Monument to Benedict Arnold's injured leg at Saratoga National Historical Park | |
![]() Interactive map of Boot Monument | |
| Location | Saratoga National Historical Park |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 43°0′30.2″N73°38′21.7″W / 43.008389°N 73.639361°W /43.008389; -73.639361 |
| Designer | George Edwin Bissell |
| Dedicated to | Benedict Arnold, although it does not mention his name |
TheBoot Monument is anAmerican Revolutionary War memorial located inSaratoga National Historical Park, New York. Erected during 1887 byJohn Watts de Peyster and sculpted byGeorge Edwin Bissell, it commemorates Major GeneralBenedict Arnold's service at theBattles of Saratoga while in theContinental Army, but he is not named on the monument because Arnold later defected from the Americans to theBritish. Instead, the monument commemorates Arnold as the "most brilliant soldier of the Continental Army".
While fighting at theBattle of Bemis Heights, the second of the Saratoga engagements, Arnold was shot and severely injured in his left leg. His horse was also hit by gunfire and fell on Arnold, crushing his already injured leg. After this, Arnold continued to grow ever more bitter towards the Continental Army when he was passed over for promotion and was court-martialed. He later attempted to help the British capture the fortification ofWest Point but was discovered and fled to theBritish army.
American Major GeneralBenedict Arnold contributed to bothBattles of Saratoga, two crucial engagements of theAmerican Revolutionary War that took place nearSaratoga, New York.[1] The extent of his contributions to the first battle, theBattle of Freeman's Farm, are disputed.[a][3][4] In the second conflict, theBattle of Bemis Heights on October 7, 1777, Arnold unexpectedly joined the fighting[5][6] even after disagreements between him and Major GeneralHoratio Gates resulted in Arnold's command being removed and given to Major GeneralBenjamin Lincoln.[7] Gates attempted to send Arnold back to camp, but Gates's orders did not reach Arnold until the battle was over. Arnold led the American Continental Army in taking aredoubt commanded byLord Balcarres.[8] At the end of the conflict, Arnold's left leg and horse were shot. When the horse fell, Arnold's leg shattered.[3] Arnold refused to have his leg amputated and instead had it faultily set.[9]
Gates did not make much mention of Arnold's contributions in his report of the aftermath of the battle, which angered Arnold.[10] In addition, he was further embittered by his combat wounds, by not having been promoted byCongress,[11] and by eight court-martial charges of abusing his role as military commander ofPhiladelphia.[12] These troubles, along with the fact that his wife,Peggy Shippen, came from a family of Loyalists, caused Arnold to start communicating with theBritish. British GeneralSir Henry Clinton offered Arnold £20,000 (equivalent to £3,353,000 in 2023) for the capture of West Point,[13] a fortification that was important to the control of the Hudson River.[14] Arnold met with British MajorJohn André so he could pass on information on how to best attack West Point.[15] André was captured on his way back to New York and the plans for the West Point attack were discovered.[16] Arnold fled to New York City to join theBritish army[17] andremained as a general there until the war ended in 1783.[18][19]
After years of financial problems that delayed the creation of theSaratoga Battle Monument, theSaratoga Monument Association (SMA), a group formed to discuss the creation of a monument for the Battles of Saratoga, held a meeting in July 1882. During the meeting, there was an announcement byEllen Hardin Walworth, chairman of the Committee of Tablets, that the spot where Arnold injured his leg was marked by a stake, as a historical marker. No one at the meeting objected to the stake being placed.[20]
John Watts de Peyster, a military historian, former major general in theUnion Army,[21] and a vice president of the SMA,[22] wanted to commemorate Arnold's contribution to the Continental Army's victory in the battle.[23] He was unsatisfied that the niche on the Saratoga Battle Monument where a statue of Arnold should have gone would remain empty.[24] De Peyster considered Arnold a traitor but still recognized his contributions at Saratoga. According to Arnold biographerJim Murphy, he wanted to "honor some of Arnold's deeds without honoring the man"[23] but thought that simply a slab of granite to commemorate Arnold "would not do."[22]
De Peyster decided on a boot for the monument because he had heard of a story where Arnold asked an American he met in London what the Americans thought of him, to which the American said that they would make a monument out of Arnold's leg and hang the rest of his body in effigy.[25][26] The historian Michael L. Lear said that he decided on Arnold's boot as a suitable monument because "the leg was the only part of Arnold not to later turn traitor and since it was sacrificed in winning the battle of Saratoga, it should be commemorated."[23] He commissionedGeorge Edwin Bissell,[22][27] who had designed other statues that de Peyster had erected,[23] to sculpt a marker in whitemarble.[22] The monument was then erected during 1887 in Saratoga National Historical Park.[23] It is the only monument to Arnold in the United States[28] and the only monument in Saratoga National Historical Park that does not show the name of its honoree.[27]
The toe of the Boot Monument was hammered off[29] and stolen by college boys on a visit; they kept the toe for years as a souvenir.[30][31] They were only discovered when an anonymous informer (described as "a graduate of a New York State educational institution") told the battlefield official in 1931 that the toe had been stolen.[26] The monument underwent restoration afterAdolph S. Ochs, publisher ofThe New York Times, financed it.[32][33]
The monument was originally located further to the north at the top of the hill at the Breymann Redoubt site, but after further research as to where Arnold injured his leg, the monument was moved south to where the main fortifications of the redoubt were.[34] The time at which this happened is disputed with some sources saying 1975[27][35] while others say 1972. The monument was still at the Breymann Redoubt before the time of its move and is still at the southern end of the redoubt.[23][36][37]
The monument is made of white marble[22][38] and is 4 feet (1.2 m) tall.[39] Because of Arnold's defection to the British it does not mention him by name,[b][3][40][41] and De Peyster was worried that the monument would be defaced if it mentioned Arnold directly.[42][31] It features ahowitzer barrel with a left-footed horseman's riding boot[3][40][41] and a two-starepaulette on top of the barrel, representing a Major General. Alaurel wreath sits atop the howitzer.[43][44][45] As a sign of dishonor, the howitzer barrel is pointed downwards.[46] One error in the inscription is that Arnold did not earn the rank of Major General after, and because of, Saratoga, but he became more senior than the other officers who had been promoted before him.[23] The inscription was edited after its erection to say "erected 1887 by" before De Peyster's name to make it clear that he is not the honoree of the boot.[29] The monument faces the battlefield.[47]
The inscription on the monument reads:
Erected 1887 By
JOHN WATTS de PEYSTER
Brev: Maj: Gen: S.N.Y.
2nd V. Pres't Saratoga Mon't Ass't'n:[c]
In memory of
the "most brilliant soldier" of the
Continental Army
who was desperately wounded
on this spot the sally port of
BURGOYNES GREAT (WESTERN) REDOUBT
7th October, 1777
winning for his countrymen
the decisive battle of the
American Revolution
and for himself the rank of
Major General.[24][48]
As with the absence of Arnold's name from the Boot Monument, the Saratoga Battle Monument honors Gates, GeneralPhilip Schuyler, ColonelDaniel Morgan, and Arnold, but the place where Arnold's statue should stand in the monument is an empty niche.[49][50][51] In an old cadet chapel at West Point, Revolutionary War generals are honored with a plaque on the wall, but Arnold's plaque does not have his name on it, and only mentions his birth and death dates.[52]
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