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After retreating from Quebec after the disaster of the Plains of Abraham on September 13, 1759, the French army regrouped in Montreal under General Lévis. Meanwhile the British army, left behind in Quebec after the fleet sailed at the end of October 1759, suffered from hunger, scurvy and the travails of living in a city largely destroyed in the seige. In April 1760, Lévis returned to Quebec with an army of over seven thousand men, including Canadian militia and first nations warriors. He hoped to besiege Quebec and force its surrender in the spring, when he expected a French fleet to arrive. Murray felt that his army was too small to defend adequately the walls of Quebec, which had not been improved much since the fall. He therefore moved some 3,800 men into the field, all he could muster, along with over twenty cannons, to the same position that Montcalm had occupied on September 13, 1759. Rather than waiting for the French to advance, however, he took the gamble of going on the offensive. At first he had some success, but the advance masked his artillery, while the infantry became bogged down in the mud and melting snowdrifts of the late spring. The battle turned into a two-hour fight at close range; eventually, as more French soldiers joined the fray, the French turned the British flanks, forcing the British to retreat back to Quebec without their guns, which Lévis then turned on the city. The British army lost over a thousand, killed and wounded (three-quarters of the officers of the Fraser Highlanders were killed or wounded) and the French almost nine hundred, one of the bloodiest battles on Canadian soil. Lévis was, however, unable to retake Quebec City. The British force remained besieged in the city until naval reinforcements were able to arrive. The French fleet never arrived, France's naval hopes having been smashed at Quiberon Bay the previous autumn - and when HMS Lowestoft raised its flag as it neared Quebec, Lévis raised the seige and retreated to Montreal, where he surrendered in September to overwhelming British force.
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