Siege of Fort Stanwix
Siege of Fort Stanwix | |||||||
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Part of American Revolutionary War | |||||||
Aerial view of the reconstructed Fort Stanwix | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Great Britain |
United States Oneida | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Barry St. Leger Cornplanter Sayenqueraghta |
Peter Gansevoort Han Yerry | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
750 regulars and provincials 800 indigenous |
750 regulars (Gansevoort) 800 militia and 50 Oneida (Herkimer) 700 regulars and 100–300 militia (Arnold) | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
British, Hessian, Loyalist
Indigenous
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American
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The siege of Fort Stanwix (also known as Fort Schuyler) began on August 2, 1777 and ended on August 22, 1777.
One attempt at relief was thwarted early in the siege when a force of New York militia under Brigadier General
St. Leger's failure to advance on Albany contributed to Burgoyne's surrender following the Battles of Saratoga in October 1777. Although St. Leger reached Fort Ticonderoga with some of his forces in late September, he was too late to aid Burgoyne.
Background
British
Forces assemble
In April 1777,
St. Leger, who was
St. Leger first learned that the Americans had occupied Fort Stanwix in force when prisoners captured from its garrison were brought to him on the St. Lawrence River.[13] He learned from the prisoners that the fort had been repaired and was "garrisoned by upwards of 600 men" and that "the rebels are expecting us, and are acquainted with our strength and route".[14] Daniel Claus, a British Indian Department superintendent accompanying the expedition, convinced St. Leger to proceed to Oswego on Lake Ontario rather than ascend the Salmon River as originally planned. They arrived at Oswego on July 25, where about 100 British Indian Department rangers from Fort Niagara led by deputy superintendent John Butler joined the expedition. Also at Oswego were Joseph Brant with his Loyalist volunteers and a large contingent of Mohawk warriors.
In total about 800 indigenous warriors joined St. Leger's expedition. Many were Seneca led by Cornplanter and Sayenqueraghta, but there were also warriors from the Cayuga, the Onondaga, the Mississaugas, and from the Upper Great Lakes area.[15][16]
The expedition ascended the Oswego and Oneida Rivers to Oneida Lake, then followed the north shore of the lake to Wood Creek. Wood Creek had been blocked by the Stanwix defenders just a week earlier by felling trees across the creek which slowed St. Leger's forces and forced then to rebuild an old military road in order to reach the fort.
Shortly after leaving Oswego a report reached St. Leger that more supplies for the fort were en route via a convoy of bateaux on the Mohawk River. St. Leger immediately dispatched Lieutenant Henry Bird and 30 men from the 8th Regiment to intercept those supplies. Bird was later joined by Brant with his volunteers and the Mohawk.[17]
Bird and Brant's arrival at the Lower Landing near the fort early on August 2 was too late.[18][19] The supply convoy, which was accompanied by 100 men from the 9th Massachusetts Regiment, had arrived and been unloaded. Bird and Brant were able to capture the convoy's bateaux captain, however, the supplies and Massachusetts soldiers safely reached the fort.[20]
Siege begins
St. Leger arrived at Fort Stanwix on the evening of August 2 with the regulars from the 8th and 34th Regiments, the jägers, and a company of the Royal Yorkers. The Canadiens, many of the Indian Department rangers, and the rest of the Royal Yorkers were tasked with clearing Wood Creek and the Oneida Carry which the Americans had blocked with fallen trees.[21]
St. Leger's artillery and stores were held up by the same tactic used to slow down Burgoyne's army after the surrender of Fort Ticonderoga. Gansevoort had earlier his men systematically fell trees across the Oneida Carry, creating abatises, and St. Leger needed to clear the path before his artillery could proceed. This work took several days and as a result the arrival of the artillery was delayed.[18]
On the afternoon of August 3, St. Leger paraded his troops, including the Mohawk in their war paint, in view of the fort. He then sent Indian Department Captain Gilbert Tice under a flag of truce with a proclamation authored by Major General Burgoyne. Gansevoort declined to respond, however, Tice was able to gather valuable intelligence about the fort's defenses.[22]
Construction of
On August 5, the main body of Seneca and Cayuga warriors arrived. The same day Joseph Brant received word from his sister
Oriskany
The
In planning their ambush, Johnson and Butler deferred to Brant, Cornplanter and Sayenqueraghta.[26] On August 6, at the bloody confrontation near Oriskany Creek, the Tryon militia suffered catastrophic casualties, including Herkimer, who received a serious wound to the leg. In a battle that lasted several hours, roughly half of Herkimer's men were killed or captured. St. Leger's indigenous allies also suffered significant casualties.[27]
Late in the afternoon St. Leger's detachment withdrew back towards Fort Stanwix. Herkimer (who eventually died of his wounds) and the surviving militia also retreated rather than continue their advance.
The confrontation came at a cost to St. Leger. Gansevoort's besieged troops took advantage of the absence of a sizable part of St. Leger's force to make a sortie, in which Gansevoort's second-in-command, Lieutenant Colonel Marinus Willett, led 250 men out and looted the nearly empty indigenous and Royal Yorkers camps of "several wagon-loads of spoils",[28] including Johnson's personal papers and orderly book, a British flag, four camp colours, and a letter the British had intercepted from Gansevoort's fiancée.[29] The story about recovering actual wagon loads of materials is probably untrue. It likely dates to a memoir by Marinus Willett written late in his life. No contemporaneous accounts of the sortie, including Willett's earlier journals, mention the need for wagons.[30]
When the indigenous warriors and Royal Yorkers returned from Oriskany they arrived at camps that had been stripped of much, including blankets, kettles and personal belongings. Combined with the fact that the battle at Oriskany had resulted in many indigenous casualties, this greatly upset the Seneca and Cayuga. They had been told that the regulars and the Loyalists, who had thus far fought relatively little, would do most of the fighting.[31] This breach of trust damaged relations between St. Leger and his indigenous allies, and became instrumental in the eventual failure of the siege.[32]
Siege continues
Siege operations began in earnest following the arrival of the British artillery. The regulars, the six-pounders and the coehorns were positioned on a low rise north of the fort, while most of St. Leger's indigenous allies and the Royal Yorkers were positioned to the south with the three-pounders.[23]
St. Leger took advantage of the victory at Oriskany to once again demand the fort's capitulation. Following a brief barrage from the coehorns, St. Leger sent three officers including Butler with the terms. Threats were made that the Indians would be massacre the garrison and destroy the Mohawk valley communities from which the garrison was drawn if the fort did not surrender. [33] In an eloquent refusal, Gansevoort responded, "By your uniform you are British officers. Therefore let me tell you that the message you have brought is a degrading one for a British officer to send and by no means reputable for a British officer to carry."[34]
Taking advantage of the brief truce, Gansevoort sent Willett and another officer out through the British lines to notify Schuyler of their situation.
Sniping and periodic shelling of the fort resumed on August 9. Work also began on a siege trench that could allow St. Leger's forces to breach the walls of the fort.
On August 13, Johnson, Claus and Butler convinced St. Leger that a delegation be sent under a flag of truce to convince the inhabitants of the Mohawk Valley to abandon their support for the rebellion. John Butler's son Walter Butler of the 8th Regiment was chosen to lead the 18-man delegation. On August 15, the delegation was taken prisoner at Shoemaker Tavern in
Siege relief
Schuyler received early reports of the action at Oriskany on August 8,[37] and dispatched Ebenezer Learned's 4th Massachusetts Regiment to relieve the besieged fort the next day.[38] On August 12, even before Willett could reach him, Schuyler held a war council to decide how to deal with the combined threats of St. Leger and Burgoyne, whose large army was at Fort Edward on the Hudson River.[39] Amid concerns that the withdrawal from Ticonderoga by Major General Arthur St. Clair would be repeated at Stanwix, the council decided, with near unanimity, not to send a relief column to Fort Stanwix. In opposition to the council, Schuyler insisted on a relief expedition, which Arnold offered to lead.[40] In addition to Schuyler's actions, Major General Israel Putnam, based in Peekskill, New York, on August 14 dispatched two regiments (the 1st Canadian and the 2nd New York), which were already on guard duty in the Mohawk River valley. These two units were still en route when the siege was lifted, and turned back.[41]
By August 20, Arnold, Willett and 700 Continental Army regulars had arrived at Fort Dayton.
Uncomfortable with the number of troops available to him, Arnold opted for a deception to sow trouble in the British camp. The delegation captured at Shoemaker Tavern was held prisoner at Fort Dayton and among them was Hon Yost Schuyler, a member of the Royal Yorkers who grew up with many of the Mohawks attacking Fort Stanwix,[44][32] Arnold persuaded Hon Yost to return to Fort Stanwix and spread rumors that large numbers of Americans, under the command of "The Dark Eagle", were about to descend on St. Leger's camp.[32] Hon Yost's good conduct was assured by holding his brother hostage.[45]
Arnold's stratagem met with some success. St. Leger recorded on August 21 that "Arnold was advancing, by rapid and forced marches, with 3,000 men", even though Arnold was still at Fort Dayton on that day.[46] When St. Leger held a council, about 200 of his indigenous allies had already abandoned the camp, and in the council the remaining, unhappy with siege warfare and the loss of their possessions, threatened to leave. On August 22, St. Leger broke camp and began the trek back to Oswego,[32] leaving behind a sizable amount of equipment. A number of men from St. Leger's party deserted or were captured by the fort's garrison, including Hon Yost.[2]
Aftermath
Arnold, whose force was augmented by the arrival of friendly Indians, advanced about 10 miles (16 km) toward Fort Stanwix on August 23 when a messenger from Gansevoort notified him of St. Leger's departure. Pushing on, they reached the fort that evening. Early the next day, Arnold detached 500 men to pursue St. Leger, whose column was also being taunted and harassed by his formerly supportive Indian allies.[47] An advance party reached the shores of Oneida Lake in heavy rain just as the last of St. Leger's boats were departing.[48] Leaving a garrison at the fort, with smaller outposts along the Mohawk, Arnold then hurried back with about 1,200 men to rejoin the main army.[47]
While still on Oneida Lake, St. Leger learned from an Indian messenger of the true state of Arnold's force.[49] On August 27, St. Leger wrote to Burgoyne from Oswego that he intended to join him by traveling via Lake Champlain.[50] He reached Fort Ticonderoga on September 29, too late to assist Burgoyne.[51]
Burgoyne blamed the failure of his campaign in part on St. Leger's failure to penetrate the Mohawk valley, and the lack of sufficient Loyalist support. He believed that a well-placed Loyalist uprising in upstate New York would have diverted enough American resources that either his advance or St. Leger's would have succeeded.
Fort Stanwix itself saw little action after the siege, although it was a dangerous and unpopular posting because of regular harassment by Loyalists and hostile Indians.
Legacy
Fort Stanwix was eventually destroyed in the 19th century.
The first official US flag was flown during battle on August 3, 1777, at Fort Schuyler. The Continental Congress adopted the following resolution on June 14, 1777: "Resolved, that the flag of the United States be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; that the union be thirteen stars, white, on a blue field, representing a new constellation." There was a delay in displaying this flag. The resolution was not signed by the secretary of the Congress until September 3, though it was previously printed in the newspapers. Massachusetts reinforcements to Fort Schuyler brought news of the adoption by Congress of the official flag. Soldiers cut up their shirts to make the white stripes; scarlet material was secured from red flannel petticoats of officers' wives, while material for the blue union was secured from Capt. Abraham Swartwout's blue cloth coat. A voucher shows that Congress paid him for the coat.[64]
See also
Notes
- ^ British casualties are as reported by St. Leger in Watt (2002), pp. 320–321, which include casualties from Oriskany. Watt notes that St. Leger did not report Canadien casualties, and probably underreported some of British casualties.
- ^ a b Watt (2002), p. 258
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 197
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 90
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 92
- ^ a b Pancake (1977), p. 140
- ^ Pancake (1977), p. 139
- ^ Nester (2004), p. 170
- ^ Scott (1927), pp. 138, 166
- ^ Watt and Morrison (2003) p. 104
- ^ Watt and Morrison (2003), p. 17
- ^ Nickerson (1967), pp. 195–197
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 198
- ^ Pancake (1977), p. 141
- ^ Nester (2004), p. 169
- ^ Watt and Morrison (2003), p. 18
- ^ Watt (2002), p. 126
- ^ a b Glatthaar (2006), p. 158
- ^ Luzader (2008), p. 127
- ^ Scott (1927), p. 175
- ^ Watt (2002), p. 127
- ^ Watt (2002) pp. 128–130
- ^ a b Nickerson (1967), p. 200
- ^ Watt (2002), p. 134
- ^ Pancake (1977), p. 142
- ^ Watt (2002) p. 157
- ^ Watt (2002) pp. 316–320
- ^ Pancake (1977), p. 144
- ^ Watt (2002), p. 191
- ^ Scott (1927), p. 195
- ^ Nickerson (1967), pp. 269–270
- ^ a b c d Pancake (1977), p. 145
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 270
- ^ a b c Nickerson (1967), p. 271
- ^ Watt (2002), p. 208
- ^ Watt (2002) p. 229
- ^ Scott (1927), p. 260
- ^ Scott (1927), p. 264
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 211
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 212
- ^ Scott (1927), pp. 267, 292
- ^ Scott (1927), p. 269
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 272
- ^ Watt (2002) pp. 224, 258
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 273
- ^ Scott (1927), pp. 281–282
- ^ a b Nickerson (1967), p. 275
- ^ Watt (2002), pp. 260–261
- ^ Watt (2002), p. 262
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 276
- ^ Nickerson (1967), p. 354–355
- ^ a b Scott (1927), p. 300
- ^ Ketchum (1997), pp. 423–425
- ^ Scott (1927), pp. 306–307
- ^ Watt (2002), p. 313
- ^ Glatthaar (2006), pp. 241–244
- ^ Watt (1997), p. 81
- ^ Watt (2002), p. 314
- ^ Pitcaithley (1981)
- ^ Official NPS page for Fort Stanwix National Monument
- ^ NHL summary description
- ^ NRHP Listing
- ^ Zenzen (2008) describes the reconstruction.
- ISBN 978-1557503305. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
References
- Glatthaar, Joseph T; Martin, James Kirby (2006). Forgotten Allies: The Oneida Indians and the American Revolution. New York: Hill and Wang. OCLC 63178983.
- Ketchum, Richard M (1997). Saratoga: Turning Point of America's Revolutionary War. New York: Henry Holt. OCLC 41397623.
- Luzader, John F. (2010). Saratoga: A Military History of the Decisive Campaign of the American Revolution. Casemate Publishers. OCLC 185031179.
- Nester, William R (2004). The frontier war for American independence. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. OCLC 52963301.
- Nickerson, Hoffman (1967) [1928]. The Turning Point of the Revolution. Port Washington, NY: Kennikat. OCLC 549809.
- Pancake, John S (1977). 1777: The Year of the Hangman. University, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. OCLC 2680804.
- Pitcaithley, Dwight T (1981). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination: Fort Stanwix" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2009-04-13.
- Scott, John Albert (1927). Fort Stanwix and Oriskany: The Romantic Story of the Repulse of St. Legers British Invasion of 1777. Rome, NY: Rome Sentinel Company. OCLC 563963.
- Watt, Gavin (1997). The Burning of the Valleys: Daring Raids From Canada Against the New York Frontier in the Fall of 1780. Toronto: Dundurn Press. OCLC 317810982.
- Watt, Gavin K; Morrison, James F (2002). Rebellion in the Mohawk Valley: The St. Leger Expedition of 1777. Toronto: Dundurn Press. OCLC 49305965.
- Watt, Gavin K.; Morrison, James F. (2003). The British Campaign of 1777, Volume One, The St. Leger Expedition, The Forces of the Crown and Congress (2nd ed.). Milton, Ontario: Global Heritage Press. OCLC 51275000.
- Zenzen, Joan M. (2008). Fort Stanwix National Monument: reconstructing the past and partnering for the future. Albany: State University of New York Press. OCLC 163593261. See also the 2004 report on which the book is based: Zenzen, Joan (June 2004). "Reconstructing the Past, Partnering for the Future: An Administrative History of Fort Stanwix National Monument". National Park Service. Archived from the originalon 2007-08-09.
- "Official NPS page for Fort Stanwix National Monument". National Park Service. Retrieved 2009-04-13.
- "NHL summary description for Fort Stanwix". National Park Service. Archived from the original on 2015-06-22.
- "Fort Stanwix – asset detail". Archived from the original on 2016-09-19. Retrieved 2016-08-25.. See also: "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
Further reading
- Campbell, William W (1880). Annals of Tryon County, Or, The Border Warfare of New York, During the Revolution: Or, The Border Warfare of New York During the Revolution. Cherry Valley Gazette Print. OCLC 7353443.
- OCLC 2100358.
External links