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The '''Hessians''' ({{IPAc-en|icon|ˈ|h|ɛ|ʃ|ən}})<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hessian | title=hessian | publisher=[[Merriam-Webster]] | accessdate=2009-12-26}}</ref> were 18-century [[Germans in the American Revolution|German]] regiments hired through their rulers by the [[British Empire]]. Despite their name, they were not all from [[Hesse]]. They were not mercenaries, although their German rulers profited from their use. Though used in several conflicts including in Ireland, they are most widely associated with combat operations in the [[American Revolutionary War]]. They provided extensive manpower to support the American loyalist cause, but the fact that they were not British provided the pro-independence side with opportunities for propaganda and may have aided pro-independence recruitment.
The '''Hessians''' ({{IPAc-en|icon|ˈ|h|ɛ|ʃ|ən}})<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hessian | title=hessian | publisher=[[Merriam-Webster]] | accessdate=2009-12-26}}</ref> were 18-century [[Germans in the American Revolution|German]] regiments hired through their rulers by the [[British Empire]]. Despite their name, they were not all from [[Hesse]]. They were not mercenaries, although their German rulers profited from their use. Though used in several conflicts including in Ireland, they are most widely associated with combat operations in the [[American Revolutionary War]]. They provided extensive manpower to support the American loyalist cause, but the fact that they were not British provided the pro-independence side with opportunities for propaganda and may have aided pro-independence recruitment.


BETH ANN is AMAZINGGGGGG!!!((((:::
==History==
So is ANNNAAA!!!(:::::
And KATELYNNN!!!(:
During the [[American Revolutionary War]], [[Landgrave]] [[Frederick II, Landgrave of Hesse|Frederick II]] of [[Hesse-Kassel]] (a principality in northern [[Hesse]] or Hessia) and other German leaders hired out some of their regular army units to [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Great Britain]] to fight against the Patriots in the [[American revolution]]. About 30,000 of these men served in America. They were called ''Hessians,'' because the largest group (12,992 of the total 30,067 men) came from ''Hesse-Kassel''. They came in entire units with their usual uniforms, flags, weapons and officers.
During the [[American Revolutionary War]], [[Landgrave]] [[Frederick II, Landgrave of Hesse|Frederick II]] of [[Hesse-Kassel]] (a principality in northern [[Hesse]] or Hessia) and other German leaders hired out some of their regular army units to [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Great Britain]] to fight against the Patriots in the [[American revolution]]. About 30,000 of these men served in America. They were called ''Hessians,'' because the largest group (12,992 of the total 30,067 men) came from ''Hesse-Kassel''. They came in entire units with their usual uniforms, flags, weapons and officers.



Revision as of 15:22, 19 October 2011

Two Hessian Soldiers of the Leibregiment

The Hessians (/[invalid input: 'icon']ˈhɛʃən/)[1] were 18-century German regiments hired through their rulers by the British Empire. Despite their name, they were not all from Hesse. They were not mercenaries, although their German rulers profited from their use. Though used in several conflicts including in Ireland, they are most widely associated with combat operations in the American Revolutionary War. They provided extensive manpower to support the American loyalist cause, but the fact that they were not British provided the pro-independence side with opportunities for propaganda and may have aided pro-independence recruitment.

BETH ANN is AMAZINGGGGGG!!!((((::: So is ANNNAAA!!!(::::: And KATELYNNN!!!(: During the American Revolutionary War, Landgrave Frederick II of Hesse-Kassel (a principality in northern Hesse or Hessia) and other German leaders hired out some of their regular army units to Great Britain to fight against the Patriots in the American revolution. About 30,000 of these men served in America. They were called Hessians, because the largest group (12,992 of the total 30,067 men) came from Hesse-Kassel. They came in entire units with their usual uniforms, flags, weapons and officers.

Units were sent by Count William of Hesse-Hanau; Duke Charles I of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel; Prince Frederick of Waldeck; Margrave Karl Alexander of Ansbach-Bayreuth; and Prince Frederick Augustus of Anhalt-Zerbst.

The Hessians did not act individually. The decisions to hire them out was made by their princes.

Hessians comprised approximately one-quarter of the forces fielded by the British in the American 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 with smoothbore muskets, while the Hessian artillery used three-pounder cannon. Initially the average regiment was made up of 500 to 600 men. Later in the war, the regiments had only 300 to 400 men.[citation needed]

About 18,000 Hessian troops first arrived in America in 1776, with more coming in later. They first landed at Staten Island on August 15, 1776. Their first engagement was in the Battle of Long Island. The Hessians fought in almost every battle, although after 1777, the British used them mainly 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.

The British use of Hessian troops rankled American sentiment, and pushed more loyalists to be in favor of the revolution. The British use of non-English speaking foreign troops to put down the rebellion was seen as insulting, as it treated British subjects no differently than non-British subjects. Pro-British Tories believed that the British nature of Americans should have subjected them to something other than mercenary foes.

Hessian captives

One of the most famous incidents involving the Hessian soldiers was the Battle of Trenton, where almost all of a force of 1,400 Hessians were either captured or killed. Approximately 20 were estimated killed, 100 wounded, and 1,000 were captured as prisoners. General George Washington's Continental Army crossed the Delaware River on the early morning of December 26th 1776, to carry out a highly successful surprise attack.[2] Family records of Johann Nicholas Bahner(t), one of the Hessians captured in the Battle of Trenton, indicate that some of the Hessian soldiers enrolled in the service of King George III of England under the false pretense that they were needed to defend the American Colonies against Indian incursions. It was not until after they arrived upon American shores that they discovered they were enlisted to fight against, rather than for, the colonists. [3] It is rumored that these Hessians fought only under force of arms, later deserting their regiments or voluntarily allowing themselves to be taken prisoner. The Hessians captured in the Battle of Trenton were paraded through the streets of Philadelphia raising American morale, and greatly increasing the Continental Army's ranks. [4] They were then marched through the snow to Lanchester where many of the men were allowed to work among the farmers, merchants, and other trades people. [5] By early 1778, negotiations for the exchange of prisoners between Washington and the British had begun in earnest. On a one-for-one exchange if a Hessian soldier deserted, there would be one less American who would return home. [6] Nicholas Bahner(t), Jacob Strobe, George Geisler, and Conrad Kramm are a few of the Hessian soldiers who deserted the British forces after being returned in exchange for American prisoners of war. [7] These men were in a vulnerable place being both hunted by the British for being deserters, and hunted by many of the colonists as an enemy. Nicholas was one of the Hessian prisoners/deserters who survived, later rendering the fullest allegiance and loyalty to America. Now, seven generations later, Nicholas is the grandfather of thousands of American patriots. [8].

In addition to firepower, American rebels such as Andrew Norman Martin used propaganda against Hessians.[citation needed] They enticed Hessians to desert and join the large German-American population. In addition to offering land bounties to colonial recruits, the US Congress authorized the offer of 50 acres (200,000 m2) of land to individual Hessian soldiers to encourage them to desert. They offered 50 to 800 acres to British soldiers, depending on rank.[9]

In August 1777 a satirical letter, "The Sale of the Hessians", was written and widely distributed. It claimed that a Hessian commander wanted more of his soldiers dead so that he could be better compensated. For many years the author of the letter was unknown. In 1874 John Bigelow translated it to English (from French) and claimed that Benjamin Franklin wrote it, including it in his biography, The Life of Benjamin Franklin, published that year. There appears to be no evidence to support this claim.[10]

When British General John Burgoyne surrendered to American General Horatio Gates during the Saratoga campaign, his surrender involved around 5,800 troops. The surrender was negotiated in the Convention of Saratoga, and Burgoyne's remnant army became known as the Convention Army. Soldiers from Brunswick-Lüneburg under General Riedesel comprised a high percentage of the Convention Army. The Americans marched the prisoners to Charlottesville, Virginia, where they were imprisoned in the Albemarle Barracks until 1781. From there they were sent to Reading, Pennsylvania until 1783.

German soldiers in the American Revolution

Conclusion of the war

After the war ended in 1783, some 17,313 Hessian soldiers returned to their German homelands. 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, mostly the former.[citation needed] Approximately 5,000 Hessians settled in North America, both in the United States and Canada. In some cases, their commanders refused to take them back to Germany because they were criminals or physically unfit. Most of the former Hessian solders married and settled amongst the population of the newly formed United States. Many became farmers or craftsmen and were able to take advantage of opportunities in the new country. The number of their direct descendants living in the U.S. and Canada today is a subject of debate. One persistent story is that George Custer may have been the grandson of a Hessian descendant.

Ireland 1798

After the Battle of Mainz in 1795, at which Hessian mercenaries participated under Colonel Johann Keglevich[11][12] the brother of Major General Stephen Bernhard Keglevich, who did not take part in this battle with his Serbian mercenaries, which had also been near there, and which was funded by the British Empire through the sale of gemstones of Madame du Barry, the British rushed Hessian mercenaries to Ireland in 1798 to assist in the suppression of rebellion inspired by the Society of United Irishmen, an organization that first worked for Parliamentary reform. Influenced by the American and French revolutions, its members began by 1798 to seek independence for Ireland. Baron Hompesch's 2nd Battalion of riflemen embarked on 11 April 1798 from the Isle of Wight bound for the port of Cork. They were later joined by the Jäger (Hunter) 5th Battalion 60th regiment. They were in the action of the battles of Vinegar Hill and Foulksmills. In 1798 the Hessians were notorious in Ireland for their atrocities and brutality toward the population of Wexford.[citation needed]

Hessian units in the American Revolution

Anhalt-Zerbst

  • Rauschenplatt's Princess of Anhalt's Regiment
  • Nuppenau's Jäger Company
  • Anhalt-Zerbst Company of Artillery

Ansbach-Bayreuth

  • 1st Regiment Ansbach-Bayreuth (later Regiment von Volt; 1st Ansbach Battalion)
  • 2nd Regiment Ansbach-Bayreuth (later Regiment Seybothen; 2nd Bayreuth Battalion)
  • Ansbach Jäger Company
  • Ansbach Artillery Company

Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel

  • Dragoon Regiment Prinz Ludwig
  • Grenadier Battalion Breymann
  • Light Infantry Battalion von Barner
  • Regiment Riedesel
  • Regiment Specht
  • Regiment Prinz Friedrich
  • Regiment von Rhetz
  • Geyso's Company of Brunswick Jägers

Hesse-Kassel

  • Hesse-Kassel Jäger Corps
  • Fusilier Regiment von Ditfurth
  • Fusilier Regiment Erbprinz (later Musketeer Regiment Erbprinz (1780))
  • Fusilier Regiment von Knyphausen
  • Fusilier Regiment von Lossburg
  • Grenadier Regiment von Rall (later von Woellwarth (1777); von Trümbach (1779); d'Angelelli (1781))
    • 1st Battalion Grenadiers von Linsing
    • 2nd Battalion Grenadiers von Block (later von Lengerke)
    • 3rd Battalion Grenadiers von Minnigerode (later von Löwenstein)
    • 4th Battalion Grenadiers von Köhler (later von Graf; 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)
  • Leib Infantry Regiment
  • 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))
  • Hesse-Kassel Artillery corps

Hesse-Hanau

  • Pausch's Artillery Company
  • von Creuzbourg's Jäger Corps
  • Janecke's Frei Corps
  • Hesse Hanau Erbprinz Regiment

Waldeck

  • 3rd Waldeck Regiment

In popular culture

  • Washington Irving's collection The Sketch Book (1819) included the story "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow", which contained a figure now known as the "Headless Horseman". Irving described it as "the ghost of a Hessian trooper, whose head had been carried away by a cannonball, in some nameless battle during the Revolutionary War."
  • Christopher Walken played a version of Irving's Headless Horseman, a brutal and sadistic Hessian mercenary sent to America during the American Revolutionary War, in Tim Burton's Sleepy Hollow.
  • D. W. Griffith co-wrote and directed the short film, The Hessian Renegades (1909), about the early stages of the American Revolution.
  • The animated short film Bunker Hill Bunny (1950) features Bugs Bunny confronting Sam Von Schmamm (played by Yosemite Sam) who, in defeat, declares himself to be "a Hessian without aggression."
  • In the computer game Age of Empires III: The War Chiefs (2006), the player can control American revolutionaries, frequently having to fight Hessians.
  • The computer game Freelancer (2003) features the Red Hessians as a criminal group composed largely of unemployed miners operating out of Rheinland space.
  • The computer game Empire: Total War (2009) features a number of Hessian units, including Hessian grenadiers, line infantry and Brunswicker dragoons, recruitable by the British faction.
  • In Karen White's The Girl on Legare Street (2009), one of the spirits that reside in the house that has been in Melanie Middleton's family for generations is a Hessian soldier who has protected the women of her family for generations.
  • The Crossing is a 2000 A&E film directed by Robert Harmon. Based on the novel of the same name by Howard Fast, it stars Jeff Daniels as George Washington. After the army narrowly escapes across the river to the Pennsylvania shore, Washington, realizing that something must be done or the Revolution will collapse, conceives a plan to cross the river and conduct a surprise attack on the Hessian garrison at Trenton. Despite their own fatigue and the winter weather, Washington manages to lift his weary soldiers' spirits, allowing the army to cross the river on Christmas night. The crossing is done in one night, allowing the troops to attack Trenton at eight o' clock on December 26, 1776, and gains a stunning victory, capturing almost all the Hessians to their own advantage.
  • The 1972 novel The Hessian by Howard Fast centers around a Hessian soldier who tries to escape.
  • In the second season of Jericho the Hessians are compared to the Ravenwood mercenaries by Jake Green's granddad in a dream sequence.

Footnotes

  1. ^ "hessian". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 2009-12-26.
  2. ^ "Battle of Trenton", British Battles.com, accessed 13 Feb 2010
  3. ^ [History of Our Ancestors: The First Bohner (Bahn, Bahner) to Migrate to America]
  4. ^ [Johannes Schwalm the Hessian, page 21]
  5. ^ [British Prisoners of war – Bradford Papers, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Volume 1-4]
  6. ^ Johann Nicholas Bahner – From Reichenbach, Hessen To Pillow, Pennsylvania By Herbert M. Bahner and Mark A. Schwalm Journal of the Johannes Schwalm Historical Association, Inc. Vol 3, No.3, 1987
  7. ^ [Journal of Johannes Schwalm Historical Assoc., Inc Vol. 3, No.1, page 2]
  8. ^ Johann Nicholas Bahner (1754-1824) Person identifier: LHZ1-53Z
  9. ^ R. Douglas Hurt (2002) American Agriculture: A Brief History, p. 80
  10. ^ Everett C. Wilkie, Jr., "Franklin and 'The Sale of the Hessians': The Growth of a Myth", Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 127, No. 3 (Jun. 16, 1983), pp. 202-212
  11. ^ Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich: Enthaltend die Lebensskizzen der denkwürdigen Personen, welche seit 1750 in den österreichischen Kronländern geboren wurden oder darin gelebt und gewirkt haben, Band 11, Constantin von Wurzbach, K. K. Hof- und Staatsdruckerei, Wien 1864.
  12. ^ Geschichte des 1. Grossherzoglich hessischen Infanterie- (Leibgarde-) Regiments, Ausgabe 115 der Ausgaben 1621-1899, Carl Christian Röder von Diersburg (Freiherr.), E. S. Mittler 1899.

Further reading

  • Atwood, Rodney. The Hessians: Mercenaries from Hessen-Kassel in the American Revolution (Cambridge University Press, 1980), the standard scholarly history
  • Fischer, David Hackett (2004). Washington's Crossing. Oxford university Press. p. 517. ISBN 0195170342.
  • Ingrao, Charles. "'Barbarous Strangers': Hessian State and Society during the American Revolution," American Historical Review Vol. 87, No. 4 (Oct., 1982), pp. 954-976 in JSTOR

Primary sources

  • Johann Conrad Döhla. A Hessian Diary of the American Revolution (1993)

External links