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HESSIAN

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The term 'Hessian' refers to the inhabitants of the German state of Hesse. In English, it most commonly refers to eighteenth century German regiments in service to the British Empire.

Contents
American Revolutionary War
Hessian captives
Conclusion of the war
Ireland, 1798
Hessians in pop culture
Hessians Units of the American Revolution
External links

American Revolutionary War


During the American Revolutionary War, Landgrave Frederick II of Hesse-Kassel (a principality in northern Hesse) and other German leaders hired out thousands of conscripted subjects as auxiliaries to Great Britain to fight against the American revolutionaries. About 30,000 of these mercenaries were hired, and they came to be called ''Hessians,'' because 16,992 of the total 30,067 men came from Hesse-Kassel. Some were direct subjects of King George III; he ruled them as the Elector of Hanover. Other soldiers were sent by Count William of Hesse-Hanau; Duke Charles I of Brunswick-Lüneburg; Prince Frederick of Waldeck; Margrave Karl Alexander of Ansbach-Bayreuth; and Prince Frederick Augustus of Anhalt-Zerbst.
The troops were not mercenaries in the modern sense of professionals who fought for money. As in most armies of the eighteenth century, the men were mainly conscripts, debtors, or the victims of impressment; some were also petty criminals. Pay was low; some soldiers apparently received nothing but their daily food. The officer corps usually consisted of career officers who had served in earlier European wars. The revenues realized from their service went back to the German royalty. Nevertheless, some Hessian units were respected for their discipline and excellent military skills.
Hessians comprised approximately one-quarter of the British forces in the Revolution. They included jäger, hussars, three artillery companies, and four battalions of grenadiers. Most of the infantry were chasseurs (sharpshooters), musketeers, and fusiliers. They were armed mainly with smoothbore muskets, while the Hessian artillery used 3-pounder cannon. Initially, the average regiment was made up of 500–600 men. Later in the war, the regiments had only 300–400 men.
About 18,000 Hessian troops arrived in the Thirteen Colonies in 1776, with more coming in later. They first landed at Staten Island on August 15 1776, and their first engagement was in the Battle of Long Island. The Hessians fought in almost every battle, although after 1777 they were mainly used as garrison troops. An assortment of Hessians fought in the battles and campaigns in the southern states during 1778–80 (including Guilford Courthouse), and two regiments fought at the Siege of Yorktown in 1781.
Hessian captives

One of the most famous incidents involving these mercenaries was the Battle of Trenton, where about 900 Hessians were captured out of a force of 1,400. General George Washington's Continental Army crossed the Delaware River on Christmas night, 1776, to carry out a highly successful surprise attack.
In addition to firepower, American rebels used propaganda against Hessians. They enticed Hessians to desert to join the large German-American population. In August 1793, one letter promised 50 acres (0.2 km²) of land to every deserter. Benjamin Franklin wrote an article which claimed a Hessian commander wanted more of his soldiers dead so that he could be better compensated.
Another notable event concerning captured Hessians occurred when British General John Burgoyne surrendered to American General Horatio Gates during the Saratoga campaign. This involved the surrender of around 5,800 troops negotiated in the Convention of Saratoga, and Burgoyne's remnant army became known as the Convention Army. Hessian soldiers comprised a high percentage of the Convention Army. Ultimately, the prisoners were marched to Charlottesville, Virginia and imprisoned in the Albemarle Barracks until 1781. From there they were sent to Lancaster, Pennsylvania until 1783.
Conclusion of the war

17,313 Hessians returned to their homelands after the war ended in 1783. Of the 12,526 who did not return, about 7,700 had died: some 1,200 were killed in action and 6,354 died from illness or accidents. Approximately 5,000 Hessians settled in North America, both in the United States and Canada, some because their commanders refused to take them back to Germany because they were criminals or physically unfit. Most of them married and settled amongst the population of the newly-formed United States. Many of them became farmers or craftsmen. The number of their direct descendants living in the U.S. and Canada today is still debated.
In 1786, the British Government paid the Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel a total of £471,000 in compensation for the loss of Hessian troops.

Ireland, 1798


Hessian mercenaries were rushed to Ireland in 1798 to assist in the suppression of the rebellion inspired by a revolutionary organization, the United Irishmen. They landed in the port of Cork. They were heavily involved in the battles of Vinegar Hill and Foulksmills but are more notorious in Ireland for their atrocities and brutality toward the population of Wexford in 1798.

Hessians in pop culture


In 1819, Washington Irving's book ''The Sketch Book'' was published which included several stories and essays written by Irving. One of these tales was ''The Legend of Sleepy Hollow'' which contained a figure now known as the "headless horseman". This figure was described by Irving as "the ghost of a Hessian trooper, whose head had been carried away by a cannonball, in some nameless battle during the Revolutionary War." The figure was also referred to as "the galloping Hessian" at the tale's resolution. In the 1999 Tim Burton film ''Sleepy Hollow'', the headless horseman is a phantom Hessian soldier portrayed by actor Christopher Walken. The horseman is a mechanical, menacing character, but is ultimately an anti-hero redeemed.
In 1909, D. W. Griffith co-wrote and directed the film ''The Hessian Renegades'', a short film about the early stages of the American Revolution. The Hessians featured in the film are a band of brutish mercenaries pursuing an American soldier, who is on a mission to deliver an urgent message to George Washington.
In the 1950 animated short ''Bunker Hill Bunny'', Bugs Bunny faces off against Sam Von Schmamm the Hessian (played by Yosemite Sam). After Bugs' inevitable victory, the defeated Sam utters the line "I'm a Hessian without no aggression."
In the computer game '', the player plays American revolutionaries, frequently fighting against Hessians.
The term Hessian can also be used to refer to adherents of the heavy metal subculture, or listeners of heavy metal music.

Hessians Units of the American Revolution


Anhalt-Zerbst

Rauschenplatt's Princess of Anhalt's Regiment

Nuppenau's Jäger Company
Anspach-Bayreuth

1st Regiment Anspach-Bayreuth (later Regiment von Volt; 1st Anspach Battalion)

2nd Regiment Anspach-Bayreuth (later Regiment Seybothen; 2nd Anspach Battalion)

Anspach Jäger
Brunswick

Dragoon Regiment Prinz Lüdwig Ernst

Grenadier Battalion Breymann

Light Infantry Battalion von Barner

Musketeer Regiment Riedesel

Musketeer Regiment Specht

Regiment Prinz Friedrich

Regiment von Rhetz

Combined Regiment von Ehrenkrook

Combined Regiment von Barner
Hesse-Kassel

Chasseurs

Combined Regiment von Loos

Fusilier Regiment von Ditfurth

Fusilier Regiment Erbprinz (later Musketeer Regiment Prinz Frederick (1783))

Fusilier Regiment von Knyphausen

Fusilier Regiment von Lossburg

Grenadier Regiment von Rall (later von Wolhwarth (1777); von Trümbach (1779); von d'Angelelli (1781))


1st Battalion Grenadiers von Linsingen


2nd Battalion Grenadiers von Block (later von Lengerke)


3rd Battalion Grenadiers von Minnigerode (later von Lowenstein)


4th Battalion Grenadiers von Koehler (later von Graff; von Platte)

Garrison Regiment von Bünau

Garrison Regiment von Huyn (later von Benning)

Garrison Regiment von Stein (later von Seitz; von Porbeck)

Garrison Regiment von Wissenbach (later von Knoblauch)

Jäger Corps

Lieb Infantry Regiment (later Musketeer Regiment Erbprinz)

Musketeer Regiment von Donop

Musketeer Regiment von Trümbach (later Von Bose (1779))

Musketeer Regiment von Mirbach (later Jung von Lossburg (1780))

Musketeer Regiment Prinz Carl

Musketeer Regiment von Wutgenau (later Landgraf (1777); Lieb Infantry Regiment(1783))
Hesse-Hanau

Pausch's Artillery Company

von Creuzbourg's Jager Corps

Janecke's Frei Corps

Hesse Hanau Infantry Regiment Erbprinz
Waldeck

3rd Waldeck Regiment

External links



American Revolution.org

Johannes Schwalm Historical Association website

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