Battle of Frenchtown
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Battle of Frenchtown | |||||||
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Part of the War of 1812 | |||||||
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Combatants | |||||||
Britain American Indians |
United States | ||||||
Commanders | |||||||
Henry Procter Tecumseh |
James Winchester | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
200 regulars 300 militia 450 natives |
1,000 regulars and militia | ||||||
Casualties | |||||||
24 dead 158 wounded |
397 dead 561 wounded or captured |
Detroit frontier |
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Tippecanoe – 1st Mackinac Island – Maguaga – Fort Dearborn – Detroit – Fort Harrison – Fort Wayne – Mississinewa – Frenchtown – Fort Meigs – Fort Stephenson – Lake Erie – Thames – Longwoods – Prairie du Chien – 2nd Mackinac Island – Lake Huron – Malcolm's Mills |
The Battle of Frenchtown, also known as the River Raisin massacre, was a severe defeat for the Americans during the War of 1812, in an attempt to retake Detroit early in 1813.
Contents |
[edit] Background
After General William Hull had surrendered Detroit in 1812, General William Henry Harrison had been given command of the Army of the Northwest, winning the position over the unpopular General James Winchester. Winchester was instead made second-in-command to Harrison. Harrison's first plan of action was to retake Detroit and split his army into two columns, personally leading one column and placing Winchester in command of the other column. Colonel Henry Procter had assumed command of British troops around Detroit after its surrender. Procter gathered all the British troops in the area together, along with about 500 Indians under the Shawnee Chief Tecumseh.
[edit] Battle
Winchester had received orders to stay within supporting distance of Harrison's column. Instead Winchester moved far ahead of Harrison to Frenchtown along the River Raisin, and on January 18, he routed a small Canadian and Indian force there and captured the town. On January 22, the main British/Indian force arrived at Frenchtown. Winchester's headquarters were far away from the main American lines and was not with his troops when the British attacked. The British/Indian attack surprised the American camp, but they took their positions quickly and returned fire. However, when the right flank gave way the main line began to retreat, even though the left flank anchored in a fort still held. Winchester, attempting to join the front lines, was captured en route by Chief Roundhead. The American retreat quickly became a rout, and only 33 of the 400 engaged escaped the battlefield.
[edit] Aftermath
Procter feared that Harrison's force might close in on him and made a hasty withdrawal to Brownstown on January 23. Procter did not have enough sleighs to carry the wounded American prisoners and left them behind under the guard of the Indians along the River Raisin. The Indians then proceeded to execute 60 American prisoners (mostly Kentucky militia) and ransom off the few unharmed prisoners in Detroit. This action became known as the River Raisin massacre.
The defeat at Frenchtown ended Harrison's campaign against Detroit. He instead assumed a defensive position in Ohio and built Fort Meigs. The phrase "Remember the River Raisin" became a rallying cry for Kentucky militiamen.
Eight Kentucky counties are named for soldiers that fought in the Battle of Frenchtown, including Ballard (after Major Bland Ballard), Edmonson (after Captain John Edmonson), Graves (after Major Benjamin F. Graves), Hart (after Captain Nathaniel G. T. Hart), Hickman (after Captain Paschal Hickman), McCracken (after Captain Virgil McCracken), Meade (after Captain James Meade), and Simpson (after Captain John Simpson).[1]
[edit] References
- ^ (1992) in Kleber, John E.: The Kentucky Encyclopedia, Associate editors: Thomas D. Clark, Lowell H. Harrison, and James C. Klotter, Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0813117720.