Everything about Battle Of Saratoga totally explained
The
Battle of Saratoga in September and October
1777 was a decisive
American victory resulting in the surrender of an entire British army of 9,000 men invading
New York from
Canada during the
American Revolutionary War. The Battle of Saratoga was actually two battles about 9 miles south of
Saratoga, New York, namely the
Battle of Freeman's Farm and the
Battle of Bemis Heights, and is related with the earlier
Battle of Bennington, about 15 miles east of Saratoga. The surrender of General
John Burgoyne, who was surrounded by much larger American militia forces, took place after his retreat to Saratoga.
The capture of an entire British army secured the northern American states from further attacks out of Canada and prevented
New England from being isolated. A major result was that
France entered the conflict on behalf of the Americans, thus dramatically improving the Americans' chances in the war.
Overview
The Battle of Saratoga was the turning point in the Revolutionary War. There were actually two battles at Saratoga. The first began with John Burgoyne's offensive on September 19, the second with the fighting during the Battle of Bemis Heights on October 7. In the first Battle at Saratoga, generally referred to by historians as Freeman's Farm, the British lost two men for every one American casualty. In terms of ground gained, however, both sides fought to a draw. In the second Battle, otherwise known as Bemis Heights, British losses were four to one. The rebels' victory was overwhelming. After negotiations, Burgoyne officially surrendered on October 17. He returned to England in disgrace and was never given another command. When news of the American victory reached Europe, France entered the war on the side of the patriots. Money and supplies flowed to the American cause, providing Washington's Continental Army with the support necessary to continue its fight against Great Britain. Britain's loss at Saratoga was disastrous because it showed the European powers that the rebels were capable of defeating the English on their own. More than any other event, it would prove decisive in determining the eventual outcome of the War and the victory of Patriots.
Background
British strategy
British General
John Burgoyne set out with about 3,000
red-coated British regulars, 3,900 blue-coated German
mercenaries from
Brunswick, and 650 Canadians,
Tories and Indians from
Canada in June. The objective was to reach
Albany, New York and there meet up with Colonel
Barry St. Leger coming east along the
Mohawk River valley with a mixed force of about 600 Tories, Canadians and 1,000
Iroquois Indians, and General
William Howe coming up the Hudson valley with a large force from
New York City. The result would be control of upstate New York, and isolation of New England. The complex plan required coordination and communication among the three units.
The British advance beyond the southern ends of
Lake Champlain and
Lake George was slowed to a few miles per day by Americans who cut down trees to block the forest route. When, on
August 1,
1777, Burgoyne's forces finally reached the Hudson River at Fort Edward, he was running out of supplies. On August 11, he detached troops to obtain cattle from the farms near Bennington, Vermont, and other supplies there. The detachment was overwhelmed and defeated by aroused American militia at the
Battle of Bennington. Burgoyne continued south and crossed to the west side of the Hudson at Saratoga (now
Schuylerville). He marched another 9 miles down the Hudson but was eventually blocked at
Stillwater by regular soldiers and militia under General
Horatio Gates. Over the course of the summer the American forces had grown to roughly 15,000 men as militia poured in from
Vermont,
New Hampshire,
Connecticut,
Massachusetts,
New York and as far as Virginia.
Washington sends reinforcements
Knowing a battle was shaping up,
George Washington held Howe's army at Philadelphia and sent aid north. He first dispatched Major General
Benedict Arnold, his most aggressive field commander, and Major General
Benjamin Lincoln, a Massachusetts man noted for his influence with the New England militia. From the main army in
Pennsylvania he ordered 750 men from Putnam's force in the New York highlands to join Gates. Then he put the word out for any available militia groups to form up on Gates. In mid-August he detached forces under Colonel
Daniel Morgan of the
11th Virginia Regiment with over 400 specially selected Virginia riflemen, chosen for their sharpshooting ability. Morgan's men were given specific instructions to concentrate on officers and artillerymen. In the battle, the sharpshooters were accurate at well over 200 yards (183 m), but suffered from their long reload times and their lack of bayonets for when the enemy got too close. The Americans eventually learned to mix the sharpshooters with trained men armed with muskets and bayonets to protect them.
Howe's blunder
The original conception of the campaign had been for Burgoyne to advance south via Lake Champlain and Lake George to the Hudson River and then to Albany, where he'd meet with the forces of
William Howe, advancing north from the British fortress at
New York City. This would cut off the New England states from the rest of America. However, Howe decided instead to make a strategically irrelevant assault on the American capital of
Philadelphia. In addition, Howe chose to approach the city by sailing the army to
Chesapeake Bay rather than marching overland across New Jersey, rendering his army totally unable to come to Burgoyne's aid. On
July 23,
1777, Howe and his army set sail and didn't return to the mainland until August 25. Howe succeeded in taking Philadelphia, winning victories at
Brandywine on September 11 and
Germantown on October 4, but the
Continental Congress simply retreated to
York, Pennsylvania, and evaded capture. Because of the slow and difficult communications of the period, Burgoyne didn't hear of this change in Howe's plans for several weeks; by then it was too late.
Barry St. Leger's retreat
The second major blow to British aims came on August 6, when British reinforcements—about 1,000 Iroquois Indians and 600 Loyalists advancing down the
Mohawk River valley—were unable to reach Burgoyne. They were blocked by a successful militia defense of
Fort Stanwix near
Rome, New York, and the
Battle of Oriskany. The 800 American militia in this battle were poorly trained German-Americans and farmers from
Tryon County, New York, commanded by General
Nicholas Herkimer. This militia was also accompanied by about 40
Oneida Indians. General Herkimer and over 160 local militia lost their lives in this engagement, which lasted almost six hours and included some intense hand-to-hand combat. News of the imminent arrival of General Benedict Arnold and 1,000 reinforcements broke the stalemate. Colonel
Barry St. Leger and his forces retreated back up the Mohawk valley to Canada, minus most of their supplies, which were captured by the Fort Stanwix garrison during the fighting at Oriskany. The garrison hauled as much of the supplies as they could inside their fort and destroyed the rest. It was a serious blow to Indian morale when all of their valuables and food disappeared.
Battles
Battle of Freeman's Farm
The Battles of Saratoga consisted of two main engagements, the first being the Battle of Freeman's Farm. The British were past Saratoga and advancing on their destination of Albany, and on
September 19,
1777, they ran into American forces in a clearing in the woods at Freeman's Farm, 10 miles south of Saratoga. General Benedict Arnold, commanding the left wing of the American forces, ordered Colonel
Daniel Morgan and his 400 sharpshooters to assault and harass the British while they were still advancing through the woods in separate columns. Morgan charged aggressively into British General
Simon Fraser's column and inflicted severe casualties before being forced back across the field. Arnold sent forward the brigades of General
Enoch Poor and General
Ebenezer Learned to support Morgan.
Burgoyne sent forward
James Inglis Hamilton and Fraser to attack the Americans across Freeman's Farm. Arnold's reinforced line repulsed the British attack with heavy losses. By the end of the battle the British and German troops had repulsed one last attack from the Americans, and Arnold was relieved of command. Although they'd to relinquish the field, the Americans had halted Burgoyne's advance and inflicted losses the British couldn't afford.
Burgoyne built
redoubts and fortified his current position. Two miles (3 km) to the south, the Americans also built
fortifications.
Battle of Bemis Heights
The second and final engagement of the Battles of Saratoga was known as the Battle of Bemis Heights, which took place on October 7, 1777. Burgoyne made plans to assault the American lines in three columns and drive them from the field. The main assault would be made by the German Brunswickers (called
Hessians) under
Major General Riedesel against the American forces on Bemis Heights. American General
Benjamin Lincoln now commanded the division of Poor's and Learned's brigades positioned on Bemis Heights. Holding their fire until the Brunswick troops were well within range, Poor's brigade devastated the British in the first attack and routed the survivors in a counter attack. Colonel Morgan and his sharpshooters attacked and routed the Canadian infantry and began to engage Fraser's British regulars. Fraser began to rally his division, and Benedict Arnold arrived on the field (despite his prior dismissal) and ordered Morgan to concentrate his fire on the officers, particularly the generals. One of Morgan's sharpshooters fired and mortally wounded Fraser. After finishing on Morgan's front, Arnold next rode to Learned's brigade. Learned's men, facing the Brunswickers' assault, were beginning to falter.
Burgoyne's surrender
In the cover of darkness, the British forces retreated north, but their attempted retreat to
Fort Ticonderoga was blocked by American forces under the command of General Gates. The British were attempting to cross back over to the east side of the Hudson at Saratoga, the same point they'd crossed in August, but by then they were surrounded and badly outnumbered. Forty miles (60 km) south of Fort Ticonderoga, with supplies dwindling and winter not far off, Burgoyne had little option. He set up camp at Saratoga and decided to open discussions with the Americans.
At first Gates demanded unconditional surrender, which the British general flatly turned down, declaring he'd sooner fight to the death. Gates eventually agreed to a "treaty of convention," whereby the British would technically not surrender nor be taken as prisoners but be marched to Boston and returned to England on the condition that they were not to serve again in America. Gates was concerned that a fight to the death with Burgoyne could still prove costly, and he was also concerned about reports of General Sir
Henry Clinton advancing from
New York to relieve his compatriots stranded at Saratoga. Resplendent in full ceremonial uniform, General Burgoyne led his troops out from his camp on
October 17,
1777, and was greeted with formal cordiality by General Gates. Others lay wounded or were helping the large contingent of officers' wives prepare for captivity.
In the grounding of arms at Saratoga, 5,791 men were surrendered. Riedesel had stated that not more than 4,000 of these were fit for duty. The number of Germans surrendering is set down by Eelking at 2,431 men, and of Germans killed, wounded, captured or missing down to October 6, at 1,122 including the losses at
Bennington. The total loss of the British and their German auxiliaries, in killed, wounded, prisoners, and deserters, during the campaign, was 9,000 men.
Aftermath
Burgoyne's troops were disarmed and should have been paroled (returned to Britain on the condition that they engage in no further conflict with America), a common 18th century military practice. Instead, the Continental Congress refused to ratify the "convention" (the document detailing the terms of surrender agreed to by Gates and Burgoyne). Though some of the British and German officers were eventually exchanged for captured American officers, most of the enlisted men in the "
Convention Army," as it became known, were held captive in camps in New England, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, until the end of the war.
Another serious difficulty encountered was that Charles I, Duke of Brunswick, didn't want his soldiers back, fearing they'd hinder future recruitment. The Brunswickers didn't appreciate this and deserted in large numbers; of 5,723 Brunswick troops, only 3,015 returned in 1783. Most became Americans.
Burgoyne returned to England as a hero--he was a prominent leader in London society. The news that an entire British army had been defeated and captured gave the Americans great credibility. France, in particular, threw its support behind the
American Revolution.
Legacy
Re-enactments
A group called "Morgan's Rifles" tours Daniel Morgan's significant battle sites in period costumes each year. There are also groups of Hessian descendants that stage battle re-enactments in period costumes using period weapons.
Boot Monument
The
Boot Monument on the battlefield commemorates the heroism of Benedict Arnold in the conflict when he was wounded in the foot. Arnold was to later switch sides and became a British general after offering to deliver
West Point to the British for cash.
According to legend, Arnold, as a British general, asked an American captive in Virginia what the Americans would do with him. The reply was:
» "We would cut your leg off and bury it with full military honors for your work at Quebec and Saratoga. The rest of you we'd hang."
The monument is dedicated to "the most brilliant soldier of the Continental Army," but doesn't mention Arnold by name.
It was donated by General
John Watts de Peyster.
Fiction
The historian
Robert Sobel, of
Hofstra University, published
For Want of a Nail in
1973, an
alternate history novel in which Burgoyne won the Battle of Saratoga.
Turning Point
The Battle of Saratoga was the
Turning Point of the war. This was because this victory finally convinced France, Spain, and the Netherlands to ally with the Americans for the remainder of the war.
Further Information
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