The Siege of Fort Stanwix

In the summer of 1777, British General John Burgoyne launched a three-pronged advance towards Albany, New York, with the goal of splitting off New England from the other colonies. One 1,800-man contingent, half Loyalists and half Native Americans, moved east from Lake Ontario to the Mohawk River Valley. Their primary target was the 500-man American garrison at Fort Stanwix. General Nicholas Herkimer, commander of the Tryon County militia based thirty miles away at Fort Dayton, was informed of the siege and assembled 700 militiamen to march to the fort’s relief.

Tom Hand, creator and publisher of Americana Corner, discusses the siege of Fort Stanwix and why it still matters today.

Images courtesy of Tennessee Virtual Archive, The New York Public Library, Library of Congress, Wikipedia. 


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The Battle of Oriskany

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Burgoyne and British Army Surrender at Saratoga