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Drawn portrait of Frederica Charlotte Louise Riedesel

Frederica Charlotte Louise Riedesel

Provided a valuable account of the American Revolution.

A Military Life

By the time she traveled to North America to accompany her husband on campaign, Lady Riedesel was no stranger to the hardships of military life, and the importance of keeping families together. Born in 1746 as Charlotte Von Massow, she grew up traveling with her father, a lieutenant general in the Prussian army. In 1762, Charlotte met Lieutenant Colonel and Baron Friedrich Adolph Riedesel. They wed later that year, and by marriage, Charlotte gained both a new title and last name: Baroness Riedesel.

In 1776 the Duke of Brunswick signed a treaty to support Great Britain's war against the Patriots in North America. While the Baron Riedesel, a commander of the Duke's troops, prepared to join the British army, the Baronnes prepared to join him—though she was pregnant with her third child at the time. Charlotte and her husband made plans that she would travel to Britian and then to Canada after giving birth. Despite a temporary protest from her mother, Charlotte carried out this plan, strongly insisting that it was important for her family to be together.

George III (1738-1820), Queen Charlotte (1744-1818) and their Six Eldest Children

In May 1776, two months after baby Carolina's birth, Charlotte and her three daughters traveled to the Channel coast and sailed to Britain. Here, they waited nearly a year, trying to arrange passage on a ship Canada and trying to find other officers' wives to travel with. During her time in Britain, Charlotte learned to speak English and adopted English customs. She met King George III and Queen Charlotte who welcomed her kindly and praised her husband's military leadership.

Image Credit: "George III (1738-1820), Queen Charlotte (1744-1818) and their Six Eldest Children" JOHAN JOSEPH ZOFFANY, 1770, The Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace

An illustrated map showing an image of Riedesel meeting with her husband and moving towards Albany, New York

Reuniting Her Family

Finally, in April 1777, Charlotte embarked with her daughters, beginning the transatlantic voyage to reunite her family. Charlotte and her daughters arrived safely and met General Riedesel in June. In the following weeks, she received permission to travel with the army during General John Burgoyne's push south toward Albany, New York. She obtained a small carriage and headed into the American wilderness with British General Burgoyne's army.

An illustrated map showing Riedesel and a marker for the battle of Saratoga.

Charlotte and her family witnessed the . On September 19, Charlotte heard the gunfire from the Battle of Freeman's Farm. She and her daughters stayed in a small house within the British lines, and wounded men were carried to the shelter. To her relief, General Riedesel survived the battle without injury.

An illustrated map showing a marker for the Battle of Bemis Heights. Photograph of the Marshall House.

In the Midst of Battle

After the Battle of Bemis Heights on October 7, mortally wounded Simon Fraser was carried to Charlotte Riedesel's temporary home. She did what she could to ease his suffering and gave supplies to care for the other wounded. Charlotte later attended Fraser's funeral and came under American artillery fire. The British army retreated, pursued by the Americans. Charlotte took refuge at the Marshall House near modern-day Schuylerville, hiding in the cellar with her daughters and protecting other women and wounded officers who sought safety there.

Painting "Surrender of Lord Cornwallis" by John Trumbull

A Shared Fate

By mid-October 1777, the option of surrender faced the British army. Isolated, hungry, and defeated in battle, Burgoyne, Riedesel, and other generals conferred and decided to ask American General Horatio Gates for terms. The general agreed to a convention in which the British army would surrender, be paroled, and return to Britain.

Image Credit: A nineteenth-century lithograph that depicts British General John Burgoyne's formal surrender to American General Horatio Gates. Courtesy of The New York Public Library.

While the military men handled the surrender, Charlotte and her children entered American lines, willingly sharing the parole fate with General Riedesel. Charlotte did not know what to expect in this new situation, but she found that the American officers treated her with kindness. American General Philip Schuyler opened one of his homes for Charlotte and her children.

Congress did not accept the convention terms, delaying the parole and return to Britain of thousands of British and German troops. The Riedesel family stayed in America with the Convention Army, moving several times until finally being allowed to return to Germany in 1783. Through all of the hardships on campaign and as prisoners of war, Charlotte kept her family safe, healthy and, most importantly, together.

Themes of the period
Death and Legacy

Letters and journals relating to the war of the American Revolution, and the capture of the German troops at Saratoga

After her husband's death in 1800, Charlotte resided in Berlin. She wrote and published her memoirs of the Saratoga Campaign, leaving a primary source record that has been inestimably valued by military and social historians. Charlotte Riedesel died on March 29, 1808, but she left a bold account of her determination to keep her family united which led to her witnessing some of the most historic events of the American Revolution.

Letters and Journals - War of the American Revolution by William L. Stone
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