Ticonderoga, NY
People
8 historical figures connected to Ticonderoga during the Revolutionary War.
Loyalists & British
Other Figures
Henry Knox
1750–1806
Boston bookseller turned artillery officer who hauled 60 tons of cannon from Fort Ticonderoga to Boston during the winter of 1775-1776, an extraordinary feat of logistics that gave Washington the firepower to force the British evacuation.
Arthur St. Clair
1737–1818
Continental general who made the controversial decision to evacuate Fort Ticonderoga in July 1777 rather than face Burgoyne's superior force. Though condemned by Congress, the evacuation saved the garrison to fight at Saratoga.
Seth Warner
1743–1784
Green Mountain Boys officer who led the capture of nearby Crown Point the day after Ticonderoga fell and later commanded the rear guard at the Battle of Hubbardton during the 1777 retreat, buying time for the main American force to escape.
Benedict Arnold
1741–1801
Connecticut officer who arrived at Ticonderoga with a Massachusetts commission to capture the fort, clashing with Ethan Allen over command. Arnold later built the American fleet on Lake Champlain that delayed the British advance at Valcour Island in 1776.
Ethan Allen
1738–1789
Leader of the Green Mountain Boys who captured Fort Ticonderoga in a dawn raid on May 10, 1775, reportedly demanding the garrison surrender "in the name of the Great Jehovah and the Continental Congress." The capture provided desperately needed artillery for the siege of Boston.
Major General William Phillips
1731–1781
Skilled British artillery officer who directed the placement of guns on Mount Defiance overlooking Fort Ticonderoga in 1777, making the American position untenable. His mastery of artillery influenced every major engagement of Burgoyne's campaign.
Captain William Delaplace
British officer commanding the small garrison at Fort Ticonderoga when it was captured by Allen and Arnold on May 10, 1775. Surprised in his quarters at dawn, he had no choice but to surrender the fort and its valuable store of artillery.