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Siege of Fort at Number 4
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Siege of Fort at Number 4 : ウィキペディア英語版
Siege of Fort at Number 4

The Siege of Fort at Number Four (April 7–9, 1747) was a frontier action at present-day Charlestown, New Hampshire
during King George's War. The Fort at Number 4 (named so because it was located in the fourth of a series of recently surveyed township land parcels), was unsuccessfully besieged by a French and Indian force under the command of Ensign Joseph Boucher de Niverville. The British defenders were alerted to the presence of the besiegers by their dogs, and were well-prepared to defend the fort. They successfully fought off attempts to burn the fort down, and turned down demands that they surrender. Some of Niverville's Indians, short on provisions, attempted to bargain with the fort's defenders for supplies, but were rejected.
==Background==
In the 1720s, during Dummer's War, the Province of Massachusetts Bay had constructed Fort Dummer at present-day Brattleboro, Vermont. In the following years, settlers from Massachusetts, which laid claim to the territory, moved up the Connecticut River, establishing small frontier settlements. The most northerly of these, north of Fort Dummer and located at the site of present-day Charlestown, New Hampshire, was called Number Four. In 1741, King George II declared that the territory belonged to the Province of New Hampshire. Massachusetts withdrew its protection from both Fort Dummer and Number Four, and New Hampshire, none of whose existing settlements was near these places, also refused to provide protection. In 1743 the settlers at Number Four constructed a wooden stockade fort to provide for their own protection.
Massachusetts reluctantly agreed to provide some militia forces to the area when King George's War broke out. During the summer of 1746 Number Four was repeatedly attacked by French and Indian raiding parties organized by the authorities of New France, and these militia had provided timely defense.〔https://archive.org/stream/collectionshist00moorgoog#page/n188/mode/2up〕 The severity of the attacks, however, prompted the settlers to abandon Number Four, which remained unoccupied during the winter of 1746–47. The fort was then occupied by Captain Phineas Stevens and 30 provincial militia in the spring of 1747. Stevens brought with him several dogs, which provided early warning of the arrival of strangers.
The Marquis de Beauharnois, New France's governor, had waged a war against the frontiers of the northern British colonies (New York, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Nova Scotia) since the fall of Louisbourg in 1745 had dried up supplies of important trade goods and provisions. In early 1747 one of the parties he sent south consisted of 10 French troupes de la marine (the colonial troops) and 60 Abenaki warriors under the command of Ensign Joseph Boucher de Niverville.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Biography of Joseph Boucher de Niverville )〕 Some English accounts of the action report Niverville's claims that he had several hundred men; they also incorrectly identify the party leader as "General Debeline".〔Calloway, p. 154〕

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