|
L A K E G E O R G E F &
I T A C T I C A L

Captains
Log
Armed Boat HORNET
Lake George, 2001

Monday, 8 October
Having an obligation to my friend Pierre Marques, I set out along with François
Iafrate to meet him and the French camp on Lake George.
Loaded with military stores and provisions for two weeks, we set course sailing
south beating into a southwesterly wind for a group of
islands located in the narrows. The
wind blew erratically for the first hour, conjuring up two-foot seas topped with white
caps. It took us an hour to beat clear of
Hulett's, but once out in mid-channel we were able to tack well to windward and make all
speed toward our destination.
Just as the sun set behind the western
peaks we saw St. Sacrament Island. The wind
began to lessen, and when we were within two cables length of the islands northern
shore the breeze died altogether. Despite the
calm of evening, the heavy seas of the past two hours gave us nine inches of water in the
boat. To our credit everything was stowed
well and our gear remained dry and undamaged.
We piloted the HORNET through the shallows off St. Sacrament and
beached near the western shore of Mother Bunch Island, a stone's throw west of St.
Sacrament. François and I disembarked with
our firelocks and set about securing the island for that evenings camp.
Soon we were quietly hailed by and Indian who whistled the call of a
whippoorwill. Once he knew we saw him he
called out quietly to us Francais?, to which we replied Oui,
Francais. The red man led us quietly to
the other side of the island where another of his kind was waiting in a canoe. Through some rough French, English and sign
language, we ascertained that these Indians, known as the Abenaki, were camped for the
night on St. Sacrament. They did not invite
us to follow them, and we set about in what little light was left to setup camp. The temperature, although in the fifties all day,
was dropping quickly. We warmed ourselves in
front of a fire, reheated some cooked chicken and made coffee that we brought with us from
Pennsylvania before settling in for a cold night.
Tuesday, 9 October
We awoke at dawn and rekindled our fire. The
weather was clear and cold. After François and I tore down the camp, I consulted
our charts and was confident of our position in relation to the rest of the French forces
on the Lake. Our orders were to rendezvous
with the French on Phenita Island, which was less then half a mile to the south. Looking in that direction the islands seem to run
together as one. What a truly a beautiful place this is. A crescent moon hangs
high in a new blue sky, and the leaves on the hardwoods that punctuate the pine forests
are turning orange and red.
While we enjoyed some hot coffee and dried cereal we were hailed in French from across
the water by a man standing on St. Sacrament's southern point . He asked if he might share our fire with us and we
beckoned him to come over, all the while looking forward to some civility and
companionship of another white man.
The Frenchman, named David, arrive with an Indian woman who I believe
called herself Juta. They were both armed
with short-barreled fowling pieces that had the sturdy appearance of cut-down muskets. They said they had been on this part of the lake
for three days and were planning to venture further south that afternoon. The day before they had skirmished with a handful
of English scouts along the Lake's eastern shore, and their route home was taking them
south into the wind and into what we believed was English held territory. We had not seen anyone else on the Lake up to this
point, aside from the Abenaki and David, and our immediate task was to find the French
camp.
We set about loading our gear onto the
HORNET. In doing so, we found that the painter tied to boat's bow became entangled
with the keel the previous evening when we landed, requiring some pulling and manipulating
on our part to get it free. As we prepared to leave, we saw David and Juta
depart in their canoe and head south. Soon
after the Abenaki loaded up their canoes and silently paddled past us, also heading south. The Indians in the first canoe ignored us. As the second canoe came past I called out to the
Indian in the stern and asked Red Man
..Phenita? and pointed to the
south. He replied Oui, Phenita. I nodded, thanked him and turned to pass the news
on to François. These Indians were French
allies, and we were going to follow them to Phenita Island.
We left the dock and poled our way with oars through the shallow
water. Once past St. Sacrament and into the
eastern channel we were able to row again. A
breeze was freshening from the southwest, but not nearly as strong as the previous day. Keeping in close to the islands also kept us out
of the wind, and rowing the boat to Phenita was a relatively easy task.
As we approached Phenita, we heard a loud
Whoooooop emanate from somewhere on the island, telling us the Indians were
there. A second Whoooooop told us
that we should go there too. We piloted the
HORNET back into the shallows where we were instructed by a Frenchman on shore to navigate
to the cove facing Duran Island. This we did
and soon saw over half a dozen canoes tied up around a dock. As we tied off and secured our boat and we were
greeted by a group of French trappers. They
were rugged individuals, with a look about them that spoke of long stays in the
wilderness. An Indian came up to me and
without speaking offered François and me some rolled tobacco. We accepted graciously and shared some French
brandy in return. The brandy warmed many of
the men there that day, and we soon became a band of friends anxiously awaiting the
arrival of the French commander and his men. Of
particular interest to me was the arrival of Pierre Marques, a friend through
correspondence that I had known through correspondence these past six years, but
circumstance up until now had prohibited us from ever meeting face to face. This was to be our first meeting, and being that
he had provided our boat with its new canvas sails, we were indebted to him and sailed the
HORNET here at his request.
Pierre arrived an hour or so after us, as did several other canoes of
Indians and French militia. The French
commander appeared in a bateaux with a canoe in tow, and despite loud calls from the
Indians and the bangs of musket shots into the air, the commander continued south past
Phenita. This vexed many of us, as we were
awaiting orders and news of the English. A man
named Renard was anxious to begin a new campaign against the English, and to this there
was general consent and agreement among all the men. The Frenchmen and some
of the Indians held a council and decided to ready the canoes to follow the French
commander and see what he was about.
We took this opportunity to scout the Lake
to the south, and we set sail around the north side of Duran Island and into the main
channel, tacking back and forth past Floating Battery Island and on to Black Mountain
Point. We had passed the main body of the
French forces and saw them beach their canoes along the eastern shore at a place they
called Ranger Bay. Knowing this, we continued
south and made it as far as Hazel Island before turning to run with the wind. It took us two and a half hours of beating into
the wind just to get a mile or so down the lake, and with a ten-knot breeze and the jib
and main drawing exceedingly well, I ordered François to load the swivel with grape. We stood off from the shoreline by two boat
lengths and quietly made our way northward along with eastern shore. In fifteen minutes we were at the entrance to
Ranger Bay. Smoke floating up through the
pines marked the camp, and we found the bay to be a well-protected refuge from the Lake
winds. We were greeted by our friends from
earlier that day and then set about building shelter for the night. A hot meal was on our mind, and we took full
advantage of the marinating beef that my wife had preserved for us several days before.
We sat around a low burning fire and discussed our position. The peninsula on which we were camped was well
defended. Sixteen men, François and I
included, made up the forward French position. The
Abenaki had their own camp just north of us, and the French commander was north of the
Abenaki and farthest from the English. No
one had yet seen the commander since he arrived, and the fact that we were unaware of any
organized plan to attack the English began to weigh on our minds.
This was not an inactive group, and while François and I were
patrolling to the south Pierre and several other Frenchman and Indians skirmished with the
English. Some thought they knew where the
English camp was, and at dawn tomorrow had planned to find out once and for all.
We settled in for the night around ten that
evening. Guards were posted at the neck where
a stockade wall was built from laid logs, and the
fires were doused and lanterns covered. Several
men had gone to sleep when a loud explosion filled Ranger Bay. Two English canoes had quietly positioned
themselves around the point, one at the mouth to Ranger Bay and the other just off the
peninsulas western shore. The explosion
sounded like a blunderbuss or swivel gun, and it succeeded in taking us all by surprise. One of the English yelled out from the canoe
See you before morning, Francais, and several men yelled back and fired
blindly at the canoes as they slipped away into the darkness.
A short time later we heard the Abenaki camp being attacked to the
north, and following that the French commanders camp.
We knew that the canoes would likely make their way south upon returning, and there
was a chance that they would come past us if only to harass us one more time. Our expectations proved correct, and we saw the
dark silhouettes of the two canoes long before they reached us. This gave us time to prepare a warm reception for
them, and I sent François to fetch a couple of grenades from the arms chest. With a piece of slow match glowing softly in my
hand we waited for the canoes to come into range. As
the first canoe approached I lit a grenade and threw it.
Overhanging tree limbs brushed the grenade as it flew, showering a cascade of
orange sparks down onto the Lake. Someone
muttered Stupid Frenchman, throwing his grenade into the water. We couldnt see any sign of the fuse, and
Pierre and I had just remarked to each other about the fuse going out when it exploded. The flash lit up the Lake, and fragments of the
grenade launched skyward into the night sky. Immediately
both canoes picked up their pace and began to race south past our camp. I lit the other grenade and threw it side-armed
under the trees to land ten feet from the second canoe.
This one exploded with far better effect, and water rained down all around the
retreating English. Most in our camp doubted
that wed be visited again by the English before morning.
Wednesday, 10 October
We spent three hours that night on guard duty at both the neck and at the point. At first light we got a fire going and set about
making some eggs and heating dried sausage. After
eating we unloaded the remaining gear from the HORNET and set off to patrol south. The French commander had not yet sent us orders,
and having been paid a visit by the English the night before, we felt compelled to return
their hospitality.
Pierre set off on foot with several scouts and worked his way south
along the Lakes eastern shore. François
and I readied the HORNET and left Ranger Bay around eleven that morning, again beating
into a strong southwesterly wind. In less
than two hours we had beaten south past Red Rock and were near where we thought the
English were camped.
Rumour spoke of a large English gunboat in this region, and we were
determined to smoke it out. We landed on Fork
Island and after a quick but thorough search we secured it for the French. Then with the wind in our favor, we left Fork
Island and headed east into Red Rock Bay. Seeing
no canoes or bateaux, we tacked and headed downwind along the eastern shore. With the swivel gun loaded with grape, I ordered
the jib struck and for François to begin raking the trees along the shoreline as we
passed. With the main sheet let out, the
mainsail boom swung nearly perpendicular to the mast off the starboard beam. The wind was still strong and we moved quickly down the Lake.
The swivel belched fire and smoke, and the sound of the report and the shot ripping
through the trees echoed northward along the mountains.
After firing five rounds in this manner, we found ourselves rapidly approaching
Black Mountain Point. We were disappointed
that no one fired back and that no boats came out to pursue us. It took a mere fifteen minutes to get from Red
Rock Bay back to the French camp, and when we returned we were greeted with stories of
skirmishes that had taken place along the eastern shore that morning.
Pierre had succeeded in making it to the English camp, and he
confirmed that they had taken up a fortified position off of Hazel Island just north of
Red Rock. We were correct in our assumption
of their position, and felt confident that we shook them up with our cannonade.
Early in the afternoon a handful of English scouts made their way to
within fifty yards of our camp. They were
noisy and we heard them coming some way off. The
alarm was raised and we gathered at the stockade wall to repel the attack. François tossed two grenades into the trees
to push back the less cautious of their group, and the explosions at close quarters seemed
to have the desired effect. Several of the
rangers took shots at us from across the bay and from behind a row of fallen trees. One appeared about eighty feet away with his head
and backside clearly visible from behind a large pine.
I reprimed my Jaeger rifle and took careful aim, engaging the set trigger as I
sighted the front blade on him. The Jaeger
jumped into my shoulder and the ranger fell. Many
Kills, a Kahnawake Indian standing to my right, laughed and yelled into the woods We
have Jaeger, Englais. Two more English
were killed before they retreated, but not before one of them got a shot off at François. He had been coming back from the HORNET where he
went to get more cartridges for our guns when one of the English shot him. The ball grazed his left thigh, and he managed to
make it safely away where upon we cleaned and dressed the wound. He was sore for the next few days, but refused to
retire from the action.
That evening we mounted a waterborne attack to the south. We removed the sail rig from the HORNET and
readied her for a cutting out expedition. Pierre
led the way in his canoe, and François mustered four volunteers to row for us. Three of the men were young Indians, and the
fourth was a Frenchman named Blu. We promised
to pay them in rum for their hard work, to which they were all too happy to provide the
necessary labor.
When we set out from Ranger Bay at eight that evening, the water on
the Lake was calm like glass. As we reached
Black Mountain Point the wind picked up again out of the south, making our work more
difficult. We saw Pierre and Renard waiting
for us at a dock near the point and we steered to meet them. François, the three Indians and I left the boat
with Blu and met up with Pierre to go over the plan.
Nothing seemed to be moving near Hazel Island.
We expected to see something a lantern, fire, smoke, sentries. But we didnt see or hear a thing. The wind began to freshen even more, and our
chances of making it to their camp by water were diminishing with the weather. Pierre decided to cancel the attack, and he and
Renard scouted a bit further south before returning to meet us at camp.
A lone canoe was spotted by lookouts leaving Black Mountain Point
shortly after we returned. It headed west
across the Lake and was lost in the darkness. François
suspected that this canoe might turn north once it crossed the Lake and then descend upon
us from that direction. We heard several
shots fired from the French commanders camp, and despite heightened anticipation,
nothing came our way. We supped light and set about preparing for another night of
guard duty.
Around eleven that evening movement was observed outside the
stockade. The entire camp was awake and we
stood for the next two hours peering into the darkness.
Many Kills was on watch and he called out into the darkness We can hear you
Englais, but no one made a reply. Lance,
a mountain man from the western territories, was next to me on the wall. After another hour of hearing nothing I sat down
on the ground with my rifle beside me. Lance
sat down and we both discussed in whispered tones what the chances were of us being
stalked by a party of squirrels. By midnight
we were all tired and with no movement being seen or heard in the last hour, many of us
turned in. François and I took guard duty
from two-thirty until four-thirty and found it very hard to keep awake.
Thursday, 11 October
The Rangers attacked at first light. Many
Kills was back at the fortification when they fired their muskets and rushed the stockade. They threw themselves over the wall, taking part
of it down with them as they leapt. Blu was
nearly killed when an English musket went off inches from his face. Luck was with him and he made it through the wave
of attackers. François and I came out of our
tent with our guns loaded and watched as several English overran our camp. The chaos of surprise dissipated quickly and we
realized that the English had not reloaded their muskets.
They quickly regrouped and took off running from our camp with several of our
scouts in pursuit. A small skirmish ensued,
and the main body of the English moved south.
We regrouped and assessed the damage to our
camp. There were some wounded, but no one was killed
or taken and the boat and canoes were all accounted for. We knew that we had
to break camp and move, and it weighed on our minds the
fact that the English waited silently outside our camp for six hours before
attacking. It was a bold move, one that took skill and discipline to achieve.
Why they didn't reload their weapons perplexed me.
It was agreed that Pierre, Renard and the rest, now fifteen in all,
would set off on foot and counterattack the English camp at Hazel Island. François carried a haversack with the remaining
grenades, and in just over an hour we were split into three parties and quietly
approaching the English camp. As we came up
over a rise and crossed the fortifications we found the camp deserted. The fire pit was wet, and a message was scrawled
onto a rock with charred wood that said See Ya!
We stood there incredulous at the possibility that the English had left. We moved to Red Rock and searched for a second
camp but found none. They had run! Standing there where they had bedded down it all
began to make sense why there were no sentries or pickets along the path to Red Rock. No one challenged us the entire way southward. No boats came out to meet us on the Lake. The English were gone, and it was Thursday
morning.
We took our time walking back to camp.
Once there we shared the news with the rest of our garrison that the English had
left the Lake. We now controlled the
waterways from Fort William Henry in the south all the way north to Lake Champlain, but
the victory somehow seemed a disappointment.
Everyone was quiet as we broke camp.
François and I loaded our gear aboard the HORNET and under jib alone sailed
northward following a line of canoes. Renard, Blue
and some of the Indians decided to leave and headed north that day, leaving half
our original number to make camp that night. We
retired to Duran Island where I offered up a fine ham, fresh corn and the remaining French
brandy and rum to any who wished to share. We
feasted like the Frenchmen we were, and somewhere along the way we lost Lance. Later
that night François, Pierre and I sat on a rock on Durans northern shore and for
two hours watched the Aurora Borealis light up the northern sky with spires of red and
green.
Friday, 12 October
In the morning we found Lance. We breakfasted light, broke camp and began loading
our gear. The wind was blowing from the north for the first time that week, and we
knew that our journey home would take longer than we had planned. We said goodbye to Pierre, Many Kills, Lance,
Harry, Bow Hunter and Ryan and began the arduous task of beating northward through the
narrow eastern channel. We saw the canoes quickly
leave us behind as they kept close to shore and out of the wind. It took us an hour to clear the channel, and in
less than three hours we arrived at Hulett's where we docked the HORNET and prepared for
our journey home to Pennsylvania.
Captain Damian Siekonic
Armed Boat HORNET

H O M E
~ H I S T O R Y
~ A R T I L L E R Y
~ E N L IS T
~ CONTACT
|