zpostcode
Battle of Fort Necessity
Jan 3, 2026 12:03 AM

  Battle of Fort Necessity, one of the earliest skirmishes of the French and Indian War, the North American theater of the global Seven Years’ War, and the only battle George Washington ever surrendered. The fight occurred on July 3, 1754, near the site of an earlier skirmish that precipitated it.

  

Battle of Fort Necessity1

  Peale, Charles Willson: George Washington as Colonel in the Virginia RegimentGeorge Washington as Colonel in the Virginia Regiment, oil on canvas, by Charles Willson Peale, 1772; in the Lee Chapel and Museum, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia.(more)The fight at Fort Necessity occurred on the heels of the Battle of Jumonville Glen (May 28), often cited as the opening battle of the French and Indian War. In the earlier skirmish, Washington and his Indian allies had ambushed Joseph Coulon de Villiers, Sieur de Jumonville and his French Canadian forces, which had earlier in the spring taken over a British fort under construction at the convergence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers (the “Forks,” at modern-day Pittsburgh). Washington had been sent to demand France’s evacuation of the area and to engage the French forces in battle if necessary. When the French refused to leave, Washington attacked the French from his own headquarters at Great Meadows, south of Fort Duquesne. After the successful raid, the captured Jumonville was suddenly tomahawked to death by Washington’s ally, Mingo (Iroquoian) chief Tanacharison; nine other French captives were then also scalped. A survivor of the raid escaped back to French headquarters at Fort Duquesne and reported on the massacre. Knowing a counterattack by the French was now only a matter of time, Washington fortified his camp at Great Meadows while he awaited the rest of his volunteer regiment.

  French and Indian War Events keyboard_arrow_left

  

Battle of Fort Necessity2

  Battle of Jumonville Glen May 28, 1754

  

Battle of Fort Necessity3

  Battle of Fort Necessity July 3, 1754

  

Battle of Fort Necessity4

  Battle of the Monongahela July 9, 1755

  

Battle of Fort Necessity5

  Battle of Minorca May 20, 1756

  

Battle of Fort Necessity6

  Battle of Carillon July 8, 1758

  

Battle of Fort Necessity7

  Battle of Quebec September 13, 1759

  

Battle of Fort Necessity4

  Treaty of Paris February 10, 1763 keyboard_arrow_right

  

Battle of Fort Necessity8

  George Washington: sketch mapGeorge Washington's sketch map of his journey (1753–54) from what is now Cumberland, Maryland, to Fort LeBoeuf (now Waterford, Pennsylvania), 1754.(more)When the last companies of the Virginia Regiment arrived on June 9, Washington learned that the colonel had died en route. Promoted to that rank, he took command of the regiment’s 293 officers and men. Washington put his men to work building a small log palisade at Great Meadows, with a low trench and earth berm around the perimeter, which he christened Fort Necessity. It was in a poor location on low ground that was subject to flooding, with the edge of the higher woodlands within musket range. Reinforcements arrived when South Carolina’s Provincial Independent Company marched in with 100 British regulars.

  On 3 July, in heavy rain, a force of some 800 French and Indians appeared, commanded by Jumonville’s half-brother, Louis Coulon de Villers. Washington formed his men in ranks to fight outside the fort, but this was not what the French force intended. Instead, they surrounded the fort and opened fire from the woods. Four hours later, Washington’s trench was flooded and exposed to enfilade fire, much of his low supply of powder was wet, and many of his men were dead or wounded. At dusk, the French commander called a truce and offered terms. After several hours of negotiation, according to the terms of which the British regulars were allowed to keep their colors and honors of war, Washington, with no hope of reinforcement, signed the surrender (written in French) not realizing that it was also a confession to having “assassinated” Louis’s half-brother at Jumonville Glen. Washington later protested that he would not have signed had the French translator used the word “assassination” and not the comparatively neutral “death.” The two battles in the woods did much to solidify each side’s commitment to war.

  At dawn on July 4, a defeated Washington and his surviving men marched out of the fort, which the French then torched, and returned to Virginia. Embarrassed by the surrender but still proud of his actions, Washington later said, “I have heard the bullets whistle; and believe me, there is something charming in the sound.” He would return to the immediate area the following year as part of General Edward Braddock’s ill-fated expedition to attack Fort Duquesne.

  Losses: French and Indian, 3 dead, 17 wounded; British, 31 dead, 70 wounded.

  Get a Britannica Premium subscription and gain access to exclusive content. Subscribe Now

Comments
Welcome to zpostcode comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Recommend >
biometrics
  biometrics, measures of individuals’ unique physical characteristics or behavioral traits that are typically used in automated recognition technology to verify personal identity. Physical characteristics used include fingerprints, faces, retinas, and voice patterns. Biometric authentication may be used to manage an individual’s access to resources such as buildings, rooms, computers, and phones. Timeline: Biometrics Technology Automated biometric systems did not become...
Kaʿiulani
  In full: Victoria Kaʿiulani Kawekio I Lunalilo Kalaninuiahilapalapa Cleghorn (Show more) Born: October 16, 1875, Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii [now Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.] (Show more) Died: March 6, 1899, Waikiki [now in Honolulu] (Show more) Kaʿiulani (born October 16, 1875, Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii [now Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.]—died March 6, 1899, Waikiki [now in Honolulu]) was the final heir apparent to the...
Deaths in 2024
  Below is a list of notable deaths in 2024, arranged in chronological order. (The age of the individual is in parentheses.) • Herbert Kroemer (95): German-born physicist who was a corecipient of the 2000 Nobel Prize for Physics • Thomas Stafford (93): American astronaut who flew on a number of missions and notably commanded the Apollo 10 mission (1969) •...
John Steenhuisen
  In full: John Henry Steenhuisen (Show more) Born: March 25, 1976, Durban, South Africa (Show more) John Steenhuisen (born March 25, 1976, Durban, South Africa) is a South African politician who since 2019 has led the Democratic Alliance (DA), the country’s leading opposition party. Steenhuisen grew up in Durban, in what was then the province of Natal (now part of...
Information Recommendation
art and cultural property repatriation
  art and cultural property repatriation, the return of art or other cultural objects to their country or culture of origin. It differs from art restitution, which is typically used to describe instances in which a piece of art or other cultural object is returned to an individual, rather than to a country or people. Many discussions of repatriation focus on...
Interactive Periodic Table of the Elements
  Above is an interactive periodic table of the elements. Clicking on one of the types of elements at the top will emphasize those elements in the table and give some information about what those elements have in common. Clicking on one of the elements will bring up a larger tile with that element’s atomic number, atomic weight, symbol, electron configuration,...
chemical castration
  chemical castration, the use of drugs to suppress the production of sex hormones. Chemical castration differs from surgical castration in that it is reversible and its effects typically stop when the drugs are ceased. Chemical castration is used in the treatment of certain types of cancer, and in some countries it is used as an intervention to deter sex offenders....
Deepest blue hole in the world discovered, with hidden caves and tunnels believed to be inside
Mexico's Taam Ja' Blue Hole is the deepest known underwater sinkhole in the world, researchers have discovered and they haven't even reached the bottom yet. New measurements indicate the Taam Ja' Blue Hole (TJBH), which sits in Chetumal Bay off the southeast coast of the Yucatan Peninsula, extends at least 1,380 feet (420 meters) below sea level. That's 480 feet...
Titan submersible implosion
  More than 100 years after sinking, the Titanic continues to capture the public’s imagination. It has inspired numerous books, TV shows, and films—as well as a highly lucrative tourism industry. For hundreds of thousands of dollars, Titanic enthusiasts can travel in submersible vehicles to the wreckage, which lies approximately 12,500 feet (3,800 meters) below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean....
Khmer empire
  Date: 802 - 1431 (Show more) Related Places: Vietnam Thailand Cambodia Laos (Show more) Khmer empire, ancient Cambodian state that ruled vast areas of mainland Southeast Asia from about 802 ce to 1431, reaching its peak between the 11th and 13th centuries. Also known as the kingdom of Angkor, it was the successor state of the earlier kingdoms of Funan...
Earth from space: Lava bleeds down iguana-infested volcano as it spits out toxic gas
Quick factsWhere is it? Fernandina Island, Galpagos Islands [-0.3738657, -91.5395414]. What's in the photo? The erupting La Cumbre volcano. Which satellite took the photo? Landsat 8. When was it taken? March 7, 2024. This striking image captures the initial lava flow from the ongoing eruption at La Cumbre volcano. The active fissure is located on Fernandina Island the third largest...
Jeffrey Gibson
  Born: March 31, 1972, Colorado Springs, Colorado, U.S. (Show more) Jeffrey Gibson (born March 31, 1972, Colorado Springs, Colorado, U.S.) is an American multidisciplinary artist of Choctaw and Cherokee descent, whose art explores the changeability of identity using narratives, materials, abstract contemporary forms, and motifs from Native American history and queer culture. Pieces include powwow regalia, geometric paintings on animal...