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New York Army National Guard Soldiers learn from Stuart Lilie, the Vice President of Public History at Fort Ticonderoga, N.Y, during a visit to the battlefield historic site September 16, 2020. The visit was part of the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course of instruction held Sept. 14-18., 2020. Three dozen Soldiers toured the historic battlefield of the American Revolution and French and Indian War to discover leadership lessons to prepare for their upcoming command tours.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Matthew Gunther)VIEW ORIGINAL2 / 10Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Reenactors wearing 18th Century uniforms demonstrate the firing of a cannon at Fort Ticonderoga, September 16th, 2020 for members of the New York Army National Guard. The visit was part of the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course of instruction held Sept. 14-18., 2020. Three dozen Soldiers toured the historic battlefield of the American Revolution and French and Indian War to discover leadership lessons to prepare for their upcoming command tours.
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New York Army National Guard Soldiers visit Fort Ticonderoga in Ticonderoga, N.Y., September 16, 2020, as part of the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course of instruction. Three dozen Soldiers toured the historic battlefield of the American Revolution and French
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New York Army National Guard Soldiers visit Fort Ticonderoga in Ticonderoga, N.Y., September 16, 2020, as part of the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course of instruction. Three dozen Soldiers toured the historic battlefield of the American Revolution and French and Indian War to discover leadership lessons to prepare for their upcoming command tours.
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New York Army National Guard Soldiers visit Fort Ticonderoga in Ticonderoga, N.Y., September 16, 2020, as part of the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course of instruction. Three dozen Soldiers toured the historic battlefield of the American Revolution and French and Indian War to discover leadership lessons to prepare for their upcoming command tours.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Matthew Gunther)VIEW ORIGINAL6 / 10Show Caption +Hide Caption –
New York Army National Guard Soldiers visit Fort Ticonderoga in Ticonderoga, N.Y., September 16, 2020, as part of the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course of instruction. Three dozen Soldiers toured the historic battlefield of the American Revolution and French and Indian War to discover leadership lessons to prepare for their upcoming command tours.
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New York Army National Guard Soldiers learn from reenactors during a visit to Fort Ticonderoga in Ticonderoga, N.Y., September 16, 2020, as part of the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course of instruction. Three dozen Soldiers toured the historic battlefield of the American Revolution and French and Indian War to discover leadership lessons to prepare for their upcoming command tours.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Matthew Gunther)VIEW ORIGINAL8 / 10Show Caption +Hide Caption –
New York Army National Guard Soldiers help reenactors lower a cannon onto a mount at Fort Ticonderoga, September 16th, 2020. The visit was part of the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course of instruction held Sept. 14-18., 2020. Three dozen Soldiers toured the historic battlefield of the American Revolution and French and Indian War to discover leadership lessons to prepare for their upcoming command tours.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Matthew Gunther)VIEW ORIGINAL9 / 10Show Caption +Hide Caption –
New York Army National Guard Soldiers visit Fort Ticonderoga in Ticonderoga, N.Y., September 16, 2020, as part of the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course of instruction. Three dozen Soldiers toured the historic battlefield of the American Revolution and French and Indian War to discover leadership lessons to prepare for their upcoming command tours.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Matthew Gunther)VIEW ORIGINAL10 / 10Show Caption +Hide Caption –
New York Army National Guard Soldiers learn from Stuart Lilie, the Vice President of Public History at Fort Ticonderoga, N.Y, during a visit to the battlefield historic site September 16, 2020. The visit was part of the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course of instruction held Sept. 14-18., 2020. Three dozen Soldiers toured the historic battlefield of the American Revolution and French and Indian War to discover leadership lessons to prepare for their upcoming command tours.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Matthew Gunther)VIEW ORIGINAL
TICONDEROGA, NY – New York Army National Guard Soldiers selected as company commanders and first sergeants visited one of America's most historic sites on September 16 to learn lessons from the past to apply to their future commands.
Three dozen students in the Company Commander and First Sergeant Pre-Command Course spent the day at Fort Ticonderoga, the site of pivotal battles in the French and Indian War and the American Revolution.
"It's fascinating to me how much we relate to these guys so many years later," said Captain Andrew Carter of Schenectady.
Built by the French between 1755 and 1757, the fort controlled the Lake Champlain and Lake George's portage route. It was dubbed the Gibraltar of North America and control of the fort allowed armies to move south from Canada to Albany and the Hudson Valley.
In 1759, 4,000 French Soldiers defeated 16,000 British and Americans who attempted to take the fort. And in 1776, the American Army surrendered the fort to the British.
But the pivotal American success at Ticonderoga came in May 1775. The Vermont militia, known as the Green Mountain Boys and led by Ethan Allen, along with militiamen from Connecticut and Massachusetts led by Col. Benedict Arnold, took the fort from a 48-man British garrison at the start of the American Revolution. The two debated who was in charge but eventually decided to cooperate on the attack on the fort.
The attack was critical in seizing the artillery pieces needed for the siege of British forces in Boston.
After crossing Lake Champlain from Vermont, Arnold and Allen surprised the British garrison commander in his bed. According to Allen, they took control of the fort "in the name of the Great Jehovah and the Continental Congress,"
After the British surrendered, the Americans celebrated, getting drunk on 90 gallons of rum stored at the fort.
Eventually, the cannon at the fort were hauled across snowy New York, Connecticut and Massachusetts and emplaced on the heights above Boston by Henry Knox, the Continental Army's artillery commander. The threat of those guns forced the British to leave Boston on March 17, 1776.
The 1775 raid history was the focus of instruction for the New York Army Guard officers and NCOs.
"I love delving into the many battles that took place here, such as Benedict Arnold and Ethan Allen taking the fort from the British in 1775," said Captain Joshua Williams. "This allowed them to send the cannons to Boston, which they used to drive the British from the city, a pivotal moment in American history," he added.
"From the leadership at the time, their challenges to overcome weren't much different than ours," Carter said. "There is a lot to be learned from the choices they made."
The Soldiers flew in UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters from Saratoga County Airport to Ticonderoga, providing them with an impressive aerial view of the site.
Captain Ryan Gonch, of Albany, said he enjoyed the dynamic nature of the day's events.
"It's a microcosm of our job as leaders. We began the day with transporting this group in UH-60's to this site, which has its own set of challenges," he said. "Then we get here and must change gears to absorb the history and lessons learned from this historic site," Gonch added.
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