General Washington had assigned Benedict Arnold to…
April 1777 CE
Arnold took the opportunity to visit his children while near his home in New Haven, and he had spent much of the winter socializing in Boston, where he unsuccessfully courted a young belle named Betsy Deblois.
In February 1777, he learned that he had been passed over by Congress for promotion to major general.
Washington had refused his offer to resign, and had written to members of Congress in an attempt to correct this, noting that "two or three other very good officers" might be lost if they persisted in making politically motivated promotions.
Benedict Arnold is on his way to Philadelphia to discuss his future when he is alerted that a British force is marching toward a supply depot in Danbury, Connecticut.
He organizes the militia response, along with David Wooster and Connecticut militia General Gold S. Silliman.
He leads a small contingent of militia attempting to stop or slow the British return to the coast in the Battle of Ridgefield, and is again wounded in his left leg.