Secret Battlefield Linked to Young George Washington Unearthed in Pennsylvania After Centuries of Mystery

Secret Battlefield Linked to Young George Washington Unearthed in Pennsylvania After Centuries of Mystery

So picture this: George Washington, yes—the same guy who’d eventually become America’s first president and star of countless history textbooks—once nearly took down his own troops by mistake. Yep, during the French and Indian War, a foggy evening and a classic case of mistaken identity turned into a full-blown friendly fire fiasco, leaving over a dozen men dead. And here we are, centuries later, with archaeologists digging up artifacts near Fort Ligonier in Pennsylvania, finally pinpointing the very spot where this chaotic moment played out. Makes you wonder—how close was this blunder to rewriting history? Had Washington’s horse taken a slightly different path, the course of a nation might’ve changed forever. Intrigued? Dive into the dusty battlefield’s story and the unexpected twist in the life of America’s iconic general. LEARN MORE

During the French and Indian War, George Washington and his men mistook a group of fellow troops as French soldiers and opened fire, resulting in the deaths of more than a dozen people.

Pennsylvania French And Indian War Battlefield

Public DomainCharles Willson Peale’s 1772 portrait of George Washington, the earliest known depiction of the future president.

Long before George Washington led American troops in the Revolutionary War, defeated the British, and became the nation’s first president, he was a 26-year-old colonel fighting in the French and Indian War. During that conflict, Washington narrowly survived a friendly fire incident that was later described as the worst “jeopardy” he ever encountered. Now, archaeologists believe they’ve located the site of the battle near a centuries-old fort in Pennsylvania.

After scouring the area near Fort Ligonier, archaeologists found a number of objects that suggest they’ve located the site of the friendly fire, which took place between Washington and another colonel aligned with the British. Though the incident is largely forgotten today, it played a crucial role in both Washington’s life and in the larger conflict.

Discovering The Friendly Fire Site Near Fort Ligonier

Archaeologists At Friendly Fire Site

Juniata College/FacebookArchaeologists, including volunteers from the Veterans Archaeology Program, excavate the site near Fort Ligonier.

The discovery of the friendly fire site was led by Jonathan Burns, an archaeologist and the director of the Cultural Resource Institute at Juniata College. Over the past four years, Burns and a team of archaeologists, including volunteers, narrowed in on the location of the site, which they believe is roughly two miles west of Fort Ligonier.

“As an archaeologist this is an exciting day for me,” Burns said as he announced the discovery of the site at the Fort Ligonier museum on July 11. “It’s not every day that you get to announce that you discovered a heretofore undiscovered Washington battlefield.”

Using metal detectors and ground-penetrating radar, archaeologists uncovered some 300 18th-century objects, including uniform buttons and buckles, musket balls, nails, and a French watch key.

Archaeologists are convinced that, more than 250 years ago, this was the site where George Washington narrowly survived a friendly fire incident during the French and Indian War.

“I’m here to say that we are pretty confident that we’ve done our due diligence here,” Burns stated. “We’ve covered multiple lines of evidence to present this body of work and make the claim that this has been found.”

Young George Washington’s Friendly Fire Battle

Fort Ligonier Today

Mind meal/Wikimedia CommonsFort Ligonier today. Archaeologists believe that George Washington’s friendly fire incident took place roughly two miles west of the fort.

The friendly fire incident took place during the French and Indian War (1754 to 1763), which was part of the larger, global conflict known as the Seven Years’ War. Then, Washington was a 26-year-old colonel fighting on behalf of the British against the French. But on Nov. 12, 1758, he stumbled into a friendly fire incident that almost cost him his life.

Washington had been ordered to lead a regiment of about 500 Virginians to help a fellow colonel, George Mercer, defend Fort Ligonier against French and Native American troops. But on that night, as Washington and his men walked through a thick fog at dusk, his and Mercer’s troops mistook each other for enemies.

“It being near dusk and the intelligence not having been fully dissiminated among Colo. Mercers Corps, and they taking us, for the enemy who had retreated approaching in another direction commenced a heavy fire upon the releiving party which drew fire in return in spite of all the exertions of the Officers one of whom & several privates were killed and many wounded before a stop could be put to it,” George Washington wrote to his friend, Colonel David Humphreys, for a biography of Washington that Humphreys was writing around 1786.

To stop the men from firing, Washington put his own life in great danger by riding between the two lines of troops and attempting to knock away the muskets with his sword. It was, wrote Humphreys, the most “imminent danger” of Washington’s life, and he had never been in so much “jeopardy… before or since.”

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