Sixteen soldiers in the Royal Regiment of Scotland are scheduled to leave Montreal on Aug. 30 and travel south via Quebec's Richelieu River, Lake Champlain, Lake George and the Hudson River. They plan to arrive in Manhattan on September 10, in time for ceremonies marking the 15th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Along the way they'll camp at New York historic sites where Scottish soldiers serving alongside the British fought during the American Revolution and the French and Indian War, part of the Seven Years' War.
"It's a way we can take a soldier from a known environment and expose him to the unknown, take them out of their comfort zone, and educate them on the history of the regiment," said Menzies, a member of the regiment's Glasgow-based battalion.
British units conduct similar exercises elsewhere, but it will be the first held in North America, Menzies said. Unlike the redcoats who had to haul canoes and boats over rugged terrain between waterways, the Scots will use vehicles to portage their canoes and gear.
At Ticonderoga, on Lake Champlain's southern end, the 42nd Royal Highland Regiment, known as the Black Watch, suffered more than 500 killed and wounded while assaulting enemy positions on July 6, 1758, during the French and Indian War.
At Stillwater, on the upper Hudson, a Scottish regiment was among the British force that surrendered to the Americans after the Battles at Saratoga in 1777, during the Revolutionary War.
The expedition will end at the USS Intrepid, a World War II aircraft carrier that serves as a floating museum in Manhattan.
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