Ethan Allen
Ethan Allen (January 10, 1738 – February 12, 1789) was an early American revolutionary and guerrilla leader during the era of the Vermont Republic and the New Hampshire Grants. He fought against the settlement of Vermont by the Province of New York.
Related Topics:
January 10 - 1738 - February 12 - 1789 - Guerrilla - Vermont Republic - New Hampshire Grants - Vermont - Province of New York
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Allen was born in Litchfield, Connecticut, the first child of Joseph and Mary Baker Allen. Ethan was the oldest of the eight children. He was the only one to be born in Litchfield, since the family moved to Cornwall shortly after his birth. His brother Ira figured prominently in the early history of Vermont. Joseph Allen was the leader of a rebellious group of land owners and speculators who held New Hampshire title to land grants in the New Hampshire Grants. New York, which held substantial claim to the grants, refused to honor the New Hampshire titles and sold competing titles to different people, who generally did not live in Vermont. This led to open rebellion among the population in much of Vermont. In April of 1755, Joseph Allen died, leaving Ethan to take care of the family farm.
Related Topics:
Litchfield - Connecticut - Ira
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Allen was well over six feet tall in a time when most men were a foot shorter. He was outspoken and apparently quite articulate. As a young man, he served in the colonial militia in the French and Indian war. He was married and had five children. In the early 1770s he emerged as the military leader of Anti-New York dissidents in the New Hampshire Grants known as the Green Mountain Boys. He was apparently reasonably effective in that role. A warrant was issued for his arrest by the government of New York, for the substantial reward of 100 pounds.
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In the spring of 1775, Allen and Benedict Arnold led a raid against Fort Ticonderoga. The relative roles of Allen and Arnold are not entirely clear. Neither is it clear to what extent the campaign was formulated by the strongly anti-British faction in Connecticut; to what extent it was the idea of the Green Mountain Boys headquartered at the Catamount Tavern in Bennington; and how much of the enthusiasm was fueled by alcohol rather than by patriotism. What is clear is that the rebels moved north, managed to get a few dozen men across Lake Champlain (they had considerable trouble finding a boat and the one they found was quite small). In a dawn attack, Ticonderoga was taken from the 22 British troops that held it and who were not aware that a war was in progress. Allen/Arnold's rebels also quickly captured forts at Crown Point, Fort Ann on Isle La Motte near the present Canadian border, and (temporarily) the town of St John (now St Jean) Quebec. The comic opera aspects of this campaign notwithstanding, the huge stores of cannon and powder seized at Ticonderoga allowed the American rebels to put in place an effective siege of Boston which caused the British to evacuate in October of 1775.
Related Topics:
Benedict Arnold - Fort Ticonderoga - Green Mountain Boys - Bennington - Lake Champlain - Crown Point - Isle La Motte
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The Green Mountain Boys elected Allen's cousin Seth Warner as leader; however, Allen commanded a small military force in the American rebel's campaign in Quebec in 1775. As a result of miscommunication or misjudgment he attacked Montreal with a handful of men and was captured by the British. He was shipped to England where he suffered considerable mistreatment. He was later transferred to New York where he was eventually paroled in a prisoner exchange.
Related Topics:
Green Mountain Boys - Seth Warner
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Allen then moved back to Vermont which had become a hotbed of anti-everyone sentiment harboring little affection for either England or for the nascent United States and harboring a significant number of deserters from the armies of both. Allen settled a homestead in the delta of the Winooski River near the modern city of Burlington. Allen remained active in Vermont politics and was appointed general in the Army of the independent state of Vermont. He was one of the participants in a failed attempt to bring Vermont back into the British Empire and thereby separate Vermont from New York permanently. Allen's first wife died in 1783 and he remarried in that year. Allen died in 1789 of a stroke at the age of 51.
Related Topics:
Winooski River - Burlington
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Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Ethan Allen in his honor, as well as a cavalry outpost in Colchester and Essex, Vermont.
Related Topics:
United States Navy - ''Ethan Allen'' - Cavalry outpost
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