General Burgoyne's army reaches the Hudson river after slogging through the wilderness for most of August 1777. Burgoyne relied on his Indian allies to keep the enemy from setting up ambushes or otherwise interfering with progress.
After an Indian returned with the scalp of Jane McCrea, the fiancé of one of his officers, Burgoyne had to put restrictions on the Indians. Most warriors responded by leaving the army and returning home. The story of Jane McCrea became a rallying point for Americans against the barbarous tactic of the British.
Visit my site at https://blog.AmRevPodcast.com for more text, pictures, maps, and sources on this topic.
Book Recommendation of the Week: The Divided Ground: Indians, Settlers, and the Northern Borderland of the American Revolution, by Alan Taylor
Online Recommendation of the Week: The Life of Jane McCrea, by David Wilson: https://archive.org/details/lifeofjanemccrea01wils
ARP310 Gnadenhutten Massacre
ARP309 North Government Falls
ARP308 McDougall Court Martial
ARP307 Congress After Yorktown
ARP306 War in India
ARP305 Siege of Menorca
ARP304 Jacksonborough Assembly
ARP303 John's Island
ARP302 Cloud's Creek Massacre
ARP301 The Evacuation of Wilmington
ARP300 Surrender at Yorktown
ARP299 The Siege of Yorktown
ARP298 Battle of the Capes
ARP297 March to Yorktown
ARP296 Eutaw Springs
ARP295 New London Raid
AR-SP24 Washington’s Marines
ARP294 Dogger Bank
AR-SP23 An American Triumph with Tom Hand
ARP293 Isaac Hayne
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