Sunday, June 11, 2023

The Peculiar Case of Dr. Blank, Part Three ©

 

 


 

Author’s note – for more on Dr. Blank’s adventure, read “A Ranger’s Story, 1756 ©”, HERE, “The Peculiar Case of Dr. Blank, Part One©”, HERE, and The Peculiar Case of Dr. Blank, Part Two ©, HERE.

 

Circumstantial evidence, inconsistencies, and things that ring true...

 

Ordinarily, in the absence of direct evidence, it would be “case closed”, and we would have concluded that Dr. Blank’s tale was nothing but a tall tale.  However, there are so many details in his narrative that look plausible, sound true, and illustrate a firsthand knowledge of how Roger’s Rangers and other scouts operated during the French and Indian War, that it makes me wonder if, even in the absence of any direct evidence, whether there is some truth to his tale.  Was there any circumstantial evidence, evidence which proves one or more facts from which you can deduce another fact, to support his story?  Was Dr. Blank’s peculiar tale of adventure as a member of Rogers’ Rangers a true tale, or was it simply a tall tale?  Perhaps by looking at some of the details in his story, and proving them true, we can find some indirect evidence to support his story. 

 

 

 


“...at Lake George, on the memorable eighth of September...

 

The doctor fought ... at Lake George, on the memorable eighth
of September
...
saw, or imagined he saw, the fall of his brave leader [Colonel Ephraim Williams--Author’s note]; and is quite sure that he put a bullet into the French officer, Mons. St. Pierre.

 

Dr. Blank, who we have identified as Dr. John Manning, mentioned that he observed both the deaths of Colonel Ephraim Williams and
Monsieur Jacques Legardeur de Sainte-Pierre at the Battle of Lake George,
but who were they and can their deaths help us solve this mystery? 

 

By late August of 1755, the army commanded by William Johnson of New York, and made up of 3,000 Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire  and New York Provincials, and with 300 allied, mostly Mohawk, Native Americans, reached the south end of “Lac du Saint-Sacrement” as it was then known to the French.  Once there he renamed the lake, “Lake George”, and began to clear the ground to build a fort. 

 

Meanwhile Monsieur Jean-Armand, the Baron de Dieskau, the commander of “Fort Saint-Frédéric”, and the senior military commander of New France, was leading a column south from Fort Saint-Frédéric, which was known to the English as “Crown Point”.  This force included 200 French regulars, 600 Canadian militia, and 700 Caughnawaga Mohawk, and Abenaki, Native American allies.  On September 7th, unknown to the English, Dieskau’s column cut the road between Johnson’s camp at Lake George and “Fort Lyman”, which was later renamed “Fort Edward1, to the south.  

 


On September 8th, a force of a thousand men from the Third Massachusetts Regiment and Second Connecticut Regiment of Provincials, with about 150 Mohawk allies, reconnoitered in force south from their camp on the shores of Lake George, to reinforce Colonel Joseph Blanchard at Fort Lyman/Fort Edward.  “In about an Hour

an Half”2, they marched into an ambush, just over 2-½ miles (4 km) from their camp; an ambush that the provincials called the “Bloody Morning Scout”.  Colonel Ephraim Williams was shot in the head and killed, as he charged the western embankment trying to rally his men and lead them out of the ambush, by charging the flank.  After his death, most of the Third Massachusetts fled north toward Johnson's camp, while Lt. Colonel Nathan Whiting, commanding the Second Connecticut, and Lt. Col. Seth Pomeroy, of the Third Massachusetts, rallied about 100 of the survivors and most of the surviving Mohawks, and with the Second Connecticut provincials conducted a successful fighting retreat.  As Lt. Col. Pomeroy wrote in his journal, ...this Morning Sent out about 1200 men near 200 of them our Indians went Down ye Rhode toward ye Carrying pla [ce ] got about 3 miles they ware ambush'd & Fir'd upon By Franch and Indians a number of ours yt war Forward Return'd ye Fre & fought bravely but many of our men toward hind Part Fled ye others being over match't ware oblig'd to fight upon a Retreet & a very hansom retreet they made by Continuing there fire & then retreeting a little & then rise and give them a brisk Fire So Continued till they Came within about 3/4 of a mile of our Camp there was ye Last Fire our men gave our Enenies which kill'd grate numbers of them Sean to Drop as Pigons...

 

It was during this Last Fire, of the rearguard fight, that Monsieur Jacques Legardeur de Sainte-Pierre was killed.

 


Monsieur Jacques Legardeur de Sainte-Pierre was an officer in the
Troupes de la Marine” and was born in Montreal on October 24, 1701.  He commanded the Canadian Milice and the French allied Native Americans at the “Bloody Morning Scout” ambush.  He was well respected and had great influence with the Native Americans and his death was a great blow to the French forces. 

 

The conclusion of “The Battle of Lake George” brought an end to the English expedition against Crown Point, and the surviving soldiers began building “Fort William Henry” at the southernmost point of Lake George, to defend the northern end of the “Great Carrying Place” road2. 

 

Dr Blank claimed to have seen the death of Colonel Ephraim
Williams,
during the first moments of the ambush of The Bloody Morning Scout, and if so, then he would have to have been part of the Third Massachusetts Regiment of Provincials. 

 

If he also saw the death of Mons. St. Pierre, then he would have had to have fought in the rearguard action, with the survivors of the Third Massachusetts and the men of the Second Connecticut, since Monsieur Jacques Legardeur de Sainte-Pierre was reported to have been killed at “...ye Last Fire our men gave our Enenies..., which took place only about ¾ of a mile (1.2 km) south of Johnson’s camp on Lake George. 

 

If Dr. Blank was Doctor John Manning, and if he did see both Col. Williams and Mons. St. Pierre both fall during The Bloody Morning Scout, why couldn’t we find him in the muster rolls of Third Massachusetts Regiment of Provincials, or even in the rolls of the Second Connecticut Regiment of Provincials?

 

Was it because he wasn’t there?  Is it possible he had only read about the battle in a newspaper? 

 

Because, soon after The Battle of Lake George, newspapers and pamphlets reported the details of the battle, such as the deaths of Col. Williams and Mons. St. Pierre, however, each reported different details, in a different way.

 


General William Johnson wrote a letter to the Governors of the Several Colonies, on September 9th, 1755, from his camp at Lake George, reporting the details of The Battle of Lake George.  This letter reported briefly on both the deaths of Col. Williams and Mons. St. Pierre, by noting “In this Engagement we suffer’d our greatest Loss; Col. Williams” and that we have killed a great number of the enemy; amongst whom is Mons. St. Pierre, who commanded all the Indians”.3  This letter in turn was reprinted in newspapers, both in the American Colonies and in Great Britain.4

 

Interestingly, General Johnson’s account of the battle did not say
when Colonel Williams died, only that he died.  Nor did his account describe when Mons. St. Pierre was slain, only that he did not survive the day.

 


The New-York Mercury, on September 22nd, 1755, featured a different account of The Battle Lake George, one that didn’t mention Mons. St. Pierre death at all, and only briefly mentioned that Col. Williams was killed in the battle.5

 

And to confuse matters even more, an account of The Battle of Lake George was offered for sale in Boston, in December 1755, by
Samuel Blodget, a civilian sutler, a merchant who sold wine, rum, tobacco and other goods to the off-duty soldiers and officers at frontier military camps.  Blodget, who noted in his account that he
“was my self present in the Camp...I took my Post at the Eminence where the Field-Piece was planted, from whence I could, with Advantage, view the Action, in all it’s Parts, from the Beginning to the End of it”.  He continued with, “I have not therefore contented my self with my own Observations, but made it my Business to converse with those, at the Camp, who were most capable of enabling me to give a fair and full Account of the Transactions of this memorable Day...As to the Fight of the Detachment of which Col. Williams had the chief Command, I am beholden to others...and I received it immediately from their Mouths”.  And just like General Johnson, Samuel Blodget wrote of the death of “St. Pierre, the chief Commander of the Indians”; but interestingly he didn’t even mention the death of Col. Williams at all!6

 

So, it appears that in the days following the battle, Monsieur Jacques
Legardeur de Sainte-Pierre’s death was widely spoken of in the camp at Lake George, and that both General Johnson, Samuel Blodgett, and the rest of the army, would have known of it.  And, they would have also known of the circumstances of Colonel Ephraim Williams’ death, during the initial moments of the ambush of The Bloody Morning Scout. 

 

But the newspapers and the pamphlets which were published  immediately after the battle, and which each had a different account from that of Dr. Blank’s in one detail or the other.  Dr. Blank remembered that he ...fought ... at Lake George, on the memorable eighth of September... saw, or imagined he saw, the fall of his brave leader”, Colonel Ephraim Williams, and that he was ...quite sure that he put a bullet into the French officer, Mons. St. Pierre. 

 

This is certainly an interesting bit of circumstantial evidence, but that is all it is, and it cannot be considered conclusive.  So once again, we are left without any conclusive evidence to prove if Dr. Blank’s tale is true, or a just tall tale foisted upon “New Contributor”; all we have is another big maybe!  In future installments of “The Peculiar Case of Dr. Blank”, we will discuss some other bits of circumstantial evidence, inconsistencies, and other things that ring true.

 

Don’t forget to come back next week and read “How to Survive a Wildfire ©”, where we will talk about what to do if you are caught in a wildfire!

 


I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me on YouTube at BandanaMan Productions for other related videos, HERE.  Don’t forget to follow me on both The Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE, and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube.  If you have questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site.  I announce new articles on Facebook at Eric Reynolds, on Instagram at bandanamanaproductions, and on VK at Eric Reynolds, so watch for me.

 

That is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!

 

 

Notes

 

1 On September 21, 1755, Sir William Johnson changed the name of Fort Lyman, to Fort Edward in honor of Edward, Duke of York and Albany, grandson of George II and brother of George III.

 

2 From The London Gazette Extraordinary, Whitehall, October 10; The Whitehall Evening Post, or London Intelligencer, Thursday October 30 to Saturday November 1, 1755.  No. 1511,

 

3 This road was the 15-mile “Great Carrying Place” portage route, known to the Native Americans as “Wahcoloosencoochaleva”, that bypassed the falls and rapids of the Hudson River, and took travelers to the southern end of Lake George or if they took the eastern branch of the trail, Lake Champlain.

 

4 From The Papers of Sir William Johnson, Volume II, by James Sullivan, Ph. D., page 25

 


5 Later the The Gentleman’s Magazine: for November 1755, reprinted the earlier account, which had originally been printed in the New-York Mercury on September 22nd, 1755.

 

6 “A Prospective-Plan of the Battle Near Lake George”, by Massachusetts Society of Colonial Wars,

 

 

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