The following information is taken, more-or-less verbatim, from Cannon's Historical Record of the Forty-Sixth or
the South Devonshire Regiment of Foot, published in London, 1851.
The engineer having reported that the entrenchment might be forced by musketry alone, Major-General Abercromby,
unfortunately, determined to attack the place without waiting for the artillery, which, on account
of the badness of the ground, could not be easily brought up. A rumour also that the French
were about to be reinforced
with three thousand men, confirmed the General in his resolution. Although the troops
behaved with the utmost gallantry in the attack on fort Ticonderoga, on the 8th of July,
it was found impossible to succeed in the undertaking, and after many unavailaing efforts, during
a desperate contest of upwards of four hours, Major-General Abercromby gave orders to withdraw,
and the British returned to their camp on the South of Lake George, where they arrived the following
evening.
The following officers belonging to the 46th Regiment were killed on this occasion:
Lieutenant-Colonel
Samuel Beaver, Captains George Needham and Edward Wynne; Lieutenants Jacob Laulhé
and Arthur Lloyd; Ensign George Crofton, and Quarter-Master Thomas Carbonell.
While the expedition under Lieutenant-General (afterwards Lord) Amherst proceeded in May, 1758,
against Cape Breton,
the 46th Regiment was ordered to join the body of troops under Major-General James Abercromby,
selected to attack
the fort of Ticonderoga. This force, which comprised the 27th, 42nd, 44th, 46th and 55th
Regiments,
embarked on Lake George on the 5th of July, and landed on the following day near the extremity
of the lake, from whence
the troops marched through a wild and thickly-wooded country, in four columns, upon Ticonderoga;
the guides mistook the route through the trackless woods, and on the 6th
of July, a skirmish ensued with a body of French troops, in which
Brigadier-General George Augustus Viscount Howe (of the 55th Regiment) was killed.
With this exception the British sustained but small loss, while the enemy had three hundred killed, and one hundred
and forty-eight taken prisoners. On the 8th of July, the British appeared before the fort,
which was situated on a tongue of land, projecting into Lake Champlain, and was built by the
French in 1756. It could only be approached on one side, which was strongly fortified;
the other three sides being surrounded by water. Felled trees, with their branches outward,
were spread before the works, which were defended by between four and five thousand men.
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