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Benedict and Arnold
Other Revolutionary War heroes who became figures of American folklore include: Benedict Arnold, Benjamin Franklin, Nathan Hale, John Hancock, Andrew Jackson, and John Paul Jones and Francis Marion.
Engraving of Benedict Arnold
On the afternoon of May 9, Benedict Arnold quite unexpectedly arrived on the scene.
While largely accurate, it notably omits Benedict Arnold from the capture of Ticonderoga, and Seth Warner as the leader of the Green Mountain Boys.
* 1779 – Benedict Arnold, a general in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War, is court-martialed for malfeasance.
Author Joseph Raymond calls Josephus " the Jewish Benedict Arnold " for betraying his own troops at Jotapata.
While it was a tactical defeat for the Americans and the small fleet led by Benedict Arnold was almost entirely destroyed, the Americans gained a strategic victory.
* 1775 – American Revolutionary War: A small Colonial militia led by Ethan Allen and Colonel Benedict Arnold captures Fort Ticonderoga.
In American English, the term is less well known than the equivalent phrase Benedict Arnold.
* Benedict Arnold ( United States )
* Benedict Arnold: A Drama of the American Revolution in Five Acts ( 2005 ).
This is an effort to humanize and show the multiple dimensions of Benedict Arnold, and to contrast the democratic values embodied in the spirit of the Revolution with the socially bankrupt classism embodied in the British subjects who won Arnold to their side.
* 1780 – American Revolutionary War: Benedict Arnold gives the British the plans to West Point.
* 1780 – Benedict Arnold flees to British Army lines when the arrest of British Major John André exposes Arnold's plot to surrender West Point.
Benedict Arnold and his expeditionary company set off from Fort Western, bound for Quebec City.
General Benedict Arnold learned of the transfer and captured the foundry.
His treachery is considered so notorious that his name has long been synonymous with traitor, a fate he shares with Benedict Arnold, Marcus Junius Brutus ( who too is depicted in Dante's Inferno, suffering the same fate as Judas along with Cassius Longinus ), and Vidkun Quisling.
* June 14 – Benedict Arnold, American Revolution hero and traitor ( b. 1741 )
* January 5 – American Revolution: Richmond, Virginia is burned by British naval forces led by Benedict Arnold.
Benedict Arnold
* June 1 – American Revolutionary War: Benedict Arnold is court-martialed for malfeasance in his treatment of government property.
* September 21 – Benedict Arnold gives detailed plans of West Point to Major John André.
* September 25 – Benedict Arnold flees to British-held New York.
* May 30 – Benedict Arnold signs US oath of allegiance at Valley Forge

Benedict and troops
When Clement II died in October 1047, Benedict seized the Lateran Palace in November, but was driven away by German troops in July 1048.
In 1775, Benedict Arnold and his 1, 100 troops would use Fort Western as a staging area before continuing their journey up the Kennebec to the Battle of Quebec.
The latter motive proved to be in vain, and in 1781, under the command of Benedict Arnold, Richmond was burned by British troops, causing Governor Thomas Jefferson to flee the city.
He sent a body of troops into Rome and forcibly expelled Benedict from the city.
The original settlement, which may have supplied wood to Benedict Arnold's troops, was completely destroyed during the American Revolutionary War in connection with British General John Burgoyne's march from Canada to Saratoga.
On December 20, 1780, Benedict Arnold sailed from New York with 1, 500 troops to Portsmouth, Virginia.
On September 11, about 1, 100 troops under the command of Benedict Arnold left for Quebec.
General Benedict Arnold and his troops passed through Anson village in 1775 on their way up the Kennebec River to the ill-fated Battle of Quebec.
Benedict Arnold and his troops rested and re-provisioned here in 1775 during their march up the Kennebec River to the Battle of Quebec.
In 1775, Benedict Arnold and his troops would march through Norridgewock Plantation, as it was known, on their way to the ill-fated Battle of Quebec.
In 1775, Benedict Arnold and his troops marched through on their way to the Battle of Quebec.
The Congress ' troops were defeated at Trois-Rivières on June 8, and on the 15th of the same, Benedict Arnold withdrew his men from the province of Quebec.
He personally led the British troops ashore in Benedict, Maryland, and marched through Upper Marlboro, Maryland, to the attack on the Americans at the Battle of Bladensburg on 24 August 1814, causing the hastily organised militia of the American army to collapse into a rout.
He was sent in 1775 as part of a commission to inspect the troops and facilities at Fort Ticonderoga in upstate New York, which was nominally under the control of Benedict Arnold, who had been issued a Massachusetts colonel's commission for the purpose of capturing it.
Ross's troops landed at Benedict on 19 August, and began marching upstream the following day, while Cockburn proceeded up the river with ships ' boats and small craft.
During the American Revolution General Benedict Arnold drilled his troops in the area, on the current location of M. S.
Dom Benedict did sympathize with the Union, however, and his monks enjoyed the protection of Union troops in the area.
In September, Benedict Arnold led 1, 100 troops on an expedition through the wilderness of Maine, which was drawn from the army assembled outside Boston.
During the American Revolutionary War, in January 1781, General Benedict Arnold, the traitor who was then serving on the British side, quartered his troops in the church when Richmond was occupied.
When Benedict Arnold and Ethan Allen captured Fort Ticonderoga and raided Fort St. Jean in May 1775, Quebec was garrisoned by about 600 regular troops, some of which were widely distributed throughout Quebec's large territory.
In September 1775, early in the American Revolutionary War, Colonel Benedict Arnold led a force of 1, 100 Continental Army troops on an expedition from Cambridge, Massachusetts to the gates of Quebec City.
In addition to his 1, 400 troops, he assumed command of another 3, 600 troops that had been under the command of the turncoat Benedict Arnold, and was soon thereafter further reinforced by about 2, 000 more troops sent from New York.

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