Battle
of Bennington Fought on
August 16, 1777, this battle allowed Vermont to
declare its independence.
By early August 1777, British
General John Burgoyne
was in need of horses and food for his troops,
who had been traversing the forests of western
New York during the Saratoga Campaign. On August
11, Burgoyne sent a mostly German force (along
with Canadians, British sharpshooters, Tories and
Indians) under Colonel Friedrich Baum into the
Connecticut River Valley to gather horses,
saddles, cattle, etc. The original orders did not
specify where Baum was supposed to go, but they
were amended at the last minute to send Baum to
Bennington, Vermont, where a significant supply
of horses and cattle was said to be only lightly
defended.
Baum's forces met resistance
from the beginning of their march, but it wasn't
until they met and routed a small scouting party
that they learned Bennington was better defended
then had been believed. On August 14, Baum sent a
message to Burgoyne saying that he would need
reinforcements in order to take the needed
supplies.
When Baum arrived at Walloomsac, New
York, about 10 miles outside Bennington, Vermont,
on August 16 he saw a much larger American force,
led by Brigadier General John
Stark, waiting for him.
The outnumbered Germans took up fortified
positions on a hill overloking the Walloomsac
River and hoped that the heavy rain then falling
would delay the Americans long enough for
reinforcements to arrive. The rain subsided by
mid-afternoon, and Stark began his assault on the
hill at about 3 pm. The Germans fought valiantly
for about two hours, but Stark's men succeeded in
taking the hill. Baum was among the Germans
killed during the assault.
The Americans were on the verge
of a complete victory when a German relief column
under Lieutenant Colonel Heinrich von Breymann
arrived on the battlefield. Unfortunately for the
Germans, however, Seth
Warner also arrived
with a combined force of regular army and Green
Mountain Boys, and by nightfall the Americans had
prevailed. By the end of the battle 207 British
and German troops had been killed and another 700
captured; by contrast, the Americans suffered 30
killed, 40 wounded, and none captured.
The Battle of Bennington cost
Burgoyne almost a third of his army and left him
seriously short on supplies, and that loss
ultimately led to his surrender at Saratoga later
that year. The role of the Green Mountain Boys in
the American victory gave Vermont the confidence
to declare its independence from both British and
Continental Congress control, and August 16,
1777, is still celebrated as Vermont Independence
Day.
British Battles http://www.britishbattles.com/battle-bennington.htm
Virtual Vermont http://www.virtualvermont.com/history/benbattle.html
John Burgoyne
John Stark
Seth Warner
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