Benedict Arnold's performance at the Battles of Saratoga contributed to the American victory there. But a bitter rivalry with his commander helped start Arnold down the road to treason. By Steve Puleo for American History Magazine The season was changing. Hot afternoons gave way to cool evenings and cooler mornings as summer turned to autumn in New York's upper Hudson Valley. Beneath the green, red, and orange canopy of leaves shrouding the hills that straddled the Hudson River, a different sort of transformation was taking place. Four months into British Lieutenant General John Burgoyne's invasion of the northern colonies, his army had collided with Major General Horatio Gates's entrenched Americans. Now, on September 19, 1777, the first of two fateful battles--bound to alter the course of the American Revolution--had begun. At Gates's headquarters behind the American lines on Bemis Heights (named for Jotham Bemis, a local tavern keeper), 36-year-old Major General Benedict Arnold seethed with impatience. The fiery Connecticut native held command of the American left wing, which Burgoyne had attacked that morning. After directing the American defense for much of the day, Arnold now found himself wasting his energy by repeatedly requesting that Gates give him reinforcements. He ached to sweep the field before dark. For the rest of the story: http://americanhistory.about.com/library/prm/blbenedictarnold1.htm Sally Rolls Pavia Sun City, AZ sallypavia2001@yahoo.com We will not be remembered by our words, but by our kind deeds." List Owner: GENEALOGYBITSANDPIECES-L-request@rootsweb.com Archives: http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/GENEALOGYBITSANDPIECES "All incoming and outgoing email checked by Norton Anti-Virus"