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Showing posts with the label Saratoga

The Surrender Celebrated - "Freedom To The Whole World"

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News of British Lieutenant-General John Burgoyne's surrender to Major-General Horatio Gates at Saratoga, New York, on October 17, 1777,  spread quickly .  Patriotic citizens of the young United States of America were jubilant, and celebrated in a number of ways.   Those present at the surrender noted their feelings in their journals and diaries, and the letters they sent home.  For Doctor Samuel Merrick of Massachusetts, who had seen firsthand the suffering of the troops who retreated south from Canada in 1776, it was "A day never to be forgotten by the American States. ... The Lord be praised for this wonderful token of divine favor for which we cannot be sufficiently thankfull." [1]  Colonel Ralph Cross of the Massachusetts Militia described what he saw as "... a Grand Sight as ever was Beheld by Eye of man in America."  [2]  In the habit of the times, men gathered in local taverns to toast the victory, and local newspapers reported those...

Surrender At Saratoga - "The Greatest Conquest Ever Known"

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For some time I assumed Lieutenant-General John Burgoyne's Saratoga Campaign came to an end in mid-October of 1777, when his army had advanced south as far as it was able, only to be stopped in its tracks and forced to surrender.  When I started exploring the route of the Convention Army, I assumed that the  Surrender Site  would be where British and German troops had laid down their arms.  Now, after some additional research, and a weekend visit to  Saratoga National Historical Park , I've learned those assumptions were wrong - and another visit to Schuylerville is in order, as there is more to see there than I'd realized. The story of Burgoyne's surrender at Saratoga is linked to a a number of locations.  One would be what is now called  "Victory Woods" , a misleading name from the British perspective perhaps, that reflects its location in the present-day  Village of Victory , incorporated in 1849, rather than any description of the site in 1777...

The Saratoga Campaign - "The Causes Of The Disaster"

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Lieutenant-General John Burgoyne launched his campaign to seize control of the Lake Champlain and Hudson River Valleys in June of 1777 with over 8,000 British, German and Canadian troops and their Native allies.  On October 17, 1777, under the Articles of Convention  he accepted to end the fighting, his men laid down their arms in present-day Schuylerville, New York, and prepared to begin their march into captivity. Seven months after the defeat of his army, Burgoyne was in London "... to explain the causes of the disaster at Saratoga..." [1]   In this short summary of his campaign I am relying in a large part on Burgoyne's own words, published in London in 1780 as A State of the Expedition From Canada, As Laid Before The House Of Commons, By Lieutenant-General Burgoyne, And Verified By Evidence, With A Collection Of Authentic Documents...   Additional information has been drawn from the US Army Combat Studies Institute Press  Staff Ride Handbook for the Sa...

The 1777 March of The Convention Army - "Two Hundred Miles From Saratoga To Boston"

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On October 18, 1777, over 6,000 men, women and children set out on a march from Stillwater, New York to Boston, Massachusetts - and never made it! These were the British and German troops of Lieutenant-General John Burgoyne, some accompanied by their wives and children, unsuccessful in their attempt to take control of the Lake Champlain and Hudson River Valleys.  Guarding them were citizen-soldiers from American militia units, who together with Continental Army forces under the command of Major-General Horatio Gates, stopped an invasion in its tracks, and in doing so changed the course of history. A day earlier Burgoyne had offered his sword to Gates in a gesture of surrender to the victorious  American army, as pictured in the painting "The Surrender of General Burgoyne" by artist and Revolutionary War veteran John Trumbull (accessed through the website of  The Architect of the Capitol ). Burgoyne's troops marched "... out of their camp with the honours of war, ......

A Bibliography Related to the People, Places and Events of the 1777 March of the Convention Army from Saratoga to Boston

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In October of 2022, I set out to explore the line of march of the Convention Army in 1777 from Saratoga, New York, to Cambridge, Massachusetts. I assumed the march was simple enough, a single route with nightly stops along the way.    I've read letters, diaries and journals written by some of the 6,000 men, women and children who marched as prisoners or guards, as well as the people they encountered; seen rivers, streams, mountains, buildings and other sights they saw; and met people along the way who love history and their community, and are happy to share their knowledge and passion. My knowledge of the march remains incomplete, but what I've learned has given me insight on the people of 1777, the places they went, and the sacrifices they made, regardless of their allegiance or status in life. My research, like my attempt to follow their path, has had its twists and turns, like the road in the photograph below that once passed over Kettle Brook in Leicester, Massachusetts....