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T O P I C R E V I E W |
Theresa |
Posted - May 28 2002 : 07:39:00 AM If you haven't already done so, take a few minutes to read "This Day in History". We all know this story but it's still good to read it again. Thank you, Rich, for including this feature on the Mohican Board.
Theresa |
8 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
Theresa |
Posted - May 28 2003 : 10:13:51 PM Thanks for the link Scott...tune in next year...same Mohicanland time...same Mohicanland Board! |
Scott Bubar |
Posted - May 28 2003 : 8:40:48 PM The years pass so swiftly in Mohicanland.
I still haven't read that book through. |
richfed |
Posted - May 31 2002 : 10:47:24 AM Like I said ... it's incredible! Even more so when you figure in Braddock's Defeat. Washington, of course, was a participant in that British/Colonial debacle ... and survived, avoiding becoming but a footnote to history, instead of a maker of History! |
Scott Bubar |
Posted - May 29 2002 : 11:16:39 PM quote: Prologue: Jumonville's Glen, May 28, 1754
The rain had fallen all night, a steady, miserable rain; and when at last the light grew to the point that he could see his troops, George Washington realized that seven of them were lost in the forest, God knew where. For hours he had blundered through the dripping dark, time and again leading the little column off the trail, sometimes taking a quarter hour just to grope his way back to the track. Confused, untrained, and wretched, the forty soldiers who had somehow held together through the night were hardly prepared to fight any enemy, let alone one experienced in forest warfare. Nonetheless the tall Virginian led them on, following the Indian warrior who had come to warn them of their peril.
Toward daybreak the rain stopped, and the remnants of Washington's patrol reached the Indian camp. There the soldiers dried and loaded their muskets while Washington conferred with the old chief who had summoned him. Tanaghrisson, called the "Half King" by the English who regarded him as an ally, described the tracks he had seen nearby. They led toward a sheltered place he knew; there, he suspected, the French had been bivouacked since the day before. Washington's soldiers could march to a spot nearby and wait while his own men reconnoitered. Once the warriors knew the enemy's strength and disposition, they and the Virginians could fall on the camp together. Washington agreed.
He had no choice. However little he cared for Indians, however little he trusted them, he could never have found the Frenchmen's camp without them. Surely he could not have found it in time to dispose his men in firing positions while the French, groggy with sleep, were just starting to cook breakfast at the foot of a tall rock face. Quietly his men and the Indians stationed themselves above and around the narrow glen, while on its floor Frenchmen still crawled from their bark lean-tos and stretched themselves in the early light.
As always in such affairs, no one knows exactly what happened next. Perhaps, as the French later said, the English fired on them without warning. Or perhaps, as Washington maintained, a Frenchman shouted a warning that sent his comrades flying to their arms and firing up into the woods. All that is certain is that the English fired two volleys down into the hollow while the French returned a few ragged shots and tried to retreat into the shelter of the trees.
But there was no escape. The Half King's warriors had blocked the path, forcing the thirty-odd Frenchmen back into the clearing, where English fire pinned them down. An officer called for quarter, and Washington ordered his men to cease firing. Perhaps ten minutes had passed since the first shot.
It had been a lopsided skirmish. Around the rim of the hollow three of Washington's troops were wounded, and one lay dead; at its bottom the French had suffered fourteen casualties. One of the wounded, a thirty-five-year-old ensign named Joseph Coulon de Villiers de Jumonville, identified himself as the detachment's commander. Through a translator he tried to make it known that he had come in peace, as an emissary with a message summoning the English to withdraw from the possessions of His Most Christian Majesty, Louis XV. The letter he carried would make everything clear. His interpreter would read it.
As the combatants' adrenaline levels subsided and the wounded men moaned, the translation went badly. The letter had to be read a second time, and Washington turned to take it back to his own translator. As he withdrew, Tanaghrisson stepped up to where Jumonville lay. "Tu n'es pas encore mort, mon père," he said; Thou art not yet dead, my father. He raised his hatchet and sank it in the ensign's head, striking until he had shattered the cranium. Then he reached into the skull, pulled out a handful of viscous tiss |
richfed |
Posted - May 29 2002 : 07:34:21 AM That's not the one I was thinking about ... Smarty Pants! ... Look back another year or two ... but good to see that the Archivist is still at work!
Anyway, it'll do!
Rich Mohican Press |
Jo |
Posted - May 28 2002 : 11:11:01 PM Rich,
I did check out the achives....
Here's your "a couple of years" ago post:
(no more URL problems this board around I hope):
http://www.mohicanpress.com/wwwboard/messages14/5597.html This Day In History ... The French & Indian War Begins! Posted by Rich on May 28, 2001 at 03:44:06:
on the OLD board. Nice info and pic. Thanks
Jo
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richfed |
Posted - May 28 2002 : 7:15:54 PM On This Day ... in 1754 - and I can remember posting something similar a couple or three years ago [check dem ARCHIVES!] - the man who would go on to lead this fledgling Nation through a War he had no right winning, become it's very first President [x2 & disposing of the notion of an American King for all time], and is remembered fondly, to this day [by most of us], as one of America's greatest - unknowingly began a chain of events that would ultimately fulfill that great destiny! Incredible!
And, you're welcome ... truly, that feature belongs here!
Jumonville Glen today |
Diana |
Posted - May 28 2002 : 6:57:54 PM I saw this too and wanted to respond to your note.
Diana
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