The Saratoga Campaign

Gen. John Burgoyne
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Battle of Saratoga

Burgoyne Surrenders by John Trumbull
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For the new year,
General Howe submitted a stretagic plan to the Secretary for North
American Affairs, Lord Germain,
to scrush the rebellion. The plan initially called for Howe,
following the conquest of Philadelphia, and then, if possible, send a
portion of his command up the Hudson River to Albany, where it would
meet up with the forces of General
John "Gentleman Johnny" Burgoyne, who would march south
from Montreal along the familiar Lake Champlain-Hudson River route.
A second army led by General Clinton would march from Newport, Rhode
Island, while a third army of redcoats and Iroquois, commanded by Colonel
Barry St. Leger, would veer east across the Mohawk Valley from Ft.
Oswego and link up at
Albany as well, thereby isolating New England. The
plan revealed Britain's continuing adherence to the idea that all the
problems stemmed from New England--and specifically, Massachusetts--and
if they could just isolate them, the rest of the colonies would come
back into the fold.
In the end, however, poor communication and
wishful thinking spoiled the plan's chances for success. Lord
Germain fooled himself into believing facts that were not supported by
evidence. He believed that Howe could accomplish the impossible
task of capturing Philadelphia, then turn around and commit his entire
force to the Albany attack. Howe repeatedly told Germaine this
was not possible. Neither Germain nor Burgoyne had any knowledge of the American terrain
that had to be covered.
When spring arrived, Howe completed his part of the strategy: he
sailed with fifteen thousand men up the Chesapeake
Bay toward Philadelphia. The Continental Congress had already
abandoned the city, knowing that Washington could not prevent enemy
occupation. Although the Americans made two efforts to block
Howe, first at Brandywine Creek and then at Germantown,
the British had
little problem capturing Philadelphia.
At Fort Oswego, Colonel St. Leger could not
gather the expected number of Indian troops and so set out wit a
smaller force than anticipated. Not far from Oswego, St. Leger
battled with a combined force led by Generals Ethan Allen and Benedict
Arnold. Suffering defeat, he retreated back to Oswego. He
would not proceed to Albany as planned to link up with Burgoyne.
Blissfully unaware of
these problems, Burgoyne
led his army from Montreal in June of 1777. The troops floated
down Lake Champlain in canoes and flat bottom boats and easily retook
Ft. Ticonderoga. From Ticonderoga, the invading army continued to
march toward Albany. From this point on, things went badly for
Burgoyne. His supply train was huge. In addition to fifty
pieces of artillery, the wagons contained Burgoyne's mistress, her
personal wardrobe and his, and a generous supply of champagne.
When the caravan entered New York's swamps and gullies, movement slowed
to a snail's pace.
The Americans took full advantage of the
situation. Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys
harassed the
British as they entered Allen's home region of Vermont. A bloody,
head-on battle near Bennington further slowed Burgoyne's
progress.
When the general's army finally reached Albany in mid-September,
neither St. Leger nor Howe was anywhere in sight.
This left Burgoyne stranded in the heart of
New
York. By mid-September 1777, with his supplies dwindling, he
realized his only option was to break northward through the American
lines and take refuge in Canada--or surrender. On September 19,
Burgoyne attacked, hoping to clear a path of retreat for his
army. The elderly American general, Horatio Gates, was neither
bold nor particularly clever, but it took little daring or genius to
defeat Burgoyne's weary, dispirited British soldiers. When
Burgoyne tried again to break through in October 7, Gates and his men
held their ground. On October 17, 1777, General Burgoyne
surrendered.
News that a major British army had been
defeated spread quickly on both sides of the Atlantic. It was a
powerful boost to American confidence and an equally powerful blow to
British self-esteem. The report also reversed the fortunes of
America's diplomatic efforts in Europe. Until Saratoga, American
appeals to France, Spain, and Holland for supplies, loans, and military
support had met with only moderate success. Now, hopes ran high
that France would recognize American independence and join the war
against Britain.
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"The French Connection"

Louis XIV
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Franklin
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Saratoga was the turning point of the War
of Independence. (One historian went so far as to call it the
most important battle in modern history in that it led to American
independence and all that entailed.) Its significance lay not in
its military brilliance but because it led directly to an American
alliance with France.
In 1776, when America declared its
independence from Great Britain, France and other British enemies had
been only too happy to see George III expend his resources and military
personnel in an effort to quell a colonial rebellion. Although
these nations expected the rebellion to fail, they were more than eager
to keep the conflict going as long as possible. Before
Saratoga, they preferred to keep their support unofficial.
Thus it was that, with the help of King Louis
XVI's chief minister, the Comte de Vergennes, set up a
connection with
an American entrepreneur named Arthur Lee. Through this
ostensibly private commercial firm, the French traded with America,
siphoning arms and money from France to the revolutionaries.
France also agreed to open ports to American privateers and to provide
French ships and seamen for raids on British commercial shipping.
The Americans hoped for more. In
December 1776, Congress sent Benjamin Franklin to Paris
in hopes of
winning formal recognition of American independence. The charming
and witty Franklin was the toast of Paris, adored by aristocrats and
common people alike. However, even he could not persuade the king
to support the Revolution openly.
Burgoyne's surrender changed everything.
After Saratoga, the British began scrambling to end a war that had
become an embarrassment, and the French government began scrambling to
reassess its diplomatic position. Vergennes suspected that the
English would quickly send a peace commission to America after
Burgoyne's defeat. If the American Congress agreed to a
compromise ending the rebellion, France could gain nothing more.
But if the French kept the war alive by giving the Americans reason to
hope for total victory, perhaps they could recoup some of the territory
and prestige lost to Britain in the Seven Years' War. This meant,
of course, recognizing the United States and entering a war with
Britain. Vergennes knew a choice had to be made--but he was not
yet certain what to do.
Meanwhile, the British government was indeed
preparing a new peace offer for Congress. At the heart of the
British offer were two promises that George III considered to be great
concessions. First, Parliament would renounce all intentions of
ever taxing the colonies again. Second, the Intolerable Acts, the
Tea Act, and any other objectionable legislation passed since 1763
would be repealed. Many members of Parliament thought these
overtures were long overdue. They had been vocal critics of their
government's policies in the 1760s and 1770s and had refused to support
the war. After Burgoyne's defeat, popular support for a
compromise also increased in England. The Americans, however,
were unimpressed by the offers. For Congress, a return to
colonial status was now unthinkable.
Benjamin Franklin knew that Congress would
reject the king's offer. But he was too shrewd to believe the
Comte de Vergennes's fear that a compromise was in the works.
Franklin warned that France must act quickly and decisively or accept
the consequences. His gamble worked, and in 1778 France and the
United States signed a treaty. The pact linked France and
American fates tightly together for under its provisions neither
country could make a separate peace with Great Britain. By 1779,
Spain had also formally acknowledged the United States, and in 1780,
the Netherlands (Holland) did so, too. George III had no choice
but to declare war against these European nations.
The American Revolution had become a world
war--a war that further taxed British resources further and made it
impossible for Britain to concentrate all its military might and naval
power in America. With ships diverted to the Caribbean and to the
European coast, Britain could no longer blockade American ports as
effectively as before or transport troops as quickly to the American
mainland. Above all, France's entry into the war opened new
strategic possibilities for General Washington and his army. If
the Americans could count on the cooperation of the French fleet, a
British army could be trapped on American soil, cut off by French ships
from supplies, reinforcements, and any chance of escape.
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