778: Death of Roland, the historic Frankish captain and governor of the Breton March (under Emperor Charlemagne) at the Battle of Roncevaux Pass in the Pyrenees. The battle occurred after Charlemagne defeated the Saxons in a long-running campaign through Frankish lands into the Iberian Peninsula. It began during the return march, when the Frankish army passed through a narrow defile where they were obliged to proceed single-file. Unfortunately for this victorious but tired army, it was in Basque country, and the Basques ambushed them as Roland’s section brought up the rear of the column. Roland and scores of others were killed, but the remainder of Charlemagne’s army made it out. From this point the legend begins, eventually morphing during the 12th Century into Le Chanson de Roland (The Song of Roland), a tale that focused on the noble knight sacrificing himself for the greater good of his sovereign. The Song is the oldest surviving piece of French literature, and its various iterations cemented Roland’s position as the noble defender all across Europe.
927: A Saracen raiding army led by Slavic Sabir conquers the strategic Greco-Roman seaport of Taranto, completely reducing it to rubble and carrying all survivors off to slavery in North Africa. The term Saracen is an archaic name, used in Medieval times to identify the warrior tribes emanating from the deserts of North Africa and the Levant. There was very little differentiation in European eyes between Arab and Muslim (or Moslem), and Saracen can be identified as either or both. It is probably worth noting the date from the entry above, and realize that the jihadist warriors of Allah are not motivated by the actions of any particular Western leader or event, but by very clear prescriptions laid down in the Koran to consider any non-Moslems as infidels completely deserving of whatever death or privation can be inflicted on them. Our current ISIS surge is a continuation of the long-running reality of brutal relations between the Saracen and European peoples.
1248: Laying of the foundation stone for the Cologne Cathedral, construction of which was completed in 1880. It is widely recognized as the ultimate expression of Gothic architecture, and was miraculously spared destruction during the WWII firebombing of that city.
1473: Birth of Richard, Duke of York, one of the two “Princes in the Tower” (with his brother Edward, Prince of Wales ) whose arrest and mysterious disappearance made the way clear for their uncle to assume the throne of England as Richard III. It is an ugly, ugly story, made more famous by the Bard, William Shakespeare, in his play, Richard III. All references to the two young heirs end without a trace sometime in 1483
1777: An American militia force, under the leadership of General John Stark, completely routs a detachment of British General Burgoyne’s army who were tasked with rounding up horses and other supplies in the area. The Battle of Bennington decisively weakened Burgoyne’s strength in upper New England, providing bracing encouragement to the nascent United States, and helped lay the groundwork for France’s eventual alliance against Great Britain.
1780: Battle of Camden (SC). Between the improving prospects of the American revolutionaries in the northern colonies and France’s recent alliance with America, Britain decides to execute a “Southern Strategy” to crush the relatively weak Southern militias (i.e., Francis Marion’s Swamp Foxes) and consolidate the larger Southern Tory political factions behind the Crown. The British under Lord Cornwallis had already re-taken Savannah, GA and Charleston, SC, and now made plans to subdue the interior by capturing Camden, South Carolina, which was a major crossroads for inland travel. In response, the Continental Army began to re-form in Charlotte, North Carolina under General Horatio Gates, the hero of the American victory in Saratoga, NY. Before his army and militia was fully formed, Gates ordered an immediate deployment down to Camden to meet Cornwallis’ army before it could take the town. The haste was his undoing; on the morning of the battle, the poorly organized and worse disciplined left wing of the militia crumbled and ran after the first volleys. The adjacent militia subsequently turned and ran with Gates himself in company, even before they engaged, leaving the lone Continental regiment to be destroyed in detail by the British Regulars and the cavalry of the notorious Banestre Tarleton. For his part, Gates never held command again, but because of his earlier service, he was never held to account for the disaster at Camden.
1786: Birth of the Tennessee frontiersman, soldier, twice-elected Member of Congress, and hero of Battle of the Alamo, Davy Crockett
1792: Three days after his physical removal from the Tuilleries Palace, French King Louis XVI is formally placed under arrest by the National Tribunal and charged as Citizen Louis Capet with being an “Enemy of the people.”
1861: Death of Eliphalet Remington (b.1793), an upstate New York blacksmith who designed and hand-made a new style of sporting rifle that became wildly popular with hunters moving into the Old Northwest. He formed the E. Remington and Sons company to manufacture low cost but highly effective rifle barrels that were then mated with receivers and stocks made by other gunsmiths. Remington’s line eventually expanded into the full range of firearm manufacturing. Its high-quality machining also made it a natural fit for other precision equipment, most particularly typewriters, in 1873.
1862: The Virginia horseman J.E.B. Stuart is assigned command of the cavalry for the Army of Northern Virginia.
1881: Birth of filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille.
1893: Birth of the actress Mae West (d.1980), whose spicy antics on film and in her public life provide a pretty good data point that the Boomer generation didn’t invent sex, the movie stars of the ’20s and ’30s did. Among her more memorable lines came from a re-write she did in her first film, Night After Night, where she’s checking in her things with the hat check girl, who exclaims, “Goodness, what beautiful diamonds!” West responded, “Goodness had nothing to do with it dearie.”
1896: A rich vein of Placer gold is found in the Rabbit Creek (now Bonanza Creek) tributary of the Klondike River in the Alaska Territory. The discovery was made by three prospecting partners, Skookum Jim Mason (a native Eskimo), Dawson Charlie and his nephew Patsy Henderson. Their discovery triggers the Klondike Gold Rush, that lasted only a few years, but yielded over twelve and a half million ounces of gold since the discovery.
1898: The United States and Spain agree to an armistice, ending hostilities of the four-month-long Spanish-American War. The two sides agree to send five commissioners each to a peace treaty negotiation in Paris by the first of October.
1898: Spanish and American forces stage a mock battle in Manila to create the appearance of a Spanish surrender under hostile conditions. The bottom line for both sides was to create a colonial hand-off which would prevent a large native Philippine army from sacking the city and taking revenge on the defeated Spanish citizens who remained. American Commodore Dewey and Generals MacArthur and Merritt negotiated the terms of the battle beforehand with the Spanish governor, and at 0900, Dewey’s ships began a bombardment of an abandoned and decrepit fort on the outskirts of town, including lobbing a few shells at the essentially impregnable, but manned, fortress of Intramuros, closer in to the city, wherein was a large refugee population. On schedule, Spanish forces marched out and American forces marched in, although there was a small skirmish with a Spanish company that didn’t get the word. With only that interruption, the takeover was completed without Filipino intervention, and the American occupation of the islands began in earnest.
1899: Birth of British film director, Alfred Hitchcock.
1912: U.S. Marines, led by Colonel Joseph Pendleton and Captain Smedley Butler, invade Nicaragua in support of the recently-elected pro-U.S. government. Nicaragua had been destabilized by a rebel movement, the Sandinistas, who threatened the plantations of the United Fruit Company and other businesses in the country. This was the first of a series of American military interventions, known as the Banana Wars, throughout the Caribbean basin that reinforced both the Monroe Doctrine (vis-à-vis European interests) and Teddy Roosevelt’s “Big Stick” (supporting direct American interests). The Marines remained in occupation in Nicaragua at varying levels of support through 1933.
1914: Great Britain declares war on Austria-Hungary.
1914: The Panama Canal opens to commercial traffic. Unfortunately for the people who labored for years on this engineering marvel, the event is completely overshadowed by the opening guns of Great Power combat in Europe.
1918: Incorporation of Bayerisch Moteren Werke (BMW) as an aircraft engine manufacturer, opening a factory in a suburb of Munich.
1929: Riots begin in British Palestinian Mandate after the Mufti of Jerusalem gives a fiery sermon excoriating Jewish worshipers who erected a temporary screen between men and women at the Wailing Wall (According to the Mufti and his Imams, this was in blatant violation of the post-Ottoman mandate agreement to permit no new construction near the Temple Mount). The thinly-manned British police were unable to stop the violence, which burned prayer books and notes left in the foundation stones by the Jews. The rampage continued through the night, eventually leading to the stabbing death of a young Sephardic Jew named Abraham Mizrachi. His funeral, in turn, became a political rally, which further inflamed the Arab “street.” Flaming editorials were published in both Arab and Jewish newspapers, and the tensions led directly to two pogroms: the 1929 Hebron Massacre (where 68 Jews were killed (23-23 August)), and the 1929 Safed Massacre (where 15 Jews were killed and 80 wounded (29 August)).
1933: Birth of American race car driver Parnelli Jones, winner of the 1963 Indy 500, and the near-winner again in 1967, driving the radical STP turbine car, which dominated the race until three laps to go, when a transmission bearing failed.
1935: Deaths of American humorist Will Rogers (b.1879) and aviation pioneer Wiley Post (b.1898) on takeoff in their float-plane near Fairbanks, Alaska. Post was on a mission to scout out potential float-plane routes between the United States and Russia, and Rogers invited himself along to gather more material for his newspaper columns. On the trip northward, Rogers would pull out a typewriter after takeoff and write his articles on his lap while Post flew the airplane. The machine they were using was a one-off combination of a Lockheed Explorer wing fitted to a Lockheed Orion fuselage with a set of custom floats designed for neither. It was notoriously nose-heavy, but Post managed to make it work until this day.
1941: Final day of four days of meetings between British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt aboard USS Augusta (CA-31) in Placentia Bay, Newfoundland. Their secret rendezvous was the end result of planning that began back in February, but was delayed by multiple disasters in the European war. Both leaders traveled to the site on capital ships (Churchill aboard the new battleship HMS Prince of Wales). The outcome of the meeting was a joint declaration on this day, which published eight points that would guide the post-war world. It was quickly dubbed The Atlantic Charter, and its prescriptions were treated with the force of law. No signed copies of the document were ever made, although Roosevelt’s papers contained one copy with a signature on it. Churchill noted the ambiguity of the Charter in his memoirs on the Yalta Conference [paraphrasing] “The British Constitution is like the Atlantic Charter- the document did not exist, yet all the world knew about it…”
1943(a): The United States Army Air Corps Eighth Air Force loses 60 B-17s, with severe damage to over 90 more aircraft during a combined raid on the Schweinfurt-Regensburg industrial complex deep in Germany. 376 bombers were assigned to the daylight mission, which was designed to cripple the German aircraft industry by destroying the factories that produced ball-bearings for the engines. Of note, the B-17s were required to spend over three hours un-escorted over German territory in order to reach their targets, time which allowed the Luftwaffe to wreak havoc on the lumbering machines; the bomber “waves” were spaced far enough apart to allow the Germans time to re-fuel and re-arm their fighters for continued defense. Operationally, the results were little short of a complete disaster, with the strikes creating only a temporary loss of about 30% of pre-strike ball-bearing capacity.
1943(b): The U.S. Seventh Army under General George S. Patton enters the strategic city of Messina, Sicily, several hours ahead of the British Eighth Army under General Bernard Montgomery.
1944: Allied armies under the command of US Army Generals Jacob Devers, Alexander Patch and Lucian Truscott, land in southern France in Operation DRAGOON (formerly Operation ANVIL). This second front in the western theatre opens up the seaports of Marseille and Toulon to Allied supplies, greatly augmenting what could otherwise be put into France through the heavily damaged Cherbourg and the nearly-destroyed Mulberry facilities near Normandy. Despite German preparations and knowledge of the impending landings, the invasion was executed very much as planned, and caused the German forces to quickly abandon their positions and withdraw into northern France to join with Army Group B near the Swiss frontier.
1945: Japanese Emperor Hirohito, having witnessed the complete destruction of his Imperial Navy, his air force, the cream of his army, the capture of Okinawa, the firebombing of Tokyo and the sudden obliteration of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, publicly announces via recorded radio transmission that he is prepared to accept the Allied terms of surrender. Most of his cabinet and leading military officers disagreed, and an unsuccessful coup attempt was staged on the 12th -13th, but the Emperor held firm with his decision [excerpt]: “I have given serious thought to the situation prevailing at home and abroad and have concluded that continuing the war can only mean destruction for the nation and prolongation of bloodshed and cruelty in the world. I cannot bear to see my innocent people suffer any longer. … It goes without saying that it is unbearable for me to see the brave and loyal fighting men of Japan disarmed. It is equally unbearable that others who have rendered me devoted service should now be punished as instigators of the war. Nevertheless, the time has come to bear the unbearable. … I swallow my tears and give my sanction to the proposal to accept the Allied proclamation on the basis outlined by the Foreign Minister.”
1960: U.S. Air Force pilot, Captain Joseph Kittinger (b.1928), leaps out of a balloon from 102,800 feet, and freefalls for over four minutes, reaching 614 mph. The jump was Kittenger’s third from high altitude (the first two were from 76,400 and 74,700 feet respectively) as part of the Excelsior tests of high altitude ejection parachute systems for modern jet aircraft. On his first jump the six foot drogue stabilizer wrapped around his neck and started him spinning at 120 rpm, which knocked him unconscious, but he was saved by the automatic systems that opened his main chute at 10,000 feet. On this test, the pressurization failed in his right glove and he lost use of it from the onset of frostbite. He didn’t tell the flight surgeon until just before stepping out. The jump set records for highest jump, fastest human speed through the atmosphere, longest freefall and longest drogue freefall. After the test series, he served three combat tours in Vietnam, getting shot down in 1971 and serving as POW in the Hanoi Hilton for eleven months. He retired as a Colonel. Kittinger now lives in Orlando, Florida. DLH Footnote: In October, 2012, he served as Capsule Communicator and mentor to Felix Baumgartner and the Red Bull Stratos group, who finally broke Kittenger’s altitude and human speed records. He was reportedly thrilled to be part of the new effort.
1961: The government of the communist German Democratic Republic closes all its border crossings into West Berlin and begins construction of The Berlin Wall.
1969(a): Three weeks after arriving back on their home planet, Apollo 11 astronauts Niel Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Mike Collins are released from biological quarantine.
1969(b): Opening acts of the Woodstock Music and Arts Festival. Billed as “An Aquarian Exposition: 3 Days of Peace & Music”, it was held at Max Yasgur’s 600-acre (240 ha; 0.94 sq mi) dairy farm near the hamlet of White Lake in the town of Bethel.[5] Located in Sullivan County, Bethel is 43 miles (70 km) southwest of the town of Woodstock in adjoining Ulster County.
1969(c): Hurricane Camille slams into the Mississippi Gulf Coast. The Category 5 storm kills 248 people and causes $1.5B in damage. If you’ve ever met anyone who was there at the time, you probably heard some hair-raising stories about it. They are all true. The National Weather Service retired the name from further use.
1977: First free-flight of prototype Space Shuttle Enterprise, which made a series of five atmospheric glides to verify flight control systems and algorithms, among other shuttle systems tests.
1987: Death of Nazi Deputy Fuehrer Rudolf Hess (b.1894), who remains perhaps one of the most enigmatic figures of the World War II era. In May of 1941, Hess piloted an ME-110 fighter on an extended range, low-level flight to Scotland, where he parachuted out and, once on the ground, requested a meeting with the Duke of Hamilton, ostensibly to negotiate a separate peace with Great Britain. The British government immediately arrested him and confined him to the Tower of London, the last actual prisoner to serve there, where he was extensively debriefed on the internal workings of the Nazi government. The supposed negotiations regarding a separate peace would have allowed Germany to apply all its power against the Soviet Union, and the silence of the British government on the subject made the already paranoid Soviet state absolutely insane about Hess. At the Nuremburg Trials he was convicted of war crimes and crimes against the peace, and sentenced to life in Spandau Prison, where the Soviets insisted to the end under their Four Power rights that he never be released. Hess died in Spandau at age 93, the only prisoner at the facility for many years, by suicide in the prison garden.
Woodstock Extra
Thirty-two acts performed over the course of the four days:
Artist | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|
Richie Havens | 5:07 pm – 7:00 pm | |
Swami Satchidananda | 7:10 pm – 7:20 pm | Gave the opening speech/invocation for the festival. |
Sweetwater | 7:30 pm – 8:10 pm | |
Bert Sommer | 8:20 pm – 9:15 pm | |
Tim Hardin | 9:20 pm – 9:45 pm | |
Ravi Shankar | 10:00 pm – 10:35 pm | Played through the rain. |
Melanie | 10:50 pm – 11:20 pm | |
Arlo Guthrie | 11:55 pm – 12:25 am | |
Joan Baez | 12:55 am – 2:00 am | Was six months pregnant at the time. |
Artist | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|
Quill | 12:15 pm – 12:45 pm | |
Country Joe McDonald | 1:00 pm – 1:30 pm | Joe later performed together with The Fish. |
Santana | 2:00 pm – 2:45 pm | Aged 20,Michael Shrieve, the band’s drummer, was the youngest musician to play at the festival. |
John Sebastian | 3:30 pm – 3:55 pm | Sebastian was not on the bill, but rather was attending the festival, and was recruited to perform while the promoters waited for many of the scheduled performers to arrive. |
Keef Hartley Band | 4:45 pm – 5:30 pm | |
The Incredible String Band | 6:00 pm – 6:30 pm | |
Canned Heat | 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm | |
Mountain | 9:00 pm – 10:00 pm | This performance was only their third gig as a band |
Grateful Dead | 10:30 pm – 12:05 am | Their set was cut short after the stage amps overloaded during “Turn On Your Love Light”. |
Creedence Clearwater Revival | 12:30 am – 1:20 am | |
Janis Joplin with The Kozmic Blues Band[43] | 2:00 am – 3:00 am | |
Sly and the Family Stone | 3:30 am – 4:20 am | |
The Who | 5:00 am – 6:05 am | Briefly interrupted by Abbie Hoffman. |
Jefferson Airplane | 8:00 am – 9:40 am | Joined onstage on piano by Nicky Hopkins. |
Artist | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|
Joe Cocker and The Grease Band | 2:00 pm – 3:25 pm | Played “With A Little Help From My Friends.” After Joe Cocker’s set, a thunderstorm disrupted the events for several hours. |
Country Joe and the Fish | 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm | Country Joe McDonald’s second performance. |
Ten Years After | 8:15 pm – 9:15 pm | |
The Band | 10:00 pm – 10:50 pm | |
Johnny Winter | 12:00 am – 1:05 am | Winter’s brother, Edgar Winter, is featured on three songs. |
Blood, Sweat & Tears | 1:30 am – 2:30 am | |
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young | 3:00 am – 4:00 am | An acoustic and electric set were played. Neil Young skipped most of the acoustic set. |
Paul Butterfield Blues Band | 6:00 am – 6:45 am | |
Sha Na Na | 7:30 am – 8:00 am | |
Jimi Hendrix / Gypsy Sun & Rainbows | 9:00 am – 11:10 am | Performed to a considerably smaller crowd of fewer than 200,000 people. |
Stuart Oliver says
You left out one performer who appeared at Woodstock. Scott Mckenzie, who was best known for his single “San Francisco “.
I was fortunate enough to have met and known him during the mid 80’s when he performed in a small bar in Virginia Beach called Simon Seagulls’, which was owned by a relative of mine.
Scott was attempting a comeback tour with some phenomenal new material, but could not get coverage and promotional support from the musical establishment of that time.
He was unfortunately typecast as a one hit wonder, and later succumbed to substance abuse issues. He was a nice person, and a talented performer.
Note: Yes! Thank you!
Paul Plante says
Even the Norwegians sing about Roland:
The Song of Roland
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFs2uw5-Xk4
This is a very martial version sung by three Norwegian women, the Trio Medieval, with a lot of illustrations.
Paul Plante says
With respect to the so-called “Battle of Bennington,” which actually took place in New York state some three or so miles west of Bennington, which is in Vermont, the “HISTORY OF The Seventeen Towns OF Rensselaer County FROM THE Colonization of the Manor of Rensselaerwyck to the Present Time” by A. J. Weise, A.M., AS PUBLISHED IN THE TROY DAILY TIMES, TROY; N. Y., J. M. FRANCIS & TUCKER, 1880 in CHAPTER X, THE TOWN OF HOOSICK. provides as follows:
THE INVASION OF BURGOYNE.
When in the summer of 1777 Gen. Burgoyne was making almost an unopposed invasion of the northern part of New York from Canada, the people of the Hoosick valley were greatly alarmed by the reports of the barbarous cruelties of the Indians which the British commander had sent forward as a band of terror to the rebellions people.
In the vicinity of Fort Edward he dispatched Col. Frederick Baum on a ” secret expedition to the Connecticut river,” having been informed that the Americans had gathered together there “a considerable depot of cattle, cows, horses and wheel carriages, most of which were driven across the Connecticut river from the provinces of New England; and, as it was understood to be guarded by a party of militia only, an attempt to surprise it seemed by no means unjustifiable.”
He received of Burgoyne instructions on August 9th, that he was “to try the affections of the country; to disconcert the councils of the enemy; to mount the Riedesel’s dragoons; to complete Peters’s corps; and to obtain large supplies of cattle, horses and carriages.”
Having performed these and other things mentioned in the Instructions he was then, in order to form a junction with the main army of Burgoyne, to proceed expeditiously with his force “by the great road to Albany.”
Col. Baum departed on this mission with about 900 Hessian mercenaries, Canadians, tories and Indians and two cannon.
Col. Philip Skene accompanied Col. Baum for the purpose of advising him “upon all matters of intelligence.”
On the 14th of August, Baum reached the little settlement at Sancoik.
Here, in a grist mill, on Little White creek, a small stream emptying into the Walloomsac, he wrote a letter to Burgoyne regarding his progress:
Sancoik, 14th August, 1777, 9 o’clock I have the honor to inform your excellency that I arrived here at eight in the morning, having had intelligence of a party of the enemy being in possession of a mill, which they abandoned at our approach, but, in their usual way, fled from the bushes and took their road to Bennington.
A savage was slightly wounded; they broke down the bridge, which has retarded our march over an hour; they left in the mill about 78 barrels of very fine flour, 10 bushels of wheat, 80 barrels of salt, and about £1,000 worth of pearlash and potash.
I have ordered 30 provincials and an officer to guard the provisions and the pass of the bridge.
By five prisoners taken here, they agree that from 1,500 to 1,800 are at Bennington, but are supposed to leave it on our approach.
I will proceed so far to-day as to fall on the enemy early tomorrow, and make such dispositions as I may think necessary from the intelligence I may receive.
People are flocking in hourly, but want to be armed.
The savages cannot be controlled, they ruin and take everything they please.
I am your excellency’s most humble servant, F. Baum.
P. S. Beg your excellency to pardon the hurry of this letter, as it is written upon the head of a barrel.
The mill in which this letter was written is still standing, it is said, and that on one of the timbers of the structure there is to be seen the inscription “A. D. 1776,” the supposed date of the erection of the building.
THE BATTLE OF WALLOOMSAC.
On the night of the 14th of August, Baum “bivouacked at the farm of Walmscott, about four miles from Sancoick, and three from Bennington.”
On the 15th there was “a perfect hurricane of wind,” and a great fall of rain.
During the day the skirmishers of the provincial militia under Gen. John Stark several times drew the fire of the British pickets.
Meanwhile Col. Baum took a position on an eminence near the “farm of Walmscott.”
He posted here the dragoons, with a portion of the marksmen on their right, in rear of a little zig-zag breastwork, composed of logs and loose earth.
Such of the detached (houses of which there were about half a dozen log ones) as came within the compass of his position he filled with Canadians, supporting them with detachments of chasseurs and grenadiers, likewise intrenched behind breastworks; and he kept the whole, with the exception of about 100 men, on the north side of the stream, holding the woods upon his flanks, in his front and rear by the Indians.
Gen. Stark with his brigade of Mew Hampshire militia and a number of companies of Vermont and Massachusetts militia, on the morning of the 16th, moved against Baum in the position taken by the latter on the 14th.
Gen. Stark, in his report of the engagement, says:
I divided my army into three divisions, and sent Col. Nichols with 260 men on the rear of their left wing.
Col. Iftoriok in the rear of their right with 300 men.
In the meantime I sent 800 men to oppose the enemy’s front to draw their attention that way.
Soon after I detached the Cols. Hulbert and Stickney on their right wing, with 200 men to attack that part, all of which plans had their desired effect.
Col. Nichols sent me word that he stood in need of a reenforcement, which I readily granted, consisting of 100 men, at which time he commenced the attack, precisely at 3 o’clock in the afternoon, which was followed by all the rest.
I pushed forward the remainder with all speed.
Our people behaved with the greatest spirit and bravery imaginable.
Had they been Alexanders or Charles of Sweden they could not have behaved better.
The action lasted two hours, at the expiration of which time we forced their breastworks at the muzzle of their guns, took two pieces of brass cannon, with a number of prisoners, but before I could get them into proper form again I received intelligence that there was a large reinforcement within two miles of us, on their march, which occasioned us to renew our attack.
But lucky for us. Col. Warner’s regiment came up, which put a stop to their career.
We soon rallied, and in a few minutes the action began very warm and desperate, which lasted till night.
We used their own cannon against them, which proved of great service to us.
At sunset we obliged them to retreat a second time.
We pursued them till dark, when I was obliged to halt for fear of killing my own men.
We recovered two pieces more of their cannon, together with all their baggage, a number of horses, carriages, etc., killed upwards of 200 of the enemy in the field of battle.
The number of wounded is not yet known, as they are scattered about in many places.
I have one lieutenant-colonel, since dead, one major, seven captains, fourteen lieutenants, four ensigns, two cornets, one judge-advocate, one baron, two Canadian officers, six sergeants, one aid-de-camp and seven hundred prisoners.
I almost forgot one Hessian chaplain.
Our wounded are forty-two.
Ten privates and four officers belonging to my brigade are dead.
The dead and wounded in the other corps I do not know, as they have not brought in their returns yet.
In the engagement Col. Baum was shot through the body and mortally wounded.
THE FIGHT AT THE BRIDGE OF SANCOICK.
Col. Breyman, who had been sent by Burgoyne to reinforce Col. Baum, reached the “mill at St. Coyk” at half-past 4 o’clock on the afternoon of the 16th, being then only two miles distant from the main body of the British forces then engaged by the force under Gen. Stark.
He had not marched but a little ways beyond “the bridge of Sancoick” when he saw through the woods “a considerable number of armed men, some of whom wore blouses and some jackets ” moving toward a hill on his left.
In a very short time he came upon a portion of Baum’s force in retreat, but he having reformed the men was about to push on toward the place where Baum had been engaged.
At this juncture he was attacked by Stark and shortly after by a reinforcement under Col. Warren, by which he was soon forced to retreat toward Cambridge.
To obstruct the advance of the Americans, Breyman set fire to the bridge at “St. Coyk.”
It was in this last engagement that for the second time that day the Americans took two cannon from the routed British.
Among the different points of interest shown visitors viewing the battle ground are the old grist mill of David Van Rensselaer, who fled to Albany on the approach of the English, and where Baum wrote his letter.
The mill, at North Hoosick, is now owned by John G. Burk; “Hessian hill” is now a part of the farm of Seymour C. Gooding, the place of Baum’s selection on the 15th; the ridge beyond the village of Wallomsac where Breyman was routed; and the spot where the body of Baum’s men was captured being in the vicinity of the residence of William P. Chace, not far from North Hoosick.
end quotes
Living not all that far from there, that is a history I was taught when young as to how the America I once knew came into being.
Paul Plante says
With respect to Burgoyne’s command to the Hessian Col. Frederick Baum, who spoke no English, to mount the Riedesel’s dragoons, it must be remembered that Burgoyne was attacking from the north, coming up the Richelieu River from the St. Lawrence in Canada, a distance of 77 miles, and then he had a journey of 120 miles down Lake Champlain to Lake George, and then another 35 miles or so to Fort Edward, which was another 53 miles to his objective of Albany in New York colony.
That journey was through forest mostly, although the troops were transported by water on barges.
So the Hessian dragoons were on foot, since there was no practical way to bring horses that distance, where there would have been no feed for them.
They were to be mounted by stealing horses from the Americans, which they were doing as they came south from Fort Edward.
Needless to say, that stirred up a real hornet’s nest, and the battle of Bennington was the result.
Friedrich Adolf Riedesel, Freiherr, was a German officer who served in the Seven Years’ War and American War of Independence.
He was the commander of the Braunschweiger Jäger, a regiment of soldiers from the Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel that was among the German units hired by the British during the American War of Independence.
He then commanded all German soldiers in the Saratoga Campaign.
Mention of those German mercenaries is made in the Declaration of Independence as follows:
He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.
end quotes
And thus is history made.