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CHAPTER VI The First Great British Disaster
John Burgoyne, in a measure a soldier of fortune, was the
younger son of an impoverished baronet, but he had married the daughter of the
powerful Earl of Derby and was well known in London society as a man of fashion
and also as a man of letters, whose plays had a certain vogue. His will, in
which he describes himself as a humble Christian, who, in spite of many faults,
had never forgotten God, shows that he was serious minded. He sat in the House
of Commons for Preston and, though he used the language of a courtier and spoke
of himself as lying at the King's feet to await his commands, he was a Whig,
the friend of Fox and others whom the King regarded as his enemies. One of his
plays describes the difficulties of getting the English to join the army of
George III. We have the smartly dressed recruit as a decoy to suggest an easy
life in the army. Victory and glory are so certain that a tailor stands with
his feet on the neck of the King of France. The decks of captured ships swim
with punch and are clotted with gold dust, and happy soldiers play with
diamonds as if they were marbles. The senators of England, says Burgoyne, care
chiefly to make sure of good game laws for their own pleasure. The worthless
son of one of them, who sets out on the long drive to his father's seat in the
country, spends an hour in "yawning, picking his teeth and damning his journey"
and when once on the way drives with such fury that the route is marked by
"yelping dogs, broken-backed pigs and dismembered geese."
It was under this playwright and satirist, who had some skill
as a soldier, that the British cause now received a blow from which it never
recovered. Burgoyne had taken part in driving the Americans from Canada in 1776
and had spent the following winter in England using his influence to secure an
independent command. To his later undoing he succeeded. It was he, and not, as
had been expected, General Carleton, who was appointed to lead the expedition
of 1777 from Canada to the Hudson. Burgoyne was given instructions so rigid as
to be an insult to his intelligence. He was to do one thing and only one thing,
to press forward to the Hudson and meet Howe. At the same time Lord George
Germain, the minister responsible, failed to instruct Howe to advance up the
Hudson to meet Burgoyne. Burgoyne had a genuine belief in the wisdom of this
strategy but he had no power to vary it, to meet changing circumstances, and
this was one chief factor in his failure.
Behold Burgoyne then, on the 17th of June, embarking on Lake
Champlain the army which, ever since his arrival in Canada on the 6th of May,
he had been preparing for this advance. He had rather more than seven thousand
men, of whom nearly one-half were Germans under the competent General Riedesel.
In the force of Burgoyne we find the ominous presence of some hundreds of
Indian allies. They had been attached to one side or the other in every war
fought in those regions during the previous one hundred and fifty years. In the
war which ended in 1763 Montcalm had used them and so had his opponent Amherst.
The regiments from the New England and other colonies had fought in alliance
with the painted and befeathered savages and had made no protest. Now either
times had changed, or there was something in a civil war which made the use of
savages seem hideous. One thing is certain. Amherst had held his savages in
stern restraint and could say proudly that they had not committed a single
outrage. Burgoyne was not so happy.
In nearly every war the professional soldier shows distrust, if
not contempt, for civilian levies. Burgoyne had been in America before the day
of Bunker Hill and knew a great deal about the country. He thought the
"insurgents" good enough fighters when protected by trees and stones and swampy
ground. But he thought, too, that they had no real knowledge of the science of
war and could not fight a pitched battle. He himself had not shown the
prevision required by sound military knowledge. If the British were going to
abandon the advantage of sea power and fight where they could not fall back on
their fleet, they needed to pay special attention to land transport. This
Burgoyne had not done. It was only a little more than a week before he reached
Lake Champlain that he asked Carleton to provide the four hundred horses and
five hundred carts which he still needed and which were not easily secured in a
sparsely settled country. Burgoyne lingered for three days at Crown Point, half
way down the lake. Then, on the 2d of July, he laid siege to Fort Ticonderoga.
Once past this fort, guarding the route to Lake George, he could easily reach
the Hudson.
In command at Fort Ticonderoga was General St. Clair, with
about thirty-five hundred men. He had long notice of the siege, for the
expedition of Burgoyne had been the open talk of Montreal and the surrounding
country during many months. He had built Fort Independence, on the east shore
of Lake Champlain, and with a great expenditure of labor had sunk twenty-two
piers across the lake and stretched in front of them a boom to protect the two
forts. But he had neglected to defend Sugar Hill in front of Fort Ticonderoga,
and commanding the American works. It took only three or four days for the
British to drag cannon to the top, erect a battery and prepare to open fire. On
the 5th of July, St. Clair had to face a bitter necessity. He abandoned the
untenable forts and retired southward to Fort Edward by way of the difficult
Green Mountains. The British took one hundred and twenty-eight guns.
These successes led the British to think that within a few days
they would be in Albany. We have an amusing picture of the effect on George III
of the fall of Fort Ticonderoga. The place had been much discussed. It had been
the first British fort to fall to the Americans when the Revolution began, and
Carleton's failure to take it in the autumn of 1776 had been the cause of acute
heartburning in London. Now, when the news of its fall reached England, George
III burst into the Queen's room with the glad cry, "I have beat them, I have
beat the Americans." Washington's depression was not as great as the King's
elation; he had a better sense of values; but he had intended that the fort
should hold Burgoyne, and its fall was a disastrous blow. The Americans showed
skill and good soldierly quality in the retreat from Ticonderoga, and Burgoyne
in following and harassing them was led into hard fighting in the woods. The
easier route by way of Lake George was open but Burgoyne hoped to destroy his
enemy by direct pursuit through the forest. It took him twenty days to hew his
way twenty miles, to the upper waters of the Hudson near Fort Edward. When
there on the 30th of July he had communications open from the Hudson to the St.
Lawrence.
Fortune seemed to smile on Burgoyne. He had taken many guns and
he had proved the fighting quality of his men. But his cheerful elation had, in
truth, no sound basis. Never during the two and a half months of bitter
struggle which followed was he able to advance more than twenty-five miles from
Fort Edward. The moment he needed transport by land he found himself almost
helpless. Sometimes his men were without food and equipment because he had not
the horses and carts to bring supplies from the head of water at Fort Anne or
Fort George, a score of miles away. Sometimes he had no food to transport. He
was dependent on his communications for every form of supplies. Even hay had to
be brought from Canada, since, in the forest country, there was little food for
his horses. The perennial problem for the British in all operations was this
one of food. The inland regions were too sparsely populated to make it possible
for more than a few soldiers to live on local supplies. The wheat for the bread
of the British soldier, his beef and his pork, even the oats for his horse,
came, for the most part, from England, at vast expense for transport, which
made fortunes for contractors. It is said that the cost of a pound of salted
meat delivered to Burgoyne on the Hudson was thirty shillings. Burgoyne had
been told that the inhabitants needed only protection to make them openly loyal
and had counted on them for supplies. He found instead the great mass of the
people hostile and he doubted the sincerity even of those who professed their
loyalty.
After Burgoyne had been a month at Fort Edward he was face to
face with starvation. If he advanced he lengthened his line to flank attack. As
it was he had difficulty in holding it against New Englanders, the most
resolute of all his foes, eager to assert by hard fighting, if need be, their
right to hold the invaded territory which was claimed also by New York.
Burgoyne's instructions forbade him to turn aside and strike them a heavy blow.
He must go on to meet Howe who was not there to be met. A being who could see
the movements of men as we watch a game of chess, might think that madness had
seized the British leaders; Burgoyne on the upper Hudson plunging forward
resolutely to meet Howe; Howe at sea sailing away, as it might well seem, to
get as far from Burgoyne as he could; Clinton in command at New York without
instructions, puzzled what to do and not hearing from his leader, Howe, for six
weeks at a time; and across the sea a complacent minister, Germain, who
believed that he knew what to do in a scene three thousand miles away, and had
drawn up exact instructions as to the way of doing it, and who was now eagerly
awaiting news of the final triumph.
Burgoyne did his best. Early in August he had to make a
venturesome stroke to get sorely needed food. Some twenty-five miles east of
the Hudson at Bennington, in difficult country, New England militia had
gathered food and munitions, and horses for transport. The pressure of need
clouded Burgoyne's judgment. To make a dash for Bennington meant a long and
dangerous march. He was assured, however, that a surprise was possible and that
in any case the country was full of friends only awaiting a little
encouragement to come out openly on his side. They were Germans who lay on
Burgoyne's left and Burgoyne sent Colonel Baum, an efficient officer, with five
or six hundred men to attack the New Englanders and bring in the supplies. It
was a stupid blunder to send Germans among a people specially incensed against
the use of these mercenaries. There was no surprise. Many professing loyalists,
seemingly eager to take the oath of allegiance, met and delayed Baum. When near
Bennington he found in front of him a force barring the way and had to make a
carefully guarded camp for the night. Then five hundred men, some of them the
cheerful takers of the oath of allegiance, slipped round to his rear and in the
morning he was attacked from front and rear.
A hot fight followed which resulted in the complete defeat of
the British. Baum was mortally wounded. Some of his men escaped into the woods;
the rest were killed or captured. Nor was this all. Burgoyne, scenting danger,
had ordered five hundred more Germans to reinforce Baum. They, too, were
attacked and overwhelmed. In all Burgoyne lost some eight hundred men and four
guns. The American loss was seventy. It shows
the spirit of the time that, for the sport of the soldiers, British prisoners
were tied together in pairs and driven by negroes at the tail of horses. An
American soldier described long after, with regret for his own cruelty, how he
had taken a British prisoner who had had his left eye shot out and mounted him
on a horse also without the left eye, in derision at the captive's misfortune.
The British complained that quarter was refused in the fight. For days tired
stragglers, after long wandering in the woods, drifted into Burgoyne's camp.
This was now near Saratoga, a name destined to be ominous in the history of the
British army.
Further misfortune now crowded upon Burgoyne. The general of
that day had two favorite forms of attack. One was to hold the enemy's front
and throw out a column to march round the flank and attack his rear, the method
of Howe at the Brandywine; the other method was to advance on the enemy by
lines converging at a common center. This form of attack had proved most
successful eighteen years earlier when the British had finally secured Canada
by bringing together, at Montreal, three armies, one from the east, one from
the west, and one from the south. Now there was a similar plan of bringing
together three British forces at or near Albany, on the Hudson. Of Clinton, at
New York, and Burgoyne we know. The third force was under General St. Leger.
With some seventeen hundred men, fully half of whom were Indians, he had gone
up the St. Lawrence from Montreal and was advancing from Oswego on Lake Ontario
to attack Fort Stanwix at the end of the road from the Great Lakes to the
Mohawk River. After taking that stronghold he intended to go down the river
valley to meet Burgoyne near Albany.
On the 3d of August St. Leger was before Fort Stanwix
garrisoned by some seven hundred Americans. With him were two men deemed potent
in that scene. One of these was Sir John Johnson who had recently inherited the
vast estate in the neighborhood of his father, the great Indian Superintendent,
Sir William Johnson, and was now in command of a regiment recruited from
Loyalists, many of them fierce and embittered because of the seizure of their
property. The other leader was a famous chief of the Mohawks, Thayendanegea,
or, to give him his English name, Joseph Brant, half savage still, but also
half civilized and half educated, because he had had a careful schooling and
for a brief day had been courted by London fashion. He exerted a formidable
influence with his own people. The Indians were not, however, all on one side.
Half of the six tribes of the Iroquois were either neutral or in sympathy with
the Americans. Among the savages, as among the civilized, the war was a family
quarrel, in which brother fought brother. Most of the Indians on the American
side preserved, indeed, an outward neutrality. There was no hostile population
for them to plunder and the Indian usually had no stomach for any other kind of
warfare. The allies of the British, on the other hand, had plenty of openings
to their taste and they brought on the British cause an enduring discredit.
When St. Leger was before Fort Stanwix he heard that a force of
eight hundred men, led by a German settler named Herkimer, was coming up
against him. When it was at Oriskany, about six miles away, St. Leger laid a
trap. He sent Brant with some hundreds of Indians and a few soldiers to be
concealed in a marshy ravine which Herkimer must cross. When the American force
was hemmed in by trees and marsh on the narrow causeway of logs running across
the ravine the Indians attacked with wild yells and murderous fire. Then
followed a bloody hand to hand fight. Tradition has been busy with its horrors.
Men struggled in slime and blood and shouted curses and defiance. Improbable
stories are told of pairs of skeletons found afterwards in the bog each with a
bony hand which had driven a knife to the heart of the other. In the end the
British, met by resolution so fierce, drew back. Meanwhile a sortie from the
American fort on their rear had a menacing success. Sir John Johnson's camp was
taken and sacked. The two sides were at last glad to separate, after the most
bloody struggle in the whole war. St. Leger's Indians had had more than enough.
About a hundred had been killed and the rest were in a state of mutiny. Soon it
was known that Benedict Arnold, with a considerable force, was pushing up the
Mohawk Valley to relieve the American fort. Arnold knew how to deal with
savages. He took care that his friendly Indians should come into contact with
those of Brant and tell lurid tales of utter disaster to Burgoyne and of a
great avenging army on the march to attack St. Leger. The result was that St.
Leger's Indians broke out in riot and maddened themselves with stolen rum.
Disorder affected even the soldiers. The only thing for St. Leger to do was to
get away. He abandoned his guns and stores and, harassed now by his former
Indian allies, made his way to Oswego and in the end reached Montreal with a
remnant of his force.
News of these things came to Burgoyne just after the disaster
at Bennington. Since Fort Stanwix was in a country counted upon as Loyalist at
heart it was especially discouraging again to find that in the main the
population was against the British. During the war almost without exception
Loyalist opinion proved weak against the fierce determination of the American
side. It was partly a matter of organization. The vigilance committees in each
State made life well-nigh intolerable to suspected Tories. Above all, however,
the British had to bear the odium which attaches always to the invader. We do
not know what an American army would have done if, with Iroquois savages as
allies, it had made war in an English county. We know what loathing a parallel
situation aroused against the British army in America. The Indians, it should
be noted, were not soldiers under British discipline but allies; the chiefs
regarded themselves as equals who must be consulted and not as enlisted to take
orders from a British general.
In war, as in politics, nice balancing of merit or defect in an
enemy would destroy the main purpose which is to defeat him. Each side
exaggerates any weak point in the other in order to stimulate the fighting
passions. Judgment is distorted. The Baroness Riedesel, the wife of one of
Burgoyne's generals, who was in Boston in 1777, says that the people were all
dressed alike in a peasant costume with a leather strap round the waist, that
they were of very low and insignificant stature, and that only one in ten of
them could read or write. She pictures New Englanders as tarring and feathering
cultivated English ladies. When educated people believed every evil of the
enemy the ignorant had no restraint to their credulity. New England had long
regarded the native savages as a pest. In 1776 New Hampshire offered seventy
pounds for each scalp of a hostile male Indian and thirty-seven pounds and ten
shillings for each scalp of a woman or of a child under twelve years of age.
Now it was reported that the British were offering bounties for American
scalps. Benjamin Franklin satirized British ignorance when he described whales
leaping Niagara Falls and he did not expect to be taken seriously when, at a
later date, he pictured George III as gloating over the scalps of his subjects
in America. The Seneca Indians alone, wrote Franklin, sent to the King many
bales of scalps. Some bales were captured by the Americans and they found the
scalps of 43 soldiers, 297 farmers, some of them burned alive, and 67 old
people, 88 women, 193 boys, 211 girls, 29 infants, and others unclassified.
Exact figures bring conviction. Franklin was not wanting in exactness nor did
he fail, albeit it was unwittingly, to intensify burning resentment of which we
have echoes still. Burgoyne had to bear the odium of the outrages by Indians.
It is amusing to us, though it was hardly so to this kindly man, to find these
words put into his mouth by a colonial poet:
I will let loose the dogs of Hell, Ten thousand Indians
who shall yell, And foam, and tear, and grin, and roar And drench their
moccasins in gore:. . . I swear, by St. George and St. Paul, I will
exterminate you all.
Such seed, falling on soil prepared by the hate of war, brought
forth its deadly fruit. The Americans believed that there was no brutality from
which British officers would shrink. Burgoyne had told his Indian allies that
they must not kill except in actual fighting and that there must be no
slaughter of non-combatants and no scalping of any but the dead. The warning
delivered him into the hands of his enemies for it showed that he half expected
outrage. Members of the British House of Commons were no whit behind the
Americans in attacking him. Burke amused the House by his satire on Burgoyne's
words: "My gentle lions, my humane bears, my tenderhearted hyenas, go forth!
But I exhort you, as you are Christians and members of civilized society, to
take care not to hurt any man, woman, or child." Burke's great speech lasted
for three and a half hours and Sir George Savile called it "the greatest
triumph of eloquence within memory." British officers disliked their dirty,
greasy, noisy allies and Burgoyne found his use of savages, with the futile
order to be merciful, a potent factor in his defeat.
A horrifying incident had occurred while he was fighting his
way to the Hudson. As the Americans were preparing to leave Fort Edward some
marauding Indians saw a chance of plunder and outrage. They burst into a house
and carried off two ladies, both of them British in sympathy--Mrs. McNeil, a
cousin of one of Burgoyne's chief officers, General Fraser, and Miss Jeannie
McCrae, whose betrothed, a Mr. Jones, and whose brother were serving with
Burgoyne. In a short time Mrs. McNeil was handed over unhurt to Burgoyne's
advancing army. Miss McCrae was never again seen alive by her friends. Her body
was found and a Wyandot chief, known as the Panther, showed her scalp as a
trophy. Burgoyne would have been a poor creature had he not shown anger at such
a crime, even if committed against the enemy. This crime, however, was
committed against his own friends. He pressed the charge against the chief and
was prepared to hang him and only relaxed when it was urged that the execution
would cause all his Indians to leave him and to commit further outrages. The
incident was appealing in its tragedy and stirred the deep anger of the
population of the surrounding country among whose descendants to this day the
tradition of the abandoned brutality of the British keeps alive the old hatred.
At Fort Edward Burgoyne now found that he could hardly move. He
was encumbered by an enormous baggage train. His own effects filled, it is
said, thirty wagons and this we can believe when we find that champagne was
served at his table up almost to the day of final disaster. The population was
thoroughly aroused against him. His own instinct was to remain near the water
route to Canada and make sure of his communications. On the other hand, honor
called him to go forward and not fail Howe, supposed to be advancing to meet
him. For a long time he waited and hesitated. Meanwhile he was having
increasing difficulty in feeding his army and through sickness and desertion
his numbers were declining. By the 13th of September he had taken a decisive
step. He made a bridge of boats and moved his whole force across the river to
Saratoga, now Schuylerville. This crossing of the river would result inevitably
in cutting off his communications with Lake George and Ticonderoga. After such
a step he could not go back and he was moving forward into a dark unknown. The
American camp was at Stillwater, twelve miles farther down the river. Burgoyne
sent messenger after messenger to get past the American lines and bring back
news of Howe. Not one of these unfortunate spies returned. Most of them were
caught and ignominiously hanged. One thing, however, Burgoyne could do. He
could hazard a fight and on this he decided as the autumn was closing in.
Burgoyne had no time to lose, once his force was on the west
bank of the Hudson. General Lincoln cut off his communications with Canada and
was soon laying siege to Ticonderoga. The American army facing Burgoyne was now
commanded by General Gates. This Englishman, the godson of Horace Walpole, had
gained by successful intrigue powerful support in Congress. That body was
always paying too much heed to local claims and jealousies and on the 2d of
August it removed Schuyler of New York because he was disliked by the soldiers
from New England and gave the command to Gates. Washington was far away
maneuvering to meet Howe and he was never able to watch closely the campaign in
the north. Gates, indeed, considered himself independent of Washington and
reported not to the Commander-in-Chief but direct to Congress. On the 19th of
September Burgoyne attacked Gates in a strong entrenched position on Bemis
Heights, at Stillwater. There was a long and bitter fight, but by evening
Burgoyne had not carried the main position and had lost more than five hundred
men whom he could ill spare from his scanty numbers.
Burgoyne's condition was now growing desperate. American forces
barred retreat to Canada. He must go back and meet both frontal and flank
attacks, or go forward, or surrender. To go forward now had most promise, for
at last Howe had instructed Clinton, left in command at New York, to move, and
Clinton was making rapid progress up the Hudson. On the 7th of October Burgoyne
attacked again at Stillwater. This time he was decisively defeated, a result
due to the amazing energy in attack of Benedict Arnold, who had been stripped
of his command by an intrigue. Gates would not even speak to him and his
lingering in the American camp was unwelcome. Yet as a volunteer Arnold charged
the British line madly and broke it. Burgoyne's best general, Fraser, was
killed in the fight. Burgoyne retired to Saratoga and there at last faced the
prospects of getting back to Fort Edward and to Canada. It may be that he could
have cut his way through, but this is doubtful. Without risk of destruction he
could not move in any direction. His enemies now outnumbered him nearly four to
one. His camp was swept by the American guns and his men were under arms night
and day. American sharpshooters stationed themselves at daybreak in trees about
the British camp and any one who appeared in the open risked his life. If a cap
was held up in view instantly two or three balls would pass through it. His
horses were killed by rifle shots. Burgoyne had little food for his men and
none for his horses. His Indians had long since gone off in dudgeon. Many of
his Canadian French slipped off homeward and so did the Loyalists. The German
troops were naturally dispirited. A British officer tells of the deadly
homesickness of these poor men. They would gather in groups of two dozen or so
and mourn that they would never again see their native land. They died, a score
at a time, of no other disease than sickness for their homes. They could have
no pride in trying to save a lost cause. Burgoyne was surrounded and, on the
17th of October, he was obliged to surrender.
Gates proposed to Burgoyne hard terms--surrender with no honors
of war. The British were to lay down their arms in their encampments and to
march out without weapons of any kind. Burgoyne declared that, rather than
accept such terms, he would fight still and take no quarter. A shadow was
falling on the path of Gates. The term of service of some of his men had
expired. The New Englanders were determined to stay and see the end of Burgoyne
but a good many of the New York troops went off. Sickness, too, was increasing.
Above all General Clinton was advancing up the Hudson. British ships could come
up freely as far as Albany and in a few days Clinton might make a formidable
advance. Gates, a timid man, was in a hurry. He therefore agreed that the
British should march from their camp with the honors of war, that the troops
should be taken to New England, and from there to England. They must not serve
again in North America during the war but there was nothing in the terms to
prevent their serving in Europe and relieving British regiments for service in
America. Gates had the courtesy to keep his army where it could not see the
laying down of arms by Burgoyne's force. About five thousand men, of whom
sixteen hundred were Germans and only three thousand five hundred fit for duty,
surrendered to sixteen thousand Americans. Burgoyne gave offense to German
officers by saying in his report that he might have held out longer had all his
troops been British. This is probably true but the British met with only a just
Nemesis for using soldiers who had no call of duty to serve.
The army set out on its long march of two hundred miles to
Boston. The late autumn weather was cold, the army was badly clothed and fed,
and the discomfort of the weary route was increased by the bitter antagonism of
the inhabitants. They respected the regular British soldier but at the Germans
they shouted insults and the Loyalists they despised as traitors. The camp at
the journey's end was on the ground at Cambridge where two years earlier
Washington had trained his first army. Every day Burgoyne expected to embark.
There was delay and, at last, he knew the reason. Congress repudiated the terms
granted by Gates. A tangled dispute followed. Washington probably had no
sympathy with the quibbling of Congress. But he had no desire to see this army
return to Europe and release there an army to serve in America. Burgoyne's
force was never sent to England. For nearly a year it lay at Boston. Then it
was marched to Virginia. The men suffered great hardships and the numbers fell
by desertion and escape. When peace came in 1783 there was no army to take back
to England; Burgoyne's soldiers had been merged into the American people. It
may well be, indeed, that descendants of his beaten men have played an
important part in building up the United States. The irony of history is
unconquerable.
BIBLIOGRAPHY

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