SaratogaDuring the Battle of Saratoga, the Advance Corp had about 1,000 men. Besides his own 24th Regiment of Foot, he had the grenadier battalion, the light infantry battalion, and a company of marksmen, along some Canadian militia and Indian auxiliaries. Their role was to precede the main column. Battle of HubbardtonOn July 7, 1777 Fraser's Advance Corps caught up with the American rear guard at the Vermont town of Hubbardton. Though the British captured more than 200 Continental soldiers, the Americans fought well and were able to retreat, keeping their force intact to fight at the later battles at Saratoga. Freeman's FarmDaniel Morgan's riflemen wiped out Fraser's advance party at Freeman's farm on September 19, and began to inflict casualties on his column before they could form up in the open. Morgan's men charged, and Fraser fell back on the main column, under General Hamilton. As Morgan and Benedict Arnold regained control of the Continentals, his column also took some casualties from friendly fire. The British finally took the farm, but the cost was high. Bemis HeightsEarly in the Battle of Bemis Heights on October 7, Fraser fell to rifle fire from Morgan's men. He was carried to a nearby house and placed in the care of Baroness Riedesel, where he died that evening at age 48. He was reportedly buried in a nearby redoubt, but the exact location is uncertain. In her diary, the Baroness noted that he was "...buried at six O'clock in the evening, on a hill, which was a sort of redoubt." His passing is noted by a memorial plaque in the Saratoga Battlefield National Park. See also
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