Louis-Antoine, Comte de Bougainville, questioning some of …

Years: 1757 - 1757
January
Louis-Antoine, Comte de Bougainville, questioning some of the men captured during the Battle on Snowshoes, learns from them the disposition of men and materials all the way from Albany to Fort William Henry.

Other captured British end up as slaves to the natives.

Thomas Brown, who will publish a pamphlet that vividly describes his captivity, will spend almost two years in slavery, traveling as far as the Mississippi River before reaching Albany in November 1758.

Bougainville was born in Paris, the son of a notary, on either November 11 or 12, 1729. 

In early life, he had studied law, but soon abandoned the profession. 

In 1753 he had entered the army in the corps of musketeers.

At the age of twenty-five he had published a treatise on integral calculus, as a supplement to De l'Hôpital's treatise, Des infiniment petits.

He had been sent in 1755 to London as secretary to the French embassy, where he was made a member of the Royal Society.

Stationed in Canada in 1756 as captain of dragoons and aide-de-camp to the Marquis de Montcalm, 
Bougainville had taken an active part in the capture of Fort Oswego in 1756.

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