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Caleb Haskell Begins Arnolds Expedition to

Quebec
newenglandhistoricalsociety.com/caleb-haskell-begins-arnolds-march-quebec/
9/19/2014

Revolutionary War soldier Caleb Haskell must have thought Arnolds expedition to Quebec was a good idea.
He signed up for it during the Siege of Boston. Benedict Arnold had persuaded George Washington that the
British would use Quebec to launch military operations. Arnold had traded in the region and believed Quebec
was lightly defended.

Detail of 1795 map overlaid with Arnold's


expedition route. A Cambridge; B Newburyport;
C Fort Western; D Fort Halifax; E Great Carrying
Place; F Height of Land; G Lake Megantic.
Courtesy Boston Public Library.

In the fall of 1775, Benedict Arnold led a force of 1,100 Continental troops from Cambridge, Mass., to
Quebec City. Richard Montgomery led another expedition to invade Quebec from Lake Champlain.

It didn't go well. Arnolds men traveled 350 miles twice as far as they planned -- through poorly charted
wilderness in what is now Maine. The men endured grueling portages up the Kennebec River. The boats
leaked, ruining precious gunpowder and food supplies. By the time Arnold reached the French settlements
above the St. Lawrence River, he had only 600 starving men. The siege of Quebec failed.

Caleb Haskell Signs Up


On May 5, 1775, Caleb Haskell enlisted as a soldier in the American Army in Newburyport, Mass. From that
day through May 30, 1776, he kept a diary.

He described marching to Cambridge, where his unit under Capt. Ezra Lunt participated in the Siege of
Boston. There was guard duty, Sunday worship, parading on the common, skirmishing with the enemy,
seizing cattle and cannon. He made it through the Battle of Bunker Hill unscathed.

Caleb Haskell signed up for Arnolds expedition to Quebec on Sept. 11. He marched to Newburyport and, a
week later, boarded one of the 11 transport ships bound for Canada.

On Tuesday, Sept. 19, he recorded in his diary the troops' departure:

This day about 9 o'clock weighed our anchors, and came to sail with a southwardly wind. After
we got over the bar, we lay to, waiting for orders from the Commodore. At 10 o'clock received
orders.

First signal.--Signal for speaking with the whole fleet: Ensign at main-topmast head.

Second signal.--Signal for chasing a sail: Ensign at fore-topmast head.

Third signal.--Signal for heaving to in the night: Lantern at mast-head, and two lights if head on
shore, and three guns if head off shore.
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Fourth signal.--For making sail in the night. Lantern at mast-head and four guns; and jack at
fore-topmast head in the day.

Fifth signal.--For dispersing, and every vessel making the nearest harbor: Ensign at main-peak.

Sixth signal.--For boarding any vessel: Jack at main-topmas head and the fleet to draw up in line
as near as possible.

N.B. No small arms to be fired at three o'clock.

The jack was hoisted on board the Commodore. We made sail with a fine breeze; in the evening,
the wind blew quick at S.E. About 1 o'clock we hove to and lay until morning.

Arnold's route through northern Maine is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Arnold Trail
to Quebec.

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