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Edward
Braddock (1695 - 1755)
Scottish
general, was born in Perthshire, Scotland, about 1695. He was
the son of Major-General Edward Braddock (d. 1725), and joined
the Coldstrearn Guards in 1710. In 1747 as a lieutenant-colonel
he served under the prince of Orange in Holland during the siege
of Bergen. In 1753 he was given the colonelcy of the i4th foot,
and in 1754 he became a major-general. Being appointed shortly
afterwards to command against the French in America, he landed
in Virginia in February 1755. After some months of preparation,
in which he was sorely hampered by administrative confusion
and want of resources, he took the field with a picked column,
in which George Washington served as a volunteer officer, intended
to attack Fort Duquesne (Pittsburg. Pa.). The column crossed
the Monongahela river on the 9th of July and almost immediately
afterwards fell into an ambuscade of French and Indians. The
troops were completely surprised and routed, and Braddock, rallying
his men time after time, fell at last mortally wounded. He was
carried off the field with difficulty, and died on the i3th.
He was buried at Great Meadows, where the remnant of the column
halted on its retreat to reorganize.
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