Canada_15                
1849 print MONUMENT TO WOLFE AND MONTCALM, QUEBEC, CANADA, #15

Print from steel engraving titled Monument de Wolf et de Montcalm, a Quebec, published in a volume of L'Univers, Paris, approx. page size is 21 x 13 cm, approx.  image size 14 x 10.5 cm.


Wolfe, James

born Jan. 2, 1727, Westerham, Kent, Eng., died Sept. 13, 1759, Quebec [now in Canada]

commander of the British army at the capture of Quebec from the French in 1759, a victory that led to British supremacy in Canada.

The elder son of Lieutenant General Edward Wolfe, he was commissioned in the Royal Marines in 1741 but transferred almost immediately to the 12th Foot. Wolfe was on active service continuously until the end of the War of the Austrian Succession, fighting against the French at Dettingen (1743) and later at Falkirk and Culloden (1746) during the Jacobite rebellion. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in 1750 and served as brigadier general under Major General Sir Jeffrey Amherst in an expedition against the French at Cape Breton Island (1758). The capture of Louisbourg, a fortress on the island, was largely attributed to Wolfe's daring and determination.

Wolfe returned to England to restore his failing health, but there he received from William Pitt the acting rank of major general and command of the expedition to capture the city of Quebec. By late June 1759, Wolfe's entire convoy had passed up the St. Lawrence River and had reached the island of Orleans, which lay opposite Quebec along the river. The army of the French defender of Quebec, the marquis de Montcalm, was strongly entrenched on the high cliffs along the city's river frontage. Unable to lure Montcalm out from the safety of his defenses, Wolfe on July 31 ordered an assault on the Beauport shore east of the city, which proved to be a costly failure.

Mortally ill with tuberculosis, Wolfe endured great pain and anxiety while the siege dragged on throughout August. At the end of that month, he and his brigadiers agreed on a plan to land troops across the river a short distance upstream and to the west of Quebec. The resulting attack, which involved scaling the cliffs only one mile from the city, was carried out on September 12 and surprised the French on the level fields of the Plains of Abraham. On September 13, after a battle lasting less than an hour, the French fled. Wolfe, wounded twice early in the battle, died of a third wound, but not before he knew Quebec had fallen to his troops. Montcalm survived him by only a few hours. Quebec surrendered on September 18, and in 1760 Amherst received the surrender of Montreal and the rest of Canada.

Montcalm (de Saint-Véran), Louis-Joseph de Montcalm-Grozo

general who served as commander in chief of French forces in Canada (1756–59) during the Seven Years' War, a worldwide struggle between Great Britain and France for colonial possessions.

Montcalm joined the army as an ensign at the age of 12. His first war experience came in 1733 against the Austrians in the War of the Polish Succession (1733–38).

In the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–48) he distinguished himself during the defense of Prague (1742), and he was made colonel of his regiment at Auxerre in 1743. He again distinguished himself at the Battle of Piacenza (1746), where he received five sabre wounds and was taken prisoner. He was later exchanged. In 1747 he was raised to the rank of brigadier, with command of a cavalry regiment by the end of the war.

Montcalm had inherited his father's titles and property in 1735. He now spent a few years with his family at Candiac. In 1756 he was placed in command of the French regular troops in North America, with the rank of major general; but his commission did not include authority over the greater part of military resources in Canada. He clashed with the governor general of the colony, the Marquis de Vaudreuil, and their animosity handicapped efficient military operations. Montcalm had early success as tactical commander against the British. In 1756 he forced the surrender of the British post at Oswego, thus restoring to France undisputed control of Lake Ontario. In 1757 he turned southward and captured Ft. William Henry, with its 2,500-man garrison; the victory was marred, however, by the slaughter of many English prisoners by the Indian allies of the French.

Montcalm's greatest feat was at Ticonderoga (July 8, 1758), when, with about 3,800 men, he repulsed an attack by 15,000 British forces under Gen. James Abercrombie. British casualties amounted to 2,000, compared with 372 for the French. The victory was largely a result of Abercrombie's incompetence; nevertheless, Montcalm was promoted to lieutenant general and given authority over Vaudreuil in all military affairs.

In 1759 the British sent Gen. James Wolfe's 8,500-man army against Quebec. Montcalm, with 1,500 men, took up a defensive position on the banks of the Montmorency River and refused to be drawn into combat for two months. Wolfe finally effected a landing near Quebec by scaling the Plains (Heights) of Abraham, and Montcalm was forced to meet the British forces (September 13), which were victorious. After fighting with conspicuous gallantry, Montcalm was mortally wounded while trying to rally his shattered army.

Battle of Quebec

(Sept. 13, 1759), in the French and Indian War, decisive defeat of the French under the Marquis de Montcalm by a British force led by Maj. Gen. James Wolfe.

After the fall of Louisbourg, Cape Breton Isl., in 1758, Quebec became the main military target of the British offensive. The following June, young Wolfe led a British force of 250 ships carrying 8,500 regulars to take up strategic positions in the St. Lawrence River. Protected by high jagged cliffs, Quebec resisted a two-month siege by land and water. Finding a narrow, hidden path, Wolfe secretly disembarked more than 4,000 men the evening of September 12, forcing a confrontation on the Plains of Abraham. The next day the French defenders were routed in this battle, in which both commanders were lost. This battle led to the fall of Montreal the next year and the final British victory.