History is for Everyone

16

Aug

1777

Key Event

Battle of Bennington — Defeat of Breymann's Relief Column

Bennington, VT· day date

6People Involved
93Significance

The Story

# The Battle of Bennington: The Defeat of Breymann's Relief Column

In the summer of 1777, the American Revolution hung in a precarious balance. British General John Burgoyne had launched an ambitious campaign to drive south from Canada through the Hudson River Valley, intending to split the rebellious colonies in two and sever New England from the rest of the fledgling nation. His army, a formidable combination of British regulars, German mercenaries, Loyalist militia, and Indigenous allies, had already captured Fort Ticonderoga and was pushing deeper into New York. But Burgoyne's supply lines were stretching dangerously thin, and his army was running short of horses, draft animals, and provisions. Desperate to resupply, Burgoyne dispatched Lieutenant Colonel Friedrich Baum, a capable Hessian officer commanding a mixed force of German dragoons, Loyalists, and Indigenous fighters, to raid the American supply depot at Bennington in the disputed territory that is now Vermont. It was a decision that would prove catastrophic for the British cause.

Standing in Baum's path was General John Stark, a fiery and experienced New Hampshire militia commander who had fought at Bunker Hill and Trenton but had grown frustrated with what he perceived as congressional favoritism in promoting officers. Stark had agreed to lead the New Hampshire militia only on the condition that he answer to New Hampshire alone, not to the Continental Army's chain of command. His independence proved to be an asset. When word reached him that Baum's column was approaching, Stark rallied his growing force of militia volunteers and prepared to meet the threat head-on. Legend holds that before the battle, Stark invoked his wife Elizabeth, known as "Molly" Stark, declaring to his men that they would win the day or Molly Stark would be a widow by nightfall. Whether apocryphal or not, the words captured the fierce resolve that animated the patriot ranks.

On August 16, 1777, Stark's militia launched a devastating assault on Baum's entrenched position. The attack came from multiple directions, overwhelming the Hessian defenders. Baum himself was mortally wounded in the fighting, and his force was shattered. But victory nearly slipped through American fingers in the chaotic aftermath. As Stark's militiamen broke ranks to loot Baum's captured position, scattering across the battlefield to seize weapons, supplies, and personal effects, a fresh threat materialized from the north. Lieutenant Colonel Heinrich von Breymann, leading a relief column of approximately 600 German reinforcements, arrived on the road with orders to support Baum. Finding the first force destroyed and the Americans in disarray, Breymann pressed forward with disciplined volleys that threatened to reverse the outcome of the entire engagement. Stark's disorganized men, many of whom had expended their ammunition in the first battle, found themselves nearly overrun.

It was at this critical juncture that Colonel Seth Warner and his regiment of Green Mountain Boys arrived on the field, providing the reinforcement that saved the day. Warner's men, hardened veterans of frontier warfare who had been marching hard to reach the battle, formed a disciplined line and engaged Breymann's column in a fierce running fight. The fresh American troops, fighting alongside Stark's rallying militiamen, poured fire into the German ranks and drove Breymann's force steadily backward along the road toward Burgoyne's main army. By the time the fighting ended, Breymann's column had suffered devastating losses, and the total British and German casualties across both engagements exceeded 900 men killed, wounded, or captured.

The consequences of the Battle of Bennington rippled far beyond the fields where the fighting took place. Burgoyne lost nearly a thousand irreplaceable soldiers, received none of the supplies or horses he desperately needed, and saw his already precarious strategic position deteriorate sharply. The American victory electrified patriot morale throughout New England and drew thousands of additional militia volunteers to the cause, many of whom would converge on Burgoyne's army in the weeks ahead. Less than two months later, surrounded and outnumbered at Saratoga, Burgoyne surrendered his entire army — a turning point that convinced France to enter the war as America's ally. Bennington, and particularly the dramatic defeat of Breymann's relief column, was one of the critical blows that made Saratoga possible, proving that citizen-soldiers led by determined commanders like Stark and Warner could stand against professional European troops and win.

People Involved

G

General John Stark

New Hampshire Militia General

New Hampshire militia general who commanded American forces at the Battle of Bennington. Having resigned his Continental commission over a seniority dispute, he accepted command of the New Hampshire militia and won the engagement that weakened Burgoyne before Saratoga. His pre-battle speech became one of the Revolution's most quoted rallying cries.

C

Colonel Seth Warner

Green Mountain Boys Colonel

Vermont militia colonel and Green Mountain Boys leader who arrived with his regiment during the second phase of the Battle of Bennington, driving off Breymann's relief column. Warner had helped capture Fort Ticonderoga with Ethan Allen in 1775 and commanded Vermont forces throughout the northern campaigns.

L

Lieutenant Colonel Friedrich Baum

Hessian Officer

Hessian dragoon officer commanding the British-German detachment sent by Burgoyne to seize the Bennington supply depot. Baum established defensive works on a wooded ridge above the Walloomsac River but was surrounded and mortally wounded when Stark's militia flanked his position on August 16, 1777.

G

General John Burgoyne

British General

British general who commanded the invasion force moving south from Canada through the Lake Champlain corridor toward Albany in 1777. His decision to send Baum's detachment to raid Bennington resulted in the loss of nearly a thousand men and set the conditions for his surrender at Saratoga in October.

E

Elizabeth "Molly" Stark

Militia Commander's Wife

Wife of General John Stark, she became the subject of her husband's famous pre-battle declaration that victory would follow or "Molly Stark sleeps a widow." Her name entered the war's popular memory as a symbol of the personal stakes militia soldiers brought to battle.

L

Lieutenant Colonel Heinrich von Breymann

Hessian Officer

Hessian officer commanding the relief column sent to support Baum's detachment. Arriving after Baum's defeat, he engaged Warner's Green Mountain Boys and Stark's reassembled militia in a road battle and was driven back with heavy losses, confirming the completeness of the American victory at Bennington.