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Battles of Saratoga

Coordinates: 42°59′56″N 73°38′15″W / 42.99889°N 73.63750°W / 42.99889; -73.63750
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Battles of Saratoga
Part of the American Revolutionary War

Surrender of General Burgoyne by John Trumbull, 1822; This painting hangs in the United States Capitol Rotunda.
DateSeptember 19 and October 7, 1777
Location42°59′56″N 73°38′15″W / 42.99889°N 73.63750°W / 42.99889; -73.63750
Result Decisive American victory
Belligerents
United Kingdom Great Britain
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
Hesse Hesse-Hanau
United States United States
Commanders and leaders
John Burgoyne
Simon Fraser 
F.A. Riedesel
Johann Specht
Wilhelm R. von Gall
Horatio Gates
Benedict Arnold
Benjamin Lincoln
Enoch Poor
Ebenezer Learned
Daniel Morgan
Strength
7,200 (first battle)[1]
6,600 (second battle)[2]
9,000 (first battle)[3]
over 12,000 (second battle)[2]
over 15,000 (at time of surrender)[4]
Casualties and losses
440 killed
695 wounded
6,222 captured[5][6]
90 killed
240 wounded[6][7]

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The Battles of Saratoga, sometimes referred to as The Battle of Saratoga (September 19 and October 7, 1777) conclusively decided the fate of British General John Burgoyne's army in the American Revolutionary War. Both battles were fought on the same ground nine miles (Template:Km to mi) south of Saratoga, New York, and were separated by almost daily skirmishes. Burgoyne, whose campaign to divide the colonies had started well but slowed due to logistical problems, won a small tactical victory over General Horatio Gates and the Continental Army in the September 19 Battle of Freeman's Farm at the cost of significant casualties. His gains were erased when he again attacked the Americans in the October 7 Battle of Bemis Heights and the Americans captured a portion of the British defenses. Because of the defeat so late in the autumn and the retreat it necessitated, the whole army, having become surrounded by the 13th, had to be surrendered on October 17.

The September 19 battle began when Burgoyne moved some of his troops in an attempt to flank the entrenched American position just south of present-day Saratoga, New York. Benedict Arnold, anticipating the maneuver, placed significant forces in his way. While Burgoyne succeeded in gaining control of Freeman's Farm, it came at the cost of significant casualties. Following that battle, Burgoyne waited in the hopes that reinforcements would arrive from New York City, while militia forces continued to arrive, swelling the size of the American army. Disputes within the American camp led Gates to strip Arnold of his command.

Concurrent with the September 19 battle, American troops also attacked British positions in the area of Fort Ticonderoga, and bombarded the fort for a few days before withdrawing. British General Sir Henry Clinton, in an attempt to assist Burgoyne, captured American forts in the Hudson River highlands on October 6, but his efforts were too late to help Burgoyne. Burgoyne attacked again on October 7 after it became apparent he would not get timely relief. In heavy fighting, marked by Arnold's spirited rallying of the American troops (in open defiance of orders to stay off the battlefield), Burgoyne's forces were thrown back to the positions they held before the September 19 battle.

Forced to retreat after his defeat on October 7, General Burgoyne and his entire army surrendered ten days later after being surrounded by American army militia forces numbering more than 17,000. These battles are generally considered to be the turning point of the Revolution, since Burgoyne's subsequent surrender directly led to French entry into the war, fundamentally changing the nature of the conflict.

Background

General John Burgoyne, portrait by Joshua Reynolds, c. 1760

In June 1777 British General John Burgoyne began an attempt to divide the rebellious United States in the American Revolutionary War by moving south from the British province of Quebec to gain control of the Hudson River valley. After his early success at Ticonderoga, his campaign had become bogged down in logistical difficulties.[8] Elements of the army had reached the Hudson as early as the end of July, but logistical and supply difficulties delayed the army at Fort Edward. One attempt to alleviate these difficulties failed when nearly 1,000 men were killed or captured at the August 16 Battle of Bennington,[9] and news reached Burgoyne on August 28 that Barry St. Leger's expedition down the Mohawk River valley had turned back after the failed Siege of Fort Stanwix.[10]

Combined with earlier news that General William Howe had sailed his army from New York City on a campaign to capture Philadelphia,[11] and the departure of most of his Indian support following the loss at Bennington, Burgoyne's situation was becoming difficult.[12] Faced with the need to reach defensible winter quarters, which would require either retreat back to Ticonderoga or advance to Albany, he decided on the latter. Consequent to this decision he made two further crucial decisions. He decided to deliberately cut communications to the north, so that he would not need to maintain a chain of heavily-fortified outposts between his position and Ticonderoga, and he decided to cross the Hudson River while he was in a relatively strong position.[13] He therefore ordered Baron Riedesel, whose forces were in the rear of his army, to abandon outposts from Skenesboro south, and ordered the army to cross the river just north of Saratoga, which it did between September 13 and 15.[14]

American situation

General Horatio Gates, portrait by Gilbert Stuart

The Continental Army had been in a slow state of retreat ever since Burgoyne's capture of Ticonderoga early in July. By mid-August the army, then under the command of General Philip Schuyler, was encamped south of Stillwater, New York. On August 19, General Horatio Gates assumed command from Schuyler, whose political fortunes had fallen over the loss of Ticonderoga and the ensuing retreat.[15] Gates became the beneficiary of an army that was growing in size as a result of increased militia turnout following calls by state governors, the success at Bennington, and widespread outrage over the slaying of Jane McCrea, an attractive young Loyalist, by Indians under Burgoyne's command.[16] Strategic decisions by George Washington also improved the situation for his army.

Washington was most concerned about the movements of General Howe, and what his goal was. Aware that Burgoyne was moving, he took some risks in July and sent aid north in the form of Benedict Arnold, his most aggressive field commander, and Major General Benjamin Lincoln, a Massachusetts man noted for his influence with the New England militia.[17] In August, before he was certain that Howe had sailed south, he ordered 750 men from Israel Putnam's forces defending the New York highlands to join Gates' army, and also sent some of the best forces from his own army: Colonel Daniel Morgan and the newly-formed Provisional Rifle Corps, which comprised about 500 specially selected riflemen from Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia chosen for their sharpshooting ability.[18]

On September 7, Gates ordered the army to march north. A site known as Bemis Heights, just north of Stillwater and about 10 miles (16 km) south of Saratoga, was selected for its defensive potential, and the army spent about a week constructing defensive works designed by Polish engineer Thaddeus Kosciusko. The heights had a commanding view of the area and commanded the only road to Albany where it passed through a defile between the heights and the river. To the west of the heights lay more heavily-forested bluffs that would present a significant challenge to any heavily equipped army.[19]

First Saratoga: Battle of Freeman's Farm (Sept. 19)

Prelude

Plan of battlefield of Battles of Saratoga and views of John Neilson's House from south, east and inside that served as the headquarters for the Generals Enoch Poor and Benedict Arnold.
Battles of Saratoga

Moving cautiously, since the departure of his Indian support had deprived him of reliable reports on the American position, Burgoyne advanced to the south after crossing the Hudson.[20] On September 18 the vanguard of his army had reached a position just north of Saratoga, about 4 miles (6.4 km) from the American defensive line, and skirmishes occurred between American scouting parties and the leading elements of his army.[21]

The American camp had become a bed of festering intrigue ever since Arnold's return from Fort Stanwix. While he and Gates had previously been on reasonably good terms in spite of their prickly egos, Arnold managed to turn Gates against him by taking on as staff officers friendly to Schuyler, a man Gates hated.[22] These conditions had not yet reached a boil on September 19, but the day's events contributed to the situation. Gates had assigned the left wing of the defenses to Arnold, and assumed command himself of the right, which was nominally assigned to General Lincoln, who Gates had detached in August with some troops to harass the British positions behind Burgoyne's army.[23]

Both Burgoyne and Arnold understood the importance of the American left, and the need to control the heights there. After the morning fog lifted around 10 am, Burgoyne ordered the army to advance in three columns. Baron Riedesel led the left column, consisting of the German troops and the 47th Foot, on the river road, bringing the main artillery and guarding supplies and the boats on the river. General James Inglis Hamilton commanded the center column, consisting of the 9th, 20th, 21st, and 62nd regiments, which would attack the heights, and General Simon Fraser led the right wing with the 24th Regiment and the light infantry and grenadier battalions, to turn the American left flank by negotiating the heavily wooded high ground north and west of Bemis Heights.[24]

Arnold also realized such a flanking maneuver was likely, and petitioned Gates for permission to move his forces from the heights to meet potential movements there, where the American skill at woodlands combat would be at an advantage.[25] Gates, whose preferred strategy was to sit and wait for the expected frontal assault, grudgingly permitted a reconnaissance in force consisting of Daniel Morgan's men and Henry Dearborn's light infantry.[26] When Morgan's men reached an open field northwest of Bemis Heights belonging to Loyalist John Freeman, they spotted British advance troops in the field. Fraser's column was slightly delayed and had not yet reached the field, while Hamilton's column had also made its way across a ravine and was approaching the field from east through dense forest and difficult terrain. Riedesel's force, while it was on the road, was delayed by obstacles thrown down by the Americans. The sound of gunfire to the west prompted Riedesel to send some of his artillery down a track in that direction. The troops Morgan's men saw were an advance company from Hamilton's column.[27]

Battle

Morgan's men took careful aim, picked off virtually every single officer in the advance company, and then charged, unaware that they were headed directly for Burgoyne's main army. While they succeeded in driving back the advance company, Fraser's leading edge arrived just in time to attack Morgan's left, scattering his men back into the woods.[28] James Wilkinson, who had ridden forward to observe the fire, returned to the American camp for reinforcements. As the British company fell back toward the main column, the leading edge of that column opened fire, killing a number of their own men.[29]

There was then a lull in the fighting around 1 pm as Hamilton's men began to form up on the north side of the field, and American reinforcements began to arrive from the south. Learning that Morgan was in trouble, Gates ordered out two more regiments (1st and 3rd New Hampshire) to support him,[30] with additional regiments (2nd New York, 4th New York, the 1st Canadian, and Connecticut militia) from the brigade of Enoch Poor to follow.[31] Burgoyne arrayed Hamilton's men with the 21st on the right, the 20th on the left, and the 62nd in the center, with the 9th held in reserve.[32]

The battle then went through phases alternating between intense fighting and breaks in the action. Morgan's men had regrouped in the woods, and busily picked off officers and artillerymen. They were so effective at the reducing the latter that the Americans several times gained brief control of British field pieces, only to lose them in the next British charge. At one point it was believed that Burgoyne himself had been taken down by a sharpshooter; it was instead one of Burgoyne's aides, riding a richly-dressed horse, that was the victim. The center of the British line was very nearly broken at one point, and only the intervention of General Phillips, leading the 20th, made it possible for the 62nd to reform.[33]

The final stroke of the battle belonged to the British. Around 3 pm, Riedesel sent a messenger to Burgoyne for instructions. He returned two hours later with orders to guard the baggage train, but also to send as many men as he could spare toward the American right wing. In a calculated risk, Riedesel left 500 men to guard the vital supply train and marched off toward the action with the rest of his column. Two of his companies advanced on the double and opened vicious fire on the American right,[34] and Fraser's force threatened to turn the American left flank. In response to the latter threat, Arnold requested more forces, and Gates allowed him to dispatch Ebenezer Learned's brigade (2nd, 8th and 9th Massachusetts). (If Arnold had been on the field, these forces might have instead faced the larger danger posed by Riedesel's force.)[35] Fortunately for the American right, darkness set in, bringing an end to the battle. The Americans retreated back to their defenses, leaving the British on the field.[5]

Burgoyne had gained the field of battle, but suffered nearly 600 precious casualties. Most of these were to Hamilton's center column, where the 62nd was reduced to the size of a single company, and three quarters of the artillery men were killed or wounded.[36] American losses were nearly 300 killed and seriously wounded.[37]

It has been widely recounted in histories of this battle that General Arnold was on the field, directing some the action. However, this is likely untrue; Luzader, a former park historian at the Saratoga National Historical Park, carefully documents the evolution of this story, which is without foundation in contemporary materials.[38]

Interlude

Burgoyne's council discussed whether to attack the next day, and a decision was reached to delay further action at least one day, to September 21. The army moved to consolidate the position closer to the American line while some men collected their dead. Attack on the 21st was called off when Burgoyne received a letter dated September 12 from Henry Clinton, commanding the British troops in New York City that Howe had left for its defense. Clinton suggested that he could "make a push at [Fort] Montgomery in about ten days." (Fort Montgomery was an American post on the Hudson River, in the New York Highlands south of West Point). If Clinton left New York on September 22, "about ten days" after he wrote the letter, he still could not hope to arrive in the vicinity of Saratoga before the end of the month. Burgoyne, running low on men and food, was still in a very difficult position, but he decided to wait in the hope that Clinton would arrive to save his army.[39] Burgoyne wrote to Clinton on September 23, requesting some sort of assistance or diversion to draw Gates' army away.[40] Clinton sailed from New York on October 3, and captured Forts Montgomery and Clinton on October 6.[41] The furthest north any of his troops reached was Clermont, where they raided the estate of the prominent Patriot Livingston family on October 16.[42]

... an attack or even menace of an attack on Fort Montgomery must be of great use ...

Burgoyne to Clinton, September 23, 1777[40]

Unknown to either side at Saratoga, General Lincoln and Colonel John Brown had staged an attack against the British position at Fort Ticonderoga. Lincoln had collected 2,000 men at Bennington by early September.[43] Brown and a detachment of 500 men captured poorly-defended positions between Ticonderoga and Lake George, and then spent several days ineffectually bombarding the fort. These men, and some of the prisoners they freed along the way, were back in the American camp by September 29.[44][45]

In the American camp the mutual resentment between Horatio Gates and Benedict Arnold finally exploded into open hostility. Gates quickly reported the action of September 19 to the Congress and Governor George Clinton of New York, but he failed to mention Arnold at all. The field commanders and men universally credited Arnold for their success—almost all the troops involved were from Arnold's command and Arnold was the one directing the battle while Gates sat in his tent. Arnold protested, and the dispute escalated into a shouting match that ended with Gates relieving Arnold of his command and giving it to Benjamin Lincoln. Arnold asked for a transfer to Washington's command, which Gates granted, but instead of leaving he remained in his tent.[46] There is no documentary evidence for a commonly-told account that a petition signed by line officers convinced Arnold to stay in camp.[47]

As September passed into October it became clear that Clinton was not coming to help Burgoyne, and he put the army on short rations on October 3.[48] The next day, Burgoyne called a war council in which several options were discussed, but no conclusive decisions were made. When the council resumed the next day, Riedesel proposed retreat, in which he was supported by Fraser. Burgoyne refused to consider it, insisting that retreat would be disgraceful. They finally agreed to conduct an assault on the American left flank with two thousand men, more than one third of the army, on October 7.[49] The army he was attacking, however, had grown in the interval. In addition to the Lincoln's detachment, militia and supplies, including critical increases in ammunition, that had been severely depleted in the first battle, continued to pour into the American camp.[50] The army Burgoyne faced on October 7 was more than 12,000 men strong,[2] and it was led by a man who knew how much trouble Burgoyne was in. Gates had received consistent intelligence from the stream of deserters leaving the British lines, and had also intercepted Clinton's response to Burgoyne's plea for help.[51]

Second Saratoga: Battle of Bemis Heights (Oct. 7)

British foray

Benedict Arnold at Battle of Bemis Heights

While Burgoyne's troop strength was nominally higher, he likely had only about 5,000 effective, battle-ready troops on October 7, as losses from the earlier battles in the campaign and desertions following the September 19 battle had notably reduced his forces.[52] His plan was to use three assault elements. General Fraser was to slide past the Americans on their left and secure positions for the artillery. Since he was going through woodlands, he had the light infantry, along with the Canadian militia, ranger forces, and Indian allies, for a total of about 700 men. Riedesel's Brunswickers would make the main attack to occupy the American left, with about 1,100 men and supporting artillery. Meanwhile, Major General William Phillips would attack in a left hook to separate the left from the main American forces at Bemis Heights. Phillip's force was just over 400 grenadiers under Major John Dyke Acland and the Royal Artillery under Major Williams. Leaving their camp between 10 and 11 am, they advanced about three quarters of a mile (1 km) to a field on a rise above Mill Brook, where they stopped to take stock of the American position. While the position afforded some room for artillery to work, the flanks were dangerously close to the surrounding woods.[53]

Artist's conception of General Benedict Arnold, color mezzotint by Thomas Hart

Gates, following the removal of Arnold from the field command, assumed command of the American left and gave the right to General Lincoln. When American scouts brought news of Burgoyne's movement to Gates, he ordered Morgan's riflemen out to the far left, with Poor's men (1st, 2nd, and 3rd New Hampshire; and 2nd and 4th New York Regiments) on the right, and Learned's (1st New York, 1st Canadian, 2nd, 8th and 9th Massachusetts Regiments, plus militia companies) in the center. A force of 1,200 New York militia under Brigadier General Abraham Ten Broeck was held in reserve behind Learned's line.[54] In all, more than 8,000 Americans took the field that day,[55] including about 1,400 men from Lincoln's command that were deployed when the action became particularly fierce.[56]

The opening fire came between 2 and 2:30 from the grenadiers on the right. Poor's men held their fire, and the terrain made the British shooting largely ineffective. When Major Acland led a bayonet charge on their position, the Americans finally began shooting at close range. Acland fell, shot in both legs, and many of the grenadiers also went down. Their column was in a total rout, and Poor's men advanced to take both force leaders prisoner and capture their artillery.[57] On the American left, things were also not going well for the British. Morgan's men swept aside the Canadians and Indians to engage Fraser's regulars. Although slightly outnumbered, Morgan managed to break up several British attempts to move west.[57] While General Fraser was mortally wounded in this phase of the battle,[58] a frequently-told story claiming it to be the work of Timothy Murphy, one of Morgan's men, appears to be a 19th-century fabrication.[59] The felling of Fraser and the arrival of Ten Broeck's large militia company (which roughly equalled the entire British reconnaissance force in size), broke the British will, and they began a disorganized retreat toward their entrenchments. Burgoyne was also very nearly killed by one of Morgan's marksmen; three shots hit his horse, hat and waistcoat.[60]

The first phase of the battle lasted about one hour, and cost Burgoyne nearly 400 men, including the capture of most the grenadiers' command, and six of the ten field pieces brought to the action.[60]

American attack

Boot Monument to Benedict Arnold's injured leg

At this point, the Americans were joined by an unexpected participant. General Arnold, who was "betraying great agitation and wrath" in the American camp, and may have been drinking, rode out to join the action.[61][62] Gates immediately sent Major Armstrong after him with orders to return; Armstrong did not catch up with Arnold until the action was effectively over.[62]

The defenses on the right side of the British camp were anchored by two redoubts. The outermost one was defended by about 300 men under the command of the Hessian Heinrich Breymann, while the other was under the command of Lord Balcarres. A small contingent of Canadians occupied the ground between these two fortifications. Most of the retreating force headed for Balcarres' position, as Breymann's was slightly north and further away from the early action.[63]

Arnold led the American chase, and then led Poor's men in an attack on the Balcarres redoubt. Balcarres had set up his defenses well, and the redoubt was held, in action so fierce that Burgoyne afterwards wrote, "A more determined perseverance than they showed ... is not in any officer's experience".[64] Seeing that the advance was checked, and that Learned was preparing to attack the Breymann redoubt, Arnold move toward that action, recklessly riding between the lines and remarkably emerging unhurt. He led the charge of Learned's men through the gap between the redoubts, which exposed the rear of Breymann's position, where Morgan's men had circled around from the far side.[65] In furious battle, the redoubt was taken and Breymann was killed.[66] Arnold's horse was hit in one of the final volleys, and Arnold's leg was broken by both shot and the falling horse. Major Armstrong finally caught up with Arnold to officially order him back to headquarters; he was carried back in a litter.[67]

The capture of Breymann's redoubt exposed the British camp, but darkness was setting in. An attempt by some Germans to retake the redoubt ended in capture as darkness and an unreliable guide led them to the American line.[68]

Aftermath

Tower at Victory, New York where the surrender occurred

Template:Details3 Burgoyne, already outnumbered 3 to 1, lost 1,000 men in the two battles, while American losses came to about 500 killed and wounded. He had lost several of his most effective leaders, his maneuvers had failed, and his forward line was breached. That night he lit fires at his remaining forward positions and withdrew under the cover of darkness. On the morning of October 8, he was back in the fortified positions he had held on September 16. By October 13 he was surrounded, and on October 17 he surrendered his army. The remnants of his expedition retreated from Ticonderoga back to Quebec. Within days of the news of Burgoyne's surrender reaching France, King Louis XVI decided to enter into negotiations with the Americans that resulted in a formal Franco-American alliance and the French entry into the war, moving the conflict onto a global stage.[69]

In recognition of his contribution to the battles at Saratoga, General Arnold had his seniority (which he had lost after being passed over for promotion earlier in 1777) restored.[70] His leg wound left Arnold bedridden for five months.[71] Later, while still unfit for field service but serving as military governor of Philadelphia, Arnold entered into treasonous correspondence with the British. He changed sides in 1780 after his plot to hand over the fort at West Point was exposed, and went on to serve under William Phillips, the commander of Burgoyne's right wing, in a 1781 expedition into Virginia.[72]

General Gates had done little to bring about victory; the strategic plan to draw the British into the interior while denying them supplies was Phillip Schuyler's and Gates had issued few orders during either Saratoga battle other than to send off reinforcements from time to time. However, he received a great deal of credit as the commanding ggeneral for the greatest American victory of the war to date. He may have conspired with others to replace George Washington as the commander-in-chief.[73] Instead he received the command of the main American army in the South, which he led to a disastrous defeat at the 1780 Battle of Camden, in which Gates was at the forefront of a panicked retreat.[74][75]

In response to Burgoyne's surrender, Congress declared December 18, 1777 as a national day "for solemn Thanksgiving and praise" in recognition of the military success at Saratoga; it was the nation's first official observance of a holiday with that name.[76]

Legacy

The battlefield and the site of Burgoyne's surrender have been preserved, and are now administered by the National Park Service as the Saratoga National Historical Park, which was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1966. The park preserves a number of the buildings in the area, and contains a variety of monuments.[77]

The Saratoga Monument obelisk has four niches, three of which hold statues of American generals: Gates, Schuyler, and Morgan. The fourth niche, which is inscribed with Arnold's name, is empty.[78] A more dramatic memorial to Arnold's heroism, that does not name him, is the Boot Monument. Donated by Civil War General John Watts de Peyster, it shows a boot with spurs and the stars of a major general. It stands at the spot where Arnold was shot on October 7 charging Breymann's redoubt, and is dedicated to "the most brilliant soldier of the Continental Army".[79]

Notes

  1. ^ Luzader (2008), p. 230
  2. ^ a b c Ketchum (1997), p. 395
  3. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 355
  4. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 436
  5. ^ a b Ketchum (1997), p. 368
  6. ^ a b Ketchum (1997), p. 405
  7. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 371
  8. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 348
  9. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 320
  10. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 332
  11. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 189
  12. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 265
  13. ^ Nickerson (1967), pp. 290–295
  14. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 296
  15. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 337
  16. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 288
  17. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 180
  18. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 216
  19. ^ Ketchum (1997), pp. 347–348
  20. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 299
  21. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 300
  22. ^ Ketchum (1997), pp. 351–352
  23. ^ Ketchum (1997), pp. 352, 355
  24. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 357
  25. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 356
  26. ^ Nickerson (1967), pp. 307–308
  27. ^ Ketchum (1997), pp. 358–360
  28. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 360
  29. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 309
  30. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 362
  31. ^ Luzader (2008), p. 240
  32. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 310
  33. ^ Nickerson (1967), pp. 310–312
  34. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 367
  35. ^ Luzader (2008), pp. 391–392
  36. ^ Ketchum (1997), pp. 368–369
  37. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 319
  38. ^ Luzader (2008), pp. 388–390, describes the relevant primary sources, and shows how early historians, including Lossing and Stone, gave rise to the story, and its propagation by later historians, including Nickerson.
  39. ^ Ketchum (1997), pp. 375–376
  40. ^ a b Nickerson (1967), p. 343
  41. ^ Nickerson (1967), pp. 345–351
  42. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 405
  43. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 376
  44. ^ Ketchum (1997), pp. 377–379
  45. ^ Nickerson (1967), pp. 324–326
  46. ^ Ketchum (1997), pp. 385–388
  47. ^ Luzader (2008), p. 271
  48. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 333
  49. ^ Nickerson (1967), pp. 356–357
  50. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 326–327
  51. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 353
  52. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 358
  53. ^ Nickerson (1967), pp. 359–360
  54. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 360
  55. ^ Luzader (2008), pp. 284–285
  56. ^ Luzader (2008), p. 286
  57. ^ a b Nickerson (1967), p. 361
  58. ^ Ketchum (1997), p. 400
  59. ^ Luzader (2008), p. xxii
  60. ^ a b Nickerson (1967), p. 364
  61. ^ Luzader (2008), p. 285
  62. ^ a b Nickerson (1967), p. 362
  63. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 365
  64. ^ Luzader (2008), p. 287
  65. ^ Luzader (2008), pp. 291–295
  66. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 366
  67. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 367
  68. ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 368
  69. ^ Ketchum (1997), pp. 405–448
  70. ^ Randall (1990), p. 372
  71. ^ Murphy, Jim. The Real Benedict Arnold. Houghton Mifflin, 2007, ISBN 0395776090, 9780395776094, p. 168
  72. ^ Pancake (1985), pp. 147–151
  73. ^ Historic Society of Pennsylvania (1896), p. 90
  74. ^ Luzader (2008), p. xxiii
  75. ^ Pancake (1985), pp. 106–107
  76. ^ Benett (2008), p. 456
  77. ^ Saratoga National Historical Park
  78. ^ Saratoga activities
  79. ^ Saratoga National Historical Park Tour Stop 7

References

  • Bennett, William J (2008). The American Patriot's Almanac. Thomas Nelson Inc. ISBN 9781595552679. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Historical Society of Pennsylvania (189). The Pennsylvania magazine of history and biography, Volume 20. Historical Society of Pennsylvania. OCLC 1762062.
  • Ketchum, Richard M (1997). Saratoga: Turning Point of America's Revolutionary War. New York: Henry Holt. ISBN 9780805061239. OCLC 41397623. (Paperback ISBN 0-8050-6123-1)
  • Luzader, John F. Saratoga: A Military History of the Decisive Campaign of the American Revolution. New York: Savas Beatie. ISBN 9781932714449.
  • Morrissey, Brendan (2000). Saratoga 1777: Turning Point of a Revolution. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9781855328624. OCLC 43419003.
  • Nickerson, Hoffman (1967 (first published 1928)). The Turning Point of the Revolution. Port Washington, NY: Kennikat. OCLC 549809. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help)CS1 maint: year (link)
  • Pancake, John (1985). This Destructive War. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 0817301917.
  • Randall, Willard Sterne (1990). Benedict Arnold: Patriot and Traitor. William Morrow and Inc. ISBN 1-55710-034-90. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: length (help)
  • "Saratoga National Historical Park". National Park Service. Retrieved 2009-06-23.
  • "Saratoga National Historical Park - Tour Stop 7". National Park Service. Retrieved 2009-06-23.

Further reading

Links to sites that discuss the Hessian soldiers—some with pictures