington.
Upon receiving this information, Stark was obviously
bound by the General Court to bar the road until
his ally, the aristocratic Schuyler, could come from
Albany with his Continentals. On 8 August, when
the New Hampshire men were marching to Benning-
ton, Burgoyne's own informer had not yet arrived
with the news of the inadequately guarded stores at
that town.
It was only by rumor and hearsay and misinforma-
tion that Stark and Baum came face to face in the
same narrow valley of the Walloomsac on the after-
noon of 14 August 1777.
9
The Hill Overlooking the Walloomsac
For the second time that afternoon, Colonel Friede-
rich Baum found himself climbing the hill over-
looking the bend and bridges of the Walloomsac
River. He was on the steep southeast face of the
hill, which was dead ground to his main defensive
position on the summit. As he plodded upward Baum
was hot and tired and feeling his long years of
service. Once more he stopped to rest, standing as
though the calves of his slim horseman's legs could
not be trusted to lever up his barrel-like body should
he sit down. He heard behind him the labored
breathing of one of his aides, the young Irishman,
on loan from Riedesel's staff.
Working around the steeply tilted land and out of
the thick scrub growth, the command party came
upon the fire positions of the fifty Jagers, stationed
so as to command both the dead ground and the
narrow gully of a brook, now almost dry. While the
spruce young captain pointed out his fire positions,
the old colonel sat drinking from a canteen as he
looked over the battlefield he had chosen.
112
THE HTT.T. OVEBLOOKTNG THE WAtLOOMSAC 113
Below, and three hundred yards distant, was the
first bridge over the Walloomsac; the Yankees had
not destroyed it when they had retreated, a few
hours earlier. Baum had just come from the position
there, held by fifty of his own light troops, thirty of
Captain Fraser's rangers, and one of Lieutenant
Bock's 3-pounders, guarding the bridge and set to
rake the road to Bennington. If the rebels attacked,
it was from Bennington that he expected them to
come. On an elevation above the road, just beyond
the bridge, one hundred and fifty Tories were at
work, throwing up field fortifications, and at his in-
spection Baum saw them make the dirt fly. The
colonel had discovered a sturdy log cabin on the far
side of the river between the Tory redoubt and the
bridge, and into this he had ordered the women who
trailed the expedition. From where he now sat among
the Jcigers, he could see the roof of the cabin, neatly
and safely tucked away in a fold of the ground.
Three-quarters of a mile away, on the road up
which he had marched from Sancoik, Colonel Baum
had left another post. This was manned by some of
the Tories who had come from the Hudson, together
with ninety others of like mind who had joined the
expedition since it set out the previous day. The
"uniform" of the latter consisted of white paper,
pinned to their hats! The rear position was stiffened
by fifty grenadiers under Captain von Schiek, if neces-
sary, they could lead a bayonet charge through the
Yankee rabble to greet the reinforcements, expected
to arrive the next day ( 15 August) by a forced march.
114 MARCH TO SARATOGA
On the crest of the hill, to which Colonel Baum
finally climbed from the canted perch of the Jagers,
was the hard core of his defense. It was sunset when
he regained his tent. Clouds were gathering, and for
a moment a hot breeze stirred the leaves as it passed
by. Every native officer he had talked with on his
rounds had smelled rain in the air. If this came, it
would be good. If the rebels attacked, the dampness
would make their muskets useless, and there would
be time for the reinforcements to arrive for the
charge with sabers and bayonets on which Colonel
Baum depended to win through to Bennington.
The hilltop position of the Brunswick Dragoons
was cleared of trees, yet trees dominated it. From the
steep slopes, the trees thrust up their leafy branches
like curious children peering onto a table-top. To the
north and northwest, the virgin timber of the Ameri-
can forest stopped the inroads of the clearing at a low
ridge, capped by a knoll. To the northeast, at a dis-
tance of approximately a mile, a tree-covered moun-
tain edged the horizon. Baum had placed his earth-
and-log barricade to face the gap between the two
features, and had caused wings to be thrown up fac-
ing east and west. The woods in front of the redoubt
were patrolled by Indians, and by de la Naudiere's
Canadians. The second cannon was mounted in an
embrasure to shoot down the hill onto the Benning-
ton road, in support of the other gun at the first
bridge. Other embrasures had been cut in the field
works, to which the little 3-pounder could be moved
quickly by drag-ropes. In the very center of the en-
THE TTTTT. OVERLOOKING THE WAIXOOMSAC 115
closure, the ammunition tumbril of the Hesse-Hanau
Artillery stood ready with its supply o rolled powder
charges. A gunner was stacking canisters of grape-
shot between the wheels. On his hilltop, with his
dragoons around him, Colonel Baum felt secure.
Sensitive to everything having to do with his men,
the Colonel awoke in his tent when the first drops
of rain fell. All around him he could hear the sounds
of restless movement in the camp as the troopers and
gunners sought shelter, cursing their lot as they re-
settled themselves in the wet darkness of the night.
Colonel Baum went back to sleep; it had taken years
of just such bivouacs to earn a colonel's comforts.
When his servant wakened him with a breakfast
somehow contrived, the rain was still falling. By
nine o'clock, it was the general opinion in the Ger-
man camp that the drizzle would continue through-
out the day. For a while, the dragoons honed their
big sabers. Then they resigned themselves to mak-
ing the best of it. Baum made the rounds of his posi-
tions. Everyone and everything was wet. Only the
women in their log cabin were really dry, but he did
not tarry there to lay himself open to the inter-
minable questions and wrangles and complaints of
the soldiers* wives.
In his headquarters on the western edge of Ben-
nington, General Stark was little better off. His men
were as wet as the Germans were, and during the
day and into the night of 15 August, he was harassed
by ardent militia captains, eager to "smite the hire-
ling invaders" and to "bring vengeance on the mur-
Il6 MARCH TO SARATOGA
derers of sweet Jennie McCrea." No one seemed to
consider the fact that damp powder nullified the ad-
vantage of fire power, on which Stark had counted,
although the parson who commanded the Berkshire
County militia quoted a conglomeration of biblical
passages sufficient to damp the fires of hell. The rain,
however, was giving Stark a day of grace in which
to concentrate his force. Seth Warner was with "him
in his headquarters, and at the prospect of battle
Warner had sent to Manchester for his regiment of
Continentals. The troops were now somewhere along
the road, plodding slowly through the mud as the
gray day wore to a close.
While Stark's reinforcements Vermont Conti-
nentals, with two hundred Green Mountain Rangers
were coming the twenty-two miles from Man-
chester, the reinforcements that Colonel Baum had
sent for had traveled only eight of the twenty-five
miles that would bring them up to the dragoons.
They had made a good start from the mouth of the
Batten Kill. Baum's messenger had arrived in the
early morning, and by nine o'clock, only an hour after
receiving Burgoyne's orders, Colonel Breymann had
his men on the road. All of Heinrich Christoph Brey-
mann's troops were steady, trained veterans, picked
from among the five infantry regiments of RiedeseFs
Brunswick and Hesse-Hanau division. Although they
were called grenadiers, and wore the high, metal-
fronted mitre traditionally associated with that name,
their forte was the attack with the bayonet, which re-
quired close ranks and rigid discipline if it were to be
THE HILL OVERLOOKING THE WAULOOMSAC 117
pushed home. Colonel Breymann was a disciplinar-
ian.
Again and again, Breymann halted the column to
dress ranks, broken by the slippery road as it climbed
up the hill out of the valley of the Hudson. Patiently,
the grenadiers shuffled back and forth as the sergeant
moved along the ranks, lining up with out-thrust
chests. When all was ready, the order to march was
given, and in measured succession, the blocks of
companies stepped out, to squish, slide, and stumble
over the muddy track until the next halt. Up front,
Colonel Breymann could twist around in his saddle
and glare at the long line of five hundred gilt or silver
mitre-caps, bobbing and lurching every which way
in the driving rain; he was not pleased. Behind the
struggling grenadiers, Lieutenant Spangenberg, heed-
less of dressing, tried desperately with his gunners
to keep up with the slow pace of the infantry. The
road was a morass of slippery wet mud that made the
two 6-pounders of his battery slew behind their limb-
ers, while the horses, their necks bent to their collars,
stumbled to their knees on the upgrades, or were in
danger of a broken leg as the weight of the load
shoved the breechings against their croups on a
downgrade. Behind the artillery, the ammunition
wagons of the column, overloaded for their construc-
tion and for the strength of their animals, fared even
worse than the guns. Breymann was still seven miles
short of Cambridge when he called a halt for the
night. In eight hours of forced march he had covered
only eight miles.
Il8 MARCH TO SARATOGA
At first light on 16 August, Breymann had his men
up on their feet, the sergeants shouting them into
line, the officers thwacking about with their gold-
headed canes. Beyond Cambridge the road was bet-
ter.
On his hilltop overlooking the deserted valley of
the Walloomsac, Colonel Baum waited, guessing at
the cause of the delay. He sent Colonel Skene back
with all his horses, as extra teams for Breymann's
wagons. Still he waited, watching and listening both
up and down the Bennington road.
General Stark went to the door of his headquarters
and walked out into the yard. It was still raining, but
it was a light, misty rain. The cloud mass was lifting
above the long summit ridges of the distant moun-
tains, which appeared clear and fresh in the gray
light. Here and there on the green slopes, thin wisps
of blue-white mist hurried upward, as if in fear of
being left behind by the rising cover of sky. To a
man of the New England hills, such flecks of cloud
were a sure sign of clearing weather. Stark shouted
for his drummer, and had the boy beat the Officers*
CaU.
They came, the lean and the portly, the young and
sturdy with the big red wrists of plowmen, the
middle-aged, pale from the crossroads store and the
Portsmouth houses of business; men as old as the
general himself, in loose uniform coats of an earlier
war. All were most soldierly and earnest as they
searched in their minds or memory for the correct
military terms in which to report their respective
commands ready. As the room settled into silence,
THE HILL OVERLOOKING THE WAIXOOMSAC 11Q
John Stark outlined his plan of attack on Burgoyne's
scattered forces. His troops would advance two em-
bracing arms, seemingly a friendly army made up of
Tories going to join Burgoyne, until at the last pos-
sible moment, or upon discovery, the attack would be
made. The arms would then embrace the enemy in
the hug of the black bear. Command of the two
arms was given, respectively, to Colonel Nichols
and Colonel Herrick. With the main force, Stark
himself would be like the jaws of the bear, snapping
up the Tories across the Walloomsac and the guard
at the first bridge, then bringing the two arms to-
gether on the dragoons' hill and at the Germans' rear
position. To Colonel Stickney went the task of rush-
ing the first bridge, while Colonel Hubbard, to whom
was attached the Berkshire County militia under its
fighting parson, was to storm the Tory redoubt on
the American side of the stream.
It was crowded in the room as Stark gave his
orders, and moisture rose out of the damp homespun
and broadcloth of the officers* coats. As the orders
droned on, first one man, then another, shed his thick
coat; waistcoats and stocks soon followed, until all
the listeners stood in their shirtsleeves. Gone was the
thin veneer of militarism, as each New England
neighbor studied and questioned his role in the com-
ing attack. When the orders group broke up and the
sweating, shirt-sleeved officers streamed out into the
yard, the clouds were breaking and the heavy damp
heat of the room seemed to have followed them
into the summer noon.
Nichols and Herrick were the first away, having the
120 MARCH TO SARATOGA
longest distance to travel around the hills and moun-
tains of the army's flanks. Then, for General Stark,
began the anxious moments of unfolding his army.
Until the flanking forces opened fire he could not
move his main body forward. The sun came out, and
he fretted. His horse danced under the twitching of
his hand at the reins. At last, calling to Colonel
Warner, whose Continentals were still waiting be-
yond Bennington town, Stark spurred westward down
the road for a closer look at the bridge. The gun
sergeant of the Hesse-Hanau 3-pounder saw the two
officers coming on at a gallop, and gave an order
while blowing up the slow match of his linstock. He
waited for the riders to stop, then he aimed his little
gun. Stark saw the puff of smoke. He did not heed
where the shot fell, but thought better of his fool-
hardy boldness and, with Warner, galloped back to
where his command was readying for battle.
Baum heard the opening gun of the battle as a dull
thump, far away in the blanket of humidity. It sent
him striding to the lookout from which he could see
to the American camp, far up the valley beyond the
second bridge. From the same spot, he had seen
Nichols's men, and those of Herrick, leave camp. As
one group went north and another south, he judged
that the militia was going home. Baum could not
identify the two horsemen who dashed up to his
cannon, then dashed away again. Their image would
not hold in the long, wood-encased tube of his spy-
glass as he rested it across the shoulder of his personal
orderly. Though heat waves danced across the big
THE ynr.T. OVERLOOKING THE WALLOOMSAC
circle of the lens, Baum could see that one of the
"Yankee" officers was a farmer: he rode all aflap. The
other crouched over his horse's neck, like an Italian
jockey, not sitting erect, like a dragoon! Shortly after
the single cannon-shot, the colonel was called to ob-
serve to his rear, where small groups of local farmers
appeared to be coming in to join the Tory regiments,
as Major Skene had so confidently anticipated. Pres-
ently, white-shirted men were seen coming down off
the ridge to the northwest of the dragoons* log barri-
cade. As they drew nearer, Baum could see that
among them there were a few Indians, his own scouts
bringing them in to volunteer. They were, in fact,
Stockbridge Indians from Western Massachusetts,
allies of the Americans and friends of John Stark
since the days when they had comprised the Indian
Company of Robert Rogers's Rangers. This was
Nichols's right arm of Stark's "pincer," while the
"f armers" in the valley to Baum's rear were Herrick's
men, who had already crossed the Walloomsac and
were now closing in around the Germans* western-
most post, on the road to Sancoik and Cambridge.
Nichols's men opened the fire. Baum's shocked sur-
prise was but momentary, as instinct and training
came vaulting over the wall of error. An order from
the colonel had the dragoons back under cover of the
log barricade; a second order began their return fire
by troop volley. It was impossible for the German
commander to estimate the effect of his return fire, as
all the Yankees seemed to fall down behind rocks or
trees or into folds in the uneven ground. Fire still
MABCH TO SARATOGA
came from the foot of the ridge, and, as the first ex-
citement wore off, Baum noticed that this fire was
spreading to his right in an arc that covered the
whole front of his log barricade. As he continued to
scrutinize the uneven ground before him, his eyes
began to pick out individual rebels, betrayed by a
puff of smoke as they fired, or by a white arm ill-
concealed behind a boulder. His officers, too, were
seeing the Yankees, and were now directing their
volleys at the small individual targets. More and
more single figures would rise up, run for a short
distance, then dive into a new and better position.
The fire onto the German position continued strong.
Bullets thudded into the protecting logs, ricochets
whined overhead; occasionally, a dragoon would be
hit, falling back with a moan or a curse. As the fire-
fight settled down to a steady exchange, Baum re-
alized that the action had become general: all of his
positions were now engaged. To the east, the colonel
could see the main force of the Americans marching
down the road from Bennington, led by the two
officers he had noticed earlier. They were following
closely behind their skirmishers, already at the bridge
and at the Tory earthworks across the stream.
The fight was hottest at this last position, where it
was also most bitter, for it was between neighbors.
There Colonel Hubbard, with the Vermont and Mas-
sachusetts men, led Stark's attack on the rail and earth
entrenchments. Burgoyne's local Tories met the on-
slaught of the people who had driven them from their
farms and homes. Many of them knew the names of
the men they were shooting at, and knew their wives
THE HTT.T. OVERLOOKING THE WALLOOMSAC 123
and children. Tories from Pittsfield took careful aim
at their former parson, who even in battle re-
viled them for their convictions and exhorted them to
see the error of their ways. Little quarter was given
when Stark's militiamen rushed over and around the
Tory redoubt, and American faced American in the
fury of hate and resentment. Both victory and hope-
lessness bring a quick cooling to the heat of battle,
when contempt and despair take over from the elation
of the victor and the fright of the vanquished. A
guard led away the Tory prisoners, who carried with
them their own wounded.
At the first bridge over the Walloomsac, Baum's
light troops, British and Germans, fared little better
than did the Tories in the redoubt. Although their
aimed fire held off the skirmishers, the return fire and
the threat of complete encirclement drove them back.
Some retired down the road, where they ran into the
confusion of the rear post, now completely sur-
rounded by Herrick's men; others climbed the hill,
pushing through the Jdgers in the dead ground to the
safety of Baum's position on the summit Alexander
Fraser found himself among the latter, assisting the
wounded and weeping gun sergeant up the steep
slope. Under accurate rifle-fire, the Hesse-Hanau
3-pounder had been useless, all the gunners dead or
wounded; yet Fraser had to lead the sergeant away
from the piece, which is an artilleryman's pride and
honor and love. Fraser, too, left much behind at the
bridge he could no longer hold: he left his marksmen
dead, and among them his friend, Baron Salans.
Stark now moved his main force to the bridge. A
124 MARCH TO SARATOGA
German woman lay dead on the abutment. She had
run from the log house, either to avoid the leering
farm boys who had captured it after the Tory redoubt
fell, or she had been running to join her man. The
general thought of Elizabeth Stark, his "Molly/' safe
at home in Londonderry, New Hampshire. He crossed
the Walloomsac, dismounted, and as his soldiers
crossed the river he directed them into position to
assault up the hill.
In the log barricade, Baum was holding back
Nichols's men to the north, but was forced to spread
his soldiers more and more thinly as Herrick's men
drifted into the fire-fight, having by-passed and taken
the grenadiers* post on the Cambridge road. Still no
reinforcements appeared. He had been engaged for
two hours, and his ammunition was giving out. At
the ammunition tumbril, Baum had set the officers*
servants and the lightly wounded to rolling cartridges
for the dragoons at the breastworks. The light troops,
who had come up from the bridge, helped to fill out
his lines, thinned by the accurate fire of the Yankees,
and he saw green-coated Jagers from the slope firing
shoulder-to-shoulder with his big, blue-uniformed
troopers. All his positions had fallen except for the
hill-top barricade, but he felt secure if only his am-
munition held out until reinforcements arrived. To
the north, Baum saw a white-shirted Yankee run
toward the barricade, then drop from sight. From
the corner of his eye he saw another rebel move for-
ward. Were they preparing to rush him? Baum strode
across for a better look through the gun embrasure.
THE HTLT. OVERLOOKING THE WALLOOMSAC 125
He had drawn his long sword and was unhooking the
scabbard to hand it to his orderly, when the ammuni-
tion tumbril blew up. Propelled by the blast, Baum
pitched forward. Everyone in the barricade was
shocked and stunned. All firing ceased as the soldiers
stared in dazed wonderment at this new havoc that
had been added to the havoc of battle. It was then
that the American attack came.
They came down over the top of the logs and
around the corners of the open wings of the barri-
cade. They came charging up out of the gullies in
the rear. They shouted and yelled, and some were
screaming the name of Jennie McCrea. The Germans
fought hard for their lives, swinging their muskets
against those of the Yankees. Some of the troopers
had out their sabers and stood at bay, fending off the
jabs of the rifle-barrels. Stones were hurled, while
men grappled together in straining silence. Over-
whelmed, those Germans who could, fled down the
hill into the trees. Again on his feet, Baum gathered
about him a group of dragoons, and in some kind of
order they began to cut their way through a ring of
Yankees. They were making good progress toward
the west summit when a musket ball took the colonel
through the body. He sagged, dropped to his knees,
tried to rise, and fell heavily. All resistance ended
with the fall of Colonel Friederich Baum.
General Stark did not get to Baum's hill until the
battle was over, nor was he able to organize an im-
mediate pursuit. When asked which way the sur-
vivors had gone, each officer pointed in a different
126 MARCH TO SARATOGA
direction. Few had got away at all. Almost all of
Baum's Germans dragoons, Jagers, light infantry,
and gunners were dead, wounded, or dazed prison-
ers of war, seated under guard in their log barricade.
Most of those seen going away had disappeared into
the woods that stretched north a hundred miles to
Canada and the St. Lawrence. Stark knew that they
would wander there, lost, until they died or were
found, gibbering from their discovery of the forest's
immensity. As if in support of Stark's surmise, the
small sound made by a single shot drifted in from
the direction of the mountain. Somewhere over there,
Burgoyne's Indians were scavenging the far outer
edge of the battle.
From the prisoners, Stark learned of the looked-for
reinforcements, not yet arrived; nor was there any
sign of their approach. With his own troops scattered
and playing amid the spoils of war, he realized that
he must act at once to prevent a surprise attack
against himself. Quickly gathering a force together,
he set out in the direction of the Sancoik mill. Before
mounting, however, he sent for Warner's fresh regi-
ment; his own men, he saw as they marched past,
were all but spent after their exertions during the op-
pressive heat of the long afternoon. Though a sparely
built man, Stark himself had sweated through his
blue uniform coat until it was black across the shoul-
ders.
10
The Road Beside the Walloomsac
For the grenadiers of Colonel Breymann's reserve
force, the march through the heat of the afternoon
was agony. At the frequent halts to dress ranks, when
the men straightened their high-fronted hats, the
metal plates of their caps were almost too hot to
touch. Sweat streamed down their faces and ran into
the tight stocks at their throats. But under the harsh
eye of their colonel they kept together, and only a
few of the really sick dared to fall out. These now
staggered on, holding onto the tailgates of the carts
that brought up the rear, behind Lieutenant Spangen-
berg's two 6-pounders.
It took all of the morning of 16 August to cover the
seven miles to Cambridge. Beyond that village, Brey-
mann's force moved faster. At two o'clock in the
afternoon they were met on the road by the draft
horses which Baum had sent to them by Philip Skene.
That officer had remained at the Sancoik bridges with
with a handful of reliable men, to protect the bridges
against possible malicious destruction. Skene asked
Breymann to send a proper bridge guard on ahead,
and, while the fresh horses were being hitched to the
128 MABCH TO SARATOGA
guns, tumbrils, and wagons, Major Ferdinand von
Earner led out the eighty men of his light infantry
detachment. Free of the ponderous shock troops, von
Earner's quick young soldiers swung off up the road
to the Sancoik mill.
At half-past four, Colonel Breymann's horse
clumped over the planking of the mill bridge. Behind
him, singing their dismal marching hymns, the tall,
erect grenadiers were making the left turn into the
Bennington road. Breymann found Skene and von
Earner on the shady side of the mill, interviewing the
first escapees from Baum's battle on the Walloomsac.
The men brought conflicting estimates and impres-
sions of the battle and its outcome. A Tory said that
Baum was completely cut off and was fighting for his
life. A sallow British officer, who had been with the
Indians, said that things were not so bad though of
course the Indians had fled. Two German officers who
had been cut off from their men when Herrick in-
filtrated Baum's rear position concurred with the
calm opinion held by the British gentleman in forest
garb. As the officers talked and the column of grena-
diers trudged by, a single dragoon mounted on a
spent horse rode in from the east. His tale of the
fighting on Baum's hill was one of woe and disaster.
But as the man was only a trooper without the cre-
dentials of a courier, his word was ignored, and he
himself, under suspicion of cowardice and desertion,
was turned over to the provost guard at the rear of
the column.
A mile up the road toward Bennington, Major
Skene, now riding with Colonel Breymann at the
THE ROAD BESIDE THE WALLOOMSAC 12Q
head o the reinforcing column, appeared to have
cause for his optimism. Halfway across a large field,
where a rail fence snaked down from the woods,
lolled a group of some twenty-odd farmers, waiting
for the column to come abreast. Skene could see,
pinned in each of their hats, the white paper patch
of the Loyalist. Stepping his horse carefully through
the muddy ditch, Major Skene gave the animal its
head and a touch of the spur as it came up onto the
harder ground of the field. The horse plunged ahead
to go at a gallop, but was checked by Skene into a
more dignified canter. Two men in stained rifle-shirts
had risen up from behind the rail fence, and to the
Tory leader's surprise, were aiming their rifles at him!
Skene pulled hard on the reins and felt the horse
sink back on its haunches, as its front feet lifted from
the ground. With a sickening sensation, the Major
felt his mount continue to rise under him. He was
aware of the two shots, as the horse screamed and
tossed its head high. The reins went loose in his
hands and Skene half slid, half jumped from the
saddle in time to throw himself free, as the stricken
beast came crashing over and down.
On the road, von Earner's light infantry already
was in extended order to the flank and was firing on
the Yankees, all of whom were now behind the rail
fence. Breymann was shouting orders in harsh Ger-
man, and as Skene gathered his legs under him to
jump up and run for it, he could see and as an old
soldier, approve the complicated evolution which
was bringing the lead company of grenadiers into
line to the front.
130 MAKCH TO SARATOGA
Safely behind the blue and white ranks of von
Rhetz's grenadiers, Major Skene was scraping the
mud from his clothes when Spangenberg's guns went
forward on the right of the road. The Tory looked up,
and over the broad shoulders of the Germans he saw
that a company of rebels had deployed, with more
of their fellows coming down the road behind them.
The volley fired by von Rhetz's company was a fool-
ish one; at their distance it could only waste ammuni-
tion. But as the thick, acrid powder smoke cleared
slowly away in the heavy air, Skene noticed that the
grenadiers had their ramrods out to reload for yet
another volley. Only cannon-fire could break up the
enemy formation now. Spangenberg already had un-
limbered his first gun, and the crew was loading from
the trail-box magazine. The other 6-pounder wheeled
smartly in front of it to bring it around into align-
ment, gun-wheel to gun-wheel, muzzle to the enemy.
A crackle of rifle and musket fire flitted up and down
the rail fence where the rebels disguised as Tories
first had been. Now, near where Skene's horse lay,
there were other still figures. They were light infantry
dead, left behind as their skirmish line went forward.
But when von Earner and his men reached the fence,
the Yankees had gone.
Spangenberg's guns were now in action, and at
long last the grenadiers of the von Rhetz regiment
had stopped their futile volley firing and were mov-
ing forward with bayonets fixed and presented to the
fore. The rebel fire had all but ceased; the rebels
were now streaming back along the road by which
THE KOAD BESIDE THE WAIXOOMSAC
they had come. Skene had to step out of the road as
the next company of grenadiers came up in column.
His left hip, which had landed on the hilt of his
sword, was very painful. At the rear of the now mov-
ing column, he would get another mount; but first he
had to retrieve his saddle and bridle, and his pistols.
Skene limped out onto the field. Some of the light
infantry, now returning from their successful charge,
would help him move the dead horse.
On up the road to Bennington, Colonel Breymann
marched his men. The singing was louder now, and
the massed feet of the companies came down to-
gether on a firmer beat. On the left of the grenadiers,
the hunting horns of the light infantry sounded a con-
fusion of attacks and recalls. Sections were sent off
at the double to drive back the Yankee riflemen, who
had dogged the column from the edge of the forest.
At the rear of the German line of march, the ammuni-
tion carts and the supply wagons fell behind the
advance, as they halted to tend the wounded and
salvage the dead, passed by in the forward press of
the German advance.
Twice, Breymann had deployed his lead company
and unlimbered his guns. Twice, the grenadiers had
followed up a thundering series of volleys with a
bayonet charge that left them, gasping for breath,
on the ground where the rebels had feigned a stand.
Fatigue and discouragement overcame Breymann's
trained regulars at the end of the long hot day. Tem-
pers blew on the gray ash of exhaustion, which flared
into jostling in the reforming ranks, loud words, and
132 MARCH TO SARATOGA
the too quick flaying of the officers' canes. Weariness
was there, too, in the closely packed mass of men,
as more and more heads turned to look at the
wounded and the dead beside the road. Discourage-
ment floated up to the surface of tired spirits, ready
to plunge over into panic or to soar to the sublime
achievement of heroic endeavor.
John Stark's mixed force of militiamen from New
Hampshire, Vermont, and Massachusetts was as fa-
tigued as Breymann's regulars. The men tried to stand
in the open and meet the oncoming grenadiers with a
blast of aimed fire, but they grew wary as they saw
the cannon unlimber and prepare to load. There was
an omnipotence in the unity of the crashing volley-
fire, causing the militiamen to duck their heads,
though reason should have told them that the range
was out. At last, when the line moved forward, with
the low afternoon sun glinting on the ice-blue bayo-
nets, the men of the Yankee militia scattered like
lumbermen from the fall of a tree.
Twice, Stark brought the fleeing militia back into
line, and twice they ran away. Not until they fell
back into Colonel Warner's Continentals, coming up
with the 3-pounder captured at the Walloomsac
bridge, did the militia steady down and prepare to
hold their line. They ranged themselves from the
marshy ground by the river bank on the left, up to
the road where Stark himself was loading and aiming
the little 3-pounder, and on toward the open right
flank, short of the woods. Behind the militia, the
three hundred and fifty Continentals waited in re-
serve.
THE ROAD BESEDE THE WALLOOMSAC 133
A quiet calm had settled, too, over all of Colonel
Breymann's men, as they recognized the fast ap-
proaching climax of the day's battle. The company
commanders, short of ammunition, were holding
back on the volley fire, while several of the light in-
fantry had slung their useless rifles and drawn their
short curved swords.
Lieutenant Spangenberg was having trouble bring-
ing up his guns. As the river side of the road now
appeared to be marshy and soft, he had attempted
to gallop the guns through the field on the left of
the column. But in doing so his teams had come
under fire from the rebel riflemen at the edge of the
wood. The near leader of his number-one gun had
been brought down in a tangled mass of horses and
harness and riders. The gunners were now hauling
that gun forward with drag-ropes. An off horse on the
number-two gun had been wounded and was becom-
ing unmanageable. Major Skene, who had joined
Spangenberg, was reaching from his saddle for the
head of the frightened beast, when, for the second
time that day, his horse was shot from under him and
he went down. Spangenberg himself rode in to gain
control of the team, and somehow the gun was got
forward into position. Undaunted, Skene had cut a
gun-horse free from the number-one limber and was
mounted again. The lieutenant sent him back to find
the ammuntion cart and bring it up along the road.
For the guns, now without teams, this was their last
stand; they would need ammunition.
Before the guns could be brought into action, von
Earner had led his light infantry across the field in a
134 MARCH TO SARATOGA
flanking movement, intended to envelop the Yankees'
short right wing. Warner and Stark, standing beside
the American gun, saw them move out and guessed
at their intention. No order was necessary between
the militia general and the Continental regimental
colonel; the New Hampshire and the Congress troops
were now working in concert. With a swing of his
arm, Warner set his Green Mountain Boys in motion.
At a slow, steady jog-trot, they followed Seth Warner
behind the ragged lines of the New Hampshire men,
who turned to grin as their neighbors passed by.
They met von Earner's men behind the American
right, and the seventy-odd German light infantry fell
back under the pressure of Warner's three hundred
and fifty fresh troops, themselves natural light in-
fantrymen or rangers.
Outnumbered and outflanked, Colonel Breymann's
resolve weakened as the Yankees, encouraged by
Warner's fresh troops, opened a telling fire at long
range. No counter-charge came from Baum. From the
number of rebels harassing him, the Brunswick colo-
nel reluctantly assumed that the troops he had been
sent to reinforce had already been defeated. The
single dragoon (now with the provost guard) must
have been right. But not only Baum was "in great
danger"; equally in danger were Breymann and his
grenadiers.
Colonel Breymann gave the order to retreat. No
light infantry remained to cover the grenadiers, as
they fell back in their ordered blocks of companies.
Von Earner had reported to Breymann the loss of his
THE ROAD BESIDE THE WAIXOOMSAC 135
fine corps against Warner's men. As he reported that
all of his officers were casualties, he pressed his linen
handkerchief against the deep wound in his chest.
Spangenberg, too, was dead, and was thus spared the
sight of his guns, unattended and abandoned in the
gap between the retreating and the advancing armies.
For two miles, Colonel Breymann kept his grena-
diers in order. Then, as the bridges of Sancoik drew
near and darkness fell, the discipline by which his
life was lived suddenly snapped. Somehow in the
gloom the grenadiers of von Rhetz and the grenadiers
of the Regiment von Specht, both of which had suf-
fered heavy casualties, became intermixed. Shouts
and orders flew about. In the other companies, a
bleary-eyed officer cried "Attack!" and tried to form
up his men, while a second officer, shaking off a film
of torpor, shouted "Halt!" Rifle shots from the Ameri-
cans, who were dogging the German retreat, poured
into the confusion. A ball took Breymann in the leg.
Sudden panic seized the whole corps of grenadiers.
In an instant, they collapsed into a frightened mass
of fleeing men. Carried along in their midst was the
limping Lieutenant Colonel Heinrich Christoph von
Breymann. He was badly hurt.
A few Americans followed the grenadiers over the
mill bridge. But it was too dark for aimed shots, and
they had used up most of their powder and ball.
Then, too, the mill stream looked cool and inviting as
they passed over the bridge. The day had been as
hot and close as any they could remember.
11
At Headquarters
Following the Battle of Bennington (as John Stark's
victory over the German mercenaries came to be
known) a midsummer torpor settled over all the
armies on the upper Hudson: British, American, and
Sovereign New Hampshire. Victory and defeat alike
seemed to be accepted philosophically by all the op-
posed commanders. Energy was addled, ambition
brooded, and hope rested on distant eventualities.
For the cosy Baroness Riedesel, the period of mili-
tary inertia that began in mid-August 1777 was a very
happy time. Her family was reunited. Fourteen
months earlier, she had left her home in Wolf enbiittel
to follow her husband to North America. The infant
Caroline had now grown into a sturdy little girl, able
to walk across the lawn if she held tightly to the
scabbard of her father's sword. Friederika was a shy
three-year-old, while Augusta, at six, was a regal
young lady who accepted as her due the homage of
generals and of privates. At Fort Edward, where the
baroness had made a home for her husband and her
little daughters in the Red House headquarters, Gen-
136
AT HEADQUABTERS 137
eral Riedesel's duties were such as to bring him home
almost every night. Being a soldier's wife and the
daughter of a soldier, the baroness did not mind too
much the fact that all five members of her family had
to share a single small room at headquarters. She
tucked them all in somehow, and even kept an eye
on her two maids, who slept on pallets in the hall.
The general's four aides were in die house, too, and
bluflE old General Phillips, who had been an easy
capture for the young and pretty baroness, was a
frequent visitor to the Red House, which served also
as commissary headquarters for the army.
Friederika Riedesel particularly enjoyed the eve-
nings. Then, she would preside at dinner, served
under the trees beside the river; or when it rained, as
it did so often during that wet, humid summer, she
would have her faithful servant, Rockel, set up the
tables in the barn. Each night there was some new
guest, usually an officer on his way either to or from
General Burgoyne's headquarters at Fort Miller,
where the wife of an absent commissary acted as
hostess for Gentleman Johnny. After dinner the
baroness withdrew, as was proper for a lady. In her
small room, while her children slept, she mended
their clothes and hummed little gay songs to herself,
to the distant accompaniment of the men's conversa-
tion as they drank a convivial bottle under the trees
or played at cards around the big staff table in the
room below.
Baroness Riedesel was very happy. Soon enough
would come the day when the big calash which had
138 MAKCH TO SABATOGA
been made for her in Canada would be rolled out, the
horses hitched to it, and with the girls stowed safely
behind, she would climb up onto the box with the
good Rockel to follow the army once again.
Beyond the outposts of General Burgoyne's army,
twenty-six miles away at the mouth of the Mohawk
River, General Philip Schuyler was closing down his
headquarters in preparation for turning over the
command of the northern army to his appointed suc-
cessor, General Horatio Gates, Into one set of boxes
Schuyler's personal staff filed the documents that told
the history of their general's two-year stewardship of
the northern frontier. On these papers would be
based Philip Schuyler's defense in the court-martial
proceedings ordered by the Congress to investigate
the fall of Ticonderoga and Burgoyne's advance to
the Hudson. In a second set of files were all the per-
manent records of the army; these would facilitate
the rapid and efficient turnover of command.
In the course of that summer of 1777, General
Schuyler's staff had packed up a succession of head-
quarters. The first had been at Fort Edward, where
Schuyler had stopped on learning that his lieutenant,
General Arthur St. Clair, had saved his inadequate
force by giving up the untenable forts at Ticonder-
oga. For this retreat, which he had taken to avoid a
stand which he knew to be hopeless, St. Clair, to-
gether with Schuyler, was to face a court-martial. It
was at Fort Edward that Schuyler set his axemen to
the destruction of the Skenesborough road, impeding
AT HEADQUARTERS 139
Burgoyne's inarch to the Hudson. There, too, John
Nixon's brigade of Continentals had arrived to rein-
force the northern army. Headquarters were at Fort
Miller when the rear guard fell back from Fort Ed-
ward, bringing the story of Jane McCrea's murder,
and the local militia began to rally as tales spread of
the savagery of Burgoyne's Indians. Schuyler's staff
had unpacked and packed again the headquarters
boxes at Saratoga, where Philip Schuyler sadly left
in the path of the British army his own lovely country
house beside the river. The staff had been busy at
Stillwater, where headquarters next was established.
On 8 August, the first messenger had arrived from
the west, bringing word that Colonel Barry St. Leger
was before Fort Stanwix, the gate to the Mohawk
Biver valley on Albany's western approach. St.
Leger's force was the now-exposed right claw of
General Burgoyne's army, swooping out of the north.
The next messenger told the tale of Nicholas Herki-
mer's drawn battle at Oriskany, on the road to Stan-
wix. Though gallantly fought, that encounter left
the besieged garrison of Americans without help; it
also put the whole Mohawk Valley in peril of an
internecine war, should the Iroquois and the local
Tories of St. Leger's army win through to their former
homeland. In the big staff-room at Stillwater, General
Schuyler had been forced to veto the contrary wish of
a hostile council of his officers in order to send Major
General Benedict Arnold, with Ebenezer Learned's
brigade, to the relief of Fort Stanwix. Despite accusa-
tions by the New England faction that Schuyler was
140 MABCH TO SARATOGA
deliberately, even treacherously, weakening his army
before Burgoyne's main threat on the Hudson, Arnold
dashed off eagerly to the promise of battle in the
west. Staff work was heavy on the right flank of the
American army, where Major General Benjamin
Lincoln, a New Englander like Arnold and Schuy-
ler's loyal lieutenant, was trying to argue with John
Stark over the employment of the New Hampshire
militia and the right to command those troops.
It was a stormy headquarters that had been set up
at Stillwater, with squalls blowing from the north and
west and east to ruffle the papers on the trestle desks.
Unknown to the northern army, the terrible swift
lightning of the Continental Congress, sitting in
Philadelphia, had already been loosed, and finally
would strike down that army's dedicated general,
Philip Schuyler.
As the clerks and aides closed down his last head-
quarters, Schuyler, in his Albany mansion, awaited
his successor. General Gates did not arrive there until
19 August, a fortnight after receiving from Congress
his appointment to the command of the northern
army.
The only way to attain high rank in the British
army of the eighteenth century was through noble
birth, the Guards, or the influence of a patron (in
breeches or in petticoats) who was close to the
sovereign. Major Horatio Gates could count on none
of these endowments, so his career as a soldier had,
from its beginning, a well-defined ceiling. Through
AT HEADQUARTERS
bravery and ability, while still in his thirties Gates
had reached the rank of major. Further than that he
could not go, in a British army that was to make use
of his rare capacity for efficient staff organization to
bolster the careers of more highly placed men, until
in time he was put out to graze on the sparse mead-
ows of retirement. His ambition whetted by his suc-
cesses in North America during the French and In-
dian War, Gates sold his commission in the army,
tried for a worthy civil post, and once again was
snubbed for his presumption. Finally, in 1772, he
came out to Virginia, where he bought "Travellers
Rest" and set himself up as a gentleman albeit a
colonial one.
By chance, and a snob's eye for a true aristocrat,
Squire Gates happened to be calling upon George
Washington at the time the latter was offered the
command of the American army. Washington, who
had soldiered with Gates, recognized in his guest an
accomplished staff officer who would make a good
adjutant general for the new army. The appointment
carried the rank of brigadier general.
Gates spent the year of the siege of Boston at Gen-
eral Washington's headquarters, where his job with
the personnel and the personalities of the Continental
Army brought him into close contact with the New
England leaders. With them, he developed an affinity
nurtured by a common suspicion that the landed
gentry sought to become a native American aristoc-
racy.
In May 1776 Horatio Gates was promoted to major
142 MABCH TO SARA/TOGA
general and sent to command the American army
then in Canada. When he sought to join his new com-
mand he found it had been driven out of Canada, a
disorganized, beaten rabble, seeking refuge in the
military territory of the northern department, com-
manded by the patroon Philip Schuyler. In the face
of this desperate situation, Gates and Schuyler di-
vided the authority on the menaced northern fron-
tier. In supreme command, Schuyler remained at
rear headquarters in Albany, maintaining liaison with
General Washington and with the Congress. Gates
commanded the troops from Ticonderoga, where he
rebuilt the morale of the shattered army, and with
the violently energetic Brigadier General Benedict
Arnold (whom Gates flattered himself he could con-
trol) had staved off a British invasion of New York
during the campaign season of 1776.
At Ticonderoga, Gates had had a taste of the
independent high command of which he had
dreamed. The true division of command on the
northern lake actually lay between Schuyler's instinc-
tive leadership, which Gates resented, and Arnold's
driving energy, of which Gates was jealous. Gates's
contribution to the campaign had been that of a staff
officer, brilliant in matters of organization, painstak-
ing in detail, yet lacking that spark which inspires
devotion.
Horatio Gates spent the winter of 1776-77 advanc-
ing his own ambitions by ingratiating himself with
the strong New England faction of the Continental
Congress, whose military candidate he became. It
AT HEADQUARTERS 143
was the jealously guarded prerogative of the Congress
to make or break general officers o the Continental
Army, without reference to or recommendation from
the commander in chief. The machinations of this
system caused John Stark to resign his colonelcy on
being left off a new list of ten brigadier generals, and
resulted in Benedict Arnold's being passed over for
promotion to major general.
In 1777 the New Englanders aimed to bring down
the artistocratic New Yorker, Major General Philip
Schuyler. The attack burst into flame when St. Glair
let Ticonderoga fall to Burgoyne without a fight. It
took no cognizance of the saving of the Continental
core of Schuyler's inadequate little army. At each re-
ceding step before Burgoyne, the accusations against
Schuyler flared up anew, until they licked about the
ominous word "treason." So virulent grew the charges,
and so calumnious the rumors, that the Congress
ordered the court-martial of both Schuyler and his
lieutenant, Arthur St. Glair. By 4 August, the oily
fat worm of gossip had consumed the high reputation
of Philip Schuyler, and Horatio Gates was named to
replace him.
Two weeks later, Gates rode up to the door of the
Schuyler mansion in Albany. Accompanying him was
his aide and deputy adjutant general, Major James
Wilkinson, a soft, small young man with the fibrous
character of a clinging vine.
Neither Gates nor Wilkinson tarried long in the
correctly courteous atmosphere of Schuyler's house.
On his way upriver, Horatio Gates had no time or in-
144 MAKCH TO SARATOGA
clination to rest with the ebbing tide. The ship of his
ambition lay with the army at the junction of the
Mohawk and the Hudson rivers. There the vessel that
Schuyler had rebuilt out of the shivered timbers of
St. Glair's regiments lay anchored against the swirling
flood of Burgoyne's advance.
Far away to the south, in the wide mouth of Chesa-
peake Bay, a British warship carried in its after-cabin
another headquarters group, one which was to play a
large part in the events shaping up on the Hudson
River. General Sir William Howe sat down to dine
with his brother, Admiral the Lord Howe. In the
roadstead, awaiting the brothers' pleasure, lay a vast
armada of transports with their naval escorts. Sir
William Howe was on his way to invest and capture
the rebel capital in Philadelphia. It was here, in the
broad sea bay, that a fast dispatch boat bearing
orders from England found Sir William. It was on
that same day that Colonel Baum and Colonel Brey-
mann met the Yankees on the Walloomsac.
The orders, which the General read and passed
across the table to the Admiral, were fourteen weeks
old. In them, Lord George Germaine, writing from
London, requested Howe to co-operate with General
Burgoyne's northern army. No urgency was indicated
in the cabinet minister's letter. It was merely the
expression, on the part of a gentleman, of a wish that,
when a second gentleman's plans were quite con-
cluded, he should go to the assistance of a third.
There were other letters from London in the newly
Lieutenant General John Burgoyne
Major General Baron von Riedesel Brigadier General Simon Fraser
Major General Horatio Gates
Major General Benedict Arnold
Fort Ticonderoga Museum Collection
AT HEADQUARTERS 145
arrived packet, letters that the brothers could share
as they lingered over their port in the Admiral's
spacious cabin. There had been a third brother,
George, who was also a soldier. He was now dead,
killed by a Frenchman's bullet in 1758, at that same
Fort Ticonderoga which Johnny Burgoyne had re-
cently captured from the Yankees.
The shoreline outside the cabin windows was ob-
scured by the heat haze. When a wind rose to carry
the British fleet further up into Chesapeake Bay, the
two brothers would part, die General to try Washing-
ton and gain Philadelphia, the Admiral to patrol the
North American coast and the West Indies.
Sir Henry Clinton was more consciously concerned
with Burgoyne's descent of the Hudson River to Al-
bany than was Sir William Howe, the commander of
all British troops in North America. Clinton was in
New York City with an army of four thousand
regulars. Howe had left him there to hold the city
and the port. In an offhand and casual way that de-
ceptively shifted responsibility, Howe had also in-
structed him to aid in Burgoyne's invasion. But
Henry Clinton's army was too small for him to send
a part of it up the Hudson, where an American army
barred the highland. He must await the reinforce-
ments which were known to have left England in
June.
So General Clinton waited, too, in his pleasant,
well-appointed headquarters in New York. Through
the hot month of August he waited for the troopships
3MABCH TO SABATOGA
making the slow passage from England to New York.
He waited for messengers making the dangerous
journey through the rebel lines that separated him
from his friend John Burgoyne. Still far out to sea the
troop ships butted the North Atlantic trade winds,
making slow progress. The messengers would never
come; they hung from the limbs of trees with the
ripening apples, the placard "Spy" pinned on their
chests below the taut rope that bit deep into their
necks.
The occasional courier who did get through gave
Clinton little cause for alarm on behalf of the army
to the north. Burgoyne wrote of his hope to reach
Albany by 22, August. Neither British general had yet
been convinced that the rebels would fight, though
both had been at Bunker Hill. On 10 August Clinton
had written to Burgoyne that he believed the rebel-
lion would soon be over.
August had gone by and September was half over
when a haggard messenger got through from Bur-
goyne to Clinton with the alarming news that the
northern army was still forty miles above Albany at a
pkce called Saratoga. Concern splashed the cool
faade of Sir Henry Clinton's studied Guardsman's
calm. He looked down the harbor, where for so long
he had expected to see the troopships coming through
the Narrows.
It was more than a week before they finally came.
Clinton did not wait for the new troops to disembark
and find their land legs after the three months* pas-
sage. He gathered up three thousand infantrymen
AT HEAIX^UARXERS 147
and headed up the Hudson, to divert the Yankees and
to assist General Burgoyne. At last, in a clear revela-
tion of the events of an indolent summer, Clinton was
making "a desperate attempt on a desperate oc-
casion/'
12
"Q" and "A"
Captain de la Naudiere, immaculate except for a
day's stubble awoke General Burgoyne at the Duer
House headquarters as soon as word came of the
defeat of Baum and of Breymann's desperate situa-
tion. Aides, their stocks hastily tied and their eyes
heavy with sleep, galloped down the river road
from Fort Miller to rout out the 47th of Foot, biv-
ouacked at the mouth of the Batten Kill and there-
fore in closest proximity to the retreating Brunswick-
ers. Burgoyne himself arrived in time to lead out the
six companies of Wolfe's own 47th to the aid and
succor of the mauled grenadiers.
Colonel Breymann met Burgoyne with punctilious
correctness: a doffing of his hat and a short bow from
the saddle. At the movement, a sharp stab of pain ran
up the German's injured leg, but the flush in his
heavy face was not that of fever. It came, rather,
from the inner hurt of smoldering self-anger, of trucu-
lent self-defense, of patched-up pride, and of unex-
pended fury. With an inherent courtesy, Burgoyne
acknowledged the greeting with a low bow, in a mark
of respect which gave no hint of mockery or censure
148
V AND A 149
toward the colonel of his beaten troops. Turning to
Nicholas Sutherland, the colonel of the 47th, General
Burgoyne requested him to have his regiment line
the road.
So it was that Breymann's grenadiers marched back
into the perimeter of the invasion army's camp, be-
tween the correctly respectful files of their British
comrades-at-arms. The grenadiers sang in their ranks.
In front of them Burgoyne and Breymann rode in
silence. In the rear of the German column the
wounded dragged along under the awed stare of the
stiff ranks of the 47th, who had not yet met the
Yankee rifleman. Behind the retiring army, the rutted,
muddy, pitted road wound away through the forest
to Cambridge, to the Sancoik mill, where the streams
marked a ragged cross at the edge of the Hudson
Valley, and on up the Walloomsac River into the
green hills around Bennington.
Of Baum's seven hundred and fifty men, only a
scattered handful returned to the camp of Burgoyne's
army. These were the frightened, haggard men who
had found their way through the dense woods, avoid-
ing alike the Yankee rangers and Stockbridge Indians,
and their own scalping, scavenging Indian bands.
The four guns of the Hesse-Hanau Artillery orna-
mented the tavern green at Bennington, where bound
Tory prisoners cringed under the scorn of former
neighbors, and blond German boys tended minor
wounds, turning dull, expressionless eyes to the
curious Vermonters who came to stare at the hireling
mercenaries.
150 MABCH TO SABATOGA
Of Burgoyne's Canadian Indians, only those with
scalps and loot to turn into cash returned to the
Hudson. As they packed up their traps, they told the
officers, who came to remind them of their promises
and to urge them to stay, that the sun which once
rose so bright was now obscured by dark and gloomy
clouds threatening a deluge. Blaming the weather,
in this obvious parable, the last of the Indian war-
riors who had danced on the banks of the Bouquet
River now left the British army.
As the Bennington force retreated, Eraser's advance
corps already on the west bank of the Hudson
fell back. They had crossed on a bridge of rafts, and
were only waiting for word from Bennington that
Baum had captured the magazine of stores and the
Yankee horse lines before they moved on down the
Hudson to the commanding heights at StUlwater.
Without the stores the advance corps could not go
on, and after the torrential rains of 15 August swept
away their bridge, Fraser found himself isolated and
vulnerable on the western shore of the river. Lieuten-
ant John Schank of the Royal Navy ferried them
back to the east bank in a fleet scratched together
from any available bateaux and scows.
While across the river, Thomas Anburey, a gentle-
man-volunteer accompanying the advance guard, was
given the opportunity that he had sought when he
volunteered to follow the army. There had occurred
a vacancy in the complement of officers of the 24th
Foot, which Anburey was invited to fill. He accepted
the invitation with alacrity, and a brother officer lent
it 19 ___ ** 99
Q" AND A" 151
him a hank of red-dyed horsehair to sew into his cap,
and a silver epaulet for his shoulder. Once again in
the old bivouac on the Batten Kill, Anburey found
time to write another letter to his friend in England.
The new bit of braid was ever present in the corner
of his eye, as he bent over the tablet on his knee, writ-
ing of his hope of becoming the captain of a company
by the end of autumn. His was the eternal optimism
of the soldier: he was immortal in a dead man's
shoes; death could not come to him.
Yet the end of the campaign had come for many
officers and men. Of the German contingent alone,
twenty-six officers were casualties of the Bennington
expedition: all the dragoons, nine officers of von
Earner's light infantry and J'dger corps, and many
cavalrymen had fallen, dead or wounded, to the long
brown rifles of the "Yankees." In the days follow-
ing Breymann's return, the camp was filled with men
convalescing from their wounds. Colonel Breymann
hobbled about, using his gold-headed cane as a staff
rather than a rod, while his men, chastened after
their panic, pointed out to each other the five crudely
patched rents in his campaign coat, where bullets had
passed him close by. Lieutenant Hannemann, his
neck swathed in linen bandages, hoped that by lying
very still he would recover in time to go on with the
expedition. But when Captain von Geyso, who came
in every day to have a flesh wound dressed, ordered
him back to Canada, Hannemann could neither voice
a protest nor shake his head in refusal
For the wounded, bound for Canada, the road was
152 MAUCH TO SARATOGA
long and painful. Lieutenant Hannemann found the
jolting of the Canadian cart, returning empty, too
painful to endure, so he got out and walked. He did
not try to keep up, trusting his luggage to the driver
and only hoping to find it intact at the boat landing
on Lake George. From the point of the army on the
Batten Kill to Fort Edward, the wounded Yager
walked through the British wing of General Bur-
goyne's army. He met work parties of the 9th, the
20th, and the 21st patching and repairing the road.
The soldiers looked at him blankly, without compas-
sion, as though he were an alien instead of an ally.
He found German friends around Burgoyne's head-
quarters at the Duer House, where he rested, catch-
ing a glimpse of cool white summer dresses beside
the tea table in the shade of the tall elms.
At Fort Edward, Lieutenant Hannemann stopped
at the hospital to get a clean dressing for his neck. On
the island and on the bank of the Hudson, the army
was building up its main stock-pile, which it would
carry forward on the march to Albany. The quarter-
masters stood, their legs apart, checking and counting
barrels of flour and pork as squads of sweating sol-
diers rolled them down planks at the open tailgates
of the carts. Everyone was working hard and cheer-
fully at tasks which they knew to have urgent im-
portance. Bateaux lined the river bank, while on the
shore caulkers with their wedges and mauls tamped
the long strings of greasy brown tun into the open
seams, readying still more boats for the river road.
John Schank, his white shirt open at the throat, stood
knee deep in the muddy brown water, helping a
Q AND A 153
squad of sailors launch a strange-looking pontoon. In
the lee of the island, a raft of similar pontoons was
anchored and moored. When completed, with tim-
bers across their gunwales and planks spiked on top
of the timbers, each pair of pontoons would make a
segment of a floating bridge which would keep pace
with the army and would link the two shores of the
Hudson. Over Schank's bridge, the army could march
across the Mohawk River, the last natural obstacle
before they reached Albany.
Beyond Fort Edward, the road to Lake George was
maintained and guarded by the troops of RiedeseFs
division. This was the critical stretch of Burgoyne's
supply road. Since the western and Canadian Indians
had gone home, the people who lived on farms along
the poor road that followed the west bank of the
Hudson had grown bold. Impromptu bands of "cow-
boys" under self-appointed ensigns and captains at-
tacked any scout or foraging party from Burgoyne's
army when they ventured across the river. Every
British wagon-train that passed between Fort Ed-
ward and Lake George was in danger of being way-
laid by a determined force of these Charlotte County
rangers. To protect the convoys, Brigadier General
Johan Friederich von Specht kept his headquarters
at the Jones farm. There, where the road began its
climb out of the Hudson Valley and entered a moun-
tain defile, the wagonmasters would be joined by a
strong escort of German infantry which would con-
duct them through the vulnerable pass, to the landing
place at the head of Lake George.
The boat trip down the Lake George leg of Bur-
154 MABCH TO SAKATOGA
goyne's supply route gave Lieutenant Hannemann
and the other wounded men from the Battle of
Bennington a last awed look at the terrible deep
woods of North America. High, steep mountains
squeezed in on the narrow blue ribbon of water. The
boat convoys stayed in the middle of the lake, shun-
ning the inhospitable and seemingly deserted shores
of stark, gray rock and thick underbrush that clogged
the forests blanketing the mountain slopes.
Not until Ticonderoga did the road to Canada
emerge from the woods. At that point European
civilization began again for those who, since early
in July, had been in the wild lands between the old
fort and the crude way-stations on the road to Al-
bany. To the weary men from the fighting point of
the army the big vessels of the Royal Navy, anchored
in the basin below the forts, gave promise of a swift
passage to the city streets of Montreal.
During the last two weeks of August 1777 an( ^
the first days of September the British post at Ticon-
deroga underwent a change in its character and pur-
pose. After the battle fought on the Hubbardton road,
a steady trickle of sick and wounded had found the
way back to Ticonderoga, to its hospitals and the
boats that would take them to Canada. The western
Indians had paddled their big canoes silently under
the high cliff at the tip of the Ticonderoga peninsula.
Warily, the garrison had watched as the Canadian
tribes paused at the landing place on their journey
north. After the battle at Bennington, men of the
Prinz Friederich regiment had tenderly lifted the
V AND "A" 155
stretcher cases who liad survived the trip and had
laid them on the decks of the Canada-bound vessels.
Then, in late August, came Indian refugees women
and children from the Mohawk villages west of Al-
bany, driven from their ancient homeland by the
rebels after their tribal brothers, under Joseph
Brandt, had fought with St. Leger's forces at die
Battle of Oriskany. Burgoyne employed the refugee
men as much-needed scouts; the others he sent on
the long, weary trial to a new home in Canada.
About i September the last of the reinforcements
for General Burgoyue's army left Fort Ticonderoga
on their way south. These were culls from the regi-
mental rear parties which had been left at Montreal
Men who in June had been thought too old or too
feeble to march with the proud battalions now, in
September, appeared able and fit to the man-hungry
colonels of wan and slim battalions, anxious to keep
their place in Burgoyne's line of battle.
Not many days after the final draft of reinforce-
ments went through to the army on the upper Hud-
son, the last shipment of supplies from Canada was
unloaded at the wharves at Ticonderoga. With the
expediting of this final cargo, Fort Ticonderoga and
its garrison reverted to a purely military role. Steve-
dores went back to being soldiers, cargo checkers
again became drill sergeants, and officers moved out
from the cool shade of the quarters to reappraise
defense positions and to lay out new fields of fire. On
down the supply line, the last cart was packed, the
156 MAKCH TO SARATOGA
last bateau loaded, and one by one the transhipping
points were closed down. When a sweating carter at
Fort Edward rolled the last barrel o flour to the tail-
gate of his wagon, and remarked to the two privates
who reached to ease the barrel down that this was
"the one we've been looking for/* Burgoyne's army
was completely and finally cut off from its Canadian
base.
General Burgoyne had cast himself adrift. He now
floated in a hostile sea, with no friendly relieving
feature on a nearby horizon toward which to steer.
Between his army and Canada there remained only
the sprawling complex of forts at Ticonderoga and a
small post on Diamond Island, stepping-stones along
the long way he had come. On their tight island, the
two companies of the 47th invited a neutralizing raid
by "cowboys" from the west bank of the Hudson.
Even the great fortifications at Ticonderoga were
vulnerable to Yankee attack. There, Brigadier Gen-
eral Henry Watson Powell, humorless but confidently
tenacious, had been left with two weak regiments.
With his main strength across Lake Champlain on
Mount Independence, Powell kept watch on the
slopes to the eastward, where Warner's Continentals
and Stark's New Hampshire men threatened to
scythe around Burgoyne.
Burgoyne knew that, between himself and Albany,
the American army, now under a defensive General
Horatio Gates, was digging in across his way. Of
what was taking place beyond and behind the rebel
lines he knew nothing at all. The long-expected word
"Q" AND "A" 157
that Sir Henry Clinton was marching up the Hudson
to the aid of the northern army failed to come.
Couriers, sent out to meet the general coming from
New York, turned back, unable to find a way through
or around Gates's army. No spies came to the camp
above the Batten Kill with rumor or gossip on which
to base either hope or despair. Burgoyne drifted in a
silent sea, with no echoing answer to his cries for
help.
One messenger did get through to the Duer House
at Fort Miller. He was an Indian from St. Leger's
force, besieging Fort Stanwix, but the dateline of the
letter that he handed to the general read "Oswego,
2/th August," and Johnny Burgoyne needed to read
no further to know that Barry St. Leger had fallen
back.
Neither bluff nor threats had been able to bring
about the capitulation of Fort Stanwix. St. Leger had
run regular siege approaches to within a hundred
and fifty yards of the fort. With a mine ready to be
laid under the northwest bastion, St. Leger's Iroquois,
surly and dissatisfied since the Battle of Oriskany,
had mutinied. Two hundred Indians had deserted in
a body, but those that remained had demanded that
the siege be raised, while rumors spread that the
invincible Benedict Arnold was coming with an army
that could be numbered only with the leaves in the
trees. As St. Leger deliberated with his British and
Tory officers, the Indians ran amok They pillaged
the tents of the officers and menaced the soldiers. The
council of war broke up with the officers hurrying
158 MAKCH TO SABATOGA
to rejoin their units, which already were running
away, as much to escape their own Indian "allies"
as from fear of the supposed approach of Arnold.
From Oswego, on Lake Ontario, St. Leger wrote
that he was hastening with his troops, to put them
under Burgoyne's command. But the general on the
upper Hudson knew that it was four hundred weary
miles to Oswego, and that long before Barry St. Leger
and his seven hundred regulars and Tories could
come up to him he must either be in Albany or
climbing back up his severed supply line into safe
and secure winter quarters.
John Burgoyne never seriously considered a re-
treat. As a soldier, his orders were as clear to him,
and as enduring, as a fife tune: he was to force his
way to Albany, where he was to put himself under
command of General Howe.
After the failure to capture stores and horse-trans-
port at Bennington, Burgoyne was four weeks in
building up the twenty-five days* supplies which he
deemed necessary to carry the army to Albany. At
last, on 11 September, all was in readiness. Wagons
were packed, boats were loaded, and Schank's float-
ing bridge was anchored across the Hudson. Von
Specht's brigade had rolled its blankets and moved
to Fort Edward. Baroness Riedesel still had the last
of the children's clothes hanging on the line; when
the order came to move out, her maid would quickly
gather them up, and the children would have clean
clothes all the way to Albany. The commissary's wife,
in her gray traveling dress, sat by the fire in the de-
159
serted Duer House headquarters. Gentleman Johnny
had gone to his field headquarters on the Batten Kill,
leaving her with her baggage wagons and his own,
She would dine alone, unless a staff officer should
come back on some errand and join her.
13
Reconnaissance
During the afternoon of 11 September, the rain,
which had been threatening, began to fall. The pre-
paratory order to move out was cancelled. The six
thousand men of General Burgoyne's army went into
bivouac along the ten miles of road that lay on the
east bank of the Hudson from the Batten Kill to Fort
Edward.
The following day, the army woke to a steady
drizzle. Stiff and cold, the men (and the women)
cursed the land in which they found themselves,
cursed their lot as soldiers, and cursed the enemy
that stood in their way to the comfortable billets
awaiting them in Albany.
John Schank spent the day pacing the planks of his
floating bridge as though it were a quarterdeck.
While his crew of sailors bailed put the pontoons, the
land-locked naval officer kept a close watch on the
taut anchor cables that held his odd-looking com-
mand firmly in place across the current. He had lost
one makeshift bridge to the torrential summer rains
of August. Now every drop of rain splashing on the
160
BECONNAISSANCE l6l
flat waters of the Hudson River seemed to threaten,
for a second time, the engineering feat that Schank
had accomplished. The present structure was so con-
trived that, should the flood rise on the river above,
Schank could quickly disconnect the segments and
float them out of harm's way until the spate of water
had passed. But the rains of September differed from
the August deluge. They were cold and silent, pene-
trating and harsh, and they lay on the land like the
snows which they presaged.
The rain stopped during the night, and before the
guard corporal woke the drummers whose din began
the army's day of march, the sentries had seen the
stars come out all over the sky. The road dried
quickly in the warm sun, and before noon the first
contingent moved out onto the bridge. Most of the
men in the army saw their general that day. Gentle-
man Johnny Burgoyne stood on the high bank on the
west side of the Hudson, his constant aide, Sir Francis
Garr Clarke, beside him, taking the salute of the colo-
nels as they came up, all grinning, onto the new and
hopeful side of the river. As the companies streamed
by, they cheered Burgoyne, who waved the plumed
and crested cap which, like them, he was wearing,
and called back the watchword of the day: "Britons
never retreat!"
General Phillips rode up and dismounted to watch
Captain Thomas Jones bring his brigade guns off the
bridge. Each gun and limber-team in turn trotted
out on to the planking. As they reached the far shore
the drivers lifted their teams into a rattling gallop
MABCH TO SARATOGA
and, with whips flaying, brought their limbers and
guns up the steep cut to the top of the bank, mud
flying, harness chains ajingle. On the road, the wild-
eyed horses were reined into a steady trot to close
up with the red-coated infantry, and to clear the
bridgehead for the next gun to cross over the Hudson.
Baron Riedesel kept his German contingent on the
east shore for two more days. Two miles down the
west shore, the British had come to Saratoga, and to
a rich bounty which they paused to gather. At Philip
Schuyler's country seat the harvest was full. Fields
of ripened wheat quilted the wide folds of the high-
lands around the house, and eight-foot stalks of
maize, like rustic soldiery, ranked row upon row
along the side of the road to Albany. In the deserted
farm sheds, the racked scythes, flails, sickles, and husk-
ing knives awaited the harvesters. At the mill on Fish
Creek the stones were in place, lacking only the mill-
er's hand on the gear-lever, and that of his assistant
to open the hopper-gate.
On 14 September, soldier-farmers worked through-
out the long day to reap Philip Schuyler's harvest.
Threshers and winnowers toiled on the threshing-
floor. While the sergeant-miller filled sacks with
bread flour, huskers shucked ears of maize for the
poor hungry horses of the army's train.
The newly commissioned officer of the 24th Foot
found the picquet guard that night a vantage point
for reflection. In the course of a single day Lieutenant
Anburey had witnessed the pillaging of a rich and
prosperous estate. From his place in the first surge
BECONNAISSANCE 163
of a victorious advancing army he could view philo-
sophically the devastation "attendant on war." But
Anburey, the young gentleman from London, during
that day of harvest had ignored, or had not seen, that
quarter of the plantation where the wheat lay
scorched by fire. The night now hid the blackened
acre where, with the torch of resistance in her own
hand, Kitty Schuyler had tried to burn her home and
the yield of her husband's land.
On the morning of 15 September, the close ranks
of the German contingent crossed to the west bank
of the Hudson. After diem came the gun park in re-
serve, guarded by the 47th Foot. Baron Riedesel did
not see his baroness that day, though he was told
that her big calash had come safely across the river
with the baggage wagons before the floating bridge
was broken into its component parts. It would be
floated downstream with the store bateaux and would
keep pace with the army.
At Saratoga the German general took his division's
station along the river road, on the left of the British.
Smartly, he deployed a regiment to his right, to make
contact with the left of Hamilton's British division.
On the rising land further to the right, Eraser's corps
had the responsibility of the army's open flank, resting
in the woods. While he made secure his own position
in the battle line, Riedesel learned that Burgoyne
himself, with General Phillips and General Fraser,
had taken forward two thousand men and four can-
non on a reconnaissance of the roads and clearings
that lay ahead toward the enemy.
164 MABCH TO SABATOGA
Johnny Burgoyne was out all day, and evening
found him two miles in front of the main position.
The woods were quiet, the cabins deserted. Almost
gaily, Burgoyne called up Captain Thomas Jones and
ordered him to fire the evening gun for the army then
and there, to give the illusion of its being well
forward of where, in fact, it was. Captain Jones stood
quietly behind the unlimbered piece. He was a vet-
eran of Benedict Arnold's night attack on Quebec.
When the gun was reported ready, Jones nodded his
consent to fire. The report was still echoing through
the woods, and the gunners were still stamping out
the little fires, started among the dry autumn leaves
by the muzzle blast, when Jones gave the order to
limber up and follow back to camp.
Another officer who had been at Quebec in the
swirling snow of New Year's, 1776, heard Burgoyne's
evening gun. He was Daniel Morgan, the rifleman
leader, whom George Washington had sent north
with his corps in August to bolster the northern army
of the Americans. On the evening of 15 September
Morgan was commanding an escort of his riflemen
back to the American lines. They had been out all
day with Horatio Gates, who like Burgoyne
was making a personal reconnaissance toward the
enemy.
In taking over from Philip Schuyler the command
of the northern department, General Gates took onto
his own sloping shoulders the full responsibility for
stopping Burgoyne's march to Albany. In his head,
RECONNAISSANCE 165
behind the wizened, bespectacled face of an old
grandfather, must be found the plan to halt the Brit-
ish invasion from Canada before it made a junction
with Sir Henry Clinton's forces. To this enormous
challenge to the new nation and to his own reputa-
tion, Gates brought a supreme self-confidence in his
own ability. He was sure of his method: the painstak-
ing staff system he had learned and mastered as an
ambitious British officer. He had proved the efficacy
of this method in 1776, when on this same northern
frontier in the short space of a summer he had halted
an American retreat at Ticonderoga, rebuilt a beaten
army into a proud force, created an American fleet
on Lake Champlain, and had erected a strong de-
fensive position out of the old French fort at Ticon-
deroga, while extending the fortress system across the
lake to Mount Independence.
Gates's strategic plan for the campaign of 1776 had
proved out. By forcing a naval race on the British,
he had left no time for General Carleton and General
Burgoyne to try the defenses at Ticonderoga. But for
Horatio Gates himself this successful campaign had
been a disappointment. He had been forced to share
credit for the victory with Philip Schuyler, nominal
commander of the northern department of the army.
Even the accolade of fame had eluded General Gates,
snatched from him by his erratic brigadier Benedict
Arnold. In directing disobedience of Gates's orders,
Arnold had fought a dazzling naval battle to climax
the summer campaign. In this battle the American
fleet had been defeated and for the purpose of any
l66 MABCH TO SARATOGA
subsequent campaign had been destroyed, but it
was Arnold's strange genius that he emerged as the
hero o the battle and the undoubted victor on Lake
Champlain.
In 1777 General Gates had to repeat the campaign
of the previous year, but with a difference which to
some degree compensated for the short space of time
remaining to him in which to accomplish his ends.
By 19 August 1777, when Gates took up his position
of command behind the headquarters desk, the Amer-
ican army already had been rebuilt. No one was more
aware of this than Gates's adjutant general, James
Wilkinson. In two years of war Wilkinson had ingrati-
ated himself into the favor of three successive gen-
erals Brigadier General Arnold, Major General St.
Clair, and the army commander, General Gates
with such success that he now stood before Horatio
Gates's desk, at twenty years of age, an adjutant gen-
eral and a lieutenant colonel. It was as aide-de-camp
to Arthur St, Clair that the young officer had endured
the night escape under Burgoyne's guns on Sugar
Loaf. From his position close to the general, Wil-
kinson knew that, of the two thousand Continen-
tals at Fort Ticonderoga on 5 July, many had been
casualties at the Battle of Hubbardton. He himself
had been a casualty of the attrition that accompanies
a retreat, but had turned up again on the strength
of the newly reconstituted northern department, in a
position to ride with an ascending star. The muster
rolls which, Wilkinson, as adjutant general, showed
to Horatio Gates at the end of the third week of
BECX)NNAISSANCE l6/
August put the strength of the American northern
army at six thousand men Continentals and effec-
tive militia.
Only four thousand, however, faced Burgoyne
along Schuyler's last defensive line at the mouth of
the Mohawk River. Benedict Arnold, now a major
general, was with Learned's brigade, successfully
turning back St. Leger's threat on Albany from the
west. He would not return with his men until the
first week in September. Benjamin Lincoln was to the
east, where, since the Battle of Bennington, he had
been organizing a strike at Burgoyne's rear, and try-
ing to persuade John Stark to join Gates's army or,
failing that, to move in closer onto Burgoyne's flank.
Stark would do neither, preferring, as was his right,
to sit out the expiring short-term enlistment of his
brigade on its victorious battleground. Later, if the
spirit moved him, Stark would take his own oppor-
tunity to strike a blow at Burgoyne.
On the way, but not yet arrived on the Mohawk
River, was Colonel Daniel Morgan's hardy regiment
of Continental riflemen. Gates knew Morgan from
Washington's winter camp in New Jersey, and from
the early days of the Revolution when, as Washing-
ton s adjutant general, he had assigned the riflemen
to Benedict Arnold's force against Quebec. Gates
now had to fumble in his memory for a picture of a
nineteen-year-old wagoner named Morgan, who had
shared with him the disaster of Braddock's defeat.
In the mess gossip of the old war there had been
the incredible story of the provincial who, quite
l68 MAKCH TO SAKATOGA
justly, received five hundred lashes for daring to
strike back at a British officer who was chastising
him. The provincial had been the same Daniel Mor-
gan whom Gates now eagerly awaited to round out
his northern army. Morgan was a broad-shouldered,
deep-chested man, who carried the welts and stripes
of his flogging under the hunting shirt he habitually
wore as uniform. His face was scarred by an Indian
arrow which had penetrated into his mouth, to leave
its mark on Morgan's naturally slurred, soft Virginia
speech. To carry his orders to his scattered regiment,
Morgan used a wild turkey call which became the
pride and spirit of his regiment of rifle-armed marks-
men.
Morgan's arrival on the Mohawk with but three
hundred and thirty-one of his men was a disappoint-
ment to Gates. The remaining one hundred and sixty-
nine of the expected five hundred were sick. To
bolster the riflemen, whom Gates proposed to keep
under his own direct command as an advance corps,
Major Henry Dearborn, with two hundred picked
light infantrymen, went under Colonel Morgan's
command. Like Morgan, Dearborn had made the
overland march to Quebec, so when Arnold returned
from Stanwix he found in Horatio Gates's army two
aggressive troop commanders waiting to greet him.
With six thousand reliable troops, Gates was an
even match for Burgoyne's regulars. But in the valley
of the upper Hudson there was no fort such as Ticon-
deroga on which Gates could build his defense and
thus gain the advantage. From his scouts and civilian
RECONNAISSANCE
spies he knew that Burgoyne's supplies were limited,
and that the cold mornings of a northern September
would force his British opponent to move on to his
objective of Albany, if only for use of that city as
winter quarters. Gates, who was a patient, calculat-
ing officer, saw his advantage and success in field
works, at which the Americans were adept, and
against which the British must wear themselves away.
With Schuyler's northern department General
Gates had inherited a serious-minded Polish military
engineer of proven competence, Thaddeus Kosciusko.
Before the American army had fallen back to the
Mohawk River, Kosciusko had run his lines and
driven the stakes for a defense at Stillwater. On 8
September, Gates's army set itself to the eleven-mile
march to Stillwater. With their muskets, the men
carried shovels and picks. Their step was light and
gay as at long last they advanced against the
brutal "macaroni," Burgoyne of the bloody hatchet.
They cheered the elderly General Gates as he rode
along the line of march, and shouted their approval
to the bearded rifleman of Dan Morgan's corps, stand-
ing under a pine tree and exhibiting to all who passed
the scalp of an Indian that he had taken only the day
before.
At Stillwater the Americans grounded their arms
and stood about with their tools in their hands, wait-
ting to be told where to begin their digging. But
Gates had gone on ahead with his Polish engineer,
his staff, and his escort, in search of another place to
build his fortifications. At Stillwater the river bank
170 MABCH TO SARATOGA
was so wide and gently sloping, and the cleared fields
so extensive, as to favor Burgoyne's strong comple-
ment of well-served cannon, and to invite the ter-
rible omnipotence of a disciplined bayonet charge
by trained European troops. On 12 September, the
American army moved three miles closer to the
enemy, onto the ground which they would fortify,
and where they would make their stand.
On a narrow strip of flat land between the river
and the hills rolling up to the western forest, a man
named Bemis had built a tavern at the juncture of
two roads. The main road followed closely along the
west bank of the river, pressed there by a parallel
series of high, moundlike hills, cut through by a
maze of deep gullies. A road on the left climbed
steeply from the river to John Neilson's farm on
Beinis Heights. Half a mile before coming to the
Neilson house, the road forked again, the western
track ambling oflf through the woods, the north road
passing the farmer's house and barn and skirting the
high land between the gorges, to Freeman's farm. A
complex of cart tracks cut through the gullies and ran
over the hills from Freeman's farm to the Hudson
River. North of the farm there was a wide depression,
known as the Great Ravine. A road, coming up from
the river bank, lay along the north edge of the Great
Ravine and joined the Neilson-Freeman road half a
mile beyond the latter farm.
Horatio Gates had come to his battlefield. Planning
carefully, Gates projected the course of the defensive
battle he expected to force on General Burgoyne.
RECONNAISSANCE 1/1
Field works of earth, faced with logs, would be
thrown up in depth across the narrow river plain
where it defiled at Bemis's tavern. Other field works
would rise on the eastern slopes of Bemis Heights,
enfilading the river road which, being the only good
road from the north, must inevitably be the center
line of Burgoyne's advance with his baggage train
and gun park. American cannon placed in the works
could deny the river to the British boats. Standing
on the heights with his engineer, Gates traced out
additional fortifications, following the contour of the
land away from the river to Neilson's big barn. This
barn he fortified, before turning the lines once again
to form a three-sided box facing north, with its
strength dominating the river plain.
From the high ground at Fort Neilson, Gates
looked down across open ground to the ravine-cut
woods and hills cruel country through which to
advance. Again, Gates's British-trained eye wandered
off toward the river road, where he had set Nixon's,
Glover's, and Paterson's brigades to digging. Here,
behind their field works, Gates felt confident that his
Continentals could hold the main advance of Euro-
pean regulars. On either side of Fort Neilson (as
the barn was now referred to), Brigadier Generals
Learned and Poor, whose men formed the division
under Arnold, dug in to guard against the approach
of a flanking column coming in from the scattered
clearings around the Freeman farm.
As General Gates had anchored his right on the
Hudson, so his left was firmly tied to the barrier of
172 MARCH TO SAKATOGA
the impenetrable woods, fit only to be a playground
for wolves and bears and catamounts, and for Gates's
own wild riflemen. Into tins dark region Gates found
himself led on 15 September. There was much work
yet to be done on the lines, and at headquarters his
desk was piled high with letters and papers re-
quiring his attention. As he rode along the trail
beyond Freeman's farm, with Morgan padding on
moccasined feet beside his stirrup, the crafty Ameri-
can general had many things to think about and
many decisions to make. All along the line of field
works the engineers needed his prodding; a mass of
reports and orders awaited his signature. The militia,
goaded by Lincoln and stirred by the murder of
Jane McCrea, were beginning to come in, eager to
fight but without supplies or any plan of action.
Then, there was the correspondence with the haughty
Sir John Burgoyne, and this Gates relished. Burgoyne
had written to him, under a flag of truce, complain-
ing of the treatment of Tory prisoners after the Battle
of Bennington. Gates had replied to "The Famous
Lieutenant General, the Fine Gentleman . . . the
Soldier and the Scholar,** with a taunt for every scalp
taken by an Indian in the pay of the British, and a
sneer for the murderer of Jane McCrea. Perhaps,
while he was in the woods with Dan Morgan, an-
other letter would have arrived from Burgoyne.
As the afternoon wore on, Gates, too long away
from his headquarters, gave the order to turn back.
Morgan spluttered into his turkey call, and the scouts
came in and silently fell into line behind their colonel.
RECONNAISSANCE
Then, over the tree-tops to the north, came the
hollow boom of Burgoyne's evening gun. The two
officers, who had been together in the woods at Brad-
dock's defeat, stopped to listen. In the stillness that
followed, they quickly made their way back to the
fortified American camp Gates to his tent, Morgan
to detail the night's offensive patrols.
14
To the Sound of the Guns
For six days Burgoyne's army crawled southward
down the west bank of the Hudson. Moving, as it
did, in a tight little enclave, it was confident. The
main body of the troops did not feel the presence of
the enemy. The army lived and moved as much unto
itself as did the porcupine it met along the road,
which, when prodded with a musket, lashed out and
then, with quills raised and head down, moved on in
the direction it had been going.
The army was indignant and affronted, therefore,
rather than apprehensive when an unarmed party
digging potatoes from an abandoned patch was am-
bushed by Yankees, who killed or wounded thirteen
men.
The whole army knew by morning, and talked all
day, of the fire that destroyed the Aclands* tent, on
the campground of the advance corps. Everyone
sympathized with the gentle Lady Harriet over her
loss, and the officers expressed their admiration for
the gallant major, who, not knowing that his preg-
nant wife had managed to escape, rushed back into
175
176 MAKCH TO SARATOGA
the burning marquee to rescue her. The soldiers con-
gratulated the Aclands* servant for having pulled the
major out by the ankles, offered him a pipe of
tobacco, and joked with him about his not having
been sure whose ankle he had grasped! Though
clothing of any land was scarce, and the officers had
brought no warm clothes with them below Skenes-
borough, somehow the Acknds were outfitted, and
the major, his head and hands swathed in wet band-
ages to soothe his burns, marched out with the grena-
diers on 17 September.
Headquarters was made that night at Sword's
house, two miles north of Semis's tavern, and re-
mained there all the following day, while the supply
train came down by road and river, bringing the
hospital with it. Burgoyne found it necessary to keep
with the army the sick and wounded and the con-
valescent. To leave them in the comfortable houses
and barns at Saratoga was to give them over to
pillage and reprisal at the hands of the irregular
Yankee "cowboys/* whom Captain Fraser and the
fifty Iroquois Indians now with the expedition re-
ported as prowling and scavenging close behind the
army. To leave a hospital behind meant leaving be-
hind surgeons and mates to tend the patients, and
Burgoyne could not spare this skilled personnel.
Heavy casualties could be expected when the Brit-
ish army butted through the American defense line
which, Burgoyne's intelligence informed him, was
building at Stillwater, three miles beyond the defile
at Bemis's tavern. The Yankees, harassing the British
front and flank in the woods, already had been iden-
TO THE SOUND OF THE GUNS 177
tified as Morgan's men, and there were those in Bur-
goyne's army who regretted that prisoner-of-war
Morgan had scorned the colonelcy offered to him in
Quebec by General Carleton. Others of Burgoyne's
officers corps had known Gates before he turned his
coat from red to blue. Burgoyne himself had seen
Arnold through his spyglasses from the deck of His
Majesty's schooner, the Lady Maria. On 13 October
1776, the Yankee general-commodore had appeared
as a wild, whooping figure under a red-and-white
gridiron flag, laying the long stern-gun of his galley,
the Congress, on any British ship that drew too near.
Burgoyne expected to meet Benedict Arnold again
in the autumn of 1777.
At dawn on 19 September, Burgoyne's artillery
prepared to move out with the army on its day's
march toward an enemy still indistinct. A thick, pale
thin mist of autumn hung over the river bank, making
strange shapes of the gun teams. Drivers were poking
about in the boxes of the troop carts and in
tion boxes, in search of hidden ears of corn with
which to coax a little moire snatch and haul out of
their tired animals during the day's work that lay
ahead. Men and horses, both blanketed against the
cold of the night that persisted into the new day,
moved slowly in the heavy mist. Not until the sun
rose high enough to burn away the mist, and, like a
bold picquet, drive off the scouting cold of the ap-
proaching winter, would the army march off toward
Albany.
At his tent in the army headquarters area, Major
1/8 MABCH TO SARATOGA
Griffith Williams, commander of Artillery, awaited
the arrival of his breakfast and of his gunner cap-
tains. One by one, the latter emerged from the mist,
slouching or moving briskly according to each in-
dividual's mood of the morning: Pausch, the Ger-
man, in his big cloak, all military; Thomas Jones,
glancing impatiently at Pausch, whom he could not
understand and of whom, as befitted a Welshman,
he was suspicious; Ellis Walker, who had taken the
12-pounder up Mount Defiance; and finally, John
Carter, who had commanded the gunboats on the
dash up to Skenesborough, and who was now in com-
mand of the gun park which followed the regiments.
Of these captains, each of the first three com-
manded the guns attached to a column of Burgoyne's
advance. Pausch was going with Riedesel's German
wing of the army, following the river road. Walker
had under command six Royal Artillery guns and
two of the Hesse-Hanau gunners. He marched with
Eraser's corps, to which had been attached Brey-
mann's grenadiers. His would be the longest march,
following the road westward along the north side of
the Great Ravine to Freeman's farm, to protect the
right flank. Captain Jones was in support of Brigadier
Hamilton's British brigade, which would follow after
Fraser but would turn off by a track which led more
directly through the Great Ravine to Freeman's farm,
and the road to Neilson's barn on Bemis Heights.
Before the artillery orders group broke up, Gen-
eral Phillips, a gunner all his life, joined these
kindred souls. Since August, as second in command
TO THE SOUND OF THE GUNS 179
of the expedition, lie had taken direct command of
all supplies, and in that capacity he would follow
Riedesel along the river road on the march of 19
September. From that position, he could best judge
the moment to call up Captain Carter's reserve of
guns when, as was expected, the German wing met
the main line of rebel resistance and their strongest
fortifications on the flat river plain. General Bur-
goyne himself would command the center, with
which he intended to turn the Yankee left.
The sun showed as an orange disc through the
mist before the captains returned to their batteries
of guns, and Major Williams's servant dared to an-
nounce the morning meal. It was ten o'clock before
the three columns of the British army moved out
Pausch, riding with his lead section of guns, had a
fair view across the Hudson and the flat plain be-
yond. Riedesel's column had halted while the leading
regiment of infantry patched a section of the road
that led through the swamp to a bridge, also in need
of repair. As the Hessian captain looked across the
river, a flash of sunlight showed on the crest of a
tree-covered mountain humped up into the sky. The
flash showed again. It was the glint of sunlight on
polished metal a basin, perhaps, or even a mirror
as though a Yankee militiaman were shaving.
When once more the German column was halted,
to repair another bridge destroyed by the retreating
Americans, again the flash of light could be seen on
the distant mountain. Pausch and Riedesel knew it
now for what it was: heliograph signals from Ameri-
l8o MARCH TO SARATOGA
can scouts to the American commander somewhere
up ahead. From the urgency of the flashing, the
rebels could not be far away.
The bridges having been repaired, the German
division had come to a long stretch of straight road
and was stepping out smartly to the music of the
bands. Shortly after one o'clock the German column
halted again, and the jangle of harness and the
rumble of wheels on the bridge planking was stilled.
Pausch could hear the sound of distant musket fire,
inland away from the river, where he judged that
Eraser's column, with Colonel Breymann, would be
turning into the road parallel to the one he himself
was following. Almost at once, one of the baron's
aides appeared, requesting that two camion be sent
forward.
Pausch himself took the two leading guns, each
with its ammunition tumbrils and carts of tools, and
pressed forward. The infantry fell away to the sides
of the road to let him pass. Near the head of the
column, Riedesel's aide led Pausch into a narrow
side road and up a small hill onto a flat table-land,
where he found Riedesel looking toward the west.
The sound of firing was crisp.
An aide quickly appraised Captain Pausch as to
the disposition General Riedesel had made of his
division. Two German battalions were deployed along
the original line of march, with two companies of
Rhetz's regiment pushed a little forward, to occupy
a small hill dominating the river road. In moving up
onto the pkteau and calling for two guns, not only
TO THE SOUND OF THE GUXS l8l
had the baron rounded out the German position but
had placed himself in readiness, if called upon, to go
to the aid of the British. As Pausch could see,
Riedesel's relief force was made up of the general's
own regiment, together with the two remaining com-
panies of Rhetz. The men were sitting on the grass,
not at ease in the companionable relaxation of a
halt on the march, but very calmly, their muskets
in their hands, waiting. These men had been in North
America for two campaigns without coming face to
face with the enemy.
Now the firing in the west seemed to be drawing
nearer. The tableau of officers, gathered around their
general yet apart from him, heard the volley fire that
marked the change of position of the British line to
its rear, while the Yankee fire, loose and indiscrim-
inate surged up into a frenzy. The cannon, too, fell
silent as the German officers looked to each other for
confirmation as to the implication of a British retreat.
General Riedesel turned quickly to his command-
ers, gave them the order to advance, and without
further delay, set out along the track across the
plateau toward the sound of musketry. The infantry
scrambled to their feet. Pausch found his artillery
train restless and eager, the horses sidling and tossing
their heads before the drivers could get them to
lunge into their collars.
Across the plateau, where the road dipped down
into a ravine, Eiedesel halted his column. While the
infantry deployed into a defensive position, Pausch
sighted his guns, ordering his gunners out to throw
1&2 MARCH TO SARATOGA
down a rail fence which offered cover for the "Yan-
kee" riflemen. Patrols of three and four men each
were sent out to locate the enemy, and when Pausch
rode up to report his guns in position, he found
Riedesel instructing his aide, Captain Geismar, to
ride to Burgoyne with word that he, Riedesel, was in
position and ready to assist. Quietly, Pausch ordered
his wagonmaster, who was well mounted, to follow
Geismar and to find the best possible traverse of the
gully for the guns and carts of the train.
So General RiedeseFs relief force waited out the
afternoon, while the noise of battle thundered less
than a mile in the distance.
Beyond the spot where Captain Pausch marked
the course of battle by the sound of Captain Jones's
6-pounders, and on the other side of the gunsmoke
that trailed lazily above the tree-tops, Captain
Walker's brigade of guns was silent. There was no
field of fire in the thick woods, where General Fraser
had put his corps into a defensive position on a
height of land half a mile to the west and north
of the embattled British center. Fraser had taken up
his position soon after hearing the first fire. The
height appeared to him as the key to the right wing
of the whole advance; from it he could also counter-
attack into the flank of the Americans attempting to
turn the British center. Already, at the very first fire,
Fraser had sent a reinforcement of two companies
of the 24th to assist the center.
Lieutenant Thomas Anburey found himself at the
TO THE SOUND OF THE GUNS 183
rear of his company, jogging down the forest road
toward the sound of musket fire. With his left hand
he held his sword scabbard free of the ground. In
front of him were the backs of his men, their muskets
held high at the port; the empty bayonet scabbards,
bullet pouches, and barrel-like water bottles bobbed
in unison at their hips. Close behind him, the lead
team of Lieutenant Dunbar's gun pressed closer.
Anburey half turned as he ran, shouting at the driver
to keep his distance. The driver's arm was raised, as
was Dunbar's, in a signal to halt. As the lieutenant
ran into his own rear rank, he heard rifle fire to the
front, answered by a volley from the leading com-
pany of the 24th. The commander of Anburey's own
company already had given the order to form on the
right. Now the company was advancing in a scythe-
like sweep to the right. A brown figure seemed to flit,
sparrow-like, between two bushes. Anburey thought
it one of the Mohawks, then realized that what he
had seen was a Yankee rifleman. Some of the men
were firing their muskets at the brown people they
saw moving away. Officers and sergeants were curs-
ing the nervousness of their men. Anburey saw his first
man killed in action, and with all the incomprehen-
sion of a soldier at his first battle, he thought it odd
that his friend, Lieutenant John Don, should leap so
high in the air, then fall in a heap to the ground.
Bursting through a screen of red-gold leaves, Lieu-
tenant Anburey came upon a strange sight. On the
ground sat a Yankee rifleman, calmly paying out
paper money from a bkck leather wallet to a soldier
184 MARCH TO SABATOGA
Anburey recognized as General Eraser's batman. Both
men were smiling. On seeing the lieutenant the Yan-
kee stopped for a moment to explain that the batman
not only had saved him from capture by the Indians
but had managed to retrieve his wallet, containing
(among other things) his commission. Politely, the
American introduced himself as Captain Van Swear-
ingham of Morgan's Riflemen and a prisoner, of
course, of the lieutenant of the 24th.
Quiet had come over that part of the battleground
on which Anburey and his prisoner stood. Dunbar
came sauntering up and joined them. When Anburey's
servant found them he had the lieutenant's flask,
from which, as they talked, each of the three officers
drank in turn. While Van Swearingham was promis-
ing the two Englishmen much more business** be-
fore the day was over, heavy firing again broke out
in front of the picquet of the advance corps. Dunbar
ran off to rejoin his gun, and Anburey, too, hurried
to where his men waited in rank. The Yankee captain
watched them go; then, with his escort, he set out
for the rear. If he was recaptured, as he might well
be, for the woods were saturated with Morgan's men,
he would get back his long brown rifle with its carved
patch-box cover that he loved so well. The British
soldier carried it in his left hand, behind the point
of balance, and Van Swearingham feared that he
would ram the lips of the muzzle into the rough
forest floor.
It was Major Gordon Forbes of the 9th Foot, who,
with the picquet of Burgoyne's center column of the
TO THE SOUND OF THE GUNS 185
British army, early that afternoon made the first con-
tact with Colonel Morgan's Riflemen. The four regi-
ments of British regulars, with Jones's brigade of
guns, had entered the gully during the morning,
crossed the millstream on a bridge which they found
to be intact, then climbed up to high ground. There,
with advance sentries out, the regiment had waited
for an hour, to give Fraser time to march the wide
circle around, and to come on to the right flank of
the army.
About one o'clock, Burgoyne ordered the three-
minute guns fired as a signal to Riedesel and Fraser,
and so began the advance. Coming out of the woods,
Major Forbes deployed his hundred men for the ad-
vance on the Freeman farmhouse. Immediately he
came under aimed rifle fire from his objective. He
ignored this, as his men were behaving well and ad-
vancing steadily and without undue haste. They
^cleared the farmhouse in a rush. Then, as they were
being fired upon from a railfence over to the west,
they changed direction and continued their charge,
which carried the fence line. Forbes followed the flee-
ing riflemen into the woods, where, among the pines,
the American resistance stiffened. Rifles seemed to
crack from every direction, and the major felt him-
self stung by a ball. The men began looking around
to see how their friends were faring, and Major
.Forbes knew that soon they would begin to huddle.
He saw one man standing free, aiming his musket
toward the tree-tops. He opened his mouth to shout
at the man, to bring him to his senses, but saw just
:in time a puff of smoke high in a maple tree.
l86 MABCH TO SARATOGA
Though he could not see the enemy he realized there
were riflemen in the trees as well as on the ground.
Reluctantly, the major gave the order to retire. He
was hit again before he regained the open pasture
land, where a regiment (probably the 20th) was
forming into line. To his horror, he saw the men of
the front rank leveling to fire. He ran toward them,
shouting, but too late to stop the first ragged volley,
which added yet more wounded to the casualty list
of his already sorely tried picquet.
Mounted on his horse directing the deployment,
Colonel Robert Kingston saw the nervous regiment
fire into the returning picquet. He ordered a gun
to be fired. Its booming roar shook the men into
control, and the sergeants and two young officers
steadied down to their work of getting the lines
dressed, preparatory to advancing across the wide
home pasture of Freeman's farm.
15
Action Front!
Gone were the farmer's bullocks, which had plowed
the upper fields. Gone was the team o horses, which
had cropped short the summer grass along the rail
fence. The log barns behind Freeman's farmhouse
were empty of stock. Where the ground fell away to
the east at the far side of the farmyard, the edge of
a cornfield spreading up out of the gully marked
the brow of the hilltop clearing. The row of tall
stacks seemed to be watching the lines of red-coated
infantry, spreading, weed-like, over the northern end
of the home meadow.
Quickly, the long line of Englishmen formed up,
as more and more files of companies marched out
of the woods. There was a moment when a little band
of Jagers in their green coats ran out between the
companies to dash for the protection of a ditch,
where their short-rifled pieces could answer the
desultory fire of Yankee riflemen. But for the odd rifle
shot, all was quiet at Freeman's farm until the drums
began to beat.
Fifty gaily coated drummers stood behind their
187
l88 MAKCH TO SARATOGA
regiments; at the ready, slim backs arched stiffly,
young eyes wide. At an order, a hundred drumsticks
fell to rattling out the insistent beat of the long roll,
then fell silent. All up and down the three regimental
fronts, colonels and captains shouted the traditional
orders and ran to take their places in the line of
British infantry before the drums began to beat
again. With the one first step of fate, the whole long
line advanced to the slow, measured tap to which
the tramping men could set down their feet with
decision.
Close behind the infantry, forty-eight gunners took
up the slack on drag-ropes, and as the heavy trails
cleared the ground, the gun sergeants, leaning on the
muzzles as counter-weights, gave the order to march.
Four guns moved out after the infantry, two in the
gap between the 9th and the 21st, and two more to
the left, where the 20th and Anstruther's 62nd con-
tinued the line. Further back, four ammunition tum-
brils followed, their drivers leading the plodding
dray horses.
General John Burgoyne sat easily in his saddle,
Colonel Kingston at his elbow. A horse, stirred by the
drumbeats, danced out of the group of staff officers
and division couriers standing near the general. The
rider, a French-speaking Brunswick officer from the
German wing, pulled his beast around and slipped
back into the group. Gentleman Johnny edged his
mount into a walk as the long red line of infantry
passed the little farmhouse. The line crossed the
ditch where the Jdgers lay. The gun crews of each
ACTION FRONT! 189
two-gun battery combined efforts to worry their
pieces across the ditch, then hurried to catch up
with the drums, bobbing on the thighs of the drum-
mers as they strode behind the companies. The Yan-
kees were firing from the woods, and here and there
a red-coated figure fell heavily to the grass. Lieu-
tenant Hadden ran ahead and dragged a wounded
private from the path of an oncoming gun.
At the two log barns, the British line halted. In
the face of the rebel fire, they could not go on
without support. Volley fire by platoon skipped up
and down from the British ranks. It drove the Ameri-
cans back from the edge of the wood, while the guns
were being wheeled into place. With the help of
Lieutenant Reid, Captain Jones set up his piece in
the space between die 9th and the 21st, with his
field of fire to the left, in front of the latter regiment.
Lieutenant Hadden stationed his two pieces to cover
the wood and to shoot into the cornfield. To his right
six companies of the 62nd faced the wood; to his left
two companies angled back, facing the gully.
For two long hours Hadden fired his guns. Some-
times his canister shot tore through the tall stand of
corn, cutting the stalks through which the enemy
tried to infiltrate around the 62nd. Sometimes Lieu-
tenant Hadden fired round shot and canister into the
woods, and the balls ricocheted off the tree trunks
into the branches above. The canister was meant for
the Yankee regiments forming up under the trees,
preparing for a charge.
From the point where he commanded the battle
1QO MABCH TO SARATOGA
Burgoyne saw four rebel attacks form up, start off,
then turn back before the volleys of his line of
regulars. Unlike the Yankees who had begun the
battle, these were uniformed Continentals. Most of
the rifle fire was to Burgoyne's right, where Fraser,
too, was holding his ground. Now the familiar crack
of the long American rifle came seldom from in front
of the 62nd and the 21st. When it was heard, it
usually meant that a British officer was hit, or that
another gunner had fallen away from his gun. As the
smoke drifted off enough to afford a clear view, the
Yankee marksmen tried for General Burgoyne. When,
at extreme range, they toppled a big officer from his
handsome mount in front of the staff group, the Yan-
kees cheered the supposed fall of the scalp-buying
British general. But the young dandy who stopped
Burgoyne's bullet was Captain Charles Green, aide
to General Phillips.
On hearing the sound of the firing, Phillips, who
had been riding with Baron Riedesel's wing, had
ridden hard to the sound of the guns. With the eye
and mind of a veteran gunner, he had paused on his
way to Burgoyne to order the 20th (which he found
waiting in the gully) to protect the flank of the 62nd
by occupying the woods and the cornfield. He also
took time to send a man galloping on horseback to
Major Williams with the request that four guns from
the park be dispatched at once. Captain Green had
been sent on ahead, to appraise General Burgoyne
of what he had done and to tell his general he was
coining. As the gunner general put his foaming
ACTION FRONT! 191
charger to the hill out of the gully, he met his hand-
some aide, borne on a litter by four officers' servants.
The captain was but one of a long line of wounded,
drifting down off the higher land like autumn leaves
shaken from a tree-top by a gust of wind. All sought
shelter in the gully, where the doctors worked by
the bank of a little stream, and chaplains moved
among the men. There a host of wagoners, smiths,
armorers, wheelwrights, servants, and busy noncom-
batants looked anxiously to where Squire Freeman
once had farmed.
The gale of battle beat most furiously on the
corner where Hadden's guns stood with the ranks of
the desperately fighting 62nd. The gunner lieutenant
was now working as a gun number. With but four
men to load the guns, he himself was laying and
firing each of his two guns in succession. Eighteen of
his artillerymen were dead or gone back wounded;
one of his three men had been hit, and even as
Hadden looked at him to appraise his strength, the
man slipped down beside a gunwheel, tried again
to rise, then sank back, exhausted.
His guns unmanned and helpless, Hadden ran
back to where Brigadier Hamilton stood encourag-
ing Colonel Anstruther, to beg for some infantry-
men to pass ammunition and keep the guns firing.
He reached politely for his cap; as he prepared to
doff it to the general, a rifleman's bullet snatched it
from his hand. He left it unheeded on the ground, as
he pleaded with the senior officer for men for the
guns his guns! But Anstruther and Hamilton were
MARCH TO SARATOGA
organizing a charge, and they needed every bayonet.
Blinded with the rage of frustration, Hadden turned
and ran stumbling to the barn where Burgoyne, dis-
mounted now, had moved up to take even closer
control of his battle. General Phillips was there, and
Captain Jones, too, and to them he repeated his plea
for gunners. With the consent of Phillips, Jones
promised men from the two other guns of the bri-
gade, and immediately ran off to fetch them. Content
for the moment, Hadden stopped to look around him.
The 9th Foot, who had not been heavily engaged^
were flying back across the ditch to take up a reserve
position at the farmhouse. The 21st was standing
firm. One of Hadderfs gunners was sprawled on the
ground in the lee of the log barn; he was one of the
men Hadden had left wounded; now he lay dead.
Exposed in the open space between the two barns,
seemingly unconcerned by the danger, Gentleman
Johnny was in earnest consultation with Captain
Willoe of RiedeseFs staff, whom the general held
tightly by the arm, as if holding back the younger
man. When the German ran quickly to his horse,
mounted, and gave the beast spur into a bounding
gallop, Hadden returned to his guns.
He arrived as the 62nd, shouting hoarsely in
the throat-stinging smoke of battle, launched their
charge. Alone with his guns, Lieutenant Hadden
watched them go. The men and officers were hurry-
ing toward the woods, where smoke puffs blossomed
at the roots of the tall trees. Behind the line of sol-
diers stumbled the little drummer-boys in their buff
ACTION FRONT! 193
coats, the big drums flapping as the boys tried to
hurry. Hadden laughed at the ragged beat the run-
ning boys were fumbling out of their jouncing drums.
It seemed funny that the regiment marched steadily
on, oblivious to the step the drums were striving so
manfully to give them.
At the forest edge, the attack of the 62nd wavered.
Like shy suitors at a lady's door, the regiment hesi-
tated to enter. From further back in the hollowness
of the woods American musket fire, controlled and
telling, rumbled out an invitation to the infantry to
come on. Instead, the 62nd fell back, firing volleys
as they went. Red-coated dead now dotted the field
in front of Hadden's two 6-pounders. Captain Jones
shouted in his ear, and Hadden, the spell of awe
broken, turned to his guns with new determination.
He had seen infantry, cloaked only in tradition, dis-
cipline, and honor, walk up to naked death.
While Anstruther and his officers strove to reform
the battle line, the guns fired and loaded and fired
again. The rebel fire along the whole front turned on
the two guns, still unsupported by the disorganized
62nd. One by one, the new gunners dropped. Cap-
tain Jones was down, clutching at his abdomen, his
face tight with pain. Lieutenant Reid's right arm
dangled helplessly from a stained blue sleeve. Had-
den sent him to the rear, carrying as best he could
the linstock from the now silent number-two gun.
It was time to bring off the guns, but, before this
could be effected, the 62nd gave way. Alone, bleed-
ing from a slight wound, Hadden could stand no
1Q4 MARCH TO SARATOGA
longer. Carrying his captain, somehow lie reached
the nearer o the two barns. The building was
crowded with the badly wounded, lying on the wet
straw. The barn smelled of cattle. As Hadden gently
laid Captain Jones down with the others, his eyes
were brought to the level of one of the chinks be-
tween the loosely laid-up logs. In the bright sunlight
of the pasture, a hundred yards away an American
infantry regiment was lining up. All the men seemed
to be big in size, moving with assurance under com-
petent officers. This, then, was the Continental line,
and Thomas Hadden, of the Royal Artillery, was
caught in a stinking cow barn between that line and
the British regulars!
With the arrival of General Poor's brigade in the
woods in front of Burgoyne's British infantry, Mor-
gan shifted his riflemen to the American left, to en-
gage Eraser's advance corps in their strong hill posi-
tion. They found good shooting into the 24th Foot,
and Colonel Morgan was content to pin his enemy
down until Benedict Arnold could bring up Ebenezer
Learned's brigade.
No one had attacked General Riedesel. The stocky
German general paced the road, awaiting the call
that surely must come from Burgoyne. Willoe was
with the general, and Riedesel had also sent Geismar;
neither had yet returned with the expected summons.
He heard the firing as the 62nd made their charge.
Standing still to listen, he heard the regiment come
back and the guns, so long silent, come alive, and
ACTION FRONT! 195
then he recognized the subtle change as British
cannon fire slowed down, while the rebel fire in-
creased. When the guns fell silent again, Riedesel,
for the second time that afternoon, flung out the
order to follow, and without waiting mounted and
rode down into the gully.
At the bottom, where the road skirted a marshy
part of the mill stream, Riedesel met the returning
Geismar and Willoe. While the three were talking,
two of Rhetz's companies came singing down the
road. Riedesel waved them on, pointing with his
gold-headed stick to the slope ahead. His own regi-
ment followed, as loud of voice as the Rhetz, and
even louder of drum. Ernst Ludwig von Spaeth was
commanding, and the general needed only a word in
passing to convey to von Spaeth his intent to bolster
up the British left. Sure of his gunner, Riedesel left
Captain Pausch to deploy his own guns.
Ziglamm, the wagonmaster, had found a way up
to the height of land for Pausch's battery. It would
be a hard haul around the edge of the swamp and up
through an edge of the cornfield. But Ziglamm had
gathered together some extra men to join the gunners
at the drag-ropes. The officers, too, heaved on the
spokes of the wheels, as the two cannon rolled on
through the corn stalks, and the big yellow pumpkins
were crushed under the iron-shod wheels. Behind the
guns, an odd assortment of men came out of the
gully, loaded down with shells and ball and powder.
Pausch had scrambled on ahead to where he had a
clear view. Out in the field stood the two deserted
196 MABCH TO SARATOGA
guns of Hadden's battery, their brass muzzles stained
black with much firing. Pausch saw the Continentals
formed up at the edge of the wood, and ran back to
urge his own guns on. With a rush, they burst out
through the last row of corn, and under their gun
captains* orders wheeled and dropped their trail.
While the gun crews loaded, the blue-coated Bruns-
wick infantry began to arrive on the field, to left and
to right. Perhaps it was stunned surprise, or perhaps
it was the blue coats of the Germans, but the Yankee
regiment seemed to hesitate for a moment. It was the
crucial instant when mattresses rammed home the
charge, gun captains applied the linstock, and the
guns let loose their swarms of stinging grapeshot out
of a roar and rush of smoke. The Continental line
was only a pistol shot away. As the Hesse-Hanau
gunners reloaded, Eiedesel's regiment opened with
volley fire. Far across the meadow Pausch saw a
house under a big shade tree; drums were beating
and a British regiment was advancing to the attack.
General Phillips was leading the charge.
The field was obscured in the smoke. With the
going down of the sun, unnoticed, the light wind had
dropped into stillness. Without a field of fire, Cap-
tain Pausch silenced the guns. The musket fire was
slowing down. A single volley burst out on the left,
after which came silence. The smoke of battle was
dispersing. All over the meadow, the men in British
red and German blue stood calmly in their ranks,
facing an empty wood.
Slowly and painfully, the gunners of the Hesse-
ACTION FRONT! 197
Hanau Artillery dragged their cannon f orward, out of
the German line. All eyes turned dully, incuriously,
on the struggling group of men. Sixty yards in front
of the whole army, the guns came to a halt. The gun
crews took up their stations as though they were on
parade. Pausch's orders were crisp and clear, as the
gunners executed the drill of loading. At the captain's
command, the two guns roared in unison. No one
counted the parting shots fired into the woods after
the retreating rebels. They were a salute to a brave
day, an evening gun of rememberance. In fifteen
minutes it was dark.
16
Muffled Drums
Harness chains rattled and limber wheels jounced
bumpily over the ditch. Lieutenant Hadden, still hat-
less, heard the familiar sound as he stood alone in the
darkness, beside his silent guns. When he reached a
caressing hand to the nearest piece, the metal was
cold to his touch. It was as though he had touched
the faces of the dead gunners beside the wheels, at
the trail, or out by the muzzle where the grass was
black with scorch. The limbers came out of the
night to Hadden's low call, and in silence dragged
away the two brass cannon, leaving the crumpled
dead alone without the symbols of their life and of
their death.
Lanterns were blinking all over Freeman's fields as
Lieutenant Hadden marched off his guns. The dim
yellow lights dotted out the lines of infantry, where
sergeants called the roll of companies and detailed
the first watches of the night. A surviving officer was
hard put to find a friend to share a nip from his flask,
so accurate had been the Yankee rifle fire.
Colonel Anstruther of the hard-fought 62nd was
198
MUFFLED DRUMS 193
the last senior officer to join the others at the farm-
house headquarters. He brought with him an appall-
ing list of one hundred and forty-six casualties, and
an additional twenty-nine who were prisoners of the
rebels; some of his companies had been reduced to
ten tired men. General Fraser, though not heavily
engaged, glumly reported fifty casualties in his own
24th alone. His grenadiers and light infantry were
sorely tired after their day exposed to the unseen
rifles of Morgan's men. At General Burgoyne's con-
ference that night, no officer was present to report
the brigade artillery casualties. Lieutenant Hadden,
the last gunner officer or man had gone down
the line to have his own wound dressed.
While the unit commanders talked over the day,
it grew quiet on the heights above the Hudson,
where the British army lay on its arms, on the fields
that it had held. Tired men slept in their ranks.
Sentries and picquets, more nervous than alert, felt
the cold beneath the belt straps crossing their backs.
Those near the gully heard the creak of wagons tak-
ing the wounded back to hospital, and listened for
other carts coming up, carts that might bring them
food. In the woods, dry-mouthed sentries, crouching
down among tall trees, heard in the darkness the
coughs and moans of yet undiscovered wounded,
grew drowsy, and again became alert when the cor-
poral, bringing up the relief, cautiously called out the
password.
Neither those who watched nor those who slept
knew that, at the council of war that night, they had
200 MAKCH TO SARATOGA
been given one more whole day to live. Burgoyne
had been persuaded to postpone until 21 September
the continuation of his advance on the rebels. The
battle at Freeman's farm was over.
Down on the river flats, where the rear echelon
of General Burgoyne's army was gathered, the long
afternoon had not yet ended. There, where the
women waited and the surgeons worked, the battle
did not end until the last patient had been cared for
and the fate of the last man was known.
At the first sound of distant gunfire, the five ladies
of Burgoyne's armies drew together. Quite naturally,
they gathered in the big downstairs room of the
Smith house, the quarters to which little Baroness
Riedesel had laid claim by bringing in her children's
trunks and setting down her own open dressing case
on the deep cedar doorsilL Rockel, the butler, had
brought tea to the ladies, after which he had gone
to be near the major, leaving his mistress in the care
of the two frightened maids.
Of the four ladies who waited courageously, Lady
Harriet Acland had the least chance of escaping the
dreaded news. Out there amid the terrifying noise
was not only her Husband but her brother as well.
It took a long time for the news to trickle back with
the wounded. Mrs. Harnage was the first of the ladies
to learn her fate. They carried the major in and laid
him down beside his wife, who covered with her lace
handkerchief the angry bluish hole in her husband's
abdomen before she managed a smile for him. Soon
MUFFLED DRUMS 2O1
the house had become a hospital, and all the ladies
went to work. Friederika Riedesel was rummaging
in her trunk in search of her own linen for an ensign
with a shattered leg, when she saw a man stand-
ing in the doorway, looking full at her. But before
she had time either to fall into despair or to let loose
her relief, the man's eyes carried hers across the room
to where Mrs. Lieutenant Reynell sat, silently weep-
ing. The man nodded his head. When the lieutenant
was brought in, Baroness Riedesel was holding the
girl tightly in her arms. There was no hope for
Thomas Reynell: his arm was off before they brought
him into the hospital* It was morning before he died,
leaving his young wife and three little children on
the banks of the Hudson River, in the North Ameri-
can wilderness.
Not until dawn of 20 September did the soldiers
on the high ground receive their rations. At the same
time the men of the line regiments, British and Ger-
man, went down into the gully to fill their empty
water bottles. The food refreshed spirits as well as
bodies, and the fresh water washed away the tired-
ness in their bones. Now they were fit for the work
to be done that day. With the carts bringing the food
there also came shovels. Groups of men were told
off to dig wide, oblong trenches for graves. Other
groups spread out over the fields and into the woods,
to gather in the dead for burial, while ashen-faced
chaplains waited, book in hand.
Thomas Anburey prided himself that the two graves
MABCH TO SARATOGA
dug by his detachment were deep, their sides square,
the soil well piled. Into the larger of the pits he saw
the bodies of the men laid neatly side by side, in
ranks, as they had lived and as they died. Into the
smaller grave, Anburey placed the three ensigns he
had found lying all together where the British line
ran closest to the woods* None of the three was older
than the drummer boy now beating out the dead
march on a muffled drum. Though he was short of
camp gear, Lieutenant Anburey avoided the sale that
evening, at which the effects of the dead officers were
sold.
It was late when the courier from New York got
through the lines and found his way, unnoticed, to
General Burgoyne's headquarters at the Freeman
house. The message he brought was written small. It
was pulled from its hiding place crumpled and
stained, but under a glass, by the light of a single
candle, the letters were clear, the words bold, and
Burgoyne read them with soaring hope. Sir Henry
Clinton would soon be out, his destination the high-
lands of the Hudsonl
Clinton had given Gentleman Johnny, always a
heavy gambler, a high trump card for his tight little
game with that more cautious player, Horatio Gates.
With the Guards General in New York holding cards,
Burgoyne could now lean back in his chair to review
his hand and, possibly, revise his play. In the first ex-
change of tricks, on 19 September, the British had
won the field by keeping possession of it. But at Free-
MUFFLED DRUMS
man's farm, Burgoyne had suffered irreplaceable
losses in officers, gunners, and soldiers, without either
sweeping the rebels out of the road to Albany or
winning any distance toward that city. The renewal
of the attack on the American left, scheduled to go
in on the morning of 21 September, was calculated
to break through the American defenses. But a battle
is always a chancy thing, and, like cards, soldiers
once played are dead. With Clinton coming up the
Hudson at Gates's back, Burgoyne could afford to
wait for a better moment to lead his strength at the
American general's field works.
It was not until shortly before daybreak that Bur-
goyne cancelled the attack and ordered his troops to
dig in. By mid-morning of 21 September, Gentleman
Johnny, the gambler, had reverted to General Bur-
goyne, the writer, penning a letter to Sir Henry in
which he urged all haste, as supplies could last only
until 12 October at the latest. By that date the north-
ern army must either be in Albany or, admitting de-
feat, at Ticonderoga.
For Horatio Gates, 19 September had not been a
happy day. Things had not gone according to his
plan; the direction of the battle had been snatched
out of his hands; and by nightfall he was in danger
of losing the glory of the day to Benedict Arnold, the
hero of Valcour Island.
In the morning, when the sun-signals had been
flashed to him from the east shore of the Hudson,
General Gates had ordered his army to man the field
2O4 MABCEC TO SARATOGA
works. Three brigades o Continentals faced the river
road, with their general peering over their shoulders,
looking for the British main attack to fall. Benedict
Arnold's two brigades, Continentals with militia,
manned the still uncompleted salient of breastworks
on the heights, near the Neilson house and barn.
About noon, the reluctant Gates had been per-
suaded to order out Morgan's corps. They were to
make contact with the British right wing in the
woods and along the road to Freeman s farm. Ad-
vancing in small groups on a wide front, Morgan met
and beat in the picquet of Burgoyne's center column.
It was at this point that Horatio Gates lost control
of his battle. Joyous at seeing the redcoats run, the
riflemen forgot their long-range tactical advantage
and pursued too closely. They ran onto the oncom-
ing British bayonets and were scattered in confusion.
Benedict Arnold, ever volatile, never patient, had
moved forward of his division's position to follow the
progress of Dan Morgan's reconnaissance from one of
the small works, built as a listening post well forward
of Gates's main line of defense. Even the rough bar-
ricade of logs and earth cramped the aggressive spirit
of the stocky major general, to whom a fort was the
starting point for an attack, not a place in which to
cower. Arnold, awkward from an old leg wound, had
climbed up to the top of the parapet when the first
fire of the riflemen broke out. There he was standing
when he heard the frenzied gobble of Dan Morgan's
turkey call, urging his scattered men to rally. It was
a cry for help, too, like that of a good hound dog
MUFFLED DRUMS 2O5
who has brought the red stag to bay. Arnold hark-
ened, and, with the weird sound of the wild turkey
beating in his ears, exploded into action. Racing back
to his division, he grabbed the first two regiments he
came upon and sent them running down the road to
Freeman's farm. They were the New Hampshire
Continentals, men of Joseph Cilley's and Alexander
Scammers regiments. Hale's men followed, then the
New Yorkers. Most of Poor's brigade, too, was in the
firing line in the woods at the south end of Freeman's
home pasture. Morgan had disengaged, to slide over
to the American left and face the British right,
"treed" on its high ground. Galloping up, Arnold saw
his troops engaging the British line across the open
fields. Seeing the gap between the British center and
Fraser's corps in the woods, he dashed away in search
of General Learned's brigade, to exploit the situation.
It was then that Arnold ran afoul of Gates. Every
action that Arnold had taken that afternoon had been
without the American commander in chiefs orders,
and contrary to his intention. Arnold had abandoned
the American army's main line of defense at a time
when Gates had expected the main British attack
down the slot he had prepared for it. To exploit an
opportunity which had not been carefully con-
sidered, the swarthy division commander had opened
a general engagement with Burgoyne, at great risk to
his command. It had been difficult for Gates to re-
store order among the excited officers and men of
Arnold's division, who were yelping at the British
stag in Freeman's fields. Wilkinson had restrained
MARCH TO SARATOGA
Arnold from returning yet again to tlie fight, with the
result that the regimental commanders lost the co-
hesive leadership they needed, and fell back.
So ended the battle and the day for Gates and for
Arnold. In his quarters, the latter was composing a
letter requesting that he be sent at once to serve
under General Washington. Gates, his army again
under control, was in his tent working over plans
and forms and lists, while his adjutant general saw to
it that the battle of 19 September 1777 was accounted
a victory for General Gates, with no credit whatever
accruing to the disobedient major general.
Benedict Arnold did not leave the northern de-
partment for three weeks. The senior officers of the
army persuaded him to stay on. With neither duty
nor command, since Gates had taken his division
from him, Arnold remained in his quarters, taking
an occasional drink with the two aides he had in-
herited from Philip Schuyler, mocking "Granny"
Gates from afar, and for the moment keeping
within the limits of sarcasm the fury mounting within
him. On the fine days of the northern autumn, he
moved his chair to the doorstep. He was sitting there,
idly watching the soldiers at their digging, when
the first great flock of Canada geese flew by. It is
the sound of their honking which first lifts one's eye
to their flight. It is an insistent, urgently plaintive cry,
quite unlike the clipped, quick, assured call of the
wild turkey gobbler ordering his hens to follow him.
Yet it is the call of the strong-willed leader, carrying
the wide-spreading wedge of his followers behind
him down the broad lanes of the upper air.
MUFFUED DRUMS
Horatio Gates busied himself in his headquarters
tent. Field works must be perfected and extended
to make strong the left flank which the enemy had at-
tempted to turn. Then, too, the militiamen, fully
aroused at last, were corning in by the hundreds, each
newly arrived unit requiring much staff work before
it was assimilated into the northern army. But Gates
as well came to stand at the flap of his tent, to watch
for a time the flight of the wild geese. As the approach-
ing cold of winter drove the big birds south, so the
coming pangs of hunger would send Burgoyne's regi-
ments marching up to the American lines.
On 3 October, in a routine order that reflected the
state of his commissary, General Burgoyne put his
whole army on half ration. The men took the order
well.
The troops had worked hard since the day after the
battle, when they had buried their dead. The field of
corn at the Freeman farm had been harvested as
fodder for the horse lines. Lieutenant Schank had
moved his pontoon bridge downstream. Again in
position, it reached from the base camp to the east
shore of the Hudson, where a bridgehead redoubt
was thrown up. But the bridge reached only to a
blind shore, for beyond the redoubt the American
militia roamed the woods in menacing strength.
The main work of Burgoyne's army, however, was
in erecting a strong, safe, fortified line in which, to
await the corning of Clinton. The works extended in
a long, jagged line across the high ground where
Riedesel had waited with his reinforcements. This
208 MABCH TO SABATOGA
part of the British works dominated the river road
and, from positions on the forward slope, watched
the crossings of Mill Creek. To the west of the long
redoubt, behind which Burgoyne established his
headquarters, a dotted line of small positions ex-
tended the fortified line through the gully to the high
ground where stood the Freeman farm. On the old
battlefield, the British engineers had traced out a
great redoubt in the shape of a broken sling swivel
Within its earth and log walls stood the Freeman
house, serving as headquarters. This, the pivotal posi-
tion of the whole line, was named Balcarres redoubt,
in honor of the twenty-four-year-old Scottish earl,
whose reckless bravery in leading the light infantry
was exceeded only by his daring at the nightly card
games with his general. Twelve hundred yards to
the north, the Germans, under General Breymann,
built their redoubt on the edge of the Great Ravine,
which was an impenetrable tangle of scrub-brush. It
faced north over newly cleared fields, across which a
road wound its way to yet more distant clearings.
Between the Balcarres redoubt and the open rear of
Breymann's redoubt stood two log cabins in which
the last remnant of Burgoyne's Canadians camped
and cooked their thick soups. Here lived the eleven-
year-old Monin, whose father, "le capitaine," had
fallen to a Yankee rifleman out where the woods were
thickest, and where only the strongest British patrols
dared go. The boy, with his dog Bellona, hunted
rabbits in the fields and waited to be taken home to
Canada by the friends of his dead father.
MUFFLED DRUMS 2OQ
Baroness Riedesel, too, was to have a house in
which to live with her children as soon as Major
Williams's men could complete it. There, she would
be near enough to her husband's headquarters to
watch over the preparation of his meals and to give
dinner parties at which she and her husband could
entertain the other generals. Her house was close to
the rear echelon of the army, where the gun park
stood beside the river, near the hospital. The boats
of the supply fleet lined the banks of the river, the
stores they had carried stacked under oilcloth cover-
ings, and all the followers of the army and the soldiers
passing on details could see the dwindling piles. It
was on the river bank, where the women and the
idlers gathered, that hopeful rumors on which to feed
the army were bred.
Like clean white linen spread on the grass to dry,
the news was plain for all to see. Clinton was coming,
of course. General Burgoyne had received a secret
messenger who brought the welcome news. Three
officer-couriers, heavily disguised, had gone out to tell
Sir Henry that the army from Canada was ready to
attack when he did, but that he must hurry. Twice
they had gone out, on the nights of 22 and 23 Septem-
ber, while the British guns thundered to draw in the
Yankee patrols, enabling the messengers to slip
through. The army knew that Captain Scott had gone
to Clinton on 27 September, followed the next night
by Captain Alexander Campbell. A wild, romantic
tale was circulating that one of the officers carried his
message in the hollow shell of a bullet made of silver.
210 MABCH TO SARATOGA
For several days the men standing to in the early
morning asked each other for the true news from the
north. Some said that Skenesborough was in Ameri-
can hands, others that Ticonderoga had fallen to the
Americans. It was not until the evening alert on 2
October that the men in the lines and at the redoubts,
listening for the evening guns in the rebel lines echo-
ing their own, learned what had really happened at
Ticonderoga. General Burgoyne received word from
Brigadier Powell that he had been attacked by a force
sent out from Vermont by General Lincoln. For four
days he had been molested by fifteen hundred rebels
but, recognizing the action as a raid in force, he had
fended them off by remaining inside his forts at Ti-
conderoga and on Mount Independence. At last they
had gone away, but not before taking the fortifica-
tions on Sugar Loaf, from which, fortunately, the
big guns had already been removed. The Yankees
had also taken the posts all along the portage road
and all the boats they found at the foot of Lake
George. Colonel John Brown, the boldest of the
American officers, had gone up Lake George in the
captured gunboats, tarrying only long enough to
menace the forewarned garrison on Diamond Island
before taking off eastward through the woods.
Twenty Canadian Indians brought this news from
Ticonderoga. But their coming was of little interest
or encouragement to the British enclave on the Hud-
son. All trust in their savage allies had gone out of
Burgoyne's army, who had been betrayed by wanton
murder and disgraced by caviling cowardice. In the
MUFFLED DRUMS
great fortified camp, twenty Indians were but twenty
additional mouths to feed. There was no work for
them to do. The woods around the army were Ameri-
can woods, into which even Captain Eraser's marks-
men scarcely dared to venture. By day and by night
the Yankees patrolled the fringes of the British camp,
while wolves howled in the distance. In the center
of the ring Burgoyne's army waited, isolated and
alone, yet confident that when the right time came
their general would lead them out to smash through
the encircling rebels and clasp hands with Sir Henry
Clinton's men. The army knew that Clinton could
not be far away, else Gentleman Johnny would not
wait.
At midnight, when 5 October passed over into the
next day, a rocket was fired from the lines near army
headquarters. It soared high into the dark sky,
launching a final rumor: the old soldiers knew, and
quickly told the young ones, that a night rocket was
fired only when a friendly force was near. Though no
answering rocket lit the sky beyond the rebel lines, at
headquarters they must be expecting the approach of
Sir Henry Clinton. As the rocket arched upward,
those nearby saw Gentleman Johnny, standing at the
open door of his quarters. Several officers were with
him, and the light from the room beyond caught the
gleam of satin as the commissary's wife turned to go
back to the warm fire burning on the hearth.
17
General Fraser Eats Breakfast
General Fraser rode his handsome gray down into
the gully behind the Balcarres redoubt. Since first
he had passed that way, the leaves of the swamp
maple growing by the bridge had turned scarlet, as
scarlet as the generaTs coat. Sumac at the edge of the
swamp was the crimson of his sash, while on the sky-
line toward which he rode the drooping branches of
an old oak tree were the color of the tarnished gold
epaulets at his shoulders. Breasting the hill at a snort-
ing, plunging gallop, the general of the advance
guard reined his horse back into the dignity of a
controlled walk and soothed it with an approving pat.
He was in behind the long, wavy line of field works
and among the rows of tents, where, in passing, sol-
diers acknowledged his rank and showed their esteem
for him. At the edge of the headquarters compound
an orderly ran out to take the bridle reins. The Bruns-
wick dragoon sentries took their pose of rocklike
attention. In the bright, warm sunlight of the fine
October Sunday, General Fraser paused for a barely
perceptible instant before crossing over the threshold
GENERAL FRASER EATS BREAKFAST
into the room where Time demanded a grave de-
cision.
It was the second time that week-end that Lieu-
tenant General John Burgoyne had called in to
headquarters his three division commanders: Major
General Phillips of the British line, Major General
Riedesel, and Acting Brigadier General Fraser of the
elite advance corps. On Saturday, 4 October, the four
men had met in a council of war to consider Bur-
goyne's bold plan to cut loose from his heavy guns,
his full hospital, his dwindling supply column, and
the women of his army, in a wide arching dive into
the forest that would bring the fighting troops out
behind Gates's army and make them the vanguard of
Sir Henry Clinton's expected advance. At Sunday's
meeting Burgoyne's generals rejected the rash plan,
as too risky for those left behind and too problemati-
cal as to the anticipated merger with Clinton's forces.
The fallow silence that followed the veto was broken
by Riedesel, the disenchanted German whose na-
tionality had excluded him from Burgoyne's proud
boast, at the crossing of the Hudson, that "Britons
never retreat!" The baron, whose initiative had saved
the day at Freeman's farm, proposed that the whole
army retire to the old position on the Batten Kill,
there to nurture itself at the dangling end of the Ti-
conderoga supply line until Clinton's arrival was more
imminent. Simon Fraser, the Highland Scot, con-
curred in the opinion of the comrade-in-arms who
had turned the Yankee right flank for him on the
Hubbardton road. With a motion of his hand, Phillips
214 MARCH TO SARATOGA
abstained. As a major in the Royal Artillery, Phillips
had witnessed the total casualties at Jones's guns on
19 September, when forty-eight irreplaceable gun
numbers were lost to Burgoyne's army. And as a
major general in the British Army, the old gunner
knew the solitary responsibility of high command,
where one's guideposts through the fog of war are
months old instructions issued by people in a remote
place, informed of circumstances no longer existent.
Phillips could only sympathize and obey.
The instructions to Lieutenant General John Bur-
goyne were clear: he was to take his army to Albany
and there place himself under command of General
Sir William Howe. In the light of these orders, Bur-
goyne would only accept as a responsible opinion,
put forward by two brave and reliable officers, the
advice of Riedesel and Fraser to retreat. His duty and
inclination lay in the opposite direction. At the coun-
cil of war Burgoyne was forced to effect a compro-
mise between his own natural instinct and the un-
acceptable (to him) caution of his subordinates.
Ultimately a solution to the problem was found. It
was agreed that on Tuesday, 7 October, all four gen-
erals would make a reconnaissance in force of the
American left. If it was then deemed feasible, a gen-
eral attack would be ordered for the following day.
If the American position was found to be unassail-
able, after waiting out the week, Burgoyne would
retire on the Saturday to the old Batten Kill position.
The command decision came hard to General John
Burgoyne. He even sought to avoid it by asking for
GENERAL PHASER EATS BREAKFAST 21$
orders from Sir Henry Clinton. But he received no
reply and, with his fate hanging on the disembodied
instructions from London, he prepared to make his
reconnaissance. He ordered rum for the whole army:
one barrel for the auxiliaries, three for the British
line, four for the Germans, and four for the advance
guard who would he going out in the morning. On
Monday morning the carts dropped the rum off at
the various positions. There were many willing hands
to ease the barrels to the ground and roll them up
onto the racks, where spigots were driven into the
bung-holes. Popularity was natural to Gentleman
Johnny Burgoyne.
Duty calls to the common soldier very early in the
morning. A sentry, eager for companionship, wakens
the drummers and the cooks as early as he dares. At
the first sound of drums, the corporals poke and pull
their squads into wakefulness before the sergeants
can find them remiss in their first duty of the day.
Two subalterns, sharing a tent, lie awake on their
cots as they listen to the noises of the rousing camp,
and luxuriate until the servant whom they share
brings water for their ablutions, and what fare can be
managed from an army starving on half-rations.
Majors and colonels of many years* service find that
the chill of a northern New York knows where old
wounds and old injuries twinge and ache the most.
The morning mist from the Hudson River gets into
the back of their throats and sends them, snuffling
and coughing, into their field trunks, where they keep
their private stock of bone-warming liquor. Majors
MABCH TO SARATOGA
and colonels are meticulous as to their dress, and
take a long time at their morning toilet extra time
for the leisurely ablutions of the captains of com-
panies.
Generals are exalted persons. Lieutenant General
Jolm Burgoyne was the most exalted of all the army
that camped on the banks of the Hudson, six miles
below Stillwater. In all the northern frontier of the
war, the only man equal to General Burgoyne in
importance was Major General Horatio Gates of the
Continental Army, whose picquets faced the British
at musket-shot distance, and whose main defense
works were only a mile from the Balcarres redoubt.
Gates's headquarters tent was pitched at a road junc-
ture, half a mile behind his front lines. The general
was early at his desk on the morning of 7 October,
with a full day's work before him. Since the British
sortie on 19 September and the nearly mutinous
brushfire fight that had contained it, Gates's army
had almost doubled in number. The militia had
turned out, its ire thoroughly aroused by the murder
and pillage by Burgoyne's Indians, and reassured in
its patriotism by Stark's victory at Beimington, Herki-
mer's and Arnold's turning back of St. Leger, and
General Lincoln's exhortation to the Continentals to
stand at the pass above Stillwater. To Gates, the mili-
tia presented a delicate problem in staff work. Theo-
retically, the men came supplied often ludicrously
so in their own interpretation of what constituted
a uniform and other martial equipment. Soon after its
arrival, a company, hungry after its march from a
hamlet in a distant valley, would be demanding food.
GENERAL FRASER EATS BREAKFAST
All the militia seemed to be prodigious eaters, and
their powder horns were as empty as their stomachs
and the flabby shot pouches hanging at their belts.
With the influx of ardent militiamen, the Ameri-
cans' resources, already low in ordnance supplies,
were sorely taxed. But the nicest staff problem for the
former British brigade major was the brigading and
deploying of this mass of citizen-soldiers. Gates put
the Massachusetts units, some thirteen hundred men,
under command of the militia general, John Fellows,
with an assignment to proceed up the Hudson by the
east shore, cross over again, and lie on Burgoyne's
rear at Saratoga. Two Connecticut State Regiments
were veterans of Poor's brigade. Even the problem of
Stark and his New Hampshire men had been solved.
The old rock-visaged ranger, with his eight hundred
men, had been persuaded to leave the fair fringe of
New England for the deserted fort and buildings at
Fort Edward, through which Barry St. Leger must
come with reinforcements for Burgoyne if, indeed,
he came at all. Searching the empty place, Stark
found, decently interred in the fort cemetery, the
boats with which St. Leger was to have crossed the
Hudson. These were destroyed before the New
Hampshire army, still shy, still suspicious, edged a
little closer to the place and hour of destiny. John
Stark did not know it, as he prowled the upper Hud-
son in the bright October sun, but the general's com-
mission which he so truculently regarded as his due,
lay already signed on a Congressional desk in
distant Philadelphia.
Less bright on his shoulders were Benedict Arnold's
MARCH TO SARATOGA
stars of rank. Gates had neutralized Arnold, who, for
the three weeks following his disobedience of 19
September, was virtually under house arrest. But
General Gates could never quite forget him, Arnold
represented the old Schuyler faction. He was the
fiery comet of the battlefield that all soldiers look to
in their own fear of death or cowardice. Schuyler
himself had been dealt with, and Gates no longer
feared him. The former general was a not-infrequent
visitor to the American camp. He had even given the
army lumber for the bridge Fellows's brigade had
used to cross to the east bank of the Hudson. But
Gates had not felt sufficiently secure to dismiss
Arnold, or even to grant his request for transfer out
of the northern department. So he was left to wither
and fall in inactivity, until a gale could be stirred up
finally to blow him away.
Meanwhile, Brigadier General Abram Ten Broeck's
New York State militia was kept away from him.
These Yorkers were Schuyler men and were inher-
ently suspicious of the New England faction, in the
army or the government. They were men whose
homes had been pillaged by Burgoyne's army, or
were imminently threatened by that army's advance
and the Tory rule it would bring. It was they who
were impatient for revenge, and who sought a bold
leader such as Benedict Arnold, now disgraced but
famed in many battles. While his defensive plans
matured, Gates kept the New York militia in the rear
or scattered in the woods, where they could stalk the
unwary British patrols and foraging parties, far re-
GENERAL FRASER EATS BREAKFAST
moved from the orderly procedure of the American
staff tents.
Horatio Gates knew that Sir Henry Clinton was
moving on the highlands of the Hudson. The Yankee '
general was in close correspondence with Israel Put-
nam, the American commander there. Each report
that Clinton was still below the highlands meant an-
other day that Gates could count on for Burgoyne to
eat himself toward the decision being forced upon
him.
So, Horatio Gates worked on through the morning
of 7 October, toward the time that he would be called
to dine.
General Burgoyne ate a leisurely breakfast on the
morning of 7 October. He was still at table when the
contingent of two hundred soldiers, selected from the
several German regiments, marched past his dining-
room window, on their way to the forming-up point
for the reconnaissance in force. With them, and rais-
ing a cloud of dust from the dry road, Captain
Pausch ckttered by with two 6-pounders. The four
ammunition wagons following the guns made quite a
cavalcade. Later, Burgoyne was disposing of some
staff details at his writing-table when Major Griffith
Williams rode up, turned out of the road, and, still
in his saddle, watched while his battery of guns went
by. For the reconnaissance Williams had selected his
two best 12-pounders the same guns with which
he had defied the great wilderness fortress at Ticon-
deroga. Major Williams had decided to accompany
22O MABCH TO SARATOGA
his beloved la's, not only to watch them but because
he hoped to place them on a hill nearby and from
there to pour a few shots in the rebel field fort. For
his anticipated shoot, Williams had ordered out his
two 8-inch howitzers, which were to drop shells in
among the rebels as they cowered behind their works.
He watched as the gun teams dragged the howitzers
past: squat brass tubes, their big mouths thrust up as
though drinking from the sky. They were very differ-
ent from the long shining barrels of the 12-pounders,
crouching in their carriages like vicious panthers
readying to spring. Before the last tumbril passed,
Major Williams dismounted and joined the head-
quarters group of officers waiting to ride out with
their general.
There was a festive atmosphere as the men waited
in the yard, a little removed from where the grooms
held the horses, which were fully caparisoned for
battle with the bulky pistol-holders at the pommels
and cloaks rolled behind the cantles. Many of the
headquarters staff were riding out that day, among
them the two bright luminaries of General Burgoyne's
intimate family of aides: Sir Francis Carr Clarke,
whose lieutenancy in the 3rd Foot Guards was
equivalent to a captaincy in any other regiment, and
Lord Petersham, his slim boots drawn over cavalry-
man's shanks. Captain John Money, the quartermas-
ter general, stood talking with Captain Thomas
Blomfield. The latter specialized in water-borne artil-
lery, and, since Charles Green had been shot, was
acting as aide-de-camp to General Phillips.
GENERAL FRASER EATS BREAKFAST
Standing by the headquarters door and sliding the
focusing piece in and out of his battered old brass
telescope, General Phillips waited for Burgoyne to
come out and begin the reconnaissance. Riedesel
walked back and forth, stopping occasionally to talk
with Phillips as though the council of war still con-
tinued. The commander of all the Brunswick and
Hessian troops of Burgoyne's army had breakfasted
with his wife, as usual. The meal had been a hasty
one, as he had been summoned when the parade of
German troops was formed up. The Baroness had
hurried him, too, for she had a menu to contrive and
a table to set in her new house. She was giving a
dinner-party that afternoon after the men returned.
The work of finding suitable food in the near-starva-
tion camp, the decoration of the room and table, and
the supervision of the cooking would keep her busy
and occupy her mind while the men were out.
Simon Fraser, who was to be one of Friederika
Riedesel's guests of the evening, was not among the
group waiting on Burgoyne at headquarters. He was
at the Balcarres redoubt, supervising the assembly of
the troops for the reconnaissance. He had eaten a
substantial English breakfast in preparation for the
busy day that lay ahead of him.
Lieutenant Anburey, who was commanding the
quarter guard of the day, had gone out toward the
American lines and had returned to report them all
quiet. He brought back to Fraser the extraordinary
report that, in a thicket, he had discovered the bodies
of three Yankees, one of them being that of a young
222 MAKCH TO SABATOGA
woman apparently killed while she was bringing an
apron full of paper cartridges out to the men. General
Fraser was returning from a last word with his
nephew, who was taking out the marksmen, the
Tories, and a few painted Indians for a wide scout to
westward, when the German contingent from the
main camp came marching up. Lieutenant Colonel
von Spaeth halted his troops on the low ground be-
tween the two redoubts. Drums sounded in the curve
of the Breymann redoubt, and soon the three hun-
dred grenadiers designated for von Spaeth's com-
mand marched down to fall into the column, now
five hundred strong. Lieutenant du Fais of the Hesse-
Hanau Artillery followed them to talk with Captain
Pausch. Then du Fais climbed up the hill again to
where his two guns were, and would remain, with
Colonel Breymann and the two hundred grenadiers
left to hold the redoubt.
Major Acland had his grenadiers out in good time,
in the cleared space in front of the Balcarres re-
doubt. The Earl of Balcarres marched his quick-
stepping light infantry across their front to gain their
starting line on the extreme right of the British ad-
vance, with the grenadiers to their left. Close behind
the light infantry followed the 24th Foot. John Acland
waved to his brother-in-law, Stephen Strangways, as
he marched past at the head of his company.
General Fraser was up on his fine gray when Gen-
eral Burgoyne rode out of the gully, the other
generals and the large staff group behind him. Bur-
goyne waited at the Balcarres redoubt only long
GENERAL FRASER EATS BREAKFAST 223
enough for the orders to move out to be sent to the
three columns. It was almost one o'clock by Lieuten-
ant Digb/s watch when the grenadiers began their
advance.
3^ BATTLE
FREEMAN'S EABM
(SARATOGA)
7 Octo&er 1777
18
No Dinner for the General
Marching beside Captain Wight, Lieutenant William
Digby of the 53rd crossed the cleared ground in good
order with his company. On reaching the edge of the
woods, parade order was broken and the captain, the
lieutenant, and the sergeant each led a single file of
grenadiers in a twisting trail through the trees and
the undergrowth of brush. Soon they came to the
road between Neilson's and Freeman's farms, across
which a large fenced-in field of wheat sloped from
high ground into a ravine across its southern border.
Major Acland was waiting in the road when the com-
pany of grenadiers of the 53rd Regiment came out.
He showed Captain Wight where he wished the com-
pany to form a line, extending the grenadier front
from its left, in the woods, into the standing wheat.
To the west, the Germans were coming onto the field
and spreading out thinly to join up with the 24th
Foot and light infantry, making a line of men a thou-
sand yards in length. From where Digby was he could
not see the guns, but he could hear the shouts of
the drivers as they turned the teams off the road to
325
22,6 MAKCH TO SAKATOGA
the selected positions, the iz-pounders unlimbering
behind the grenadiers. Orders came from the rear for
the men to sit down and, though they had marched
only half a mile from the redoubt, the soldiers quickly
took advantage of the opportunity and sprawled
themselves out in the yellow wheat. Captain Wight
walked over to where Digby sat, cross-legged, behind
his company, and invited the lieutenant to stroll
about with him. Wight led him a short way down the
line where they could see a small abandoned log
cabin set at the edge of the woods beside a rail fence
that defined the wheatfield. On the roof of the cabin,
like a bunch of brightly dyed feathers on a dilapi-
dated old brown beaver hat, perched three British
generals and a stiff-backed German colleague a
delight to all common soldiers and junior officers to
behold. General Phillips was on his stomach, steady-
ing his long glass on the ridge-pole; a mounted staff
officer (Petersham, by the look of him) was standing
in his stirrups beside the cabin, stretching to pass a
spyglass up to Gentleman Johnny himself.
While the generals studied the terrain to the south,
a long line of foragers, leading their pack animals,
filed up the road. They spread quickly out through
the field to harvest the good grain, which would put
energy back into the worn horses. From the roof, the
generals could see a small portion of Gates's lines
across the rough, broken country, cut by ravines and
gullies, thick with woods, and checkered only spar-
ingly with rough clearings. One of the latter reached
over the top of a small wooded hill that rose out of a
NO DINNER FOR THE GENERAL
ravine beyond the brook at the southern extremity of
the wheatfield. The generals were still on their roof-
top when a gun team came up over the crest of the
hill and into the clearing. It was followed by another,
to its left, then two more. As one, the generals im-
mediately swung their telescopes to take into focus
this new development on their front. Phillips's cen-
tered on a young officer in blue and red standing
with his back to the British, an arm raised as a
marker to the gun crew, dragging a gun with dif-
ficulty around the stumps and through the brush of
the rough clearing. Phillips was straining for a good
look at the gun itself in an attempt to judge its exact
size it was small when musket fire broke out at
the southern end of the wheatfield. The foragers were
now running back to the safety of the infantry line,
which along its whole length was rising to its feet.
They were calling to him from below when General
Phillips snapped his telescope shut, slipped down the
back of the cedar-shingled roof, and dropped to the
ground.
The gunner officer the British generals had watched
as he expertly positioned his piece was Lieutenant
Ebenezer Mattoon of the Continental Artillery. The
range was long for real effect with his small caliber
guns, but the target was clear as he opened fire on
the long line of enemy infantry. He saw that his shells
were falling short of their target, and he was at the
breech of his number-one gun, attempting to coax a
little more elevation out of it, when the heavy British
22& MARCH TO SARATOGA
round shot struck down the hill in front of him and
went screaming over his head in a wild, terrifying
ricochet. The ball from Major Williams's second
12-pounder rumbled through the air, high over the
hill where Mattoon had placed his battery on the for-
ward slope, and his limbers and ammunition wagons
out of sight behind the crest. Lieutenant Mattoon
had already spotted the other British guns, set up in
batteries of pairs behind Burgoyne's line. Now he saw
that they were coming into action against him in
counter-battery fire. The Continental gunner called
up his limbers and abandoned his position before the
full force of the enemy cannonade could fall on it.
Safely in the shelter of the woods, the American bat-
tery came into the forming-up area of General
Learned's brigade, where Mattoon found Lieutenant
McLane and the rest of the guns of Captain Furni-
vaTs company. He joined them in a march that
skirted to the west of his hilltop clearing and was
aimed for the edge of the woods at the bottom of
the ravine, facing the blue-coated Germans in the
center of the British line.
Learned's brigade had been the last to march out
from the American position on Bemis Heights. When
the Yankee picquets reported that the British were
preparing to come out, General Lincoln had gone
forward to estimate the situation. Benedict Arnold
rode with him to the lookout point. Together, they
had then ridden to Gates's headquarters tent, and
Gates had interrupted his work to come out and re-
ceive Lincoln's report; Arnold he snubbed. On Gen-
NO DINNER FOR THE GENERAL
eral Lincoln's recommendation, Horatio Gates or-
dered Morgan's corps out at once, to make a wide
march to the west, then to the north, to fall on the
British right and "begin the game.** Drums were
beating the call to arms for Poor's Continentals to
attack Burgoyne's left. As he led out his guns up the
road to the Freeman farm, Mattoon caught a glimpse
of the last of Morgan's riflemen disappearing into
the woods. He was to support the skirmish line, sent
to hold the enemy's center until Learned's brigade
could be assembled for the main attack. He saw
Arnold, looking like the cocked hammer of a dueling
pistol. He was riding aimlessly about on his big
chestnut horse with the flowing black mane. Mattoon
did not see Gates go back into his tent to resume
his interrupted work.
Although it had been intended that Dan Morgan
was to "begin the game," he had a long route around,
over rough country, and Poor's brigade made the
first contact with Acland's grenadiers, on Burgoyne's
extreme left. Probing about through the woods on
the east side of the road, Poor's men encountered
the extension of the grenadiers' line. A fire-fight
began, with the Yankees aiming at individual men in
red, while the solid ranks of grenadiers, broken by
the gray tree trunks, poured volleys among the figures
they dimly saw, down the hill from them, among the
thicker undergrowth near the water course. Another
regiment of Poor's brigade, Joseph Cifley's 1st New
Hampshire Continentals, entered the action, and the
fight with the grenadiers was carried out into the
23 MARCH TO SARATOGA
road and into the wheatfield beyond. Now the whole
line of grenadiers was firing by company volley and
was accepting heavy casualties. But Acland, standing
between two of the companies, noted a hesitance in
the advance of Cilley's men. He took this as an op-
portunity to charge, and gave the order to fix bayo-
nets. Bayonet sockets clicked home over the hot
muzzles of the muskets, and as the officers, with
drawn swords, took their places out in front, the ranks
of British, grenadiers straightened and seemed to
grow taller as they readied for the charge. Cilley's
men halted where they stood. But it was less in awe
of the threatened bayonet attack by Europe's most
famous infantry, than in wonder that men would
stand so, in the open, such easy targets to the muzzles
of the Continental line. Quickly, the New Hampshire
men brought their weapons to their shoulders, their
eyes running down the long gun barrels to the front
sights, comfortably fitting the V-sights near the
breech. Beyond, at flat range, they could see ruddy
faces under bearskin caps, white over-belts crossing
over stained and worn lapels. Some saw the crimson
sashes slashing across the white coats of officers as
they pressed on the triggers of their muskets. All
Time was compressed into the interminable minute
of sighting. Then the muskets began to fire, and the
slowest marksman noted that the man on either side
of him was reloading, and hurried his shot before the
smoke drifted in front of him so that he could not see
if he had made a hit. Colonel Cilley was shouting as
his men fired, and other firing was coming from the
woods on his right.
NO DINNER FOR THE GENERAL 231
Major Acland went down during the long fusilade
of the New Harnpshiremen. Although fat Captain
Simpson was a good target, he had not been hit. A
man of great strength, he was able to pick up his
major and carry him on his back, out of the trodden
wheat. The whole line of British grenadiers was giv-
ing way before the Continentals, who, as they fired,
moved forward out of their own smoke to fire again.
At the edge of the woods the remaining British
officers checked the men, but no amount of effort
could get them to move out to renew the fight, nor
were there enough of Burgoyne's elite grenadiers left
to mount a bayonet charge. Acland's command had
ceased to exist, and the survivors could but watch as
Cilley's men veered slightly to the west to overrun
Major Williams and his two la-pounders. They saw
the big rebel colonel climb up onto one of the pieces,
and but for the noise of the battle over the spur
of ground where the Germans were fighting they
could have heard the Yankee officer yelling and
whooping and cheering, as more and more of Poor's
brigade emerged from the woods.
The battle had gone no better for the British on
their right. Morgan's riflemen had quickly driven in
Captain Alexander Eraser's marksmen. With the
same wild abandon they had shown on 19 September,
Morgan's rangers hurled themselves at Balcarres's
light infantry. Showing perfect discipline under firm,
clear orders, the British light infantry shifted their
front to meet the attack from the west. Balcarres
marked the extent of Morgan's attack by the now-
familiar call of the wild turkey. Somewhere behind
MARCH TO SARATOGA
Ids own shifting line, a bugler mocked the call with
a "Tally Ho!" on his curled French horn. The attack
of Dearborn's light infantry fell unexpectedly on
Balcarres's new left flank. Henry Dearborn's men
came in hard and strong. Caught, the earl withdrew
his whole command to the rail fence, and, from its
protection, reorganized his firing line, which held
Morgan and Dearborn at the edge of the woods.
General Burgoyne's messenger at last found Bal-
carres and gave him the general's orders to disengage
and return to the redoubt. By ones and twos, the light
infantrymen fired; then they retired in good order,
trailing their muskets as they stepped lightly down
the forest track.
The messenger, sent to the left flank with the
same message, and then to the Germans in the center,
was Sir Francis Carr Clarke. Setting off at a fast
canter, he rode through the wheat, passing behind
the gun line, as both Pausch's battery and the
howitzers were in action. Smoke obscured the gentle
rise over which Major Acland had formed up his
grenadiers, and where the afternoon's action had
begun. One of Major Williams's 12-pounders that
had been silent for a time now fired. With the sound
of the gun as a reference point, Sir Francis gave his
horse its head, and at a pounding gallop, plunged
into the smoke with his vital message. Too late, he
realized that he had ridden onto the ground taken
from Acland by Poor's brigade. The Guards officer
had no time to cry out "Surrender!" before a musket
shot at close range took him in the body, jerked
NO DINNER FOR THE GENERAL 233
out of the saddle, and slammed him on the ground.
Rough hands pulled him, still dazed and wondering,
to his feet, and with a strange soldier helping him on
either side, he dimly sensed that he was miming and
stumbling down a hill. Somewhere in the confusion
of his mind, Sir Francis Carr Clarke knew that he had
been wounded, and that he was running in the wrong
direction.
Unaware that Acland's left wing had been driven
in and that Williams's guns had been turned on the
beaten grenadiers, in ignorance of Burgoyne's new
order to retire, which the light infantry and the 24th
Foot on the right flank were already following, the
five hundred men of the German contingent stood
where they had been placed. Some protection from
the fire of the rebel skirmishers was afforded them
by the rail fence behind which they stood, and
through which their own Jiigers were returning the
enemy fire. At the left of their line, Captain Pausch
was keeping up a steady fire along the edge of the
woods. He was taking casualties among his gun
crews, so when Lieutenant William Smith, bloody
and excited, rushed up to him, demanding ten gun-
ners to return the 12-pounders to action, Pausch
refused. He was brusque with the wounded young
officer, who seemed to have forgotten that the three
to one rate of fire of a 6-pounder made it that much
more valuable in the type of open fight that was de-
veloping.
The Americans had now brought up their own
guns. The big puffs of white smoke rolling out from
234 MABCH TO SABATOGA
under the trees betrayed their position. They were
Mattoon's and McKay's light batteries, firing canister
at a telling range. Under the close support of their
guns and disregarding Pausch's fire, Learned's regi-
ments of Massachusetts Continentals were forming
up for a charge. Slowly, they advanced across the
bed of the dry brook and on up the gentle slope to-
ward the waiting Germans. Gunsmoke rolled over
the field between the advancing and the stationary
lines of soldiers. When the smoke lifted, the rebels
had halted and in places were giving ground. In-
stantly, Colonel von Spaeth was up over the fence,
shouting for a counter-attack. Driven by their officers,
the men came out. But, though the officers kicked
and shouted and beat the men with swords, the Ger-
man line would not take ranks. Instead, it wadded
itself into a milling mass of stubborn and frightened
men terrified to go on toward the enemy, and
frightened to go back, where their own snarling of-
ficers menaced them with brutal authority. In the
quick moment of indecision, German discipline fal-
tered and the invincible hand of confidence fell upon
the shoulders of Learned's Continentals. It sent the
Americans running for the rail fence, and before the
onslaught of the hoarsely shouting Massachusetts
men the Brunswickers and Hessians stampeded.
Of all General Burgoyne's reconnaissance force,
only Pausch's two guns remained in action on the
field. With his gun numbers still working with pre-
cision under the old veteran's tight hand, the Hesse-
Hanau artillery was preparing for a fight to the
NO DINNER FOR THE GENERAL
muzzle. Discipline kept the gunners at their station;
tradition kept the old captain from abandoning his
sacred guns while they could still fire a shot. And it
was tradition and discipline and loyalty that ulti-
mately saved them. Out from the trees at the north-
ern end of the wheatfield the limbers came at a
gallop, the quirts of the drivers flaying their teams.
Down the hill they came, swinging wide through
the field in a curve cut to bring each limber close to
the trail of its gun. The gun crews fired, to clear their
guns with a parting shot, hooked up quickly, and as
the drivers slashed down at their off-horses, they
grabbed a stirrup leather and ran free and wild, in
great bounds, beside the running horses.
At the log cabin, which less than an hour before
had borne upon its roof four British generals, Captain
Pausch unlimbered for another stand. Learned's
brigade was reforming at the rail fence, which they
were pulling to pieces to make a way through for
Mattoon's guns. Coming up from out of the woods
behind them was a fresh regiment, still marching in
column of route, led by a senior officer in full uni-
form, riding a big chestnut horse. Some men of Poor's
brigade, to the east, had drifted over and were poking
about among the Hesse-Hanau dead at Pausch's old
gun position down the hill, where the wheel tracks
through the wheat came to an end.
In the woods behind the cabin, Pausch could find
no line of resistance forming up. There were still
plenty of German soldiers, but they were individuals,
some of them without weapons, who, recognizing him
236 MARCH TO SARATOGA
as an officer, skulked away into the bush as he ap-
proached them or called out to them. Without an
infantry line to support, it was foolhardy to stand
with the guns and waste such good men as remained
to him. Pausch ordered up the limbers, hooked up
again, and continued his retreat with honor, down the
narrow track through the woods. He followed it east-
ward toward the Freeman's farm road and the re-
doubt, but he did not get far down the crooked,
narrow trail. Saplings snarled the wheels, stumps
seemed to rise up from the ground to foul the axle-
trees, and when the gunners rushed forward to clear
them, the standing horses grew fractious under the
taut reins held by uneasy drivers. Rifle fire was draw-
ing nearer, as Morgan's men infiltrated the woods.
The end of Pausch's guns came when a hidden rifle-
man shot a wheel horse in the leading gun's team.
Its driver leaped free, but the lead team took fright
and bolted, dragging the squealing beast with it for
a few feet, until all ended in a hopeless tangle of
horses, harness, limber, and gun. More rifle fire broke
out, now aimed at the horses, and Pausch and his
gunners ran. The old captain rested for a time be-
hind a rail fence, trying to catch his breath. It was
then that he saw one of his ammunition wagons,
abandoned, its team quietly nibbling among the
leaves on the ground. Almost gratefully, Pausch
climbed up onto the driver's seat, and with one of
his gunners beside him, drove off. At least he had
saved something of his pride.
At the eastern corner of the wheatfield, where the
NO DINNER FOR THE GENERAL
road from Neilsoris farm entered the wood on the
north side of the field, Simon Fraser was making his
last stand. He had found his own regiment (the
24th) intact, its morale still high, retiring under or-
ders with Balcarre's light infantry. He had led the
men out onto the corner of the field, and, sitting high
and proud on his gray horse, had watched while the
rest of the reconnaissance force passed around be-
hind him, bound for the redoubts. The Yankees, too,
were keeping their distance, though rifle fire was
chipping into the solid wall of the company fronts.
Suddenly, the American rifle fire concentrated on the
conspicuous General Fraser. A ball creased the crup-
pers of the gray horse. For a moment the animal
danced in surprised pain, then Fraser quieted him.
The riflemen held their fire. Once more, horse and
rider were motionless. A second ball passed through
the horse's mane, then a third took the general in the
stomach, doubling him over as though he were exe-
cuting an awkward bow from the saddle. Soldiers
rushed to steady the stricken officer before he fell. An
aide leaped to the bridle, and before the general
could protest, led horse and rider away. With two
men to hold him in the saddle, and the aide leading
his horse, Fraser began the long, agonizing ride to the
hospital, far away on the banks of the Hudson.
For a short distance, Gentleman Johnny rode be-
side his wounded friend. Behind them followed the
24th Foot. The reconnaissance in force was at an end.
Burgoyne turned off at the Balcarres redoubt, to
organize its defenses for the rebels were following
238 MARCH TO SARATOGA
closely behind the rear guard. General Fraser rode
on, one of a long line of wounded men finding their
way through the late afternoon shadows to the camp
beside the river.
Heavy firing could be heard inland at the redoubts,
as the two soldiers eased the wounded general from
the blood-flecked gray horse. They carried Simon
Fraser into the cool, quiet darkness of Baroness
Biedesers new house, and there, on the table at which
he had been invited to dine, they gently laid him
down.
19
Prisoners of Hope
The sorely wounded Sir Francis Carr Clarke found
himself in the most unusual situation for a prisoner of
war, of all the distinguished British officers captured
on 7 October. Major Acland, who had been overrun
while helpless in the angle of the rail fence, was cared
for with proper consideration. Captain Money and
Major Williams, being less seriously wounded, were
held politely but firmly by the American provost
guard. But Burgoyne's knighted aide came to rest in
Horatio Gates's own camp bed, with the rebel gen-
eral giving him as much attention as did the head-
quarters physician.
While Gates was occupied with his august prisoner,
Benedict Arnold escaped the restraint of his virtual
arrest. He had gone forth to fight with the men of his
old division. Arnold had ridden forward with the last
regiment of Leanaed's brigade, and by going up to
the firing-line had put himself beyond reach of the
exquisite aide sent by Gates to fetch him back.
Arnold, whose enemies referred to him as a "horse
jockey/* rode extremely well. He had need of his skill,
240 MARCH TO SARATOGA
as he brought his big red horse pounding after
Learned's leading regiments, up the hill and through
the wheat. The bodies of the dead first those of the
Americans and then of the Germans and the
wounded of both sides caused the big animal to start,
leap, and swerve. But Arnold's strong hands and self-
possession quieted the nervous horse into a useful
charger.
The charge over the rail fence had hardly ended
and the last of Burgoyne's men had just retired under
the rear-guard action of Eraser's 24th Foot when
Arnold rode over the field. He was cheered by the
regiment, and he was seen reining in for an instant
to shout a gay word to a company officer, or to com-
mend a flush-faced colonel. At a time when the ela-
tion of victory might well have dampened to the
flaccid content of physical exhaustion, Benedict Ar-
nold spread his own unquenched lust for battle over
all the well-won field. Soldiers stopped their aimless
looting of the enemy dead and ran back to their
officers. Drummers beat the call, and colonels shouted
the rallying cry of their commands. The haphazard
fire of Morgan's riflemen and the marksmen of regi-
ments concentrated and held on the old British gen-
eral mounted on his handsome gray horse. The
Americans saw him sag in his saddle, and they saw
him led away. Many a Yankee claimed that shot!
The noisy Irishman, Tim Murphy, vowed it was his
own. So did an old man in a full-bottomed wig and
a greasy big hat, with a long-barreled musket which,
according to his claim, had never been known to miss.
PRISONERS OF HOPE 241
Arnold was not there to see the shooting of General
Fraser. He was off to the captured 12-pounders,
where Morgan and Poor and Learned had gathered
at his summons. The three leaders, whose measured
blows one, two, three had beaten out the shape
of the British defeat, now turned expectantly to the
former division commander for the plan to complete
the afternoon's success. Benedict Arnold's order was
simple: "Follow me!"
General Gates's aide, Major John Armstrong, also
followed Arnold, but he trailed along at a distance,
contentedly busy as he snuffled at the cold track
through the wheatfield, at the cabin door, and in the
angles of the rail fence, while Poor's and Learned's
men streamed down the road in the direction of the
British redoubts, and Morgan's corps re-entered the
enveloping forest. The hesitant major was prowling
through the shambles of the abandoned gun batteries
as the New York militia of Abram Ten Broeck's bri-
gade hurried past. For the most part they were Al-
bany County Dutchmen, who marched loosely in vil-
lage groups or together with their neighbors of the
valley. They were untried troops, though there were
some who had fought with Herkimer, and others who
had been with Arnold on the road to Fort Stanwix.
The latter, as they marched across the clearing and
down the road the Continentals had traveled before
them, looked with interest at the British dead. The
green men looked away as they came past where
Acland's big grenadiers lay huddled all around. From
the walking wounded, Ten Broeck's men knew that
MABCH TO SABATOGA
Arnold had gone ahead; from the sound of firing
further on, they knew where they would find him.
Lieutenant General Burgoyne himself commanded
in the Balcarres redoubt, where the outflanked, out-
numbered, overwhelmed remnant of the reconnais-
sance in force had now reformed. Gentleman Johnny
had been lucky. A horse had been shot from under
him, his waistcoat had been ripped by a rifle ball,
and at one point during the battle at the wheatfield
he had been obliged to remove his hat and rearrange
the plume cut by an aimed shot. Everyone had been
under fire in the clearing. Behind the walls of the
redoubt the soldiers would have shelter, and beyond
the loopholes and the gun embrasures lay a clear field
of fire over open ground. The woods were a long rifle-
shot away. In front of the redoubt, two small earth-
and-log barricades were positioned to cover some
dead ground beyond an outcropping of gray rock.
Into the southern and larger of these barricades, the
Earl of Balcarres had gone with his light infantry
and a complement of cannon. The men were com-
posed as they leaned against the log walls of their
barricade, occasionally interrupting their talk to peer
through the loopholes in which their muskets lay. A
gunner sergeant blew softly on his slow match and
watched the glow as it brightened.
The sun was dropping quickly toward the undulat-
ing line of the tree-tops. Black shadows, gathering in
the deep spaces between the marginal trunks of the
trees, spilled out onto the clearing. The British
PRISONERS OF HOPE 243
watched the approaching dusk and awaited the com-
ing of the enemy.
Suddenly the enemy was there, dark figures run-
ning out from the sheltering shadows into the reveal-
ing light of the cleared field. As if startled, the British
guns roared and pranced back on their wheeled car-
riages. The guns fired again. A light infantryman saw
his chosen target drop his musket and fall into the
low scrub. Balcarres's man selected another Yankee,
waited for him to come within range, and fired.
Once triggered, the fire from the British field works
became measured and purposeful. The artillerymen,
loading, aiming, firing to a long-rehearsed rhythm,
beat out their bass note in a recurring sequence of
emphasis; the musket fire quickened or slackened
according to the near or distant approach of the
attacking rebel infantry.
The first rush had carried the American charge up
and into the British abatis. For a moment, the attack
had hung there while the Yankee soldiers furiously
wrenched and clawed and pulled at the mesh of
branches that kept them from the raw-faced walls of
earth and logs beyond. Then the British fire had
driven the Continentals away, into fire positions in
the scrub, among the stumps, or wherever a slight
fold of the ground offered shelter in concealment. All
up and down the long, twisting line of the Balcarres
redoubt, small American attacks were now develop-
ing. Out of the Yankee firing line, a group of shout-
ing men would rise up and charge forward in a new
attempt to come to grips with the enemy beyond the
244 MARCH TO SARATOGA
abatis. Each time a group came on the British or the
Germans at the threatened part of the redoubt would
drive them back. As the battle developed into a long
fire-fight, a pattern in the local attacks became appar-
ent. First, the British at the loopholes would see an
American officer gallop up on a big, chestnut horse;
the Yankees would rise slowly out of their hiding
pkces surrounding the figure astride the prancing
horse; then they would charge. By the time the at-
tack had been beaten back, the big horse was far
down the line, and wherever he was, another charge
could be expected.
But even the fury of Benedict Arnold (who was the
mounted figure) could not lift up the whole Conti-
nental line and hurl it forward en masse. The sun
was down, the day was dying, and the passing min-
utes were sliding the balance of victory over to the
side of the defense.
Then Arnold, changeable, unpredictable, never
constant, totally unreliable but instinctive in battle,
abandoned the frontal attack on the Balcarres re-
doubt He left his own troops in their fire positions
and he left the British at their loopholes, their guns
agape at the embrasures. He was off and away on the
impulse of a new idea. In his urgency, the fact that
the direct way to his new objective the Breymann
redoubt was across the front of the two firing-lines,
was of no consequence. He gave spur to his chestnut
horse. American marksmen withheld their fire as the
swarthy major general galloped by in front of their
leveled pieces. British and German infantrymen for-
PRISONERS OF HOPE 245
got to shoot, as they watched the horse with the flow-
ing black mane and tail dash past them.
It was almost a mile to the American left, where
fresh regiments were coming onto the field. Un-
scathed, Arnold reined in at the head of the Massa-
chusetts regiment, where Lieutenant Colonel John
Brooks was waiting for orders. Arnold did not tarry
long. He made a sweeping motion of his arm in the
direction of the two log houses in the gap between
the two redoubts, Brooks and his men understood
their orders. A touch of the spurs and again Benedict
Arnold was away, to meet the militiamen of Ten
Broeck's brigade, who were running toward him from
the west. Here, too, there was no need for words.
Arnold had but to wheel his mount to draw the whole
brigade after him in a march, the direction of which
would turn the open end of Breymann's log redoubt.
The big horse was walking now, to allow the foot
soldiers to catch up with him. Many of them reached
out to touch Arnold's stirrup as they hurried by, and,
looking down at them, he saw that some of Dear-
born's and Morgan's men had joined him for the final
assault. From all over the field they came to him: men
in buckskin and in civilian clothes, boys with their
fathers* hunting guns, old men with muskets as old
as their fathers before them. Even a dog joined the
parade. He came out of the cabins from which Bur-
goyne's Canadian troops were now fleeing. Although
the boy, Monin, tried to call him back, he was ir-
resistibly drawn by the shouting Yankees.
Within the redoubt. Colonel Heinrich Breymann
246 MARCH TO SARATOGA
was in a frenzy. His men had grown sullen as the acid
of their fear ate into the core of their discipline. There
was little firing over the log wall at the oncoming
mass of rebels; the grenadiers were watching over
their shoulders for a chance to cut and run. One man
did run, but Breymann, snarling like a Hartz Moun-
tain cat, slashed viciously at him with his sword.
The rebels had passed the open southern end of the
redoubt and were slanting in on the German flank
and rear when Breymann's grenadiers broke. The
raging colonel stood, his legs apart, cutting and jab-
bing at his own men. In the rush for safety, he struck
three of them; a fourth, a big man with waxed mus-
taches and a mad look of panic in his wide blue eyes,
shot Breymann dead, then calmly turned to meet the
enemy now entering the works. For a wild moment it
was hand to hand, clubbed gun against bayonet,
sword against musket. In the center of the melee, the
big chestnut war horse stamped and slashed with his
hooves, as the rider on his back shouted and
whooped. A wounded German on the ground saw the
great beast bearing down on where he lay. The man's
gun was still unfired. He raised it, aimed at the wide
red chest and let loose the charge. It pierced the
animal's great heart.
Arnold felt the horse go slack between his knees.
He kicked free of one stirrup, but the leg wounded
and then broken at Quebec was awkward. On it fell
the dead weight of the horse. Once more, Benedict
Arnold had broken his leg.
It was all over in the Breymann redoubt. Amer-
PEISONEES OF HOPE 247
leans guarding them, a long line of Hessian prison-
ers sat, their backs to the wall that they had built.
The Yankees had rolled the dead horse from their
general's leg, and, having given his orders, Arnold was
resting. It was almost dark. The salmon-colored sun-
set glow was fading quickly. Breymann's redoubt was
firmly in American hands. Burgoyne's whole defense
line had been turned.
It was then, and in such circumstances, that Gates's
aide, Major John Armstrong, at last caught up with
Benedict Arnold. He had been too late to prevent
Arnold from acting "rashly/" Only the last part of
Gates's orders to him remained to be carried out.
Standing before the wounded and prostrate hero gen-
eral, the bright boy aide requested Arnold to put him-
self under the major's escort, to be returned to his
quarters at once. Arnold complied and so left the
field of his battle, borne on a litter high on the shoul-
ders of four of his veterans.
With the coming of darkness all musket and can-
non fire ceased. In front of the Balcarres redoubt,
Private Soldier Ephraim Squier sat up, put his back
against the white birch stump which, for the duration
of the fire fight, had been his fortress, and waited for
the sergeant to come and tell him what to do next.
Ephraim was tired. As he figured it, the Continental
Army owed him a full night's sleep. The night before
Monday night he had been one of a patrol
whose leader got lost and did not bring the men in
until ten o'clock in the morning. Sunday night,
248 MAKCH TO SARATOGA
Ephraim had stood the middle guard. On Sunday
he had heard the parson preach from the text, "Re-
turn to the stronghold, ye prisoners of hope." On
Tuesday the British and their hirelings certainly had
returned to their stronghold! The sergeant, calling
the company in a low-pitched voice, roused Ephraim
from his reverie. Stiffly he levered himself up from
his stump and shuffled off toward the voice he hoped
would lead him back to Fort Neilson and his blankets.
There was no sleep that night for William Digby,
At first dark, carrying a lantern, he had searched the
Balcarres redoubt for the scattered remnants of the
company of grenadiers, which, since the death of
Captain Wight in the wheatfield, Digby had com-
manded. Of the twenty men who had marched out
that afternoon, he could find only four. He knew that
there were others : some wounded who might recover,
some sick who would return, and a few who had been
left out of the battle for valid reasons of administra-
tion, were still on the rolls of the company. But for
duty that night of 7 October, Lieutenant Digby had
but four men out of the fifty who had sailed so gaily
up Lake Champlain only three months before. Dig-
by's succession through survival scarcely seemed a
promotion.
The duties of seniority, however, kept him up late.
He had organized his command, set guards (like a
sergeant), sought food and water for his men,
searched without success for a commander of grena-
diers in Major Acland's stead, and finally had re-
ported to Balcarres, the new commander of the ad-
PRISONERS OF HOPE 249
vance corps. If Digby had hoped for a few hours*
sleep, he was quickly disabused of the notion, Bal-
carres had just returned from General Burgoyne, with
serious news and urgent orders.
When John Burgoyne had received no report from
Colonel Breymann as to the light firing heard from
his key redoubt, a contact patrol had been sent out
at dusk. It returned with the news that, not only had
the Brunswick colonel been killed and his grenadiers
captured, but that the Yankees, who now held the
redoubt in force, were bringing up their own cannon
to add to the three pieces taken in the works from
the Hessian gunners there. The loss of two hundred
additional men was a blow to Burgoyne, but the loss
of the vital corner of the defense line was cata-
strophic. In the morning, a bombardment followed
by an attack such as had been seen on the yth would
roll up the Balcarres redoubt like a map. Disheveled,
gaunt, and in the lantern light looking all of his fifty-
five years, Lieutenant General Burgoyne gave the
order to evacuate the Balcarres redoubt.
It was one o'clock in the morning of 8 October be-
fore the retreat to the new position on the heights
above the hospital could begin. Horses had to be sent
up from the camp beside the river to draw off guns
and their ammunition and the wagons with the tents.
Tending a watch fire, kept to deceive the Yankees in
Breymann's old redoubt, Digby heard his own men,
and the other Britishers, mutter as the German in-
fantry marched out first Silent and chastened, the
blue-coated soldiers quick-marched past their red-
250 MARCH TO SARATOGA
coated comrades. His head held high, Captain
Pausch, who had fought the good fight, stamped
off at the head of his proud gunners.
It was the dark before the dawn when the Earl of
Balcarres entered the gully behind his redoubt, and
the last of General Burgoyne's army quit Freeman's
farm.
20
The Highland Lament
Only three hours of the night remained when the
surgeon who was attending General Fraser crossed
the room to speak to Baroness Riedesel. She was sit-
ting bolt upright on a bench with her small daughters
sleeping beside her. The surgeon told her that, de-
spite all efforts to save him, the general was dying.
The baroness roused her children and was attempting
to slip quietly out of the room when Fraser himself
spoke to her. He apologized for the inconvenience he
was causing. Friederika Riedesel spent the rest of
the night sitting on the floor of the corridor, while
her children slept peacefully nearby.
The old Highlander had prided himself on his
mastery of the difficult military maneuver of with-
drawal and retreat. The British army during the
hours and days following his funeral was in sore need
of General Fraser. Burgoyne had given the order for
a general retreat to Saratoga to Fort Edward
down Lake George to Ticonderoga: a sixty-mile
climb back down the ladder of his success, without
pause on the rungs of his delays.
MARCH TO SARATOGA
John Burgoyne was the dashing cavalryman of the
"hell-f or-leather" charge, the gambler who always ex-
pected his high cards to win, the politician in debate
who was always impatient to make his rebuttal. He
saw no glory or merit in retreat, however bold or reck-
less, from an unbreached wall. To discard a court
card was dishonorable, even though such a move
might develop a whole line of lesser trumps, and, in
debate, to concede was to admit defeat. Now, Bur-
goyne had no plan for retreat. He had only the hope
that his luck would turn and that he could yet reach
Albany.
A few necessary preparations were made, however,
during the daylight hours of 8 October. At the British
camp, carts and boats lay, as on any other day, under
the watchful scrutiny of rebel scouts on the east side
of the Hudson River. The increased activity around
the hospital, where the surgeons worked to prepare
the sick and wounded for the Yankees to whose care
they must be left, could well be attributed to the
previous day's battle. The guns could not yet be re-
moved from the redoubts, as a renewed American
attack was expected, even hoped for, by the British
troops imbued with their general's infectious deter-
mination. Only the men of the fighting regiments, by
resting quietly behind their strong redoubts, could
prepare for the secret night retirement.
During the morning there was a general alarm,
when the tired, underfed troops stood to and watched
the Americans deploy in front of their lines on the
flat river plain. But the guns and howitzers of the
THE HIGHLAND LAMENT 253
Royal Artillery kept the Yankees at their distance,
while the foot soldiers, wrapped in the blanket of
near exhaustion, resumed their interrupted sleep.
In a hiding place that he had made beyond the
picquet post, a Jdger private, alert because of the
danger in which he found himself, caught a glimpse
of blue and buff among the trees, a long rifle-shot
away. As a huntsman on the ducal estate, the Jdger
had often watched the wild boars drifting, ghost-like,
through the forest. Now he raised his rifle, waiting
for his quarry again to expose himself. In the instant
before pulling the trigger, he saw the biggest and
fattest man to come before his eyes since last he had
seen His Grace's baker, at home in Wiilfenbutl. In
the German's aimed shot General Fraser was
avenged.
Major General Benjamin Lincoln took the Jdger
bullet in his leg. Though not fatal, the wound seri-
ously affected the future course of the American cam-
paign. In immobilizing the great bulk of the man, it
removed the weighty influence of the general. Benja-
min Lincoln's value as a soldier had been proven on
the northern frontier under both Schuyler and Gates.
He it was who had roused the militia, who had pla-
cated John Stark sufficiently to prevent his returning
home; he had organized the telling raid on Fort Ti-
conderoga, leaving it be carried out by men more
agile than himself. During the action of 19 September
Lincoln had been in Vermont, but he soon returned
to keep his level head, and his command of the right
wing of the Continental Army and of the militia,
254 MABCH TO SARATOGA
while the Gates-Arnold controversy raged. He had
taken Benedict Arnold with him when he went for-
ward to estimate the situation created by Burgoyne's
reconnaissance in force. General Gates had listened
to his report, and at Lincoln's urgent instigation had
sent out Morgan and the brigades of Arnold's former
command. Although he was the only available major
general on duty at the time, Lincoln had made no
attempt to take over the disgraced Arnold's men for
the battle of 7 October. He had returned to his right
wing command, where he readied Glover's and Pat-
terson's brigades to exploit any breakthrough that
might be achieved on the left.
With Lincoln down, as well as Arnold, Major Gen-
eral Horatio Gates stood alone in the high place of
his rank and his command. He demonstrated no need
for a deputy; he had never sought one. None of his
seven brigadier generals was permitted to approach
him. Content with the working out of his own
schemes, he remained in every way aloof. From
Gates's headquarters, all contact forward was made
through that "bright lad," James Wilkinson. General
Gates saw his troops and their battles only through
the eyes of the young lieutenant colonel and adjutant
general, who rode here and there as he felt inclined,
a platoon of couriers trailing him.
Now, on 8 October, undisturbed by the bold inter-
ruptions of Arnold or by the necessity for showing
courtesy to the able and amenable Lincoln, Gates
could continue with his plan for holding the diminish-
ing British army within its contracting lines. If Bur-
THE HIGHLAND LAMENT
goyne retreated, as now appeared likely, Gates would
follow, as inevitably as the cart follows the horse, into
the marketplace of victory and reward.
But as the day after the battle wore on, Gates was
reminded again and again of one administrative de-
tail which had been overlooked 7 October had
been the beginning of a new four-day ration period.
Because of the battle no individual issue of food had
been made. The Americans had been sustained by the
excitement of victory and by the anticipation of a
second day's harrying of the British. But inaction had
kindled fires of hunger in the soldiers deployed on the
river plain and in the captured redoubts. Gates or-
dered the issue of rations on 9 October, and called the
troops back into their fieldworks so that in the day-
long ceremony of weighing, apportioning, and re-
cording of the rations, each man might draw the issue
to which he was entitled.
At sunset, when the Americans had not yet re-
turned to their lines, a group of British soldiers was
spotted on a hilltop, only a cannon shot away. Before
it limbered up, a rebel battery fired on this target of
opportunity, its round shot falling short by only a
few yards. It was close enough to throw a shower of
dirt and sand over the black coat of Chaplain Edward
Brudenel. But the interruption failed to halt the flow
of his words, nor did General Burgoyne, or Phillips,
or Biedesel, or young Captain Alexander Fraser, raise
his bowed head until the remains of General Simon
Fraser had been committed, with all ceremony, to
the grave.
256 MARCH TO SARATOGA
At nine o'clock on die evening of 8 October, with
Captain Eraser's marksmen leading, the retreat o
Burgoyne's army began. General Riedesel followed
with his Germans. Then came the British contingent,
with the guns and wheeled transport sandwiched in
among the regiments. Before the rear guard, under
Balcarres, had begun to march, Riedesel, at the head
of the column already four miles forward on the road
to Saratoga, received the order to halt. A light rain
was falling when General Riedesel climbed into his
family's calash to await the order expected mo-
mentarily to resume the march. Three hours later,
he awoke with a start of bewilderment which quickly
changed to anger at his wife, who had pillowed him
in his heavy sleep. Rain beat on the canvas cover of
the wagon, and gusts of the northeast wind flapped
the sodden cloth against the taut bows holding it
away from the passengers and baggage that it pro-
tected. Still in a rage, the general left its shelter and
strode off through the mud to get to the bottom of the
cause for the delay.
The cause was all too apparent. It was visible in
the drawn white faces of the men who sat by the
roadside, wet and cold and seemingly heedless of
their misery. Like the baroness herself, the German
women were with their men, instead of at the wagons.
They looked at him boldly, and the general's anger
softened into indignant compassion. It was the trans-
port which had caused the delay. Whereas the will
of the men could be revived by encouragement, the
dumb beasts pulling the guns and the wagons
THE HIGHLAND LAMENT 257
through the mud could only be driven until they died.
Yet they struggled on. In one of the carts, Riedesel
saw Major Harnage, wrapped in blankets; he had re-
fused to be left behind. With one hand on the tail-
gate, Mrs. Harnage walked beside the cart, smiling
at Major General Riedesel as she passed.
From across the Hudson River, a single shot was
fired. It was directed at a provision bateau which, in
its struggle upstream, had worked its way too close
to the enemy, dogging the east bank of the river.
At a point where grooms were holding a krge herd
of saddle horses, Riedesel found General Burgoyne,
who was rejecting the plea of Colonel Sutherland to
release his regiment (the 47th) for an attack. On the
previous day, 8 October, Sutherland had been sent
ahead to see if the way was clear. He had reported
that the road was unobstructed through Saratoga.
Beyond that place, Brigadier General Fellows of the
Massachusetts militia lay in such a loose, carelessly
organized camp that Sutherland felt sure he could
attack with the two hundred and fifty men left in his
regiment and have every expectation of success. Bur-
goyne, however, refused to detach any part of his
force. He remained throughout the day in the rainy
bivouac at Dovegate, and at four o'clock in the after-
noon the march to Saratoga the first leg of the
retreat to Ticonderoga was resumed.
Earlier in the day a group of German soldiers had
eluded their officers long enough to desert into the
woods. There, without their own Indian allies to hunt
them down like rabbits, the "hirelings" found mercy
258 MARCH TO SARATOGA
from the Yankees. That evening Lady Acland, too,
quit the army. With her she took her maid, her hus-
band's wounded valet, and, for consolation and to
row the boat, the Reverend Edward Brudenel. The
little party went downriver to a safe landing behind
the American lines. Her pass from General Burgoyne
was respected, and soon she was reunited with her
wounded husband, whom she nursed back to health.
The evening was still young as the head of the
British army crossed Fish Creek and spread out into
the old positions, made in mid-September. Scouting
north of the old camp, Fraser's marksmen saw the last
of Fellows's brigade splashing across the ford to the
east bank of the Hudson. A few shots in the dark
hurried them along.
Burgoyne himself did not cross Fish Creek that
night. Always reluctant to give in, he ordered three
British regiments, tinder Brigadier Hamilton, to keep
a bridgehead on the south side of the stream. Wea-
rily, he then permitted himself to turn in at the gate
of Schuyler's house. The wife of his commissary had
preceded him, and already lamps had been lighted
in the downstairs rooms. As Burgoyne crossed the
threshold, a champagne cork popped with a noise like
a pocket pistol. Gentleman Johnny headed instinc-
tively toward the familiar sound.
In the morning, rested and refreshed, General Bur-
goyne moved all his troops north of the Fish Kill.
Regretfully, he gave the order to burn down the
graciously hospitable Schuyler house. It had to go,
overlooking as it did the stream crossing and the
British defensive positions on the other side.
THE HIGHLAND LAMENT
On 10 October General Gates finally moved out of
his fortified camp and with his whole army went in
pursuit of Burgoyne. During that day, Fellows's bri-
gade held the British to the west side of the river by
harassing fire, preventing Burgoyne's pioneers from
building a bridge over the Hudson at the old crossing
place.
In the dense river fog of the autumn morning of
11 October, Daniel Morgan and his grizzled riflemen
crossed Fish Creek on improvised rafts, disembarking
on the bluffs three-quarters of a mile west of the
Hudson. To men at home among the close, solid,
friendly trunks of great trees, the vast emptiness of
the thick blue mist hanging over the open fields was
a disconcerting thing. As if drawn by a magnet, their
northward advance inclined to the west, where the
deep woods began again. Thus they missed the
strong redoubt where Balcarres's advance guard stood
at arms, marking the rangers* passage by their eerie,
though all too familiar, call of the wild turkey gob-
bler. Nearer to the river bank, Brigadier General
John Nixon had crossed the creek with his brigade
of Continentals. Though a town man from near to
Boston, Nixon, like Morgan's woodsmen, also moved
warily through the fog. Uncertain of his true position
and mistrusting the report that the British had gone
on to Fort Edward, he called a halt. It was well that
he did so, for with the rising sun the mist burned
away to show his whole brigade under the muzzles
of a British battery. Promptly and without hesitation,
Nixon, in whom the keen edge of vainglory had been
dulled on many battle grounds, brought off his bri-
260 MABCH TO SABATOGA
gade at a run, not stopping until lie had recrossed
Fish Creek to its south shore. There he fell into line
of battle beside John Glover, a Marblehead man.
Only Ebenezer Learned sprang forward on discover-
ing that the fog had hidden all of Burgoyne's army in
a position of defense. As on 7 October when Benedict
Arnold led, he sought out Morgan and prepared to
mount a charge. He was stopped only by the arrival
of the ubiquitous Wilkinson, who, in the name of
General Gates, ordered him back. Reluctantly, and
muttering strange biblical quotations, Learned with-
drew.
Gates's artillery came up in the afternoon, and
from positions along the line of Fish Creek began the
bombardment of the British entrenchments. Using
captured British bateaux as ferries, Yankee artillery-
men moved guns and ammunition over to the east
shore of the Hudson, where men from Fellows's com-
mand pointed out gun sites to enfilade Burgoyne's
camp. On 12 October, the first gun of the east-shore
batteries fired on a house that was known to belong
to Peter Lansing, which, from the activity surround-
ing it, the American gunners believed to be British
army headquarters.
It was on that day, too, that Gates completed the
encirclement of Burgoyne's army. Morgan shifted his
line northward until it overlapped the British posi-
tions on the west. Again crossing Fish Creek, Learned
lined up to the right of the riflemen. That night, Mas-
sachusetts men of Fellows's brigade crossed on rafts
to the west shore of the Hudson. Pushing boldly
THE HIGHLAND LAMENT
westward through the darkness and rain they cut
the forest road up the west bank of the river to Fort
Edward, Burgoyne's only clear way to the north.
Patrols continued westward through the sodden un-
derbrush until they were challenged by the picquet
of riflemen holding Morgan's suspended left flank.
By dawn of 13 October, twelve thousand American
guns, rifles, and muskets ringed around Burgoyne's
scant four thousand men and bayonets.
Since the fog had lifted on the morning of 11 Oc-
tober, the British troops on the high ground had
learned every angle and nook of their redoubt. They
knew every spot where a Yankee rifleman perched
high in a tree could reach in with his murderous small
shot. They knew where they could crouch and where
they could lie in reasonable safety from the American
cannon. Men quickly grew wise in judging the sound
of an oncoming shell, and learned by a glance at a
distant puff of smoke whether to duck for safety or to
continue their wretched waiting in the rain.
Baroness Riedesel had seen the first shot fired from
the east shore of the river. With the shrewd judgment
of a veteran, she had guessed that it was intended for
the Lansing house, in the cellar of which she and her
children, with the other women, were taking refuge.
For the remainder of the siege, the house was under
constant and accurate bombardment, but there, in
the vaulted arches of the cellar, she ruled as she had
ruled in her stately Brunswick home. After thor-
oughly fumigating the smelly quarters by burning
262 MABGH TO SABATOGA
vinegar there, she apportioned the available space. In
the deepest vault she placed the wounded; the
women she assigned to the middle room; and in the
room from which the stairs climbed to the outer door,
she curtained off her own corner of luxurious privacy.
In the outer room, which she shared with Mrs.
Harnage and Mrs. Reynell, Baroness Riedesel re-
ceived her callers and turned away all those whom
she deemed "skulkers." She saw but little of her hus-
band, though he sent his aides from time to time to
reassure her. On one such errand, Captain Willoe
silently handed his wallet to her for safe-keeping.
She was already holding Captain Geismar's wallet,
with his watch and ring. One day, after a particularly
heavy bombardment, during which those in the cellar
could hear the cannon balls rolling across the plank
flooring above them. Captain Green came to have
his old wound dressed by the surgeon. Before leav-
ing, he told the baroness that he had made arrange-
ments with three officers, each of whom would take
one of her children on his saddle-bow, and that, when
the time came, a horse would be brought for her to
ride.
At headquarters the generals were talking flight. In
the lines the men talked of food, of a bayonet charge,
of old campaigns: Ticonderoga, Hubbardton, Fort
Anne, Fort Edward, even of Bennington. All these
were now only places in the distant past.
21
The World Turned Upside Down
At all the councils of war, Major General the Baron
Friederich von Riedesel though himself a "hire-
ling" and his men but chattels of their respective
dukes spoke out in favor of any plan which was
in any way of benefit to his troops. In doing so, he
risked incurring the disapproval of those same Dukes
of Brunswick and of Hesse-Cassel, who stood to gain
if their soldiers were killed, wounded, or taken pris-
oner. Of the former, three wounded subjects equaled,
in cash to the duke, one dead subject. Perhaps the
baron's concern for the common soldier was the
result of his own long years in the army, and his con-
sequent knowledge of, and respect for, those men he
deemed true soldiers. General Riedesel recognized
the investment in training, experience, and loyally
represented by the men, both British and German,
who had fought from Ticonderoga to Freeman's
farm, and considered them to have a greater value
than the guns and stores.
At the council of war held on is, October 1777,
in the all but encircled camp at Saratoga, General
263
264 MABCH TO SARATOGA
Eiedesers views finally prevailed. His proposals were
accepted and the necessary orders issued by General
Burgoyne. At ten o'clock that night, guns, wagons,
stores, boats everything but small arms were
to be abandoned, and the men and women of the ex-
pedition, carrying their food on pack-horses, were to
march by the west road to Fort Edward. They were
to fight for the crossing there, and proceed to Fort
Ticonderoga.
But at Saratoga the plan, which might have suc-
ceeded four days earlier, no longer served its pur-
pose. The drag of the wheeled vehicles in the rain
and mud, and the northeast wind which had delayed
the provision boats forcing their way up against the
current of the river, killed all hope of the troops
being able to save themselves. Had the delay not
rendered the plan unfeasible, in all probability Gen-
eral Burgoyne's hesitancy would have done so. He
still saw his duty and loyalty in faithful adherence
to "The Plan/' and he was honor-bound while he yet
had guns and battalions, to hammer the enemy pend-
ing die arrival of Sir Henry Clinton and his army,
still confidently expected by Burgoyne.
Even in this desperate situation John Burgoyne
could not quit. Before the appointed hour on the
night of 12 October he cancelled the order to retreat.
By accepting the decision of a council of war, a com-
mander in chief gains friendly witnesses at the in-
evitable court of inquiry. By overriding the decision
and going against the advice of his senior officers
Phillips, Biedesel, Hamilton, and von Gall Gen-
THE WORLD TUBNED "UPSIDE DOWN 265
eral Burgoyne accepted full responsibility for the
consequences.
By the morning of 13 October any attempt to get
away by the west road was futile. The road was
dominated by Fellows's Massachusetts men, from a
strong hill position with marshy ground in front. In
the afternoon, Burgoyne called a general council, to
which came the generals, the colonels, and the ma-
jors. The captains, too, were summoned, some of
them coming from exposed company positions, dart-
ing across open spaces, under the watchful eyes of
Morgan's riflemen, and crawling through under-
brush so as not to be seen by the Yankee gunners.
After brushing their uniforms with grimy hands and
straightening their rumpled stocks, with some em-
barrassment they entered the presence of their gen-
eral.
Burgoyne rose to speak. He accepted all blame for
the situation in which they found themselves. He
reported frankly that there remained but five days'
rations in all the camp. Eloquently, he cited com-
parable examples in history of armies that had capit-
ulated. The officers listened in silence as their general
made his case for surrender. Then Burgoyne posed
two questions: Would a surrender on advantageous
terms be disgraceful? The solemn answer was an un-
hesitating "No." Under existing circumstances was
such a capitulation necessary? Speaking, first, as is
the custom, the most junior captain shyly and un-
emotionally offered his life and pledged the loyalty
of his men in a "do or die" attack. Others followed
2,66 MARCH TO SABATOGA
his lead, and on up through the grades of ascending
rank, General Burgoyne heard out his tribute. In the
reaction of his officers John Burgoyne regained
reason and found wisdom. He entered into negotia-
tion with Horatio Gates.
Early in the morning of 14 October a drummer in
a yellow coat marched boldly to Fish Creek, where
the bridge stringers still reached over to the south
bank. He was busy for a moment as he tightened the
soggy head of his drum. Then, posing with the tips
of the drumsticks just touching the down on his
upper lip, he sensed that unseen Yankees were watch-
ing him. He beat out the parlay.
At ten o'clock, James Wilkinson rode past the
burned-out ruins of the Schuyler mansion, dis-
mounted, and strode to the south end of the broken
bridge. At the north end, a few yards away, Lieu-
tenant Colonel Robert Kingston, Deputy Adjutant
General and secretary to General Burgoyne, waited
in the rain for Wilkinson's invitation to cross, which
came with a polite gesture. Gingerly, the English-
man crossed on the single stringer linking the two
banks of Fish Creek. On the Yankee side, Kingston
accepted the blindfold, and with Wilkinson leading
him set out to open the negotiations with Gates.
All that day and far into the night proposals
and counter-proposals were written, exchanged, dis-
cussed, amended, and returned. While the two staffs
worked hard and long and late, the men of both
armies moved about in their positions, secure under
the terms of an armistice.
THE WORLD TURNED UPSIDE DOWN 267
Compromise by compromise, the negotiations
moved toward a still-distant conclusion. Then, with
a suddenness that startled Burgoyne into suspicion,
Gates agreed to all of Burgoyne's requests, stipulat-
ing only that the capitulation be signed by two
o'clock that afternoon, Wednesday, 15 October, and
that the British and German troops lay down their
arms at five o'clock. Such a bullish rush was not in
in character for the feline Gates. To Burgoyne, a
shrewd player at cards, Gates appeared to be pushed
from behind, like a house cat shoved out into the
rain. Quite correctly, Burgoyne reasoned that some
action on the part of Sir Henry Clinton was the cause
of Gates's haste to bring the easy game of negotiation
to a close. By every means in his considerable knowl-
edge of the art of procrastination, Burgoyne sought
to prolong the discussion of terms. Ever a prisoner
of hope, with each passing hour he saw the phoenix
of his "Thoughts for Conducting the War" rise from
the ashes of his predicament, in the tardily kindled
flame of Clinton's advance from Albany.
Burgoyne's spirits soared that night when he was
roused from sleep to interview a Tory from the lower
Hudson. The man brought word of the capture by
Clinton, on 8 October, of the American forts on the
highlands. He also reported that English forces,
which he had heard were at Esopus, only sixty miles
below Albany, probably were now marching into
that city.
With this good news, General Burgoyne entered
the council of officers that he had called for 16
268 MARCH TO SARATOGA
October. But the temper of the army had now
changed, and the vote held Burgoyne in honor bound
to continue the negotiations with Gates. Even so,
Gentleman Johnny found one more grain of hope in
his larder of desperation. Had Gates broken the
armistice by sending troops from the army encircling
the British to meet the threat of Clinton's northward
march? If so, then Gates himself had broken off the
negotiations. The council of officers recessed while
representations on this point were sent to Gates.
Truthfully the American general could answer in the
negative. In fact, Gates had sent Colonel Peter Ganse-
voort, from the Mohawk Valley, to contain the British
at Esopus. It was these rebel soldiers that the Tory
talebearer had seen on the march below Albany.
When the council reconvened that afternoon the
British officers again saw no legal or moral reason
for failure to sign the surrender. While the officers
waited, Burgoyne sought privately to sway his gen-
erals. Phillips, eternally proud, refused comment, as
he had done at the council before the second battle
at Freeman's farm. Riedesel, who had been sustain-
ing himself in his exhaustion with white wine, could
only bemoan the lost opportunity to save such fine
soldiers. Completely alone in all his hopes, opinions,
and determination, Lieutenant General John Bur-
goyne surrendered his army. With studied careless-
ness, he threw his last card out onto the table: it was
a deuce. Nowhere in the Articles of Agreement should
the word "capitulation" appear; the word, "conven-
tion" was to be used in its place.
THE WORLD TUBNED UPSIDE DOWN 2&Q
The British general chose the nicest of words to
entitle the script; unexpectedly, the staging of the
final scene was a masterpiece of tact, courtesy, and
understanding on the part of the American general.
The ceremonies were set for Friday, 17 October 1777.
For the first time since the retreat had begun nine
days earlier, the sun came out. It rose above the
high mountains lining the Vermont horizon. It shone
on the wide trace of the Hudson River, where red
and gold autumn leaves, riding southward on the
smooth, swift flowing current, caught the light. On
the western slopes, the trunks and branches of trees
that had been hidden by summer foliage now showed
a silvery gray.
The day was bright and washed and polished as
were the British and German soldiers, forming their
ranks in the old redoubts and behind the barricades.
Orders were carried out with a crispness matching
the clear October air. Closed ranks opened; the dress-
ing was picked up with a shuffling of feet that rustled
the dry leaves. Rows and rows and rows of straight,
ptoud figures stood rigidly at attention while the
officers made their slow inspection. Not much was
left of the uniforms that four months earlier had
looked so fine on the banks of the distant Richelieu
River, as the royal standard had flapped lazily in
the warm June breeze. Now, many miles away on
the shores of the Hudson, patches were the soldiers*
distinction, and wispy plumes that once had been
full and luxuriant marked the fortitude of men on
2/O MARCH TO SARATOGA
long marches down forest roads. Old muskets, their
battered, dented stocks rubbed gleaming with oil,
and the burnished steel of bayonets, marked the
veterans of General Burgoyne's army as battle-tested
troops.
It was their last parade as soldiers. Soon for the
drums had begun to beat the men would be called
upon to lay down the tools of their profession and to
march away as prisoners of war. One by one, the regi-
ments came down to the river, the red-coated British
and the tall, blue-uniformed Germans. One by one,
their colonels gave the order to ground arms, and
one by one, the regiments marched off, hands swing-
ing high to the music of the bands. There were no
Yankees to witness the shucking of their arms and
their pride. Only a few curious civilians watched
from the other side of the river. It was for their bene-
fit that the bands played "The World Turned Upside
Down," while the tension that had been building up
in the waiting troops eased to the sound of the ap-
propriate and familiar tune.
James Wilkinson could hear the sound of the music
as, with General Burgoyne riding beside him, he ap-
proached the Fish Creek bridge. The stamping hooves
of their horses, and of the horses of Burgoyne's four
generals who followed behind them, drowned out
the saucy music as the party rode across the bridge.
On the new side of the world, the young American
officer and the old British general he was escorting
caught the sound of another air. It was made by the
harsh field music of the American Continentals,
THE WOULD TURNED UPSIDE DOWN
marching up to line the road to the tune of "Yankee
Doodle Dandy/* squealed out by the insolent fifes.
Once, as Wilkinson led him on, Burgoyne jerked his
head up quickly; a wild turkey had called from a
copse not far away.
Half a mile from the creek, the cavalcade turned
off the Albany road into a field where a large tent
had been set up. In front of the tent stood a group of
American officers. As the British approached, one of
the Americans left the group and mounted his horse.
Moving with slow deliberation, the British generals
drew nearer. A few yards from the solitary mounted
figure dressed in a simple blue uniform-coat, Bur-
goyne reined in. Wilkinson politely made the intro-
duction. John Burgoyne removed his plumed hat, and
in a firm, clear voice spoke the sentence that made
him a prisoner of war. Horatio Gates made the ap-
propriate reply, addressing Lieutenant General Bur-
goyne as "Your Excellency/'
The final ceremonies of the "convention** took
place beside the straight road to Albany. There, in a
cleared space near the road, General Burgoyne ten-
dered his sword to General Gates. Along the road
the weaponless soldiers of Britain's northern army
marched as prisoners between two silent ranks of
solmen-faced Continentals.
To Lieutenant Digby, striding by with all that
remained of Acland's grenadiers, the music of their
band, though it played their own "Grenadiers'
March/* sounded dull and lifeless. His face was wet
with tears as he stepped out smartly, to pass in style
MABCH TO SARATOGA
the place where Gentleman Johnny was taking the
review beside the pudgy little man who was the
conqueror. Company by company they came: light
infantry, artillery, regiments of the British line, ] tigers
in green, and stolid German infantry. The remnants
of the 62nd passed the motionless ranks of the men
they had met in the bitter fighting at the angle of
the fence at Freeman's farm, a month gone by. The
young Fraser and his moccasined rangers padded
past the riflemen of Morgan's corps, on whom they
had so successfully patterned themselves. The 9th of
Foot, remembering the defile at Fort Anne, marched
along behind its band. In the lead was Colonel Hill,
very conscious of the sudden corpulence showing
under his waistcoat, where his regiment's Color was
safely (he hoped) hidden. The October sun caught
the polished gold and silver of the mitered grena-
diers, as they trudged woodenly along behind their
new commander. The sun caught, too, the flourish of
a sword blade as it cut the elaborate arc of a final
salute to the well-loved general it had served with
unswerving devotion. A short distance down the
road, the company commander whose sword it was
turned abruptly and tossed the weapon, now useless
in his hands, to a small American boy who stood,
wide-eyed, in the space between two Continental
soldiers.
Epilogue
Charles Gravier, Comte de Vergennes, was foreign
minister to Louis XVI, the young Bourbon king of
France. Many people, however, considered him to
be little more than a clerk, and it was as such that
he was treated by the British ambassador to the court
at Versailles when, on 2 September 1777, he brought
word to the French court of Lieutenant General
Burgoyne's capture of Fort Ticonderoga, the French-
built "Fort Carillon." Accompanying this news was
a demand by England that the American rebels be
treated as outlaws, and that French ports be closed
to the Yankee pirates and their prizes. The Brit-
ish ambassador, Viscount Stormont, intimated that
failure to comply with this demand might well bring
on a formal declaration of war.
For two months after the receipt of the news of
Burgoyne's significant victory in the Lake Champlain
Pass, Vergennes played the part of procrastinating
clerk, while proving himself to be, in fact, an ac-
complished diplomat, a crafty politician, and a mas-
ter in the art of devious intrigue. In France, public
274 MABCH TO SARATOGA
opinion favored the cause of the Americans in their
dispute with England. Since the revolt in Boston had
spread so quickly to the other colonies in North
America, France had sent supplies to the rebels and
had encouraged them in every way short of declaring
war on Britain. But in spite of increasing pressures,
Vergennes held back from making the ultimate com-
mitment. Actually, he was strengthening his own
resources in military preparations and in diplomatic
alliances, while watching for a sure sign that the
Americans could and would hold fast to their de-
clared independence against the armed might of
Britain.
All during September, October, and November,
Vergennes was successful in fending off the demands
made by the arrogant Lord Stormont, while restrain-
ing his own ardent countrymen and following his
monarch to Fontainebleau for hunting with the
court.
On 4 December 1777, the American commissioners
brought to Vergennes's busy private bureau the sure
sign for which he waited. General Burgoyne had
been defeated in battle, and his whole army had
been taken prisoner at a place called Saratoga. Two
days later, in a note written in the king's presence
and in the king's own apartment, Vergennes gave
France's recognition of the new United States as a
sovereign nation, and became that nation's ally in
war. Scarcely waiting for the ink to dry, Louis XVI
approved and dated the simple document which was
to assure the victory and independence of the United
States of America.
EPILOGUE 275
In the office of King George the Third's Secretary
of State for the American Colonies there was another
document, as important to the emergent United
States as was Vergennes's note of alliance and active
participation in the war. But, unlike its French
counterpart, the document in London was unsigned,
undelivered, and in fact, forgotten. This was the
promised letter from Lord George Germaine to Gen-
eral Howe, ordering the latter up the Hudson to com-
plete the grand design of Burgoyne's plan to sever
in two the American colonies along the Hudson-
Champlain Pass.
It was bitterly cold on the March evening in 1777
when Germaine stopped in at the Colonial Office to
sign some letters before continuing his drive into the
country, where he was to spend the week-end. The
important letter he had drafted to Lord Howe was
not yet ready in the form insisted upon by the metic-
ulous Germaine. It was warm beside the fire in the
Secretary's office, but it was not warm outside in the
street where milord's coach was waiting. Always a
considerate horseman, Germaine preferred not to
keep his horses waiting in the cold. Besides, his blast
of furious rage over the poorly copied letter would
lose its effect, if he were to wait patiently while the
clerk rewrote the slovenly work. So Lord George
Germaine swept out of his office, his dignity and his
scruples intact, and rode away in his fine coach.
When he returned a few days later, he quite forgot
to ask for the letter to Howe, and no one cared
perhaps no one remembered to bring it to his at-
tention.
76 MABCH TO SARATOGA
The letter was never sent, and without any specific
orders to co-operate with General Burgoyne, Howe
sailed for the Chesapeake to carry out his plan for
the capture of Philadelphia.
In the upper Hudson River and in Lake George
and Lake Champlain, ice forms in December in quiet
bays and backwaters, and between Fort Ticonderoga
and Skenesborough, where the water is shallow. On
the mountain summits the gathering snows are white
along the invasion road from the St. Lawrence to the
Hudson. The long silence of winter settles over the
land.
By December 1777 all the armies of the long, hot,
frenzied days of summer were gone from the north-
ern frontier. Soon after the surrender at Saratoga,
Clinton had fallen back on New York. Powell had
destroyed and abandoned the British forts at Ticon-
deroga, and had sailed to Canada. The remnant of
Burgoyne's army was beginning its long years of
captivity in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Even Gates's
army had left the fields it had won. The militia had
gone home. The tough Continentals had marched
away to join General Washington at the grim camp
at Valley Forge, there to watch Sir William Howe
wintering comfortably in Philadelphia. No one was
left at Freeman's farm, on the Walloomsac, at Fort
Edward, Fort Anne, Skenesborough, Hubbardton,
Ticonderoga. The softly falling snow covered the
debris of Burgoyne's army along all the way of its
proud march from British Canada to Saratoga, in
New York State.
Chronology
of Lieutenant General John Burgoyne's Campaign
of 1777 and of events relating to that campaign.
6 May General Burgoyne arrives in Canada.
13 June Invasion army sets out from St. Jean.
20 June Burgoyne's proclamation to the Americans.
21 June Burgoyne's conference with the Indians.
1 July Siege of the forts at Ticonderoga begins.
5 July British guns arrive on Sugar Loaf, and the
Americans evacuate Fort Ticonderoga and
Mount Independence.
6 July British army occupies the forts and Skenes-
borough.
7 July Battle on Hubbardton road.
8 July Battle near Fort Anne.
Z 3 Juty" General Howe with the main British army
leaves New York by sea for Chesapeake Bay.
a 7 J^y Murder of Jane McCrea.
30 July Burgoyne's army established on the Hudson
River at Fort Edward.
278 CHRONOLOGY
6 August Battle of Oriskany.
9 August British army advances to the Batten Kill.
16 August Baum's and Breymann's battles along the
Walloomsac River on the road to Benning-
ton.
23 August Colonel St. Leger raises his siege of Fort
Stanwix.
11 September Howe wins the Battle of Brandywine, Penn-
sylvania.
13 September Burgoyne crosses to the west bank of the
Hudson at Saratoga.
18 September General Lincoln's raid on the British-held
forts at Ticonderoga.
19 September First battle at Freeman's farm.
26 September Howe occupies Philadelphia.
6 October General Sir Henry Clinton captures the
American forts guarding the Hudson high-
lands.
7 October Second battle at Freeman's farm.
9 October Burgoyne's army arrives at Saratoga on its
retreat.
17 October Burgoyne surrenders at Saratoga.
26 October Sir Henry Clinton returns to New York.
8 November British destroy and evacuate the forts at
Ticonderoga.
British and German Troops
The tables of organization laid down for the three parts of
the British army operating in and from Canada for the cam-
paign of 1777 are given in a letter of instruction, dated at
Whitehall on 26 March of that year, from Lord George
Gertnaine, Secretary of State for the American Colonies, to
General Guy Carleton, Governor General of Canada. The
detailed instructions provided for 3770 soldiers to remain in
Canada, 675 soldiers plus "a sufficiency of Canadians and
Indians" to go with Colonel Barry St. Leger to Albany via
the Mohawk River, and 7173 British and German troops to
be put under the command of Lieutenant General Burgoyne.
In addition, Burgoyne was to have as many Canadians and
Indians as might be thought necessary. Both St. Leger and
Burgoyne were to be given complete artillery trains. Bur-
goyne's force was also to include cadres of American Loyalist
units to be recruited to full strength in the liberated province.
St. Leger's force was to include Sir John Johnson's Loyalist
regiment from the Mohawk Valley.
There are several points that should be made about the
different kinds of units and their components before pro-
ceeding with the table of organization.
In the eighteenth century it was customary to put the best
soldiers of a regiment into a single elite company. Originally
280 BBTIISH AND GERMAN TROOPS
this company was armed with grenades. Though the weapon
itself became obsolete, the assault and shock troops of a
regiment continued to bear the name of grenadier company.
The overarm motion used to throw a grenade was awkward
for a man wearing a wide-brimmed tricorne hat, so special
headgear was adopted by the grenadiers. This, with certain
other minor deviations from the regular uniform, was carried
over as a kind of remnant, though it formerly had served a
purpose.
For a particular campaign, the grenadier company of each
of the regiments of the force was often removed from the
command of the regimental colonel and all the grenadiers
assembled as a separate command. Thus, Major Acland's
"Grenadiers of Regiments" was made up of the grenadier
companies of the seven British regiments of General Bur-
goyne's army: the 9th, 20th, 21st, 24th, 47th, 53rd, and 62nd.
To these were added the grenadier companies of three British
regiments which remained in Canada under command of
General Carleton: the 29th, 31st, and 34th. Ideally, the
strength of a British company was fifty men, giving Acland
a potential force of ten companies, or 500 soldiers. After re-
moval of the grenadier company and, frequently, the light
infantry company too, the line regiment was left with but
eight companies, a total (in theory) of 400 men. In most
instances, however, the actual number was somewhat less
than full complement, though every effort was made to draft
the most able men from the battalion companies into the
grenadier and light infantry companies.
When, in the mid-eighteenth century, a need for the em-
ployment of ranger-type troops became apparent, the light
infantry company of regiments was raised by gathering the
youngest and most active men into a second elite corps. Like
the grenadiers, this corps also wore a distinctive uniform.
Burgoyne's light infantry of regiments, commanded by the
Earl of Balcarres, was of the same strength and drawn from
the same regiments as Adand's corps of grenadiers.
BBTITSH AND GERMAN TROOPS
Burgoyne's forces, including the Indians who joined after the
expedition set out from St. Jean, numbered about 8000 of-
ficers and men. They were organized, up to the time they
quit Skenesborough at the end of July, as follows:
I Lieutenant General John Burgoyne and Staff
II Advance Corps
Grenadiers of Regi-
ments
Light Infantry of
Regiments
24th Foot
Marksmen
Indians
Canadians
III British or Right Divi-
sion
1st Brigade
20th Foot
21st Foot
62nd Foot
2nd Brigade
. 9th Foot
Brigadier General Simon
Fraser
Major John Acland
The Earl of Balcarres
Major William Agnew; Major
Robert Grant (killed at Hub-
bardton) ; Colonel Fraser,
Acting Brigadier General
Captain Alexander Fraser
St. Luc de la Corne and others
De la Naudiere and others
Major General William Phil-
lips
Brigadier General James
Hamilton
Lieutenant Colonel John Lind
Major Squire; Acting
Brigadier General Hamilton
Lieutenant Colonel John An-
struther
Brigadier General Henry W.
Powell
Lieutenant Colonel John Hill
282
BBTTISH AND GERMAN TROOPS
47th Foot
53rd Foot
IV German or Left Division
Brigade Specht
Regiment von Rhetz
(Brunswick)
Regiment von Specht
(Brunswick)
Regiment von Riedesel
(Brunswick)
Brigade von Call
Regiment Prinz
Friederich (Bruns-
wick)
Regiment Erb-Prinz
(Hesse-Hanau)
"Reserve" *
Lieutenant Colonel Nicholas
Sutherland
Lieutenant Colonel Powell,
Acting Brigadier General
Major General Baron Friede-
rich von Riedesel
Brigadier General Johann
Friederich Specht
Lieutenant Colonel Johann
Gustav von Ehrenkroock
Major Carl Friederich von
Ehrenkroock; Acting Briga-
dier General von Specht
Lieutenant Colonel Ernst
Ludwig von Spaeth; Major
General von Riedesel
Brigadier General W. R. von
Gall
Lieutenant Colonel Christian
Julius Praetorius
Colonel W. R. von Gall, Act-
ing Brigadier
Colonel Heinrich Christoph
Breymann
* The German "Reserve" were, in effect, the storm troops of the
German contingent, as was the advance corps of the British. The
grenadiers of regiments were formed in the same way as Acland's
grenadiers. However, as the German regiment was composed of
five companies only, each with a hundred men, the five com-
panies of Breymann's grenadiers were theoretically of the same
numerical strength as their British counterpart. There were no
light infantry companies of regiments in the German Establish-
ment.
BRITISH AND GERMAN TROOPS 283
Grenadiers Colonel Heinrich Christoph
Breymann
Light Infantry Battal- Major Ferdinand Albrecht
ion Earner von Earner
Jager Company Captain von Geyso
(Brunswick)
Prinz Ludwig Dra- Lieutenant Colonel Friede-
goons (Brunswick) rich Baum
Artillery Major Griffith Williams
Personnel:
4 companies Royal Artillery
Detachment Royal Irish Artillery
Reinforcement draft of 33rd Foot, destined for
their regiment with General Howe's annyj at-
tached to Royal Artillery
i company Captain Georg Pausch
Hesse-Hanau Ar-
tillery
Guns:
Siege Train for siege of Fort Ticonderoga 128
' guns cannon, howitzers, and mortars
Guns attached to brigades
Advance Corps 10 guns
Hamilton's Bri- 4 guns
gade
; Powell's Brigade 4 guns
German Brigades 4 guns
German Reserve 4 guns
284 BBTIISH AND GERMAN TROOPS
After the fall of Fort Ticonderoga, the siege train of artil-
lery became redundant and was left behind. The army
marched off to the Hudson with but 27 guns, which by
eighteenth-century standards was a strong complement for
the number of soldiers. With the constant problem of se-
curing horses and forage for them, this large train of guns,
ammunition tumbrils, tool carts, etc., was a severe strain on
Burgoyne's transportation system.
On leaving Ticonderoga, General Burgoyne was forced to
detach two regiments: the 62nd (later replaced by the 53rd)
and the Brunswick Regiment Prinz Friederich as guards for
that important rear link and focus point for the collection of
supplies. Two companies of the 47th were left on Diamond
Island in Lake George, serving a like purpose when the army
severed its supply line to Canada in the march down the
Hudson to Albany.
Faced with the necessity of manning and maintaining the
posts in his rear, and after the losses suffered at Bennington
and by attrition, Burgoyne crossed the Hudson with approxi-
mately 6000 men. The organization of the army was altered
to fit the reduced size and the anticipated employment and
deployment of the troops. At the time of the two battles of
Freeman's farm, Burgoyne's army was brigaded as follows:
Advance Corps: Marksmen, Canadians, Loyalists, Indians,
Grenadiers, Light Infantry, 24th Foot, Breymann's Corps
(Grenadiers and Earner's Light Troops), Attached artilleiy
(10 guns varying).
Right Wing (Brigadier General Hamilton) : 9th Foot, 20th
Foot, 21st Foot, 62nd Foot, Attached artillery (4 guns).
Left Wing (Major General Riedesel): Regiment Rhetz,
Regiment Specht, Regiment Riedesel, Regiment Hesse-Hanau,
Attached artillery (8 guns).
Rear Echelon: Brunswick Dragoons (remnant as head-
quarters guard), 47th Foot (6 companies), Gun Park.
Major General Phillips was second in command to General
Burgoyne, and in that capacity he took over the supervision
BBTI1SH AND GERMAN TROOPS 285
of supplies and services while the army was gathering its
resources at Fort Edward for the drive to Albany.
The staff appointments at the army level were many and
extraordinary :
Adjutant General Lieutenant Colonel Robert Kingston
Deputy Quartermaster Captain John Money
General
Royal Artillery Captain Thomas Bloomfield
Chief Engineer Lieutenant William Twiss
Commissary Mr. Rousseau
Wagonmaster Mr. Robert Hoakesly
Provost Lieutenant Atherton
Department of Civil Colonel Philip Skene
Affairs
Naval Engineer Ad- Lieutenant John Schank, Royal Navy
viser
Captain of Bateaux Mr. Munro, Royal Navy
Pioneers Captain Wilcox
Paymaster Mr. David Geddes
Surgeon of Hospitals
Almost all of these departments had assistants and depu-
ties, and certain of them, such as quartermasters, commis-
saries, surgeons, and paymasters, had their counterpart at
brigade and regimental levels. The chaplains were attached
to regiments. Drummers were carried on the rolls of their
regiments, distinct from the musicians of the regimental
bands. The former were in effect the signal corps, as they
beat the various calls and duties of the camp, as well as
giving the pace on the march and in battle. Valets and bat-
men were also on the regimental lists, as were soldiers* wives,
who served as washer-women and hospital attendants, and
who had other specific duties for which they received rations.
The final returns of General Burgoyne's brave army at
the signing of the "Convention,** 17 October 1777 showed a
total of 4693 men who entered into the long captivity.
The American Army
General George Washington was the commander in chief of
the American army. He was also field commander of the
army fighting the British commander in chief, Sir William
Howe.
In the snmmer of 1775, in acknowledgment of the threat
of the Hudson-Champlain Pass and the classic scheme of
slicing in two the Atlantic Colonies along that geographic
fault, Washington created the northern department of the
army, command of which was given to Major General Philip
Schuyler. It was Schuyler who met the first advance of Bur-
goyne's invasion in July and August 1777, and it was he who
'was responsible for the action of his subordinate, Major
General Arthur Sinclair, who, with a force of two thousand
Continentals, three hundred artillerymen, and about five
hundred militia, abandoned the forts at Ticonderoga at the
threat of siege by Burgoyne's eight thousand troops and
heavy guns. The troops were saved. During Schuyler's rear-
guard action, the American army was rebuilt in strength and
numbers. However, the loss of the forts at Ticonderoga, sym-
bol of rebel strength, resulted in such a scandal in the Con-
gress that Major General Horatio Gates was appointed to
replace General Schuyler and was given almost dictatorial
power. Gates assumed command on 19 August 1777.
The American army had two kinds of troops: first, the
THE AMERICAN ABMY
Continentals, who in effect were regular army troops, sup-
plied by regiments from the individual colonies to the Con-
tinental Congress and to George Washington, its general,
and, second, the militia, who were state or colony troops.
The latter were held in their respective states for local de-
fense, or were called out in a defensive role for a specific
purpose and for a limited time. In the case of the New
England militia at Saratoga, they were on an offensive-de-
fensive mission outside their home states.
Gates took over command of approximately three thousand
Continentals and three to four hundred militia on active
duty. Between 19 August and the Convention of Saratoga,
17 October 1777, Gates's army grew to almost six thousand
Continentals and an undetermined number of militia, esti-
mated variously at from twelve hundred to three thousand
men. At the time of the surrender at Saratoga, the militia
was still pouring in to join the army facing Burgoyne.
The hard core of Gates's army was made up of the Con-
tinentals. At the first battle of Freeman's farm, they were
organized into two wings, of which the right was commanded
by Major General Benjamin Lincoln; the left was under the
command of General Benedict Arnold. Gates had five briga-
diers of Continentals.* They were, according to seniority:
John Nixon, Enoch Poor, John Glover, John Paterson, and
Ebenezer Learned.
The Continental regiments of Gates's army at the time of
Burgoyne's surrender at Saratoga were as follows:
llth Virginia Regiment (known as Morgan's Regiment of
Riflemen)
Dearborn's Light Infantry Battalion (under command of
Morgan's Regiment)
* Brigadier General John Stark Held a New Hampshire commis-
sion at the time. His Continental commission, an award for his
victory at Bennington in August 1777, was not promulgated until
4 October, so he was unaware of it at the time of the second
battle of Freeman's farm.
288 THE AMERICAN ABMY
1st New Hampshire Regi- Colonel Joseph Cilley
ment
2nd New Hampshire Regi- Colonel Nathan Hale
ment
3rd New Hampshire Regi- Colonel Alexander Scammel
ment
2nd New York Regiment Colonel Philip van Cortlandt
4th New York Regiment Colonel Henry Livingston
Livingston's New York Colonel James Livingston
Regiment (formerly 1st
Canadians)
1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, llth, 12th,
13th, 14th and 15th Massachusetts Regiments
Warner's Vermont Regiment (The Green Mountain Boys)
Ebenezer Stevens's Independent Battalion of Artillery
Jeduthan Baldwin's Detachment of Engineers and Arti-
ficers
Hyde's Continental Light Horse
Seymour's Troop, 2nd Dragoons
The militia was supplied for Connecticut, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, and New York, and for Vermont, a quasi-
autonomous territory. The designation of a militia regiment
was hy the name of its colonel or the county in which it
had heen raised. The National Park Service has listed fifty-
three militia units which either took part in the battles at
Saratoga or were present at Burgoyne's surrender. Generally
speaking, the militia regiments were brigaded together by
states, which gave a great disparity in numbers between the
various brigade strengths. Thus, Stark's New Hampshire bri-
gade at the close of the campaign was eight hundred strong,
while Ten Broeck commanded three thousand New Yorkers.
THE AMERICAN ABMY 289
Three brigadier generals of the militia, with their troops,
took an active part in the Burgoyne campaign: John Stark
(New Hampshire), John Fellows (Massachusetts), Abram
Ten Broeck (New York).
Two Connecticut militia regiments, those of Colonel Jona-
than Lattimer and Thaddeus Cook, were engaged with Poor's
brigade of Benedict Arnold's division.
Book List
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America, Boston and New York, 1923.
Baldwin, Colonel Jeduthan: Revolutionary Journal, Bangor,
Maine, 1906 (Limited Edition).
Bascom, Robert: The Fort Edward Book, Fort Edward, New
York, 1903.
Baumeister, Adjutant General Major Carl Leopold: Revolu-
tion in America: Confidential Letters and Journals, 2776-
1784, translated and annotated by Bemhard A. Uhlen-
dorf, New Brunswick, New Jersey, 1957.
Boardman, Oliver: Journal, Connecticut Historical Society,
1899-
Brandow, John Henry: The Story of Old Saratoga and His-
tory of Schuylersville, Saratoga Springs, New York,
1906.
British Army, Historical Records of Every Regiment in Her
Majesty's Service: History of the 8th, 9th, 20th, 21st,
24th, 29th, 31st, 33rd, 34th, 47th, 53rd, and 62nd Regi-
ments of Foot Horse Guards, 1836.
Burgoyne, Lieutenant General John: The Dramatic and Po-
etical Works of Vol. I, London, 1808.
Orderly Book, edited by E. B. O'Callaghan, Albany,
New York, 1860,
Cannon, Richard: Historical Record of the Ninth Regiment
of Foot, London, 1838.
290
BOOK LIST 291
Commager, Henry Steele and Richard B. Morris: The Spirit
of Seventy-six, Indianapolis-New York, 1958.
Clinton, Governor George: Public Papers of George Clinton,
Introduction by Hugh Hastings, State Historian (two
volumes), New York and Albany, 1899.
Dearborn, Major General Henry: A Narrative of the Saratoga
Campaign, Bulletin, Fort Ticonderoga Museum, Vol. I,
No. 5, January 1929.
Digby, Lieutenant William: The British Invasion of North
America, with the Journal of Lieutenant William Digby
of the 53rd or Shropshire Regiment of Foot, edited by
James Phinney Baxter, Albany, 1887.
Duncan, Major Francis: History of the Royal Regiment of
Artillery, London, 1879.
DuRoi, : Journal of DuRoi the Elder, Lieutenant and
Adjutant in Service of the Duke of Brunswick, 1776-
1778, translated by Charlotte S. J. Epping, Philadelphia,
1911.
Eelking, Captain Max von: The German Allied Troops in the
War of Independence, 1776-1783, Albany, 1893.
Flexner, James Thomas: The Benedict Arnold Case (abridged
edition), New York, 1962.
Flick, A. C., New York State Historian, and others: One
Hundred Fiftieth Anniversary of the Battle of Saratoga
and the Surrender of Burgoyne, Albany, 1927.
Fuller, J. F. C.: A Military History of the Western World,
New York, 1955.
: Decisive Battles of the U.S.A., New York, 1942.
Nickerson, Hoffman: The Turning Point of the Revolution,
Boston and New York, 1928.
Partridge, Bellamy: Sir Billy Howe, New York, 1932.
Pausch, George: Journal of Captain Pausch, Captain of the
Hanau Artillery During the Burgoyne Campaign, trans-
lated by William L. Stone, Albany, 1886.
Pell, John H. G.: Burgoyne and Ticonderoga, Bulletin, Fort
Ticonderoga Museum, Vol. I, No. 2, July 1929.
BOOK USX
Pell, Joshua, HI: Diary of Joshua Pett, III, an Officer of the
British Army in America, 1776-1777 (privately printed) ,
Fort Ticonderoga, New York, 1934.
Montross, Lynn: Rag, Tag, and Bobtail: The Story of the
Continental Army, 1775-1783, New York, 1952.
Morris, Richard B. (see Commager, Henry Steele)
Morton, Doris Begor: Philip Skene of Skenesborough, Gran-
ville, New York, 1959.
Raddall, Thomas H.: Canada from the British Conquest to
Home Rule: The Path of Destiny, Vol. Ill, Canadian
History Series, edited by Thomas B. Costain, Garden
City, New York, 1957.
Riedesel, Major General Baron von: Memoirs, Including
Letters and Journals Written during His Residence in
America, edited by Max von Eelking, translated by Wil-
liam L. Stone (two volumes), Albany, 1868.
Riedesel, Baroness von: Letters and Journal, translated by
William L. Stone, Albany, 1867.
Gilby, Thomas (Editor) : Britain at Arms, London, 1953.
Graves, Robert: Sergeant Lamb's America, New York, 1940.
Hadden, Lieutenant James M.: Journal and Orderly Book,
Albany, 1884.
Hiscock (Hitchcock?), Rev. Enos: Journal, Providence,
1901.
How, David: Diary: An American Private, New York, 1865.
Hudleston, F. J.: Gentleman Johnny Burgoyne, Indianapolis,
1927.
Lefferts, Charles M.: Uniforms of the American, British,
French, and German Armies in the War of the American
Revoltrtion, 1775-1783, New York, 1926.
Lamb, Roger, Sergeant 9th Foot: Journal of Occurrences
During the Late American War, Dublin, 1809.
Lancaster, Bruce: Guns of Burgoyne, New York, 1939.
Lawson, C. C. P.: The History of the Uniforms of the British
Army (three volumes), London, 1961.
Lossing, Benjamin: Pictorial Field Book of the Revolution,
New York, 1859.
BOOK LIST 293
Murray, Eleanor M.: The Burgoyne Campaign, Bulletin, Ti-
conderoga Museum, Vol. VIII, No. i, January 1948.
Neilson, Charles: Burgoyne 9 $ Campaign, and the Memorable
Battles of Bemis's Heights, September 19 and October
7, 1777, Albany, 1844-
Roberts, Kenneth; Rabble in Arms, Garden City, New York,
1936.
Reid, Arthur: Reminiscences of the Revolution, or Le Loup's
Bloody Trail (privately printed) , Utica, New York, 1859.
"Sexagenary": Reminiscences of the American Revolution,
Albany, 1866.
Snell, Charles W. and Francis F. Wilshin: Saratoga National
Historical Park, Washington, D. C., 1958.
Squier, Ephraim: Journal, Boston, 1878.
Stanley, George F. G.: Canada's Soldiers, Toronto, 1960.
Stanley, George F. G. (Editor) : For Want of a Horse, Sack-
ville, N. B., 1961.
Roby, Luther: The Life and Military Services of Major Gen-
eral John Stark, Concord, New Hampshire, 1831.
Stimson, F. J.: My Story: Being the Memoirs of Benedict
Arnold, New York, 19x7.
Steele, Matthew Forney: American Campaigns (two vol-
umes), Washington, D. C., 1909.
Stitt, Edward W., Jr.: Horatio Gates, Bulletin, Fort Ticon-
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Stone, William L.: The Campaign of Lieut. Gen. John Bur-
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Albany, New York, 1877.
Stone, William L. (Editor) : Washington County, New fork:
Its History to the Close of the Nineteenth Century,
New York, 1901.
Sylvester, Nathaniel Bardett: History of Saratoga County,
Philadelphia, 1878.
Thacher, James: A Military Journal During the American
Revolutionary War from 1775 to 1783, Boston, 1827.
Trumbull, John: Autobiography, Reminiscences and Letters,
New York & London, 1841.
BOOK LIST
Walworth, Mrs. Ellen Hardin: Battles of Saratoga, 1777, Al-
bany, New York, 1891.
Ward, Christopher: The War of the Revolution, New York,
1952.
Watson, J. Steven: The Reign of George III, 1760-181$
Vol. XII, Oxford History of England, edited by Sir
George Clark, Oxford: 1960.
Watson, Winslow C.: The Military and Civil History of the
County of Essex, New York, Albany, New York, 1869.
Weeks, William: Letters of an American Sergeant, Cam-
bridge, Massachusetts, 1901.
Wilkinson, General J.: Memoirs of My Own Times, Phila-
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Wilshin, Francis F. (see Snell, Charles W.).
Index
Acland, Lady Harriet, 7, 64,
175, 176, 200, 258
Acland, Maj. John, 7, 41, 42,
43, 64, 175, 1/6, 222, 225,
229, 230, 231, 232, 233,
239, 241, 248, 271
Allen, Ethan, 31
Allen, John, 75, 76, 77, 80,
81,84
Amherst, Gen. Jeffrey, 16, 29
Anburey, Lieut. Thomas,
151, 162, 163, 182, 183,
184, 201, 202, 221
Anstruther, Col. John, 188,
191, 193, 198
Armstrong, Maj. John, 241,
247
Arnold, Gen. Benedict, 4, 5,
6, 48, 72, 77, 108, no,
139, 140, 142, 143, 157,
158, 164, 165, 166, 167,
168, 171, 177, 194, 203,
204, 205, 206, 216, 217,
218, 228, 229, 239, 240,
241, 242, 244, 245, 246,
247, 254, 260
Aubrey, Capt. Thomas, 95
Baker, Albert, 82
Balcarres, Maj. the Earl of,
28, 42, 43, 208, 212, 216,
221, 231, 232, 237, 242,
243, 244, 247, 248, 249,
250, 256, 259
Baldwin, Ezekiel, 72
Barner, Maj. Ferdinand von,
38, 100, 103, 106, 128,
129, 130, 133, 134, 151
Baum, Col. Frederick, 63, 99,
100, 101, 102, 104, 106,
107, 111, 112, 113, 114,
115, Il6, Il8, 120, 121,
122, 123, 124, 125, 126,
128, 134, 144, 148, 149
Blomfield, Maj. Thomas, 221
Bock, Lieut, 100, 113
Braddock, Gen. Edward, 70,
167
295
296
Brandt, Joseph (Thay-en-da-
ne-gea), 155
Breyman, Col. Heinrich, 101,
116, 117, 118, 127, 128,
129, 131, 132, 133, 134,
135, M4, 148, 149, 151,
178, 180, 208, 222, 244,
245, 246, 247, 249
Brooks, Lieut. Col. John, 245
Brown, Col. John, 210
Brudenel, Chaplain Edward,
255, 258
Campbell, Capt. Alexander,
209
Carleton, Gen. Sir Guy, 4, 5,
6, 9, 11, 13, 14, 15 ? 16, 17,
22, 24, 73, 86, 91, 92, 108,
165, 177
Carter, Capt. John, 59, 178,
179
Cilley, Col. Joseph, 205, 229,
230, 231
Clarke, Lieut. Sir Francis
Carr, 160, 220, 232, 233,
INDEX
Dearborn, Maj. Henry, 168*
Clinton, Gen. Sir Henry, 10,
15, 92, 93, MS, 146, 147,
157, 165, 202, 203, 207,
209, 211, 213, 215, 219,
264, 267, 268, 276
Clive, Rohert (Lord), 12, 72
Cromer, Jane, 52, 53, 56, 57,
64
Digby, Lieut. William, 69,
223, 225, 226, 248, 249,
271
Don, Lieut. John, 183
Du Fais, Lieut., 222
Duer, Lady Kitty, 72
Duer, Capt. William, 72, 101
"Duluth," 79, 80, 81, 82
Dunbar, Lieut, 183, 184
Edgerton, Eleazer, 105, 106
Fellows, Gen. John, 217, 218,
257, 258, 259, 260, 265
Forbes, Maj. Gordon, 184,
185
Francis, Col. Ebenezer, 43
Fraser, Capt. Alexander, 33,
34, 69, 86, 87, 88, 100,
104, 113, 123, 176, 211,
231, 255, 256, 258, 272
Fraser, Gen. Simon, 19, 20,
aa, *8, 33, 35, 36, 37, 38,
40, 42, 43, 59, 61, 68, 72,
77, 78, 81, 84, 85, 87, 102,
150, 163, 178, 180, 182,
184, 185, 190, 194, 199,
212, 213, 214, 221, 222,
*37, ^38, 240, 241, 251,
*53, 255
Freeman, Fanner, 170, 172,
191
Furnival, Capt, 228
INDEX
^97
Gage, Gen. Thomas, 10
Gall, Gen. W. R. von, 264
Gansevoort, Col. Peter, 268
Gates, Gen. Horatio, 6, 31,
72, 108, 138, 140, 141,
142, 143, 156, 157, 164,
165, 166, 167, 168, 169,
170, 171, 172, 173, 177,
202, 203, 204, 205, 206,
207, 213, 216, 217, 218,
219, 226, 228, 229, 239,
241, 247, 253, 254, 255,
259, 260, 266, 267, 268,
271, 276
Geismar, Capt, 182, 194,
195, 262
George III, 22, 24, 26, 45,
50, 275
Germaine, Lord George, 16,
90, 91, 92, 144, 275
Geyso, Capt von, 100, 151
Glover, Gen. John, 171, 254,
260
Grant, Maj. Robert, 39
Green, Capt. Charles, 190,
220, 262
Hadden, Lieut James, 21,
22, 95, 189, 191, 19*, 193,
194, 196, 198, 199
Hale, Col. Nathan, 39, 40,
205
Hamilton, Gen. James, 94,
163, 178, 191, 258, 264
Hannemann, Lieut, 151,
IS*, 154
Harnage, Maj. Henry, 257
Harnage, Mrs. Henry, 64,
200, 257, 262
Herkimer, Nichoks, 139,
216, 241
Herrick, Col. Samuel, 119,
120, 121, 123, 124, 128
Hill, Lieut. Col. John, 45, 46,
47, 48, 49, 50, 52, 53,. 54,
56, 61, 272
Hoakesly, Robert, 62
Houston, Col., 67
Howe, Gen. Sir William, 10,
15, 16, 88, 89, 90, 91, 9^,
93, 109, 144, 145, 158,
214, 275, 276
Hubbard (Hobart), Col.
David, 119, 122
Hunter, Polly, 79, 80, 81, 82
Jessup, Lieut. Col. Ebenezer,
6 7
Jessup, Capt Edward, 67
Jones, Lieut. David, 69, 72,
73, 78, 79
Jones, Capt. Thomas, 95,
161, 164, 178, 182, 185,
189, 192, 193, 194, 214
Kilmore, George, 75, 76
Kingston, Lieut Col. Robert,
93, 186, 188, 266
298
INDEX
Kosciusko, Gen. Thaddeus,
169
Lamb, Sgt. Robert, 52, 53,
54, 55, 56, 57, 64, 65, 66
Langkde, Charles de, 70,
74, 78, 85, 86
Lansing, Peter, 260, 261
Learned, Ebenezer, 139, 167,
172, 194, 205, 228, 229,
*34> *35, ^39, 240, 241,
260
"Le Loup," 74, 75, 77, 80,
81, 82, 84, 85
Ligonier, Gen. Edward,
Viscount, 45
Lincoln, Gen. Benjamin, 77,
no, in, 140, 167, 172,
210, 216, 228, 229, 253,
254
Lind, Lieut. Col. John, 47
Long, Col. Pierce, 50, 51, 53,
56,66
Louis XVI, 273, 274
Lutwidge, Capt. Skeffington,
20,37
McAlpin, Maj. Daniel, 67
McArthur, Duncan, 73, 74,
75,76
McCrea, Jane ("Jennie"),
78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84,
85, 116, 125, 139, 172
McKay, Lieut., 234
McKay, Samuel, 9, 10
McLane, Lieut., 228
McNeil, Mrs. Sarah Fraser,
72, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 84
Maibon, Maj. Christoph von,
100
Mattoon, Lieut. Ebenezer,
227, 228, 229, 234, 235
Melsheimer, Pastor, 103
Money, Capt. John, 93, 220,
239
Montgomery, Gen. Richard,
4
Montgomery, Capt. William,
54, 55
Morgan, Col. Daniel, 4, 5,
164, 167, 168, 169, 172,
173, 177, 184, 185, 194,
199, 204, 205, 229, 231,
232, ^36, 240, 241, 245,
254, 259, 260, 261, 265,
272
Munro, Capt. Hugh, 67
Murphy, "Tim," 240
Naudiere, Capt. de la, 8,
100, 101, 114, 148
Neilson, John, 170, 171
Nichols, Col. Moses, 119,
120, 121, 124
Nixon, Gen. John, 77, 139,
171, 259
Paterson, Gen. John, 171,
Pausch, Capt. George, 178,
179, 180, 181, 182, 195,
INDEX
299
, 219, 222, 232, 233,
*34> 235, 236, 230
Peters, Lieut. Col. John, 67,
100, 101
Petersham, Capt (Lord),
220, 226
Pfister, Col. Francis, 67, 100
Phillips, Gen. William, 9, 18,
22, 24, 33, 34, 36, 61, 101,
102, 137, 161, 163, 178,
190, 192, 196, 197, 213,
214, 220, 221, 226, 227,
255, 264, 268
Poor, Gen. Enoch, 171, 194,
205, 217, 229, 231, 232,
Powell, Gen. Henry W., 45,
94, 95, 156, 210, 276
Praetorius, Col. Julius, 94
Putnam, Gen. Israel, 91, 219
Reid, Lieut., 189, 193
Reynell, Mrs. Anne
(Reynolds), 64, 201, 262
Reynell, Lieut. Thomas, 201
Riedesel, Augusta von, 136
Riedesel, Caroline von, 136
Riedesel, Gen. Baron
Friederich von, 5, 9, 19,
22, 23, 24, 32, 34, 35, 36,
37, 38, 4*, 59, 61, 62, 63,
64, 69, 96, 101, 102, 112,
116, 137, 153, 162, 163,
178, 179, 180, 181, 182,
190, 192, 194, 195, 196,
207, 213, 214, 221, 255,
256, 257, 263, 264, 268
Riedesel, Baroness Friederika
von, 23, 136, 137, 158,
163, 200, 201, 209, 221,
238, 251, 256, 26l, 262
Riedesel, Friederika von, 136
Rogers, Maj. Robert, 107,
121
St. Clair, Gen. Arthur, 31,
32, 35, 40, 46, 65, 66, 77,
138, 143, 144, 166
St. Leger, Col. Barry, 8, 9,
15, 16, 17, 65, 88, 94, no,
139, 155, 157, 1S8, 167,
217
St. Luc de la Come, Louis,
8, 26, 27, 70, 77, 84, 85,
86
Salans, Lieut. Baron
Alexander, 88, 123
Scammel, Col. Alexander,
205
Schank, Lieut. John, 21, 150,
152, 153, 158, 160, 161,
207
Sdhiek, Capt, 113
Schuyler, Katherine Van
Rensselaer, 163
Schuyler, Gen. Philip, 31, 56,
65, 66, 67, 69, 71, 77, 91,
108, 109, no, 111, 138,
139, 142, 143, 144, 162,
164, 165, 167, 169, 206,
218, 253, 258
3oo
INDEX
Scott, Lieut. Thomas, 87, 88,
209
Sherwood, Capt., 103
Shrimpton, Capt, John, 43
Simpson, Capt., 231
Skene, Alexander, 88
Skene, Maj. (Col.) Philip,
48, 58, 59, 60, 61, 66, 70,
71, 96, 100, 118, 121, 127,
128, 129, 130, 131, 133
Smith, Lieut. William, 233
Smythe, Dr. James, 72
Spaeth, Col. Ernst Ludwig
von, 195, 222, 234
Spangenberg, Lieut., 117,
127, 130, 133, 135
Specht, Gen. Johan
Friederich von, 153, 158
Squier, Ephraim, 247, 248
Stark, Elizabeth ("Molly"),
108, 109, no, 111, 124
Stark, Gen. John, 107, 108,
109, no, 115, 116, 118,
119, 120, 121, 122, 123,
125, 126, 132, 134, 136,
140, 143, 156, 167, 2l6,
Stickney, Col. Thomas, 119
Stormont, Viscount, 273, 274
Strangways, Capt. Stephen,
222
Sutherland, Col. Nicholas,
Ten Broeck, Gen. Abram,
218 241, 245
Tommo, "Captain/' see "Le
Loup"
Twiss, Lieut. William, 34, 67
Van Rensselaer, Col. Henry,
50, 51, 54, 66
Van Vechten, Lieut, 80, 81,
83
Vergennes, Charles Gravier,
Comte de, 273, 274, 275
Walker, Capt Ellis, 178, 182
Warner, Col. Seth, 42, 63,
102, 105, 109, 116, 120,
126, 132, 134, 135
Washington, Gen. George,
31, 91, 108, 109, no, 141,
142, 145, 164, 167, 206,
276
Westroop, Lieut. Richard, 53
Wight, Capt, 225, 226, 248
Wilkinson, Col. James, 35,
143, 166, 205, 254, 260,
266, 270, 271
Williams, Maj. Griffith, 34,
178, 179, 190, 209, 219,
220, 228, 231, 232, 233,
Swearingham, Capt, 184
Willoe, Capt, 192, 194, 195,
262
Wolfe, Gen. James, 32, 148