- Mount Defiance
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Mount Defiance is an 853 ft (260 m) high hill on the New York side of Lake Champlain, in the northeastern United States. It is notable in that the hill militarily dominates both Fort Ticonderoga and Fort Independence, but it was deemed inaccessible so never fortified. Mount Defiance was previously known as Sugar Loaf. [1]
In the 1777 Siege of Fort Ticonderoga, the British army succeeded in positioning artillery on Mount Defiance, causing the Americans to withdraw from both forts without a fight.
Mount Defiance is located at 43°49′53″N 73°24′24″W / 43.83139°N 73.40667°WCoordinates: 43°49′53″N 73°24′24″W / 43.83139°N 73.40667°W, in the town of Ticonderoga in southeastern Essex County.
References
- ^ "Mount Defiance". America's Historic Lakes. http://www.historiclakes.org/Ticonderoga/Defiance.html. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
External links
- Fort Ticonderoga National Historic Landmark - Battlegrounds (includes Mount Defiance)
Categories:- United States military history stubs
- Essex County, New York geography stubs
- Mountains of New York
- Geography of Essex County, New York
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