Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 4).djvu/131

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BATTLE OF THE MONONGAHELA
127

No encounter has been more incorrectly described and pictured than the Battle of the Monongahela.[1] Braddock was not surprised; his advance guard saw the enemy long before they opened fire; George Croghan affirmed that the grenadiers delivered their first charge when two hundred yards distant from the Indians, completely throwing it away. Nor did Braddock march blindly into a deep ravine; his army was ever on the high ground, caught almost in the vortex of the cross-fire of the savages hidden on the brink of the ravines on either side, or posted on the high ground to the right.[2]

The road was but twelve feet in width. Even as Burton came up, Gage's grenadiers were frightened and retreating. The meeting of the advancing and retiring troops caused a fatal confusion and delay in the narrow road. The fire from the Indians on the high ground to the right being severe, Braddock attempted to form his bewildered men and charge. It was

  1. This view of Braddock's defeat is given in the late John Fiske's recent volume, New France and New England.
  2. London Public Advertiser, November 3, 1755.