In a world darkened by
ethnic conflicts that tear nations apart, Canada stands as a model of
how people of different cultures can live and work together in peace,
prosperity, and mutual respect.
U.S. President Bill Clinton
Travel through the eras of
history and the development of the various nations that
make up Canada today.
The English
continued to act slowly. Nothing was
done on the 16th, and on the 17th bad weather prevented a landing.Finally, on the 18th, the militia were put
ashore on La Canardiere without meeting any immediate resistance.Major
Walley, who commanded the landing
force, says that it numbered between 1200 and 1300 men.
Count
Frontenac had a definite plan, which he outlines in his dispatch to the
Minister of Marine.Although he had
three French regular battalions he did not propose to send them into the broken
country beyond the St. Charles.This
area, he says, was impracticable for large bodies of troops, because of the
woods, the rocks and the mud (of the foreshore) . . . and suitable only for
little platoons skirmishing in the Indian way, which our soldiers are not
capable of doing." Frontenac was obviously no Braddock.But he had other troops well fitted for
guerrilla work- our Canadian officers and other
volunteers,
and the people of the country, along with those French officers and soldiers
who had already become used to this sort of thing." Among the
"Canadian officers" present were at least two of the eleven famous
LeMoyne brothers, native Canadians who deserve a high place on the roster of
Canadian fighting men.One of them,
Jacques, Sieur de Sainte-the seigneur of St. Helen's Island-was to be the
great hero of the defence.Frontenac
planned to use his local irregulars to harass the New England landing
party.His main battle, however, he
intended to fight on the open ground on the Quebec side of the St. Charles,
which was more suitable for European tactics.The river could be forded only at low water, and Frontenac hoped that
the New Englanders would come at him across it.Then, with the stream rising behind them, he planned to attack
them with his brigade of regulars, drive them downhill into the St. Charles and
destroy them completely.It was a sound
plan, designed to make the best use of the forces at Frontenac's disposal; but
as it turned out the invaders never made enough progress to give him the chance
to put it fully into operation.
When
Walley's men landed Frontenac sent out the militia of Montreal and Three
Rivers, under Ste-H616ne, to help the Beauport men and the local Indians harry
them.As soon as the English began to
move inland they came under fire from among the trees and bushes, and although
they advanced some distance they lost fairly heavily (according to Walley, four
killed and not less than 60 wounded) and soon camped for the night.They expected the ships' boats to come in
with the tide before dawn to help them cross the St. Charles, but they were
disappointed, the shipmasters blaming the wind for the failure.But the six cannon, which the plan required
should be put ashore west of the St. Charles, were prematurely landed, without
Walley being warned, close to his camp.He had no means of getting them across the river.
Phips'
whole scheme was falling apart.There
is no evidence that the proposed feint above the town was ever made; and on the
evening of the 18th Phips himself took action quite contrary to the plan.The four large ships, not waiting for
Walley's men to cross the St. Charles, moved up the river, anchored before
Quebec and opened fire.The batteries
replied, and firing went on until after dark.Early the next morning the cannonade was resumed.The ships went in close ("within
musquett shott," says Phips) and the six big guns in the Lower Town bore
the brunt of the action.Ste. Helene
had come back to the city and was laying the guns in one of the batteries.The English were forced to break off the
action on the 19th after several hours' firing, when their ships, and
particularly Phips' flagship, the Six Friends, had been seriously damaged.They had shot away most of their scanty
supply of ammunition without doing much harm to the solid stone buildings of
Quebec or inflicting any casualties worth mentioning.
In the
meantime, the New England landing force had remained inactive and made no
attempt to exploit such diversion as the bombardment provided.The men suffered greatly from cold (winter
was coming on early) and lack of essential supplies (the shortage of rum seems
to have been the main complaint); and there was smallpox in the camp.The fleet's boats still did not come; and on
the night of the 19th a council of war decided to recommend that the force
re-embark on the night of the 20th, with a view to making another attack
elsewhere after the troops were refreshed.On the morning of the 20th Walley went aboard the flagship and Phips
reluctantly agreed to the suggestion.
On this
day there was another skirmish.According to Monseignat, the author of one of the best French accounts,
in the afternoon the English vanguard was seen marching along the bank of the
St. Charles as though intending to cross.Frontenac now moved his regular battalions out to his chosen ground,
formed them in order of battle and placed himself at their head.But the battle for which he had set the
stage never took place.No Englishman
crossed the St. Charles.The incredibly
active SteH61&ne was now back on the Beauport side, leading and inspiring
the Canadian skirmishers who were engaged with the head of the English
column.This was his last fight, for in
it he received a mortal wound from a musket ball.His brother Longueuil was wounded in the same affair, in which
the French lost two other men killed.
The
English boats came in shortly before dawn, but there was so little darkness
left and his men were in such confusion that Walley thought it best to put off
the evacuation until the next night.There was further minor fighting on the 21st, with Walley sending out
parties of skirmishers to hold the French back.That night the boats appeared again, and the English force was
evacuated without interference from the French, whose outposts did not even
discover what was going on.Perhaps
they would have done better if Ste-H61&ne had still been on his feet.The English, as the result of some
misunderstanding, left five of their six guns behind them.Lloyd quaintly says that they hoped to
recover them next day, "but by that time they spoake ffrench."
Frontenac
had probably failed to fathom the enemy's intention to make an immediate
evacuation.He had missed an
opportunity for offensive action, which might have wiped out the landing force.It seems likely that in any case he
continued to feel that his European troops were unfitted to an offensive
movement in broken country, and feared that any attempt to use them in this
manner might produce a disaster.He
preferred to sit tight.
The
English attempted nothing more.A
council of war on the 22nd did not finally decide to abandon the attack,
although many of the officers argued that their men were unfit for action,
sickness being rampant.But on the 23rd
and 24th an exchange of prisoners was arranged and effected, and the New
England fleet then dropped down the river on its way back to Boston.Some of the ships never reached home, and
many men who had survived the fighting died on the voyage.The failure of the expedition was a painful
blow to Massachusetts, who had spent a great deal of money on fitting it out
and was now obliged for the first time in her history to resort to an issue of
paper currency.While Boston mourned,
Quebec rejoiced.But the English
retreat had come none too soon, for New France was short of food, and with
almost all the able-bodied men in the country assembled at Quebec there would
soon have been no way of feeding them.
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