Class Book COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT ^^ AN ^©riginal, dompikir auir dorrecttb ^^crotint or BURGOYNE'S CAMPAiaN, AND THE MEMORABLE BATTLES OF BEMIS'S HEIGHTS, SEPT. 19, AND OCT, 7, 1777, FROM THE MOST AUTHENTIC SOURCES OF INFORMATION; INCLUDING MANY INTERESTING INCIDENTS CONNECTED WITH THE SAME : AND A MAP OF THE BATTLE GROUxXD. BY CHARLES WeILSON, ESQ. Methinks I bear the sound of time long past Still murmuring: oVr me, and whif^perii.g in The following pages— like the lingerin? voices Oi those who long within their graves have slept. AL' ANT PRINTED BY J. MUWSELI., JVb. 59 State Strtet. 1844 Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1844, by CHARLES KEILSON, in the Clerk*s office for the Northern District of New York. ^- L»w} «. '«^ RECOMMENDATIONS- The following Recommendation is from the Rev. C'harles 0. Kimball, and the Rev. Isaac Wescott. Stillwater, March 28, 1844. Charles Neilson, Esq : Dear Sir — We have read v^^ith deep interest your work in manuscript entitled '' An Original, Compiled and Corrected Ac- count of Burgoyne's Campaign, and the Memorable Battles on Bemis's Heights, on the 19th September, and 7th October, 1777" &c. &c., and are free to say, that we believe it to be a document of great merit, containing a full, clear, and authentic statement of important facts and incidents, of the most thrilling kind, con- nected with the Revolutionary war. The book is eminently worthy of publication, and introduction into every family in the country, and of being read by every youth, that the rising generation may enjoy the correct, interest- ing and profitable view therein presented, of the toils, sufi'erings, conflicts, and triumphs of our venerable ancestors. The ability, age, and above all, the peculiarly favorable circumstances of the author's birth, education, and parentage, exhibit the most lucid proof of qualification for the work, and sure evidence of truth and fidelity in its execution. These circumstances should secure a ready and extensive sale. With sentiments of respect and esteem. Permit us, sir, to subscribe ourselves, Your obedient servants, CHARLES 0. KIMBALL. ISAAC WESCOTT. Albany, May 23, 1844. Charles Neilson, Esq., Dear Sir — At your request and that of my esteemed friend, ir. RECOMMENDATIONS. the Rev. Mr. Kimball of Stillwater, I have perused most of the proof sheets of your " Account of Burgoyne's Campaign, and of the Memorable Battles of Bemis's Heights," and I can truly say, that I have derived much pleasure as well as information from their perusal. Without intending to pass upon the comparative accuracy of your account of this portion of our Revolutionary history, and those of your predecessors, or to sit in judgment lupon the motives which governed the conduct of some of the principal agents connected with the transactions of this import- ant campaign, I cheerfully accord to you, the credit which I think you richly deserve, of having materially, and in an attract- ive form, added to our stock of historical information, in refer- ence to a period big with the future destinies and fate of our be- loved country. Very respectfully, Your obedient servant, SAMUEL S. RANDALL. TO A PATRIOTIC PUBLIC. As the memorable battles onBemis's Heights have become a subject of increasing interest to the '* good people" of these United States ; and as no historian, in his own account of the revohitionary war, has yet given a very mintue or even correct superficial account of the same, it has been suggested by many, who feel a deep interest in the subject, that a more particular history ought to be given to the public, for the benefit of the present, rising, and all future generations ; accompanied with a topographi- cal view, or description of the important ground, and its relative situation with respect to the surrounding country ; and is the simple Tl. TO A PATRIOTIC PUBLIC. reason for even commencing the following narrative. The author, in the absence of some one better qualified for the important duty, though he knows his own efforts will be feeble and inadequate to the task, has thought proper, as far as in him lies, to try to give a true and impartial history of all, or at least, the prin- cipal facts relative to the several movements of the two armies under generals Gates and Burgoyne, and of the several battles fought between different portions of the same, accord^ ing to the most authentic information that, he thinks at least, can possibly be obtained at this, so late a day. As the author is not writing to * please any particular individual or set of men, or to gratify the peculiar taste of any particular class of readers, he will not, therefore, as far as his own style is used^ attempt to dress his subject in lofty and sublime language, or in un- intelligible and mysterious phrases, but in the plain and simple every-day language of a hum- ble farmer^ as he is, and in language, he TO A PATRIOTIC PUBLIC. Til, hopes, that will be understood equally as well by the common school boy, as by the man of science. In giving an account of any impor- tant transaction that took place at some re- mote former period, it is always desirable, and sometimes thought necessary, especially when there has been so many different accounts of the same transaction, as in this case, that the author introduce some facts or circumstances connected with the subject under considera- tion, that will have a tendency at least, to place the narrative beyond the possibility of doubt. In respect to the topographical description, the author refers the reader to an examination of the ground thereon described, where he will not only find a great portion of the re- mains of the old entrenchments and other for- tifications, as evidence of its correctness, but will, he thinks, be much gratified with a view from the author's dwelling — of the most beau- tiful, picturesque, and extensive landscape to be found, perhaps, within the " Empire State." Viii. TO A PATRIOTIC PUBLIC, If taste for grandeur, or the more sublime, Prompt thee, my friend, these gentle Heights to climb, Here gaze attentive on the scene around, But tread, with holy awe, this hallow'd ground ! In order that the reader may the better judge of the authenticity of the author's infor- mation on the subject on which he is about to write, he will remark, that in addition to the information repeatedly received from a number of the old revolutionary officers and soldiers, who have ever resided in this vicinity, and who took a part in the battles ; he also receiv- ed it from his much respected father, a man of well known strong and discerning mind, of superior intellect, and the most retentive mem- ory, who lived at the time of those most im- portant events, within the circle of the Ameri- can camp on Bemis's Heights, and in the very house, now standing, in which the brave Gen. Poor and the heroic Col. Morgan quartered ; and who was a volunteer under Gen. Arnold at the time he wen ton with reinforcements to the relief of the garrisson at Fort Stanwix. He was also a volunteer under Gov. Geo. Clinton at the time TO A PATRIOTIC PUBLIC, IX* he went north to intercept the retreat of sir John Johnson, and was one of the two scouts, who were selected by the governor, and sent from Crown Point, to scour the wilderness between that post and Schroon lake ; and also performed many other similar, important and hazardous duties, an account of which is now on record. He was also with the American armv from the time of its retreat from Fort Ed- ward to Van Schaii k's island, except when otherwise employed, and on its return to Bemis's Heights, assisting with his team in con» veyin^ the baggage of the army. He also re- mained with the army during its whole stay on Bemis's Heights, and until the time of Bur- goyne's surrender at Saratoga, and became familiarly acquainted with all the officers, and actually led out, or piloted three regiments to the field of action — the country then being principally a wilderness, and executed many other important duties. He also continued to live at the same place until the time of his de- cease in '33, and on the very ground and in its X. TO A PATRIOTIC PUBLIC. vicinity where those important battles and in- teresting movements of the two contending armies, of w^hich the author is about to write, took place, and consequently, the reader, he thinks, as well as the author himself, will say that he must of course, and beyond the possi- bility of doubt, have been familiarly acquaint- ed with every portion of the ground on which every action was fought, and with the move- ments of each and every brigade, rigiment, and batallion of the two contending armies, and especially of the American. In addition to the foregoing, the author will add, that, he being a man of well known abil- ity to communicate, and of strong and reten- tive memory, even of the most minute circum- stances, it isj therefore, more than probable, that he retained as far as it was possible for frail man to retain, a full, clear, and compre- hensive recollection of all the facts and cir- cumstances, which the author is about to dis- close, until they were communicated and of- ten repeated to and treasured up by him, in TO A PATRIOTIC PUBLIC. XI. all their simplicity and truth, and who now as a most faithful and humble servant presents them before a generous and charitable public. The author is well aware of his respon- sibility in as much as his own account in many instances, will differ very materially from the most, if not all of those who have written upon the subject. Not that he would mean to be un- derstood to say, that all others are intentional- ly in an error ; but on the contrary, when he looks at the materials out of which their super- structures have been erected, he feels more charitably disposed towards them than he other- wise would feel, had their premises been true from which they have drawn their false con- clusions. It has been frequently remarked, that in the original accounts given of the sever- al movements of the two armies, and especial- ly of the battles fought between them, there are no two who agree in their statements. This is a lamentable fact, and having been well weighed in the author's mind, more strongly confirms him if possible in the au- Xii. TO A PATRIOTIC PUBLIC. thenticitj of the account which he has re- ceived from those who had, and continued to have, the best possible means of observing and retaining the facts as thej transpired. The reader will bear in mind, that the time when those original accounts were written by the officers, or others connected with the armies, was a time of much confusion and alarm, and a time of the greatest excitement ; when the minds of the people generally, were on the ut- most stretch, to catch at something favorable on the one side, or unfavorable on the other; and consequently under such circumstances, and during the moment of such excitement, it is not to be wondered at, that all the accounts then hastily drawn up, and hurriedly despatch- ed to some general officer, or particular friend, should be wanting in many prominent particu- lars, and redundant in others. Gen. Washing- ton himself often complained of the many dif- ferent and conflicting statements which came to him, and which seemed at the time to baf- fle all conjecture. And the author would now to A PATRIOTIC PUBLIC. Xllh ask the reader to place his finger on one sin- gle sentence, which he can select from those original accounts, that has been altered or cor- rected by its author ; and if he is not able to do that, he would again ask, to which one of them, for they are numerous, will he give his assent, and reject all others as incorrect. In giving an account of some of the nume- rous incidents connected with Burgoyne's cam- paign, the author will do it in as few words as possible, and retain the substance of the facts as they transpired. As this is the author's first and only attempt at " book-making," and as he is duly sensible of the delicate situation in which he has very reluctantly placed himself — though his aim is sincerely to do good, by recording what he verily believes to be a plain and simple state- of facts ; he earnestly hopes, therefore, that all his imperfections either in style or arrange- ment, will be indulgently overlooked by the XIV. TO A PATRIOTIC PUBLIC. reader, of whom he will, for the present, take his leave with the following motto — " Truth ought always to be preferred before elegance of language." THE AUTHOR. BURGOYNFS CAMPAIGN, CHAPTER i. During the progress of the Revolutionary War, the British minister formed the scheme of opening a way to New- York, by means of an army which should descend from Lake Champlain to the banks of the Hudson, and unite in the vicinity of Albany with the whole, or with a part of that commanded by Gen. Howe. All intercourse would then have been cut off between the Eastern and Western pro- vinces, and it was believed that victory from that moment, could no longer be doubtful. This expedition to them, presented few diffi- culties, since, with the exception of a short march, it might be executed entirely by water. It was hoped that it would have been already effected by the close of the preceding year ; but it had failed in consequence of the obsta- \6 burgoyne's campaign. cles encountered upon the lakes, the lateness of the season, and especially because while Gen. Carlton, then Governor of Canada, ad- vanced upon Ticonderoga, and consequently towards the Hudson, Gen. Howe, instead of proceeding up the river to join him, had car- ried his arms against New Jersey. At present, however, this scheme had acquired new favor, and what in the preceding years had been only an incidental part of the plan of the campaign, was now become its main object. The entire British nation had founded the most sanguine expectations upon this arrangement ; nothing else seemed to be talked of among them but this expedition of Canada, which was shortly to bring about the total subjection of America. The junction of the two armies appeared quite sufficient to attain this desired object ; the Americans, it was said, could not oppose it without coming to a general battle, and in such case, there could exist no doubt of the result. The ministers had taken all the mea- sures which they deemed essential to the suc- cess of so important an enterprise ; they had furnished with profusion whatever the gene- rals themselves had required or suggested. General Burgoyne, an officer of uncontested BURGOYNE's CAMPAIGW. 17 ability, possessed of an exact knowledge of the country, and animated by an ardent thirst for military glory, had repaired to England during the preceeding winter, where he had submit- ted to the ministers the plan of this expedition, and had concerted with them the means of carrying it into effect. The ministry, besides their confidence in his genius and spirit, placed great hope in that eager desire of renown by which they knew him to be goaded incessant- ly ; they gave him therefore the direction of all the operations. General Burgoyne arrived in Quebec in the beginning of the month of May 1777, and im- mediately set himself to push forward the busi- ness of his mission. He displayed an extreme activity in completing all the preparations which might conduce to the success of the en- terprise. Meanwhile, several ships arrived from England, bringing arms, munitions, and field equipage, in great abundance ; and every thing was in preparation for an exjjedition which was to decide the event of the war, and the fate of America. The regular force placed at the disposal of Burgoyne, consisting of British and German troops, amounted to upwards of seven thou- 18 burgoyne's campaign* sand merij exclusive of a corps of artillerj com- posed of about five hundred. To these were added a detachment of seven hundred rangers, under Col. St. Ledger, destined to make an excursion into the Mohawk country, and to seize Fort Stanwix, otherwise called Fort Schuyler, This corps consisted of some com- panies of English infantry, of recruits from New-York, Hanau chasseurs, and of a party of Canadians and savages. He was also join- ed by about two thousand Canadians including axemen, and other workmen, whose services, it was foreseen, would be much needed to ren- der the ways practicable. A sufficient num- ber of seamen had been assembled for man- ning the transports upon the lakes and upon the Hudson. Besides the Canadians that were to be immediately attached to the army, many others were called upon to scour the wood in the frontiers, and to occupy the in- termediate posts between the army which ad- vanced towards the Hudson, and that which remained for the protection of Canada ; the latter amounted, including the Highland emi- grants to upwards of three thousand men. In addition to the foregoing, a host of savages from their avidity to grasp the presents of the BURGOrNE's CAMPAIGN. 19 English or from their innate thirst for blood and plunder, were induced to join the British army. Never, perhaps, was an army of no greater force than this accompanied by so for- midable a train of artillery, as well from the number of pieces as from the skill of those who served it. This powerful apparatus was considered eminently sufficient to disperse without effort an undisciplined enemy in the open country, or to dislodge him from any difficult places. The generals who seconded Burgoyne in this expedition were all able and excellent officers. The principal were major- general Philips, of the artillery, who had dis- tinguished himself in the wars of Germany, the brigadier-generals Frazer, Powal, and Hamilton, with the Brunswick major-general baron Reidesel, and brigadier-generals Specht and Goll. The whole army shared in the ar- dor and hopes of its chiefs, not a doubt was entertained of an approaching triumph, and the conquest of America. The preparations being at length completed, and all the troops, as well national as auxiliary, having arrived, Burgoyne proceeded to encamp near the little river Bouquet, in now Essex county, upon the west bank of Lake Champlain, at no great dis- 20 BURGOYiNE's CAMPAIGN. tance to the north of Crown Point. As the time for commencing hostilities was near at hand and dreading the consequences of the bar- barity of the savages, which, besides the disho- nor it reflected on the British arms, might prove essentially prejudicial to the success of the ex- pedition, he made a speech to them, calculated, in terms of singular energy, to excite their ardor in the common cause, and at the same time to repress their ferocious propensities. While on the one hand general Burgoyne attempted to mitigate the natural ferocity of the Indians, he endeavored on the other, to render them an object of terror with those who persisted in resistance. For this purpose, on the twenty-ninth of June, he issued a general proclamation from his camp at Putnam Creek, wherein he magnified the force of the British armies and fleets which were about to embrace and to crush every part of America, He had come, he continued, with a numerous and ve- teran army, to put an end to the enormities of the people. He invited the well-disposed to join him, and assist in redeeming their country from slavery, and in the re-establishment of legal government. He promised protection and security to all those who should continue burgotne's campaign. 21 quietly to pursue their occupations ; who should abstain from removing their cattle or corn, or any species of forage ; from breaking up the bridges, or obstructing the roads, and in a word, from committing any act of hostilities ; and who, on the contrary, should furnish the camp with all sorts of provisions, assured, as they might be, of receiving tUv, full value thereof in solid coin. But against the contu- macious, and those who should persist in re- bellion, he denounced the most terrible war; he w^arned them that justice and vengeance were about to overtake them accompanied with devastation, famine, and all the calamities of war in their train. Finally, he admon- ished them not to flatter themselves, that distance or coverts could screen them from his pursuit, for he had only to let loose the thou- sands of Indians that were under his direction, to discover in their most secret retreats, and to punish with condign severity the hardened enemies of Great Britian. That fearless people who inhabited the pro- vinces, and especially New England, far from allowiiig this manifesto to terrify them, were much inclined to deride it ; they never met with each other without contemptuously en- 22 quiring what vent the vaunting general of Britian had found for his pompous and ridi- culous declamations. These preliminary dispositions accomplish- ed, Burgojne made a short stop at Crown Point, for the establishment of magazines, an hospital, and other necessary services, and then proceeded with all his troops to invest Ticondc^roga. From Crown Point, the British army advanced on both sides of the lake, the naval force keeping its station in the center ; the frigate and gun boats cast anchor just out of cannon shot from the American works. On the near approach of the right wing, which advanced on the west side of the lake', on the second of July, the Americans abandoned and set fire to their works, block-houses and saw- mills, towards lake George ; and without at- tempting any serious opposition, suffered Gen. Phillips to take possession of Mount Hope. This post commanded the American lines in a great degree, and cut off their communica- tion with Lake George. The enemy charged the Americans, on this occasion, with supine- ness and want of vigor ; but this charge seems not well founded : they had not men enough burgoyne's campaign. 23 to make any effectual opposition to the power- ful force which threatened to enclose them. In the meantime, the British army proceed- ed with such expedition in the construction of their works, the bringing up of their artillery, stores, and provisions, and the establishment of posts and communications, that by the fifth matters were so far advanced as to require but one or two days to completely invest the posts on both sides of the lake. Mount Defiance had also been examined, and the advantages which it presented were so important, that it had been determined to take possession and erect a battery there. This work, though at- tended with extreme difficulty and labor, had been carried on by Gen. Phillips with much expedition and success. A road had been made over very rough ground, to the top of the mound ; and the enemy were at work in con- structing a level for a battery and transporting their cannon. As soon as this battery should be ready to play, the American works would have been completely invested on all sides. The situation of Gen. St. Clair, who was in command of the Fort at Ticonderoga, was now very critical. He called a council of war to deliberate on measures to be taken. He 24 BURGQYNE's CAMPAIGr«. informed them that their whole effective num- ber was not sufficient to man one-half of the works; that as the whole must be constantly on duty, it would be impossible for them to endure the fatigue for any considerable length of time ; that Gen. Schuyler, who was then at Fort Edward, had not sufficient forces to re- lieve them; and that as the enemy's batteries w^ere nearly ready to open upon them, and the place would be completely invested in twenty-four hours, nothing could save the troops but an immediate evacuation of the posts. It was proposed that the baggage of the army, with such artillery, stores, and provi- sions as the necessity of the occasion would admit, should be embarked with a strong de- tachment on board of two hundred batteaux, and despatched under convoy of five armed galleys, up the lake to Skeensborough (White- hall,) and that the main body of the army should proceed by land, taking its route on the road to Castleton in Vermont, which was about thirty miles south-east of Ticonderoga, and join the boats and galleys at Skeensborough. It was thought necessary to keep the matter a secret till the time should come when it was burgoyne's campaign. 25 to be executed. Hence the necessary pre- parations could not be made, and it was not possible to prevent irregularity and disorder in the dififeret embarcations and movements of the troops. About two o'clock in the morn- ing of July 6th, Gen. St. Clair left Ticonde- roga, and about three, the troops at Mount Independence were put in motion. The house which had been occupied by Gen. de Fermoy was, contrary to orders, set on fire. This afford- ed complete information to the enemy of what was going forward, and enabled them to see every movement of the Americans; at the same time it impressed the latter with such an idea of discovery and danger, as precipitated them into great disorder. About four o'clock Colonel Francis brought off the rear-guard, and conducted their retreat in a regular manner, and soon after, some of the regiments, through the exertions of their officers, recovered from their confusion. When the troops arrived at Hubbardton, in Vermont, they were halted for nearly two hours, and the rear-guard was increased by many who did not at first belong to it, but were picked up on the road, having been una- ble to keep up with their regiments. The 3 26 rear-guard was here put under the command of Col. Seth Warner, with orders to follow the army, as soon as the whole came up, and to halt a mile and a half short of the main body. The army then proceeded to Castleton, about six miles farther — Col. Warner, with the rear- guard and stragglers, remaining at Hubbardton. The retreat of the Americans from Ticonde- roga and Mount Independence, w^as no sooner perceived by the British, than Gen. Frazer began an eager pursuit with his brigade. Major-General Reidesel was ordered to join in the pursuit with the greater part of his Ger- mans. General Frazer continued the pursuit through the day, and having received intelli- gence that the rear-guard of the American army was at no great distance, ordered his men to lie that night upon their arms. On the 7th July, at five o'clock in the morning, ho came up with Colonel Warner, who had about one thousand men. The British advanced boldly to the attack, and the two bodies form- ed within sixty yards of each other. The con- flict was fierce and bloody. Colonel Francis fell at the head of his regiment, fighting with great gallantry. Colonel Warner was so well supported by his officers and men, that the as- burgoyne's campaign. 27 sailants broke and gave way. They soon, however, recovered from their disorder, formed again, and charged the Americans with the bayonet, when they, in their turn, were put into disorder ; these however rallied and re- turned to the charge, and the issue of the bat- tle became dubious. At that moment General Reidesel appeared with the advanced party of his Germans. These being led into action, soon decided the fortune of the day, and the Americans had to retreat. The loss in this action was very considerable on the American side. Col. Hale, who had not brought his regiment, which consisted of militia, into ac- tion, although ordered so to do, in attempting to escape by flight, fell in with an inconside- rable party of the enemy, and surrendered himself, and a number of his men, prisoners. In killed, wounded and prisoners, the Ameri- cans lost in this action three hundred and twenty-four men, and the British one hundred and eighty-three in killed and wounded. Burgoyne having determined to pursue the Americans by water, the British seamen and artificers immediately engaged in the operation of destroying the boom and bridge which had been constructed in front of Fort Ti or Ti- 28 BlTRGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. conderoga. The passage being cleared, the ships of Burgojne immediately entered Wood Creek and proceeded with extreme rapidity in search of the Americans, who had taken that route ; all was in motion at once upon land and water. By three in the afternoon, the van of the British squadron, composed of gun boats, came up with and attacked the American galleys, near Skeenesborough, In the meantime three regiments, which had been landed at South Bay, ascended and passed a mountain with great expedition, in order to turn the Ameri- cans above Wood Creek, to destrov their works at Skeenesborough, and thus to cut off their retreat to Fort Ann. But the Americans eluded this stroke by the rapidity of their flight. The British frigates having joined the van, the galleys already hard pushed by the gun boats, were completely overpowered. Two of them surrendered ; three were blown up. The Americans now despaired ; having set fire to their works, mills, and batteaux, and otherwise destroyed what they were unable to burn, they escaped as well as they could up Wood Creek, without halting till they reached Fort Ann. Their loss was considerable, for burgoyne's campaign. 29 the batteaux they burnt were loaded with bag- gage, provisions, and munitions, as necessary to their sustenance as to military operations. General St. Clair, who had arrived with the van-guard at Castleton, in Vermont, upon in- telligence of the discomfiture at Hubbardton, and the disaster of Skeenesborough, which was brought to him at the same time by an officer of one of the galleys, apprehensive that he should be interrupted if he proceeded towards Fort Ann, struck into the woods on the left, uncertain whether he should repair to New England, or to Fort Edward. But being joined two days after, at Manchester, by the remains of the corps of Colonel Warner, and having collected the fugitives, he proceeded to Fort Edward, in order to unite with General Schuyler. After the surrender of Fort Ticonderoga, General Burgoyne endeavored to keep up the alarm, by spreading his parties over the coun- try. With this view. Colonel Hill, at the head of the ninth regiment, was despatched after Colonel Long, who with four or five hundred men, principally invalids and convalescents of the army, had taken post at Fort Ann, and was directed by General Schuyler to defend 30 it. Colonel Long with his party did not wait an attack from the enemy, but boldly advanced to meet them. At half past ten in the morning he attacked the British in front, with a heavy and well di- rected fire ; a large body passed the creek on the left, and fired from a thick wood across the creek on the left flank of the regiment : they then began to recross the creek and at- tack the enemy in the rear. Colonel Hill then found it necessary to change his ground, to prevent his regiment from being surround- ed. He took post upon the top of a hill to his right. As soon as he had taken post, the Americans made a very vigorous attack, which continued for upwards of two hours, and they would have certainly forced the enemy, had it not been for some Indians that arrived, and gave the Indian war-whoop, which was an- swered by the enemy with three cheers. The Americans soon after that gave way. The giving way of the Americans was caused not, however, by the terror of the war whoop, but by the failure of their ammunition. The fol- lowing is a very correct description of the scene of this action. On leaving the street of Fort Ann village. BURGOYNe's CAMPAIGPf. 31 there is a bridge over Wood Creek, leading to its left bank. Immediately beyond the bridge there is a narrow pass, only wide enough for a carriage, and cut, in a great measure, out of a rocky ledge, which terminates here exactly at the creek. This ledge is the southern end of a high rocky hill, which converges towards Wood Creek, and between the two is a nar- row tract of level ground, which terminates at the pass already mentioned. On this ground the battle took place, and the wood on the right bank of the creek, from which the Ame- ricans fired upon the left flank of the British, is still there, and it was up this rocky hill that they retreated and took their stand. General Burgoyne, as usual, claimed a vic- tory in this affair, which is understood to have been a bloody contest, as indeed it obviously must have been from the narrowness of the de- file, and the consequent nearness of the con- tending parties. Captain Montgomery, of Colonel Hiil's regiment, was left wounded on the field, and taken prisoner by the Americans, which could not have been the fact, had the royal party been victorious. Colonel Long, deeming it not prudent to remain longer at Fort Ann, as the main body 32 burgovtne's campaign. of the British arniy was on its near approach^, set fire to the fort, and withdrew with hi& Spartan band to Fort Edward. After the arrival of General St. Clair at Fort Edward on the twelfth, and of the fugitives, who came in by companies, all the American troops amounted to a little over four thousand- men, including militia. They were in want of all necessaries, and even of courage, in con- sequence of their reverses. The Americans lost in these different actions no less than one- hundred and twenty-eight pieces of artillery^ with a prodigious quantity of warlike stores^ baggage and provisions, particularly of flour, which ,they left in Ticonderoga and Mount Independence. To increase the calamity, the whole of the neighboring country was struck with terror by this torrent of disasters, and the inhabitants thought more of providing for their own safety, than of flying to the succor of their country in jeopardy. The country be- tween Fort Ann and Fort Edward, a distance of about sixteen miles, was extremely rough and savage ; the ground unequal, and broken with numerous streams, and with wide and deep morasses. General Schuyler neglected no means of adding by art to the difticulties burgoyne's campaigin. 33 with which nature seemed to have purposely interdicted this passage. Trenches were open- ed, the roads and paths obstructed, the bridges broken up ; and in the only practicable defiles immense trees were cut in such a manner on both sides, of the road, as to fall across and lengthwise, which with their branches inter- woven, presented an insurmountable barrier; in a word, this wilderness, in itself so horrible, was thus rendered almost absolutely impene- trable. He also directed the cattle to be re- moved to the most distant places, and the stores and baggage from Fort George to Fort Edward, that articles of such necessity for his troops might not fall into the hands of the enemy. He urgently demanded that all the regiments of regular troops found in the adja- cent provinces, should be sent without delay to join him ; he also made earnest calls upon the militia of New England and New York. While he thus occupied himself with so much ardor. General Burgoyne was detained at Skeenesborough as well by the difficul- ty of the ground he had to pass, as be- cause he had to wait for the arrival of tents, baggage, artillery and provisions, so absolute- ly necessary before plunging himself into these 34 bukgoyine's campaign. fearful solitudes. His army at this time was disposed in the following manner : the right occupied the heights of Skeenesborough, the German division of Reidesel forming its ex- tremity; the left, composed of Brunswickers, extending into the plain, rested upon the river at Castleton, and the brigade of Frazer formed the centre. The regiment of Hessians of Hanau was posted at the source of East Creek, to protect the camp of Castleton and the bat- teaux upon Wood Creek, against the incur- sions of Warner, who had been detached with his regiment into the state of Vermont, with orders to assemble the militia of the country, and to make incursions towards Ticonderoga. In the meantime, indefatigable labor was ex- erted in removing all obstacles to the naviga- tion of Wood Creek, and also in clearing pas- sages and opening roads through the country about Fort Ann. The design of Burgoyne was, that the main body of the army should penetrate through the wilderness we have just described to Fort Edward, while another co- lumn under General Phillips embarking at Ti- conderoga, should proceed up Lake George, reduce the fort of that name situated at its southern extremity, and afterwards rejoin him burgoyne's campaign. SB at Fort Edward. Upon the acquisition of Fort George, the stores, provisions and neces- saries were to be conveyed to the camp by way of the lake, the navigation of which was easier and more expeditious than that of Wood Creek, and there was, besides, a good w^agon road between the two posts. Such were the efforts made by the two belligerents ; the English believing themselves secure of victory; the Americans hardly venturing to hope for better fortune. CHAPTER II. In the meantime. Colonel St. Leger, whose detachment had been reinforced by a large body of Indians under Brant, (alias Tayadanaga) the great captain of the Six Nations, went up the St. Lawrence, then to Oswego, and from thence to Fort Stanwix. From this point it was intended to pass down the Mohawk and join the forces of Burgoyne at Albany. In June '76, general Schuyler, who had the com- mand of the north western frontier, sent Colonel Dayton to repair the works at Fort Stanwix : 36 burgoyjse's campaign. he seems to have done little towards effecting this object ; he however, thought proper to change its name to Fort Schujier, which name it retained during the war. The last of April '77, Colonel Peter Gansevoort with the third regiment of the New- York line of troops, was sent to supply his place. Fort Stanwix, which stood on the present site of the village of Rome in Oneida county, and named from General Stanwix, was origi- nally erected in the year 1758, during the French war. It occupied a position command- ing the carrying place between the navigable waters of the Mohawk and Wood Creek, and was regarded as the key to the communication between Canada and the settlements on the Mohawk. It was originally a square fort, hav- ing four bastions surmounting a broad and deep ditch, with a covert way and glacis. In the centre of the ditch, a row of perpendicular pickets was planted, and another horizontal row fixed around the ramparts. But although the principal fortress had been erected at the enormous expense for those times of $266,400, yet at the commencement of the revolutionary war the whole was in ruins. On the third of August, Colonel St. Leger burgoyne's campaign. 37 arrived before the fort with his whole force, consisting of a motlj collection of British re- gulars, Hessians, Tories, and about one thou- sand Indians. The garrison under Col. Ganse- voort, consisted of about seven hundred and fifty men. Soon after his arrival, St. Leger sent a flag into the fort with a manifesto, ad- vising submission to the mercy of the king, and denouncing severe vengeance against those who should continue in their unnatural rebel- lion. This manifesto produced no effect on the brave garrison, who had determined to defend the fortress to the last extremity. Ap- prised of this state of things, and knowing the importance of this post to the United States, General Herkimer ;summoned the militia of Tryon county to the field to march to the suc- cor of the garrison. On the fifth of August he arrived near Oriskany with a body of upwards of 800 men, all eager to meet the enemy. On the morning of the sixth. General Herkimer determined to halt till he had received rein- forcements, or at least until the signal of a sortie should be received from the fort. His officers, however, were eager to press forward ; high words ensued, during which the two colonels and other officers denounced their S8 BURGOYNE's CAMPAIGfN. commander to his face, as a tory and a coward. The brave old man cahnly replied that he con- sidered himself placed over them as a father, and that it was not his wish to lead them into any difficulty from which he could not extri- cate them. Burning, as they now seemed, to meet the enemy, he told them roundly that they would run at his first appearance, but his remonstrances were unavailing. Their clamor increased, and their reproaches were repeated, until, stung by imputations of cowardice and want of fidelity to the cause, and somewhat ir- ritated withal, the general immediately gave the order — " march on !" The words were no sooner heard than the troops gave a shout, and moved, or rather rushed forward. Colonel St. Leger having heard of the advance of general Herkimer, determined to attack him in an ambuscade. The spot chosen favored the design. There was a deep ravine crossing the path which Herkimer was traversing, sweeping towards the east in a semi-circulair form, and bearing in a northern and southern direction. The bottom of this ravine was marshy, and the road crossed it by means of a causeway. The ground, thus partly enclosed by the ravine, was elevated and level. The burgoyne's campaign. 39 ambuscade was laid upon the high ground west of the ravine. The British troops, with a large body of In- dians under Brant disposed themselves in a circle, leaving only a narrow segment open for the admission of Herkimer's troops. Uncon- scious of the presence of the enemy, Gen. Her- kimer with his whole force, with the exception of the rear guard, found themselves encompass- ed at the onset — the foe closing up the gap on their first fire. Those on the outside fled as their commander had predicted ; those with- in the circle were thrown into disorder by the sudden and murderous fire now poured in upon them on all sides. General Herkimer fell wounded in the early part of the action, and was placed on his saddle against the trunk of a tree for his support, and thus continued to order the battle. The action having lasted more than half an hour in great disorder, Herkimer's men formed themselves into cir- cles to repel the attacks of the enemy, who were now closing in upon them from all sides. From this moment their resistance was more effective. The firing in a great measure ceas- ed ; and the conflict was- carried on with knives, bavonets, and the butt-ends of their 40 BURGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. muskets A heavy shower of ram now arrest^ ed the work of death ; the storm raged for an hour, and the enemy retired among the trees, at a respectful distance, having suffered severe- ly, notwithstanding the advantages in their fa- for. During this suspension of the conflict, General Herkimer's men, by his direction, formed themselves into a circle and awaited the movements of the enemy^ In the early part of the battle, wdienever a gun was fired hy a militiaman from behind a tree, an Indi- an rushed up and tomahawked him before he could reload. To counteract this, two men were stationed behind a single tree, one only to fire at a time — the other to reserve his fire, till the Indian ran up as before. The fight was soon renewed, but by this arrangement the Indians suffered so severely that they be- gan to give way. A reinforcement of the enemy now came up, called Johnson's Greens. These men were mostly royalists, who, having fled from Tryon county, now returned in arms against their former neighbors. Many of the militia and Greens knew each other, and as soon as they advanced near enough for recog- nition, mutual feelings of hate and revenge raged in their bosoms. The militia fired upon CAMPAIGN. 41 them as they advanced, and then springing like tigers from their coverts, attacked them with their bayonets and butts of their muskets ; or both parties in close contest throttled^each other and drew their knives — stabbing and sometimes literally dying in each other's em- brace. This murderous conflict did not continue long : the Indians seeing with wliat resolution the militia continued the fight, and finding their own numbers greatly diminished, now raised the retreating cry *' OonahP^ and fled in every direction under the shouts of the surviving m.ilitia, and a shower of bullets. A firing was heard in the distance, from the fort; the Greens and Rangers now deemed that their presence was necessary elsewhere, and retreated precipitately, leaving the victo- rious militia of Tryon county masters of the field. Thus ended one of the severest, and for the numbers engaged, one of the most bloody battles of the revolutionary war. The loss of the militia, according to the American account, was two hundred killed, exclusive of wounded and prisoners. The loss of the enemy was equally if not more se- vere, than that of the Americans. General 42 burgoyne's campaign. Herkimer, though wounded in the onset, bore himself during the six hours of conflict under the most trying circumstances, with a degree of fortitude and composure worthy of admira- tion. At one time during the battle, while sitting upon his saddle, raised upon a little hil- lock, being advised to select a less exposed situation, he replied, " I will face the enemy." Thus surrounded by a few men, he continued to issue his orders with firmness. In this si- tuation, and in the • midst of the onslaught, he deliberately took his tinder box from his pocket, lit his pipe, and smoked with great composure. After the battle was over he was removed from the field on a litter and convey- ed to his house, below the Little Falls on the Mohawk. At the time of the battle of Oriskany, when general Herkimer was advancing to the relief of the fort, a diversion was made in his favor, by a sortie of two hundred and fifty men under the command of Colonel Willet. Such was the impetuosity of Willet's movements, that sir John Johnson and his regiment, who lay near the fort with his Indian allies, sought safty in flight. The amount of spoil found in the enemy's camp was so great that Willet sent burgoyne's campaign. 43 hastily for wagons to convey it away. The spoil thus captured, twenty wagon loads, con- sisted of camp equipage, clothing, blankets, stores, &c., five British standards, and the bag- gage and papers of most of the officers. For this brilliant exploit, congress directed that Colonel Willet should be presented with an elegant sword in the name of the United States. The siege of the fort still continued, and the situation of the garrison, though not desperate, beo-an to be somewhat critical. Colonel Wil- let and Major Stockwell readily undertook the hazardous mission of passing through the enemy's lines to arouse their countrymen to their relief. After creeping on their hands and knees through the enemy's encampment, and adopting various arts of concealment, they pur- sued their way through swampy and pathless woods until they arrived safely at German Flats, and from thence to the head quarters of General Schuyler, then commanding the Ame- rican army at Stillwater. General Arnold was immediately despatch- ed with a body of regular troops and volunteer militia raised for the occasion, to the relief of Col. Gansevoort. As he was advancing up the 44 BUilGO^NE's CAMPAIGN. Mohawli, he captured a tory by the name of Hon Yost Schuyler, who being a sj3y was con- demned to death. Hon Yost was one of the coarsest and most ignorant men in the vaHey, appearing scarcely half removed from idiocy ; and yet there was no small share of shrewd- ness in his character. He was promised his life if he would go to the enemy, particularly the Indians, and alarm them by announcing that a large army of the Americans was in full march to destroy them. Hon Yost being ac- quainted with many of the Indians, gladly ac- cepted the offer ; one of his brothers was de- tained as a hostage for his fidelity, and w^as to be hung if he proved treacherous. A friendly Oneida Indian was let into the secret, and cheerfully embarked in the design. Upon Hon Yost's arrival he told a lamentable story of his being taken by Arnold, and of his es- cape from being hanged ; he showed them several shot holes in his coat, which he said were made by bullets fired at him when mak- ing his escape. Knowing the character of the Indians, he communicated his intelligence to them in a mysterious and imposing manner. When asked the number of men which Arnold had, he shook his head mysteriously, and point- burgoyne's campaign. 45 ed upwards towards the leaves of the trees. These reports spread rapidly through the camp. Meantime the friendly Oneida arriv- ed with a belt and confirmed what Hon Yost had said, hinting that a bird had brought him intelligence of great moment. On his way to the camp of the beseigers he had fallen in with two or three Indians of his acquaintance, who readily engaged in furthering his design. — These sagacious fellows dropped into the camp as if by accident, they spoke of warriors in great numbers rapidly advancing against them. The Americans, it was stated did not wish to injure the Indians, but if they continued with the British they must all share one common fate. The Indians were thoroughly alarmed, and determined on an immediate flight, being already disgusted with the British service. Colonel St. Leger exhorted, argued and made enticing offers to the Indians to remain, but all in vain. He attempted to get them drunk, but .they refused to drink. When he deter- mined to go, he urged them to move in the rear of his army ; but they charged him with a design to sacrifice them to his safety. In a mixture of rage and despair, he broke up his encampment with such haste, that he left his 46 burgovne's campaign. tents, cannon and stores to the besiegers. The friendly Oneida accompanied the flying army, and being naturally a wag, he engaged his companions, who were in the secret, to repeat at proper intervals the cry — '* They are coming /" " They are coming /" This ap- paling cry quickened the flight of the fugitives whenever it was heard. The soldiers threw away their packs ; and the commanders took care not to be in the rear. After much fatigue and mortification, they finally reached Oneida Lake, and there probably for the first time felt secure from the pursuit of their enemies. From this place St. Leger hastened with his scat- tered forces back to Oswego and thence to Montreal. Hon Yost, after accompanying the flying army as far as the estuary of Wood Creek, left them and retired to Fort Schuyler, (Stanwix,) and gave the first information to Colonel Gan- sevoort of the approach of Arnold. From thence he proceeded to German Flats, and on presenting himself at Fort Dayton his brother was discharged. He soon after rejoined the British standard, attaching himself to the forces under Sir John Johnson. Arnold, having quitted the main body, and 47 with a light armed detachment of only nine hundred men, set forward by forced marches towards the fortress, and arrived at the fort on the evening of the twenty-fourth of August, two days after the seige had been raised. He and his soldiers were welcomed by the garri- son with acknowledgements of deliverance, and the exultation of victory. The following incident, which took place near Oriskany, may be interesting to the read- er, as showing the unlimited confidence which might, in those days, be placed in the In- dians, when pledged to perform any certain act within their power. An old Indian named Han-Yerry, who dur- ing the war had acted with the royal party, and now resided at Oriskany in a log wigwam which stood on the bank of the creek, just back of the house until recently occupied by Mr. Charles Green, one day called at Judge White's with his wife and a mulatto woman who belonged to him, and who acted as his interpreter. After conversing with him a lit- tle while, the Indian asked him, "Are you my friend ?" " Yes," said he. 48 burgoyne's campaign. " Well, then," said the Indian, '' do you be- lieve 1 am your friend ?" " Yes, Han-Yerry," replied he, " I believe you are." The Indian then rejoined, " Well, if you are my friend, and you believe I am your friend, I will tell you what I want, and then I shall know whether you speak true words." ^« And what is that you want ?" said Mr. White. The Indian pointed to a little grandchild, the daughter of one of his sons, then between tw^o and three years old, and said, '' My squaw wants to take this pappoose home with us to stay to-night, and bring her home to-morrow : if you are my friend, you will now show me." The feelings of the grandfather at once up- rose in his bosom, and the child's mother start- ed with horror and alarm at the thought of entrusting her darling prattlet with the rude tenants of the forest. The question was full of interest. On the one hand, the necessity of placing unlimited confidence in the savage, and entrusting the welfare and the life of his grandchild with him; on the other the certain enmity of a man of influence and con- 49 sequence in his nation, and one who had been the open enemy of his countrymen in their re- cent struggle. But he made the decision with a sagacity which showed that he properly esti- mated the character of the person he was deal- ing with. He believed that by placing im- plicit confidence in him, he should command the sense of honor which seems peculiar to the uncontaminated Indian. He told him to take the child ; and as the mother, scarcely suffer- ing it to be parted from her, relinquished it into the hands of the old man's wife, he sooth- ed her fears with his assurances of confidence in their promises. That night, however, was a long one ; and during the whole of the next morning, many and often were the anxious glances cast upon the pathway leading from Oriskany, if possible to discover the Indians and their little charge, upon their return to its home. But no Indians came in sight. It at length became high noon ; all a mother's fears were aroused ; she could scarcely be restrained from rushing in pursuit of her loved one. But her father represented to her the gross indig- nity which a suspicion of their intentions would arouse in the breast of the chief; and half frantic though she was, she was restrained. 5 60 burgoyne's campaign^ The afternoon slowly wore away, and still no- thing was seen of her child. The sun had nearly reached the western horizon, and the mother's heart had swollen beyond further en- durance, when the ibrms of the Indian chief and his wife, bearing upon her shoulders their little visiter, greeted its mother's vision. The dress which the child had worn from home had been removed, and in its place its Indian friends had substituted a complete suit of Indian gar- ments, so as completely to metamorphose it into a little squaw. The sequel of this adven- ture was the establishment of a most ardent attachment and regard on the part of the In- dian and his friends for the white settlers. The child, now Mrs. Eells of Missouri, the widow of the late Nathaniel Eells of Whites^ boro, still remembers some incidents occurring on the night of her stay at the wigwam, and the kindness of her Indian hostess. Another — which occurred in relation to the siege of Fort Stanwix, and w hich evinced the fortitude and prowess of General Schuyler, in moments of difficulty. When Colonel Willett and his companion l^ieutenant Stockwell left the fort and got be- burgoyme's campaign. 51 yond the investing party, which was not done without passing through sleeping groups of savages, who lay with their arms at their side, they crossed the river, and found some horses running wild in the woods. They were soon mounted, and with the aid of their bark bri- dles, stripped from the young trees, they made considerable progress on their journey. It is well known that they reached Stillwater vil- lage, and begged a reinforcement. General Schujler, who then quartered in the house of Dirck Swart, Esq., now standing at the foot of the hill, and occupied by Mrs. Williams, called a council of his officers, and asked their advice. It is perhaps not generally known that he was opposed by them. As he walked about in the greatest anxiety, urging them to come to his opinion, he overheard some of them saying, " he means to weaken the army." The emotions of the veteran were always vio- lent at the recollection of this charge. At the instant when he heard the remark, he found that he had bitten a pipe, which he had been smoking, into several pieces, without being conscious of what he had done. Indignantly he exclaimed, " Gentlemen, I shall take the responsibility upon myself; where is the briga- 62 BtRGOlTNE's CAMFaIGH, dier that will take command of the relief? 1 shall beat up for volunteers to-morrow." The brave, the gallant, the ill-fated Arnold, started up with his characteristic quickness, and offer- ed to take command of the expedition. In the morning the drum beat for volunteersj and two hundred hardy fellows capable of withstanding great fatigue, offered their services, and were accepted. The result of his efforts is well known ; a stratagem, as before mentioned, was played off upon the Tories and Indians, which left St. Leger no alternative but a hasty re- treat. To General Schuyler's promptness and fearlessness, therefore, due credit should be given. The retreat of St. Leger, with the success of the American arms at Bennington, restored hope and animation. Tryon county, smiling through her tears, obeyed with alacrity the call to reinforce General Gates in the month of September following. Her militia mounted on horseback, some without saddles, others without bridles, sallied forth. If as uncouth in their appearance, they were equally as zeal- ous, as the knight of La Mancha. It is not our province to inquire into the po- licy or propriety of the change of commanders burgoyne's campaign. 55 of the northern army. General Schuyler was always a favorite with the inhabitants of New York. Those few survivors, who have come down to us, the relics of his day, still cherish his name in grateful remembrance. Tryon county owed much to his vigilance and atten- tion. He rejoiced with her when she rejoiced, and wept with her when she wept. Alive to her exposed situation, he was always ready to afford relief so far as it could be done con- sistently. Another — in relation to the same siege may be interesting to the reader. A man by the name of Baxter, who resided in the vicinity of the fort, being a disaffected man, had been sent to Albany, to be watched by the committee of safety. Two sons of his remained behind, and were extremely indus- trious, taking every opportunity to keep their farm in order, notwithstanding its being in the vicinity of the hostile parties. They were so successful, and so little disturbed by the Brit- ish, that the Americans began to suspect that they were on too good terms with the enemy. Their father's character kept up the suspicion. One day, as it subsequently appeared, one of 64 burgoyne's campaign. the sons, who was working with a wheel plough, in cutting his furrows, would every few minutes approach a fence which was be- tween him and the enemy. After several turns, as he was making his last cut across the field, he felt his hands suddenly grasped with violence. Impelled by a natural desire to es- cape, he jumped forward, and seizing his plough cleaver, he turned on his antagonist, who was an Indian, and felled him to the ground. But a second approached, and with equal dexterity and nerve he dealt a second blow, which levelled the savage. Both were stunned, their heads being too obvious to es- cape the terrible blow of the plough cleaver. As they lay on the ground, he alternately struck them over their heads with all his might, and then setting his horses clear from the plough, he came to the fort and told them what had happened. His tale was not be- lieved, and when he offered to lead them to the spot, they suspected further treachery. They detained him to abide the event, and sent out a detachment to ascertain how the fact was ; and these found two savages lying dead at the place he mentioned. This brave feat procured the release of the father, and indeed rescued BURGOYNfi'S CAMPAlGiN. 55 the whole family from the imputation of tory- !sm forever. Another — respecting Abraham D. Quack- enboss, as being connected with the battle of Oriskany, may also be interesting. Abraham D. Quackenboss, resided in the Mohawk country on the south side of the river, at the breaking out of the war. Living as it were among the Indians, he spoke their lan- guage as well as he did his own. Among ihem he had a friend, named Bronkahorse — who, though an Indian, had been his play- mate, and they had served in the French war together under Sir William Johnson. When the revolutionary troubles came on, Bronkahorse called upon Quackenboss, and endeavored to persuade him to espouse the cause of the King — assuring him that their Great Father could never be conquered. Quackenboss refused, and they parted. The Indian, however, as- suring him that they parted as friends, al- though, since they had fought in one war to- gether he had hoped they might do so in the other. Mr. Quackenboss saw no more of his friend until the battle of Oriskany. During the thickest of the fight he heard his name 56 burgoyine's campaign. called in the well known voice of Bronka- horse, from behind a large tree near by. He was himself sheltered by a tree ; but in look-- ing out for the warriors he saw his Indian friend. The latter now importuned Ctuacken- boss to surrender, assuring him of kind treat- ment and protection, but also assuring him unless he did so, he would inevitably be killed. Quackenboss refused, and the Indian there- upon attempted to kill him. For a moment they watched each other endeavoring to obtaio the first aud best chance of a shot» The In- dian at length fired, and his ball struck the tree, but had nearly been fataL Springing from his covert upon the Indian, Quackenboss fired, and his friend Bronkaborse fell dead on the spot. It was the belief of Mr. Quacken- boss that the loss of the enemy during that battle equalled that of Herkimer's command. The latter suffered the most severely in the early part of the engagement — the enemy in the latter part. About the time of the investment of Fort Stanwix the following incident occurred : Captain Gregg went with two of his soldiers into the woods a short distance to shoot pi- 57 geons ; a party of Indians started suddenly from their concealment in the bushes, shot them all down, tomahawked and scalped them and left them for dead. The Captain after some time revived, and perceiving his men were killed, himself robbed of his scalp, and suffering extreme agony from his numerous wounds, made an effort to move, and laying his bleeding head on one of the dead bodies, expected soon to expire. A faithful dog who had accompanied him manifested great agita- tion, and in the tenderest manner possible lick- ed his wounds, which afforded him great relief from exquisite distress^ He then directed the dog, as if a human being, to go in search of some person to come to his relief. The ani- mal with every appearance of anxiety, ran about a mile, where he met with two men a fishing in the river, and endeavored in the most moving manner, by whining and piteous cries to prevail on them to follow into the w^oods. Struck with the singular conduct of the dog, they were induced to follow him part of the way ; but fearing some decoy, or dan- ger, they were about to return, when the dog fixing his eyes on them renewed his entreaties by his cries, and taking hold of their clothes 58 burgoyne's campaign. with his teeth, prevailed on them to follow him to the fatal spot. Such was the remarkable fidelity and sagacity of this animal. Captain Gregg was immediately carried to the fort, where his wounds were dressed. He was a most frightful spectacle; the whole of his scalp was removed ; in two places on the fore part of his head the tomahawk had penetrated the skull ; there was a wound on his back with the same instrument, besides a wound in his side, and another through his arm by a musket ball. This unfortunate man, after suffering extremely for a long time, finally recovered and appeared to be well satisfied in having his scalp restored to him, though uncovered with hair- About the same time three young girls who were engaged in picking berries were fired upon by the Indians. Two of them were kill- ed and scalped, and the third made her escape, wounded by two balls shot through her shoul- der. The foregoing statements need no com- ment. The men who employed such instru- ments, and who stimulated them by promises and rewards, have received the just execration of an indignant people. BURGOrNE's CAMPAIGN, 59 CHAPTER HI. During this interval, Burgoyne exerted him- self with extreme diligence in opening a pas- sage from Fort Ann to Fort Edward. But notwithstanding the ardor with which the whole army engaged in the work, their pro- gress was extremely slow ; so formidable were the obstacles which nature as well as art had thrown in their way. Besides having to re- move the fallen trees with which the Ameri- cans had obstructed the roads, they had no less than forty bridges* to construct, and ma- ny others to repair. Finally the-army encoun- tered so many impediments in measuring this inconsiderable space, that it could not arrive on the banks of the Hudson, near Fort Ed- ward, until the twenty-eighth of July. Gene- ral Schuyler, deeming his forces insufficient, in the present state of the fort, to oppose so powerful an army, and being apprehensive that Colonel St. Leger, after the reduction of Fort * These bridges, especially across the marshes, were principally constructed of logs laid parallel and conti- guous to one another, and covered with evergreen boughs ; many of the logs remain entire even to this day. 60 BURGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. Schujler, might descend by the left bank of the Mohawk to the Hudson and thus intercept his retreat, abandoned Fort Edward, and re- tired down the river to Stillwater where he remained a few days and then proceeded on to Van Schaick's Island* near Waterford, where he encamped with his army, and threw up numerous fortifications on that and Hauver Is- land. The left wing under General Arnold, and composed of two brigades and Colonel Morgan's rifle corps, was stationed at Loudon's ferry, on the south bank of the Mohawk, five miles above its confluence with the Hudson, to prevent Burgoyne from crossing at that place, should his march be continued thus far towards Albany. That event, however, was not destined to happen. * As a visit to " Bemis's Heights'* has become a sub- ject of increasing interest, and as the question, among numerous others, is frequently asked by people from all parts of the Union, who are not acquainted with the facts, why the American army, while under the com- mand of General Schuyler, encamped on and fortified Van Schaick's Island, with any expectation of oppos- ing Burgoyne in his march to Albany ; I will, for the information of the public generally, give the following explanation : At that time, there were no bridges across either the 61 At the same time the Americans evacuated Fort George, having previously burned their vessels upon the lake, and interrupted in va- rious places the road that leads thence to Fort Edward. The route from Ticonderoga to this fortress by Lake George was thus left entirely open by the Americans. The English, upon iheir arrival on the Hudson river, which had been so long the object of their wishes, and Hudson or Mohawk, nor were there ferries as plenty as they have been since ; the only ferry on the Mohawk, between the Hudson river and Schenectady was Lou- don's, about five miles above its mouth, where Arnold was posted with the left wing of the American army, for the purpose of preventing a passage at that place* There was another ferry near Halfmoon Point, (Water- ford), accross the Hudson, but that would only have been leading him out of the way on the opposite side of the river ; besides, the conveying so large an army over that stream in a common scow-boat, and at the same time subject to be opposed by the Americans who lay near by, would have rendered such an undertaking impracticable. Tho?e being the facts, his course neces- sarily lay acres the " Sprouts," as they were called, or mouths of the Mohawk, which, except in time of fresh- ets, were fordable, and by four of which that stream enters the Hudson ; the second and third forming Van Schaick's Island, across which the road passed, and was the usual route at that time. S2 burgoyne's campaign. which had been at length obtained at the ex- pense of so many trials and hardships^ were seized with a delirium of joy, and persuaded themselves that victory could now no longer escape them. But ere it was long, their bril- liant hopes were succeeded by anxiety and embarrassment. On the near approach of Burgoyne w4th so powerful, and as yet successful an army, with his horde of unrestrained savages, who were continually in advance and on his flanks, prowling about the country, plundering, mur- dering, and scalping all who refused loyalty to the British king; the inhabitants on both sides of the river in the wildest consternation and alarm, fled in every direction. The horrors of war, however mitigated by the laws and usa- ges of civilization, are at all times sufficiently terrific; but when to these the fierce cruelties of a cloud of savages are superadded, those only who are familiar with an American border warfare, can form an adeqate opinion of its atrocities. In one place a long cavalcade of ox carts occasionally intermixed with wagons, filled with all kinds of furniture hurriedly thrown in, and not often selected by the own- ers with reference to their use or value, on oc- CAMPAIGN, 63 casions of such alarm, were stretched for some distance along the road; while in another might be seen a number on horsback, and here and there two mounted at once on a steed panting under the weight of a double load, closely fol- lowed by a crowd of pedestrians, and some perhaps weeping mothers, with a child or two screaming in their arms or on their backs, trudg- ing along with fearful and hurried step. These found great difficulty in keeping up with the rapid flight of their mounted friends. Here and there would be seen some humane person assisting the more unfortunate, by relieving them of their burthens, with which they were encumbered ; but generally a principle of self- ishness prevented much interchange of friend- ly offices— every one for himself was the com- mon cry. To those who now sit quietly under their own shady bowers, or by the fireside long endeared by tranquility and happiness, it is left to ima- gine, with what feelings they hastened to aban- don their homes and their all, as it were, and fly for safety, they knew not whither. The men of this generation can never know what were the sorrows of those fathers that saw their children exposed to dangers and death, and 64 liUiiGOYiNE'S CAMPAlGNx what the agonies of those kind mothers, of whom my own respected mother was one, who pressed their offspring to their bosoms in the constant apprehension of seeing them torn from their embraces, to become the victims of savage cruelty. And it is impossible with sufficient force to describe the appalling dis- tress that many families experienced at that moment of peril and alarm. Burgoyne, always moved with great pre- caution, was always seeking intelligence, and if ever a general was well served by his scouts, or an invading army assisted by disaffected in- habitants, his was. Rank toryism and infa- mous venality fought against us on his side ; and if we had not been sustained by the Lord of battles, we should have sunk under the many difficulties that beset us. And it is a well known fact, that the ancestors of some respectable families in this vicinity, were ac- tively engaged in their secret exertions in fa- vor of Burgoyne. Among the numerous acts of savage cruel- ties committed by the Indians, was the tragi- cal death of Miss Jane McCrea ; an event which drew tears from every eye, and might furnish, if not too horrible, an affecting subject burgoyne's campaign. 65 for the painter or dramatist ; and which con- tributed soon after in a powerful degree, to ex- cite the mass of the Americans to rise against the British army. The following account of this tragedy, received through the politeness of Mr. William T. Baker, of Sandy Hill, cor- responds, in all the essential particulars, with the often repeated accounts given to me by my much respected parents, who were fami- liarly acquainted with Miss McCrea, and who received their information from those who were eye witnesses to the scene. The names of David Jones and Jane M'Crea are indelibly impressed upon the page of Ame- rican liberty, and the tragic fate of the latter forms an interesting and melancholy incident of the memorable wars of the Revolution. It has accordingly furnished a fruitful theme for fancy and " poetic imaginings," as well as for the graver and more authentic details of histo- ry. It has occurred to me that, after so much poetry and fable, the public would be grati- fied with a plain narrative of the truth of the lamentable transaction. This 1 think the more desirable, inasmuch as the published histories of this tragedy are both defective, and in some essential particulars incorrect. I have there- 6 66 burgoyne's campaign. fore obtained from Caleb Baker, Esq., a resi- dent of the village of Sandy Hill, who was born where he now resides, five years before the Revolution, (in April, 1771) a minute and authentic relation of this Indian scene, with many of the attending circumstances. Mr. C. Baker was not an eye witness of " the catas- trophe," for he was then a lad of six years of age, and was at the time at Stillwater, to which place his father, Albert Baker, Esq., had removed his family, on the 12th of July, 1777, soon after the evacuation of Ticonde- roga by the American army under General St. Clair, and on the 15th of the same month he returned to his house at Sandy Hill, (leaving his family at Stillwater) which stood at the southern extremity of the present village, just two miles north of Fort Edward, and remain- ed there till the 26th July, the day previous to Jane's murder, and fled to Fort Edward with the retreating fragments of scouts and detach- ments from its feeble garrison. From that place, then in plain view of the scene, he saw Jane shot from her horse by the Indians. On that day no one dared venture from the fort, but at early dawn of the morning of the 28th, Mr. A. Baker, in company with a file of men burgotne's campaign. 67 from the fort, went in search of the body of Jane, and found it naked and mutilated, with- in about twenty rods of the spot where they had seen her fall the day before, together with the body of an American officer, both stripped and scalped, and rolled down the declivity of the hill, against a large pine tree which had fallen longitudinally along the slope of the ra- vine, and partially covered with brush. They were borne immediately to the fort which the Americans evacuated that morning, and a small detachment preceded the retreating Ame- ricans, with the two bodies, to the right bank of a small creek about three miles below Fort Edward, in time to bury them in a rude and hasty grave before the main body came up. Mr. Baker accompanied the retreating Ameri- cans to Stillwater, and then related to his fa- mily and friends, among the number of whom were the author's parents, the melancholy fate of poor Jane, and all he had seen and done. This relation has been a thousand times re- peated by Mr. Baker, (and perhaps as often by the author's parents) whose memory is like a book, and as faithful and true as the record. Neither Mr. C. Baker nor his father, A. Ba- ker, found the murdered Jane while still 68 burgoyne's campaign. ** breathing," nor was she buried under the celebrated pine tree yet standing and common- ly shown as marking the spot where she was butchered. Nor was she found by her lover, a "reeking corse," and transported in a baggage wagon to Moses-kiil, and there buried by the orders of the British " general officers," as stated by a correspondent of the " Mirror." Nor were the Indians surprised by an Ameri- can scout crossing the river within sixty or eighty rods of them, and in their hurry and trepidation induced to murder her. There was no such scout. Every American not under British protection, that could reach the fort, had already fled to it, and none dared leave it on that day. There were no American troops or militia on the west side of the river, and the fort was on the east bank. There were no Americans, therefore, to cross from the west to the east bank toward the Indians. The In- dians had the wilderness and the field alone to themselves. Miss M'Crea was the daughter of a New- Jersey clergyman, who on the death of her mother married a second wife, and Jane came to reside with her brother, John M'Crea, who had already settled himself some five or six burgoyne's campaign. 69 years before the war, on the western bank of the Hudson, about six miles below Fort Ed- ward. This whole country was then an un- known wilderness, and Mr. M'Crea, the bro- ther of Jane, was one of the pioneer settlers. Five miles farther up the river, and on the same bank, and within one mile of Fort Ed- ward, was also located the Widow Jones, with a family of six sons, who also emigrated from New-Jersey some few years before the war. These sons were Jonathan, John, Dunham, Daniel, David (our hero) and Solomon. Three of these were already married and settled in the adjoining towns. John in Kingsbury, near three miles north of Sandy Hill, in what is now called Moss street. I mention this as marking the spot near which there was consi- derable skirmishing between the advance of the British army and Indians and the flying Americans, where several of the latter were killed on the 26th of July aforesaid. A very small part of the country was at this time thinly settled with emigrants, some from New Jersey, as before stated, and some from New England. Feeling their own feeble and de- fenceless condition, and what they deemed the irresistible power of Great Britain, with the 70 burgoyne's campaign. exception of the New England emigrants, and Mr. A. Baker, these scattered settlers were tories and loyalists, and on the breaking out of the Revolution some fled to Canada, and many who remained accepted British protection on the approach of Burgoyne's army. Among many others, the Joneses proved to be tories, and fled to Canada immediately after Bur- goyne's capture. In the fall of 1776, Jona- than and David raised a company of fifty or sixty men, under the pretext of reinforcing the American garrison at Ticonderoga, but they passed by the American fort and joined the British post at Crown Point, about fifteen miles farther down the lake. In the winter, Jonathan and David repaired to Canada, and obtained commissions in the British service — Jonathan as captain and David as lieutenant in the same company ; and they accompanied Burgoyne's invading army as pilots and pioneers against their own country. Miss Jane M'Crea was at this time about twenty-three years of age, and David Jones somewhat older. It is supposed that they had been acquainted in New- Jersey. At any rate an intimacy had grown up between the young folks in the solitude of the wilderness, from burgoyne's campaign. 71 which common report had inferred reciprocal love and the usual implied contract. On the twenty-sixth of July, JBurgoyne had penetrated with his main army through the wilderness and clay of Kingsbury, and his advance under General Frazer was encamped on a small ele- vation about a mile north of the house of John Jones before mentioned. The skirmish, as before stated took place this day, and the out- posts and scouting parties of the Americans were driven in and sought refuge in Fort Ed- ward, from the tomahawk and scalping knife of the Indians. By this time it would seem that Jane was somewhat apprised of the proxi- mity of her lover. But all this is matter of inference suggested by her movements. On this day Jane came from her brother's resi- dence to the house of Peter Freel (" the old Baldwin house,") who lived close under the walls of the fort, and remained there the suc- ceeding night. The next morning, after break- fast, she repaired to the house of Mrs. M'Niel, (afterwards Mrs. Campbell,) own cousin and intimate acquaintance of General Frazer, and who had recently emigrated from Scotland. This house stood about eighty rods north of the fort, at the point of junction with the main 72 burgoyne's campaign. road, to a foot walk leading in a direct line from the fort to an old breastwork on the first hill — overlooking the fort from the foot of the second hill. There was a marsh separated from the river by ground somewhat elevated, and joining its eastern bank, on which Fort Edward was erected. On the morning of the 27th our people in the fort sent out a recon- noitering party of about fifty men, under the commannd of Lieutenant Palmer, to ascertain the position and watch the motions of the enemy. They seem to have proceeded on to the plain about a mile north of the fort, where, on entering a deep ravine near the river, they fell into an ambuscade, or met a party of In- dians of about two hundred, and immedi- ately fled for their lives towards the fort. The Indians pursued and shot down and scalp- ed eighteen of them. The Americans rushed out of the plain and precipitated themselves down the hill and across the marsh, on the foot walk above mentioned, and such as es- caped, returned to the fort. Near the brow of the hill, the Indians shot down the com- mander of the American party, and the last private fell upon the causeway adjoining the foot walk aforesaid. Six of the Indians rush- burgoyne's campaign. 73 ed forward across the said marsh to the house of Mrs. M'Neil, (Campbell) where Jane had already repaired, as before stated. They seiz- ed them both and hurried them back, retrace- ing their steps, and rejoined the main body at the foot of the hill. There they placed Jane on a horse, which seems to have been provid- ed for the occasion, and reascended the hill. All their motions were intently watched from the fort, and at this point, the discharge of some rifles were heard, and Jane was seen to fall from her horse. The operation of the tomahawk and scalping knife were quickly performed, and the body soon dragged forward out of sight of the fort. This scene was en- acted about mid-day, and the next morning the bodies of Jane and the American officer were recovered and disposed of in the manner I have already related. The cause of this unprovoked and barbarous Indian butchery, has never been satisfactorily explained, and has always been, and ever will remain the subject of various and discordant conjecture. About one hundred of the Indians were of the St. Regis tribe, and another hundred of the St. Aux Geest, or some other tribe ; and 7 74 burqoyne's campaign. here the two parties quarrelled about the ho- nor or profits, or both, of taking her into camp ; one leader shot her from the horse, and the other scalped her. From the necessity of the ease, we must take their own account of the matter, if they ever rendered any, or that of Mrs. M'Neil, (Campbell), whose horror and alarm must have incapacited her for just observation. There is no evidence that she ever gave any explanation of the transaction. To her, it seems, they were indeed rough and ungenteel gallants. In their route back to the camp, they pursued the track of the lumber road, leading from Kingsbury to the fort, about a mile east of the village of Sandy Hill. On this road, distant two miles from the fort, there lived William Griffin, a tory, who had a protection from Burgoyne. The Indians stopped at this house, exhibited their scalps and said they " had killed Jenny." Among the rest they displayed her scalp. They had Mrs. Campbell (M'Neil with them, in a state of perfect nudi- ty, with the exception of her chemise^ and when they departed they took Grifiin with them, but offered no other violence. This part of the story is furnished by Sal. Griffin, as she was then and is still called ^ who was burgoyne's campaign. 76 then a girl of twelve years of age, living with her father. She still lives in or near the vil- lage of Sandy Hill, and is " the female at- tendant" spoken of by the correspondent of the Mirror. But the young ladies of this then wilderness had no female " attendants," and on this occasion, poor Jane had no female companion-, but old Mrs. M'Neil, (Campbell) The Indians delivered her in the condition I have described, to her cousin General Frazer, who was much perplexed and embarrased to provide a suitable robe for so corpulent a lady. The Joneses are said to have deserted Bur- goyne before the capture, and David is relat- ed to have died in Canada about three years after of a broken heart. It is also said, and probably with much truth, by those who pre- tend to authentic information, that he rushed into the midst of the battle of the 19th of September on Bemis's Heights, and was there slain. The following suggestions to this narrative may tend to elucidate the transactions related : The Indians, supposed by Mr. Baker to be dif- ferent tribes, were but different sections of the same tribe ; occupying the two branches of the St. Lawrence at the confluence of the St. Regis 76 river. St. Regis is the English pronuncia^ tion, and St. Aux Geest the Yankee sound of the French pronunciation of the same name* The efforts to account for the murder of Miss M'Crea, by ferocious savages^ furious with the recent onslaught, and whose keen appetites were sharpened by fresh blood, are palpable absurdities ; and imply a total forgetfulness of their known rule of warfare, and indiscrim- inate and unsparing slaughter. The induce- ments to strip and plunder Mrs. M'Neil, — (Campbell) were sufficient to account for the butchery of Miss M'Crea. The idea of Jones sending an Indian scout for Miss M'Crea is preposterous. It was not only ungallant, but wholly unnecessary for her safety. All who were so disposed, received protection from Burgoyne, and remained unmolested by the British or Indians. The Whig Americans had enough to do to take care of themseles, and had neither license nor inclination to punish the loyally of the majority. Jones knew that Fort Edward would be evacuated on the ap- proach of the British army, and Jane would have been found safe at Mrs. M'NeiFs or at her brother's house. It is probable, therefore, that Jane intended to avail herself of the pro- burgoyne's campaign. 77 tection of Mrs. M'Neil, whose loyalty and consanguinity were ample guaranties of her safety, and came to the house for the purpose ; and both she and the old lady would have await- ed there, the approach of General Frazer, had it not been for the unfortunate movement be- tween the American scouts and the marauding Indian party on the morning of her death. The horse was more probably stolen than pro- vided for Jane's comfort or convenience ; and had they been sent to the house of Mrs. M' Neil, General Frazer would have been made acquainted with the design, and would have provided for her as well as for Jane. The place of the rencontre too, forbids the pre- sumption, that this Indian party was sent to escort these two ladies to the British camp. They were lurking in ambuscade, in a deep ravine, some distance from the highway, be- tween that and the river where they had been seen early that morning, by a Tory who lived near the spot, for the very purpose, no doubt, of intercepting any American scouts or vedets. They pressed forward to the house of Mrs. M'Niel, because they were near it ; and it was out of reach of the guns of the garrison, more probably for plunder or the scalps of the flying 78 burgoyne's campaign. Americans, (some of whom they might have supposed to have taken refuge in the house) than for the ladies v\^hom they carried off and treated as prisoners. Miss M'Crea's name is inscribed on the west side of the pine tree before mentioned, with the date 1777, and no traveller passes this spot without spending a plaintive moment in con- templating the untimely and tragical fate of youth and loveliness, and dropping a silent tear in token of the inward workings of a sen- sitive mind. At the time of her death she was about twenty-three years of age, of midling stature, finely formed, dark hair, and uncommonly beautiful. About the same time, Mr. John Allen, of the town of Argyle, his wife, three children, and three negroes (the property of his father-in-law) were all murdered by the Indians. The negroes were sent for the pur- pose of assisting Mr. Allen in the harvest field, and it is supposed they were all murdered while at dinner. Allen and his father-in-law, Mr. Gilmer, were both Tories ; this created a great alarm among the Tories of Argyle, and they flocked in great numbers to Sandy-Hill to soli- cit from Burgoyne protection against the ma- burgoyne's campaign. 79 rauding savages. Upon which General Frazer made the following remark, " It is a conquer- ed country, and we must wink at such things." The Tories remonstrated, and Burgoyne hav- ing issued orders that those who held protec- tions from him must not be molested, a num- ber of the Indians left him and returned to Canada. General Gates in a letter addressed to Ge- neral Burgoyne, thus spoke of the cases above Cited : — Miss M'Crea, a young lady, lovely to the sight, of virtuous character and amiable disposition, engaged to an officer of your army, was, with other women and children, taken out of a house at Fort Edward, carried into the woods, and there scalped and mangled in the most shocking manner. Two parents, with their six children, were treated with the same inhumanity, while quietly resting in their own happy and peaceful dwelling. The mise- rable fate of Miss M'Crea was particularly aggravated, by being dressed to receive her pro- mised husband ; but met her murderers, employ- ed by you. Upwards of one hundred men, wo- men and children have perished by the hand of the ruffians, to whom, it is asserted, you have paid the price of blood. 80 burgoyjse's campaign. The British commander, in his reply to Ge- neral Gates, labored at some length, to make the best of his case, and, among other things, had the effrontery to say, that excepting the foregoing instance, his intelligence respecting the cruelty of the Indians was false. The effect of the incidents we have been detailing, and other recitals of savage crueltieSj not all, as General Burgoyne represented, without foundation, was extensive and power- ful. The cry of vengence was universal; and a spirit was aroused which proved of speedy and great advantage to the American arms. Often, when a boy, have I sat long and si- lent, in the family group, by the side of my much respected, now sainted mother, listening to her tales of alarm, suffering and distress, that pervaded this part of the country, in those troublous times ; and the dangers to which she herself had frequently been exposed. And often while reciting the tragic fate of her friend and acquaintance, Miss Jane M'Crea, and other equally savage cruelties, have I seen the " big tear " roll from her glistening eye and trickle down her cheek, glowing with the emotions of her heart. And even to this day, when I reflect on those scenes of savage cruelty, and with 81 what emotion thej were then recited, a sjm-' pathetic tear will insensibly steal from my eye, and I am involuntarily led to exclaim O ! my mother ! my much loved mother ! could I have been present to have witnessed those scenes of danger and alarm to which thou hast been ex- posed, and from which thou barely escaped with thy life, with one arm would I have en- circled that brow, around which the Indian's tomahawk thrice was brandished, preparatory to the fatal stroke ; and with the other would I have dashed to the earth, that ferocious sa- vage, whose scalping-knife, reeking with the blood of thy friends, was already drawn to execute on thee its threatened deed ! But a mightier arm was interposed for thy protection — He in whom thou thou trusted was there — for at the critical moment, when there seemed no possible escape, a file of men approached, as if specially and providentially directed — the sharp crack of rifles was heard in the distance — the fatal balls were sped — two cruel savages fell dead at thy feet, and thou alone, the joy of thy friends, wast saved, to relate the sad story of thy three murdered companions ! 'Tis faith thus wrought, whose fearful mysteries Yield e'en weak woman strenofih for deeds like these. 82 burgoyne's campaign. It may be supposed from my relation of so many of the numerous scenes, and some of them heart-rending, through which my own friends have passed, that they were the only persons who suffered in those trying times. My intention is not to be so understood, nor do I suppose that the many trials through which they passed, were greater than those of many others; yet the relation of them, by be- ing often repeated, have become more familiar, and consequently better enables me to give a correct account of them. The subsequent tragic scene, though I do not now recollect all the particulars, I will re- count in substance, as follows : — My step-grandfather, had been very ac- tive among the Indians and Tories, and un- derstood their manner of warfare so well, that he was often selected to head volunteer parties, who went in pursuit of them, in their maraud- ing expeditions, and was generally very suc- cessful ; for which they owed him a grudge, and tried many ways to decoy and take him ; but he had always eluded them. It happened on a time when it was supposed there were no Indians in the vicinity, and the inhabitants all felt secure, that my father was burgoyne's campaign. 83 gone from home on business with the commit- tee of safety, leaving my grandfather, grand- mother, and mother, at home alone — they all occupying the same house at the time. Soon after dark, a little dog which they had, and which was then in the house, for some mo- ments seemed to express considerable uneasi- ness, and at last ran to the door, and with a kind of howl, or unusual expression, immedi- ately turned and looked up, with much seem- ing concern, to my grandfather, whose keen perception in a moment led him to exclaim, '* Indians !" He immediately caught his rifle, which lay horizontally on hooks attached to a beam overhead, and opening the door stepped out. But he had no sooner passed the thresh- hold, than the sharp crack of three rifles were heard in rapid succession, and he staggered back, exclaiming, ^' Run for your lives !" and fell into the room. My mother and grandmo- ther, already horror-stricken, gave a sudden scream and immediately sprang out of an op- posite window, and ran to a neighboring house, about eighty rods distant, to give the alarm. It so happened that two distant neigh- bors, who had been out that day on a hunting excursion, called at the same house some ten 84 burgoyne's campaign. or fifteen minutes before, and hearing the fir- ing, were, in company with the occupant, lis- tening to ascertain its direction, if repeated. At the same time a horse was heard at a dis- tance rapidly approaching, which soon proved to be my father's, on which, having heard the firing, and suspecting mischief, he was riding at the top of his speed, and arrived at the mo- ment the alarm was given. Springing from his horse, and being furnished with a rifle, the four men immediately hurried on, regardless of any danger they might be rushing into. On approaching the house, it being then quite dark, they caught the glimpse of persons run- ning in the direction of a piece of woods near by ; upon whom they, in their hurry, fired at random. Having pursued on to the skirt of the wood, and seeing no more of the enemy, they re- turned to the house, where a mournful specta- cle presented itself. There lay the mangled and lifeless corpse of my grandfather, drenched in his own blood, and tomahawked and scalp- ed ; and on examination it was found that three balls had passed through his body. In searching, the next morning, at the place where the Indians, for such were they supposed to be, burgoyne's campaign. 85 were fired upon, they found blood in several places leading into the woods, evincing that some one of them, at least, had been wound- ed. It was supposed that the hostile party consisted of four Tories, and five Indians, as that number was seen next day, near Fort Edward, travelling north with a hurried step ; one of which limped considerably and lagged behind. A short time previous to the foregoing tra- gedy, my grandfather, at the head of Mty men, had a desperate encounter with about eighty Indians and Tories at Sabbathday Point,* in which the enemy were defeated, with the loss of forty killed and wounded. It was supposed that, in consequence of so signal a defeat, which was effected by means of an ambus- * Sabbathday Point is a low neck of land stretching into Lake George from the western shore, three miles from the little village of Hague. On Sabbathday Point, Lord Amherst with his armj'' stopped for re- freshment upon the morning of the Sabbath, and gave this beautiful spot the name by which it is now known. It is a charming spot, and susceptible of great embel- lishment. In the summer of 1756, a small body of Provincials who had retreated to this point, defeated a superior force of French and Indians, who had attacked them in gun-boats. 86 BURGOYNe's CAMPAiaN. cade, the Indians and Tories were determined, at all hazards, to destroy the man, who in this, as in many other instances, had been so great a scourge to them, and which they finally ac- complished, in the manner already related. At the time the American army under Ge- neral Schuyler was retreating down the Hud- son from Fort Edward, small parties of Tories and Indians kept pace with them along the opposite bank, and when an opportunity pre- sented, where the road was on or near the margin of that stream, along which the army passed, they would secrete themselves near the bank and fire across at the officers and men ; and in this manner they pursued them as far down as Stillwater, wounding many on the way. When the army was thus passing near E. Vandenburgh's, and opposite a shoal place in the river, an Indian waded out some distance and fired, hitting a soldier and badly wounding him in the hand. Another soldier, by the name of Dirk Van Vechten, who was marching in the same platoon, w^as so vexed at it that he was determined to avenge the in- jury. Accordingly he kept a sharp look out, and watching his opportunity, as soon as he burgoyne's campaign. b7 saw an Indian approach the river, he crept along on the ground, and laid himself down on the margin of the bank, behind some open bushes ; and as an Indian arrived at a spot in the river from which he raised his piece to fire. Van Vechten let drive at him, when the In- dian bounded, with a horrid screech, three feet out of water, and fell, and he saw no more of him. After that, the Indians were very care- ful how and where they showed themselves. CHAPTER IV. The progress of Burgoyne thoroughly alarm- ed the American states also ; it being well known that the American forces under Gene- ral Schuyler were not sufficient to prevent the capture of Albany, whenever it was reached by the enemy. Instead of thinking of sub- mission, the Americans met this alarming cri- sis with firmness and resolution, and great ex- ertions were made to reinforce the army. General Lincoln, of Massachusetts, was di- rected to raise and take command of the New England militia. Colonel Morgan, with his 88 burgoyne's campaign. riflemem was detatched to the northern army§ and Congress elected General Gates as Com^ mander. The appointment of General Gates, though he did not assume the command till after the battle of Bennington, created considerable ex- citement at that time in the public mind, and much dissatisfaction was expressed on account of that measure ; and with my limited means of knowledge, I have never been able to learn what good reason induced the removal of Gen. Schuyler. Few men in our country at that time ranked higher, in all the essential quali- ties of the patriot, the gentleman, the soldier, and scholar. The nobility of soul he possess- ed, distinguished him from ordinary men, and pointed him out as one deserving of public confidence. While the American army was thus assum- ing a more respectable appearance, General Burgoyne was making very slow advances to- wards Albany. From the 28th of July to the 15th of August, the British army was continu- ally employed in bringing forward batteaux, provisions, and ammunition, from Fort George, to the first navigable part of the Hudson river, a distance of not more than fifteen miles. burgoyne's campaign. 89 The labor was excessive, the Europeans were but little acquainted with the methods of per- forming it to advantage, and the effect was in no degree equivalent to the expense and time. With all the efforts that Burgojne could make, encumbered with his immense train of artille- ry and baggage, his labors were inadequate to the purpose of supplying his army with provi- sions for its daily consumption, and the estab- lishment of the necessary magazines. And after his utmost exertions for fifteen days, there was not above four days' provisions in store, nor above ten batteaux in the Hudson river. In such circumstances, the British general found that it would be impossible to procure sufficient supplies of provisions by the way of Lake George, and determined to replenish his own magazines at the expense of those of the Americans. Having received information that a large quantity of stores were laid up at Ben- nington, and were guarded only by the mili- tia, he formed the design of surprising that place ; and was made to believe that as soon as a detachment of the royal army should ap- pear in that quarter, it would receive effectual assistance from a large body of loyalists, who only waited for the appearance of a support, 90 eurgoyne's campaign. and would in that event, come forward and aid in the royal cause. Full of these expecta- tions, he detached Colonel Baum, a German officer, with a select body of troops, to sur- prise the place. This force consisted of about five hundred regular troops, some Canadians, and more than one hundred Indians, with two light pieces of artillery. To facilitate their operations, and to be ready to take advantage of the success of the detachment, the royal army moved down along the east bank of the Hudson river, and encamped nearly opposite Saratoga (Schuylerville) ; having at the same time thrown a bridge of rafts across the river, by which the advanced corps passed to that place. With a view to support Baum, if it should be found necessary. Lieutenant Colonel Breyman's corps, consisting of the Brunswick grenadiers, light infantry and chasseurs, were posted about five miles up the Battenkill. General Stark having received information that a party of Indians were at Cambridge, sent Lieutenant-Colonel Gregg, on the thir- teenth of August, with a party of two hundred men to stop their progress. Towards night he was informed by express that a large body of re- gulars was in the rear of the Indians, and ad- burgoyne's campaign. &1 vancing towards Bennington. On this intelli- gence, Stark drew together his brigade, and mi- litia that were at hand, and sent to Manchester for Col. Warner to bring on his regiment ; he sent expresses at the same time to the neigh- boring militia, to join him with the utmost speed. On the morning of the fourteenth, he marched with his troops, and at a distance of seven miles he met Gregg on the retreat, and the enemy within a mile of him. General Stark drew up his troops in order of battle ; but the enemy coming in sight, halted upon a very advantageous piece of ground. Colonel Baum perceiving the Americans were too strong to be attacked with his present forces, sent an express to Burgoyne with an account of his situation, and to have Breyman march immediately to his support. In the meantime small parties of the Americans kept up a skir- mish with the enemy, killed and wounded thirty of them, with two of their Indian chiefs, without any loss to themselves. The ground the Americans had taken was unfavorable for a general action, and Stark retreated about a mile and encamped. A council of war was held, and it was agreed to send two detach- ments upon the enemy's rear, while the rest 92 burgoyne's campaign. of the troops should make an attack upon their front. The next day the weather was rainy, and though it prevented a general action, there were frequent skirmishings in small parties, which proved favorable and encouraging to the Americans. On the sixteenth of August, in the morning. General Stark was joined by Colonel Sy- monds and a body of militia from Berkshire, and proceeded to attack the enemy, agreeably to the plan which had been concerted. Co- lonel Baum, in the meantime, had entrenched on an advantageous piece of ground near St. Koick's mills, on a branch of the Hoosick river ; and rendered his post as strong as his circum- stances and situation would admit. Colonel Nichols was detached with two hundred men to the rear of his left. Colonel Herrick with three hundred to the rear of his right : both were to join and then make the attack. Co- lonels Hubbard and Stickney, with two hun- dred more, were ordered to the right, and one hundred were advanced to the front to draw the attention of the enemy that way. About three o'clock in the afternoon the troops had taken their several positions, and were ready to commence the action. While Nichols and BUKQOYNPi's CAMPAIGN. 93 Herrick were bringing their troops together, the Indians were alarmed at the prospect, and pushed of! between the two corps ; but receiv- ed a fire as they were passing, by which three of them were killed and two wounded. Ni- chols then began the attack, and was followed by all the other divisions ; those in the front immediately advanced, and in a few moments the action became general. It lasted about two hours, and was like one continued peal of thunder. Colonel Baum made a brave de- fence : and the German dragoons after they had expended their ammunition, led by their Colonel, charged with their swords, but they were soon overpowered. Their works were carried on all sides, their two pi(3ces of cannon were taken. Colonel Baum himself was mor- tally wounded and taken prisoner, and all his men, except a few who had escaped into the woods, were either killed or taken prisoners. The work having been completed by taking the whole party, the militia began to disperse in search of plunder. But in a very short time General Stark received information that a large reinforcement was on their march, and within two miles of him. Fortunately at that moment Colonel Warner came up with his 94 burgoyne's campaign. regiment from Manchester. This brave and experienced officer commanded a regiment of Continental troops, which had been raised in Vermont. Mortified that he had not been in the former engagement, he instantly led on his men against Colonel Brejman, and began the second engagement. General Stark collected the militia as soon as possible, and pushed on to his assistance. The action soon became general, and continued with obstinacy on both sides till sunset, when the Germans were forced to give way, and were pursued till dark. They left their two field pieces behind and a considerable number were made prisoners. They retreated in the best manner they could, improving the advantages of the night, to which alone was their escape ascribed. The following facts may possibly elucidate the circumstances of the foregoing battles. On the approach of Col. Baum, he had for- ces enough, had he continued his march, to have taken all the stores that had for some time been accumulating at Bennington, as there were but few militia there at the time ; but a Yankee trick, (and what are the Yankees not up to ?) was played off upon him, as fol- lows. Three men, '' true to the core," in burgoyne's campaign. 95 whom General Stark placed the most implicit confidence, offered themselves as volunteers, to go to Colonel Baum, who was on his approach, and represent themselves as loyalists, and ask to be taken under his protection, and even ofTered to take up arms with him, and fight against the Americans ; and at the same time represented the Americans to be in strong force at that place, and that if he attempted to proceed, his troops w^ould all be cut to pieces. Upon this information, and placing great con- fidence in the " honest looks" of these men, Colonel Baum made a halt near the west line of Bennington, in the town of Hoosick, and sent to Burgoyne for reinforcements. Gene- ral Stark, taking advantage of the delay, col- lected together from the surrounding country a considerable number of militia, and having sent an express to Manchester for Colonel Warner to come on with the troops under his command, went out to meet Colonel Baum about five miles from Bennington ; and having approached to within about a mile and a half of the Hessian camp, he made a halt at Mat- thews's, where he remained with his troops through the night. In the meantime the Hessians fortified them- 96 BURG0Y^'E'S CAMPAIGN. selves on quite an elevated hill on the north side of the river, and directly east of the Bar- net house. This hill is of quite steep ascent from the river to the top, but of a more gen- tle slope in every other direction. On the top, in a sort of timber fort, they placed one of their field pieces, and the other on a level patch of ground at the foot of the hill, and near the margin of the river, for the purpose of covering the Tories, w^ho were posted on a small rise of ground, on the opposite side of the river, and who hastily fortified themselves by placing two tier of rails horizontally, and filling the space with flax that grew in the same field. Near the margin of the river, where the road crossed the bridge, and between the battery at the foot of the hill and the Tories' breast work, stood a log cabin well stowed with women at- tached to the Hessian army, one of which, on the approach of the Americans, in attempting to flee across the bridge to the Hessian hill, was killed by a musket ball. Along the road on the margin of the river, and leading from Bennington to Hoosick, Ge- neral Stark ordered a part of his troops to ad- vance ; and in order to make as much show as possible, he directed a number who had no BURGOYNE S CAMPAIGN. 97 arms to fall in with them, to draw the atten- tion of the Hessians that way ; while two re- giments were directed by a circuitous route through the woods, to gain the enemy's rear ; the plan was well concerted and promptly ex- ecuted. The Hessians, being now attacked in front and rear, fought for sometime with desperation, till at length, being too hotly pressed, they threw down their arms and fled; but were immediately pursued by the Ameri- cans, and nearly all killed or taken prisoners. The day was hot and sultry, and the men, after a long and arduous conflict, were almost exhausted. But, notwithstanding, on the ap- proach of Colonel Breyman with reinforce- ments, they again rallied as soon as circum- stances would permit, and Colonel Warner having arrived with his regiment, prepared for renewed action, and crowned the day with victory complete. In these actions the Americans took four brass field pieces,* twelve brass drums, two * These beautiful brass pieces of artillery were des- tined to undergo several of the vicissitudes of war. They are French cast, and were brought from Quebec, with the army of Burgoyne. They were afterwards inscribed, ** Taken at Bennington, August 16th, 1777," 9 98 burgoyne's campaign. hundred and fifty dragoon swords, four am- munition wagons, and about seven hundred prisoners, with their arms and accoutrements ; two hundred and seven men were found dead upon the field ; the number of wounded was not known. The loss of the Americans was but small — thirty were slain, and about forty were wounded. The consequences of this battle were of great importance. It animated the hearts of the people, more than fulfilling, in this respect, the happy prediction of Washington. But its and constituted a part of the artillery of General Hull's army, and fell into the enemy's hands at Detroit. When the British officer of the day ordered the evening salutes to be fired from the American cannon, who at the same time reading the inscription, *' Taken at Bennington, August 16th, 1777," observed that he would cause to be added as an additional line to the verse, " Retaken at Detroit, August 16lh, 1812." The guns were car- ried by the British down to Fort George, at the mouth of the Niagara river, where they again fell into the hands of the American army, which captured that for- tress. General Dearborn had them transported to Sackets-Harbor, and with them was fired the salutes in honor of Harrison's victory over Proctor at the river Thames, in Upper Canada. The guns are nov7 at th© city of Washington, where it is hoped they may remain in peace. burgoyne's campaign. 99 immediate effects were of the first moment. It not only cost the army of Burgoyne more than one thousand of his best troops, but it wholly deranged the plan of his campaign, and materially contributed to the loss of his army. By advancing beyond Ticonderoga, his communication with the country in his rear was interrupted. He relied on these la- teral excursions to keep the population in alarm, and prevent their flocking to General Schuyler, who at this time had the command of the northern army. He also depended on procur- ing his supplies by such inroads into the country. The catastrophe of Baum's expedi- tion, by which he hoped to furnish himself with an ample store of provisions collected at Ben- nington, disappointed that expectation, and compelled him to halt until he could procure them in detail from other quarters, and thus retarded his advance toward Albany for a month ; during all which time, the militia poured to the standard of General Schuyler, and placed the Americans in a condition to compel the surrender of the whole British army. In the memoir of Baron ReidesePs expedition, written by the baroness, his lady, it is stated that this judicious officer strongly 100 burgoyne's campaign, remonstrated against despatching Col. Baum, and the event of the expedition is declared "to have paralyzed at once the operations of the British army." After having rendered important services in the arduous campaigns of the French w^ar un- der Generals Howcj Abercrombie, and Am- herst, after sustaining his part gallantly in the fields of Bunker Hill and Trenton, and contributing much to the result of those im- portant actions. General Stark had the morti- fication to find himself overlooked in the line of promotion, and men who were his inferiors in rank, who had scarcely seen the fire of an enemy, or the smoke of his camp, promoted over him. He remonstrated to Congress, but all to no purpose ; and rather than submit to the injustice of the measure, he resigned his commission in the preceding spring, and re- tired from the army. When Burgoyne advanced from the north with so powerful a force, and all the energies of the country became necessary to repel his attacks, the authorities of his native state di- rected their attention to General Stark, rely- ing upon his military reputation and popularity to call out the militia of New Hampshire and burgoyne's campaign. 101 Vermont. At their request, laying aside the recollection of his wrongs, he called upon his friends, the yeomanry of his country, and they obeyed his voice. The victory of Bennington discovered to his astonished countrymen the rare spectacle of undisciplined militia fighting for their firesides and homes, and triumphing over British veterans. Mr. Jefferson, speaking of himself. General Stark, and Mr. Adams, then the eldest patri- archs of the revolution, in regard to the objects Vi^hich were most agreeable to the recollec- tions of each of them, makes use of this ob- servation : " Stark talked of his Bennington^ and exulted in his glory." Exultation in the usual sense of the term, did not belong to him. To all the committees from different states who congratulated him upon his success, his answer was, " that any other man would have done as well under similar circumstances." And well might the hero exult in his fame. He had struck an immortal blow in the cause of Liberty, which turned the tide of conquest against her enemies, and gave hope and con- fidence to his despairing friends in the common cause. It was not the loud shout of success- 102 BURGOYr^E's CAMPAIGN. ful ambition, but the honest expression of true patriotism, which characterised his triumph. The liberty of his country was the prize for which he contended — to free the land of his birth from foreign dependence, and not mere- ly the gathering of military laurels, was the ob- ject of this soldier citizen ; when that was ob- tained, he retired to domestic life, and never more solicited or received a public employ- ment. It must have been extremely gratifying to his feelings, to observe the effect of his suc- cesses upon Congress, late so hostile to his promotion, in drawing from them commissions and votes of thanks. It is, however, worthy of remark, that while Congress liberally bestowed upon distinguished actors in the great revolutionary drama, swords and medals in approbation of their services, the total defeat of a veteran army, the capture and destruction of a thousand men, and a death blow given to the hopes of the invader, was complimented by the Old Congress, with only a generous vote of thanks bestowed upon the hero of Bennington. in person General Stark was about the mid- dle size, extremely well proportioned, and in his youth was remarkable for vigor, activity, BUilGOVTNE's CAMPAIGN. 103 and the capability of sustaining fatigue ; as was proved during the French war, in which a single bearskin and a roll of snow was fre- quently the war-couch of our gallant veterans. He was a man of kindness and hospitality, which through life he extended to all his bro- ken down companions in arms, and all others who sought his assistance. One remarkable fact in the life of General Stark, is, that al- though often engaged in close and desperate combat with the French and Indians, and af- terwards with the British and Tories, in the Revolution, he was never struck by a shot, or wounded in any manner by the enemy. His character in his private, was as unex- ceptionable as in his public life. His manners were frank and open; though tinged with an ec- centricity peculiar to himself, and useful to so- ciety. He sustained through life, the reputa- tion of a man of honor, and integrity, friendly to the industrous and enterprising — severe to the idle and unworthy — society may venerate the memory of an honest citizen, and the na- tion of a hero, whose eulogy is written in the remembrance of his countrymen. 104 burgoyine's campaign* Congratulatory letter from General Schuy- ler to General Stark, written three days after the battle of Bennington. Van Schaick's, Aug. 19th, 1777. Dear Sir — I do myself the pleasure to congratulate you on the signal victory which you have gained'; please accept my best thanks. The consequence of the severe stroke the enemy have received, cannot fail of producing the most salutary results, I have de- spatched one of my aids-de-camp to announce your vic- tory to Congress and the Commander- ia-chief. Governor Clinton is coming u^p with a body of mili- tia, and I trust that after what the enemy have received from you, their progress will be retarded, and we shall yet see them clriven from this part of the country» General Gates is at Albany, and will this day reassume the command. I am, dear General, Your most obedient, PH. SCHUYLER. Several anecdotes in connection with the battle of Bennington have been recorded, of which the following is one. Among the reinforcements from Berkshire county came a clergyman, the Rev. Mr. Allen, of Pittsfield, with a portion of his flock, re- solved to make bare the arm of flesh against 105 the enemies of the country. Before daylight on the morning of the 16th, he addressed the commander as follows : '' We the people of Berkshire have been frequently called upon to fight, but have never been led against the ene- my. We have now resolved, if you will not let us fight, never to turn out again." Gene- ral Stark asked him if he wished to march then, when it was- dark and rainy. '' No," was the answer. '^ Then," continued Stark, ''if the Lord should once more give us sunshine, and 1 do not give you fighting enough, I will never ask you to come again." The weather clear- ed up in the course of the day, and the men of Berkshire followed their spiritual guide into action. Another — On General Stark's approach to the Hessian camp, and pointing out the ene- my to his soldiers, he declared to them that " he wonld gain the victory over them in the approaching battle, or Molly Stark should be a widow that night." Some two or three days previous to the time that Colonel Baum was detached to Benning- ton, a party of Indians and Tories were sent 106 on for the purpose of scouring the county be- tween that place and Fort Edward. On their way they captured and took with them Mrs. Hannah Coon, (now Mrs. Grandy) wife of Mr. Elisha Coon, a captain in the Ameri- can militia, and who was then absent on duty. Mrs. Coon was then in a very delicate situa- tion, and such as required momentary atten- tion ; but notwithstanding, she was compelled, as incapacitated as she was, to travel on foot with these ferocious savages and more brutal Tories. The second day after her capture her accouchment took place, where they halted for the night. In the morning after her con- finement, she, witli two other women who had also been captured, was again compelled to walk and carry her child, to the place where the troops under Colonel Baum encamp- ed, previous to the action with the Americans under General Stark. Before the battle, she says, the troops were in high spirits, and boasted much of their ability to subdue the *' rebel Yankees" as they called the Ameri- cans, and vainly endeavored to persuade a number, whom they had taken prisoners on the way, to join in the cause of the British kiner. But durinir the action, and while the burgoyne's campaign. 107 soldiers were repeatedly bringing the wound- ed into camp, she would laugh at, and ridi- cule them. Soon after the action commenced, she saw the Indians, she says, flying in all directions, and skulking behind trees, rocks, and other places of concealment. On the re- treat of the Indians, after the defeat of Colonel Baum, she was taken with them, and soon met the reinforcements under Colonel Brey- man ; when she returned to camp and remained during the second battle, and was again com- pelled to travel on foot with them on their re- treat to the place where they encamped dur- ing the night. Here, owing to her recent confinement and constant fatigue, she was ta- ken sick, and whether it was on that account, or on account of the hurry and bustle the troops were in at the time, being in momentary expec- tation of pursuit by the Americans, she does not know, but she was left without a guard, and managed to conceal herself and child imtil they had departed, when she made her escape. During those days of extreme suffering, distress, and alarm that she experienced, while in her delicate state of health, she was often threatened with instant death, if she refused to proceed or complained of inability ; and 108 burgoyne's campaign. once in particular, an Indian chief approached her with much ferocity, at a time when she was tantalizing them on their defeat, and ac- tually clenched up her child, which was lying on her lap, and drew his scalping knife around its head, and brandished his tomahawk over her, in token of what he would do if she did not desist ; and she thinks would have carried his threats into execution, had it not been for the interference of a humane officer. After her escape, and having undergone all the horrors of a cruel death, she with much difficulty returned home, where she remained alone (excepting her infant child), and in the midst of the wilderness, about three weeks, with nothing to subsist upon but a little salt pork, which had been concealed, and some old or seed cucumbers, that were left undisturbed in the garden, all their other provisions and even her cooking and other furniture having been taken away by the Indians and Tories. The cucumbers she scraped the seeds from and peeled, then roasted them in the embers, and though she was fearful they might kill her, yet, she says, she thought she might as well die by eating them as to starve to death — as the salt*pork she could not eat alone. burgoyne's campaign. 109 At the expiration of three weeks she was again taken by the Indians and Tories, who, she thinks, vented their malice particularly upon her, on account of her husband having taken sides with the Americans, as they would often speak of it. At this time she was com- pelled to cross the river with them, in advance of the British army, and was taken as far as Stillwater, but managed to make her escape during the action of the 19th of September, having suffered much during the time. But little do the junior matrons of these times of luxury and ease, know or feel of the suffer- ings and deprivations of those who inhabited this part of the country in those days of peril and alarm ; and there are but few, who suffi- ciently realize the price at which the dear bought liberties of our now happy country were purchased. Mrs. Coon, (Grandy) now lives on the same farm that her husband owned and occupied when she was taken prisoner — about two miles from Union Village, in Washington county. New York. She is, at the time of writing this narrative, ninety-three years of age, quite active, and her step uncommonly firm for a person of her advanced age ; and she bids fair 110 burgoyne's campaign. to live yet a number of years. On the reci- tal of her sufferings, a glow of resentment suffused her matronly cheek, and the fire of indignation would sparkle in her keen black eye; but in a moment she sprang upon her feet, with the seeming activity of youth, and broke out in raptures of joy, as though no sacrifice for her country had been too great, and exclaimed with much enegy of feeling : " But they got well paid for it! the first army," as she called it, " were most all taken pris- oners, and the second got defeated and had to run for their lives;" and " Oh," she says, ''how 1 rejoiced to see it, though I knew my own sufferings would be increased." And who is there so lost to his country's weal as not to exclaim with the patriot poet ? ''Amor (patrije) vincit omnia, et nos cedamus amori." The following incident took place while Colonel Warner had the command of the gar- rison at Fort Edward : While the Americans held undisputed pos- session of the posts at the north, it was a very common thing for the different commanders to exchange visits. Colonel Warner occasionally visited the commander at Fort George. On burgoyne's campaign. Ill one of these occasions, he was returning with two officers all of them mounled on horseback. As they were passing the Bloody Pond, where some hostile Indians had hid themselves behind an old tree, they received a volley of musketry from their concealed enemies. The two offi- cers fell lifeless to the ground, and Colonel Warner was wounded, as was also the horse he rode. He put spurs to the bleeding animal and endeavored to escape. One of the offi- cer's horses accompanied him, and the Indians pursued. As he rode on, his own occasional- ly seemed ready to fall under him, and at other times would revive and appear to renew his strength. The other horse kept up with them, alternately increasing and relaxing his speed, to keep pace with his wounded companion. The colonel in vain tried to sieze the bridle which hung over his neck, an expedient which prom- ised to save him if his own steed should fail. In this manner, and with all the horrid anti- cipation of a cruel death before him, he ma- naged to outstrip his pursuers until he reached Glen's Falls. There, as the uninjured horse came along side, he made another attempt to seize his bridle, and succeeded. He instant- ly dismounted, unslung his own saddle, threw 112 BURGOYNE's CAMPAICrf. it over the fence, mounted the other horse and rode off at full speed. He saw no more of his pursuers from this moment, but reached Fort Edward in safety. Not however, with- out being really overcome by his exertion, fa- fatigue, and loss of blood. What was also singular, was the arrival of his wounded horse, which lived to do good service in the field. CHAPTER V. Soon after the foregoing battles, General Lincoln, with a strong corps of militia from New Hampshire and Connecticut,conceived the hope of recovering for the States the fortress- es of Ticonderoga and Mount Independence, and consequently the command of Lake George. He knew that these places were guarded only by feeble garrisons. He advanced from Man- chester to Paulet. He parted his corps into three divisions : the first, commanded by Co- lonel Brown, was to proceed to the northern extremity of Lake George, and thence to fall by surprise upon Ticonderoga ; the second, led by Colonel Johnston, was destined to burgoyne's campaign. 113 scour the country about Fort Independence, in order to make a diversion, and even an attack, if occasion should favor it; the third, under the orders of Colonel Woodbury, had it in view to reduce Skeensborough, Fort Ann, and even Fort Edward. Colonel Brown, with equal secresy and celerity, surprised all the posts upon Lake George, and the inlet of Ti- conderoga. Mount Hope, Mount Defiance, and the old French lines. He took possession of two hundred batteaux, an armed brig, and seve- ral gun boats ; he also made a considerable number of prisoners. Colonel Johnston ar- rived at the same time under the walls of Fort Independence. The two fortresses were sum- moned to capitulate. But brigadier General Powel, who held the chief command, replied that he was resolved to defend himself. The Americans continued their cannonade for the space of four days ; but their artillery being of small calibre, and the English opposing a spiri- ted resistance, they were constrained to aban- don the enterprise and to recover their former position. About the twentieth of August, General Gates, having succeeded to the command of the northern army, soon after left the encamp- 10 114 BURGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. ment at Van Schaick's Island, and moved back with it again to Stillwater (Village,) fully de- termined to face the foe, and if necessary pur- sue him into his own confines. This was at first supposed to be an eligible position for throwing up a line of entrenchments, and a large party, under an engineer, were according- ly set to work for that purpose. But at the suggestion of the author's father and some others, who were actively engaged at that time, and who were well acquainted with the country, and upon a narrow inspection of the grounds, General Gates determined to change his posi- tion and occupy Bemis's Heights, which were immediately taken posession of and fortified. Burgoyne at this time lay nearly opposite to Saratoga, occupying old Fort Miller and the banks of Battenkill near its mouth ; but what were his further intentions General Gates had no means of judging. In this situation the deputy Adjutant-General Wilkinson, volunteer- ed to head a select reconnoitering party, and obtain if possible the desired information. He left the camp with one hundred and seventy men, under cover of a dark night (12th Sept.) and arrived by daylight at Do-ve-gat (Cove- Ville) about three miles below Saratoga (Schuy burgoyne's campaign. 115 lerville). Here he posted a greater part of his men in a wood near the road, and proceeded himself to the heights of Fish Creek ; from which position he discovered a cohimn of the enemy drawn up under arms on the opposite bank of the creek, within three hundred yards of him, and another column under march de- scending the heights below Battenkill. Being satisfied, from these circumstances, that Gen- eral Burgoyne was advancing, Colonel Wilkin- son returned to camp with his party, bringing with him three prisoners who confirmed the intelligence. The following is a description of the ground, [see map] and its vicinity, selected by General Gates, for the encampment of the American army. On the right bank of the Hudson, about three miles above the village of Stillwa- ter, and about twenty-five north of Albany, are extensive alluvial flats, about half a mile in width at the centre, and tapering towards their extremities, until they form a narrow defile of only about thirty rods in width, between the river and the river hills. In the rear of those flats, and even down to their margin, with the exception of here and there a small clearing, and those in the rough, was at that time a 116 dense forest, and in many places for some dis- tance back, the land was much cut up with deep ravines. The only road much traveled at that time, run along the margin of the riv- er, and through the defile at the southern ex- tremity of those flats, where a man by the name of Bernis kept a public house, the only one of any note, I have been informed, be- tween Albany and Fort Edward; and from whom the high land, back, derived the appel- lation of Bemis's Heights. From these cir- cumstances, an army approaching from the north, and especially with a heavy train of artillery and baggage, was under the necessity of passing along this road, and through this narrow defile. Here and on the Heights, Gates having determined to establish and for- tify his camp, immediately commenced opera- tions. Along the brow of the river hills he threw up a line of breast-works about three- fourths of a mile in extent, with a strong bat- tery at each extremity, and one in or near the centre, in such positions as to sweep the flats intervening between them and the river. From the foot of the hills, across the flats to the river, an entrenchment was opened, at the ex- tremity of which, on the margin of the river. burgoyne's campaign. 117 was constructed another strong battery; and another breast-work and battery a little in ad- vance of the last, and near where the road crossed Mill creek, the bridge having been broken up. These were the principal, and I may say, the only fortifications completed, pre- vious to the action on the nineteenth of Sep- tember. The engineer having the direction of the American works at Bemis's Heights, was the celebrated Polish patriot, Thaddeus Kosci- usko, who had also served in the same capaci- ty at Ticonderoga. This celebrated engineer came to this coun- try utterly unprovided with letters of recom- mendation, or introduction, and nearly penni- less, and ofiered himself as a volunteer in the American cause, and solicited an interview with General Washington. **What do you seek here?" inquired the General with his ac- customed brevity. "I come to fight as a vol- unteer for American Independence," was the equally brief and fearless reply. "What can you do?" was Washington's next question ; to which Kosciusko, with his characteristic sim- plicity, only rejoined, '*Try me." This was done ; occasion soon offered, in which his tal- ents, science and valor were evinced, and above 118 burgoyne's campaign. all his great character was duly appreciated. He was speedily made an officer, and further distinguished himself. He had not been long in America, when he had occasion to display his undaunted courage, as a captain of a company of volunteers. Generals Wayne and Lafayette, notwithstand- ing the heat of the battle in which they them- selves were fully engaged, observed with satis- faction the exertions of that company, which advanced beyond all the rest, and made its at- tack in the best order. " Who led the first company ?" asked La- fayette of his comrades, on the morning of that memorable day, the 30th of September. The answer was, " It is a young Pole, of noble birth, but very poor ; his name if I am not mistaken, is Kosciusko." The sound of this unusual name, which he could hardly pro- nounce, filled the French hero with so eager a desire for the brave stranger's acquaintance that he ordered his horse to be immediately saddled, and rode to the village about two miles off, where the volunteers were quartered for the night. Who shall describe the pleasure of the one, or the surprise of the other, when the Gene- burgoyne's campaign. 119 ral, entering the tent, saw the captain, still covered from head to foot with blood, dust, and sweat, seated at a table, his head resting upon his hand, a map of the country spread out before him, and pen and ink by his side. A cordial grasp of the hand imparted to the modest hero his commander's satisfaction, and the object of a visit paid at so unusual an hour. Kosciusko was appointed an engineer, with the rank of colonel, in October, 1776. After fortifying the camp of General Gates, he was sent to West Point to erect the works there. He was highly esteemed both by American and French officers. At the close of the Re- volutionary war, he returned to his native country, and was made Major-General under Poniatowski. In the latter part of his life, having no country of his own, he retired to Switzerland, where he died, Oct. 16th, 1817. During the time (near a month) that Bur- goyne, with his army, lay at and near Batten- kill, an incident took place, which I think worthy of notice, as showing the spirit and ardor of the Whigs, in those troublous times ; and their determination to cut off all supplies from the invading army. The Tories, or Cowboys, as they were then 120 burgoyne's campaign. called, were in the constant habit of plundering the inhabitants on both sides of the river, of their grain, poultry, and other kinds of eata- bles, and driving ofif their cattle, hogs, and sheep, vi^henever they could find them, for the purpose of supplying the British army vs^ith provisions, for which no doubt they were well paid. Though often pursued, and sometimes roughly handled by the Whigs, they still per- sisted. At one time in particular, they had collected and secreted in a deep dark ravine, branching off from Mill creek, a large quantity of provisions, such as beef, pork, flour, and other articles of consumption, with the inten- tion of transporting them, at some favorable opportunity, to the British camp. By acci- dent it was found out, and the place of con- cealment discovered ; upon which my father, at the head of about twenty resolute fellows, which he had collected together and well arm- ed, went on in the night, for the purpose of taking or destroying their plunder. On their arrival within a short distance of the depot, one of them crept slily along, when he dis- covered the Tories, about thirty in number ; five of whom appeared to be armed and keep- ing guard, while the others were in the act of burooyne's campaign. 121 loading four waggons which stood a short dis- tance from the depot, and which they had brought for the purpose of conveying away their stores. The assailing party then held a secret council of war, to consult whether, the enemy being so much superior in number, it was advisable to proceed ; whereupon it was unan- imously agreed that they should " go ahead," and made their arrangements accordingly. The place where the stores were concealed, was behind a point projecting from the oppo- site side, around which the ravine curved, forming the bank on the side of the assailants into a semicircle, around which, it was precon- certed, they should extend themselves in cou- ples, and silently approach the bank or brow of the hill, and at the word of command, " Come on, boys /" they were all to give a whoop, and rush on, though not to fire unless the Tories made resistance ; but in that case, to fight their way through in the best way they could. All preliminaries being arranged, they formed themselves in order of battle, and silently moved on to the brow of the hill form- ing the ravine ; and when my father, who was at the head, and as previously agreed, gave the word, " Come on boys !" they gave such hor- II 122 burgoyne'^s gampaigi*?, rid, continued, and frightful yells, and at the same time rushing down the hill like a mighty torrent, that by the time they had got to the bottom of the ravine, the enemy had all de- camped, leaving their arms and baggage a prey to the victors. The assailants not yet satisfied, pursued on a considerable distance, shouting, whooping, and making the woods ring with their horrid yells, as though a thou- sand Indians had been let loose upon the frightened fugitives. Having found no enemy in their pursuit, the assailants returned to the deserted camp, to examine their booty ; but as the Tories had not yet brought, or had con- cealed their horses, and having no means of bringing off the wagons, they went to work and broke them in pieces, as much as they could. Having stove in the barrels, and scat- tered and otherwise destroyed the flour and other provisions, they all returned home safe and sound, and much to the joy and gratifica- tion of their families and friends; bringing with them twenty-five stand of arms, with which Burgoyne had furnished the Tories, and which the victors considered lawful prize. Thus ended this hazardous and praisewor- thy exploit, and for which my father whs ho- burgoyne's campaign. 123 nored with the title of captain^ a title, as is now well known to many, by which, for a num- ber of years, he was addressed, and until he was appointed a civil magistrate, when the title was exchanged for esquire* About the same time, small parties of In- dians were seen prowling about the vicinity, of whom my father and a few resolute fellows had been in pursuit. On their return, he had occasion, while the others passed on, to call at a Mr. Ezekiel Ensign's, who afterwards, and for a number of years, kept a public house a little north of Wilber's Basin. While sitting there about nine o'clock in the evening, in con- versation with Mr. Ensign, a ferocious looking giant-like Indian, armed and accoutred in the usual costume of an aboriginal warrior, ushered himself into the room, and after eyeing them sharply for a momeat, he with one hand drew from his belt a huge tomahawk, which he flourished about his head in true Indian style, and with the other a long scalping-knife, whose glittering steel became more brilliant in the dazzling glare of a bright torch-light, and with vi^hich he exhibited, in pantomime, his dexter- ous manner of taking scalps. At the same timej with eyes flashing fire, and turning al- 124 burgoyne's campaign. ternalely from one to the other, as they sat in opposite directions, he accompanied his daring acts, in broken English, with threats of instant death, if they attempted to move or speak. Ensign being a cripple in one arm, having at some former time accidentally received a charge of shot through his shoulder, and feeling his own weakness, should resistance become ne- cessary, and being in momentary expectation of receiving the fatal blow, he became fixed and immovable in his chair, with a countenance of ashy paleness, Obstupuit, steteruntque comas, et vox faucibus haesit. On the other hand, my father, being a man of great muscular strength, and of uncommon agility, and having had many encounters with the Indians, for which they owed him a grudge, prepared himself, with much presence of mind, for a desperate event. To this effect, while the Indian, in his threatening manner, would momentarily direct his attention to Ensign, he would, imperceptibly and by degrees, turn himself in his chair, and in this manner would from time to time, keep silently moving by lit- tle and little, until he succeeded in placing himself in a position in which he could grasp burgoyne's campaign. 125 with both hands, the back posts of his chair. Thus situated, and knowing the lives of both of them depended altogether on his own ex- ertions, he watched his opportunity, and the moment the Indian turned his eye from him, he grasped the chair, and with almost the ra- pidity of lightning, sprang upon his feet, whirl- ed the chair over his head, and aimed at him a desperate blow : but the chair raking the ceiling above, and the Indian at the same time, and almost as quick as thought, dodging the blow, he missed his aim. The Indian, having recovered his position, immediately sprang, with a hideous yell, and with his tomahawk uplifted, ready to strike the fatal hhw ; but before he could effect his direful purpose, the chair was brought around the second time, and with redoubled force, athwart his head and shoulders, which brought him to the floor. No sooner had he fallen, than his assailant, dropping his chair, sprang upon him, and wrenched from his firm grasp, the dreadful weapons of death ; and would have disabled him on the spot, but Ensign, who by this time had recovered the power of speech, and sup- posing he intended to take the Indian's life, begged of him not to kill him in the house. 12G burgoyne's campaign. He then holding him in his firm grasp, called for a rope, which was soon procured, and with the assistance of Ensign, he succeeded, though not without a dreadful struggle, in binding the savage monster. By this time, two of the neighbors who had been alarmed by some fe- male of the family, came in, when he was shut up in an out-house, with the doors barred and left in their keeping during the remainder of the night ; to be disposed of in the morn- ing as circumstances might require. In the night, the guard believeing him secure, and allowing themselves to fall asleep, he made his escape, by removing some portion of the floor and under wall, on the opposite side of the prison to which his guard was posted, much to the regret, not only of his victor, but to many of the neighbors, who had flocked together to obtain a sight of the conquered savage. At another time seven of those maurauding Tories, who had distinguished themselves by a series of desperate acts not to be patiently endured by the community, were taken pris- oners, conveyed to Albany, and confined in the city prison, since known as the old mu- seum, and from which they once made their escape, but only to enjoy their liberty a few bdrgoyne's campaign. 127 hours, for they were soon retaken and con- demned to the gallows. The public indigna- tion was much excited by their conduct in prison, and the circumstances attending their being brought to suffer the sentence of the law. They were confined in the right hand room of the lower story of the prison. The door of their apartment swung in a place cut out lower than the level of the floor. When the sheriff came to take them out he found the door barricaded. He procured a heavy piece of timber with which he in vain endeavored to bat- ter down the door, although he was assisted in the operation by some very athletic and willing individuals. During the attempt, the voices of the prisoners were heard threatening death to those who persevered in the attempt, with the assertion that they had a train of powder to blow up themselves and their assailants. In- deed it was well ascertained, that a quantity of powder had passed into their possession, but how, could not be known. It was afterwards found placed under the floor, and arranged to produce the threatened result. The sheriff could not effect his entrance, while a crowd of gazers looked on to see the end of this singu- lar contest. Some one suggested the idea of get- l!28 burgoyne's campaign. ling to them through the ceiling, and immedi- ately went to work to effect a passage, by cut- ting a hole through. While this was going on, the prisoners renewed their threats, with vows of vengeance speedy, awful and certain^. The assailants, however;, persevered, and having pro- cured a fire-engine, placed it so as to introduce the hose suddenly to the hole in the ceiling, and at a given signal inundated the room be- neath. This was dexterously performed. The powder and its train were in an instant rendered useless. Still, however^ to descend was the di- fficulty, as but one person could do so at a time» The disproportion of physical strength that ap- parently awaited the first intruder, prevented, for some time, any further attempt. At last an Irishman, by the name of McDole,. who was a merchant, exclaim^ed, " give me an Irishman's gun, and I will go first !" He was instantly provided with a formidable cudgel, and with this in his hand he descended, and at the same moment in which he struck the floor,^ he level- ed the prisoner near him, and continued to lay about him violently until the room was fill- ed with a strong party of citizens, who came to his assistance through the hole in the ceil- ing. After a hard struggle they were secured, EURGOYNe's CAMFAlG.N. 129 and the door which had been barricaded by brick taken from the fireplace, was opened. They were almost immediately taken out for execution, and the mob was sufficiently exasperated to have instantly taken their pun- ishment into their own hands. The prisoners while moving up the hill to the place of exe- cution, wore an air of great gloom and ill na- ture. No one appeared to pity them, and their own hopes of being released by some for- tunate circumstance, as by the intervention of the enemy, had now vanished forever. Having arrived at the summit of the hill, near, or at the very place now covered with elegant and substantial edifices, north and east of the academy, they there, upon one gallows of rude construction, ended their miserable lives together. The transaction created considerable excite- ment, and was considered by the Tories as a cruel and unnecessary waste of life, and a sa- crifice to the unnatural feelings which had dic- tated the unhappy rebellion. By the Whigs, it was considered as a necessary example, de- manded by the nature of the times and the enormity of the offences they had committed, and they considered it notonly a justifiable, but 130 burgoyne's campaign. an imperious act of necessity, to inflict upon the offenders the full penalties of the law. CHAPTER VI. Burgoyne, having used the most unremit- ting industry and perseverance in bringing stores forward from Fort George, and having at length, by strenuous efforts, obtained about thirty days' provisions, formed the resolution of passing the Hudson with his army in order to etigage the Americans, and force a passage to Albany.^ * Albany has been memorable in American history. It was the rendezvous, and the point of departure, for most of those armies, which, whether sent by the mother country, or raised by the colonies themselves, for the conquest of the Gallo-American dominions, and of the savages, so often during^ the middle periods of the last century, excited, and more than once disappointed the hopes of the empire. It Avas scarcely less conspicu- ous in the same manner, during the war of the Revolu- tion, and during the late war with Great Britain. Few places on this side of the Atlantic, have seen more of martial array, or heard more frequently the dreadful note of preparation. Still, (except perhaps in some of burgoyne'3 campaign. 131 As a swell of the water, occasioned bj great rains had carried away his bridge of rafts, he constructed another of boats, over the river at a shoal place of the water, just above the mouth of Battenkill. And in order to cross, he encamped on an extensive flat or interval, about one hundred rods north of Lansing's saw-mill. The farm, till within a few years, was occupied by Mr. Thomas Rogers. Bur- goyne had quite an extensive slaughter yard there, which so enriched the soil, that its ef- fects are still visible^pn the corn crops and oth- er productions. On the bank of the river the early contests, with the Aborigines) it has never seen an enemy ; a hostile army has never encamped be- fore it ; nor have its women and children ever seen the smoke of an enemy's camp. More than once, however, has a foreign enemy, after fixing his determination for Albany, been either arrested, and turned back in his career, or visited the desired spot in captivity and disgrace. The French invasions from Canada, never came nearer than Schenectady. In 1777, the portentous ad- vances of the British armies from the same place, and of the British fleets and armies, from New-York, threat- ening a junction at Albany, and filling the- new states with alarm, and the Cabinet of St. James with prema- ture exultations, met a most signal discomfiture. 132 burgoyne'3 campaign. where the army made their flotilla to cross with their cannon, &c. they threw up an em- bankment, about twenty rods in extent, run- ning parallel with the river, and mounted with several pieces of cannon, to protect the army in case of opposition, while crossing. The re- mains of this bank are still visible, and are mostly covered with brush wood, which skirts the bank of the river. On the thirteenth and fourteenth of September, he crossed with his army here, and at a shoal one mile below, to the right bank of the Hudson, and encamped on the heights of Saratoga, (Schuylerville.) On the fifteenth, having succeeded in getting his artillery and baggage all across, he moved down as far as Do-ve-gat, (Coveville) where he halted two days, for the purpose of repairing the roads and bridges in his advance, for the more convenient march of his army. On the seventeenth he advanced as far as the " Sword- house," about two miles above John Taylor's, (which has been mistaken by many for the " Sword-house,") where he encamped for the night. On this day, Gen. Arnold, with about fifteen hundred men, was sent out to harass him and impede his progress ; but the country at that time was so thickly wooded, and the burgoyne's campaign. 133 land along the river hills and their vicinity, so cut up with deep and almost impassable ravines, as to render it impracticable to attack him in flank, and to attack so powerful an army in front would not have been advisable ; conse- quently he returned without accomplishing anything, excepting some slight skirmishing with the British advance guard. On the eighteenth Burgoyne continued his march as far as what is now called *' Wilber's Basin,"* at the northern extremity of the alhi- vial flats, before mentioned, and within about two miles of the American camp. Here he fortified his camp, with breast works and re- doubts, in a line extending from the river to a * Northeast of the American camp, and about five miles distant, is quite an elevated portion of land called " Willard's Mountain," from the following fact. At the time Burgoyne, with his veteran army, was encamped at and near Wilber's Basin, a man by the name of Wil- lard, in company with a few others, took a good spy- glass, and went to the top of this mountain, for the pur- pose of ascertaining, as near as possible, the number of the British troops, the situation of their camp, and to watch their movements, and made his reports accord- ingly; which, it was said, were of much benefit to the Americans, and from which circumstance, it has ever since retained the appellation of " Willard's Mountain." 134 range of hills about forty rods distant, and upon which, and the plain in the rear, was posted the division under General Frazer, and upon the very ground, beneath the surface of which, the bones of that gallant officer are now mouldering into dust. At this time the American army were dis- posed in the following order ; the main body, composing the right wing, and under the im- mediate command of General Gates, occupied the river hills, and the defile between those and the river ; the left wing, under General Ar- nold, and composed of General Poor's brigade, Morgan's rifle regiment and a portion of the militia, were posted on the Heights about three-fourths of a mile in rear of the river hills ; and General Learned, with his brigade and two regiments of militia, occupied the plain or centre. Thus circumstanced, the nineteenth of Sep- tember was reserved by destiny for an obsti- nate and sanguinary action, in which it was at length to be decided whether the Ameri- cans, as some pretended, could only resist the English when protected by the strength of works, or of woods, rivers and mountains, or burgoyne's campaign. 135 if they were capable of meeting them upon equal ground, in fair and regular battle. About ten o'clock, the British troops formed themselves in order of march, with a full de- termination of forcing their way through the American lines, and made their arrangements accordingly. Burgoyne's intention, as was afterwards authentically ascertained, with the center division, of which he took command in person, and the right wing under General Frazer, was by a circuitous route, to concen- trate their forces at the head of the middle ravine near the left wing of the Americans ; turn that wing, and fall upon the rear of the American camp ; at the same time a strong force composing the left wing, and artillery under Generals Phillips and Reidesel, were to move along the main road near the margin of the river, to within about half a mile of the American lines ; and at a given signal, make an attack in front and force their way through. And in order to keep up a perfect understand- ing between the divisions under Burgoyne and Frazer, and that composing the left wing, three minute guns were to be fired, at the junction of the former, for the latter to ad- vance 136 Bl!llGOiNK\s CAMPAIGN. As soon as it was ascertained that Burgoyne was on the advance, and in separate divisions, Arnold, feeling anxious to begin the *'• game," pressed General Gates with much earnestness to permit him to march out and make the at- tack in advance of the American lines, and solicited a portion of the troops composing the right wing. Gates at first refused, prefering to await his approach at the entrenchments, and, besides, it was at that moment some- what uncertain where Burgoyne intended his first attack, consequently he objected to the drawing oft' any of the forces from the river, as Phillips and Reidesel were already on the march. But Arnold, anticipating Burgoyne's intentions, which afterwards proved correct, and pressing with so much force, the propriety of an attack in advance, as a means of dis- concerting his plan of operations, and check- ing the progress of the left wing of the Bri- tish army, that General Gates finally yielded, and directed him to send out Colonel Morgan's rifle corps and a portion of the infantry, and to support them himself if necessary ; but re- fused any assistance from the right wing, ex- cepting Colonel ScammelFs regiment. It has ever been a matter of surprise, to those who BURGOyNE^S CAMPAIGN. 157 were present at the time, and well acquainted with the facts, that, after Phillips and Reide- sel fell back. General Gates did not allow Ar- nold to draw reinforcements from the right wing, in which case, the victory no doubt would have been complete. It has been stated by almost all who have written upon the subject, and even by Wilkin- son, of whom 1 may have occasion to speak hereafter, that the battle of the nineteenth of September was accidental in its commence- ment. It is true it may have been accidental on the part of Burgoyne, inasmuch as he did not expect the Americans would meet and at- tack him where they did ; but in the sense in which the idea of accidence appears intended to be conveyed, it never has been understood by those who were present and well acquaint- ed with the facts, and had honesty enough to relate them in all their truth and simplicity. If the attack was not intended by Burgoyne, as above stated, with due deference, I would ask, why did the left wing move down the river to within half a mile of the American lines? and why were those signal guns to be fired on the junction of the two divisions un- der Burgoyne and Frazer ? and why did their 12 138 burgoynk's campaign. baggage remain on board of their boats and other convejancesj all of which are well known and incontestible facts ? These are questions of moment, and ought to be satis- factorily answered by those who assert the ac- tion to have been accidental in its commence- ment. But to resume. Burgoyne, with the center division, followed the course of the stream now forming Wilber's basin, about half a mile, then struck off in nearly a southwest direction, and through some partial clearings, until he arrived a little south of what was then called ^* Freeman's Cottage ;" his front and flanks being covered by Indians, Provincials, and Canadians. The division composing the right wing, under General Frazer, took a circuitous route along a new road partially opened, lead- ing from the river and intersecting the road from Bemis's Heights, north, about two and a half miles from the American camp ; and from this place of intersection, proceeded south towards the American left, until they arrived at some high ground about one hun- dred and fifty rods west of Freeman's Cottage- At this moment, Colonel Morgan, who had been detached to observe the movements of 139 the British, and to hanass them as they ad- vanced, fell in with the Canadians and In- dians, in advance of Burgojne, at the middle ravine south of Freeman's Cottage, w^here he attacked them sharply, and drove them back till they were reinforced by a strong corps, un- der Major Forbes, about midway between the ravine and cottage, where a brisk engagement took place ; but the British were finally driven back to their line which was then forming, in an open wood in rear of the cottage, where they were again reinforced, and Morgan in turn compelled to retire. Major Dearborn, with a battallion of light infantry, being order- ed to the assistance of Morgan, whose rifle- men had been considerably scattered by the vigor of the attack, the battle was renewed about one o'clock. About this time, Arnold, with his command, consisting of a part of Learned's brigade and of the New- York troops, appeared on the field, and made an attempt to cut off Frazer, who was now rapidly ad- vancing, from the center division or main body under Burgoyne. But Frazer was, at the same time, endeavoring to execute a similar movement upon him, while neither of them was able, on account of the woods, to per- 140 eeive the movements of his enemy. The two parties met about sixty rods west of the cot- tage, on a plain or level piece of ground. Ar- nold exhibited on this occasion all the impetu- osity of his courage ; he encouraged his men with voice and example. The action soon became vvarm^ close, and bloody ; the enemy^ fearing that Arnold, by cutting their line, would penetrate between the right wing and center division, as was manifestly his inten- tion, hastened with two regiments of infantry and Brey man's riflemen, to reinforce the point attacked ; who poured so galling a fire into the right flank of the Americans, that, after contesting the ground inch by inch for more than an hour, they finally broke and gave way^ when Arnold was compelled to retire and re- sume his place in the line. The principal scene of the subsequent ac- tion, was on what was then called Freeman's Farm,^ of which the following is a description * " Freeman's Cottage,** or " Freeman *s Farm," as it was then called, lies about half a mile east of the road leading to the Quaker Springs, and is now occu- pied by the widow and heirs of William Leggett, de- ceased. A farm now owned by the heirs of Isaac Free- burgoyne's campaign. 141 of the ground. Iq front of Freeman's cottage was an oblong clearing, skirted by an open wood, about sixty rods in length from east to west, containing twelve or fifteen acres, and sloping to the east and south. About three o'clock in the afternoon, both armies were drawn up in a line of battle; the British, consisting of the 9th, 21st, 62d and 20th regiments of Hamilton's brigade, and Jones's corps of grenadiers and artillery, on the north, and the Americans on the south of this clearing. Burgoyne being now at the head of his army, and the Americans having been reinforced by four regiments under Lieu- tenant-Colonels Brooks, Cilley and Scammel, and Majors Dearborn and Hull, the action commenced, and soon became general, and the combatants evinced that ardor and gal- lantry which showed a determination to con- quer or die. Such was now the valor and im- petuosity of the Americans, which continued without intermission for more than an hour, that the British troops began to fall into confusion ; man, deceased, and immediately between the foregoing and the said road, then occupied by George Coulter, is often mistaken for the ded to. 142 BURGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. but General Phillips soon appeared with fresh men and a part of the artillery. Upon hear- ing the firing, he had rapidly made his way up the river hills, and through a very difficult wood to the scene of danger, and restored the action at the very moment it was about to be decided in favor of the Americans. The Ame- ricans being again reinforced by Gen. Learn- ed's brigade, the firing, for about three hours, was incessant, with continued and tremendous roar and blaze, filling the field with carnage and death. Few battles have been more ob- stinate and unyielding — at one point the Brit- ish are overpowered; but being reinforced, the Americans are baffled : these, being sup- ported and renewing their efforts, regain their advantages ; the same ground is occupied al- ternately ; the dead and w^ounded are now promiscuously mingled together; the British resort repeatedly to their bayonets, without ef- fect ; the Americans resist and foil their at- tempts. Major Jones of the British artillery, had the command of four pieces of cannon, which he conducted with great skill and valor till he fell, and thirty-six out of forty-eight of his artille- rymen were either killed or wounded ; his 143 cannon were repeatedly taken and retaken, but finally remained with the enemy for want of horses to bring them off. The sixty-second regiment, under Colonel Anstruther, of Hamil- ton's brigade, was also literally cut to pieces ; after the action it did not exceed sixty men, and five or six officers, fit for duty. The Co- lonel and his Major, Harnage, were wounded. During the engagement a number of the Ame- ricans placed themselves in the boughs of high trees, in the rear and flanks, and took every opportunity of destroying the British officers by single shot; and in this way Captain Green, aid of General Phillips, was shot through the- arm, at a moment when he happened to pass between the ball and General Burgoyne, at whom it was aimed. In the dusk of the evening the battle termi- nated, the British in one quarter silently re- treated, the Americans in another gave way and quit the long contested field. Lieutenant- Colonel Brooks, who with the eighth Massa- chusetts regiment, was engaged with Brey- man's riflemen, remained on the field till about eleven o'clock at night, and was the last who returned. So engaged were the Americans, 144 bukgoyne's campaign* that many of them, after having their wounds dressed, returned again to the fight. Major Hull commanded a detachment of about two hundred men, who fought with such signal ardor, that more than half of them were either killed or wounded ; and during the heat of the action, a party of the British having stationed themselves in and near the cottage, from which they were making havoc among his men, he detached a band of brave fellows for the purpose, who made a rush, drove them with much slaughter from their position, and took their cannon ; and all in less time than it takes to record the fact. Towards the close of the day. General Learned's brigade, and one other regiment, I think Marshall's, were principally engaged on a rise of ground west of the cottage, with the British grenadiers and a regiment of British infantry, and bravely contested the ground till night, which has so often and so kindly inter- posed to stop the carnage of contending hosts, Put 'n end to the conflict. A scene now of horror Was open'd to view on the dawn of the morrow ; For on parts of the field where the battle most rag'd, Lay Britons and Yankees, both the young and the ag'd Promisc'ously mingled — about forty-two score, Of the dying and dead lay weltering in gore ! burgoyne's campaign. 145 Both parties claimed the victory. The English, it is true kept possession of the field ; yet, as the intention of the Anfiericans was, not to advance, but to maintain their position, and that of the English not to maintain theirs, but to gain ground, and as besides, it was a victory for the Americans not to be vanquish- ed, it is easy to see which had the advantage, of the day. On the other hand, the English were now convinced, to the great prejudice of their hopes, and even of their courage, that they would have to grapple with a foe as ea- ger for action, as careless of danger, and as in- different with respect to ground or cover, as themselves. The whole number of Americans engaged in this battle, was about three thousand ; the remainder of the army, from its unfavorable situation, being near the river, and for reasons before stated, took no part in the action. About three thousand five hundred of the British were engaged, more than five hundred of whom, were either killed, wounded, or ta- ken prisoners. On the side of the Americans three hundred and fifteen were killed, wound- ed, or missing. Among the killed were Lieu- is 146 BURGOYWE^S CAMFAiGK, tenant-Colonels Adams and Colburn, of Poor^s brigade, both able and efficient officers. At the same time the left wing of the British army was moving down the river, a party of Canadians, Loyalists, and Savages were de- tached through the skirt of the woods along the margin of the flats, where, at that time, was a bye road, traveled only in time of great fresh- ets, the flats at such time being overflowed. General Gates, having received information of their approach, detached about three hundred men to intercept them ; they were met on a flat piece of ground bordering on Mill creek, where a smart skirmish took place, which last- ed, with much obstinacy on both sides, about twenty minutes, when the enemy being much cut up and broken, finally gave way and fled in every direction ; leaving thirteen dead on the field, and thirty-five taken prisoners. This was the first action, fought with any portion of Burgoyne's army after he crossed the river; being terminated about the same time that Morgan commenced the action near the Heights. I have, within a few years, been informed by a Mr. Hoose, who was in the action, that the enemy, being reinforced, rallied again, and bukgoywk's campaign. 147 drove the Americans within their entrench- ments, where about one hundred followed, whoj a reinforcement at that moment arriving, were immediately surrounded and every man taken prisoner ; and the remainder, after a sharp contest for about fifteen minutes, were compelled to flee. From some of the prisoners taken in this skirmish, General Gates received the first cer- tain information of Burgoyne's intention of trying to force a passage through the American lines, and of his manner of attack ; which de- termined him to keep a strong force on the flats and river hills. The next day, Arnold being anxious to re- new the attack, was opposed by Gen. Gates, and possibly for the following reasons. At the close of the preceding battle, such was the difficulty at that time of procuring ammunition, that the American soldiers composing the left wing, and who had been engaged, had not a second round of cartridges left, nor were they to be procured at the magazine ; a fact not made known to any of the officers excepting General Gates, until after a supply had bees obtained from Albany, when the secret was first disclosed. Upon which Arnold, feeling a 148 burgoyne's campaign. deep sense of the deplorable situation in which the army would have been placed, had the ac- tion been renewed the next day by the British troops, as they were in hourly expectation ; very politely asked General Gates why he had not made the fact known to him. Gates re- plied in his usual grufif manner, " It was bad enough for me to know it myself." About the time General Phillips arrived on the field with the artillery, General Arnold, on a grey horse, and under full speed from the scene of action, rode up to General Gates, who was on the Heights at the time, sitting upon his horse, and listening to the tremen- dous firing, and addressed him in the follow- ing laconic manner r " General, the British are reinforced ; we must have more men."" General Gates immediately replied, " You shall have them, sir," and immediately ordered out General Learned's brigade ; when Arnold again hurried back on a full gallop, and the men after him in double quick time. These incidents, which were well known at the time, and often spoken of afterwards, even up to this day, the author relates in cor- roboration of the facts stated by him, in con- tradiction to what has been said by General burgoyne's campaign. 149 Wilkinson respecting Arnold. I have some- where seen it stated by Wilkinson, that during this action, Generals Gates and Arnold sat on their horses near the center^ of the American camp, listening to the firing, while he, (Wil- kinson) I think, was much on the field, direct- ing the movements of the American forces. But those acquainted with the situation of the I country at that time ; the dense forest that in- tervened between the center of the camp and the battle field ; its more remote situation, and consequently from its position, there was more difficulty in hearing ; and also knowing the relative situation of the Heights on the left, where Arnold's division was posted, and where the attack was intended, by Burgoyne, to have been made, and the open ground in- tervening between those Heights and the field of action : I feel confident, were there nothing else to confute it, that they would, at once, see the fallacy of Wilkinson's statement : and I also think that Colonel Stone, had he known the situation of the whole ground, and the cir- cumstances of this battle, would not have set down Wilkinson's account of it as the best that has been written. It is possible, howe- ver, that Wilkinson's account of any transac- 160 burgoyne's campaign. tion where Arnold was not concerned, maj be as correct as any extant. Whether these errors were intentionally committed by Wilkinson, or whether he was intoxicated at the time ; or finally, whether he was so blinded by jealousy^ a feeling, which, it was well known at that time, exist- ed towards Arnold, was the cause of those er- rors, I will leave for the reader to inquire ; while I deem it sufficient for me to point them out, and correct them, by such facts and cir- cumstances as have come to my knowledge. Not that I would, by any means, attempt to justify the after and traitorous conduct of Ar- nold, for no one can more highly condemn that unfortunate step, than I do myself, nor can I suppose any possible circumstances that would justify him in taking the course that he did ; but at the same time, as my object is to " no- thing extenuate or aught set down in malice," I am therefore willing to give *' honor to whom honor is due," and it has been the common belief, especially in this part of the Union, that one cause of his turning a traitor as he did, was in consequence of his not having received due credit for his management and gallantry in and during the truly " memorable battles on burgoyne's campaign. 161 Bemis's Heights." It is perhaps difficult to speak of the deeds of such a man as Arnold, without remembering the deplorable issue to which he was finally brought, by his folly and wickedness; yet the historian should never forget that he commits a crime little less fla- grant in its nature, if inferior in its magnitude, when he allows himself to be so far moved by his feelings, as to depart from the strict line of truth and justice, or, by such an obliquity, to lead his readers to form a false and harsh judg- ment, A serious misunderstanding arose about this time between Gates and Arnold, which is sup- posed to have been owing to the officious in- terference of Wilkinson, who was adjutant- general to the army, and who insisted on the returns of a part of Arnold's division being made to him, and influenced Gates to sustain his demand; which was done in general or- ders, without giving notice to Arnold. And in his official communication to congress, re- specting the battle, General Gates said nothing of Arnold or his division, but merely stated that the action was fought by detachments from the army* Arnold complained of this neglect as ungenerous, not more in regard to 152 BURGOYiNE^S CAMPAIGN. himself than to the troops under his immediate command. A sharp correspondence ensued, and Arnold was finally deprived of his com- mand. There is room to believe that a spice of jealousy was also mingled with Gates's feel-^ ings at that time. Colonel Varick, military secretary to General Schuyler, in writing from camp to that officer three days after the action, said, " He seems to be piqued, that Arnold's division had the honor of beating the enemy on the 19th. This I am certain of, that Ar- nold has all the credit of the action." And after the convention of Saratoga, Colonel Va- rick again wrote as follows in a letter from Albany. «' During Burgoyne's stay here, he gave Arnold great credit for his bravery and military abilities, especially in the action of the 19th, whenever he spoke of him, and once in the presence of General Gates*" He certain- ly, I think, could not have referred to his bravery in sitting on his horse, near a mile in rear of the field of battle, and secreted behind a dense intervening forest, where Wilkinson has very erroneously placed him. The fact of Arnold's being on the field during the action of the 19th, and actually heading the troops burgoyne's campaign. 15S that engaged Frazer's division, is also confirm- ed by a number who were present, and many of whom were engaged in that battle. With these few remarks 1 will leave Wil- kinson, with all his errors, in the hands of the reader, to be dealt with as he may think most advisable, while I myself am proceeding on and preparing the way for an account of a more decisive battle. CHAPTER VII. The day following the action, General Bur- goyne, finding that he must abandon all idea of dislodging the Americans by force, from their entrenched positions, endeavored to console himself with the hope, that time might offer him some occasion, to operate with more ef- fect. Resolving, therefore, to pause, he pitched his camp within cannon shot of the American lines. He threw up a line of entrenchments, with batteries, across the plain to the river hills ; also an entrenchment with batteries, across the defile at the northern extremity of 154 BURGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. the flats, and extending to the river on his left, the whole being about two miles in extent. An English regiment, the Hessians of Hanau, and a detachment of Loyalists were encamped on the flats, where he had established his maga- zines and hospitals, for greater security. While these preparations were going on at the British camp, the Americans were not idle. They now extended and completed their line of breastworks, from the north-eastern angle on the river hills, west, across the farm then owned by the late John Neilson, Esq., deceas- ed, about three-fourths of a mile, to the Heights on the left, and to within a few rods of his dwelling house now occupied by his son the present waiter. From the Heights on the left, and a few rods north of the dwelling house, the entrenchments extended south and south- west, about three-fourths of a mile, to a great ravine. At the northwest angle stood a large log barn, which was strengthened by a double tier of logs on three sides, and strong batter- ies, in circular form, extending from each ex- tremity, south, about one hundred and fifty feet, and encircled by a deep trench and pa- lisades or pickets ; ihe whole area within the circle of the pickets, was near half an acre. burgoyne's campaign. 156 and out of respect to the owner, who was a very active Whig, it was honored with the name of Fort Neilson. A little left of the cen- ter, between the northern extremities, was a strong battery, and also about fifty rods south of the fort was another ; and in the rear, near the center of the encampment, was their mag- azine, which was also fortified. Much of these fortifications are still existing ; sufficient to plainly trace their line, and the positions of the several batteries. The front of the camp was covered from the right to the left by a deep ravine, running nearly parallel w^ith the line, and a great part of the way by a dense forest. From a little left of the fort and for some dis- tance west, large trees were felled in every direction, which presented an almost insur- mountable barrier. Thus fortified. General Gates, having given up the command of the right wing to General Lincoln, assumed that of the left, and moved his head quarters from Bemis's house near the river, to a house standing about one hundred rods south of the fort, and owned by Captain Ephraim Woodworth ; the left being composed of two brigades under Generals Poor and Learned, Colonel Morgan's rifle corps, and a 156 BURCOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. part of the New England Militia : Colonel Morgan occupying the Heights immediately south of the fort, General Learned's brigade, the plain below or on the east, and General Poor's brigade, the Heights south of Morgan, and between him and General Gates's head quarters. The British troops were disposed in the fol- lowing order: the Hessians under Colonel Breyman occupied the extreme right, or right flank defence, the light infantry, under Lord Balcarras, and Frazer's elite, that part of the camp around Freeman's cottage, flanked by the grenadiers and Hamilton's brigade, on their left, and extending to the north branch ravine. The remainder of the army, including Reide- sel's command, occupied the plain, and the ground north of Wilber's Basin, to protect their magazine and hospital. Thus the two armies lay, in lines parallel to each other, and within cannon shot distance, from the nineteenth of September until the seventh of October ; though not without great anxiety on both sides ; and scarcely a night passed without firing, and sometimes concert- ed attacks upon the British pickets ; no forag- ing party could be made without great detach- feURGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. 15? ments to cover them ; it was the plan of the Americans to harrass the British army by con- stant alarms, and their superiority of numbers now enabled them to attempt it, without fa- tigue to themselves. It has been said, and no doubt truly, that neither officer nor soldier of the British army, ever slept during that inter- val, without his clothes, or that any general officer or commander of a regiment, passed a single night without being upon his legs oc- casionally, at different hours, and constantly an hour before daylight. At one time while the two armies were thus encamped near each other, about twenty of the most resolute inhabitants in the vicinity, collected together for the purpose of having a frolic, as they termed it, of some kind or other. After their arrival at the place of rendezvous, and a number of propositions had been logically discussed, they finally concluded, with more courage than prudence, that, by a coup-de^ main, they would go and bring in one of the British advance pickets, which was posted on the north bank of the middle ravine. Having, with much formality, selected their several offi- cers, and furnished themselves with suitable arms, and other equipments, they marched off 158 burgoyne's campaign. in i/'-regular military style. The martial cos- tume of the Captain, for by such title he was addressed, exhibited the extremes of continen- tal etiquette, personified in one instance, by a sharp and huge three cocked hat, profusely trimmed with the threadbare fragments of thrown-off gold lace, surmounting a well poma- tumed and powdered head. A long waisted blue coat, turned up with rather sun-bleach- ed bufif, that met and parted at the same time on his breast ; a black silk neck-kerchief drawn tightly around his throat, discovering the bal- lance of power, or rather the center of gravity, to be lying some where in the region of the olfactory organ, completed the upper half of this mischief-bent volunteer officer. A pair of buckskin small clothes drawn tightly over a muscular thigh, were met at the knee by a pair of straight-sided boots, that, doubtless, by their stiffness and want of pliability prevent- ed any thing like an attack upon the limb in- side. An old white belt thrown over the whole man, and a heavy sabre with a leather scab- bard, completed the brilliant costume of this son of chivalry, and ir-regular friend of the continental congress. The other corn-missioned officers, for such BURGOINE^S CAMPAlGiN. 159 by way of distinguishnient, were they called, were fully armed and accoutred in a similar manner, but somewhat inferior in brilliancy. Brown tow shirts were the panoply of the farmer-soldiers ; over their broad shoulders hung powder horns and shot bags, manufac- tured during the long winter evenings, and now and then stopped up with a corn cob, which had escaped the researches of the "swin- ish multitude." Muskets were rather uncom- mon among the inhabitants in those days of martial exploit, and in their stead, long fowl- ing-pieces were substituted. In such a group of combatants just escaped, as it were, from the tomahawk, hastily equipt for the present emergency, and bearing a gro- tesque appearance, the name of Steuben was of no more weight than the feather that danc- ed in the breeze. Thus armed and accoutred, these sons of daring interpidity, marched off about ten o'clock at night, with more courage than order, fully determined to conquer or die in the glorious cause of their beloved country, then bleeding at every pore. As they approached within musket-shot dis- tance of their unsuspecting enemy, they were formed, or rather formed themselves in order 160 burgoyne's campaign. of battle, and advanced in three grand divi- sions — one by a circuitous route, to gain their rear, while the other two posted themselves on their flanks. After giving time for each party to gain their several positions, the resolute cap- tain, who was prepared for the purpose, gave the preconcerted signal, by a deafening blast on an old horse trumpet, whose martial sound had often cheered the mounted troops to fierce and bloody combat, when all, w^ith fearless step " rushed bravely on" with clattering arms, through rustling leaves and crackling brush, with the usual parade of a hundred men. As they closed in, the leaders of each division, in a bold and commanding voice, and before the guard could say *^ Who comes there ?" called, or rather bawled out, " Ground your arms, or you are all dead men !" Supposing they were surrounded by a much superior force, and deeming resistance, under such circumstances, of no avail, the officer of the guard gave the orders, when their arms were immediately grounded, and thirty British soldiers surren- dered themselves *^ prisoners of war " to only two-thirds of their number, and those undisci- plined American farmers. By the fourth of October the supplies of burgoyne's campaign. 161 Burgoyne's army were so far reduced that the soldiers were placed on short allowance, and his position was in other respects becoming so critical, that hearing nothing from Sir Henry Clinton, for whose co-operation from New- York he had been waiting since the battle of the nineteenth, he therefore sent for Gene- rals Phillips, Reidesel and Frazer, to consult with them on the best measures to be taken. His project was to attack and again attempt to turn the left wing of the Americans at once ; but the other generals judged that it would be dangerous to leave their stores under so feeble a protection as eight hundred men according to the proposition of their commander. A second consultation was held on the fifth, at which General Reidesel positively declared that the situation of the army had become so critical, that they must either attack and force the entrenchments of General Gates, and thus bring about a favorable change of affairs, or recross the Hudson, and retreat upon Fort George. Frazer approved of the latter suggestion, and Phillips declined giving an opinion. Ge- neral Burgoyne, to whom the idea of retreat- ing was most unwelcome, having had an order 14 162 promised him if he succeeded in his campaign, declared that he would make, on the seventh, a reconnoisance as near as possible to the left wino; of the Americans, with a view of ascer- taining whether it could be attacked with any prospect of success. He would afterwards, either attack the Americans, or retreat by the route in rear of Batten kill. This was his final determination, and dispositions were made ac- cordingly. During this time of dreadful preparation, information was received by deserters and otherwise, that an attack would soon be made by the British, upon the line of the American entrenchments at the Heights, near the head quarters of General Gates, or that a retreat across the Hudson would be attempted. Ac- cordingly, General Fellows with about fifteen hundred men, was detached across the river, and to take post on the heights opposite the Saratoga ford, to watch their movements, and prevent their passage at that place. In the afternoon of the sixth, an unusual movement was perceived in the British camp, and especially in that part of it which extend- ed across the plain near the river, which, at that time, induced a belief that the army were CAMPAIGN. 163 about to attempt a retreat during the following night ; consequently, General Gates augment- ed his forces near the river, by drawing off a portion of those on the Heights preparatory to a close pursuit, should that be the case. But it afterwards appeared, that Burgoyne was only arranging his troops, preparatory to such subsequent course as might be determin- ed upon the next day. On the seventh of October, between ten and eleven o'clock, Burgoyne, having commit- ted the guard of his camp upon the high ground, near Freeman's Cottage, to the Bri- gadier-Generals Hamilton and Speckt, and that of the redoubts and plain near the river, to Brigadier-General Gall, began to move with about fifteen hunded meii to the northern ex- tremity of a low ridge of land, about three- fourths of a mile, and a little north of west, from the American camp, where they display- ed, formed the line, and sat down in double ranks. General Gates, having received infor- mation of their movements, despatched one of his aids to ascertain their position, and if pos- sible their intentions. He proceeded about half a mile to a small rise of ground, (near Asa Chatfield's house,) where he discovered 164 burgoyne's campaign. them, about sixty rods in advance, in a wheat field, and foragers in the act of cutting the wheat or standing straw ; and several officers mounted on the top of a cabin (Joseph Hun- ger's,) from whence, with their glasses, they were endeavoring to reconnoitre the American left, which was concealed from their view by intervening woods. Soon after the return of the officer, a party of Canadians and Savages that were scouring the woods on the Hank of the British grena- diers as they were marching from camp, fell in with and attacked the American pickets, near the middle ravine, which were driven in, and followed by the grenadiers to within mus- ket shot distance of Gates's line of entrench- ments, where a tremendous discharge of can- non and musquetry took place, which was returned with equal intrepidity by the Ameri- cans. For about thirty minutes the action at the breast works, a little south of the fort, was maintained with great obstinacy on both sides. The grenadiers resorted repeatedly to their bayonets, but were as often resisted by the Americans, and foiled in their attempts. For sometime this bloody conffict continued with- 165 out any apparent advantage on either side, till at length the Americans being reinforced by a part of Morgan's riflemen, the assailants be- gun to give way, and finally retreated, with much loss, hotly pursued by the Americans to within a short distance of the British line of battle, which was then forming. A great many balls have since been picked up on both sides of the breast work, and even to this day, they are found in the direction to which they were fired — some of them flattened and others misshaped, evincing that they had come in collision with opposing obstacles. And here is one circumstance, strongly confirming the often repeated saying, " that the Ameri- cans, in addition to one musket ball, added two buck shot, by which they done so much execution," they are frequently found on the side of the breast w^ork to which the Americans fired, and not on the other, a About two o'clock in the afternoon, the British line of battle was formed across a new- ly cultivated piece of ground ; their grenadiers, under Major Ackland, and their artillery under Major Williams, occupied a rise of ground on the left, bordering on a wood and covered in front by the head of the middle ravine : their 166 burgoyne's campaign, light-infantry under Lord Balcarras, in a south- western direction, and on their extreme right, and covered by a rail fence ; and the center was composed of British and German battalions, under Generals Phillips and Riedsel. In advance of the right wing, and near J. Hunger's, as before mentioned, were stationed about one thousand men, under Gen. Frazer, (five hundred having been withdrawn) intended to fall on the Americans in flank and rear, while the attack should be made in front. But General Gates, who observed their movements, and instantly penetrating the de- sign of the British general, directed Col. Mor- gan with his rifle corps, consisting of about fif- teen hundred men, by a circuitous route, and under cover of the woods, to take post on some high ground in front and flank of their advan- ced right, and make the attack there, as soon as the fire should be opened on the British left. Tt was concerted, that time should be allow- ed Col. Morgan to make the proposed circuit, and gain his station on the enemy's right, be- fore the attack should be made on the left ; Gen. Poor's brigade, composed of the New- York and New-Hampshire troops, to be sup- ported by a part of Learned's brigade, was or- burgoyne's campaign. 167 dered for this service, and the attack was com- menced at about thirty minutes after two ou the front and flank of the British grenadiers. When Gen. Poor had drawn up his men in or- der of battle, and given them orders not to fire until they commenced rising the hill, there was, for a moment, an awful pause, — each party seemed to bid defiance to his opponent. At length, however, the grenadiers commenced the action by a shower of grape shot and musket balls, which took no other effect than to mar the trees above the heads of the Americans ; who " the din of battle now begun," rushed on firing and opening to the right and left, and forming again on the flanks, mowing down the grena- diers at every shot, until they gained the top of the hill, where a close and bloody conflict ensued, which lasted, with tremendous roar and blaze of artillery and small arms, for about thir- ty minutes, when the commander of the gren- adiers. Major Ackland, was badly wounded, being shot through both legs, and the grena- diers being too vigorously pressed, broke and gave way, leaving the ground thickly strewed with their dead and dying. In this dreadful struggle, one field piece was taken and retaken five times, and finally fell into the hands of the 168 burgoyne's campaign*. Americans : upon which CoL Cilley, of New- Hampshire, exulting in its capture, immediate- ly mounted, and it being " sworn true to Ame- rica," was turned and fired on the British troops, with their own ammunition, which was left in the boxes. Soon after Gen. Poor commenced the attack upon the grenadiers, a flanking party of the British was discovered advancing, by a circuit- ous route, through the woods ; upon which Col. Cilley was ordered with his regiment to inter- cept them. As he approached near to a brush fence, the British troops rose from behind it, and immediately fired, but done it so hurriedly that only a few balls took effect. The com- mander of the British, then ordered his men to " Fix bayonets, and charge the d — d rebels." Col. Cilley who heard the order, responded, " It takes two to play at that game — charge, and we will try it !" The Americans charged at the word, and rushing upon the enemy dis- charged a volley in their faces, when they im- mediately broke and fled, leaving many of their number dead and wounded on the field. As soon as the action commenced on the British left. Colonel Morgan, who had posted his men as directed, poured down, unexpect- CAMPAIGN. 169 edlj, upon the British right advance, and af- ter a sharp contest drove them in with much slaughter ; then by a sudden movement to his left, he fell upon the flank of the British right, with such impetuosity, and with a so well di- rected fire, that they soon fell into confusion ; and while attempting to change their front, Major Dearborn, who at that critical moment had arrived on the field with two regiments of New-England troops, poured so galling a fire into their flank and rear, that they soon broke, and were compelled to retire. They were however, again rallied and reformed by the Earl of Balcarras^ behind a fence in rear of their first position ; but being again attacked in front and flank, with so great vigor by supe- rior numbers, that resistance became vain, and the w^hole right wing gave way. While the battle was furiously raging here and at the British left, Arnold, who had be- come very restless after the action commenced, and who, without orders, determined to share in the danger, appeared on the field, with three regiments of General Learned's brigade, and made a spirited attack upon the center, composed of Hessian troops, which, at first, was resisted with much vigor, but at the se- 15 170 BURGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN, cond charge, which was made with such irre- sistible force, Arnold, with a few brave fol- lowers dashing into the midst of them, that they broke and gave way in great disorder. While the whole British line was thus bro- ken and in much confusion, and the Americans pouring in their deadly fire on three sides of them, General Frazer, conspicuously mount- ed on an iron grey horse, was all activity, cou- rage and vigilance, riding from one part of his division to another, and animating the troops by his example. Wherever he was present, everything prospered, and, when confusion ap- peared in any part of the line, order and ener- gy were restored by his arrival. About this time Colonel Morgan, who with his rifle corps, was immediately opposed to Frazer's division, at the suggestion of Arnold, took a few of his riflemen aside, among whom was the celebrat- ed marksman, Timothy Murphy ; men in whose fidelity, and fatal precision of aim, he could repose the most perfect confidence, and said to them, " That gallant officer is General Frazer : I admire and respect him, hut it is necessary that he should die — take your sta- tions in that cluster of bushes and do your duty." Within a few moments, General Fra- burgoyne's campaign. 171 zer fell, mortally wounded, and was carried off the field by a few grenadiers. How far such personal designation is justify- able, has often been questioned, but those who vindicate war at all, contend, that to shoot a distinguished officer, and thus to accelerate the conclusion of a bloody battle, operates to save lives, and that it is, morally, no worse to kill an illustrious than an obscure individual ; a Frazer than a common soldier ; a Laiorence than a common sailor. Soon after General Frazer fell, a reinforce- ment of three thousand New- York militia, un- der General Ten Broeck, came on the field, when the whole British line, commanded by Burgoyne iu person, and in about fihy min- utes after the action commenced, gave way and precipitately retreated within their en- trenchments, hotly pursued by the victorious Americans, and leaving two twelve pounders and six six pounders on the field — with the loss of about two hundred officers and men killed and wounded, and as many prisoners, and among them the flower of his officers, viz : Brigadier-General Frazer ; Major Ack- land, commanding the grenadiers ; Sir Francis Clark, his first aid-de-camp ; Major Williams, 172 burgoitne's campaign. commanding officer of the artillery ; Captain Mooney, deputy quarter-master-general, and many others. An interesting incident respecting Major Ackland I will here insert, while I leave the two armies to close the most important battle fought during the Revolutionary war ; an ac- count of which, shall immediately after be given. While pursuing the flying enemy, passing over killed and wounded, Wilkinson says, he heard a voice exclaim, — " Protect me sir against that boy !" Turning his head, he saw a lad thirteen or fourteen years of age, delibe- rately aiming at a wounded officer, lying in the angle of a worm fence. The purpose of the boy was arrested — the officer proved to be the brave Major Ackland, who had command- ed the grenadiers, and was wounded in both legs. He was immediately sent to head quar- ters. The story of Major Ackland has been rendered familiar to all, even before escaping the nursery, by the interesting narrative of Lady Harriet, his wife, who was with the ar- my, and who, two days after the battle, came to the American camp, under a flag, to join her husband. The incident, from the embel- burgoyne's campaign. 173 lishment it received, was touching and roman- tic. When divested of its poetry, however, and reduced to the plain matter of fact, ac- cording to the late General Dearborn, which he authorized to be published, the affair was not so very extraordinary that it might not have been enacted by any other pretty woman, under the same circumstances, who loved her husband. Major Ackland, who was conveyed from the field of battle, to my present kitch- en, then General Poor's quarters, where his wounds were dressed, and where he remained several days on account of their excessive in- flammation, was there visited by Lady Harrier, who remained with him, and was treated with all possible courtesy, until he was conveyed to Albany, when she was permitted to follow him. Major Ackland was a gallant officer and a generous foe. While in New- York, on pa- role, he did all in his power to favor the treat- ment of distinguished American prisoners. Af- ter his return to England, he sacrificed his life in defence of American honor. Having procured a regiment, at a dinner of military men, the courage of the Americans was ques- tioned. He repelled the imputation with de- cision. High words ensued, in the course of 174 BURGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. which Ackland gave the lie direct to a subordi- nate officer named Llojd. A meeting was the consequence, in which he was shot through the head. Lady Harriet lost her senses, and continued deranged two years, after which she married the Rev. Mr. Brudenell, the same gentleman who had accompanied her from the camp of Burgoyne, to that of General Gates, in search of her wounded husband. CHAPTER VHI. But to resume. The British troops had scarcely entered their lines, when the Ameri- cans, led by Arnold, pressed forward, under a destructive fire of grape shot and musketry, assaulted their works throughout their whole extent, from right to left, and a long, arduous and bloody conflict ensued, in which many brave men fell on both sides. This long and bloody contest was now carried on between the British behind thek works, and the Americans entirely exposed, or partially sheltered by trees, stumps or hol- lows at various distances ; and the tremendous burgoyne's campaign. 175 roar of artillery, from one extremity of the line to the other, filling the air with one con- tinual volume of smoke and blaze — the con- stant peal of small arms, hurling, in rapid succession, their leaden messengers of death — and bomb after bomb, with their fiery trails, flaming, like meteors, through the thick and darkened atmosphere, presented a scene ''aw- fully sublime," and beyond the power of de- scription : And such as have ne'er seen them, most surely would fear, The stars had dissolved, afid the last judgment was near ! In the midst of this dreadful scene of blood and carnage, Arnold, at the head of a band of brave fellows, from Poor's and Patterson's bri- gades, rushing, like tigers, into the camp of Lord Balcarras, and encountering the British troops at the point of the bayonet, dealt death and destruction in every quarter. From thence, spurred boldly on, he dashed through thick and thin, to the extreme right of the British camp, occupied by the Hessian troops, where he was still more successful. This right flank defence of the enemy, oc- cupied by the German corps under Colonel 176 burgoyne's Campaign. Brejman, consisted in a great measure, of a breast work of rails piled horizontally between perpendicular pickets, driven into the earth, enpotence to the rest of his line, and extended about two hundred yards across an open field, and was covered on the high ground on the right, by a battery of two guns. The interval from the left of this defence to the light infan- try, under Lord Balcarras, was committed to the defence of the Provincialists, who occu- pied a log bouse and barn, then owned by Thomas Leggett. The Germans were encamp- ed immediately behind the rail breastwork, and the ground in front of it declined in a very gentle slope, for about one hundred and twen- ty yards, when it sunk abruptly. The Ame- rican troops had formed a line under this decli- vity, and covered breast high, were warmly engaged with the Germans. From this posi- tion, about sunset, Brigadier-General Learned advanced towards the enemy with his brigade in open column, with Colonel Jackson's regi- ment, then in command of Lieut.-Colonel Brooks, in front. On his approach, he inquir- ed where he could '' putin " with most advan- tage. A slack fire was observed at an opening between the left of the Germans, and light burgoyne's campaign. 177 infantry, occupied by the Provincialists ; and the general was recommended to incline to the right and attack that point. He did so with great gallantry ; the Provincialists abandoned their position and fled. The German flank, by this means being left uncovered, and Ar- nold arriving at the moment, and taking the lead of Learned's brigade, they were vigor- ously assaulted, overturned in a few minutes, and retreated in great disorder^ — leaving their gallant commander mortally wounded, on the field, and all their tents, artillery, and baggage in possession of the victors. By dislodging this corps, the whole British encampment was laid open to the Americans ; but the extreme darkness of the night, the fa- tigue of the men, and disorder incident to un- disciplined troops, after so desultory an action, put it out of the power of the Americans to improve the advantages. This brilliant manoeuvre with which the en- gagement was closed, the assault of the ene- my's works and driving the Hessians from their encampment, was undoubtedly owing to the intrepidity of Arnold. He gave the order, and by his personal bravery set an example to the troops, which inspired them with ardor and 178 burgoyne's campaign. hurried them onward. He was shot through the leg whilst riding gallantly into the sally- port, and his horse fell dead under him. The success of the assault was complete and crown- ed the day with victory. Thus ended this battle, with most dreadful slaughter, The pride and renown of the town of Stillwater ; A glorious one too, for on it hung the key, That unlocked the tyrant's door, and set us all free ! 'Twas the bright rising sun of our national morn — The herald of " glad-tidings" to millions unborn I At the commencement of the foregoing bat- tle, Quarter-Master-General, Major Lewis, was directed to take eight men w^ith him to the field, as messengers, to convey to General Gates, who remained at camp issuing his orders as circumstances required, such infor- mation, as might from time to time, be com- municated to them, respecting the progress of the action, and whether for or against the Americans. At the same time the baggage of the army was all loaded up, and the cavalcade of teams, extended from a little south of the fort on the Heights, along the road for near half a mile, under the direction of Major Chan- denette, as wagon-master, and to move ac- 179 cording to orders from the commanding gene- ral. The first information that arrived, re- presented the British troops on the field to ex- ceed the Americans, by so much, that it was thought the Americans would be forced to re- tire ; when the teams were ordered to, *IE°'S CAMPAIUJS. was not true. Others said h(3 took opium. This is conjecture, unsustained bj proofs of any kind, and consequently improbable. His vagaries may perhaps be sufficiently explained by the extraordinary circumstances of wounded pride, anger and desperation, in which he was placed. Congress relented, though with an ill grace at so late a period, and authorized Gen. Washington to send him a commission, giving him the full rank he had claimed. General Gates remained in camp during the whole action, that he might be the better ena- bled to order and regulate the various move- ments, as circumstances should require. The night of the seventh of October, was a most critical one for the royal army ; in the course of it, they abandoned their camp and moved to the high ground, contiguous to the river, and immediately in rear of their hospital. On the morning of the eighth, the American army moved forward and took possession of the abandoned camp, from which they kept up a random fire of artillery and small arms during the whole day. Burgoyne's troops were all day under arms in expectation of another attack, and indicating by their movements (hat they intended a still further retreat. In the occasion- iitJRGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN* 185 h\ skirmishes of the day, General Lincoln Was shot in the leg) while riding near the line, by some of the enemy's marksmen from the oppo- site side of the ravine. The gallant Frazer, who had been mortally wounded the day before, died at eight o'clock on the morning of the eighth. On the evening of his fall, when it was rendered certain that he could not recover, he sent for General Bur- goyne, and requested that he might be buried at six o'clock the following evening in the great redoubt, on the hilL It was a subject of com- plaint against Burgoyne, that in order to com- ply with his request, he delayed his retreat, and thus contributed to the misfortunes of his army. Be that as it may, the dying soldier's request was observed to the letter. At the hour appointed, the body was borne to the hill that had been indicated, attended by the gen- erals and their retinues ; the funeral service was read by the chaplain, Mr. Brudenell, and the corpse interred while the balls of the Ame- rican cannon were flying around and above the assembled mourners. The Baroness Reidesell, who with several other ladies of distinction, accompanied the ar- my of Burgoyne, states, that General Gates 16 186 protested afterwards that had he known what was going on, he would have stopped the fire immediately. And General Winslow, who commanded the gun which was fired on this occasion, sajs, that as soon as they discovered that it was a funeral procession, they ceased firing shot, and commenced firing minute-guns — a high minded mark of respect, sometimes shown, when a distinguished enemy is buried. This must have been a solemn spectacle, and General Burgoyne himself describes it with his usual eloquence and felicity of expres- sion : — " The incessant cannonade during the solemnity ; the steady attitude and unaltered voice with which the chaplain officiated, though frequently covered with dust, which the shot threw up on all sides of him ; the mute but ex- pressive mixture of sensibility and indignation upon every countenance ; these objects will re- main to the last of life upon the mind of every man who was present. The growing duski- ness added to the scenery, and the whole marked a character of that juncture, that would make one of the finest subjects for the pencil of a master, that the field ever exhibited. To the canvass, and to the faithful page of a more important historian, gallant friend ! I consign 187 thy meaiory. There may thy talents, thy man- ly virtues, their progress and their period, find due distinction; and long may they survive, after the frail record of my pen shall be for- gotten." The soldier vs^ho shot General Frazer, was Timothy Murphy, a Virginian, and belonged to Morgan's rifle corps, in which he distin- guished himself as a marksman, and excited much interest while in camp. After the capture of Burgoyne, the company to which he belonged was ordered to Schoharie, where it remained until their term of service expired. When the company was disbanded. Murphy and some others remained, and served in the militia ; his skill in the desultory war which the Indians carry on, gave him so high a repu- tation, that though not nominally the command- er, he usually directed all the movements of the scouts that were sent out, and on many important occasions the commanding officers found it dangerous to neglect his advice ; his double rifle, his skill as a marksman, and his fleetness either in retreat or pursuit, made him an object both of dread and of vengeance to the Indians : they formed many plans to de- 188 burgoyne's campaign. stroj him, but he always eluded them, and sometimes made them suffer for their temerity. He fought the Indians with their own weap- ons. When circumstances permitted, he toma- hawked and scalped his fallen enemy ; he boasted after the war that he had slain forty of the enemy with his own hand, more than half of whom he had scalped ; he took delight m perilous adventures, and seemed to love dan- ger for danger's sake. Tradition has preserved the account of many of his exploits ; but there are so many versions of the same siory, and sd much evident fiction mixed with the truth, that the author will give but a single instance as proof of the dread with which he was regardetl by the Indians, They were unable to conjecture how he could discharge his rifle twice without having time to reload ; and his singular good fortune in escaping unhurt, led them to suppose that he was attended by some invisible being, who warded off their bullets, and sped his with un- erring certainty to the mark. When they had learned the mystery of his double-barrelled ri- fle, they were careful not to expose themselves too much until he had fired twice, knowing that he must have time to reload his piece be- fore he could do them further injury. burgoyne's campaign. 189 One tlaj having separated from his party, he was pursued by a number of Indians, all of whom he outran excepting one ; Murphy turn- ed round, fired upon this Indian, and killed him. Supposing that the others had given up the pursuit he stopped to strip the dead, when the rest of his pursuers came in sight. He snatched the rifle of his fallen foe, and with it killed one of his pursuers; the rest, now sure of their prey, with a yell of joy heedlessly rushed on, hoping to make him their prisoner ; he was ready to drop down with fatigue, and was likely to be overtaken, when turning round, he discharged the remaining barrel of his rifle, and killed the foremost of the Indians ; the rest astonished at his firing three times in succession, fled, crying out that he could shoot all day without loading. Ih stature, Murphy was about five feet six inches, and very well proportioned, with dark complexion, and an eye that would kindle and flash like the very lightning when excited. He was exceedingly quick in all his motions, and possessed an iron frame that nothing ap- parently could affect : And what is very re- markable, his body was never wounded or scarred during the whole war. ]90 burgoyne's campaign. It was evident from the movements in Bur- goyne's camp, on the evening of the eighth, that he was preparing to retreat ; but the American troops having, in the delirium of joy consequent upon their victory, neglected to draw and eat their rations — being withal not a little fatigued with the two days exertions, fell back to their camp, which had been left standing in the morning. Retreat was indeed the only alternative remaining to the British commander, since it was now quite certain that he could not cut his way through the American army, and his supplies were reduced to a short allowance for five days. That com- mander, w^ho, in the commencement of the campaign, had uttered in his general orders the memorable sentiment, " this army must not retreat," was now compelled to seek his safety by stealing away in the night from his victo- rious enemy, and leaving his hospital, contain- ing more than four hundred sick and wounded, to the mercy of General Gates, who in this as in all other instances, exhibited towards the enemy the greatest humanity and kindness. Numerous fires were lighted — several tents left standing, and the retreat was ordered to be conducted with the greatest secrecy. The burgoyne's campaign. 191 army commenced its retrograde motion at nine o'clock on the evening of the 8th of October, pursuing the river road along the flats. It moved all night, and made a halt in the morn- ing at Do-ve-gat, (Coveville,) w^here it re- mained during the principal part of the ninth, it being an excessively rainy day. While the British army were halted here, a detachment of about three hundred American troops, who had been sent on to harass them in their retreat, overtook and made an attack upon their rear guard, under General Phillips, about a mile below, but the heavy rain pre- vented their effecting much. Before the British troops commenced their retrograde march, the Baroness Reidesel sug- gested to Lady Ackland, the propriety of re- joining her husband, to whom she might be of great service in his present situation, and again at this place strongly impressed upon her its importance. Yielding to her constant and friendly advice. Lady Harriet sent a message to General Burgoyne, through his aid-de- camp, Lord Petersham, to beg his permission to leave the army. It has been represented that the British commander was thunderstruck at the application, but gave her leave to pro- 192 BURGOtNE^S CAMPAiaN. ceed, although he was utterly unable to afford any assistance. After her fatigue, and after being drenched in a heavy rain of twelve hours, she instantly proceeded on. The celebrated letter of Gen- eral Burgoyne to General Gates on the occa- sion, has often been admired, and which is here inserted as a specimen of that talent for composition, which afterwards distinguished the author of the " Narrative," and several ele- gant comedies, well known to the reading pub- lic. " Sir — Lady Harriet Ackland, a lady of the first dis- tinction of family, rank and personal virtues, is under such concern on account of Major Ackland, her hus- band, wounded, and a prisoner in your hands, that I cannot refuse her request to commit her to your protec- tion. What ever general impropriety there may be in persons in my situation and yours to solicit favors, I cannot see the uncommon perseverance in every female grace and exaltation of character of this lady, and her very hard fortune, vc^ithout testifying that your atten- tions to her will lay me under obligations. I am, sir, your ob't serv't, J. BURGOYNE." From the wife of a soldier she obtained a little spirits and water, and with this to sus- burgoyne's campaign. 193 tain her, she set out in an open boat, and sail- ed down the river, during a violent storm of rain and wind, accompanied by the British chaplain, Brudenell, her own waiting maid, Sarah Pollard, and her husband's valet de chambre, who had been severely wounded in searching through the field of battle for his master, when first missing. An impression has gone abroad, sanctioned not only by gentlemen belonging to Bur- goyne's army, but by that general himself, that this ill-fated and amiable female was kept all night in the boat, and not permitted to land until morning. This is not the fact. In ten minutes after the boat was hailed by the sen- tinel of the advance guard, she was invited to the quarters of Major Dearborn, (since so distinguished as a general officer,) where she received every attention in his power to be- stow, and was made happy by the intelligence of her husband's safety. In the morning be- fore sunrise, through the politeness of Gene- rel Gates, she was conveyed to the quarters of General Poor on the Heights, to her wounded husband ; where she remained until he was conveyed to Albany. The resolution and firm- ness of this lady excited a great sensation 17 194 BURGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. throughout the American camp, while the ten- der devotion which she displayed towards her husband, " won her golden opinions " of all sorts of people. While the British army on their advance were encamped at Do-ve-gat, (Coveville) Ma- jor Ackland's tent took fire, and Lady Harriet and himself were nearly lost in the flames. The Major being with the advance guard, and obliged to be very diligent in attending to his command, in consequence of the difficulty and danger of his position, kept a candle burning in his tent. A Newfoundland dog, of which they were very fond, unfortunately pushed the can- dle from a table or chair where it was stand- ing ; it fell against the side of the tent, and instantly the whole was in a blaze. A soldier who was keeping guard near them, rushed in and dragged Major Ackland from the fiames, while Lady Harriet crept out almost uncon- sciously through the back part of the tent. When she looked round she saw with horror her husband rushing into the flames in search of her. Again the soldier brought him out, though not without considerable injury to both. Everything in the tent was consumed ; but the Major and his lady were too happy to see each burgoyjse's campaign. 195 other in safety to regret the loss of their camp equipage. It may not be amiss to state, that this ad- mired and beautiful woman had already been subjected to great inconveniences and distress, before the army arrived at Saratoga. She had been distinguished by her devotion and unre- mitting attention to her husband, when he lay sick at Chamblee, in a miserable hut, encoun- tering every inconvenience, and subjected to every privation. She was indeed not only the idol of her husband, but the admiration of the army, continually making little presents to the officers belonging to her husband's corps, when- ever she had anything among her stores wor- thy of acceptance. She experienced in return from them every attention which could miti- gate the hardships she daily was obliged to encounter. When her husband was wounded at Hub- bardton, she again, like a guardian angel, ho- vered round him, and watched him until he was restored to health. The moment she heard of his being wounded she hastened from Montreal, where she had intended to remain, and crossed the lake in opposition to her hus- band's injunctions, resolved to share his fate and be separated from him no more. 196 burgoyne's campaign. CHAPTER IX. Previous to the action of the seventh, Ge- neral Gates, anticipating the retreat of the enemy, had ordered General Fellows, with about fifteen hundred men, as before mention- ed, to cross the river, and take post on the heights opposite the Saratoga ford, supposing that he might be able to reinforce him before Burgojne could reach that place. But the re- treat of the British army being earlier than he expected, and the circumstances of the heavy rain on the ninth, preventing him from pursu- ing immediately with the main army, or send- ing off any considerable detachment. General Fellows was placed in a critical situation, and nothing saved his detachment from destruction or capture, but the very slow movements of Burgoyne, occasioned by the heavy rain and the badness of the roads ; so that he did not reach Saratoga (Schuylerville,) until the morning of the tenth. By this time General Fellows had received orders to recross the river and endea- vor to oppose their passage, which he did just as the front of the British army crossed Fish burgoyne's campaign. 197 creek, and in time to post himself advantage- ously on the opposite side of the river. On the evening before, his camp was so entirely unguarded, that Lieutenant-Colonel Souther- land, who had been sent forward by Burgoyne to reconnoitre, marched round it without meet- ing a sentinel, and was so strongly impressed with the conviction that he could surprise him, that he solicited permission to attack him with his single regiment, and it was perhaps fortu- nate for General Fellows that Burgoyne re- fused. In the mean time several other bodies of militia were posted, to intercept the retreat of Burgoyne, in various directions, and one de- tachment was ordered to march immediately to Fort Edward, and take possession before any part of Burgoyne's troops could reach it. The rain on the ninth and morning of the tenth, prevented General Gates from marching until about noon. When the advance of the army reached Saratoga, about four o'clock in the afternoon, the British were encamped on the heights beyond Fish creek ; their boats lay at the mouth of the creek and a fatigue party were at work in removing the baggage from the creek to the heights. Gen. Fellows with his corps were on the opposite bank of the river, 198 burgoyne's campaign. with a couple of small field pieces on the flats, plajing upon the enemy's fatigue party. Ge- neral Gates on his arrival posted the army in several lines on the heights about a mile in the rear of Fish creek, with Colonel Morgan's corps in front. Under the idea that the enemy would retreat in the night, General Gates gave orders that the army should advance at reveih lee in the morning of the eleventh. A small detachment had been sent off by Burgoyne to possess themselves of Fort Edward, but Col. Cochran with about two hundred men, had already taken possession of that place, and on the arrival of the British detachment at Dead- man's point, on the opposite side of the river, piles of logs and brush, which had been col- lected, on the first rise of Fort Edw^ard hill, by the British on their advance, having now become dry, were set on fire in the night, which at a distance, had the appearance of a large encampment. When the British troops saw the fire they, supposing the American forces to be as numerous in front as in their rear, hastily retreated to their camp at Fish creek. The movement of this detachment had giv- en rise to the information which deceived Ge- burgoyne's campaign. 199 neral Gates, that the whole British army had moved off, leaving a small guard only in the camp to take care of the baggage and stores. Upon this intelligence it was determined to attack the camp early in the morning ; and Brigadier-Generals Nixon and Glover were ordered to cross the creek with their brigades for this purpose. Colonel Morgan advancing with his corps at daylight agreeably to orders fell in with the enemy's picket, by whom he was fired upon, and lost a lieutenant and several privates. This induced him to believe that the enemy had not moved as supposed, in which case his situation would be extremely critical, as the fog was so thick that nothing could be seen at the dis- tance of twenty yards ; a winding creek was in his rear, and he was unacquainted with the grounds. In this dilemma he was met by the deputy-adjutant-general. Colonel Wilkinson, who had been sent out by General Gates, for the purpose of reconnoitering. Wilkinson re- turned immediately to communicate this intel- ligence to the General, and Patterson's and Learned's brigades, both under the command of the latter, and Colonel Woodbridge's regi- ment, were sent to the support of Morgan. 200 burgoyne's campaign. In the meantime the whole army advanced as far as the ridge between the church and Fish creek, where they halted. Generals Nixon and Glover were in advance, marching according to orders to the attack of the camp. Nixon had already crossed the creek, and surprised a British picket in old Fort Hardy, and Glover was preparing to follow him, when a deserter from the enemy was observed fording the creek, from whom information was received that Burgoyne with his whole army were still in- his camp. This was confirmed by the capture of a reconnoitering party of a subaltern and thir- ty-five men, by the advance guard of fifty un- der Captain Goodale, of Putnam's regiment,, who discovered them through the fog just as he reached the bank of the creek, and making a resolute charge upon them^ took them without firing a gun. General Gates was at this time a mile in the rear, and before this intelligence could be communicated to him, and orders re-- ceived for the two brigadiers to desist and re- cross the creek, the fog cleared up, and ex- posed to view the whole British army under arms* A heavy fire of artillery and small anns was- immediately opened upon Nixon's brigade. bcjrgoyne's campaign. 201 which was in advance, and they retreated in considerable disorder across the creek, with a trifling loss, and resumed their position. General Learned had in the meantime reach- ed Morgan's corps with his two brigades, and was advancing rapidly to the attack, in obe- dience to a standing order which had been issued the day before, '' That in case of an at- tack against any point, whether front, flank or rear, the troops are to fall on the enemy at all quarters." He had arrived within two hundred yards of Burgoyne's strongest post, and in a few minutes more would have been en staged under great disadvantages, when Colonel Wil- kinson reached him with intelligence that our right wing had given way, and that it would be prudent for him to retreat. Being without authority from General Gates to order it, the brave old general hesitated to obey, in opposi- tion to the standing order, until Lieutenant- Colonels Brooks and Tupper and some other officers coming up, a sort of council was held, and the proposition to retreat was approved. The moment they turned their backs, the enemy who had been calmly expecting their advance, opened a fire upon them, which con- tinued until they were masked by the woods. 202 burgoyne's campaign. General Gates was immediately informed of the incident ; he revoked all the orders he had given, and directed that the troops should be reconducted to their several positions ; Mor- gan at the same time taking post in flank and rear of the British right. The following facts respecting Col. Cochran, I obtained through the politeness of Miss Caro- line Ogden, an interesting maiden lady, and grand- daughter of the colonel, who now resides with J. T. M'Cown, Esq., in the city of Troy. Colonel Cochran having been sent to Cana- da as a spy, his mission was suspected, and a larp:e bountv offered for his head. While there he was taken sick, and knowing that he was suspected, concealed himself, for the space of a few days, in a brush heap, within about two miles of the American lines, unable to make his escape, or even to walk. Having suffered much from his sickness and want of nourishment, and having discovered a log cabin at considerable distance from where he was concealed, and the only one in sight, he crept to it on his hands and knees, for the purpose of soliciting assistance. On his approach to the rear of the cabin, he heard three men in ear- nest conversation, and as it happened he was BURGOYNe's CAxMFAIGN. 20S the subject of their discourse. Having heard of the heavy bounty that was offered for the Colonel, and having seen a man in the vicinity a few days before, answering the description of him, they were then forming their plans, and expressing their determination to find his whereabouts, and take him for the sake of the bounty. One of the men was the owner of the cabin, whose wife was also present, and the others were his brother and brother- in-law. Soon after this conversation took place, and the three men having departed in pursuit, he crept into the cabin, and frankly told the woman, who seemed favorably im- pressed towards him, on account of his almost helpless condition, that he had overheard the conversation, and that/ie was the man of whom they were in search, and that he should throw himself entirely upon her mercy, and trust to her fidelity for protection, which she very kindly promised him, to the utmost of her ability. Having administered some restora- tives, which seemed to give relief, and given him some suitable nourishment, he lay down on a bed in the room, for the purpose of tak- ing some repose, which he very much needed. After the men had been absent some three 204 burgoyne's campaign. hours, they again returned, when she conceal- ed him in a closet, or sort of cupboard, stand- ing by the side of the fire-place, and shut the door, taking good care while the men were in the house, to keep near it herself, that if any- thing should be wanted from within, she might be ready to get it herself. During the time the men were in the cabin, they expressed much confidence in the belief, that the colonel was concealed somewhere in the vicinity, and named many places in which they intended to search for him ; all of which he in his place of concealment overheard. Having taken some food, and otherwise prepared themselves, the men again departed, in order to renew their search. Soon after they retired, and the woman considering the Colonel's present situation not long safe, she proposed that he should conceal himself at some distance from the cabin, where she might clandestinely bring him food, and render him such other assistance as he needed, and accordingly directed him to take post on a certain hill about half a mile off, where he might be able to discover any person on their approach, and to flee, if he was able, and it became necessary. On his manifesting an in- 205 clination to resume his former position in the brush heap, which was in the midst of quite a patch of ground that had been cut over for a fallow, she told him that her husband intended to burn it over the next day, and in that case he would certainly be discovered, or perish in the conflagration; upon which he submitted entirely to her proposition and directions, and crept along to the hill in the best way he could. He remained sometime in this place of con- cealment, undiscovered by any one except this faithful Rahab of the forest, who rendered him suitable and timely assistance, and like a good Samaritan poured in the "oil and the wine," until his strength was in a measure restored, and he was again enabled to return to his country and his home. Some years after the close of the war, and while the Colonel lived at Ticonderoga, he ac- cidently came across this kind hearted woman, whose name, I much regret, I have not been able to ascertain, and rewarded her handsome- ly for her fidelity. Colonel Cochran died 1822, near Sandy Hill, Washington county. New York, much lamented by a large circle of friends and ac- 206 burgoyne's cAMPAicrf. quaintances, and was buried in the family burying ground at Fort Edward. Here loo, those warrior sires with honor rest, Who braved in freedom's cause the valiant breast ; Lo ! here they rest, who every danger braved. Unmarked, unlrophied, 'mid the soil they saved. A few days more of anxiety, fatigue and suf- fering remained for the British army. They had lost part of their provision batteaux, taken by the Americans while on their retreat, and the rest being exposed to imminent danger, the small stock of provisions remaining, was landed under a heavy fire, and hauled up the heights. On these heights near to the flats bordering on the river, was formed their forti- ed camp, extending over half a mile in rear, and strengthened by artillery ; most of their artillery however, was back on the plain, and on an elevated piece of ground northeast of the present village of Schuylerville. Gen. Gates's army was encamped on the south side of Fish creek and parallel to it, the corps of Colonel Morgan lay west and northwest of the British army, and General Fellows, whose forces were now increased to two thousand men, was on 207 the east side of the Hudson, readj to dispute the passage of that stream should it be attempt- ed. Fort Edward was occupied by the Amer- icans — a fortified camp was formed on the high ground between this fort and Fort George, and numerous parties were stationed up and down the river ; thus the desperate resolution which had been taken in General Burgojne's camp, of abandoning their artillery and bag- gage and (with no more provisions than they could carry on their backs,) forcing their way by a rapid night march, in this manner gain- ing one of the lakes, was rendered abortive. Every part of the royal army was now ex- posed, not only to cannon balls, but to rifle shot ; not a single place of safety could be found, not a corner where a council could be held, a dinner taken in peace, or where the sick and the wounded, the females and the children could find an asylum. Even the ac- cess to the river was rendered very hazardous by the numerous rifle shot, and the army was soon distressed for want of water. General Reidesel, and his lady and children, w^ere of- ten obliged to drink wine instead of water, and they had no way to procure the latter, ex- cept that a soldier's wife ventured to the river 208 BURGOtNE's CAMPAIGN* for them, and the Americans, out of respect to her sex, did not fire at her. To protect his family from shot, the Baron de Reidesel, soon after their arrival at Sarato- ga, directed them to take shelter in Lemson's house (now Mrs. Bushee's,) about a mile up the river, and opposite to the mouth of Batten kill. They had scarcely reached it, before a terrible cannonade from the heights on the op- posite side of the river was directed against that very house, upon the mistaken idea, that all the generals were assembled in it ; "Alas," adds the Baroness, " it contained none but wounded and women ; we were at last obliged to resort to the cellar for refuge, and in one corner of this I remained the whole day, my children sleeping on the earth with their heads in my lap, and in the same situation, I passed a sleepless night. Eleven cannon balls passed through the house, and we could distinctly hear them roll away. One poor soldier who was lying on a table, for the purpose of having his leg amputated, was struck by a shot which carried away the other ; his comrades had left him, and when we found him he was in the corner of the room, into which he had crept, more dead than alive, scarcely breathing. My burgoyne's campaign. 209 reflections on the danger to which my husband was exposed, now agonized me exceedingly, and the thoughts of my children, and the necessity of struggling for their preservation, alone sustained me. In this horrid situation we remained six days." In such a state of cir- cumstances, it was alike impossible to advance or remain as they were ; and the longer they delayed to take a definitive resolution, the more desperate became their situation. Bur- goyne, therefore, immediately called a council of war, at which not only the generals and field officers, but all the captains of companies were invited to assist. While they delibe- rated, the balls of the Americans whistled around them, and frequently pierced even the tent where the council was convened. It was determined unanimously to open a treaty and enter into a convention with General Gates. On the 14th of October, General Burgoyne sent Major Kingston to the head quarters of General Gates, with a proposition for " a ces- sation of arms, during the time necessary to communicate the preliminary terms ; by which in any extremity he and the army mean to abide." General Gates had already prepared a schedule of the terms upon which he was 18 210 burgoyne's campaign. willing to treat. This schedule evinced that he was well acquainted with the distresses of the British, and was drawn up in terms of extreme liberality. To the 9th article of General Bur- goyne's proposition, General Gates affixed the following answer : The capitulation to be finished by two o'- clock this day, the 15th, and the troops march from their encampment at five, and be in readi- ness to move towards Boston to-morrow morn- ing. These preliminary articles and their an- swers, being sent to General Burgoyne, pro- duced the immediate return of his messenger with the following note. '' The eight first preliminary articles of Lieutenant General Bur- goyne's proposals, and the 2d, 3d, and 4th of those of Major-General Gates, of yesterday, be- ing agreed to, the formation of the proposed treaty is out of dispute : but the several sub- ordinate articles and regulations necessarily springing from these preliminaries, and requir- ing explanation and precision, between the parties, before a definitive treaty can be safely executed, a longer time than that mentioned by Generel Gates in his answer to the ninth ar- ticle, becomes indispensably necessary. Lieu- tenant-General Burgoyne is willing to appoint burgoyne's campaign. 211 two officers immediately, to meet two others from Major-General Gates, to propound, dis- cuss, and settle those subordinate articles, in order that the treaty in due form may be exe- cuted as soon as possible." This meeting took place on the afternoon of the 15th, and the parties mutually signed ar- ticles of capitulation, or convention, as Ge- neral Burgoyne wished to have it designated, A copy of the convention was to be signed by General Burgoyne, and delivered the next morning. In the night, an express arrived at the Bri- tish camp from General Clinton, with the in- telligence that he had moved up the Hudson, reduced Fort Montgomery, and penetrated as far as Esopus. This information seemed to revive a hope of safety in the breast of Bur- goyne ; he therefore called a meeting of the officers to declare, whether in a case of ex- tremity, the soldiers were in a situation to fight, and whether they considered the public faith as pledged by the verbal convention. A great number answered, that the soldiers, de- bilitated by fatigue and hunger, were unable to make resistance ; all were decidedly of the opinion, that the public faith was engaged^ 212 burgoyne's campaign. Burgojne alone manifested a contrary opinion. Meanwhile General Gates, apprised of these hesitations of the British commander, and the new hopes which occasioned them, formed his troops in order of battle on the morning of the sixteenth, and sent to inform Burgojne, that the stipulated time being arrived, he must either sign the articles, or prepare himself for battle. The Englishman no longer hesitated, but took his resolution ; he signed the paper, which was in the following words : Articles of Convention between Lieutenant-General Burgoyne and Major-Geiieral Gates. 1st. "The troops under Lieutenant General Bur- goyne, to march out of their camp with the honors of war, and the artillery of entrenchments, to the verge of the river where the old fort stood, where the arms and artillery are to be left ; the arms to be piled by word of command from their own officers. 2d. A free passage to be granted to the army under Lieutenant-General Burgoyne to Great Britain, on condition of not serving again in North America dur- ing the present contest ; and the port of Boston is as- signed for the entry of transports to receive the troops, whenever General Howe shall so order. 3d. Should any cartel take place, by whicli the ar- my under General Burgoyne, or any part of it, may be burgoyne's campaign. 213 exchanged, the foregoing articles to be void as far as such exchange should be made. 4th. The army under Lieutenant-General Burgoyne, to march to Massachusetts Bay, by the easiest, most ex- peditious, and convenient route, and be quartered in, near, or as convenient as possible to Boston, that the march of the troops may not be delayed, when the transports shall arrive to receive them. 5th. The troops to be supplied on their march, and during their being in quarters, with provisions by Gen. Gates's orders, at the same rate of rations as the troops of his own army ; and if possible, the officers' horses and cattle are to be supplied with forage at the usual rates. 6th. All officers to retain their carriages, battle- horses, and other cattle, and no baggage to be molest- ed or searched ; Lieutenant-General Burgoyne giving his honor that there are no public stores secreted there- in. Major-General Gates will of course take the ne- cessary measures for the due performance of this arti- cle. vShould any carriages be wanted during the march for the transportation of officers' baggage, they are if possible, to be supplied. 7th. Upon the march, and during the time the army shall remain in quarters in Massachusetts Bay, the offi- cers are not as far as circumstances will admit, to be separated from their men. The officers are to be quartered according to rank, and are not to be hinder- ed from assembhng their men for roll-call, and the necessary purposes of regularity. 214 burgoyne's campaign. 8th. All corps whatever of General Burgoyne's army whether composed of sailors, batteaux men, artificers, drivers, independent companies, and followers of the army of whatever country, shall be included in every respect as British subjects. 9th. All Canadians, and persons belonging to the Canadian establishment, consisting of sailors, batteaux men, artificers, drivers, independent companies, and many other followers of the army, who come under no particular description, are to be permitted to return there; they are to be conducted immediately by the shortest route to the first British post on Lake George, are to be supplied with provisions in the same manner as the other troops, are to be bound by the same con- dition of not serving during the present contest in North America. 10th. Passports to be immediately granted for three officers not exceeding the rank of captains, who shall be appointed by Lieutenant-General Burgoyne, to carry despatches to Sir William Howe, Sir Guy Carleton, and to Great Britain by the way of New York ; and Maj. General Gates engages the public faith, that these des- patches shall not be opened. These officers are to set out immediately after receiving their despatches, and are to travel the shortest route, and in the most expe- ditious manner. 11th. During the stay of the troops in Massachusetts Bay, the officers are to be admitted on parole, and are to be allowed to wear their side arms. burgoyne's campaign. 215 12th. Should the army under Lieutenant-General Burgoyne find it necessary to send for their clothing and other baggage to Canada, they are to be permitted to do it in the most convenient manner, and the neces- sary passports granted for that purpose. 13th. These articles are to be mutually signed and exchanged to-morrow morning, at nine o'clock, and the troops under Lieutenant-General Burgoyne, are to march out of their entrenchments at three o'clock in the afternoon. (Signed) HORATIO GATES, Maj. Gen. (Signed) J. BURGOYNE, Lieut. Gen. Saratoga, Oct. 16, 1777. To prevent any doubts that might arise from Lieu- tenant-General Burgoyne's name not being mentioned in the above treaty, Major-General Gates hereby de- clares, that he is understood to be comprehended in it, as fully as if his name had been specifically mentioned. HORATIO GATES. The brass artillery captured from Burgoyne at various times during the campaign, amount- ed to forty-two pieces, constituting one of the most elegant trains ever brought into the field ; five thousand stand of arms ; six thousand dozen of cartridges ; and a number of ammu- nition wagons, travelling forges, shot, carcases, shells, &c., &c., also fell into the hands of the Americans. The whole number of trooi^« 216 CAMPAIGN. surrendered bj the convention amounted to five thousand, seven hundred and ninety-two, which, added to the number killed, wounded and captured in the several actions previous to the 17th of October, amounting to near five thousand, makes Burgojne's total loss up- wards of ten thousand men. In the morning of the 17th, Colonel Wilk- inson was directed to visit General Burgoyne in his camp, and accompany him to the green in front of old Fort Hardy, on the north bank of Fish creek, and near its intersection with the Hudson, where his army was to lay down their arms, from thence they rode to the mar- gin of the river, which he surveyed with at- tention, and asked whether it was not fordable. *' Certainly, sir ; but do you observe the peo- ple on the opposite shore ?" " Yes," he replied, " I have seen them too long!" He then pro- posed to be introduced to General Gates, and they crossed Fish creek, and proceeded to head-quarters. General Burgoyne in front, with his Adjutant-General Kingston, and his aids-de-camp Captain Lord Petersham, and Lieutenant Wilford behind him ; then follow- ed Major-General Phillips, the Baron Reide- sel, and the other general officers, and their burgoyne's campaign. 217 suits, according to rank. General Gates, ad- vised of Burgoyne's approach, met him at the head of his camp about three-fourths of a mile south of Fish creek, Burgoyne, in a rich royal uniform, and Gates in a plain blue frock ; when they had approached nearly within sword's length, they reined up and halted. The Colonel then named the gentlemen, and General Burgoyne, raising his hat, most grace- fully, said, " The fortune of war, General Gates, has made me your prisoner ;" to which the conqueror, returning a courtly salute, promptly replied, " I shall always be ready to bear testimony, that it has not been through any fault of your excellency." Major General Phillips then advanced, and he and General Gates saluted and shook hands with the familiarity of old acquaintances. The Baron Reidesel, and the other officers, were introduced in their turn. After the introductory ceremony was gone through, Burgoyne, with his general officers, was invited to the head quarters of General Gates, and entertained by him at dinner. They were received with the utmost courtesy, and with the consideration due to brave but unfor- tunate men. The conversation was unre- 19 218 burgoyne's campaign. strained, affable, and free. Indeed the con- duct of General Gates throughout, after the terms of surrender had been adjusted, was marked with equal delicacy and magnanimity, as Burgoyne himself admitted in a letter to the Earl of Derby. In that letter the captive ge- neral particularly mentioned one circumstance which, he said, exceeded all he had ever seen or read of on a like occasion. It was the fact, that when the British soldiers had marched out of their camp to the place where they were to pile their arms, not a man of the American troops ivas to be seen — General Gates having ordered his whole army out of sight, that not one of them should be a spectator of the hu- miliation of the British troops, nor offer the smallest insult to the vanquished. This was a refinementofdelicacy and of military generosity and politeness, reflecting the highest credit upon the conqueror ; and was spoken of by the offi- cers of Burgoyne in the strongest terms of approbation. After the British troops left their encamp- ment, and had marched to the " green " in front of Old Fort Hardy,* where they deposited their * Fort Hardy, is a military work thrown up and oo- 219 arms, and emptied their cartridge boxes ; they were again formed in line, with the light in- fantry in front, and escorted by a company of light dragoons, preceeded by two officers mounted, and bearing the stars and stripes waving triumphantly, through the American camp. On their approach, and as they march- ed between the long lines of victorious troops, who were then paraded on opposite sides of the road, for near a mile in extent. The American Band, with cheerful sound Of sonorous Drum, French horn and Bugle, Made the neighboring hills, in joy, resound, To the thund'ring tune of Yankee Doodle ! At this moment the two Generals came out of Gates's marquee together. The American com- cupied by the French, under General Dieskau, in the year 1755. The lines of entrenchment embrace about fifteen acres of ground. The outer works yet retain the appearance of a strong fortification, bounded south by the north side of Fish creek, and east by the right bank of the Hudson. Human bones, fragments of fire-arms, swords, balls, tools, implements, and broken crockery, are frequently picked up on this ground. hi excavating the earth for the Champlain Canal, which passes a few rods west of this Fort, such num- bers of human skeletons were found, as made it highly probable this was the cementry of the French garrison. 220 burgoyne's campaign. mander faced front, andBurgoyne did the same, standing on his left. Not a word was spoken bj either, and for some minutes, they stood silently gazing on the scene before them — the one, no doubt, in all the pride of honest success ; the other, the victim of regret and sensibility. Burgoyne was a large and stoutly formed man, his countenance was rough and hard, but he had a handsome figure and noble air. Gates was a smaller man, with much less of manner, and destitute of that air which distinguished Burgoyne. Presently General Burgoyne as by previous understanding, step- ped back, drew his sword, and in the face of the two armies, as it were, presented it to General Gates, who received and instantly re- turned it in the most courteous manner. They then returned to the marquee. The British troops now filed off, with the light infantry still in advance, and the Hessians came lumbering in the rear. Their heavy caps alone were equal to the weight of the whole equipment of a light infantry soldier. It was well known that their services had been sold by their own petty princes, that they were col- lected together, if not caught^ at their church- es while attending religious worship ; and if we 221 may credit the account given us, they were actually torn from their homes and handed over to the British government at so much a head, to be transported across the ocean, and wage war against a people of whose history, and even of whose existence they were ignorant. They were found almost totally unfit for the business they were engaged in. They were unable to march through the woods and en- counter the difficulties incident to movements in our then almost unsettled country. Many of them deserted to our army before and after the convention of Saratoga. Among those German troops, were the Hesse Hanau regiment, ReidesePs dragoons, and Speckt's regiment, the most remarkable of the whole. The officers of distinction who accompanied them, were, Major-General Bar- on de Reidesel, Q,uarter-Master-General Gos- back, Adjutant-General Poelnic, Secretary Langemegen, Brigadier-General Speckt, Brig- adier-General Goll, and some others. The Hessians were extremely dirty in their persons, and had a collection of wild animals in their train — the only thing American they had cap- tured. Here could be seen an artillery-man leading a black grizzly bear, who every now 222 btjrgoyne's campaign. and then would rear upon his hind legs as if he were tired of going upon all fours, or occa- sionally growl his disapprobation at being pulled along by his chain. In the same manner a tamed deer would be seen tripping lightly after a grenadier. Young foxes were also observed looking sagaciously at the spectators from the top of a baggage wagon, or a young racoon securely clutched under the arm of a sharp shooter. There were a great many women accompanying the Germans, and a miserable looking set of oddly dressed, Gypsey featured females they were. It is said that no insults were offered to the prisoners as they marched off, and they felt grateful for it. However, after they got out of the camp, many of the British soldiers were extremely abusive, cursing the rebels and their own hard fate. The troops were escorted by some of the New England militia, and crossed the river at Stillwater, on a bridge of rafts, which had been constructed by the Americans while the army were encamped on Bemis's Heights. On the night of the surrender, a number of Indians and Squaws, the relics of Burgoyne's aboriginal force, were quartered under a strong CAMPAIGN. 223 guard for safe keeping. Without this precau- tion their lives would not have been safe from the exasperated militia. The murder of Miss M'Crea was but one of a number of their atrocities, which harden- ed every heart against them, and prevented the plea of mercy from being interposed in their behalf. Among these savages were three, that were between six and seven feet in height, perfect giants in form, and possessing the most fero- cious countenances. And among them, was recognized the same Indian with whom my father had the encounter at Ensign's. Blood and carnage were now succeeded by success and plunder. The clouds of battle rolled away, and discovered hundreds of search- ers after the relics of the tented field. CHAPTER X. While the British army lay on the north bank of Fish creek, the east side of the river, in addition to the regular troops, was lined with American militia. One of them, an expert 224 burgoyne's campaign. swimmer, discovered a number of the enemy's horses feeding in a meadow of General Schuy- ler's, opposite, and asked permission of his captain to go over and get one of them. It was given, and the man instantly stripped, and swam across the river. He ascended the bank and selecting a fine bay horse for his prize, approached the animal, siezed, and mounted him instantly. This last was the work of a moment. He forced the horse into a gallop^ plunged down the bank and brought him safely over to the American camp, although a volley of musketry was fired at him from a party of British soldiers posted at a distance beyond. His success was hailed with enthusiasm, and it had a corresponding effect on his own ad- venturous spirit. After he had rested himself, he went to his officer and remarked, that it was not proper that a private should ride, whilst his commander went on foot. '' So, sir," added he, " if you have no objections, I will go and catch another for you, and next winter when we are home, we will have our own fun in driving a pair of Burgoyne's horses." The captain seemed to think it would be rather a pleasant thing, and gave a ready consent. The fellow actually went across the second burgoyne's campaign. 225 time, and with equal success, and brought over a horse that matched exceedingly well with the other. The men enjoyed this prank very much, and it was a circumstance familiar to almost every one in the army at that time. Another circumstance happened about the same time, and shows that families were not only divided in feeling on the subject of the war, but that the natural ties which bind the same ** kith and kin " together, were not al- ways proof against the political animosities of the times. When Burgoyne found his boats were not safe, and in fact much nearer the main body of the American army than his own, it became necessary to land his provi- sions, of which he had already been short for many weeks, in order to prevent his army be- ing actually starved into submission. This was done under a heavy fire from the Ameri- can troops, who were posted on the opposite side of the river. On one of these occasions, a person by the name of Mr. , at Salem, and a foreigner by birth, and who had at the very time a son in the British army, crossed the river at De Bidder's, with a person by the name of M'Niei ; they went in a canoe, and 226 burgoyne's campaign. arriving opposite to the place intended, cross- ed over to the western bank, on which a re- doubt called Fort Lawrence had been erected. They crawled up the bank with their arms in their hands, and peeping over the upper edge, they saw a man in a blanket coat, loading a cart. They instantly raised their guns to fire, an action more savage than commendable. At the moment the man turned so as to be more plainly seen, old Mr. said to his com- panion, now that's my own son Hughy, but I'll d — 'd for a' that if I sill not gi him a shot. He then actually fired at his own son, as the person really proved to be, but happily without effect. Having heard the noise made by their conversation, and the cocking of their pieces, which the nearness of his position rendered perfectly practicable, he ran round the cart, and the balls lodged in the felly of the wheel. The report drew the attention of the neigh- boring guards, and the two marauders were driven from their lurking place. While re- treating with all possible speed M'Niel was wounded in the shoulder, and if alive carries the wound about with him unhealed to this day. Had the ball struck the old Scotchman, it is questionable whether any one would have burgoyne's campaign. 227 considered it more than even-handed justice, commending the chalice to his own lips. At the time Governor George Clinton, to whose indefatigable exertions the state of New- York owes more than she could repay, ordered out the militia of the different coun- ties, and at their head proceeding north- ward in hopes of cutting off the retreat of Sir John Johnson, he advanced as far as Crown- Point without meeting the enemy. On his arrival at that post, and hearing nothing of Sir John, my father and John Benson, known and distinguished as " barefoot Benson," who were volunteers at the time, were selected by Governor Clinton, as scouts, to proceed from that post through a dense " howling wilder- ness," as far as Schroon lake, for the purpose of ascertaining by the " trail " of the Indians, whether Sir John had passed between the two lakes. With only one ration for each, and nothing for their guide but a small pocket com- pass, they set out with their usual firmness and intrepidity. After travelling over steep and rugged mountains, and through deep, dark, and dismal ravines, they at length reached Schroon lake, without making any discovery, 228 burgoyne's campaign. in time to return as far back as the ** Beaver Meadows," about two miles west of the head of Brant lake, the first night. During the night, by way of precaution, they deemed it advisable to separate, that, in case they should be discovered by Indians, who were constantly lurking about the country, there might be a better chance, for one of them at least, to make his escape and give the alarm. Accord- ingly they lay down in the tall grass about fif- teen or twenty rods apart, for their repose, during the night. About three o'clock in the morning as near as they could judge, they heard a rustling in the grass, about equi-dis- tant from them both, and soon after heard a stepping, like some person cautiously approach- ing, which they supposed at the time to be the step of some Indian who might have dis- covered them at the time they concealed them- selves in the grass. On the approach of the object within the circle of their faint vision, they both, as if by concert, though ignorant of each others intentions, being determined to sell their lives as dear as possible, raised themselves on one knee, levelled their pieces, and fired at the same instant. As soon as they fired, they heard a groan and momentary struggle in the burgoyne's campaign. 229 grass, when all again was still as the abodes of death. They then reloaded, and resumed their former positions, but there was no more sleep for them during the remainder of that night. Soon after day break, and when there was light sufficient to discern objects at a dis» tance, thej took an observation, and seeing no enemy near, they advanced to ascertain the re- sult of their encounter in the night, when be- hold, to their surprise, they found they had killed a famous great — deer ! After having their own sport for a while, they started on their return for the camp, by a dif- ferent route from the one they came, and which they supposed would be nearer, but they had not gone far among the mountains, before the needle to their compass refused to perform its duty, owing no doubt to some neighboring mineral^ which operated more powerfully than the pole. After wandering al)out for some time, in a dark and dismal forest, it being a dark and cloudy day, they became be- wildered and finally got lost. Thus they contin- ued to travel through the day, and found them- selves at night near the place where they start- ed from in the morning. By this time, having fasted twenty-four hours, their appetites be- 230 burgoyne's campaign. came so sharp they thought they would make a meal out of the deer they had fortuitously killed the night before ; but on their arrival at the spot they found that the wolves or some other animals had devoured it, and left not even a bone. They then laid themselves down for repose, on the same bed of grass they had occupied the night of the encounter. The next morning they again started for the camp, by the same route they came the first day, though somewhat faint for the want of food. About ten o'clock they came across a knap- sack, which had been lost or left in the woods, by some person to them unknown, containing a lot of boiled pork, bread and cheese promis- cuously thrown in together, and out of which Benson made a hearty meal ; but my father, having so strong an aversion even to the smell of cheese that he refused to taste a mouthful of any of the contents of the knapsack ; and ac- cordingly stood it out until he arrived at camp, about three o'clock in the afternoon of the third day, where they were received, with much joy, by the Governor and his staff, who had given them up for lost. It was thus ascertained that Sir John, with his horde of Indians, had not retreated in that direction, and the Governor borgoyne's campaign. 231 gave up all hopes of intercepting them on this and returned home. The Savage comes, the spoiler of your land, With all his howling, desolating band ; Red is the cup they drink, but not with wine ; Watch then to-night, or see no morning shine ! As I have pledged myself, in my introduc- tion, to give all the principal facts connected with Burgoyne's campaign, as far as they have come to my knowledge, and as I am not writ- ing to please any particular individual or class of readers, I will relate the following incident, which is often spoken of even to this day. The inhabitants throughout this part of the country, having been much harrassed by the Indians and Tories, and in constant danger of their lives, were consequently under the neces- sity, for their own safety, of building, at dif- ferent stations, what they termed Block-houses. These buildings were constructed of logs flattened on two sides and locked or halved to- gether at the angles or corners, which rendered them strong and proof against rifle or musket balls. On each side about six feet from the bottom was an interstice or narrow space be- tween the logs, for the purpose, in case of a 252 burgoyne's campaign. siege or an attack, of thrusting their guns through to fire on the besiegers. Below this open space a platform was erected about two feet from the floor, to stand upon while firing. The buildings were constructed without win- dows, and with but one door, which was made strong, and when occupied, this was strongly barricaded. To these buildings, when it was known or suspected there were Indians or To- ries in the vicinity, a number of families would resort during the night, leaving their own dwellings much exposed, and many of which were plundered and consumed. The block-houses were often attacked, and sometimes with considerable force, but as near as I have been able to learn, without much success, though with some loss to the assail- ants. It happened during a considerable interval of time, in which no Indians had been seen in the neighborhood, that the inhabitants ceased resorting to their block-houses. At this time a man by the name of Joseph Seely, whose vicious habits generally led him more to the gratification of his own evil propensities, than the public weal, and who had been out one day on a hunting excursion, for which he was burgoyne's campaign. 253 very famous, and not very fastidious about the kind of game he " bagged," even if it w^as a turkey or a fowl that might accidentally come in his vray, returned from the woods, saying he had come across a party of Indians and To- ries, at whom he had fired, and as he thought, killed one. The alarm was immediately spread throughout the neighborhood, and the men all armed themselves, and flocked together, for the purpose of going in pursuit. On being led by Seely to the place where he said he had shot at the Indians, they found a trail of blood extending some distance through the woods, which led them on the course they concluded it best to pursue, not doubting, from the circumstances of the blood, that he had severely wounded, if not killed one of the Indians or Tories. After traveling some miles and finding no enemy, they concluded they might have se- creted themselves in the neighborhood, with the intention of committing their savage deeds during the following night. Accordingly they all returned home, it being near night, and for safety, after secreting as much of their ef- fects as they conveniently could, they and their families resorted to their block-houses, and by 20 234 BURGOTNE's CAMPAiaN. turns kept watch for the enemy during the night ; but none appeared to molest them. The next morning thej very cautiously re- turned to their several homes, and many of them with the expectation of finding their property destroyed, and their dwellings in ashes. About ten o'clock, this mischief-bent hero of the forest, after having his own sport at the expense of his neighbors, and feeling conscious he had carried the joke rather too far, finally disclosed the whole secret. Hav- ing spent the whole forenoon af the previous day, and finding no game, on his return came across a flock of sheep, and from his natural propensity to mischief, he fired among them^ and badly wounded one, when they all ran into the woods. On pursuing them some dis- tance to see if the wounded sheep died, he observed the blood trickled along on the leaves ; upon which he thought he would raise a '• hue and cry," and alarm the neighborhood, by the horrible story he told of having seen and shot an Indian. The following daring fete was performed by the author's great-uncle. Captain Hezekiah Dunham, who commanded a militia company burgoyne's campaign. 2$5 in the vicinity of Bemis's Heights, a staunch whig, and a firm friend to the American cause. One evening as he was at a public enter- tainment, a boy was seen emerging from the woods in the nei^^hborhod on horseback, and presently approaching the place where the people were collected, asked if he could pur- chase a little rum. When he was answered no, he immediately mounted, returned a con- siderable distance, and then was seen gallop- ing down the main road by the river. On seeing this, Dunham exclaimed, " This means something, I am sure of it." He then watch- ed for the boy's return, and in a few minutes he repassed at full speed. He then reentered the wood, and was gone from their sight in an instant. Dunham's penetration induced him to say, " The enemy is near us : the Tories are in our neighborhood, and not far off." He separated from his company, with a deter- mination to act immediately. Dunham, when he reached home, immedi- ately went to a person by the name of Green, who was a son of Vulcan and of Mars, and an able-bodied, bold and persevering fellow. He was the pride of his settlement, and the safe- 236 burgoyne's campaign. guard of the people around him — always readj for action, never desponding, and fearless to an extent that was remarkable. He was al- ways relied upon in trying emergencies by the leading men in the vicinity, and what com- pleted his merits, he was never backward* Dunham related the circumstance to bim, and declared his belief that there was a party of Tories in the neighborhood. Three other persons were called upon the same night for assistance, and when the rest of their neighbors were asleep^ these hardy men commenced their reconnosance. Every suspected spot was carefully approached in hopes of finding the objects of their search. Every hollow that could contain a hiding place was looked into ; but in a more particular man- ner the out-houses and barns of those persons who were suspected for their attachment to the enemy, were examined by them. It seem- ed all in vain. No traces of a concealed foe were discovered, when towards day-break it was proposed to separate and make one final search for that time. Dunham took two men with him, and Green but one. The former, as a last effort returned to the house of one — « , who it was probable would be in com- burgoyne's campaign. 237 municalion with an enemy if near him. As he approached the house he had to pass a meadow adjoining, and observed a path lead- ing from the house to a small thicket of about three acres in extent. Dunham immediately suspected it led to his enemy. He pursued it, and found it passed around the thicket, and when it almost met the place where it turned off, the path entered the wood. Dunham paused, and turning to his companions said, " Here they are, will you follow me ?" They instantly agreed to accompany him, and the party moved on in single file, with light and cautious steps. As they got nearly to the cen- ter, Dunham in advance, a log stopped up the path, and seemed to prevent any farther ap- proach. With a motion that indicated the neces- sity of their remaining still, he mounted the log, and looking over, discovered, sure enough, at once a desired and yet imposing sight. Around the remains of a watch-fire, which day-break rendered less necessary, sat a group of five fierce looking men, with countenances relaxed from their usual fixedness ; but yet betokening bold- ness, if not savageness of purpose. They were dressing themselves, and putting on their shoes and stockings, which stood beside their 238 burgoyne's campaign. rude couches. Their clothes were much worn, but had a military cut, which making their stout and muscular forms more apparent, gave them a peculiar snug fit, and distinguished them from the loose, slovenly scarecow figures which the homely character of our country seamtresses impossed upon everything rural or rusticated among our people. Their hats or caps were set carelessly on their heads, with the air of regulars ; and what made them still more ob- served was, that every man of them had his musket at his side on the ground, ready to be used at an instant's notice. Dunham surveyed this scene a few moments, and then drew back cautiously to his companions. In a tone not above a whisper, he said, " Shall we take 'em !" A nod from his companions decided him — each now examined his musket, and re- primed it. The captain took the right of his little band, and they moved forward to the log. They mounted it at the same instant, and as they did so, Dunham cried out, " surrender or you are all dead men !" The group that thus found themselves almost under the " muzzles of their enemies' guns," were indeed astonish- ed. All but their leader, Thomas l^ovelass, seemed petrified and motionless. This reso- burgoyne's campaign. 239 lute man seemed disposed to make an effort for their lives. Twice amid the silence and stillness of the perilous moment, he stretched out his hand to seize his gun. Each time he was prevented by the near approach of the muzzle that pointed at his head, and beyond which he saw an unflinching eye steadfastly fixed upon him ; at the same instant he was told, that if he touched it he was a dead man. At this critical period of the rencontre, Dunham peremptorily ordered the party to come out, one by one, which they reluctantly did, fearing perhaps that they were surround- ed by and in contact with a superior force. As fast as one came over the log he was secur- ed by the most powerful man of the three, while the other two kept their pieces steadily pointed at the prisoners. Some young women who proved to be sisters of some of the party, gave way to the most violent grief. Well aware of the danger they were in, and the speedy vengeance inflicted upon Tories and spies, they anticipated the most dreadful con- sequences to their unhappy brothers, and no words can express the frantic sorrow to which they abandoned themselves. The young men themselves assumed an air of firmness, but it 240 BURGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. was easily penetrated. They confessed that their intention was to capture and take off some of the most active Whigs in the neigh- borhood. One of the prisoners upon promise of quarters, informed that he belonged to a party of fifteen, who had come down from Canada on the same business — who were then in various disguises, scattered through the coun- try to ascertain the state of affairs for the ben- efit of the British general in Canada, who was planning an inroad, and that they had left their boats concealed on the shores of Lake George. The country was at that time over- run with spies and traitors. Robberies were frequent, and the inhabitants, (non combat- ants) carried prisoners to Canada. General Schuyler's house was robbed and two of his servants, or life-guards carried there. The general saved himself by retiring to his cham- ber, barricading the door, and firing upon the marauders. Lovelass and his companions, were taken to the barracks at Saratoga, where they were tried and condemned at a court-martial, of which the celebrated General Stark was president. Lovelass alone suffered death. He was con- sidered too dangerous a man to be permitted to burgoyne's campaign. 241 Escape. He complained that being found with arms in his hands, he was only a prisoner, and many thought that such being the fact, he was scarcely punishable as a spy. Indeed he even bewailed his hard fate, and the injustice done him, but found he had nothing to expect from the judges. In two or three days he was brought Out of his place of confinement, and suffered death upon the gallows, during a tremendous storm of rain and wind, accompanied with heavy and often repeated claps of thunder, and the most vivid flashes of lightning. I have adverted but little to the sufferings of the American army, because but little compara- tively, is known of what they individually en- dured. Excepting the inevitable casualties of battle, they must have suffered much less than their enemies ; for they soon ceased to be the flying, and became the attacking and trium phant party. Colonels Colburn, Adams, Fran- cis, and many other brave officers and men, gave up their lives, as the price of their coun- try's liberty, and very many carried away with them the scars produced by honorable wounds. The bravery of the American army was fully acknowledged by their adversaries. " At all times," said Lord Balcarras, " when I was 21 242 burgoyne's campaigi^^ opposed to the rebels, tliej fought with great courage and obstinacy. We were taught by experience, that neither their attacks nor resistance was to be despised. Speaking of the retreat of the Americans at Ticonderoga, and of their behaviour at the battle of Hub- barton, Lord Balcarras adds : 'circumstanced as the enemy were, as an army very hard pressed in their retreat, they certainly be- haved with great gallantry ; of the attack on the lines, on the evening of the 7th October, he says — The lines were attacked, and with as much fury as the fire of small arms can ad- mit. Captain Mooney, in answer to the questions whether on the 19th of September the Ameri- cans disputed the field with obstinacy, answer- ed, they did, and the fire was much hotter than I ever knew it anywhere, except at the affair at Fort Ann ; and speaking of the battle of October 7th, and of the moment when the Americans, with nothing but gmall arms, were marching up to the British artillery, he adds, I was very much astonished to hear the shot from the enemy fly so thick after our cannon- ade had lasted a quarter of an hour. General Burgoyne gives it as his opinion, burgoyne's campaign. 243 that as rangers, perhaps there are few better in the world, than the corps of Virgina rifle- men which acted under Colonel Morgan. He says, speaking of the battle of September 19th, that few actions have been characterized by more obstinacy, in attack or defence. The British bayonet was repeatedly tried ineflect- ually. Remarking upon the battle of the 7th of Oc- tober, he observes : If there be any persons who continue to doubt that the Americans pos- sess the quality ?ind faculty of fighting, call it by whatever term you please, they are of a prejudice, that it would be very absurd longer to contend with ; he says, that in this action the British troops retreated hard pressed, but in good order, and that the troops had hardly entered the camp, when it was stormed with great fury — the enemy rushing to the lines, un- der a severe fire of grape-shot and small arms. It is very gratifying to every real American to find, that for so great a prize, his country- men, (their enemies themselves being judges) contended so nobly, and that their conduct for bravery, skill and humanity, will stand the scrutiny of all future ages. From the enemy it becomes us not tQ with- 244 burgoyne's campaign. hold the commendation that is justly due ; all that skill and valor could effect, they accom- plished, and they were overwhelmed at last by complicated distresses, and by superior num- bers. The vaunting proclamation of Burgoyne, at the commencement of the campaign ; some of his boasting letters, written during the pro- gress of it, and his devastation of private prop- erty, reflect no honor on his memory. But in general, he appears to have been a humane and honorable man, a scholar and a gentleman, a brave soldier and an able commander. Some of his sentiments have a higher moral tone than is common with men of his profession, and have probably procured for him more respect, than all his battles. Speaking of the battle of the 7th, he says : In the course of the action, a shot had passed through my hat, and another had passed through my waistcoat. I should be sorry to be thought, at any time, insensible to the protecting hand of Providence ; but I never, more particularly considered (and 1 hope not superstitiously) a soldier's hair breadth escapes as incentives to duty a marked renew- al of the trust of being ^ for the purposes of a public station : and under that reflection, to burgoyne's campaign. 245 loose our fortitude, by giving way to our affec- tions ; to be divested by any possible self-emo- tion from meeting a present exigency, with our best faculties, were at once dishonor and im- piety. Thus have I adverted to some of the leading circumstances of the greatest military event which has ever occured in America ; but com- pared with the whole extent and diversity of that campaign, the above notices however ex- tended, are few and brief. Should the notice of these great events tend, in any instance, to quench the odious fires of party, and rekindle those of genuine patriotism — should it revive in any one a veneration for the virtues of those men who faced death, in every form, regard- less of their own lives, and bent only on secur- ing to posterity the precious blessings which we now enjoy ; and above all, should we thus be led to cherish a higher sense of gratitude to heaven for our unexampled privileges, and to use them more temperately and wisely, the time occupied in this narrative, will not have been spent in vain. History presents no strug- gle for liberty which has in it more of the moral sublime than that of the American Re- volution. It has been, of late years, too much 246 BtJRGOYNE^S CAMPAIGN. forgotten in the sharp contentions of party, and he who endeavors to withdraw the public mind from those debasing conflicts, and to fix it on the grandeur of that great epoch — which, magnificent in itself, begins now to wear the solemn livery of antiquity^ as it is viewed through the deepening tivilight of more than Haifa century, certainly performs a meritorious service, and can scarcely need a justification. The generation that sustained the conflict, is now almost passed away ; a few hoary heads remain seamed with honorable scars — a very few experienced guides can still attend us to the fields of carnage, and point out the places where they and their companions fought and bled, and where now sleep the bones of the slain. But these men will soon be gone ; tra- dition and history, will however, continue to recite their deeds, and the latest generations will be taught to venerate the defenders of our liberties ; to visit the " memorable battle grounds," which were moistened with their blood, and to thank the mighty God of bat- tles that the arduous conflict terminated in the entire establishment of the liberties of this country. burgoyne's campaign, 247 TO THE READER, It was the author's intention at the com- mencement of this "narrative," to have given credit for such matter as he might be induced to dreiw from other sources than those named in the introduction. But in the progress of his writing, he found his own corrections and re- marks, in many instances, so commingled with those selections, as to render it almost, if not not quite, impracticable, and possibly so unin- telligible to many, that he was reluctantly compelled to abandon the idea in many cases. And to give credit in one instance and not in another, would manifestly be doing an injus- tice ; he has therefore left it for the reader to make his own researches, as a means of im- proving his habits of reading, and possibly, his understanding. In the meantime the author apologizes to those from whom he has, more or less, drawn, believing, as his object is to give a correct statement of facts, they will deem it of sufficient credit to them, to know that they have been referred to as authority for a portion of this work. APPENDIX The following is an extract of a letter written by the venerable Samuel Woodruff, Esq., of Connecticut, a volunteer under Gen. Gates, and a participator in the battle of the seventh of October, and who again visit- ed the very important ground some few years since. In speaking of his tour to Stillwater and Saratoga to gratify a desire he had felt, and which had long- been increasing, to view the battle grounds at that place, and the spot on which the royal armyunder the command of General Burgoyne surrendered to Gene- ral Gates,, on the 17th October, 1777, he says : " You will excuse me for entering a little into the feelings of Uncle Toby respecting Dendermond in the compressed and hastily written journal I kept of my tour, especially as you will take into consideration that I had the honor to serve as a volunteer under General Gates part of that campaign, and was in the battle of the 7th of October. " I take the liberty to enclose to you an extract of that part of my journal which embraces the principal object of ray tour. 250 APPENDIX. " At 7 A. M. started on foot to view some other equally interesting places connected with the cam- paign of 1777, three (six) miles and a half south of Fish creek, called at the house of a Mr. Smith, in which General Frazer died of wounds received in the battle of the 7th of October, and near which house in one of the British redoubts, that officer was buried. This house (owned at the time by John Taylor, of Al- bany,) then stood by the road on the west margin of the interval, at the foot of the rising ground. A turn- pike road having since been constructed, running twen- ty or thirty rods east of the old road, the latter has been discontinued, and Mr. Smith (Lee,) has drawn the house and placed it on the west side of the turn- pike. " Waiving, for the present, any farther notices of this spot, I shall attempt a concise narrative of the two hostile armies for a short period anterior to the great battle of the 7th of October. " The object of the British General was to penetrate as far as Albany, at which place, by concert, he was to meet Sir Henry Clinton, then with a fleet and army at New-York. In the early part of September, Gene- ral Burgoyne had advanced with his army, from Fort Edward, and crossed the Hudson with his artillery, baggage Avagons, &c., on a bridge of boats, and en- trenched the troops on the highlands of Saratoga (Still- water). On the 19th of September they left their en- trenchments, and moved south by a slow and cautious march towards the American camp, which was secured APPENDIX. 251 by a line of entrenchments and redoubts on Bemis's Heights, running from west to east about half a mile in length, terminating at the east on the west side of the interval. " Upon the approach of the royal army, the Ameri- can forces sallied forth from their camp, and met the British about a mile north of the American lines. A severe conflict ensued, and many brave officers and men fell on both sides. The ground on which this battle was fought was principally covered with stand- ing wood. This circumstance somewhat embarrassed the British troops in the use of their field artillery, and afforded some advantage to the Americans, particularly the riflemen under the command of the brave Colonel Morgan, who did great execution. Night, which has often and so kindly interposed to stop the carnage of conflicting hosts, put an end to the battle. " Neither party claimed a victory. The royal army withdrew in the night, leaving the field and their slain with some of their wounded in possession of the Ame- ricans. The loss of killed and wounded, as near as could be ascertained, was, on the part of the British, six hundred ; and on that of the Americans about three hundred and fifty. The bravery and firmness of the American forces displayed this day, convinced the British officers of the difficulty if not utter impossibility of continuing their march to Albany. The season for closing the campaign in that northern region was ad- vancing — the American army was daily augmenting by militia, volunteers and the " two months' men," as 252 APPENDIX. they were then called. The fear that the two royal armies might effect their junction at Albany, aroused the neighboring states of New-England, and drew from New-Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Vermont, a large body of determined soldiers. Baum's defeat at Bennington had inspired them with new hopes and invigorated their spirits. " Under these circumstances, inauspicious to the hos- tile army, the British commander-in-chief summoned a council of war ; the result of which was to attempt a retreat across the Hudson to Fort Edward. General Gates, apprehending the probability of this measure, seasonably detached a portion of his force to intercept and cut off the retreat should that be attempted. " Many new and unexpected difficulties now present- ed themselves. The boats which had served the Brit- ish army for a bridge, being considered by them as of no further use, had been cut loose, and most of them floated down the river. The construction of rafts suf- ficient for conveying over their artillery and heavy baggage, would be attended with great danger as well as loss of time. The bridges over the creeks had been destroyed ; great quantities of trees had been felled across the roads by order of the American general 5 and another thing, not of the most trifling nature. Fort Edward was already in possession of the Americans. In this perplexing dilemma the royal army found them- selves completely checkmated. A retreat, however, was attempted, but soon abandoned. Situated as they now were, between two fires, every motion they made APPENDIX. 253 was fraught with danger and loss, they retired to their old entrenched camp. " Several days elapsed without any very active ope- rations on either side. This interval of time, was, however, improved by the royal army in preparations to make one desperate effort to force the lines of the American camp, and cut their way through on their march to Albany. The American army improved the meantime in strengthening their outer works, arrang- ing their forces, and placing the continentals on the north side of the entrenchments, where valaint men were expected ; thus preparing to defend every point of attack. Morgan, with his riflemen, to form the left flank in the woods. " During these few days of ^ dreadful preparation,' information daily arrived in our camp, by deserters and otherwise, that an attack would soon be made upon the line of our entrenchments at Bemis's= Heights nea? the head quarters of General Gates. " The expected conflict awakened great anxiety among the American troops, but abated nothing of that Stirling intrepidity and firmness which they uni-^ formly displayed in the hour of danger ; all considered that the expected conflict would be decisive of the campaign at least, if not of the war in which we had been so long engaged. Immense interests were at stake. Should General Burgoyne succeed in marching his army to Albany, General Clinton, without any con- siderable difficulty, would there join him with another powerful English army, and a fleet suflficient to com- 254 APPENDIX. mand the Hudson from thence to New-York. Should this junction of force take place, all the states east of the Hudson would be cut off from all efficient commu- nication with the western and southern states. " In addition to this there w^ere other considerations of the deepest concern. The war had already been protracted to a greater length of time than was expect- ed on either side at the commencement. The resources of the country, which were at first comparatively small in respect to those things necessary for war, began to fail ; the term of enlistment of many of the soldiers had expired. "We had no public money, and no government to guarantee the payment of wages to the officers and soldiers, nor to those who furnished supplies for the troops. Under these discouraging circumstances it be- came extremely difficult to raise recruits for the army. During the year 1776, and the fore part of '77, the Americans suffered greatly by sickness, and were un- successful in almost every rencontre with the enemy. Men's hearts, even the stoutest, began to fail. This was indeed the most gloomy period of the war of the Revolution. " On the 7th of October, about ten o'clock A. M., the royal army commenced their march, and formed their line of battle on our left, near Bemis's Heights, with General Frazer at their head. Our pickets were driven in about one o'clock P. M., and were followed by the British troops on a quick march to within fair musket shot distance of the line of our entrenchments. APPENDIX. 255 At this moment commenced a tremendous discharge of cannon and musquetry, which was returned with equal spirit by the Americans. " For thirty or forty minutes the struggle at the breast-w^orks was maintained with great obstinacy. Several charges with fixed bayonets were made by the English grenadiers with but little effect. Great num- bers fell on both sides. The ardor of this bloody con- flict continued for some time without any apparent ad- vantage gained by either party. At length, however, the assailants began to give way, preserving good or- der in a regular but slow retreat — loading, wheeling and firing, with considerable effect. The Americans followed up the advantage they had gained, by a brisk and well directed fire of field pieces and musketry. Colonel Morgan with his riflemen hung upon the left wing of the retreating enemy, and galled them by a most destructive fire. The line of battle now became extensive, and most of the troops of both armies were brought into action. The principal part of the ground on which this hard day's work was done, is known by the name of Freeman's Farm. It w^as then covered by a thin growth of pine wood without underbrush^ except one lot of about six or eight acres which had been cleared and fenced. On this spot the British grenadiers, under the command of the brave Major Ackland, made a stand, and brought together some of their field artillery ; this little field soon became lite- rally * the field of blood.' These grenadiers, the flower of the royal army, unaccustomed to yield to any op- 256 APPENDIX. posing force in fair field, fought with that obstinate' spirit which borders on madness. Ackland received a ball through both legs, which rendered him unable to walk or stand. This occurrence hastened the retreat of the grenadiers, leaving the ground thickly strewed with dead and wounded. " The battle was continued by a brisk running fire until dark. The victory was complete ; leaving the Americans masters of the field. Thus ended a battle of the highest importance in its consequences, and added great lustre to the American arms — I have seen no official account of the numbers killed and wounded j but the loss on the part of the British must have been great, and that on the Americans not inconsiderable. The loss of general officers suffered by the royal army was peculiarly severe. '* But to return to the Smith house. For several days previous to that time, General Burgoyne had made that house his head-quarters, accompanied by several gene- ral officers and their ladies, among whom were Gene- ral Frazer, the Baron and Baroness Reidesel, and their children. " The circumstances attending the fall of this gallant officer have presented a question about which military men are divided in opinion. The facts seem to be agreed, that soon after the commencement of the ac- tion, General Arnold, knowing the military character and efficiency of General Frazer, and observing his motions in leading and conducting the attack, said to Colonel Morgan, " That officer upon a grey horse is of APPENDIX. 267 himself a host, and must be disposed of— direct the at* tention of some of the sharp-shooters among your rifle^ men to him." Morgan nodding his assent to Arnold^ repaired to his riflemen, and made known to them the hint given by Arnold. Immediately upon this, the crupper of the grey horse was cut off by a rifle bullet, and within the next minute another passed through the horse's mane, a little back of his ears. An aid of Fra* zer noticing this, observed to him, " Sir, it is evident that you are marked out for particular aim ; would it not be prudent for you to retire from this place?" Frazer replied, " my duty forbids me to fly from dan- ger," and immediately received a bullet through his body. A few grenadiers were detached to carry him to the Smith (Taylor) house. " Having introduced the name of Arnold, it may be proper to note here, that although he had no regular command that day, he volunteered his service, was early on the ground, and in the hottest part of the struggle at the redoubts^ He behaved (as I then thought,) more like a mad-man than a cool and dis- creet oflScer. Mounted on a brown horse, he moved incessantly on a full gallop back and forth, until he re- ceived a wound in his leg and his horse was shot under him. I happened to be near him when he fell, and as- sisted in getting him into a litter to be carried to head- quarters. " Late in the evening Burgoyne came in, and a tender scene took place between him and Frazer. General Frazer was the idol of the British army, and the officer 22 258 APPENDIX. on whom, of all others,, Burgoyne placed the greatest reliance. He languished through the night, and ex- pired at eight o'clock the next morning. While on his death-bed he advised Burgoyne, without delay, to propose to General Gates terms of capitulation, and prevent the further effusion of blood ; that the situation of his army was now hopeless ; they could neither ad- vance nor retreat. He also requested that he might be buried in the great redout^ his body to be borne thither between sunset and dark, by a body of the grenadiers, without parade or ceremony. This request was strictly complied with. " After viewing the house to my satisfaction, I walked up to the place of interment. It is situated on an ele- vated piece of ground, commanding an extensive view of the Hudson, and a great length of the beautiful in- terval on each side of it. I was alone ; the weather was calm and serene. Reflections were awakened in my mind wliich I am wholly unable to describe. In- stead of the bustle and hum of the camp, and confused noise of the battle of the warrior, and the shouts of vic- tory which I here witnessed more than fifty years ago, all was now silent as the abodes of the dead. And indeed far, far the greatest part of both those armies who was then in active life, at and near this spot, are now mouldering in their graves, like that valiant offi- cer whose remains are under my feet, " their memories and their names lost," while God, in his merciful pro- vidence, has preserved my life, and after the lapse of more than half a century, has afforded me an opportu- APPENDIX. 259 nity of once more viewing those places, which force upon my mind interesting recollections of my youthful days." The Baroness de Reidesel in speaking of the move- ments of Burgoyne's army, says, when the army broke up (at Batten kill,) on the eleventh of September, 1777, she was at first told that she must remain behind ; but on her repeated entreaties, and as other ladies had been permitted to follow the army, the same indulgence was extended to her. They advanced by short journeys, and went through many toils; yet she w^ould have purchased at any price the privilege thus granted to her of daily seeing her husband. She had sent back her baggage, and only kept a small bundle of summer dresses. In the begining all went well ; they thought that there was little doubt of their being successful, and of reaching "the promised land f^ and when on the passage across the Hudson, General Burgoyne ex- claimed, " Britons never retrograde," their spirits rose mightily. She observed, however, with suspicion, that the wives of the officers were beforehand informed of all the mihtary plans ; and she was so much the more struck with it, as she remembered with how much secrecy all dispositions were made in the armies of Duke Ferdinand during the seven years' war. Thus the Americans anticipated their movements, and expected them wherever they arrived ; and this of course injured their affairs. On the ninteenth of September, an ac- tion took place which ended, she says, to their ad van- 260 APPENDIX. tage ; but they were in consequence, obliged to halt at a place called Freeman's farm. She witnessed the whole action, and knowing that her husband was among the cambatants, she was full of anxiety and trembled at every shot — and nothing escaped her ear. She saw a great number of wounded, and what was still worse, three of them were brought into the house where she was. One of them was a Major Harnage, whose wife was with them ; the second a lieutenant, whose wife was of her acquaintance ; and the third a young Eng- lish officer, called Young. The Major occupied, with his wife, a room close by where she was. He had re- ceived a shot through his body, and suffered exquisite pain. A few days after their arrival, she heard groans in another room, and was told that the young officer, whom she had just mentioned, was lying there, and that his recovery was very doubtful. She took much interest in him, as a family of his name had shown her great kindness during her stay in England. He ex- pressed a great desire to see his benefactress, for so he called her. She went into his room and found him on a thin bed of straw, for he had lost all his baggage. He was eighteen or nineteen years old, an only son, and a nephew of the same Mr. Young she had known in England. He lamented for his parents' sake, but said nothing of his sufferings. He had lost much blood, and the surgeon advised him to submit to the amputa- tion of his leg ; but he would not consent to it, though the limb had become gangrenous. She sent him pil- lows and blankets, and her maids gave him their mat- APPENIDX. 261 tress. She took more and more care of him, and visit- ed him daily ; for which he thanked her a thousand times. At last the amputation took place j but it was too late, and he died a few days afterwards. Her room being close to his, and the walls very thin, she heard his last moans. For their further march, she had caused a calash to be made for her, in which she could take not only her children, but also her two female attendants ; and thus she followed the army in the midst of the troops who were in great spirits, and sang and longed for victory. They marched, she says, through endless forests, and a beautiful district, though deserted by the inhabitants, who ran away at their approach to reinforce General Gates's army. They are naturally soldiers and excel- lent marksmen, and the idea of fighting for their coun- try and their liberty increased their innate courage. Her husband was encamped with the rest of the army ; being herself an hour's ride behind the army, she went every morning to pay him a visit in the camp, and sometimes she dined there with him, but generally he took his dinner at her quarters. There was daily skir- mishes with the enemy, generally of little importance.. But her husband could never sleep without his clothes. The weather already having grown rougher. Colonel Williams of the artillery, thought their mutual visits were rather too fatiguing for them, and proposed to have a house built for her with a chimney, which should not cost more than five or six guineas, and which she could uninterruptedly inhabit. She accepted of his 262 APPENDIX. offer, and the building, which was to be about twenty- feet square^) was began. Such a dwelhng is called a block house, for which logs nearly of equal diameter are put together; if the interstices are filled up with clay, it is not only very solid, but very warm. She was to take possession of it on the next day ; and she rejoiced in it the more, she says, as the nights were damp and cold, and it being close to the camp,' her hus- band would be able to be with her. But severe trials avvaited them, and on the seventh of October, their misfortunes began. She was at breakfast with her hus- band, and heard that something was intended. On the same day she expected Generals Burgoyne, Phillips, and Frazer, to dine with her. She saw a great move- ment among the troops and inquired the cause ; her husband told her it was merely a reconnoisance, which gave her no concern, as it often happened. She walk- ed out of the house and , met several Indians in their war dresses, with guns in their hands. When she ask- ed them where they were going ; they cried out, " War ! War !" (meaning they were going to battle.) This filled her with apprehension, and she scarcely got home before she heard reports of cannon and musketry, which grew louder by degrees, till at last the noise be- came excessive. About four o'clock in the afternoon, instead of the guests whom she expected. General Fra- zer was brought on a litter mortally wounded. The table which was already set, was instantly removed and a bed placed in its stead for the wounded general. She sat trembling in a corner ; the noise grew louder, APPENDIX. 26S and the alarm increased ; the thought that her husband might perhaps be brought in wounded in the same way, was terrible to her, and distressed her exceeding- ingly. General Frazer said to the surgeon, " Tell me if my wound is mortal ; do not flatter me." The ball had passed through his body, and unhappily for the ge- neral, he had eaten a very hearty breakfast, by which the stomach was distended, and the ball, as the surgeon said, had passed through it. She heard him often ex- claim with a sigh, " Oh, fatal ambition ! Poor General Burgoyne ! Oh my poor wife !" He was asked if he had any request to make ; to which he replied, that " If General Burgoyne would permit it, he should like to be buried at six o'clock in the evening on the top of a hill, on a redoubt which had been built there. She says she did not know which way to turn, all the other rooms were full of sick. Towards evening she saw her husband coming; then she forgot all her sor- rows, and thanked God that he was spared to her. He ate in great haste with her and his aid-de-camp behind the house. She had been told that they had the ad- vantage of the enemy, but the sorrowful faces she be- held told a different tale, and before her husband went away, he took her one side and said every thing was going very bad, that she must keep herself in read- iness to leave the place, but not to mention it to any one. She made the pretence that she would move the next morning into her new house, and had every thing packed up ready. Lady Harriet Ackland had a tent not far from her 264 Ap^ENBiXa house j in this she slept, and the rest of the day she was in the camp^ All of a sudden a man came to tell her that her husband was mortally Wounded, and taken prisoner ; on hearing this she became very miserable ; the Baroness comforted her by telling her that the wound was only slight, and at the same time advised her to go over to her husband, to do which, she would certainly obtain permission, and then she could attend to him herself; she was a charming woman and very fond of him. The Baroness spent much of the night in comforting her, and then went again to her children whom she had put to bed. She could not go to sleep, as she had General Frazer and all the other wounded gentlemen in her room, and she was sadly afraid her children would awake, and by their crying disturb the dying man in his last moments, who often addressed her, and apologized '■'for the trouble he gave herP About 3 o'clock in the morning she was told he could not hold out much longer ; she had desired to be in- formed of the near approach of this sad crisis, and she then wrapped up her children in their clothes, and went with them into the room below. About 8 o'- clock in the morning he died. After he was laid out and his corpse wrapped up in a sheet, she came again into the room, and had this sorrowful sight before her the whole day ; and to add to this melancholy scene, almost every moment, some officer of her acquaintance was brought in wounded. The cannonade commenced again; a retreat was spoken of, but not the smallest motion was made towards it. About 4 o'clock in the APPENDIX. ' 266 afternoon she saw the house which had just been built for her in flames, and the enemy was now not far off. They knew that General Burgoyne would not refuse the last request of General Frazer, though by his ac- iCeding. an unnecessary delay was occasioned by which the inconvenience of the army was much increased. At 6 o'clock the corpse was brought out, and she saw all the generals attend it to the hill ; the chaplain, Mr. Brudenell, performed the funeral service, rendered un- usually solemn and awful, from its being accompanied by constant peals from the American artillery. Many cannon balls flew close by her; but she had her eyes directed towards the hill, where her husband was standing amid the fire of the Americans, and of course, she could not think of her own danger. She says Gen- eral Gates afterwards said, that if he had known it had been a luneral, he would not have permitted it to be fired on. Orders had already been issued that the army should break up immediately after the funeral, and their ca- lashes were got ready. She was unwilling to depart soon- er. Major Harnage, though hardly able to walk a step, left his bed, that he might not remain in the hospital, upon which a flag of truce had been erected. When he saw the Baroness there in the midst of danger, he drove her children and female attendants into the vehi- cle, and told her that she had not a moment to lose. She begged to be permitted to remain a little longer. "Do what you please," replied he, — "but your children I must at least save." This touched her most 23 266 AFPENDiX. tender feelings : she sprang into the carriage, and al eight o'clock they departed. The Baroness Reidesel further says, they were halt* ed at six o'clock in the morning at Do-ve-gat, to their great amazement. At length, however, they recom- menced their march, and arrived at Saratoga on the ninth, about dark ; which was but half an hour's march from the place where they spent the day. She was quite wet, and was obliged to remain in that condition for want of a place to change her apparel. She seat- ed herself near the fire and undressed the children, and they then laid themselves upon some straw. She ask- ed General Phillips, who came to see how she was, why they did not continue their retreat, her husband having pledged himself to cover the movement, and to bring off the army in safety. *-My poor lady," said he, you astonish me. Though quite wet, you have so much courage as to wish to go further in this weather. "What a pity it is that you are not our commanding general ! He complains of fatigue, and has determined upon spending the night here, and giving us a supper." It is very true that General Burgoyne liked to make himself easy, and that he spent half his nights in sing- ing and drinking, and diverting himself with the wife of a commissary, who was his mistress, and who was as fond of champaign as himself. The Baronness refreshed herself at 7 o'clock the next morning, (the 10th of October) with a cup of tea, and they all expected that they should soon continue APPENDIX, 267 their March. General Burgoyne had given orders to set fire to General Schuyler's fine buildings and mills at Saratoga, fi3r the purpose of securing their retreat An English officer brought her some good souj), and insisted that she should partake of it. After this they continued their march, but only for a short time. There was much misery and disorder in the army. The com- missaries had forgotten to distribute provisions, though they had an abundance of cattle. She says she saw more than thirty officers who complained bitterly of hunger. She gave them coffee and tea, and every thing eatable she had in her calash. Their calashes remained in readiness to depart. Every body advised a retreat, and her husband pledged himself to effect that movement, if no time was lost. But General Burgoyne, who was promised an order if he should ef- fect his junction with General Howe, could not be per- suaded to it, and lost every thing by his dilatoriness. About two o'clock they heard again a report of muskets and cannon, and there was much alarm and bustle among their troops. Her husband sent her word that she should immediately retire into a house (now occupied by Mrs. Bushee) not far off. She got into her calash with her children ; and when they were near the house, she saw, on the opposite bank of the Hudson, five or six men, who aimed at them with their guns. "Without knowing what she did, she threw her children into the back part of the calash, and laid her- self upon them. At the same moment the fellows fired and broke the arm of a poor English soldier, who 268 APPENDIX. stood behind her, and who, being already wounded, sought a shelter. Soon after their arrival a terrible cannonade began, and the fire was principally directed against the house, where she had hoped to find a re- fuge, probably because the enemy inferred, from the great number of people who went towards it, that this was the head quarters of the generals, while in reality none were there except women and crippled soldiers. She says, they were at last obliged to descend into the cellar, where she laid herself in a corner near the door. Her children put their heads upon her knees. An abominable smell, the cries of the children, and her own anguish of mind did not permit her eyes to close during the whole night. On the next morning the cannonade began anew, but in a different direction. She advised her fellow sufferers to withdraw for a while from the cellar, in order to give time to clean it, for they should other- wise injure their health. On an inspection of their re- ti'eat, she discovered that there were three cellars, spa- cious and well vaulted. She suggested that one of them should be appropriated to the use of the officers, who were most severely wounded, and the next to the females, and the third, which was nearest to the stair- case, to all the rest of the company. They were just going down, when a new thunder of cannon threw them again into alarm. Many persons who had no right to enter, threw themselves against the door. Her children were already at the bottom of the stair- case, and every one of them would probably have APPENDIX. 269 been crushed to death, had she not put herself before the entrance and resisted the intruders. Major Har- nage's wife, a Mrs. Raynell, the wife of the good lieu- tenant who had, on the preceding day, shared his soup with her, the wdfe of the commissary, and herself, were the only officers' wives at present with the army. They sat together, deploring their situation, when somebody having entered, all her companions ex- changed looks of deep sorrow, — whispering at the same time to one another. She immediately suspected that her husband had been killed^ She shrieked aloud, but was immediately told that nothing had happened to her husband, and was given to understand by a side- long glance, that the lieutenant had been killed. His wife was soon called out, and found that the Heutenant was still alive, though one of his arms had been shot off, near the shoulder, by a cannon ball. They heard his groans and lamentations during the whole night, which were dreadfully reechoed through the vaulted cellar ; and in the morning he expired. Her husband came to visit her during the night, which served to diminish her sadness and dejection in some degree. On the next morning they thought of making their cellar a more convenient residence. Ma- jor Harnage and his wife, and Mrs. Reynell, took pos- session of one corner, and transformed it into a kind of closet, by means of a curtain. She was to have a simi- lar retreat ; but she preferred to remain near the door, that she might escape more easily in case of fire. She had straw put under her mattresses, and on these she 270 APPENDIX, laid lierself with her children ; and her female servants slept near them. Opposite to them were three officers, who, though wounded, were determined not to remain behind if the army retreated. One of them was Captain Green, aid-de-camp to General Phillips, and a yery amiable and worthy gentleman. All three swore they would not depart without her in case of a sudden re- treat, and that each of them would take one of her children on his horse. One of her husband's horses was constantly in readiness for herself. The Baron de Reidesel thought often of sending her to the American camp, to save her from danger ; but she declared that nothing would be more painful to her than to live on good terms with those whom he was fighting ; upon which he consented that she should continue to follow the army. However, the apprehension that he might have marched away, repeatedly intruded itself into her mind ; and she crept up the staircase, more than once, to confirm or dispel her fears ; and when she saw their soldiers near their watch-fires, she became more calm, and even could have slept. The want of water continuing to distress them, they could not but be extremely glad to find a soldier's wife so spirited as to fetch some from the river, an occupa- tion from which the boldest might have shrunk, as the Americans shot every one who approached it. They told them afterwards, she says, that they spared her on account of her sex. She endeavored to dispel her melancholy by continu- ally attending to the wounded. She made them tea APPENDIX. ^7i and coffee, for which she received their wannest ac- knowledgements. She often shared her dinner with them. One day a Canadian officer came creeping mto their cellar, and was hardl]^ able to say that he was dying with hunger. She felt happy to offer him her dinner, by eating which he recovered his health and she gained his friendship. On their return to Canada she i>ecame acquainted with his family. She also took care of Major Bloomfield, who was wounded by a musket ball, which passed through both his cheeks, knocked out his teeth and injured his tongue. He could retain nothing in his mouth, and soup and liquor were his only nourishment. Fortunate- ly the Baroness had some Rhenish wine, and in the hope that the acidity would contribute to heal the wound, she gave him a bottle, of which he took a little now and then, and with such effect that he w^as soon cured. She thus acquired a new friend, and enjoyed some hap- piness in the midst of care and sufferings, which other- wise would have weighetl heavily upon her spirits. On one of these mournful days. General Phillips, wish- ing to pay her a visit, accompanied her husband, who came once or twice daily at the risk of his life ; and seeing their situation, and observing the entreaties she made to her husband not to be left behind, in case the army should suddenly break up, and her reluctance to fall into the hands of the Americans, he plead her cause, and said, on retiring, "I would not, for ten thousand guineas, see this place again. I am heart broken at what I Ixave seen." 272 APPENDIX. All their companions, however, did not deserve so much commiseration. They had some, she said, in their cellars who ought not to have been there, and who afterwards, when they were prisoners, were in perfect health, and walked about quite erect, and strut- ed as much as they could. They remained six days in this doleful retreat. At last a capitulation was talked of, in consequence of having lost by useless delays, the opportunity of eifecting their retreat. A cessation of hostilities took place, and her husband, who was quite exhausted by fatigue, could now^, lor the first time sleep quietly in a little chamber, whil'e she retired with her children and the maid servants into the adjoining room. Towards one o'clock, she says a person came and ask- ed to speak with him. She was very reluctant to awaken him at that hoar of the night ; arul she soon observed that the errand did not much please him, for he immediately sent the messenger back to head-quar- ters, and laid himself down again out of humor. Soon after this General Burgoyne sent for all the Generals and field-officers,, to attend a counsel of war early next morning, when he proposed to break the capitulation^ in consequence of some groundless information he had received. It was however decided that this step was neither advisable nor practicable ; and this determina- tion was very fortunate for them, as the Americans told them afterwards, she says, that, had they broken the treaty, they would all have been cut to pieces. This they could easily have done, as the British army was reduced to about five thousand men, while they had APPENDIX. 273 given the Americans time to raise tlieir's to about four- teen thousand. On the morning of the 16th, however, her husband was obhged to repair to his post, and she to her cellar. On the 17th of October the capitulation was carried into effect. The Generals waited upon the American General, Gates, and the troops surrendered themselves prisoners of war, and laid down their arms. The time had now come for the good w^oman, who had risked her life to supply them with water, to receive the re- ward of her services. Each of them threw a handful of money into her apron, and she thus received more than twenty guineas. At such a moment, at least, if at no other, the heart easily overflows with gratitude. When the Baroness drew near the tents, a good look- ing man, she says, advanced towards her, and helped the children from the calash, and kissed and caressed them ; he then offered her his arm, and tears trembled in her eyes. " You tremble," said he, " do not be alarmed I pray you." " Sir," cried she, " a countenance so expressive ot benevolence, and kindness which you have evinced towards my children, are sufficient to dis- pel all apprehensions." He then ushered her into the tent of General Gates, whom she found engaged in friendly conversation with Generals Burgoyne and Phillips, General Burgoyne said to her, " you can now be quite free from apprehension of danger." She re- plied that she should indeed be reprehensible if she felt any anxiety when their General felt none, and was on such friendly terms with General Gates. 274 APPENDIX. The gentleman who received her, she says, with ^ much kindness, came and said to her " you may find it embarrassing to be the only lady in such a large com- pany of gentlemen ; w^ill you come with your children lo my tent, and partake of a frugal dinner, offered with the best will ? " " By the kindness you shew to me," returned she, " you induce me to believe that you have a wife and children." He informed her that he was General Schuyler. He regaled her, she says, with smoked tongue, which were excellent, with beef-steaks, potatoes, fresh butter, and bread. Never did a dinner, she says, give so much pleasure as this. She was easy, after many months of anxiety ; and there w^as the same happy change in those around her. That her husband was out of danger, was a still greater cause of joy to her. After their dinner. General Schuyler begged her to pay him a visit, at his house near Albany, where he expected that General Burgoyne would also be his guest. She sent to ask her husband's directions, w^ho advised her to accept the invitation. As they were two days journey from Albany, and it w^as now near five o'clock in the afternoon, General Schuyler wished her to endeavor to reach on that day a place distant about three hours ride. He carried his civilities so far as to solicit a w^ell bred French officer to accompany her on that first part of her journey. On the next day, they reached Albany, where they so often wished themselves ; but they did not enter that city, as they hoped they should, with a victorious army. The reception, however, which they met with from APPENDIX. 275 General Schuyler, his wife and daughters, was not like the reception of enemies, but of the most intimate friends. They loaded them, she says, with kindness ; and they behaved in the same manner towards General Burgoyne, though he had ordered their splendid estab- lishment to be burnt, and without any necessity, as it was said. But all their actions proved, that at the sight of the misfortunes of others, they quickly forgot their own. General Burgoyne was so much affected by this generous deportment, that he said to General Schuyler, " you are too kind to me who has done you so much injury." "Such is the fate of war," replied he, " let us not dwell on this subject." The Baroness remaind three days with that excellent family, and they seemed to regret her departure. As the reader may, possibly, have some desire to know how the author came to be living on the hallow- ed ground of " Bemis's Heights," and what he knows about the war, and Burgoyne, and Gates, and the marches and countermarches of the British and Ameri- can armies, and when and where the battles were fought, and perhaps a thousand other notions, I w^ill try to tell him, in my own luay. My father, the late John Neilson, Esq. deceased, was born in Elizabethtown, or Amboy, or somewhere else, in the state of New-Jersey, on the 23d day of March, 1753, according to his own story, and he was always considered to be a man that followed the strict and straight forward line of truth. His father, and accord- 276 APPENDIX. ing to the legitimate line of ascent, my grandfather, Samuel Neilson, was an EngHshman by birth, but whether he was uncle, or cousin, or any thing else to " My Lord" — Horatio Nelson, or by transposition. Honor est a JYilo, (for he fought the great battle of the Nile, and by his indomitable spirit of perseverance was successful, and received much honor for the victory,) I do not know, as I never have, very scrutinizingly, traced the line any farther back than to find out who was my grandfather ; but this I know, or, at least, have been so informed, that he was a man of great re- solution and uncommon perseverence, and so was Lord Nelson, and for that reason, as the same spirit runs down along the stream of family descent, I should be inclined to think there was some relationship, or some other ship, if it was not for that little i that seems to have intruded itself into the name of my grandfather, and so down along. But, as all things, especially in the natural world, are to be accounted for in some way or other, I will try to account for it in this way. We know there are some men who do not depend upon ifs, for instance, " if you will assist me I will do this, or try to do that," but rely altogether on their own strength and resolution, when about to execute some deed of valor, or requiring great mental exertion ', and on that account, the pronoun / instead of the conjunc- tion if is more commonly used by them, as, 1 will do this, or I will do that, or " / will take the responsi- bility," and which may have been the fact in this case; and possibly, during a long voyage (for they had no Ai^PENDlX. 211 steam-boats at that time) in crossing the Atlantic, the 1 may have forgotten its proper place, and accidentally slipped itself into the name, instead of taking its former position as a prefix. If that fact could be satisfac- torily ascertained, and the result prove my reasoning to be true, why then, I should of course, from the cir- cumstances before mentioned, and the fact of the same pronunciation being retained, claim, at least some dis^ tant, relationship to " My Lord^^ Nelson. But, until that question is settled, I shall, from necessity, be com- pelled to leave the reader to draw his own conclusion, while I go on and tell him something about my grand- mother, on my father's side. Her name before she was married, for she too, my fair young readers, was once a maid, was Mary Courtenay, cousin (here I claim a relationship) to Lord Courtenay, well known in revolu- tionary times, and was born in the city of Dublin, but at what period of the world I do not now recollect, if I ever knew. She was a woman of strong and retentive memory, and endow^ed with an unconquerable passion for reading, and would often, when I was a little boy, call me and my little brothers and sisters into her room (for she lived with my father till she died,) and enter- tain us with long and numerous stories, about the wars, and the Indians, and how her second husband, my step- grandfather, was killed and scalped by them, and about her own sufferings and deprivations; and when the "big tear" would roll down her cheek, I would cry too, — and what is it now, gentle reader, that is stealing from my eye as I am writing this ? — for we are sym- 278 APPENDIX. pathising creatures the best way we can fix it. But all this does not answer the questions as I promised in the beginning ; though, as there is some Yankee blood in me, as you may possibly find out hereafter, I must have my own way of coming at it. Well, my grandfather ^vas on the " stage" at the time of the Rev. William Tenant, David Brainard, and many other worthies with whom he was acquainted, and often entertained them at his house ; from which circumstance, I have drawn the conclusion, very naturally too, that he was a " good man," and delighted in entertaining, not only known friends, but " strangers" too. He was never rich, es- pecially in the things of this world, but in easy and comfortable circumstances, until, by misfortune, he be- came reduced, and soon after died, leaving three chil- dren, two sons and a daughter, of whom my father was the youngest, being then about ten years of age ; and who, by his industry and perseverance, assisted my grandmother in obtaining a comfortable living, until she w^as married to her second husband, about eight years after. When he was nineteen, being quite a ro- bust, athletic youth, and the times growing hard where he lived, he took a notion, like many other resolute boys in those days, that he would migrate to some oth- er part of the country, where wages were better, and land was cheap, and try to work himself into a small farm of his own, by the time he became marriageable, for boys often begin to think about it at that age, though many of them, especially in these times, with less forethought. APPENDIX. 279 On the twenty>third day of March, 1772, being his birth day, a robust youth, with only a few shilhngs in his pocket, and an axe on his shoulder, which was all the property he then owned ; his wardrobe consisting of one suit of common coarse cloth, made sailor fashion, and one spare shirt, was seen taking leave of his pa- rents and friends, somewhere in the state of New-Jer- sey. Thus externally and poorly equipt, though well endowed with a good and firm resolution in the inner man, or rather boy, he pursued a reversed course to the Hudson, until he arrived within about one mile of Be- mis's Heights, for they were so called even at that re- mote period. Coming across two young fellows, who \vere lounging upon a log by the side of the road, as it is very common even at this time, at that season of re- . laxation, on a warm " sun-shiny" day, and being some- what fatigued with his long travel, he took a seat with them, in order to make some enquiries about the coun- try, for he began to think by this time, that he had got nearly to the end of the world, and especially the in- habited part of it. While conversing with these fel- lows, who appeared to be as ignorant of the country as himself, for they too came from a distance and were seeking employment, a man, who some two years pre- vious had moved, with his family, from the " Land of steady habits," came along ; and having cut over a large fallow the summer before, and wishing to clear it off and fence it the ensuing season, was in search of a " good hand" to help him. On enquiring of these " youngsters" if they were seeking work, and they all 280 Appendix. answering in the affirmative, he soon made his selec- tion, and the " lot" fell upon the " New-Jersey boy," as possessing the greatest muscular strength, or at least, apparently so ; and the axe too, that he brdught so far on his shoulder, v/hich in these times would have to be handled with gloves, was no small recom- mendation. After "Very kindly directing the other two in the most advisable course to take, his employer, whose tiame (an odd one too) was Quitterfield, escorted him to his house, which was in sight, and it being near night, he was not set at w^ork on that day. The next morning he was up " bright and early," and there being no certain bargain made, unless on trial a few days, they should both be suited, his em- ployer thought he would give him a fair one in the start. After breakfast, w^hich was disposed of quite early, the old gentleman brought out his beetle and wedges, and having told John, for by this time some of the gals, (inquisitive creatures) had found out his name, he might split rails that day, he shouldered his axe, and catching up the other tools, they both started for the woods or fallow, some eighty rods from the house. On their arrival, the old gentleman led him up to a number of rail cuts which had been hauled to- gether, and among them there was one ^^ great big black-oak log," pretty considerable" winding, and told him he might commence on that. Having never split many rails, and eyeing the log sharply for a few moments^ and examining both ends, he sprang upon APPENDIX. 281 the top of it, which raised him some three feet from " terra firma," and finding it very winding, he expressed some doubts whether it could be spht, while there was as much frost in it as appeared to be at that time. The old gentleman, knowing from experience, that the task would be, at least a hard one, yet, as his principal ob- ject was to try the boy's " spunk," as he termed it, he rather insisted upon his making a thorough trial ; and having very doubtingly in his own mind, encouraged him in the undertaking, returned to the house. After preparing two or three wooden wedges, or gluts as they are usually called, the youth pulled off his round- about, or sailor coat, and commenced operations, with a full determination to try to perform any reasonable act that his employer might require of him. After hammering away for some time on the iron wedges, which would often fly back again, on account of the frost in the log, he at last, by constant friction, got them so heated, that they began to melt the frost, and consequently to " stay put." By this time the sweat beginning to start freely, he pulled off his jacket, and went at it again with more courage, or hopes of suc- cess, and mauled away until he drove them, with much difficulty up to their heads, before the log began to crack, when it started some two or three feet with a sound like the bursting of a twelve pounder. The sweat now running down his face, and into his eyes, like streams of liquid fire, he threw off his old hat, and wiping away the sweat with his shirt sleeve, pre- pared himself with much resolution, for a further and desperate encounter. 24 282 APPENDIX. Having drove all the iron wedges up to their hilts, (heads I mean,) then came on the " tug of war " with the gluts, upon which he mauled and mauled, with a power not to be equalled by any son of Vulcan, until the sweat, in streams, ran off his face, and his clothes became saturated with the briny fluid ; but at last bang! went the log, and the fur flew, or rather the bark, like chips from a turning lathe, when it opened some three or four feet further. Now came on the closing scene, or " finis coronat opum." After " taking breath " a few moments, and a faithful application of the shirt slave, already drench- ed to its fill, and having placed the other gluts in the crevis or opening, he again went at it with renewed courage, and redoubled resolution, mauling away until their heads were mangled into brooms; but he still kept on, tugging, panting, and mauling, and the slivers snapping and cracking, and bark flying, when all at once, just as the horn was bio wed for dinner, cr-ash ! bang ! ! again went the " great, big black-oak logy^ and fell apart, with a sound resembling some mighty explosion, and much to the joy of the young proba- tioner. He now, for the last time, applied the shirt sleeve, and having slipped on his hat and jacket, went whistl- ing down to dinner, much elated with his success. As he entered the house, the old gentleman, who had something of a jovial turn, rather laughing in his sleeve, as the saying is, inquired, " Well, John, how many rails have you split ?" He replied, with an arch APPENIDX* 283 smile, he had not counted them, but would before he came in at night, when the subject was dropped. Af- ter he had taken his dinner, and a few " sly winks," perhaps^ had passed between him and some of the " gals," for there were some two or three of them, he returned to his beetle and wedges, and soon slivered the two halves into rails, and with the others he split that afternoon, he counted two hundred at night, and made his report accordingly. The old gentleman was not only much gratified with, but even disappointed at the number -, for he did not suppose that he could have opened the first log, but had put him on it by way of trying his " grit " as he termed it. Being well satis- fied with his first day's work, and the family with his deportment, and deeming any further trial unnecessary, a bargain was closed for the season. The summer passed away very satisfactorily, and with much inter- change of kind feehngs, especially between some of the parties interested. The time having arrived, though with more or less reluctance, perhaps, to a certain portion of the family, when his term of service was to expire, he left for some other place in the vicinity, though not without occasional calls " for old acquaintance sake." Thus matters passed along for about two years, and this New-Jersey boy had collected, by '^ little crumhs^^ suflScient, with a trifling indulgence in credit, to pur- chase a small farm or piece of land on Bemis's Heights, on which, by his skill and industry he erected a " log cabin." Having cleared a small patch, sufficient to 284 APPENDIX. raise his own " turnips and cabbage/' and about the same time, the eldest daughter of Mr. Quitterfield be- coming, by mutual consent, Mrs. Neilson, the log ca- bin was soon occupied, and the premises, though much enlarged, have remained in the family ever since. As the reader, no doubt, by this time begins to mis- trust all the why's and wherefore's about the Author, and Bemis's Heights, and Battles, and Battle-ground, I may as well answer the questions at once, by saying, it was altogether owing to the skill and perseverance of the New-Jersey boy, in splitting that " great, big, winding, hlack-oak log.'^ And now gentle reader, both male and female, as this is my first, I'll promise you faithfully, it shall be my last attempt at " book-making ;" and had it not been for that ^'indomitable spirit of perseverance,^' that has been floated down to me, on the long stream of legitimate descent, from the remotest generation bear- ing the name, I should, before I got half through with this, have " cut stick " and run,— and many, perhaps, would have thanked me for it THE AUTHOR. EXPLANATION OF THE MAP. The map represents a southeast view taken from dif- ferent positions, so as to exhibit the whole surface of the ground included within its boundaries. On the 18th September, 1777, General Burgoyne encamped on the flats above and below Wilber's Basin, with Frazer's division on the river hills and plain in the rear. Along the brow of the hills he thi'ew up a breastwork, with a redoubt at each extremity ; also an entrenchment across the flats, with another redoubt near the margin of the river. On the 19th the British army marched in three divis- ions — Phillips and Reidesel along the river flats, to within half a mile of the American camp, where they halted. Frazer, with the right wing, took a west di- rection to the road leading to the Quaker Springs, thence south towards Bemis's Heights ; and Burgoyne, with the center division, along the north ravine about half a mile, thence in a direction to Freeman's cottage, intending to join Frazer at the head of the middle ra- vine, where signal guns were to be fired for Phillips and Reidesel to advance to the attack near the river ; while the combined forces of Burgoyne and Frazer made the attack on the left of the Americans. But the intentions of Burgoyne being anticipated, he was met by the Americans, about three-fourths of a mile 286 APPENDIX. in advance of their lines, and before the junction took place. Consequently, the left wing, under Phillips and Reidesel, fell back from their advanced position, and on their retreat set fire to E. Vandenburgh's house, which was consumed. At the commencement of the action on the 19th, General Frazer posted one thousand men on the rise of ground about one hundred and fifty rods north of west from Freeman's cottage, and advanced with five hundred to reinforce Burgoyne, whose division was already attacked. On Frazer's advance, he was met by Arnold at the head of his troops, in an open wood about sixty rods w^est of the cottage, where a severe engagement took place. Fearing that Arnold would cut him off from the main division under Burgoyne, which was his intention, Frazer brought on reinforce- ments from those troops posted on the high ground, alread mentioned, when Arnold, after obstinately con- testing the ground for more than one hour, was com- pelled to retire, leaving the field literally drenched with human gore ; and in some places, I have been informed by those who were in the action, the blood was ancle deep. "Freeman's Farm," as it is usually called, where the general action was fought on the 19th September, was an oblong clearing in front of the cottage; its length extending east and west, and containing some twelve or fourteen acres of ground. At the eastern extremity of this clearing, the first gun was fired on that day, by a small scouting party, which had been APPENDIX. 287 sent out by General Gates to watch the movements of Burgoyne on his advance, and who were there met by a party of Canadians and Indians. The Americans, being few in number, fled after the first fire, and the Canadians and Indians, probably fearing an ambus- cade, declined pursuit. The skirmish on the flat bordering on Mill creek, was near where that stream emerges from the river hills. The place where it is s^id the Canadians and Indians after being reinforced, entered the American breastwork, which was then only partially completed, was about forty rods west of the redoubt at the north- east angle of the camp. After the battle of the 19th, Burgoyne, seeing the impratic ability of dislodging the Americans from their entrenched position, established his magazine and hos- pital near Wilber's Basin, where he encamped on the 18th, and extended his line of fortifications, from the river hills south of the north or great ravine, across the plains west, to a point a little south of Freeman's cottage, thence north and northwest to Breyman's hill. After the action of the 19th, the Americans com- pleted their fortifications, which had already been laid out, as designated on the map ; and picket guards were posted at different positions along the south bank of Mill creek, or middle ravine, and on the rise of ground near A. Chatfield's house ; and also a line of pickets along the ravine south of Mill creek, and be- tween that stream and the camp. 288 APPENDIX. The fifteen hundred men with Frazer at their head, that first marched out of the British camp on the 7th of October, were posted near the northern extremity of a rise of land near J. Hunger's house, and named in the " Narrative" as the " right advance ;" but pre- vious to the action, five hundred of them were with- drawn, and formed a part of the right wing of the British Une of battle. Colonel Morgan having posted his men on two hills, as designated on the map, made the attack in front and flank on the " right advance" of the British, and drove them in a northwest direction, to a swamp or marsh, where about two hundred were sepa- rated from the main body, and pursued by about as many of the riflemen, to about eighty rods west of J. Barber's house, where the British troops, being too hard pressed, ceased firing and " took to their heels." The riflemen then returned to the main body, which had just commenced a vigorous attack on the flank of the British light infantry. In about fifty minutes after the action commenced, the British troops were driven in from all quarters, and were huddled together, like a flock of sheep, about sixty rods north of the center of their first position, and the Americans pouring in their deadly fire on three sides of them, at which time General Frazer was mor- tally wounded. About the same time. General Ten Broeck came on the field, with about three thousand New York militia, and Burgoyne having lost many of his principal offi- cers, and fearing he might be surrounded, ordered a APPENDIX. 289 retreat, when the British troops fled, hke passengers out of an omnibus (at the tail end) to their entrench- ments. General Learned, with a strong force, was di- rected to intercept them ; but taking too large a circuit through a piece of woods, the British got in advance of him. Both actions, namely, on the 19th September and 7th of October, commenced at the middle ravine ; the first in a direct line between the fort on the Heights and Freeman's cottage ; and the second, about twenty- rods farther up, when the American picket was driven in. At the close of the battle on the 7th Octol)er, the British were driven to their camp on the plains, east of the ravine branching off to the north from Mill creek. During the night, they broke up their camp on the plains, and retreated to their camp north of Wil- ber's basin, and in rear ol their magazine and hospitaL All the dwellings included on the map were log cabins, except those of J. Neilson, E. Woodworth, J. Bemis, E. Vandenburgh, J. Vernor, and J. Taylor, (the Smith house, which now stands near the river.) This house was occupied, a portion of the time, by Bur- goyne, as his head quarters, and also by the Baroness Reidesel and other ladies attached to the British army. It is also the house in which General Frazer died.. The farm owned by Joshua Barber, on which a part of the British hne of battle was formed on the 7th Oc- tober, is now owned by John Walker, an aged and re- spectable member of the society of Friends, a good 25 290 APPENDIX. neighbor and a kind friend, who takes much delight in recounting the stories he has heard of the ever memo- rable battles on Bemis's Heis^hts. General Arnold quartered in a log cabin which stood about three rods north of J. Neilson's house, and General Lincoln, after the battle of the 19th September, in J. Bemis's house. The kitchen part of my dwelling, in which General Poor and Colonel Morgan quartered, being then in two rooms, is the only house now standing in w^hich any of the American officers quartered at the time the army lay at Bemis's Heights. And the Smith house, then owned by John Taylor of Albany, and occupied by Billy M'Gee as tenant, previous to the approach of Burgoyne, and which, I regret to say, is now in the act of being demolished, is the last remaining one in which any of the British officers quartered. The trees on the map are intended to represent that portion of land which was covered with wood at the time ; and the other marks to represent the clearings or cultivated part. The distance from Bemis's Heights to Ballston Spa, and Saratoga Springs, is twelve miles ; to the Quaker Springs, which are also mineral waters, three and a half miles ; to Stillwater Village three and a half miles ; to Do-ve-gat, (which is the Dutch of cove,) seven miles; and to Saratoga (Schuylerville) ten miles. Bemis's Heights, (proper) where the left wing of the American army was posted, and on which now stands the venerable mansion of the late John Neilson, APPENDIX. 291 Esq., deceased, is a gentle rise of ground, in the midst of quite an extended plain, and commanding the most beautiful, picturesque, and extensive landscape, to be found, perhaps, in the Empire State; having, as it were, at its foot, the meandering Hudson, the Cham- plain canal, and the Whitehall turnpike ; the extensive range of Kaatsbergs and Helderbergs, with a broad expanse of country, in full prospect in front ; Lake- George mountains and their neighboring summits, in plain view in the rear ; the long line of Green moun- tains, with a delightful intervening prospect, including Bennington heights, on the left ; and a beautiful, va- riegated and extensive landscape on the right ; which, being connected as it is, with its Revolutionary remin- iscences, renders it a most eligible situation for a coun- try seat, and well worthy of a visit from the admiring tourist, or the earnest attention of some gentleman of fortune. History sheds a deeper interest over no portion of our beloved country. He who venerates the virtues and valor, and commiserates the sufferings of our fa- thers, and he who views with gratitude and reverence, the dehverances which Heaven has wrought for this land, will tread with awe on every foot of ground in- cluded within the boundaries of the accompanying map. Page ERRATA. 5 — 4th line from top, omit the word otan. 5— 5th 15~2d 48— 21st 125— 21st 160— 14th 179— 19th 236— 13th 237— 9th 279— 14th 232— 12th for "mintue" read minute. for "minister" read ministers. for "prattlet" read prattler > for "his" read the. for "leaders" read leader. for "reach" read reached. for "reconnosance" read reconnoi- sance. for "the" read a. omit the word it. for "slave" read .'cleave.