May 18, 1795—Major Robert Rogers, a New Hampshire soldier whose tactics and leadership of an
elite unit of unconventional warriors in the French and Indian War foreshadowed
the modern “Special Forces,” died alone and impoverished at age 63 in London,
far removed from the brilliant exploits in the North American wilderness that
made him famous throughout the 13 American colonies.
If you are wondering what a picture of buckskin-clad
Spencer Tracy is doing in a post about an 18th-century military
commander, it is because the great actor spurred my interest in this legendary
but flawed soldier by playing him, with his usual intensity and conviction, in Northwest Passage, King Vidor’s 1940
adaptation of the bestselling novel by Kenneth Roberts.
I can still remember
being enthralled as a child by numerous scenes in this epic Technicolor tale of daring and survival—notably, a “human chain” that
enables “Rogers’ Rangers” to cross a torrential river.
With America more than a year away from entering
World War II, Rogers’ exploits showed how America, with little of the intense
training that characterized Continental soldiers, could still revolutionize
warfare by teaching a motley force unconventional new tactics.
“Rogers’ Rangers” represented a sharp break with the
English tradition of military service, where commissions were bought and common
soldiers were drilled to march in strict formation. In contrast, the soldiers
that Rogers molded were woodsmen, provincials, farmers, and Indian scouts, all
ready to follow their charismatic leader in asymmetrical warfare where
traditional methods could not find traction.
The film ended in triumph for Rogers and his soldiers.
MGM had originally subtitled their feature “Book One: Rogers’ Rangers,” in the
hope that its success would convince the studio’s most acclaimed male star that
he should come back for the second half of the Roberts novel.
But Tracy, exhausted by its arduous on-location
filming, saw the downbeat second half of the book as a reason why it should not be filmed. “I’ll play him [Rogers]
up to the point where he has achieved his objective, but I’ll be damned if I’ll
play him when he becomes a drunkard. Audiences won’t want to see him in that
stage of life.”
Offhand, I can think of only two epic films that
challenged audiences with second halves that saw their real-life heroes suffer
the kind of shattering disillusionment and death that Tracy saw as box-office
poison: Lawrence of Arabia and Reds, about the American journalist who
served as an eyewitness-participant in the Russian Revolution, John Reed. Northwest Passage, about an American
further removed in time, would have been an even harder sell in tracing how its
hero subsequently failed at politics, business, and marriage.
The great 19th-century historian of the
colonial conflict between England and France, Francis Parkman, summed up
Rogers’ opposing tendencies in Montcalm and Wolfe:
“He had passed his boyhood in the rough surroundings
of a frontier village. Growing to manhood, he engaged in some occupation which,
he says, led him to frequent journeyings in the wilderness between the French
and English settlements...He does not disclose the nature of this mysterious
employment; but there can be little doubt that it was a smuggling trade with
Canada. His character leaves much to be desired. He had been charged with forgery,
or complicity in it, seems to have had no scruple in matters of business, and
after the war was accused of treasonable dealings with the French and Spaniards
in the west. He was ambitious and violent, yet able in more ways than one, by
no means uneducated, and so skilled in woodcraft, so energetic and resolute,
that his services were invaluable.”
A few of Rogers’ exploits were especially
noteworthy, not only for the way he employed speed and surprise against the
French and their Native American allies but also for the hardships endured by
him and his men:
*The St.
Francois Raid, the climax of a 150-mile march, much of it through marshy
bog, that ended in the destruction of an Indian village that had served as the
launching pad for several deadly raids into the northern colonies;
*The Second Battle
of the Snowshoes, in which, after attempting to ambush the French, Rogers’
men had the tables turned on them—surviving by the skin of their teeth
(including, a possibly apocryphal tale claims, by sliding 400 feet down a sheer
cliff to a frozen Lake George; and
*The 1760 capture
of Fort Detroit and other French outposts, secured after Rogers and the Rangers
marched west—through enemy forests not even charted by the English.
Rogers’ career after the end of the French and
Indian Wars marked a tragic fall from grace. He had made an enemy of General
Thomas Gage, a rival of Rogers’ commander and mentor, British General Jeffrey
Amherst. Gage, as Parkman indicated in the passage I quoted earlier, brought
charges of treason against Rogers and had him hauled to Detroit in chains.
Rogers was acquitted following a trial. But, at the start of the American Revolution, he made
a worse enemy in George Washington, who, because of the major’s extensive
travels in the colonies as unrest spread against English rule, suspected that
Rogers was a Loyalist spy.
Forced to choose side, Rogers elected to fight
against the New Englanders he grew up with, even playing a role in one of the
earliest English intelligence coups of the war: the capture of Nathan Hale. But
he was removed from a leadership role of “The Queen’s Rangers,” and his
drinking and indebtedness mounted until he faded into obscurity far from home.
Nevertheless, his contribution to American warfare
remains. It not only was maintained through his aide John Stark, who would win
the Battle of Bennington for the colonials in the American Revolution, but
through his “Rules of Ranging,” a set of guidelines for guerrilla warfare that
is still distributed by the U.S. Army Ranger School.
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