After considering and rejecting a number of…
August 1759 CE
If successful, such a landing will force Montcalm to fight, as a British force on the north shore of the St. Lawrence will cut his supply lines to Montreal.
Initial suggestions for landing sites range as far as thirty-two kilometers (twenty miles) up the St. Lawrence, which would give the French troops one or two days to prepare for the attack.
Following the failed British assault on Montmorency, Montcalm alters his deployment, sending Bougainville and a column of approximately fifteen hundred regular troops, two hundred cavalry, and a group of New French militia—some three thousand men in all—upriver to Cap-Rouge to monitor the British ships upstream.
He further strengthens his defenses of the Beauport shore following the abandonment of the British camp at Montmorency, which he regards as preparations for a descent (amphibious attack) on Beauport.
In spite of warnings from local commanders, he does not view an upstream landing as a serious possibility.
People
François-Charles de Bourlamaque
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James Cook
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James Wolfe
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Jeffery Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst
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Louis-Antoine de Bougainville
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Louis-Joseph de Montcalm
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Pierre de Rigaud de Vaudreuil de Cavagnal, Marquis de Vaudreuil
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Robert Rogers
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Thomas Gage
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William Johnson, 1st Baronet
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William Pitt
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