Battle at Fort Carillon
Battle at Fort Carillon
By the time James Wolfe was headed back to London after the French surrender at Louisbourg, Louis-Joseph the Marquis de Montcalm's battles were just beginning, about a thousand miles away.
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Louis-Joseph, the Marquis de Montcalm was a career soldier from a distinguished French family. (As portrayed by Guy Nadon in Canada: A People's History)
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Early in the summer of 1758, as the British began bombarding Louisbourg, Montcalm had managed a stunning victory at Fort Carillon.
Sixteen thousand British troops led by General James Abercromby moved steadily north along Lake Champlain converging on Montcalm at the fort. Montcalm was outnumbered three to one.
"I have to deal with a formidable army. Nevertheless I don't despair. My troops are good. From the enemy's movements I can see that he wavers; if, thanks to his slowness, he gives me time to establish myself... I shall beat them."
Montcalm's confidence was well-founded. Within minutes, before the British soldiers and colonial forces could reach the fort, French muskets pinned them down with a withering rain of fire.
"A man could not stand erect without being hit, any more than he could stand in a shower without having rain fall upon him," wrote David Perry, a 17-year old militiaman from Massachusetts.
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David Perry, a 17-year-old soldier from Massachusetts, wrote of the French defense of Fort Carillon, "A man could not stand erect without being hit..." (As portrayed in Canada: A People's History) |
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