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Arnold Has Betrayed Us

On September 25, 1780, General George Washington arrived at West Point to inspect the fort and meet with its post commander, General Benedict Arnold. As he was sitting down to breakfast, Arnold received a letter informing him that Major John Andre, his spy accomplice, had been caught and confessed Arnold’s plot. He immediately raced to the river and ordered his bargemen to take him downriver. A few hours later, Washington was informed of Arnold’s attempt to give away West Point to the British. Colonel Alexander Hamilton, who delivered the message, later stated he had never seen Washington so visibly shaken, simply uttering, “Arnold has betrayed us.”

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Arnold’s Scheme Goes Awry

In June 1780, General George Washington gave the command of West Point to Benedict Arnold. Arnold swiftly took steps to weaken the fort’s defenses and arranged to meet with Major John Andre, the British spy chief, to turn over documents on the fortress. Arnold and Andre conferred until the early morning hours, but when ordered to take Andre back to his waiting ship, two local farmers hired by Arnold refused to go until they got some sleep. That would prove to be a fateful decision because while they slept, an American shore battery fired on and drove off Andre’s waiting vessel, leaving him no alternative but to make his way back to British lines on horseback.

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The Fall of Benedict Arnold

In June 1778, Major General Benedict Arnold, the new military commander of Philadelphia, moved into the lavish Penn mansion and began to use his position to make extra money. The following year, Joseph Reed, a powerful Pennsylvania politician who had taken a great dislike to Arnold, accused him of several illegal activities. While most charges were frivolous and dismissed, two were referred to General Washington.

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The Hero of Saratoga

In July 1777, General George Washington sent his most trusted field commander, Benedict Arnold, to New York to help stop the invading British Army. Arnold would reach the peak of his short but illustrious career on October 7, when he charged and captured a strongly defended enemy redoubt at the Battle of Bemis Heights, ensuring an American victory. Unfortunately, Arnold suffered a severe wound in his left leg that prevented him from participating in the next military campaign. Instead, Washington appointed Arnold military commander of the Philadelphia region, a situation that would prove ripe for abuse.

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The Rise of Benedict Arnold

Benedict Arnold was born January 14, 1741 in Norwich, Connecticut, into a wealthy family, but his father lost his fortune when Benedict was a child. At twenty, Arnold moved to New Haven, where he opened a pharmacy, married and had three children. Arnold soon expanded into the trading business, sailing his own ship to the West Indies. When Parliament passed the Stamp Act in 1765, Arnold joined the Sons of Liberty and began a dangerous but lucrative smuggling operation. By the early 1770s, Arnold’s high-risk-high-reward business exploits made him the wealthiest man in New Haven and in 1774, Arnold formed a militia company and was elected captain by the men.

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Death and Destruction at the Battle of Oriskany

While the Mohawk and Seneca Indians and British Loyalists were ambushing General Nicholas Herkimer and his Tryon County militiamen at The Battle of Oriskany on August 6, 1777, Lieutenant Colonel Marinus Willett and 250 Continentals were destroying the unprotected British camp outside Fort Stanwix. Once alerted to Willett’s presence, Native American and British forces abandoned the fight to protect their belongings. Willet’s men retreated into Fort Stanwix, but they had saved Herkimer’s militiamen from certain annihilation. In an indication of the ferocity of the battle, 385 of the 700 Tryon County militiamen, or an astonishing 55 percent, had been killed, an unparalleled percentage for an American force during the Revolutionary War.

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The Battle of Oriskany

On August 6, 1777, General Nicholas Herkimer and 700 Tryon County militiamen planned a surprise attack against a British force led by Lieutenant Colonel Barry St. Leger that was besieging Fort Stanwix. Unfortunately, an informer tipped off St. Leger and he directed Joseph Brant, leader of the Mohawks surrounding Fort Stanwix, to set up an ambush in a ravine near the Native American village of Oriska.

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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.

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British and Americans Clash at Saratoga

General John Burgoyne’s British Army crossed to the west bank of the Hudson River in mid-September to continue its march towards Albany. General Benedict Arnold had placed American troops in a virtually unassailable position on high ground called Bemis Heights. On September 19, Burgoyne moved through heavy woods around the American flank, hoping to surprise the Continentals. However, Arnold, anticipating this move, sent Captain Daniel Morgan’s Virginia riflemen and Major Henry Dearborn’s light infantry to attack the British at Freeman’s Farm before they could deploy.

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British and Americans Poised for Battle

In the eight weeks since capturing Fort Ticonderoga, British General John Burgoyne had seen his army go from being invincible to facing starvation and defeat. The Americans were having issues as well. With the loss of Fort Ticonderoga, New Englanders in Congress had the perfect excuse to remove General Phillip Schuyler, who was strongly disliked, from command. He was replaced with General Horatio Gates, and General George Washington sent his best field commander, General Benedict Arnold, to assist as well. Unfortunately, Gates resented Arnold’s fame and that resentment would almost cost the Continental Army this campaign.

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Burgoyne Battles American Wilderness and Continental Army

As General John Burgoyne’s British Army advanced deeper into New York in the summer of 1777, his supply line lengthened, making it more difficult to obtain supplies, especially given the wretched roads in the area. Living off the land was not an option as the Continental Army destroyed any provisions they could not carry off as they retreated. With the situation growing desperate, Burgoyne dispatched a detachment to capture a stockpile of supplies at Bennington. On August 16, these troops walked into a buzzsaw in the form of Colonel John Stark and 2,000 angry New Hampshire militiamen spoiling for a fight.

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Fort Ticonderoga Falls to British

In June 1777, Fort Ticonderoga had been in American hands for two years, but little had been done to strengthen its defenses. The fort, commanded by General Arthur St. Clair, was garrisoned by 2,000 Continental troops but was not prepared to withstand an assault. When the vanguard of British General John Burgoyne’s 7,000-man army arrived in front of Fort Ticonderoga, British officers soon discovered Mount Defiance, a hill that dominated the fort, was unoccupied.

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British Begin the Saratoga Campaign

Following the failed American invasion of Canada in 1776, British General Guy Carleton pursued the retreating Continentals as far south as Fort Ticonderoga until the approaching winter halted Carleton’s advance and he retired to winter quarters. Unhappy with Carleton, Lord George Germain, England’s secretary of state for the colonies, replaced him with General John Burgoyne. Known as Gentleman Johnny, Burgoyne had developed a great plan to defeat the Continental Army, but he was relatively unfamiliar with warfare in North America and the logistical challenges presented by its seemingly endless forests.

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A Desperate Winter at Valley Forge

In December 1777, following the loss of Philadelphia, General George Washington moved his Continental Army into winter quarters about 18 miles northwest of Philadelphia. Unfortunately, there were no shelters for the 12,000 soldiers and improvised wooden huts, housing 8-12 men, were hastily erected, but barely kept out the wind. Washington, who remained with his troops throughout the long winter, sent countless requests to Congress imploring them to alleviate his men’s suffering. But Congress, without taxation authority and little influence over the states, seemed powerless to help.

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The British Capture Philadelphia

In the spring of 1777, most of the British army was stationed in New York. For his next move, General William Howe decided to attack Philadelphia, the largest city in the colonies and home of the Continental Congress. Rather than march over land through New Jersey, Howe sailed his regiments up the Chesapeake Bay and landed sixty miles south of the city. Washington quickly moved to get between Howe’s army and the capital but failed to guard a ford to his north. When the British attacked on September 11, 1777, they outflanked the Americans and Washington was forced to retreat.

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Continental Army Victorious at Princeton

After achieving a great victory at the Battle of Trenton, General George Washington recrossed the Delaware River hoping for a second miracle. In response, Lord Charles Cornwallis and 6,000 Redcoats marched towards Trenton and struck back at the bold Americans, leaving a battalion at Princeton, twelve miles north. On the night of January 2, 1777, Washington, unnoticed by British sentries, moved his men around the British flank towards Princeton and attacked at dawn. Perfect.

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