Battle of the Monongahela

(Redirected from Battle of Monongahela)

The Battle of the Monongahela (also known as the Battle of Braddock's Field and the Battle of the Wilderness) took place on July 9, 1755, at the beginning of the French and Indian War at Braddock's Field in present-day Braddock, Pennsylvania, 10 miles (16 km) east of Pittsburgh. A British force under General Edward Braddock, moving to take Fort Duquesne, was defeated by a force of French and Canadian troops under Captain Daniel Liénard de Beaujeu with its American Indian allies.

Battle of the Monongahela
Part of the French and Indian War

Washington the Soldier by Reǵnier (1834), depicting Lt. Col. Washington on horseback during the battle
DateJuly 9, 1755[1]
Location
near present-day Braddock, Pennsylvania
40°24′13″N 79°52′7″W / 40.40361°N 79.86861°W / 40.40361; -79.86861
Result French-Indian victory
Belligerents
 France
New France New France
Ottawas
Abenaki
Lenni Lenape
Hurons
Potawatomis
Ojibwa
 Great Britain
British America
Commanders and leaders

Kingdom of France Daniel Liénard de Beaujeu 
Kingdom of France Jean-Daniel Dumas
Pontiac (Leader of Ottawa forces)
Shingas (Leader of Lenape forces)

Charles Michel Mouet de Langlade (Leader of Ojibwa Forces)
Kingdom of Great Britain Edward Braddock 
Kingdom of Great Britain Peter Halkett 
George Washington
Kingdom of Great Britain Robert Orme (WIA)
Kingdom of Great Britain Thomas Gage
Kingdom of Great Britain John Fraser
Strength
637 First Nations (the Ottawas, Ojibwa and Potawatomis)
108 troupes de la Marine
146 militia[2]
Total: 891
1,300 regulars and provincial troops.[2]
Casualties and losses
39 killed
57 wounded[3][4]
457 killed[5][2]
450+ wounded[6]

The defeat marked the end of the Braddock Expedition, by which the British had hoped to capture Fort Duquesne and gain control of the strategic Ohio Country. Both Braddock and Beaujeu were killed in action during the battle. Braddock was mortally wounded in the fight and died during the retreat near present-day Uniontown, Pennsylvania. He specifically asked for George Washington, who accompanied him on the march, to oversee his burial. The remainder of the British column retreated south-eastwards. Fort Duquesne and the surrounding region remained in French hands until its capture in 1758.

Background

edit

General Edward Braddock was dispatched to the Thirteen Colonies in the new position of Commander-in-Chief, North America, bringing with him two British Army regiments (the 44th and 48th) from Ireland.[7] He added to this by recruiting provincial troops in British America, swelling his forces to roughly 2,200 by the time he set out from Fort Cumberland, Maryland on 29 May.[8] He was accompanied by Colonel George Washington, who had led the previous year's expedition to the area.[1]

 
Major General Edward Braddock launched a military expedition aimed at capturing the French Fort Duquesne.

Braddock's expedition was part of a four-pronged attack on the French in North America. Braddock's orders were to launch an attack into the Ohio Country, disputed by Britain and France. Control of the area was dominated by Fort Duquesne on the forks of the Ohio River. Once it was in his possession, he was to proceed on to Fort Niagara, establishing British control over Ohio Country.

Braddock soon encountered a number of difficulties. He was scornful of the need to recruit local Indians as scouts and left with only eight Mingo guides. He found that the road he was trying to use was slow and needed constant widening to move artillery and supply wagons along it, which only served to waste time and exhaust his supplies. Frustrated, he split his force in two, leading a flying column ahead, with a slower force following with the artillery and wagons.[8]

The flying column of 1,300 crossed the Monongahela River on 9 July, within 10 miles (16 km) of their target, Fort Duquesne. Despite being very tired after weeks of crossing extremely hard terrain, many of the British regulars and provincial troops anticipated a relatively easy victory — or even for the French to abandon the fort upon their approach.[9] Fort Duquesne had been very lightly defended but had recently received significant reinforcements.[10] Claude-Pierre Pecaudy de Contrecœur, the commander of the fort, had around 1,600 French troupes de la Marine, Canadian Militia, and Indian allies. Concerned by the approach of the British, he dispatched Captain Daniel Liénard de Beaujeu with around 800 troops (108 Troupes de la Marine, 146 militia, and 600 Indians),[11] to check their advance.[12]

Battle

edit
 
British troops are attacked by Indian and French forces positioned along the tree line.

The French and Indians arrived too late to set an ambush, as they had been delayed, and the British had made surprisingly speedy progress. They ran into the British advance guard, commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Gage. Seeing the French and Indians in the trees, Gage ordered his men to open fire. Despite the limited range of their smooth-bore muskets, their opening volleys succeeded in killing Captain Beaujeu.

The Indians took up positions to attack. They were fighting on traditional hunting grounds, with numerous trees and shrubbery separated by wide open spaces that enabled them to easily move about in concealment. The rolling platoon fire of the British initially caused roughly 100 French troops to flee back to the fort. Captain Dumas rallied the rest of the French troops. The Indians, which included warriors from the Ottawa, Ojibwa and Potawatomi tribes, used psychological warfare against the British by nailing the scalps of their dead comrades to trees. During the battle, Indians made a terrifying "whoop" sound that caused fear and panic to spread among British troops.[13]

As they came under heavy fire, Gage's advance guard began taking casualties and withdrew. In the narrow confines of the road, they collided with the main body of Braddock's force, which had advanced rapidly when the shots were heard. Despite comfortably outnumbering their attackers, the British were immediately on the defensive. Most of the regulars were not accustomed to fighting in forest terrain; instead of scattering, they maintained tight formations that the Indians and French could easily target. Confusion reigned, and several British platoons fired at each other.[14] The entire column dissolved in disorder as the French and Indians enveloped them and continued to snipe at the British flanks from the woods on the sides of the road. At this time, French regulars began advancing along the road and began to push the British back. Braddock rode forward to try to rally his men, who had lost all sense of unit cohesion.

Efforts were made to counterattack, but the inability of Braddock's troops to adapt the tactics of the French and Indians continued to interfere. The cannons were sent forth, but there was no space to effectively use them. Braddock had several horses shot out from under him, yet retained his composure, providing the only sign of order to his frightened troops.[14] Many of the provincial troops, lacking the training of British regulars to stand their ground, fled and sheltered behind trees, where they were mistaken for enemy fighters by the regulars and fired at.[14] The rearguard, made up of soldiers of the Virginia Regiment, managed to fight effectively from the trees — something they had learned in previous years of fighting Indians.[15] Despite the unfavorable conditions, the British began to stand firm and blast volleys at the French and Indians. Braddock believed that the French and Indians would eventually give way in the face of the discipline displayed by British troops. Despite lacking officers to command them, the often-makeshift platoons continued to hold their crude ranks.

 
After three hours of intense combat, Braddock was mortally wounded, resulting in the withdrawal of British forces.

Finally, after three hours of intense combat, Braddock was shot in the lung, possibly by one of his own men, and effective resistance collapsed. He fell from his horse, badly wounded, and was carried back to safety by his men. As a result of Braddock's injuries, and without an order being given, the British began to withdraw. They did so largely with order, until they reached the Monongahela River, when they were attacked by Indians in close-quarter combat. Believing that they were trapped, the soldiers lost their discipline and ran in panic.[16]

Washington, although he had no official position in the chain of command, was able to impose and maintain some order, and formed a rear guard, which allowed the remnants of the British force to disengage. By sunset, the surviving British forces were fleeing back down the road they had built, carrying their wounded. Behind them on the road, bodies were piled high. The Indians did not pursue the fleeing British, but instead set about scalping and looting the corpses of the wounded and dead, and drinking two hundred gallons of captured rum.[17] A number of British soldiers and female camp followers were captured in the battle. Some of the soldiers were spared, as were most of the women, but around a dozen soldiers were tortured and burned to death by the Indians that night, witnessed by American prisoner James Smith.[18]

Daniel Boone, a famous American pioneer, explorer, woodsman, and frontiersman — and one of the first folk heroes of the United States — was among the soldiers involved in the battle. Boone served under Captain Hugh Waddell of North Carolina, whose militia unit was assigned in 1755 to serve under Braddock. Boone acted as a wagoner, along with his cousin Daniel Morgan, who would later be a key general in the American Revolution.[19] In the Battle of the Monongahela, Boone narrowly escaped death when the baggage wagons were attacked, by cutting his wagons and fleeing. Boone remained critical of Braddock's blunders for the rest of his life.[20][page needed] While on the campaign, Boone met John Finley, a packer who worked for George Croghan in the trans-Appalachian fur trade. Finley first interested Boone in the abundance of game and other natural wonders of the Ohio Valley. He would take Boone on his first hunting trip to Kentucky 12 years later.[21]

Order of battle

edit

Aftermath

edit
 
The mortally wounded General Braddock during the retreat. The British saw significant casualties in the battle.

Of the approximately 1,300 men Braddock led into battle,[1] 456 were killed outright and 422 were wounded. Commissioned officers were prime targets and suffered greatly: out of 86 officers, 26 were killed and 37 wounded. Of the 50 or so women that accompanied the British column as maids and cooks, only 4 returned with the British; about half were taken as captives. The French and Canadians reported only 23 killed, including the French commander, and 20 wounded.[22]: 235–236  Braddock died of his wounds on July 13, four days after the battle, and was buried on the road near Fort Necessity.

Colonel Thomas Dunbar, with the reserves and rear supply units, took command when the survivors reached his position. Realizing there was no further likelihood of his force proceeding to capture Fort Duquesne, he decided to retreat. He ordered the destruction of supplies and cannon before withdrawing, burning about 150 wagons on the spot. His forces retreated back toward Philadelphia. The French did not pursue, realizing that they did not have sufficient resources for an organized pursuit. Beaujeu was buried on July 12 at Fort Duquesne.[22] The battle was a devastating defeat, and has been characterized as one of the most disastrous in British colonial history.[23] It marked the end of the Braddock expedition, which many had believed contained overwhelming force, to seize the Ohio Country. It awakened many in London to the sheer scale of forces that would be needed to defeat the French and their Indian allies in North America.[24]

The inability of the British to use skirmishers, and the vulnerability this caused for the main force, had a profound effect on British military thinking. Although Braddock had posted a company of flankers on each side, these troops were untrained to do anything but stand in line and fire platoon volleys, which were unsuited to such conditions. Learning from their mistakes the British made much better use of skirmishers, often equipped with rifles, who could protect the main body of troops from such devastating fire, both later in the French and Indian War and in the American Revolutionary War.

Because of the speed with which the French and Indians launched their attack and enveloped the British column, the battle is often erroneously reported as an ambush by many who took part. In fact, the French had been unprepared for their contact with the British, whom they had blundered into. The speed of their response allowed them to quickly gain the upper hand, and brought about their victory. The French remained dominant in the Ohio Country for the next three years, and persuaded many previously neutral Indian tribes to enter the war on their side.[23] The French were eventually forced to abandon Fort Duquesne in 1758 by the approach of the Forbes Expedition.

Debate

edit

The debate on how Braddock, with professional soldiers, superior numbers, and artillery, could fail so miserably began soon after the battle and continues to this day. Some blamed Braddock, some blamed his officers, and some blamed the regular and provincial troops under their command. Washington, for his part, supported Braddock and found fault with the regulars.[25] Braddock's tactics are still debated. One school of thought holds that Braddock's reliance on time-honoured European methods, with men standing shoulder-to-shoulder in the open and firing mass volleys in unison, were not appropriate for frontier fighting and cost Braddock the battle. Skirmish tactics ("Indian style"), which American colonials had learned from frontier fighting, with men taking cover and firing individually, were superior in the American environment.[26]

However, in some studies, the interpretation of "Indian-style" superiority has been argued to be a myth by several military historians. European regular armies already employed irregular forces of their own and had extensive theories of how to use and counter-guerilla warfare. Stephen Brumwell argues just the opposite by stating that contemporaries of Braddock, like John Forbes and Henry Bouquet, recognized that "war in the forests of America was a very different business from war in Europe."[27]

Peter Russell argues it was Braddock's failure to rely on the time-honoured European methods that cost him the battle.[28] The British Army already had experience fighting against irregular forces in the Jacobite uprisings. Furthermore, Eastern European irregulars, such as Pandurs and hussars, had already made an impact on European warfare and theory by the 1740s. Braddock's failure, according to proponents of this theory, was caused by not adequately applying traditional military doctrine (particularly by not using distance), not his lack of use of frontier tactics.[29] Russell, in his study, shows that on several occasions before the battle, Braddock had successfully adhered to standard European tactics to counter ambushes and so had become nearly immune to earlier French and Canadian attacks.

Legacy

edit
 
Braddock's Field 175th anniversary commemorative issue of 1930

In 1930, on the 175th anniversary of the Battle of Braddock's Field, a statue of Colonel Washington was unveiled, and a commemorative postage stamp, modeled after that statue, was released for usage the same day.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c "The Battle of the Monongahela". World Digital Library. 1755. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
  2. ^ a b c Borneman p. 55
  3. ^ Borneman p. 55 – French: 28 killed 28 wounded, Indian: 11 killed 29 wounded
  4. ^ Preston 2015 p. 270
  5. ^ Preston 2015 p. 276
  6. ^ Frank A. Cassell. "The Braddock Expedition of 1755: Catastrophe in the Wilderness". Archived from the original on June 7, 2010.
  7. ^ Anderson pp. 67–71
  8. ^ a b Anderson p. 96
  9. ^ Anderson p. 97
  10. ^ Dull p. 31
  11. ^ W. J. Eccles, France in America, p. 184
  12. ^ Anderson pp. 98–99
  13. ^ Ward, Matthew C. (1995), "Fighting the "Old Women"", The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography: 297+.
  14. ^ a b c Anderson p. 102
  15. ^ Anderson pp. 102–103
  16. ^ Hadden, 117
  17. ^ Anderson pp. 103–104
  18. ^ Preston 2015. p. 265
  19. ^ Wallace, Paul A. W. (2002) [Originally published 1967]. Daniel Boone in Pennsylvania. Harrisburg: Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. p. 17. ISBN 0-89271-105-1.
  20. ^ Wallace, Paul A. W. (2007). "Daniel Boone in Pennsylvania". Diane Publishing Inc. – via Google Books.
  21. ^ Draper, Lyman C. (1998). Belue, Ted Franklin (ed.). The Life of Daniel Boone. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books.
  22. ^ a b Papiers Contrecoeur Le Conflit Angelo – Francias Sur L' Ohio De 1745 a 1756. English translation of documents in the Quebec Seminary by Donald Kent, 1952
  23. ^ a b McLynn p. 35
  24. ^ McLynn pp. 35–36
  25. ^ George Washington, July 18, 1755, letter to his mother. Similarly, Washington's report to Governor Dinwiddie. Charles H. Ambler, George Washington and the West, University of North Carolina Press,1936, pp. 107–109.
  26. ^ See, for example, Armstrong Starkey's European and Native American Warfare, 1675–1815 (University of Oklahoma Press, 1998).
  27. ^ Stephen Brumwell, Redcoats, The British Soldier and War in the Americas 1755–1763, Cambridge University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-521-80783-2, pp. 198–205.
  28. ^ See the in-depth study of Peter Russell: "Redcoats in the Wilderness: British Officers and Irregular Warfare in Europe and America, 1740 to 1760", The William and Mary Quarterly > 3rd Ser., Vol. 35, No. 4 (Oct., 1978), pp. 629–652
  29. ^ This argument is most recently presented in Guy Chet's Conquering the American Wilderness: The Triumph of European Warfare in the Colonial Northwest (University of Massachusetts Press, 2003).

Bibliography

edit