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CHAPTER II Boston and Quebec
Washington was not a professional soldier, though he had seen
the realities of war and had moved in military society. Perhaps it was an
advantage that he had not received the rigid training of a regular, for he
faced conditions which required an elastic mind. The force besieging Boston
consisted at first chiefly of New England militia, with companies of
minute-men, so called because of their supposed readiness to fight at a
minute's notice. Washington had been told that he should find 20,000 men under
his command; he found, in fact, a nominal army of 17,000, with probably not
more than 14,000 effective, and the number tended to decline as the men went
away to their homes after the first vivid interest gave way to the humdrum of
military life.
The extensive camp before Boston, as Washington now saw it,
expressed the varied character of his strange command. Cambridge, the seat of
Harvard College, was still only a village with a few large houses and park-like
grounds set among fields of grain, now trodden down by the soldiers. Here was
placed in haphazard style the motley housing of a military camp. The occupants
had followed their own taste in building. One could see structures covered with
turf, looking like lumps of mother earth, tents made of sail cloth, huts of
bare boards, huts of brick and stone, some having doors and windows of wattled
basketwork. There were not enough huts to house the army nor camp-kettles for
cooking. Blankets were so few that many of the men were without covering at
night. In the warm summer weather this did not much matter but bleak autumn and
harsh winter would bring bitter privation. The sick in particular suffered
severely, for the hospitals were badly equipped.
A deep conviction inspired many of the volunteers. They
regarded as brutal tyranny the tax on tea, considered in England as a mild
expedient for raising needed revenue for defense in the colonies. The men of
Suffolk County, Massachusetts, meeting in September, 1774, had declared in
high-flown terms that the proposed tax came from a parricide who held a dagger
at their bosoms and that those who resisted him would earn praises to eternity.
From nearly every colony came similar utterances, and flaming resentment at
injustice filled the volunteer army. Many a soldier would not touch a cup of
tea because tea had been the ruin of his country. Some wore pinned to their
hats or coats the words "Liberty or Death" and talked of resisting tyranny
until "time shall be no more." It was a dark day for the motherland when so
many of her sons believed that she was the enemy of liberty. The iron of this
conviction entered into the soul of the American nation; at Gettysburg, nearly
a century later, Abraham Lincoln, in a noble utterance which touched the heart
of humanity, could appeal to the days of the Revolution, when "our fathers
brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty." The
colonists believed that they were fighting for something of import to all
mankind, and the nation which they created believes it still.
"It was a dark day for the
motherland when so many of her sons believed that she was the enemy of
liberty."
An age of war furnishes, however, occasion for the exercise of
baser impulses. The New Englander was a trader by instinct. An army had come
suddenly together and there was golden promise of contracts for supplies at fat
profits. The leader from Virginia, untutored in such things, was astounded at
the greedy scramble. Before the year 1775 ended Washington wrote to his friend
Lee that he prayed God he might never again have to witness such lack of public
spirit, such jobbing and self-seeking, such "fertility in all the low arts," as
now he found at Cambridge. He declared that if he could have foreseen all this
nothing would have induced him to take the command. Later, the young La
Fayette, who had left behind him in France wealth and luxury in order to fight
a hard fight in America, was shocked at the slackness and indifference among
the supposed patriots for whose cause he was making sacrifices so heavy. In the
backward parts of the colonies the population was densely ignorant and had
little grasp of the deeper meaning of the patriot cause.
The army was, as Washington himself said, "a mixed multitude."
There was every variety of dress. Old uniforms, treasured from the days of the
last French wars, had been dug out. A military coat or a cocked hat was the
only semblance of uniform possessed by some of the officers. Rank was often
indicated by ribbons of different colors tied on the arm. Lads from the farms
had come in their usual dress; a good many of these were hunters from the
frontier wearing the buckskin of the deer they had slain. Sometimes there was
clothing of grimmer material. Later in the war in American officer recorded
that his men had skinned two dead Indians "from their hips down, for bootlegs,
one pair for the Major, the other for myself." The volunteers varied greatly in
age. There were bearded veterans of sixty and a sprinkling of lads of sixteen.
An observer laughed at the boys and the "great great grandfathers" who marched
side by side in the army before Boston. Occasionally a black face was seen in
the ranks. One of Washington's tasks was to reduce the disparity of years and
especially to secure men who could shoot. In the first enthusiasm of 1775 so
many men volunteered in Virginia that a selection was made on the basis of
accuracy in shooting. The men fired at a range of one hundred and fifty yards
at an outline of a man's nose in chalk on a board. Each man had a single shot
and the first men shot the nose entirely away.
Undoubtedly there was the finest material among the men
lounging about their quarters at Cambridge in fashion so unmilitary. In
physique they were larger than the British soldier, a result due to abundant
food and free life in the open air from childhood. Most of the men supplied
their own uniform and rifles and much barter went on in the hours after drill.
The men made and sold shoes, clothes, and even arms. They were accustomed to
farm life and good at digging and throwing up entrenchments. The colonial mode
of waging war was, however, not that of Europe. To the regular soldier of the
time even earth entrenchments seemed a sign of cowardice. The brave man would
come out on the open to face his foe. Earl Percy, who rescued the harassed
British on the day of Lexington, had the poorest possible opinion of those on
what he called the rebel side. To him they were intriguing rascals, hypocrites,
cowards, with sinister designs to ruin the Empire. But he was forced to admit
that they fought well and faced death willingly.
In time Washington gathered about him a fine body of officers,
brave, steady, and efficient. On the great issue they, like himself, had
unchanging conviction, and they and he saved the revolution. But a good many of
his difficulties were due to bad officers. He had himself the reverence for
gentility, the belief in an ordered grading of society, characteristic of his
class in that age. In Virginia the relation of master and servant was well
understood and the tone of authority was readily accepted. In New England
conceptions of equality were more advanced. The extent to which the people
would brook the despotism of military command was uncertain. From the first
some of the volunteers had elected their officers. The result was that
intriguing demagogues were sometimes chosen. The Massachusetts troops, wrote a
Connecticut captain, not free, perhaps, from local jealousy, were "commanded by
a most despicable set of officers." At Bunker Hill officers of this type
shirked the fight and their men, left without leaders, joined in the panicky
retreat of that day. Other officers sent away soldiers to work on their farms
while at the same time they drew for them public pay. At a later time
Washington wrote to a friend wise counsel about the choice of officers. "Take
none but gentlemen; let no local attachment influence you; do not suffer your
good nature to say Yes when you ought to say No. Remember that it is a public,
not a private cause." What he desired was the gentleman's chivalry of
refinement, sense of honor, dignity of character, and freedom from mere
self-seeking. The prime qualities of a good officer, as he often said, were
authority and decision. It is probably true of democracies that they prefer and
will follow the man who will take with them a strong tone. Little men, however,
cannot see this and think to gain support by shifty changes of opinion to
please the multitude. What authority and decision could be expected from an
officer of the peasant type, elected by his own men? How could he dominate men
whose short term of service was expiring and who had to be coaxed to renew it?
Some elected officers had to promise to pool their pay with that of their men.
In one company an officer fulfilled the double position of captain and barber.
In time, however, the authority of military rank came to be respected
throughout the whole army. An amusing contrast with earlier conditions is found
in 1779 when a captain was tried by a brigade court-martial and dismissed from
the service for intimate association with the wagon-maker of the brigade.
The first thing to do at Cambridge was to get rid of the
inefficient and the corrupt. Washington had never any belief in a militia army.
From his earliest days as a soldier he had favored conscription, even in free
Virginia. He had then found quite ineffective the "whooping, holloing gentlemen
soldiers" of the volunteer force of the colony among whom "every individual has
his own crude notion of things and must undertake to direct. If his advice is
neglected he thinks himself slighted, abused, and injured and, to redress his
wrongs, will depart for his home." Washington found at Cambridge too many
officers. Then as later in the American army there were swarms of colonels. The
officers from Massachusetts, conscious that they had seen the first fighting in
the great cause, expected special consideration from a stranger serving on
their own soil. Soon they had a rude awakening. Washington broke a
Massachusetts colonel and two captains because they had proved cowards at
Bunker Hill, two more captains for fraud in drawing pay and provisions for men
who did not exist, and still another for absence from his post when he was
needed. He put in jail a colonel, a major, and three or four other officers.
"New lords, new laws," wrote in his diary Mr. Emerson, the chaplain: "the
Generals Washington and Lee are upon the lines every day... great distinction
is made between officers and soldiers."
The term of all the volunteers in Washington's any expired by
the end of 1775, so that he had to create a new army during the siege of
Boston. He spoke scornfully of an enemy so little enterprising as to remain
supine during the process. But probably the British were wise to avoid a
venture inland and to remain in touch with their fleet. Washington made them
uneasy when he drove away the cattle from the neighborhood. Soon beef was
selling in Boston for as much as eighteen pence a pound. Food might reach
Boston in ships but supplies even by sea were insecure, for the Americans soon
had privateers manned by seamen familiar with New England waters and happy in
expected gains from prize money. The British were anxious about the elementary
problem of food. They might have made Washington more uncomfortable by forays
and alarms. Only reluctantly, however, did Howe, who took over the command on
October 10, 1775, admit to himself that this was a real war. He still hoped for
settlement without further bloodshed. Washington was glad to learn that the
British were laying in supplies of coal for the winter. It meant that they
intended to stay in Boston, where, more than in any other place, he could make
trouble for them.
Washington had more on his mind than the creation of an army
and the siege of Boston. He had also to decide the strategy of the war. On the
long American sea front Boston alone remained in British hands. New York,
Philadelphia, Charleston and other ports farther south were all, for the time,
on the side of the Revolution. Boston was not a good naval base for the
British, since it commanded no great waterway leading inland. The sprawling
colonies, from the rock-bound coast of New England to the swamps and forests of
Georgia, were strong in their incoherent vastness. There were a thousand miles
of seacoast. Only rarely were considerable settlements to be found more than a
hundred miles distant from salt water. An army marching to the interior would
have increasing difficulties from transport and supplies. Wherever water routes
could be used the naval power of the British gave them an advantage. One such
route was the Hudson, less a river than a navigable arm of the sea, leading to
the heart of the colony of New York, its upper waters almost touching Lake
George and Lake Champlain, which in turn led to the St. Lawrence in Canada and
thence to the sea. Canada was held by the British; and it was clear that, if
they should take the city of New York, they might command the whole line from
the mouth of the Hudson to the St. Lawrence, and so cut off New England from
the other colonies and overcome a divided enemy. To foil this policy Washington
planned to hold New York and to capture Canada. With Canada in line the union
of the colonies would be indeed continental, and, if the British were driven
from Boston, they would have no secure foothold in North America.
The danger from Canada had always been a source of anxiety to
the English colonies. The French had made Canada a base for attempts to drive
the English from North America. During many decades war had raged along the
Canadian frontier. With the cession of Canada to Britain in 1763 this danger
had vanished. The old habit endured, however, of fear of Canada. When, in 1774,
the British Parliament passed the bill for the government of Canada known as
the Quebec Act, there was violent clamor. The measure was assumed to be a
calculated threat against colonial liberty. The Quebec Act continued in Canada
the French civil law and the ancient privileges of the Roman Catholic Church.
It guaranteed order in the wild western region north of the Ohio, taken
recently from France, by placing it under the authority long exercised there of
the Governor of Quebec. Only a vivid imagination would conceive that to allow
to the French in Canada their old loved customs and laws involved designs
against the freedom under English law in the other colonies, or that to let the
Canadians retain in respect to religion what they had always possessed meant a
sinister plot against the Protestantism of the English colonies. Yet Alexander
Hamilton, perhaps the greatest mind in the American Revolution, had frantic
suspicions. French laws in Canada involved, he said, the extension of French
despotism in the English colonies. The privileges continued to the Roman
Catholic Church in Canada would be followed in due course by the Inquisition,
the burning of heretics at the stake in Boston and New York, and the bringing
from Europe of Roman Catholic settlers who would prove tools for the
destruction of religious liberty. Military rule at Quebec meant, sooner or
later, despotism everywhere in America. We may smile now at the youthful
Hamilton's picture of "dark designs" and "deceitful wiles" on the part of that
fierce Protestant George III to establish Roman Catholic despotism, but the
colonies regarded the danger as serious. The quick remedy would be simply to
take Canada, as Washington now planned.
"The privileges continued to the
Roman Catholic Church in Canada would be followed in due course by the
Inquisition, the burning of heretics at the stake in Boston and New York, and
the bringing from Europe of Roman Catholic settlers who would prove tools for
the destruction of religious liberty."
To this end something had been done before Washington assumed
the command. The British Fort Ticonderoga, on the neck of land separating Lake
Champlain from Lake George, commanded the route from New York to Canada. The
fight at Lexington in April had been quickly followed by aggressive action
against this British stronghold. No news of Lexington had reached the fort when
early in May Colonel Ethan Allen, with Benedict Arnold serving as a volunteer
in his force of eighty-three men, arrived in friendly guise. The fort was held
by only forty-eight British; with the menace from France at last ended they
felt secure; discipline was slack, for there was nothing to do. The incompetent
commander testified that he lent Allen twenty men for some rough work on the
lake. By evening Allen had them all drunk and then it was easy, without firing
a shot, to capture the fort with a rush. The door to Canada was open. Great
stores of ammunition and a hundred and twenty guns, which in due course were
used against the British at Boston, fell into American hands.
About Canada Washington was ill-informed. He thought of the
Canadians as if they were Virginians or New Yorkers. They had been recently
conquered by Britain; their new king was a tyrant; they would desire liberty
and would welcome an American army. So reasoned Washington, but without
knowledge. The Canadians were a conquered people, but they had found the
British king no tyrant and they had experienced the paradox of being freer
under the conqueror than they had been under their own sovereign. The last days
of French rule in Canada were disgraced by corruption and tyranny almost
unbelievable. The Canadian peasant had been cruelly robbed and he had conceived
for his French rulers a dislike which appears still in his attitude towards the
motherland of France. For his new British master he had assuredly no love, but
he was no longer dragged off to war and his property was not plundered. He was
free, too, to speak his mind. During the first twenty years after the British
conquest of Canada the Canadian French matured indeed an assertive liberty not
even dreamed of during the previous century and a half of French rule.
The British tyranny which Washington pictured in Canada was
thus not very real. He underestimated, too, the antagonism between the Roman
Catholics of Canada and the Protestants of the English colonies. The Congress
at Philadelphia in denouncing the Quebec Act had accused the Catholic Church of
bigotry, persecution, murder, and rebellion. This was no very tactful appeal
for sympathy to the sons of that France which was still the eldest daughter of
the Church and it was hardly helped by a maladroit turn suggesting that
"low-minded infirmities" should not permit such differences to block union in
the sacred cause of liberty. Washington believed that two battalions of
Canadians might be recruited to fight the British, and that the French Acadians
of Nova Scotia, a people so remote that most of them hardly knew what the war
was about, were tingling with sympathy for the American cause. In truth the
Canadian was not prepared to fight on either side. What the priest and the
landowner could do to make him fight for Britain was done, but, for all that,
Sir Guy Carleton, the Governor of Canada, found recruiting impossible.
Washington believed that the war would be won by the side which
held Canada. He saw that from Canada would be determined the attitude of the
savages dwelling in the wild spaces of the interior; he saw, too, that Quebec
as a military base in British hands would be a source of grave danger. The easy
capture of Fort Ticonderoga led him to underrate difficulties. If Ticonderoga
why not Quebec? Nova Scotia might be occupied later, the Acadians helping. Thus
it happened that, soon after taking over the command, Washington was busy with
a plan for the conquest of Canada. Two forces were to advance into that
country; one by way of Lake Champlain under General Schuyler and the other
through the forests of Maine under Benedict Arnold.
Schuyler was obliged through illness to give up his command,
and it was an odd fortune of war that put General Richard Montgomery at the
head of the expedition going by way of Lake Champlain. Montgomery had served
with Wolfe at the taking of Louisbourg and had been an officer in the proud
British army which had received the surrender of Canada in 1760. Not without
searching of heart had Montgomery turned against his former sovereign. He was
living in America when war broke out; he had married into an American family of
position; and he had come to the view that vital liberty was challenged by the
King. Now he did his work well, in spite of very bad material in his army. His
New Englanders were, he said, "every man a general and not one of them a
soldier." They feigned sickness, though, as far as he had learned, there was
"not a man dead of any distemper." No better were the men from New York, "the
sweepings of the streets" with morals "infamous." Of the officers, too,
Montgomery had a poor opinion. Like Washington he declared that it was
necessary to get gentlemen, men of education and integrity, as officers, or
disaster would follow. Nevertheless St. Johns, a British post on the Richelieu,
about thirty miles across country from Montreal, fell to Montgomery on the 3d
of November, after a siege of six weeks; and British regulars under Major
Preston, a brave and competent officer, yielded to a crude volunteer army with
whole regiments lacking uniforms. Montreal could make no defense. On the 12th
of November Montgomery entered Montreal and was in control of the St. Lawrence
almost to the cliffs of Quebec. Canada seemed indeed an easy conquest.
The adventurous Benedict Arnold went on an expedition more
hazardous. He had persuaded Washington of the impossible, that he could advance
through the wilderness from the seacoast of Maine and take Quebec by surprise.
News travels even by forest pathways. Arnold made a wonderful effort. Chill
autumn was upon him when, on the 25th of September, with about a thousand
picked men, he began to advance up the Kennebec River and over the height of
land to the upper waters of the Chaudiere, which discharges into the St.
Lawrence opposite Quebec. There were heavy rains. Sometimes the men had to wade
breast high in dragging heavy and leaking boats over the difficult places. A
good many men died of starvation. Others deserted and turned back. The
indomitable Arnold pressed on, however, and on the 9th of November, a few days
before Montgomery occupied Montreal, he stood with some six hundred worn and
shivering men on the strand of the St. Lawrence opposite Quebec. He had not
surprised the city and it looked grim and inaccessible as he surveyed it across
the great river. In the autumn gales it was not easy to carry over his little
army in small boats. But this he accomplished and then waited for Montgomery to
join him.
By the 3d of December Montgomery was with Arnold before Quebec.
They had hardly more than a thousand effective troops, together with a few
hundred Canadians, upon whom no reliance could be placed. Carleton, commanding
at Quebec, sat tight and would hold no communication with despised "rebels."
"They all pretend to be gentlemen," said an astonished British officer in
Quebec, when he heard that among the American officers now captured by the
British there were a former blacksmith, a butcher, a shoemaker, and an
innkeeper. Montgomery was stung to violent threats by Carleton's contempt, but
never could he draw from Carleton a reply. At last Montgomery tried, in the
dark of early morning of New Year's Day, 1776, to carry Quebec by storm. He was
to lead an attack on the Lower Town from the west side, while Arnold was to
enter from the opposite side. When they met in the center they were to storm
the citadel on the heights above. They counted on the help of the French
inhabitants, from whom Carleton said bitterly enough that he had nothing to
fear in prosperity and nothing to hope for in adversity. Arnold pressed his
part of the attack with vigor and penetrated to the streets of the Lower Town
where he fell wounded. Captain Daniel Morgan, who took over the command, was
made prisoner.
Montgomery's fate was more tragic. In spite of protests from
his officers, he led in person the attack from the west side of the fortress.
The advance was along a narrow road under the towering cliffs of a great
precipice. The attack was expected by the British and the guard at the barrier
was ordered to hold its fire until the enemy was near. Suddenly there was a
roar of cannon and the assailants not swept down fled in panic. With the
morning light the dead head of Montgomery was found protruding from the snow.
He was mourned by Washington and with reason. He had talents and character
which might have made him one of the chief leaders of the revolutionary army.
Elsewhere, too, was he mourned. His father, an Irish landowner, had been a
member of the British Parliament, and he himself was a Whig, known to Fox and
Burke. When news of his death reached England eulogies upon him came from the
Whig benches in Parliament which could not have been stronger had he died
fighting for the King.
While the outlook in Canada grew steadily darker, the American
cause prospered before Boston. There Howe was not at ease. If it was really to
be war, which he still doubted, it would be well to seek some other base.
Washington helped Howe to take action. Dorchester Heights commanded Boston as
critically from the south as did Bunker Hill from the north. By the end of
February Washington had British cannon, brought with heavy labor from
Ticonderoga, and then he lost no time. On the morning of March 5, 1776, Howe
awoke to find that, under cover of a heavy bombardment, American troops had
occupied Dorchester Heights and that if he would dislodge them he must make
another attack similar to that at Bunker Hill. The alternative of stiff
fighting was the evacuation of Boston. Howe, though dilatory, was a good
fighting soldier. His defects as a general in America sprang in part from his
belief that the war was unjust and that delay might bring counsels making for
peace and save bloodshed. His first decision was to attack, but a furious gale
thwarted his purpose, and he then prepared for the inevitable step.
Washington divined Howe's purpose and there was a tacit
agreement that the retiring army should not be molested. Howe destroyed
munitions of war which he could not take away but he left intact the powerful
defenses of Boston, defenses reared at the cost of Britain. Many of the better
class of the inhabitants, British in their sympathies, were now face to face
with bitter sorrow and sacrifice. Passions were so aroused that a hard fate
awaited them should they remain in Boston and they decided to leave with the
British army. Travel by land was blocked; they could go only by sea. When the
time came to depart, laden carriages, trucks, and wheelbarrows crowded to the
quays through the narrow streets and a sad procession of exiles went out from
their homes. A profane critic said that they moved "as if the very devil was
after them." No doubt many of them would have been arrogant and merciless to
"rebels" had theirs been the triumph. But the day was above all a day of
sorrow. Edward Winslow, a strong leader among them, tells of his tears "at
leaving our once happy town of Boston." The ships, a forest of masts, set sail
and, crowded with soldiers and refugees, headed straight out to sea for
Halifax. Abigail, wife of John Adams, a clever woman, watched the departure of
the fleet with gladness in her heart. She thought that never before had been
seen in America so many ships bearing so many people. Washington's army marched
joyously into Boston. Joyous it might well be since, for the moment, powerful
Britain was not secure in a single foot of territory in the former colonies. If
Quebec should fall the continent would be almost conquered.
Quebec did not fall. All through the winter the Americans held
on before the place. They shivered from cold. They suffered from the dread
disease smallpox. They had difficulty in getting food. The Canadians were
insistent on having good money for what they offered and since good money was
not always in the treasury the invading army sometimes used violence. Then the
Canadians became more reserved and chilling than ever. In hope of mending
matters Congress sent a commission to Montreal in the spring of 1776. Its
chairman was Benjamin Franklin and, with him, were two leading Roman Catholics,
Charles Carroll of Carrollton, a great landowner of Maryland, and his brother
John, a priest, afterwards Archbishop of Baltimore. It was not easy to
represent as the liberator of the Catholic Canadians the Congress which had
denounced in scathing terms the concessions in the Quebec Act to the Catholic
Church. Franklin was a master of conciliation, but before he achieved anything
a dramatic event happened. On the 6th of May, British ships arrived at Quebec.
The inhabitants rushed to the ramparts. Cries of joy passed from street to
street and they reached the little American army, now under General Thomas,
encamped on the Plains of Abraham. Panic seized the small force which had held
on so long. On the ships were ten thousand fresh British troops. The one thing
for the Americans to do was to get away; and they fled, leaving behind guns,
supplies, even clothing and private papers. Five days later Franklin, at
Montreal, was dismayed by the distressing news of disaster.
Congress sent six regiments to reinforce the army which had
fled from Quebec. It was a desperate venture. Washington's orders were that the
Americans should fight the new British army as near Quebec as possible. The
decisive struggle took place on the 8th of June. An American force under the
command of General Thompson attacked Three Rivers, a town on the St. Lawrence,
half way between Quebec and Montreal. They were repulsed and the general was
taken prisoner. The wonder is indeed that the army was not annihilated. Then
followed a disastrous retreat. Short of supplies, ravaged by smallpox, and in
bad weather, the invaders tried to make their way back to Lake Champlain. They
evacuated Montreal. It is hard enough in the day of success to hold together an
untrained army. In the day of defeat such a force is apt to become a mere
rabble. Some of the American regiments preserved discipline. Others fell into
complete disorder as, weak and discouraged, they retired to Lake Champlain.
Many soldiers perished of disease. "I did not look into a hut or a tent," says
an observer, "in which I did not find a dead or dying man." Those who had huts
were fortunate. The fate of some was to die without medical care and without
cover. By the end of June what was left. of the force had reached Crown Point
on Lake Champlain.
Benedict Arnold, who had been wounded at Quebec, was now at
Crown Point. Competent critics of the war have held that what Arnold now did
saved the Revolution. In another scene, before the summer ended, the British
had taken New York and made themselves masters of the lower Hudson. Had they
reached in the same season the upper Hudson by way of Lake Champlain they would
have struck blows doubly staggering. This Arnold saw, and his object was to
delay, if he could not defeat, the British advance. There was no road through
the dense forest by the shores of Lake Champlain and Lake George to the upper
Hudson. The British must go down the lake in boats. This General Carleton had
foreseen and he had urged that with the fleet sent to Quebec should be sent
from England, in sections, boats which could be quickly carried past the rapids
of the Richelieu River and launched on Lake Champlain. They had not come and
the only thing for Carleton to do was to build a flotilla which could carry an
army up the lake and attack Crown Point. The thing was done but skilled workmen
were few and not until the 6th of October were the little ships afloat on Lake
Champlain. Arnold, too, spent the summer in building boats to meet the attack
and it was a strange turn in warfare which now made him commander in a naval
fight. There was a brisk struggle on Lake Champlain. Carleton had a score or so
of vessels; Arnold not so many. But he delayed Carleton. When he was beaten on
the water he burned the ships not captured and took to the land. When he could
no longer hold Crown Point he burned that place and retreated to Ticonderoga.
By this time it was late autumn. The British were far from
their base and the Americans were retreating into a friendly country. There is
little doubt that Carleton could have taken Fort Ticonderoga. It fell quite
easily less than a year later. Some of his officers urged him to press on and
do it. But the leaves had already fallen, the bleak winter was near, and
Carleton pictured to himself an army buried deeply in an enemy country and
separated from its base by many scores of miles of lake and forest. He withdrew
to Canada and left Lake Champlain to the Americans.
BIBLIOGRAPHY

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