6
Jul
1777
Burgoyne's Army Retakes Fort Ticonderoga
Ticonderoga, NY· day date
The Story
**The Fall of Fort Ticonderoga: A Strategic Retreat That Changed the Course of 1777**
Fort Ticonderoga had long held an almost mythical place in the American imagination by the summer of 1777. Situated on a narrow stretch of land between Lake Champlain and Lake George in upstate New York, the stone fortress controlled one of the most strategically important water routes in North America — the corridor connecting Canada to the Hudson River Valley. In May 1775, Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold had captured Ticonderoga from the British in a daring surprise attack, and the fort had since become a powerful symbol of American defiance and Continental military capability. So when British General John Burgoyne launched his ambitious campaign to drive south from Canada and split the rebellious colonies in two, Ticonderoga stood directly in his path, and Americans fully expected it to hold.
Burgoyne's plan was one of the most sweeping British strategic initiatives of the entire war. He intended to march a large force southward through the Lake Champlain corridor toward Albany, where he hoped to link up with other British forces and sever New England from the rest of the colonies. His army, numbering roughly 8,000 soldiers — a formidable mix of British regulars, German auxiliaries, Loyalists, and Native American allies — advanced steadily through late June and into early July 1777. By the first days of July, his forces arrived before Ticonderoga and began assessing the American defenses.
The American garrison, commanded by Major General Arthur St. Clair, numbered far fewer troops than were needed to adequately defend the sprawling fortifications. St. Clair had roughly 2,500 Continental soldiers and militia under his command, a force stretched thin across multiple defensive positions. Despite these shortcomings, American commanders had long considered Ticonderoga virtually impregnable due to its geography and fortifications. That confidence, however, rested on a critical assumption — that the steep, heavily wooded Mount Defiance, which rose approximately 750 feet to the southwest and overlooked both the fort and its water approaches, could not be utilized by an attacking force. No one had fortified its summit, believing it too rugged for artillery.
British Major General William Phillips, Burgoyne's chief of artillery and a seasoned veteran, saw matters differently. Phillips reportedly declared that where a goat could go, a man could go, and where a man could go, artillery could be dragged. Under his direction, British engineers and soldiers undertook the grueling task of hauling cannons up the steep, forested slopes of Mount Defiance. By July 5, British guns were positioned on the summit, commanding both the fort and the vital waterway below. In an instant, Ticonderoga's supposedly impregnable position became a death trap.
Faced with this devastating tactical reality, St. Clair made the painful but ultimately wise decision to evacuate rather than subject his outnumbered garrison to destruction. Under cover of darkness on the night of July 5–6, 1777, the American forces withdrew southward, abandoning the fort without a major engagement. The retreat was harrowing and not entirely clean — British forces pursued the withdrawing Americans, and a sharp rearguard action was fought days later at Hubbardton, Vermont, where American troops bought precious time for the main body to escape.
The fall of Ticonderoga sent shockwaves through the American public and the Continental Congress. Many citizens and politicians could not understand how such a storied fortress could be surrendered without a significant fight. Congress launched an inquiry, and St. Clair faced the prospect of a court-martial for his decision. He was eventually acquitted of wrongdoing, as military leaders recognized that his evacuation had preserved an army that would have otherwise been destroyed or captured.
In the broader arc of the 1777 campaign, St. Clair's decision proved to be strategically sound. The troops he saved lived to fight again and contributed to the growing American forces that would eventually confront Burgoyne's increasingly overextended army. Burgoyne's initial triumph at Ticonderoga bred overconfidence, and as his supply lines lengthened and resistance stiffened, his campaign faltered. By October 1777, Burgoyne's army was surrounded and forced to surrender at Saratoga — a pivotal American victory that convinced France to enter the war as an ally. The loss of Ticonderoga, so devastating in the moment, had paradoxically helped set the stage for one of the most consequential turning points of the entire Revolutionary War.
People Involved
Arthur St. Clair
Continental Army Major General
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.
Major General William Phillips
British Artillery Commander
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.