British Colonials & Mohawk Warriors vs. French-Canadians & Native Allies : The Battle Of Lake George
After the death of General Braddock during the disastrous loss at the Battle of the Monongahela, the British Empire’s hope of successfully repelling the French Imperial encroachment into their colonial interest through the implementation of the Braddock Expedition took a significant blow.
A key advantage the British had over their French adversary, was the population of their colonial brethren. With over one million citizens inhabiting the British colonies compared to less than a hundred thousand for New France, the upperhand the French held by way of backcountry fortifications and militarized outposts could be upended through a war of attrition. This would only be possible if the British Colonies could hold back the advancing French long enough to raise an army large enough to defeat them.
With the Braddock Expeditions faltering, the impetus for this would be placed squarely on the shoulders of Major-General William Johnson, who headed north from Albany with a force entirely composed of provincial soldiers. They’d enlisted from throughout New York and New England, and while they appeared to be little more than a glorified militia compared to the highly trained British Regulars, their courage and their cunning would prove invaluable when under the gun of an imposing force of French Grenadiers, Canadian Provincials, and Abenaki and Nippissing Warriors.
After Johnson’s arrival at the south end of Lake George near Fort Lyman, the Major-General contemplated a northern facing assault on Crown Point and Fort Frontenac to overtake the entrenched French position and drive them out of New York and back across the Canadian border.
After a series of moves and countermoves made by Johnson and his adversarial contemporary, French Commander Baron de Dieskau, a column of more than 1,000 provincial soldiers, led by 170 Mohawk Warrior allies set out from Johnson’s Camp with the intention of reinforcing Fort Lyman after intel gleaned from a captured enemy informed them of an impending attack, the British Colonials walked into a lethal trap laid by Dieskau.
Dieskau’s Native warriors fired upon the approaching column early, and while the Mohawks and Colonials incurred heavy casualties in the onset of the exchange, the quick thinking Lt. Colonel Nathan Whiting rallied his men of the Second Connecticut and formed a fighting retreat, counter attacking the overconfident approach of the French-Canadians and delivering considerable damage to their forces as they fought and dashed their way back to Johnson’s camp. The encounter would come to be known as The Bloody Morning Scout.
As the British Colonials and Mohawks made their way back into camp, Major-General Johnson made preparations for the coming onslaught by the French. The security of the colonies hinged upon Johnson’s success, for if the French would triumph over them in battle yet again, it would open the door for New France to make an undeterred march upon Albany, and from there New York City, and the heart of the British Colonies.
This pivotal showdown of which the fate of North America hinged upon, would forever be known as the Battle of Lake George..
Don't miss this brutal, often overlooked story brought to you only by History At The OK Corral : Home Of History's Greatest Shootouts & Showdowns!
#battleoflakegeorge #frenchandindianwar #hokc #historyattheokcorral
Пікірлер: 57
Excellent video displaying detailed research and presented in fine form.👍 This channel is among my very favorite due to it's very professional format and historical accuracy. Well done.
@killerkushgaming3955
2 ай бұрын
This channel and wild west extravaganza are the best for old west content for sure!
If it wasn't for Johnson we may all be speaking French right now! Incredible story. Thank you!
It's always a little sad to hear about good men commanded stupidly.
Thank you for your hard work
Love your channel, dude. Very interesting history and well articulated content comes from these videos
I grew up in LG. I love the history!
Great job on this one!
My favorite channel. I've watched every video.
@historyattheokcorral
2 ай бұрын
Wow, thanks!
My hometown is about an hour east of there. I been to Johnson Hall, this battlefield, Ft William-Henry, Ft Ticonderoga, and Rogers Rock. Also, many battlefields in the Mohawk Valley and Cherry Valley. Plus the great hiking, hunting and fishing that the Adirondack Mountains provides. Unfortunately, the politicians have ruined upstate New York.
Excellent! Eastern battles are mostly unknown to me, a West coast Canadian , and I am learning. You also did great work on local events, like the Tonquin' debacle. TY.
@historyattheokcorral
Ай бұрын
More on your area to come! Lots of history there. Beautiful area.
I am enjoying this series, excellent work.
This battle would make an incredibly movie. And you should be the one to write the script! 🎥
Another good one, thanks for that.
Now that's the way to to tell history from the grass roots level of each incident .
Love the fresh content
Great video 🏴
Currently 15 mins from actual location of this event now
@historyattheokcorral
2 ай бұрын
Veey cool!
Great content!
Nice work
I used to summer here. There's a cool old fort. Maybe william Henry?
@HistoricallyRomantic
2 ай бұрын
Johnson renamed it Ft William Henry from Fort Lyman after a dispute with Lyman.
Love seeing the eastern indian wars getting some love. Also, Benjamin Church wants to know when he gets his episode.
Let's goooo Shout out Detroit suburbs
I love you work and love how entertaining the education is. My wife is part Yaqui and is impressed with my interest because of your vids. Thank you. Do you have any Brazilian indigenous teachings also?? Keep posting, I'll keep watching
Neat way to name places
If this is the same Chief Hendrick, he is my 8x great grandfather…
Sounds similar to the battle in Last of the Mohicans
Please do some videos regarding the nez perce war!
@historyattheokcorral
2 ай бұрын
Are you reading our e-mails?! 😂 Coming soon!
@tradbowhunter53
2 ай бұрын
@@historyattheokcorral must have missed them😂
👍
Did they ever pull the skeletons out of that pond? 😮
A comment from down below.
👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸👍🏿
An excellent reminder that "the wild west", at this point, was in Upstate NY. Sometimes we forget that there was always a "wild west" until it was all subdued. (ie: conquered, grabbed, stolen) Not passing judgment, just saying. Keep on.
It would have been different if the French Canadiens had of remembered to pack their hockey sticks...
@Rob-157
2 ай бұрын
Lol
@FryingTiger
2 ай бұрын
Had of?! 😂 Yikes.
@danmanak
2 ай бұрын
Had've. Short for had have. It's called a contraction.
@uploadth1s
2 ай бұрын
At least stale baguettes
@aldosigmann419
2 ай бұрын
@@danmanak Awwwwww....good little grammar gnatzi.
Although I live in Canada (not French or from Quebec) I am thankful that the French lost. It must have been terrifing to be in battle and see the aftermath. Ty
They need Hawkeye😁
@Mankeischreck
2 ай бұрын
A good Surgeon is always usefull in such situations! :9
The p title makes the British sound like bad colonial people but the French were Canadians. They were two of the same, both fighting for the same thing. Just because the french lost doesn’t mean it would be any different had they won.
The Mohawks are not well thougth of up here in the land of the Oneida's and Onondaga's!
@b.m.2434
2 ай бұрын
Nor in the area of the Seneca and chemung.
I love the stories but the music drives me crazy I wish there was a way to shut it off