Hostilities between Britain and France were soon renewed with the outbreak of the Seven Years' War in 1756. The 35th Regiment was deployed to America, where Monro relieved Lieutenant-Colonel William Eyre as commander of Fort William Henry in the Province of New York.[2]: 95 That summer, the French General Louis-Joseph de Montcalm led a force of 7,626 French and Native troops in a weeklong Siege of Fort William Henry. Effectively cut off from the main British force, commanded by General Daniel Webb, the 2,327-man British garrison stood little chance of holding the fort once the French began formal siege operations on 3 August. Monro was forced to open negotiations with Montcalm on 9 August.[3]
Monro's tenacious defence of the fort won him generous terms of surrender from Montcalm. The British were accorded the full honours of war by being allowed to keep their colours, muskets and a single symbolic cannon. The garrison would be paroled and allowed to march to the British-held Fort Edward, about 17 miles (27 km) away.
However, it was not to be. As Monro led his garrison from Fort William Henry the next day, the Native American warriors attacked the British soldiers and killed approximately 185 of them. Monro actually survived the massacre, but he died suddenly in Albany just three months later, on 3 November 1757.[4][3]
In popular culture
Colonel Munro is portrayed in James Fenimore Cooper's story The Last of the Mohicans, in which he is the father of two daughters, Alice and Cora. (In reality Munro never married or had children)[5] In the story, he plays a similar role as he did in history, leading the defense of Fort William Henry.[6]
Monro is also portrayed as a supporting character in the 2014 action-adventure video game Assassin's Creed Rogue.[19] He is shown to be a noble character, seeking to help the people of New York City recover from the gang violence and the disrepair of the city.[20] He is a member of the Templar Order and assists Christopher Gist and the protagonist Shay Patrick Cormac until he is killed by Assassin Liam O'Brien in Albany after the fall of Fort William Henry.[21][22][23] He is voiced by Graham J. Cuthbertson.[24]
References
^ abHolden, James A.; Inglis, John Alexander (1914). "The Lineage of Colonel George Monro - Proceedings of the New York State Historical Association". Proceedings of the New York State Historical Association. 13: 389–403. JSTOR42889472.
^Steele, Ian kenneth (1990). Betrayals: Fort William Henry and the "Massacre". Oxford University Press. ISBN9780195058932.