Knox Trail Marker - Schuylerville, NY
Posted by: neoc1
N 43° 05.840 W 073° 05.840
18T E 654840 N 4773380
A Knox Trail Marker located at 2 Broad Street in Schuylerville, NY commemorates General Henry Knox's transport of artillery from Fort Ticonderoga, NY to Cambridge, MA.
Waymark Code: WM14KXY
Location: New York, United States
Date Posted: 07/24/2021
Views: 2
During he winter of 1775-1776 General George Washington held the high ground around Boston while the British were firmly in control of the city. If Washington had artillery he could dislodge the British and retake Boston. The nearest available artillery was at Fort Ticonderoga, which was under Continental Army control, in up-state New York.
General Henry Knox then was commissioned, in December 1775, by General Washington to secure these artillery pieces and transport them from New York, through Massachusetts, to Dorchester Heights outside Boston. To do this General Knox successfully crossed the Berkshire Mountains and several large rivers, in winter, with fifty-nine pieces of artillery. When the artillery arrived in Boston, in early March 1776, General Howe realized the hopelessness of his position and evacuated the city.
To commemorate this heroic trek a series of 56 historical markers denote the route that General Knox and his men travelled that winter. Twenty-six markers were erected in Massachusetts and thirty in New York for a total of fifty-six. The marker has a bronze bas relief sculpture of General Knox and the oxen used to transport the artillery and a map of the route from Ticonderoga, NY to Cambridge, MA. The inscribed on the map are: TICONDEROGA, FT. GEORGE, FT. EDWARDS, SARATOGA, HALF MOON, ALBANY, KINDERHOOK, CLAVERBACK, NOBLETOWN, and CAMBRIDGE. The marker is inscribed.
THROUGH THIS PLACE PASSED
GEN. HENRY KNOX
IN THE WINTER OF 1775 - 1776
TO DELIVER TO
GEN. GEORGE WASHINGTON
AT CAMBRIDGE
THE TRAIN OF ARTILLERY
FROM FORT TICONDEROGA
USED TO FORCE THE BRITISH
ARMY TO EVACUATE BOSTON
ERECTED BY
THE STATE OF NEW YORK
DURING THE SESQUICENTENNIAL
OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION