Monro, an officer with virtually no battle …
Years: 1757 - 1757
July
Monro, an officer with virtually no battle experience, decides to risk a reconnaissance in force.
His plan is to gather all available boats, pack them with approximately three hundred and fifty men and sends them north up the lake into an area controlled by an enemy he knows little about.
To command this force Monro chooses Colonel John Parker of the newly arrived Jersey Blues unit.
It is decided to land Colonel Parker’s flotilla of men on Sabbath Day Point situated approximately twenty miles (thirty-two kilometers) north of Fort William Henry on the west side of Lake George.
An advance party of three boats had left for the point on July 20, with Parker’s main force departing in the predawn hours of July 21.
The passage of the first three boats had been spotted by French scouts.
An interception force of approximately four hundred and fifty French and native men under the command of Ensign de Corbiere departs Fort Carillon on July 21.
The French ambush Parker’s three lead boats and while under interrogation by natives, the Provincials tell them exactly where Parker plans to come ashore.
The French trap is now set.
The ambush plan is to place musket-men along the shore of the point and a flotilla of natives in fifty canoes out of view on the opposite side of the point.
His plan is to gather all available boats, pack them with approximately three hundred and fifty men and sends them north up the lake into an area controlled by an enemy he knows little about.
To command this force Monro chooses Colonel John Parker of the newly arrived Jersey Blues unit.
It is decided to land Colonel Parker’s flotilla of men on Sabbath Day Point situated approximately twenty miles (thirty-two kilometers) north of Fort William Henry on the west side of Lake George.
An advance party of three boats had left for the point on July 20, with Parker’s main force departing in the predawn hours of July 21.
The passage of the first three boats had been spotted by French scouts.
An interception force of approximately four hundred and fifty French and native men under the command of Ensign de Corbiere departs Fort Carillon on July 21.
The French ambush Parker’s three lead boats and while under interrogation by natives, the Provincials tell them exactly where Parker plans to come ashore.
The French trap is now set.
The ambush plan is to place musket-men along the shore of the point and a flotilla of natives in fifty canoes out of view on the opposite side of the point.
Locations
People
- Daniel Webb
- François-Gaston de Lévis
- George Monro
- Jeffery Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst
- John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun
- Louis-Antoine de Bougainville
- Louis-Joseph de Montcalm
- William Johnson, 1st Baronet
- William Pitt
Groups
- Iroquois (Haudenosaunee, also known as the League of Peace and Power, Five Nations, or Six Nations)
- Abenaki people (Amerind tribe)
- Mohawk people (Amerind tribe)
- Wyandot, or Wendat, or Huron people (Amerind tribe)
- Lenape or Lenni-Lenape (later named Delaware Indians by Europeans)
- New France (French Colony)
- Shawnees, or Shawanos (Amerind tribe)
- France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
- Ohio Country
- New York, Province of (English Colony)
- New Hampshire, English royal Province of
- Massachusetts, Province of (English Crown Colony)
- New Jersey (English Colony)
- Britain, Kingdom of Great
