- Rogers' Rangers
Infobox Military Unit
unit_name=Rogers' Rangers
caption="Rogers' Rangers Toward Ticonderoga 1759"
Depicted by artist John Buxton
country=Great Britain
allegiance=British Crown
type=Special Operations Light Infantry
branch=Provincial Irregulars
dates=1755 –1763
specialization=Conducting unconventional or special Light Infantry operations
size=Nine companies
garrison=Fort William Henry (1755 –1757 )
Rogers Island (1757 –1763 )
colors=
march=
battles=French and Indian War Battle of Carillon Battle of Great Meadows Battle of Fort William Henry Battle on Snowshoes
Raid on Saint-FrançoisPontiac's Rebellion Devil's Hole Massacre
notable_commanders=Major Robert Rogers
Lieutenant John StarkRogers' Rangers was an independent company of rangers attached to the
British Army during theFrench and Indian War . The unit was informally trained by Major Robert Rogers as a rapidly deployablelight infantry force tasked withreconnaissance and conductingspecial operations against distant targets. Their military tactics were so bold and effective that the unit became the chief scouting unit of British Crown forces in the late 1750s. Later, several members of Rogers' Rangers became influential leaders in theAmerican Revolutionary War and a large number of ex-rangers were present as patriot militiamen at the Battle of Concord Bridge.History
Rogers' Rangers was a colonial
militia that fought for theKingdom of Great Britain during theFrench and Indian War . Commanded by Major Robert Rogers they operated primarily in the Lake George andLake Champlain regions ofNew York . The unit was formed during the severe winter of 1755 by provincial forces entrenched atFort William Henry . The Rangers frequently undertook winter raids against French towns and military emplacements, travelling on crude snowshoes and across frozen rivers.Never fully respected by the British regulars, Rogers' Rangers were one of the few non-Indian forces able to operate in the inhospitable region due to the harsh winter conditions and mountainous terrain.
On January 21, 1757, at the First Battle of the Snowshoes, Rogers' force of 74 rangers ambushed and captured seven Frenchmen near
Fort Carillon but then encountered about a hundred French and Canadian militia and Ottawa Indians from theOhio Country . After taking casualties, Rogers' force retreated. In their reports, the French noted that they were at a tactical disadvantage, being without snowshoes and 'floundering in snow up to their knees,'Louis Antoine de Bougainville, "Adventures in the Wilderness"; Edward P. Hamilton, ed. and trans. (Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1964)] and Rogers' Rangers were fortunate in being able to maintain positions on the high ground and behind large trees. According toFrancis Parkman Ranger casualties were 14 killed and 6 captured, with 48 returning unharmed and 6 returning wounded. The French-consisting of 89 Regulars and 90 Canadians and Indians-had 37 killed and wounded. [ [http://www.gutenberg.org/files/14517/14517-8.txt Francis Parkman] ] and possibly one additional casualty (One wounded and captured Ranger, who was later exchanged, claimed to have killed one of the captured Frenchmen after the Rangers were ambushed; it is unclear if this was the fate of the other captured ones as well.)After British forces surrendered Fort William Henry in August 1757, the Rangers were stationed on Rogers Island near
Fort Edward . This allowed the Rangers to train and operate with more freedom than the regular forces.On March 13, 1758, at the Second Battle of the Snowshoes, Rogers' Rangers ambushed a French-Indian column and, in turn, were ambushed by enemy forces. The Rangers lost 125 men in this encounter, as well as eight men wounded, with 52 surviving. One reference reports casualties of the Regulars, who had volunteered to accompany the Rangers, at 2 captured and 5 killed. Of Rogers' Rangers, 78 were captured and 47 killed and missing (of whom 19 were captured). [Mary Cochrane Rogers, Battle of the Snowshoes, [http://www.usgennet.org/usa/topic/colonial/rogers/snowshoes.html] ] Rogers estimated 100 killed and nearly 100 wounded of the French-Indian forces; however, the French listed casualties as total of ten Indians killed, seventeen wounded and three Canadians wounded. [ [http://www.dmna.state.ny.us/historic/articles/snowshoe2.htm New York State, The Battle on Snowshoes, March 1758] ]
Robert Rogers himself was originally reported by the French to have been killed in the second Snowshoe Battle, which in fact was not true. This report stemmed from the manner of Rogers’ escape during which he discarded some of his belongings, including his regimental coat, which contained his military commission. This episode also gave rise to the famous legend about Robert Rogers’ sliding 400 feet down the side of a mountain to the frozen surface of Lake George. While there is no proof of this event, the rockface he supposedly went down has become known as 'Rogers' Slide' or 'Rogers Rock.' [ [http://www.lakegeorgehistorical.org/rogers-slide.htm Lake George Historical Association - Roger's Slide] ]
On July 7-8, 1758 Rogers Rangers took part in
Battle of Carillon .On July 27, 1758 between Fort Edwards and Half-Way Brook 300 Indians and 200 French/Canadians under Captain St. Luc ambushed a convoy in which the English lost 116 killed {including 16 Rangers} and 60 captured. [ [http://www.gbl.indiana.edu/archives/miamis11/M53-58_59a.html Indiana archives] ]
On August 8, 1758 near
Crown Point, New York an English force of Rangers, light infantry and provincials was ambushed by a French-Canadian-Indian force of 450 under Captain Marin. In this action, MajorIsrael Putnam was captured.Francis Parkman reports that the English fatalities were 49 and that the enemy killed were "..more than a hundred..". Likewise Rogers claimed English losses were 33 and that the enemy had losses of 199. However another source [ [http://www.gbl.indiana.edu/archives/miamis11/M53-58_59a.html Indiana archives page 122] ] reports that the French casualites were 4 Indians and 6 Canadians killed and 4 Indians and 6 Canadians {including an officer and a cadet} wounded.During 1759, the Rangers were involved in one of their most famous operations: They were ordered to destroy the Indian settlement of Saint-Francis in
Quebec from which attacks on British settlements were frequently being launched. Rogers led a force of two-hundred rangers fromCrown Point ,New York , deep into French territory. Following theOctober 3 ,1759 attack and successful destruction of Saint-Francis, Rogers' force ran out of food during their retreat back through the rugged wilderness of northernVermont . Once the Rangers reached a safe location along theConnecticut River at the abandonedFort Wentworth , Rogers left them encamped, and returned a few days later with food, and relief forces fromFort at Number 4 nowCharlestown, New Hampshire the nearest English town. In the raid on Saint-Francis, Rogers claimed 200 enemies were killed, leaving 20 women and children to be taken prisoners, of whom he took 5 children prisoners; however, the French record that only 30 were killed including 20 women and children. [ [http://www.avcnet.org/ne-do-ba/rrr_2.html Roger's Raid according to the research of Gordon Day] ] . According toFrancis Parkman Ranger casualites in the attack were 1 killed and 6 wounded; however in the retreat, 5 were captured from one band of Rangers and nearly all in another party of about 20 Rangers were killed or captured. [ [http://www.gutenberg.org/files/14517/14517-8.txt Francis Parkman] ] One source alleges that of about 204 Rangers, allies and observers, only about 100 returned. [ [http://webpages.charter.net/leearbgm/long_trail_district/fall%20Camporee%202005.htm Spring Camporee 2005 – ] ]At the end of the war, the Rangers were given the task of taking command of Detroit from the French forces on behalf of the British crown. After the war most of the Rangers returned to civilian life. In 1763 a unit of the Rogers' Rangers who were formed into the
80th Regiment of Foot (disambiguation) (1758-1764) were ambushed at theDevil's Hole Massacre duringPontiac's Rebellion .At the outbreak of the American Revolution at Lexington and Concord, former Rangers were among the Minutemen firing at the British. After these events, Robert Rogers offered his help to the commander of the Colonial Army,
George Washington . Washington refused, fearing that Rogers was aspy because Rogers had just returned from a long stay in England. Rogers was infuriated by this and did indeed join the British--forming theQueen's Rangers (1776) and later theKing's Rangers .The
Queen's York Rangers (1st American Regiment) of the Canadian Army claim to be descended from James Rogers of Rogers' Rangers. Also claiming descent from Rogers' Rangers is the1st Battalion 119th Field Artillery of Michigan and theU.S. Army Rangers .In popular culture
The historical novel "Northwest Passage" (1937), by American author
Kenneth Roberts , gave greatverisimilitude to the events of Rogers' Rangers' raid on the Abenaki town of St. Francis. The first half of the novel was later adapted to film called "Northwest Passage" (1940).During the
Second World War , theU.S. Army was interested in the tactics of the British Commando units, which by then had a couple of years of experience, and wanted similar special operations forces of their own. Recalling this colonial unit, they took the name "Rangers" as the official title; these units consider Rogers their founding father and distribute copies of Rogers'Rangers Standing Orders to all aspiring Ranger students.A more recent book, "White Devil - A True Story of War, Savagery, and Vengeance in Colonial America," by Steven Brumwell (ISBN 0-306-81389-0, Da Capo Books, 2005), contains an historical analysis of the St. François raid and ensuing controversy.
In 2002, Mind Lab Films produced a Documentary about Robert Rogers and his Rangers entitled "The Battle On Snowshoes." The film is available through Heritage Books.
Rogers' Rangers were depicted in the
2005 video gameAge of Empires 3 , fromEnsemble Studios , in which they are a type of light infantry mercenary.Notable members
*Major Robert Rogers
*Captain James Rogers
*Captain Richard RogersFact|date=March 2008
*CaptainJohn Stark
*Jonathan Moulton
*Joseph Cilley
*Israel Putnam
*Moses Hazen
*William Stark Footnotes
ee also
*
Jeffery Amherst
*Sir William Johnson, 1st Baronet
*New Hampshire Provincial Regiment External links
* [http://www.militaryheritage.com/rangers.htm Notes on Gorham's and Roger's Rangers]
* [http://www.rogersisland.org/ Rogers Island Visitor Center Home Page]
* [http://members.lycos.co.uk/Regiment_de_la_Reine/de_la_reine.htm Regiment De la Reine website]
* [http://www.dmna.state.ny.us/historic/articles/snowshoe.htm Frigid Fury: The Battle on Snowshoes, March 1758]
* [http://ns1763.ca/remem/7yw-timeline-w.html Seven Years War timeline] including Rogers' Rangers activities
* [http://rogersrangers.org A Rogers' Rangers Reenacting unit]
* [http://www.mindlabfilms.com/bos.htm A Documentary about Robert Rogers and The Battle On Snowshoes]
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