The Campaign of 1777
With secure bases at New York and Newport, Howe had a chance to get
the early start that had been denied him the previous year. His first
plan, advanced; on November 30, 1776, was probably the most
comprehensive put forward by any British commander during the war. He
proposed to maintain a small force of about 8,000 to contain Washington
in New Jersey and 7,000 to garrison New York, while sending one column
of 10,000 from Newport into New England and another column of 10,000
from New York up the Hudson to form a junction with a British force
moving down from Canada. On the assumption that these moves would be
successful by autumn, he would next capture Philadelphia, the rebel
capital, and then make the southern provinces the "objects of the
winter." For this plan, Howe requested 35,000 men, 15,000 more
effective troops than he had left at the end of the 1776 campaign. Sir
George Germain, the American Secretary, could promise him only 8,000.
Even before receiving this news, but evidently influenced by Trenton and
Princeton, Howe changed his plan and proposed to devote his main effort
in 1777 to taking Philadelphia. On March3, 1777, Germain informed Howe
that the Philadelphia plan was approved, but that there might be only
5,500 reinforcements. At the same time Germain and the king urged a
"warm diversion" against New England.
Meanwhile, Sir John Burgoyne, who had succeeded in obtaining the
separate military command in Canada, submitted his plan calling for an
advance southward to "a junction with Howe." Germain and the
king also approved this plan on March 29, though aware of Howe's
intention to go to Philadelphia. They seem to have expected either that
Howe would be able to form his junction by the "warm
diversion," or else that he would take Philadelphia quickly and
then turn north to aid Burgoyne. In any case, Germain approved two
separate and un-co-ordinated plans, and Howe and Burgoyne went their
separate ways, doing nothing to remedy the situation. Howe's
Philadelphia plan did provide for leaving enough force in New York for
what its commander, General Clinton, called "a damn'd starved
offensive," but Clinton's orders were vague. Quite possibly
Burgoyne knew before he left England for Canada that Howe was going to
Philadelphia, but ambitious "Gentleman Johnny" was determined
to make a reputation in the American war, and evidently believed he
could succeed alone. Even when he learned certainly on August 3, 1777,
that he could not expect Howe's cooperation, he persisted in his design.
As Howe thought Pennsylvania was filled with royalists, Burgoyne
cherished the illusion that legions of Tories in New York and western
New England were simply awaiting the appearance of the king's troops to
rally to the colors.
Again in 1777 the late arrival of Howe's reinforcements and stores
ships gave Washington time that he sorely needed. Men to form the new
Continental Army came in slowly and not until June did the Americans
have a force of 8,000. On the northern line the defenses were even more
thinly manned. Supplies for troops in the field were also short, but the
arrival of the first three ships bearing secret aid from France vastly
improved the situation. They were evidence of the covert support of the
French Government; a mission sent by Congress to France was meanwhile
working diligently to enlist open aid and to embroil France in a war
with England. The French Foreign Minister, the Comte de Vergennes, had
already decided to take that risk when and if the American rebels
demonstrated their serious purpose and ability to fulfill it by some
signal victory in the field.
With the first foreign material aid in 1777, the influx of foreign
officers into the American Army began. These officers were no unmixed
blessing. Most were adventurers in search of fortune or of reputation
with little facility for adjusting themselves to American conditions.
Few were willing to accept any but the highest ranks. Nevertheless, they
brought with them professional military knowledge and competence that
the Continental Army sorely needed. When the misfits were culled out,
this knowledge and competence were used to considerable advantage. Louis
DuPortail, a Frenchman, and Thaddeus Kosciuszko, a Pole, did much to
advance the art of engineering in the Continental Army; Casimir Pulaski,
another Pole, organized its first genuine cavalry contingent; Johann de
Kalb and Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, both Germans, and the Marquis de
Lafayette, an influential French nobleman who financed his own way, were
all to make valuable contributions as trainers and leaders. On the
Continental Army of 1777, however, these foreign volunteers had little
effect and it remained much as it had been before, a relatively
untrained body of inexperienced enlistees.
When Howe finally began to stir in June 1777, Washington posted his
army at Middlebrook, New Jersey, in a position either to bar Howe's
overland route to Philadelphia or to move rapidly up the Hudson to
oppose an advance northward. Washington confidently expected Howe to
move northward to form a junction with Burgoyne, but decided he must
stay in front of the main British Army wherever it went. Following the
principle of economy of force, he disposed a small part of his army
under General Putnam in fortifications guarding the approaches up the
Hudson, and at a critical moment detached a small force to aid Schuyler
against Burgoyne. The bulk of his army he kept in front of Howe in an
effort to defend Philadelphia. Forts were bulk along the Delaware River
and other steps taken to block the approach to the Continental capital
by sea.
In the effort to defend Philadelphia Washington again failed, but
hardly so ignominiously as he had the year before in New York. After
maneuvering in New Jersey for upward of two months, Howe in August put
most of his army on board ship and sailed down the coast and up the
Chesapeake Bay to Head of Elk (a small town at the head of the Elk
River) in Maryland, putting himself even further away from Burgoyne.
Though surprised by Howe's movement, Washington rapidly shifted
his own force south and took up a position at Chad's Ford on Brandywine
Creek, blocking the approach to Philadelphia. There on September 11,
1777, Howe executed a flanking movement not dissimilar to that employed
on Long Island and again defeated Washington. The American commander had
disposed his army in two main parts, one directly opposite Chad's Ford
under his personal command and the other under General Sullivan guarding
the right flank upstream. While Lt. Gen. Wilhelm van Knyphausen's
Hessian troops demonstrated opposite the ford, a larger force under Lord
Cornwallis marched upstream, crossed the Brandywine, and moved to take
Sullivan from the rear. Washington lacked good cavalry reconnaissance,
and did not get positive information on Cornwallis' movement until the
eleventh hour. Sullivan was in the process of changing front when the
British struck and his men retreated in confusion. Washington was able
to salvage the situation by dispatching General Greene with two brigades
to fight a valiant rear-guard action, but the move weakened his front
opposite Kynphausen and his forces also had to fall back. Nevertheless,
the trap was averted and the Continental Army retired in good order to
Chester.

MAP
Howe followed with a series of maneuvers comparable to those
he had executed in New York, and was able to enter Philadelphia with a
minimum of fighting on September 26. A combined attack of British Army
and Navy forces shortly afterward reduced the forts on the Delaware and
opened the river as a British supply line.
On entering Philadelphia, Howe dispersed his forces, stationing 9,000
men at Germantown north of the city, 3,000 in New Jersey, and the rest
in Philadelphia. As Howe had repeated his performance in New York,
Washington sought to repeat Trenton by a surprise attack on Germantown.
The plan was much like that used at Trenton but involved far more
complicated movements by much larger bodies of troops. Four
columnstwo of Continentals under Sullivan and Greene and two of
militiamoving at night over different roads were to converge on
Germantown simultaneously at dawn on October 4. The plan
violated the principle of simplicity, for such a maneuver was difficult
even for well-trained professionals to execute. The two columns of
Continentals arrived at different times and fired on each other in an
early morning fog. The two militia columns never arrived at all. British
fire from a stone house, the Chew Mansion, held up the advance while
American generals argued whether they could leave a fortress in their
rear. The British, though surprised, had better discipline and cohesion
and were able to re-form and send fresh troops into the fray. The
Americans retreated about 8:00 a.m., leaving Howe's troops in command of
the field.

MAP
After Germantown Howe once again concentrated his army and
moved to confront Washington at Whitemarsh, but finally withdrew to
winter quarters in Philadelphia without giving battle. Washington chose
the site for his own winter quarters at a place called Valley Forge,
twenty miles northwest of the city. Howe had gained his objective but it
proved of no lasting value to him. Congress fled west to York,
Pennsylvania. No swarms of loyalists rallied to the British standards.
And Howe had left Burgoyne to lose a whole British army in the north.
Burgoyne set out from Canada in June, his object to reach Albany by
fall. His force was divided into two parts. The first and
largest part7,200 British and Hessian Regulars and 650 Tories,
Canadians, and Indians, under his personal commandwas to take the
route down Lake Champlain to Ticonderoga and thence via Lake George to
the Hudson. The second 700 Regulars and 1,000 Tories and Indian braves
under Col. Barry St. Legerwas to move via Lake Ontario to Oswego and
thence down the Mohawk Valley to join Burgoyne before Albany. In his
preparations, Burgoyne evidently forgot the lesson the British had
learned in the French and Indian War, that in the wilderness troops had
to be prepared to travel light and fight like Indians. He carried 138
pieces of artillery and a heavy load of officers' personal baggage.
Numerous ladies of high and low estate accompanied the expedition. When
he started down the lakes, Burgoyne did not have enough horses and
wagons to transport his artillery and baggage once he had to leave the
water and move overland.
At first Burgoyne's American opposition was very weakonly about
2,500 Continentals at Ticonderoga and about 450 at old Fort Stanwix, the
sole American bulwark in the Mohawk Valley. Dissension among the
Americans was rife, the New Englanders refusing to support Schuyler, the
aristocratic New Yorker who commanded the Northern Army, and openly
intriguing to replace him with their own favorite, Maj. Gen. Horatio
Gates. Ticonderoga fell to Burgoyne on June 27 all too easily. American
forces dispersed and Burgoyne pursued the remnants down to Skenesborough.
Once that far along, he decided to continue overland to the Hudson
instead, of returning to Ticonderoga to float his force

MAP 9
down Lake George, though much of his impedimenta still had to be
carried by boat down the lake.
The overland line of advance was already a nightmare, running along
wilderness trails, through marshes, and across wide ravines and creeks
that had been swollen by abnormally heavy rains. Schuyler adopted the
tactic of making it even worse by destroying bridges, cutting trees in
Burgoyne's path, and digging trenches to let the waters of swamps onto
drier ground. The British were able to move at a rate of little
more than a mile a day and took until July 29 to reach Fort Edward on
the Hudson. By that time Burgoyne was desperately short of horses,
wagons, and oxen. Yet Schuyler, with a unstable force of 4,500 men
discouraged by continual retreats, was in no position to give battle.
Washington did what he could to strengthen the Northern Army at this
juncture. He first dispatched Maj. Gen. Benedict
Arnold, his most
aggressive field commander, and Maj. Gen. Benjamin Lincoln, a
Massachusetts man noted for his influence with the New England militia.
On August 16 he detached Col. Daniel Morgan with 500 riflemen from the
main army in Pennsylvania and ordered them along with 750 men from
Putnam's force in the New York highlands to join Schuyler. The riflemen
were calculated to furnish an antidote for Burgoyne's Indians who,
despite his efforts to restrain them, were terrorizing the countryside.
It was the rising militia, rather than Washington, who were to
provide the Northern Army with its main reinforcements. Nothing worked
more to produce this result than Burgoyne's employment of Indians. The
murder and scalping of a beautiful white woman, Jane McCrea, dramatized
the Indian threat as nothing else probably could have done. New England
militiamen now began to rally to the cause, though they still refused to
cooperate with Schuyler. New Hampshire commissioned John Stark, a
disgruntled ax-colonel in the Continental Army and a veteran of Bunker
Hill and Trenton, as a brigadier general in the state service (a rank
denied him by Congress), and Stark quickly recruited 2,000 men. Refusing
Schuyler's request that he join the main army, Stark took up a position
at Bennington in southern Vermont to guard the New England frontier. On
August 11 Burgoyne detached a force of 650 men under Hessian Col.
Friedrich Baum to forage for cattle, horses, and transport in the very
area Stark was occupying. At Bennington on August 16 Stark nearly
annihilated Baum's force, and reinforcements sent by Burgoyne arrived on
the field just in time to be soundly thrashed in turn. Burgoyne not only
failed to secure his much-needed supplies and transport but also lost
about a tenth of his command.
Meanwhile, St. Leger with his Tories and Indians had appeared before
Fort Stanwix on August 2. The garrison, fearing massacre by the Indians,
determined to hold out to the bitter end. On August 4, the Tryon County
militia under Brig. Gen. Nicholas Herkimer set out to relieve the fort
but were ambushed by the Indians in a wooded ravine near Oriskany. The
militia, under the direction of a mortally wounded Herkimer, scattered
in the woods and fought a bloody afternoon's battle in a summer
thunderstorm. Both sides suffered heavy losses, and though the militia
were unable to relieve Stanwix the losses discouraged St. Leger's
Indians, who were already restless in the static siege operation at
Stanwix.
Despite his own weak position, when Schuyler learned of the plight of
the Stanwix garrison, he courageously detached Benedict Arnold with 950
Continentals to march to its relief. Arnold devised a ruse that took
full advantage of the dissatisfaction and natural superstition of the
Indians. Employing a half-wit Dutchman, his clothes shot full of holes,
and a friendly Oneida Indian as his messengers, Arnold spread the rumor
that the Continentals were approaching "as numerous as the leaves
on the trees." The Indians, who had special respect for any madman,
departed in haste, scalping not a few of their Tory allies as they went,
and St. Leger was forced to abandon the siege.
Bennington and Stanwix were serious blows to Burgoyne. By early
September he knew he could expect help from neither Howe nor St. Leger.
Disillusioned about the Tories, he wrote Germain: "The great bulk
of the country is undoubtedly with Congress in principle and zeal; and
their measures are executed with a secrecy and dispatch that are not to
be equalled. Wherever the King's forces point, militia in the amount of
three or four thousand assemble in twenty-four hours; they bring with
them their subsistence, etc., and the alarm over, they return to their
farms...." Nevertheless, gambler that he was, Burgoyne crossed the
Hudson to the west side during September 13 and 14, signaling his
intention to get to Albany or lose his army. While his supply problem
daily became worse, his Indians, with a natural instinct for sensing
approaching disaster, drifted off into the forests, leaving him with
little means of gaining intelligence of the American dispositions.
The American forces were meanwhile gathering strength. Congress
finally deferred to New England sentiment on August 19 and replaced
Schuyler with Gates. Gates was more the beneficiary than the cause of
the improved situation, but his appointment helped morale and encouraged
the New England militia. Washington's emissary, General Lincoln, also
did his part. Gates understood Burgoyne's plight perfectly and adapted
this tactics to take full advantage of it. He advanced his forces four
miles northward and took up a position, surveyed and prepared by the
Polish engineer, Kosciusko, on Bemis Heights, a few miles below
Saratoga. Against this position Burgoyne launched his attack on
September 19 and was repulsed with heavy losses. In the battle, usually
known as Freeman's Farm, Arnold persuaded Gates to let him go forward to
counter the British attack, and Colonel Morgan's riflemen, in a wooded
terrain well suited to the use of their specialized weapon, took a heavy
toll of British officers and men.
After Freeman's Farm, the lines remained stable for three weeks.
Burgoyne had heard that Clinton, with the force Howe had left in New
York, had started north to relieve him. Clinton, in fact, stormed Forts
Clinton and Montgomery on the Hudson on October 6, but, exercising that
innate caution characteristic of all his actions, he refused to gamble
for high stakes. He simply sent an advance guard on to Kingston and he
himself returned to New York.
Burgoyne was left to his fate. Gates strengthened his entrenchments
and calmly awaited the attack he was sure Burgoyne would have to make.
Militia reinforcements increased his forces to around 10,000 by October
7. Meanwhile Burgoyne's position grew more desperate. Food was running
out; the meadows were grazed bare by the animals; and every day more men
slipped into the forest, deserting the lost cause. With little
intelligence of American strength or dispositions, on October 7 he sent
out a "reconnaissance in force" to feel out the American
positions. On learning that the British were approaching, Gates sent out
a contingent including Morgan's riflemen to meet them, and a second
battle developed, usually known as Bemis Heights. The British suffered
severe losses, five times those of the Americans, and were driven back
to their fortified positions. Arnold, who had been at odds with Gates
and was confined to his tent, broke out, rushed into the fray, and again
distinguished himself before he was wounded in leading an attack on
Breymann's Redoubt.
Two days after the battle, Burgoyne withdrew to a position in the
vicinity of Saratoga. Militia soon worked around to his rear and cut his
supply lines. His position hopeless, Burgoyne finally capitulated on
October 17 at Saratoga. The total prisoner count was nearly 6,000 and
great quantities of military stores fell into American hands. The
victory at Saratoga brought the Americans out well ahead in the campaign
of 1777 despite the loss of Philadelphia. What had been at stake soon
became obvious. In February 1778 France negotiated a treaty of alliance
with the American states, tantamount to a declaration of war against
England.
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