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Betrayals: Fort William Henry and the Massacre

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Book Overview

On the morning of August 9, 1757, British and colonial officers defending the besieged Fort William Henry surrendered to French forces, accepting the generous "parole of honor" offered by General... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A scholarly investigation

Despite the Liberal revisionist description of this book I found it to be an honest scholarly investigation into this event in history which has become one of the darker legends of colonial American history. Clearly not the work of some Amerindian apologist bent on denying or trivializing what happened, this book tries to provide the reader with an honest and unbiased source of what happened. Provides a good source of background on the war and the treatment of captives, including the French Colonial slave trade of American captives. The author makes a sincere effort to determine what actually happened. A good book for those interested in this period.

What is a Massacre ?

The title of this perceptive book tells the gist of Professor Steele's investigation into the seige and subsequent murder or kidnapping of prisoners after the British garrison surrendered to Montcalm in 1757. In essence, the English prisoners were betrayed by the French by letting their Indian allies seek scalps, prisoners and plunder after being given parole to march to a British force on the Hudson. On a larger scale, the French betrayed the Indians by not allowing them to take what Indians assumed were rightfully theirs as a part of 18th century warfare: prisoners to replace tribal members killed in combat, plunder of European materials, and scalps. Steele asserts that the losses suffered by the British garrison were smaller than previously claimed (including a number of men who were forced to travel home with Indians from the Great Lakes)and that the incident was not the bloodbath of popular legend. The men taken to the Lakes kept turning up for years afterward. Many of the scalps taken were from the corpses in the fort's cemetery-the Indians who took these scalps therefore brought smallpox back home with them and might have inadvertently destroyed whole tribes. Steele tries to count the men killed during the "massacre" and I think he is successful in his enumeration. He does not overlook the wounded who were murdered in their beds, the man boiled and eaten by his captors, and the soldiers knocked out of line and killed because they resisted being plundered. I agree that Montcalm was not complicit in directing the massacre, but set up the conditions that caused it to happen.The Massacre lives on in popular imagination, but so does the Boston Massacre, certainly one of the most non-massacres in American history.On a personal note, my 7th generation great-grandfather Bernardus Bratt commanded the New York troops at Fort William Henry in the summer of 1756 and came out as a company commander in Sir William Johnson's regiment after the 1757 massacre.Well-written and well-documented modern accounts of the French and Indian War are few and far between. Steele's book should remain the final word for some time to come.

History Done Right

Steele presents the reader with a masterful treatment of the events surrounding the "massacre" so familiar to viewers of the latest cinematic incarnation of Cooper's "The Last of the Mohicans." As a teacher, I can tell you it's a bit of a surprise for students to find out that Colonel Munro survived Magua's knife. Steele puts the events in historical and cultural context. A fine piece of work, one which should be of interest to a broader audience than the book will probably get.

Perfect For Projects

This book is great for projects if they are looking for a great fort to report on. It's detail is phenominal and I really liked the pictures and diagrams.

Well researched and thoroughly analyzed.

Those familiar with James Fenimore Cooper's "Last of the Mohicans" can now read the true tale of what exactly happened on August 9, 1757, when Fort William Henry, commanded by British Lt. Colonel George Monro, formally surrendered to a beseiging army of French regulars, colonial troops, and their Indian allies. The resulting "massacre" is discussed using sources and eyewitness accounts from both sides involved. By careful analyses of details, Steele is able to estimate how many were probably killed in this incident. Steele also views the massacre within the broader aspects of Indian-European relationships and attitudes toward war, captives, and honor. The book is complemented by an appendix of missing New England troops as well as a wealth of notes. Much new light is shed upon this controvercial and troubling incident of the French and Indian War. -James J. Mitchel
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