Benedict Arnold’s Army Reaches Quebec

On November 8, 1775, Colonel Benedict Arnold and his troops came to the bluffs across the St. Lawrence River from Quebec City. Forty-five days earlier, this group of hardy Americans had started out from Fort Western on the lower Kennebec River. The rivers had flowed faster, the heights had been higher, and swamps more extensive than any had imagined.

Tom Hand, creator and publisher of Americana Corner, discusses how these “famine-proof” veterans survived a 350-mile march, considered one of the greatest in military history, and why it still matters today.

Images courtesy of Mount Vernon, Library of Congress, The New York Public Library, UMass Boston Digital Collections, Digital Commonwealth Massachusetts Collections Online, Wikipedia. 


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Americans Commence Siege of Quebec

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Benedict Arnold’s Troops March into Trouble