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Jane Macrae became one of the best known women of the 19th century after her sensational murder on
July 27, 1777. She was a casualty of the American Revolution.
The truth about her death was another casualty of the war. She was a young Loyalist who went to upstate
New York to meet her fianc, a lieutenant in Lt. Gen. John Burgoynes army.
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According to the myth that grew up about her, she was tall, beautiful, accomplished and much loved. She
was captured near the town of Fort Edward, N.Y., by Iroquois Indians on her way to meet her lover at
Ticonderoga. Two were taking her to the British for, quarreled, killed her and took her scalp. To make
matters worse, Burgoyne refused to punish the murderers.
The news of her unavenged murder spread quickly, fueling outrage and fear throughout upstate New York
and Vermont (then the New Hampshire Grants). Continental Army enlistments spiked and resistance to the
British was so strengthened the patriots that they won the Battles of Saratoga. Propaganda about her
murder also built support for the 1779 Sullivan Expedition, a campaign led by Maj. Gen. John
Sullivan against Loyalists and the four American Iroquois tribes that sided with the British. And James
Fenimore Cooper used the tale in The Last of the Mohicans.
Some of it is true. Some of it isnt. Some well never know.
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At least this is known: There was a Jane Jenny Macrae, or McCrea, or MacCrea, the daughter of a
Presbyterian minister born sometime in New Jersey in 1752. She was engaged to a Loyalist neighbor, David
Jones, who joined the British Army.
7/28/2015 11:56 AM
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A newspaper account described her as "lovely in disposition, so graceful in manners and so intelligent in
features, that she was a favorite of all who knew her." Her hair "was of extraordinary length and beauty,
measuring a yard and a quarter." James Wilkinson, who actually saw her, described her as "a country girl
of honest family in circumstances of mediocrity, without either beauty or accomplishments."
Her hair was described as reddish, black and blonde.
It is certain that Burgoyne was leading an invasion down
the Hudson River Valley from Canada that summer. Patriot
fighters were harassing his army, and he encouraged his
Iroquois allies to hunt and kill them.
There is consensus that Jane Macrae traveled to Fort
Edward to meet her fianc. She was staying with an elderly
friend, Sara McNeil. With the approach of British forces,
many of the townspeople fled to Albany. Jenny and Sara
stayed behind. She had received a letter from David Jones,
saying,
According to a
century version of events, David Jones
sent two Indian escorts to fetch her so they could be married that day. And then:
When pretty Jane Macrae, imagining herself safe under the escort of two Indians, was on her
way to join her betrothed lover at Fort Edward, the escort quarreled about her, and as the
easiest way of settling it, drove an ax into her skull. The deed, committed under such
circumstances, sent a thrill of horror through the country.
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According to other accounts, she was -- or they were -- captured by the Indians. One of the Indians later
said she was shot by pursuing rebels. An American soldier claimed to have been captured with them and
saw the Indian shoot, then scalp her. Another British officer said she was taken against her will and
tomahawked.
Whether propaganda about her death increased recruitment into the patriot cause and solidified resistance
to the British forces in the run-up to the Battles of Saratoga is also open to question.
John F. Luzader, in Saratoga: A Military History of the Decisive Campaign of the American Revolution,
reviewed muster rolls and found no increase in enlistment; in fact, it dropped.
He also questioned how much fear and loathing
was spread by the news of her murder.
It is true that Burgoyne complained to Gen.
Horatio Gates about the way British prisoners
were treated after the Battle of Bennington. Gates
replied in a letter:
Horatio Gates
Gates circulated the letter and boasted he had run a successful propaganda campaign. Gates claims may
have prompted the myth that eventually grew up around Jane Macrae.
Not only did she appear as Dora in The Last of the Mohicans, but Joel Barlow wrote about it in his 1807
poem The Columbiad. Mercy Warren wrote about it in her 1805 Historyof the American Revolution. Delia
Bacon made it into a play in 1839, The Bride of Fort Edward. John Vanderlyn painted the portrait of her in
1804.
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