The Development of British Light Infantry in North America During The

The Development of British Light Infantry in North America During The

View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Wilfrid Laurier University Canadian Military History Volume 7 | Issue 2 Article 4 1-24-2012 “Within Ourselves”: The evelopmeD nt of British Light Infantry in North America during the Seven Years’ War Ian McCulloch Directorate of Heritage and History, Department of National Defence Recommended Citation McCulloch, Ian (1998) "“Within Ourselves”: The eD velopment of British Light Infantry in North America during the Seven Years’ War," Canadian Military History: Vol. 7: Iss. 2, Article 4. Available at: http://scholars.wlu.ca/cmh/vol7/iss2/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Scholars Commons @ Laurier. It has been accepted for inclusion in Canadian Military History by an authorized administrator of Scholars Commons @ Laurier. For more information, please contact [email protected]. McCulloch: “Within Ourselves”: The Development of British Light Infantry in ''Within Ourselves ... '' The Developm.ent of British Light Infantry in North America During the Seven Years' War Ian McCulloch " ... I am convinced. that till we have everything necessary. for carrying on the War here. within ourselves. Independent of Aidfrom this Country. we shall go on very slowly." Lord Loudon to the Duke of Cumberland, August, 1756. Introduction and folklore. "Braddock's Defeat," "The Massacre at Fort William Henry," "The Boston Massacre" he first British regulars to appear in North and even "George Washington's Cutting Down T America were those accompanying a small the Cherry Tree" have all served a variety of British expedition to wrest Manhattan from the purposes down through the centuries. All have Dutch in 1664. Colonel Richard Nicolls' troops become part of the "usable past" and have been landed on Long Island 25 August 1664 at the extensively deployed in any discussions of one exact site where General William Howe's troops of those favourite themes of North American would disembark over a century later. After a historians -the conflict between European and swift Dutch capitulation, Nicolls' redcoats and colonial values and methods. Inevitably subsequent garrisons of British regulars would European warfare vs. North American warfare maintain a solid presence in New York for a (la petite guerre) has been drawn into the mythic virtually uninterrupted period of 119 years. 1 vortex. :l Canadian historian l.K. Steele writes that "North American pride in the ways of the New It has been suggested by one American World has often led to the assumption that, in historian that this factual record has been warfare as in everything else, the new men of conveniently overlooked by most of his the New World were better than the history-laden colleagues in order that "the dismal episode of men of the Old." Braddock's defeat more than Braddock's defeat" can figure prominently in any other engagement of the Seven Years' War history books as the first appearance of British has, "with some misrepresentation," been used redcoats on the North American scene. Thus as key evidence to support this assumption of "they could be made to appear as stupid brutes superiority.4 Stanley Pargellis reinforces this view: led by an eighteenth century Colonel Blimp while American militia simultaneously appeared as a Military historians hold that Braddock's defeat keen and valiant yeomanry led by that paragon taught a lesson badly needed for the time: you cannot employ parade ground tactics in the of all virtue and destined military hero of the fight bush. To almost everyone who in one 2 for American liberty, George Washington. " connection or another remembers Braddock. this episode stands as a conflict between Old His accusation is a valid one, but not very World and New World ways, with the outcome surprising, as much of early American history justifying the new.5 has become firmly embedded in myth, legend ©Canadian Military History. Volume 7, Number 2, Spring 1998, pp.4l-55. 41 Published by Scholars Commons @ Laurier, 1998 1 Canadian Military History, Vol. 7 [1998], Iss. 2, Art. 4 However, many historians led by Pargellis, Cromwell's time, took on a new vitality in with Paul Koppermans, Ian Strachan, and America. Each colony, as it became established, Steele in close support, stress that Braddock's was obliged to create its own militia for defeat can no longer be perceived or used as protecting and extending its frontiers. such. 6 While broad generalizations about the Cooperation amongst the militias of the various utility of close-order formations in woods or the colonies was confined to specific expeditions in cunning and ruthlessness of Indian tactics or which two or more colonies had a mutual the command abilities of the young Washington interest. Organized into units by county or may all be still true, they are not true as township, the militia rarely fought as formed inferences from Braddock's defeat. The general units. Instead, the local unit served as a training consensus now is that Braddock's debacle was and mobilization base from which individuals precipitated in large part by his critical neglect could be selected for active operations. 10 on the day of battle to observe the fundamental rules of war laid down in the European manuals The effectiveness of the colonial militias of the day. His leadership lapse and varied from bad to very good, their prowess complacency once nearing his objective meant increasing proportionately to their proximity to that his soldiers were never given a chance to the Indian frontier and the no-man's-land demonstrate that Old World methods, properly between New England and New France. The applied, might have very well won the day. 7 His seventy year struggle for the North American column from the day it launched into the North continent commencing in 1689 consisted, in fact, American wilderness adopted well-conceived of four separate wars. The first three: the War of and generally well-executed security measures the League of Hapsburg ( 1689-1697). the War of as per the manuals. On the day however, these the Spanish Succession (1702-1713) and, the careful measures were inexplicably not ordered War of the Austrian Succession (1744-1748), nor implemented by Braddock and his staff and were fought by the colonists of both mother their absence was enough to ensure the ruin of countries using colonial methods and military their army and give British officers a reputation resources to hand. The French utilized their for ineptitude under frontier conditions. 8 Indian allies from the outset and armed them with muskets. The American frontier militias This reputation is undeserved, for British were thus forced to assimilate the best features regulars took especial care to prepare of Indian tactics in order to effectively counter themselves for the American theatre, including their enemy: small-unit operations, loose Braddock and subsequent commanders. After formations, informal dress, swift movement, fire Braddock's defeat no inferior guerilla force discipline, ambush and surprise attack. Aided would ever overcome any substantial body of by a greater population base and their own British regulars during the Seven Years' War in Indian allies, many American frontiersmen North America. became adept at marksmanship, a skill which increased as more accurate weapons were developed. 11 "BB"- Before Braddock Russell Weigley, an American military he first English settlers in Virginia and New historian, states. however. that "as the frontier T England arrived with a minimum of receded. the inhabitants of older communities professional military support. In 1607, the gradually lost their skills in shooting. forest lore. Jamestown settlers heeding Captain John and Indian fighting. More and more the militia Smith's advice formed" .. .immediately into three of long-settled communities had to rely not on groups: one to erect fortifications for defence, frontier experience but on European military one to serve as a guard and to plant a crop, a manuals to guide them in their training. " 12 third to explore."9 They encountered hostile Orthodoxy advanced to such an extent that at Indians almost immediately and, for many the outbreak ofthe Seven Year's War (The French decades, had to rely on standing militia forces. and Indian War to the Americans), militia commanders were being advised by Colonel Ironically, this ancient British tradition of the Washington to study war from Humphrey Bland's militia, on the decline in England since Oliver Treatise on Military Discipline, the leading 42 http://scholars.wlu.ca/cmh/vol7/iss2/4 2 McCulloch: “Within Ourselves”: The Development of British Light Infantry in Above: Indian auxiLliary with scalp. by Brigadier General George Townshend. ca.l 759. (Author's collection) Right: An Iroquois Warrim: He is formidably armed with a ball club, iron-headed tomahawk and a J1intlock. Note the snowshoes, which would greatly increase his mobility in the snow. and the enemy scalp draped ouer the barrel of his gun. (David M. Sieww'L Museum) English tactical manual of the day. These Our people are nothing but a set of farmers recommendations were no doubt based on and planters, used only to the axe and hoe - Washington's less than charitable opinions of [the Canadians] are not only well trained and disciplined, but they are used to arms from colonial militiamen as expressed in 1755: their infancy among lndians; and are reckoned equal, if not superior in that part of the world Mililia, you will find ... never answer your to veteran troops ... These [Canadians] are expectations. no dependence is to be placed troops that fight without pay - maintain on them: they are obstinate and perverse, they themselves in woods without charges march are egged on by the officers. who lead them to without baggage - and support themselves acts of disobedience, and when they are without stores and magazines ..

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