Unknown to Burgoyne, the citizens of the…
August 1777 CE
New Hampshire responds on July 18 by authorizing John Stark to raise a militia for the defense of the people "or the annoyance of the enemy".
Using funds provided by John Langdon, Stark raises fifteen hundred New Hampshire militiamen in the space of six days, more than ten percent of New Hampshire's male population over the age of sixteen.
They are first marched to the Fort at Number 4 (modern Charlestown, New Hampshire), then cross the river border into the Grants and stop at Manchester, where Stark confers with Warner.
While in Manchester, General Benjamin Lincoln, whose promotion in preference to Stark had been the cause for Stark's resignation from the Continental Army, attempts to assert Army authority over Stark and his men.
Stark refuses, stating that he is solely responsible to the New Hampshire authorities.
Stark now goes on to Bennington with Warner as a guide, while Warner's men remain in Manchester.
Lincoln returns to the American camp at Stillwater, where he and General Philip Schuyler hatch a plan for Lincoln, with five hundred men, to join with Stark and Warner in actions to harass Burgoyne's communications and supply lines at Skenesboro.
Baum's movements significantly alter these plans.