Online Encyclopedia

BATTLES OF SARATOGA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 205 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BATTLES OF

SARATOGA  . The
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British
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campaign for the
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year 1777 in
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America (see
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AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE) involved the operations of two armies moving from opposite and distant points . The lack of co-operation between the two led to the loss of one of them . This was General Burgoyne's force of 7000 men which marched from
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Canada in
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June 1777 with the view of reaching the upper Hudson and combining with British troops from New York to isolate New England from the colonies below . Lord Howe,
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commander-in-chief of the British in America, who had received no instructions binding him in detail to co-operate with Burgoyne, moved southward and captured
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Philadelphia . In
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drawing Washington after him he claimed to be assisting Burgoyne . Burgoyne pushed down by way of Lakes Champlain and George and approached the American army under General Horatio Gates in its fortified camp near Stillwater on the W.
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bank of the Hudson,' about 24 M . N. of Albany . On the 19th Burgoyne attacked the American
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left under General Benedict Arnold . The
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battle, fought in densely wooded country till nightfall, was severe but indecisive . The British suffered heavy losses, especially in
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officers . This is variously known as the First Battle of Saratoga, the Battle of Freeman's
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Farm, the First Battle of Bemis Heights or the First Battle of Stillwater .

Burgoyne fortified himself on the site of the

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action, and on
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October 7th made another attempt to turn the American left . An engagement still more severe than that of the 19th, known as the Second Battle of Saratoga, followed, in which the Americans under Benedict Arnold, E . Poor and D . Morgan drove the enemy into their
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works . Among many British officers killed was Brigadier-General Simon Fraser, who had been the
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life of the expedition . Crippled to an alarming extent, Burgoyne re-treated . He was closely followed and harassed, and on the 16th of October nearly surrounded . On the 17th he surrendered, with about 6000 men, near the
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present
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village of Saratoga Springs . See W . L . Stone, Campaign of Lieut.-Gen . John Burgoyne (Albany, 1877) .

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