The 'Green Mountain Boys' were historically, the militia of the
Vermont Republic. Today it is the informal name of the
Vermont National Guard which comprises the Vermont Army and Air National Guard.
Historical unit
The original ''Green Mountain Boys'' were a
paramilitary infantry organized in Southwestern
Vermont in the decade prior to the
American Revolutionary War. They comprised
settlers and land speculators who held
New Hampshire titles to lands between the
Connecticut River and
Lake Champlain, what is now modern Vermont.
New York was given control of the area by a decision of the
British crown and refused to respect the
New Hampshire Grants and town charters. Although a few towns with New York land titles, notably
Brattleboro on the Connecticut River, supported the government in
Albany, the vast majority of the settlers in the sparsely populated
frontier region rejected the authority of New York.
With several hundred members, the Green Mountain Boys effectively controlled the area where New Hampshire grants had been issued. They were led by
Ethan Allen, his brother
Ira Allen, and their cousins
Seth Warner and
Remember Baker. They were based at the
Catamount Tavern in
Bennington, ironically only a short distance from the New York seat of government in Albany. By the 1770s, the Green Mountain Boys had become an armed military force and
de facto government that prevented the Albany government from exercising its authority in the northeast portion of the
Province of New York. New York authorities had standing
warrants for the arrests of the leaders of the rebellious Vermonters, but were unable to exercise them. New York
surveyors and other officials attempting to exercise their authority were prevented from doing so and in some cases were severely beaten.
When the
American Revolutionary War started in 1775, Ethan Allen and a force of his
guerrillas, along with
Massachusetts Colonel Benedict Arnold, marched up to Lake Champlain and captured the important military posts at
Fort Ticonderoga,
Fort Crown Point,
Fort Ann, and the town of St. John (
Battle of Fort St. Jean) in
Québec. The Green Mountain Boys later formed the basis of the Vermont
militia which selected Seth Warner as its leader. Some of the Green Mountain Boys preferred to stick with Ethan Allen and were captured along with Allen in August 1775 in a bungled attack on the city of
Montreal. A member of this unit was
Congressman Matthew Lyon.
Vermont eventually declared itself an independent nation in January 1777, and organized a government based in
Windsor. The army of the
Vermont Republic was based upon the Green Mountain Boys. Although Vermont initially supported the
American Revolutionary War and sent troops to fight
John Burgoyne's British invasion from
Canada at
Hubbardton and
Bennington in 1777, Vermont eventually adopted a more neutral stance and became a haven for
deserters from both the British and colonial armies.
George Washington, who had more than sufficient difficulties with the British, brushed off Congressional demands that he subdue Vermont. The ''Vermont Army'' version of the Green Mountain Boys faded away after Vermont joined the
United States as the 14th
U.S. state in 1791. They returned for the
War of 1812, the
Civil War, and later more formally as the
Vermont National Guard.
Members
★
Ethan Allen – militia leader (general)
★
Seth Warner – militia leader (colonel)
★
Ira Allen – militia leader, and the founder of
The University of Vermont
★
Remember Baker – militia member (captain)
★
Ebenezer Allen – militia member (lieutenant)
★
Matthew Lyon – militia member (second lieutenant), and future congressman
★
Thomas Rowley – militia member and spokesman, known as the “Bard of the Green Mountains” who “Set the Hills on Fire”
See also
★
Battle of Ticonderoga (1775)
Vermont National Guard
Main articles: Vermont National Guard
Today, the Vermont National Guard, composed of the Vermont
Army National Guard and Vermont
Air National Guard are collectively known as the ''Green Mountain Boys'', this despite the inclusion of women in both branches since the mid-twentieth century. Both units use the original flag of the Vermont Republic as their banner.
References
★
The natural and political history of the State of Vermont, one of the United States of America, , Ira, Allen, Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1969,
★
The Reluctant Republic: Vermont 1724–1791, , Frederic Franklyn, Van de Water, The Countryman Press, 1974,
External links
★
Ethan Allen History: Green Mountain Boys