Responses: 4
It is my understanding that Horatio Gates was given this command following "his" overwhelming victory at the Battle of Saratoga which turned British strategy to the South. Credit for Saratoga actually belonged to a more historically recognizable Colonial by the name of...(any guesses?)
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LTC Tom Jones
From memory, Benedict Arnold was put on "house arrest" in his tent for insubordination telling "his commander/boss" in a probable disrespectful manner that the time and circumstance demanded that he go on the offensive against Burgoyne's Army. Arnold "jumped house arrest," rallied the Colonials and won a victory that some claim to be the real turning point of the war and one of the most decisive victories in world history. The lack of recognition (probably due in no small part to his generally irascible temperament) from his valiant effort at Saratoga is what some say turned, along with the urgings of his Tory wife, his loyalties to the British side. Later in the American Revolution, he led a British force in combat operations in the New England area of operation. The name of his group--"The American Legion." SPC Douglas Bolton SGT (Join to see) Lt Col Charlie Brown
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MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
LTC Tom Jones You nailed it. Arnold and was furious over not being promoted to two stars.
One other note about Gates: He was not Washington's first choice for command of the southern forces. That honor fell to Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Greene, the quartermaster general, who replaced Gates after Camden.
One other note about Gates: He was not Washington's first choice for command of the southern forces. That honor fell to Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Greene, the quartermaster general, who replaced Gates after Camden.
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LTC Tom Jones
Greene being one of two American generals given the sobriquet, "the Fighting Quaker"--USMC Smedley Butler being the other. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
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