Road to Ticonderoga

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A01=Michael G. Laramie
Author_Michael G. Laramie
Black Watch
Bourlamaque
Category=NH
Category=NHK
Category=NHWF
Category=WQH
Desandrouins
Earl of Loudon
Edward Braddock
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eq_history
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Fort Carillon
Fort Duquesne
Fort Edward
Fort St. Frederic
Fort Ticonderoga
Fort William Henry
Francios-Gaston Levis
French and Indian War
George Augustus Howe
George Monro
James Abercrombie
James Abercromby
Jeffery Amherst
John Bradstreet
Lake Champlain
Louisbourg
Marquis de Vaudreuil
Mohawk tribe
Montcalm
Quebec
Rangers
Robert Rogers
Rogers Rangers
Thomas Gage
William Johnson
William Pitt

Product details

  • ISBN 9781594164071
  • Weight: 481g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Westholme Publishing, U.S.
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The British campaign to capture Fort Carillon on the Ticonderoga Peninsula in 1758 resulted in the largest battle of the French and Indian War. Crafted by Prime Minister William Pitt, the scope and scale of the British effort was staggering, calling for their northern colonies to raise 20,000 men to rendezvous with the British Regulars at Albany. The directive would test the patience, resources, and will of the colonial governments as well as that of the newly appointed the British commander-in-chief, General James Abercrombie. For the defenders of New France matters were dire. Reports were arriving that Abercrombie’s numbers were over twice the entire fighting strength of Canada. For the French field commander, the Marquis de Montcalm, there were few options. The Marquis had long opposed defending frontier forts, calling for abandoning these posts at the first sign of threat in order to conserve the colony’s resources. The French Governor disagreed and dispatched Montcalm and his white-coated French regulars with orders to defend Fort Carillon. With his army the only thing that stood between the British and the interior of Canada, there appeared to be a single path before the Marquis. Whether the Governor liked it or not, a rearguard action followed by a retreat down Lake Champlain was the only answer that would leave the army of Canada in position to fight again. Yet, within the span of a few days Montcalm would set these views aside, and suddenly risk both his army and the fate of Canada on a single risky battle.
Based on journals, letters, and accounts of the participants on both sides, The Road to Ticonderoga: The Campaign of 1758 in the Champlain Valley by Michael G. Laramie recounts this unexpected tale of victory and defeat on the North American frontier. Here we learn how the unexpected death of a dynamic leader, George Howe, elder brother of Richard and William, nearly crushed “the soul of General Abercrombie’s army,” leading to misinterpreted orders and hesitation on the part of the British. At the same time, the French commander perilously underestimated the ability of his own forces while overestimating his enemy’s before his fateful and unexpected decision to make his stand at Ticonderoga. With lessons and repercussions for future warfare in North America, The Road to Ticonderoga shows how a series of small mistakes can cascade into a catastrophe under weak leadership—or be exploited by a strong one.
 
 
Michael G. Laramie is the author of King William’s War: The First Contest for North America, 1689–1697, winner of the New York Society of Colonial Wars Annual Book Award, Queen Anne’s War: The Second Contest for North America, 1702–1713, and By Wind and Iron: Naval Campaigns in the Champlain Valley, 1665–1815.

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