'Christopher Carleton' (1749 - 1787) was born in
Newcastle-upon-Tyne,
England into a military family. Christopher's parents died at sea when he was only four years old and his uncles
Guy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester the future
Governor General of Canada and
Commander-in-Chief, North America along with Sir
Thomas Carleton the 1st
Govenor of
New Brunswick saw to his education and upbringing. At the age of twelve, Chistopher joined the
British Army as an
Ensign in the
31st Regiment of Foot. Before his first tour of duty in
North America, Chistopher married Anne Howard, whose sister Maria was the wife of Guy Carleton. While in North America, Christopher Carleton met
Sir William Johnson and lived among the
Mohawk Indians, learning their language and partaking in their customs. He would remark in later life that the time spent living with the Mohawks was the happiest of his life. These skills would serve him well later. Christopher would be back in England when the
American Revolutionary War broke out in 1775.
In May of 1776, Capt. Chrisopher Carleton arrived at
Quebec City as part of a relief force for his uncle Guy Carleton, besieged in the city by the
Continental Army forces. During the campaign leading up to the
Battle of Valcour Island, Capt. Christopher Carleton served on his uncle's staff and in command of detachments of Indian allies. In 1777, Christopher purchased a
major's commission in the
29th Regiment of Foot, in which his uncle Sir Thomas Carleton was a
Lieutenant Colonel.
Raids
In the Fall of 1778, Maj. Chistopher Carleton lead a raid along the shores of
Lake Champlain burning the towns along Otter Creek in
Vermont and taking the local
militia men prisoner.
Carleton's Raid (1778) was very successful, destroying enough supplies for 12,000 men for a four month campaign. Maj. Carleton also showed that he was an expert in leading
Native American warriors along with British Regulars and
Loyalist troops, a feat that not many British officers could claim. His time spent with the Mohawks in his youth had paid off.
During the
Burning of the Valleys campaign of 1780, Maj. Carleton lead another raid down Lake Champlain into the upper
Hudson Valley capturing the forts at
Fort Ann and
Fort George with a mixed force of
British Regulars, Loyalist troops,
Hessians and Indians, including the 29th's unique
ranger company of
John Enys.
The years spent on the cold northern frontiers of North America took their toll on now Lt. Colonel Christopher Carlton's health and he died on
June 14,
1787.
Sources
★ ''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