'Carleton's Raid' was a
British raid during the
American War of Independence.
Prelude
On
October 24,
1778, with snow already on the ground but before
Lake Champlain had frozen, a fleet of ships left
Isle aux Noix for the southern part of Lake Champlain. The ships were the
HMS ''Carleton'' and
HMS ''Maria'', both of which had fought at the
Battle of Valcour Island in
1776.
They were supported by 2 gun boats and many
batteaux. The
British Army forces were made up of
regulars from the
29th,
31st,
53rd Regiments of Foot and the
Royal Artillery supported by
Loyalists from the
King's Royal Regiment of New York,
Hessian Jägers and about 100 Indian allies for a total force of 454 men. The force was led by
Major Christopher Carleton of the 29th Regiment of Foot.
Attacks
The fleet moved down the lake to about
Crown Point on
November 6,
1778, where parties of raiders were let off to attack Reymond's Mill on Beaver Creek in
New York and
Middlebury and
New Haven on
Otter Creek in
Vermont. The fleet then moved to
Buttonmold Bay on
November 7, where more raiding parties were sent to attack military supplies and
Black powder, the town of
Monkton, Vermont, and to Moore's Mill near
Vergennes, Vermont, a meeting place for the
Green Mountain Boys. At Moore's Mill the raiding party ran into a group of local
militia, and there was a 20 minute
skirmish before the local militia retired. One British soldier was wounded during this fight while American casualties are unknown.
When the force returned to Isle aux Noix on
November 14, Major Carleton reported the raid had destroyed enough supplies for 12,000 men for a 4-month campaign. This included 1
saw mill, 1
grist mill, 47 houses, 48 barns, 28 stacks of
wheat and 75 stacks of
hay. Over 80 head of cattle were captured and brought back to
Canada. Also 39 prisoners were taken to
Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec and 40 to
Quebec City over land through northern Vermont by Indians. The only
Continental Army units in the area were
Whitcomb's Rangers at
Rutland, Vermont and
Seth Warner's
Green Mountain Boys at
Fort Edward. The raid had been expected by the American forces but the timing of the raid was so late in the year that almost all the forces had gone into winter quarters and were not in a position to stop the raid.
The British losses during the raid were 1 man killed by a falling tree, 1 bateaux lost with 17 men on the lake on the return voyage to Isle aux Noix and 1 wounded at the fight at Moore's Mill. This raid would be followed up in
1780 by multiple raids called the
Burning of the Valleys, with Major Carleton leading a force down Lake Champlain again while
Sir John Johnson lead a force in the
Mohawk and
Schoharie Valley, and Lieutenant Houghton leading a raid towards the
Connecticut River in the
Royalton Raid.
References
★ ''The American Journals of Lt. John Enys'', John Enys and Elizabeth Cometti (editor), Syracuse Unin. Press 1976
★ ''The Burning of the Valleys'', Gavin K. Watt, Dundurn Press 1997
★ ''Carleton's Raid'', Ida H. Washington and Paul A. Washington, Cherry Tree Books 1977