1738–1789
Ethan Allen
3
Events in Ticonderoga
Biography
Ethan Allen was born in Litchfield, Connecticut, in 1738 and grew up on the New England frontier before relocating to the New Hampshire Grants, the disputed territory between New York and New Hampshire that would eventually become Vermont. He became the dominant figure among the Green Mountain Boys, the irregular militia that resisted New York's attempts to enforce its land claims over settlers who held New Hampshire grants. Allen's methods were confrontational, his rhetoric bombastic, and his personal courage undeniable, and he turned what began as a land dispute into a formidable paramilitary organization.
When news of Lexington and Concord reached the Grants in April 1775, Allen immediately proposed turning the Green Mountain Boys toward a military objective that could benefit the Patriot cause: Fort Ticonderoga, the British stronghold at the southern end of Lake Champlain. The fort was lightly garrisoned and housed a substantial collection of artillery that the rebellious colonies desperately needed. Allen organized an assault force, agreed to a joint command arrangement with Benedict Arnold, who arrived with a Massachusetts commission, and led the pre-dawn crossing of the lake on May 9-10, 1775. The Green Mountain Boys passed through the fort's unguarded gate in the early morning darkness, and Allen confronted the British commander William Delaplace, demanding surrender in terms that became instantly famous. The fort fell without a shot fired, and its artillery was eventually transported to Boston by Henry Knox.
Allen's capture by the British in a rash attempt to seize Montreal in September 1775 removed him from active military service for nearly three years. He was held on a prison ship in New York harbor and in various British facilities in conditions that permanently damaged his health, and his account of his captivity, published in 1779, became a widely read indictment of British treatment of American prisoners. After his exchange in 1778, Allen returned to Vermont and spent the remaining years of his life engaged in Vermont's political struggles, including the secret negotiations with the British known as the Haldimand Affair. He died in 1789, just two years before Vermont achieved statehood, the rough frontiersman whose dawn raid on Ticonderoga had provided one of the Revolution's earliest and most stirring victories.
In Ticonderoga
May
1775
Allen and Arnold Dispute Command at TiconderogaRole: Green Mountain Boys Commander
# The Dispute at Ticonderoga: Allen, Arnold, and the Battle Over Command In the spring of 1775, barely weeks after the first shots of the American Revolution rang out at Lexington and Concord, a small but strategically vital British outpost on the southern shore of Lake Champlain became the focus of patriot ambitions. Fort Ticonderoga, situated in the wilderness of northeastern New York, was lightly garrisoned and poorly maintained, but it held something the fledgling American cause desperately needed: cannons, mortars, and military stores that could tip the balance in the growing conflict with Britain. The effort to seize the fort would prove successful, but it was nearly derailed not by British resistance but by a fierce and deeply personal dispute over command between two ambitious men — Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold — whose clash at Ticonderoga would echo through the rest of the war and beyond. Ethan Allen was a towering, boisterous figure from the contested region known as the New Hampshire Grants, the territory that would eventually become Vermont. He commanded the Green Mountain Boys, a rough militia originally organized to resist New York's jurisdictional claims over the Grants. Allen and his men were frontiersmen, fiercely independent and loyal to Allen personally rather than to any formal military hierarchy. When word of the fighting at Lexington reached the region, Allen and a small group of Connecticut patriots, including militia officer Captain Edward Mott and civilian organizer Heman Allen, Ethan's brother, began planning a raid on Ticonderoga. The Green Mountain Boys were the natural force for the job — they knew the terrain, they were already organized, and they were eager for a fight. Allen threw himself into the effort with characteristic energy, rallying his men and coordinating logistics for the march north. Benedict Arnold, meanwhile, had arrived at the same idea independently. A prosperous New Haven merchant and militia captain with sharp military instincts, Arnold had recognized Ticonderoga's strategic value and traveled to Cambridge, Massachusetts, to pitch the plan to the Massachusetts Committee of Safety. Impressed by his confidence and reasoning, the Committee granted Arnold a colonel's commission and authorized him to raise a force of up to four hundred men to capture the fort. Armed with this official mandate, Arnold rode hard for Lake Champlain, expecting to take command of whatever forces had assembled. When Arnold arrived at the staging area near Hand's Cove on the eastern shore of the lake, he found Allen and roughly two hundred Green Mountain Boys already prepared to cross. Arnold immediately presented his commission and demanded command of the operation. The Green Mountain Boys, however, flatly refused to serve under anyone but Allen. They were volunteers, not regular soldiers, and their loyalty was personal. Arnold, for his part, would not accept a subordinate role when he held the only legitimate military commission on the field. The resulting standoff was bitter and intense, with both men unwilling to back down. Allen had the men; Arnold had the paperwork. Neither advantage was decisive. The compromise they reached was awkward and telling. On the predawn morning of May 10, 1775, Allen and Arnold entered Fort Ticonderoga side by side, neither formally commanding the other. The small British garrison, caught completely off guard under the command of Captain William Delaplace, surrendered without a significant fight. Allen reportedly demanded the fort's surrender "in the name of the great Jehovah and the Continental Congress," though the exact words have been debated by historians ever since. The capture of Ticonderoga was a significant early victory for the patriot cause. The cannons and military supplies seized from the fort would later be transported to Boston under the direction of Colonel Henry Knox, where they played a crucial role in forcing the British evacuation of the city in March 1776. Strategically, controlling Ticonderoga and Lake Champlain gave the Americans a critical buffer against a British invasion from Canada. Yet the personal consequences of the command dispute lingered far longer than the tactical ones. For Allen, the capture of Ticonderoga cemented his reputation as a bold frontier hero, a legend he cultivated for the rest of his life. For Arnold, the experience at Ticonderoga became one of the first in a long series of perceived slights over rank, credit, and recognition. Though Arnold would go on to demonstrate extraordinary bravery and tactical brilliance at battles such as Valcour Island and Saratoga, his chronic sense of being undervalued and overlooked by Congress and fellow officers festered into a grievance that ultimately led him down the path to treason. His 1780 conspiracy to surrender West Point to the British remains one of the most infamous betrayals in American history. The seeds of that betrayal, historians have argued, were planted in moments precisely like the one at Ticonderoga — moments when Arnold's ambition collided with the messy, decentralized realities of the revolutionary movement and left him feeling cheated of the glory he believed he deserved.
May
1775
Ethan Allen Demands Surrender 'In the Name of Jehovah'Role: Green Mountain Boys Commander
# The Capture of Fort Ticonderoga: Ethan Allen and the Green Mountain Boys In the spring of 1775, the American colonies teetered on the edge of full-scale war with Great Britain. The battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19 had shattered any remaining illusion of peaceful reconciliation, and colonial militias across New England were mobilizing with urgent but uncertain purpose. Among the most pressing problems facing the nascent rebellion was a stark military reality: the loosely organized forces gathering around Boston had almost no artillery. Without cannon, the Continental Army could not hope to dislodge the British garrison occupying the city. The solution to this desperate shortage would come from an unlikely and dramatic raid carried out under cover of darkness at a remote fortress on the shores of Lake Champlain in northern New York. Fort Ticonderoga, originally built by the French as Fort Carillon during the French and Indian War, occupied a position of enormous strategic importance. Situated at the southern end of Lake Champlain, it controlled the vital corridor connecting the Hudson River Valley to Canada — a natural invasion route that both sides recognized as critical. By 1775, however, the fort had fallen into disrepair, garrisoned by only a small detachment of British soldiers who had little reason to expect an attack. The Revolution was barely three weeks old, and no formal declaration of war had been issued. The fort's commandant had no intelligence suggesting that armed colonists were converging on his position. The man leading that convergence was Ethan Allen, the bold and outspoken commander of the Green Mountain Boys, a militia originally formed to defend the land claims of settlers in the region that would later become Vermont. Allen was a commanding physical presence and a natural leader, known for his fiery rhetoric and willingness to act decisively — sometimes recklessly. When word reached him that colonial authorities in Connecticut were quietly planning an expedition to seize Ticonderoga's artillery, Allen saw an opportunity that matched his temperament perfectly. He gathered his Green Mountain Boys and prepared to strike. Before dawn on May 10, 1775, Allen led approximately eighty men across Lake Champlain and into the fort. The attack caught the British garrison completely off guard. According to the most famous version of the story, Allen confronted the fort's startled commandant and demanded his immediate surrender "in the name of the Great Jehovah and the Continental Congress." The exact phrasing of this demand has been debated by historians for centuries — Allen himself offered varying accounts of the moment at different points in his life — but the essential facts are beyond dispute. The British garrison, outnumbered and unprepared, offered no serious resistance. The fort, along with its substantial stores of military supplies, fell into American hands without significant bloodshed. The capture of Fort Ticonderoga was one of the first offensive military actions undertaken by American forces during the Revolution, and its consequences extended far beyond the immediate tactical victory. Within the fort's walls, the Americans discovered more than a hundred pieces of artillery — cannon, mortars, and howitzers that represented an almost unimaginable windfall for an army that possessed virtually none. Recognizing the transformative potential of this captured weaponry, General George Washington entrusted a young Continental Army officer named Henry Knox with the seemingly impossible task of transporting the heavy guns from Ticonderoga to the siege lines outside Boston. Over the brutal winter of 1775–1776, Knox orchestrated an extraordinary feat of logistics, hauling roughly sixty tons of artillery across three hundred miles of frozen wilderness by ox-drawn sleds. When those cannon were finally emplaced on Dorchester Heights overlooking Boston Harbor in early March 1776, the British position in the city became untenable. General William Howe, recognizing the danger, evacuated his forces on March 17, 1776 — handing the Americans one of the most decisive early victories of the war. The story of Ticonderoga thus illustrates how a single audacious act could ripple outward to reshape the course of an entire conflict. Ethan Allen's predawn raid secured not just a crumbling fort but the very tools that would liberate Boston, bolster American morale, and demonstrate to the world that the colonial rebellion was more than a disorganized uprising. Whether or not Allen spoke those legendary words exactly as tradition remembers them, the meaning behind them endures: a defiant claim of divine and political authority, issued at the very moment a new nation was daring to assert its right to exist.
May
1775
Capture of Fort TiconderogaRole: Green Mountain Boys Commander
# The Capture of Fort Ticonderoga In the weeks following the battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, the American colonies found themselves in open rebellion against the British Crown, yet they faced a dire shortage of the one thing every army needs to wage war: heavy weaponry. The colonial militias gathering around Boston had muskets and determination in abundance, but they possessed almost no artillery — no cannon to break a siege, no mortars to lob shells behind fortified walls. Meanwhile, sitting in the remote wilderness of upstate New York on the southwestern shore of Lake Champlain, Fort Ticonderoga held one of the largest stores of military ordnance in the northern colonies. Originally built by the French as Fort Carillon during the French and Indian War, Ticonderoga had long served as a strategic linchpin controlling the vital water corridor that connected Canada to the Hudson River Valley and, by extension, to the heart of the American colonies. By the spring of 1775, however, the once-formidable fortress had fallen into disrepair, garrisoned by a mere 48 British soldiers under Captain William Delaplace who had little reason to expect an attack. Two bold and ambitious men independently recognized the opportunity that Ticonderoga presented. Ethan Allen, the charismatic and fiery commander of the Green Mountain Boys — a militia originally formed to defend the land claims of settlers in the New Hampshire Grants, the territory that would eventually become Vermont — had already been planning a raid on the fort when he learned that Benedict Arnold had arrived in the region with a commission from the Massachusetts Committee of Safety authorizing him to raise troops and seize the same target. Arnold, a prosperous New Haven merchant and captain in the Connecticut militia, was a man of considerable military ambition and tactical intelligence, and he fully expected to take command of the expedition. The Green Mountain Boys, however, were fiercely independent and loyal to Allen. They flatly refused to serve under Arnold, creating a tense rivalry between the two leaders that was only partially resolved when Allen and Arnold agreed to march side by side at the head of the column. In the predawn hours of May 10, 1775, approximately 80 men — Green Mountain Boys and Connecticut volunteers — crossed Lake Champlain in commandeered boats and approached the fort's southern gate. They found it unguarded and in poor condition. The raiders swept into the fort so quickly and quietly that the sleeping garrison had no time to mount a defense. Not a single shot was fired. According to Allen's own account, he confronted the fort's second-in-command, Lieutenant Jocelyn Feltham, who appeared at his door half-dressed and bewildered, demanding to know by whose authority the Americans were acting. Allen reportedly thundered that they came "in the name of the Great Jehovah and the Continental Congress," though historians have debated the exact phrasing and whether Allen, known for his colorful and profane language, might have expressed himself in rather earthier terms. The capture of Fort Ticonderoga was the first successful American offensive action of the Revolutionary War, and its consequences rippled far beyond the wilderness of New York. The fort yielded an extraordinary haul of military supplies: more than 100 cannon, mortars, and howitzers, along with significant stores of gunpowder, musket balls, and other provisions. These weapons would sit in storage for months until the winter of 1775–1776, when Colonel Henry Knox undertook the remarkable feat of transporting roughly 60 tons of artillery overland by ox-drawn sleds across the frozen mountains of western Massachusetts to the Continental Army's positions outside Boston. Once those guns were placed on Dorchester Heights overlooking the city and its harbor in March 1776, the British position became untenable, and General William Howe evacuated his forces from Boston entirely — a pivotal early victory for the American cause made possible by the arms captured at Ticonderoga. Beyond the artillery, the fort's seizure gave the Americans control of the Lake Champlain corridor, denying the British their most natural invasion route from Canada into the colonies and providing the Americans with a staging ground for their own ill-fated invasion of Canada later that year. The capture also served as a powerful symbol of colonial resolve, demonstrating that the rebellion was not merely defensive but that Americans were willing to take the fight to British strongholds. For Ethan Allen, Ticonderoga cemented his status as a folk hero of the Revolution, while for Benedict Arnold, whose contributions were overshadowed and whose authority was disputed, the experience fed a growing sense of grievance that would, years later, contribute to his infamous decision to betray the American cause — making the dawn raid of May 10, 1775, a moment that shaped the trajectories of two of the Revolution's most fascinating and contrasting figures.