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Taking of Fort Erie
Directly across from Buffalo, at the
head of Niagara river, on the Canada side, stood Fort Erie.
Chippewa, at that time head-quarters of the British army, was
eighteen miles below, on the same side. Fort Erie was garrisoned
by about one hundred and seventy men; at Chippewa and within
available distances from it, was stationed the principal part of
the British force in this region.
The plan with which it was proposed to open the
campaign of 1814, contemplated an attack on both of these
places.
The campaign of the previous year, though favorable in
a good degree, did not close with entire success to the American
arms. The idea was entertained of descending the St. Lawrence,
with a view of capturing Montreal, a design which signally
failed. Taking advantage of the feeble defense of our frontier,
by the withdrawal of the regular troops for the purpose named,
the enemy, on the 18th of December, surprised and took Fort
Niagara, and sweeping along our frontier settlements on the
Niagara river, ravaged the country by fire and sword, as they
passed rapidly on, carrying the works at Lewiston, and
Manchester, and laying in ashes the thriving villages of Black
Rock and Buffalo. They burned also without opposition, a village
of the
Tuscarora.
The voice of Red Jacket was thereupon heard, arousing
his people again, to the necessity of taking up arms. And as the
result, about six hundred warriors, mostly from the Seneca
nation, were in readiness to offer their services, at the
opening of the present campaign.
Buffalo was the appointed place of rendezvous, and on
the first of July, General Brown, who commanded our forces,
regarding them as sufficient to warrant the commencement of the
plan of operations, began by reconnoitering Fort Erie. During
the night of the second of July, General Ripley, with a part of
his brigade, embarked in boats, with a view of landing on the
opposite shore, one mile above the Fort, at about day break the
next morning.
General Scott with his brigade was to cross the Niagara
river, through a difficult pass in the Black Rock Rapids, and
make a simultaneous landing below the fort. The two brigades
enclosing the fort, could prevent the escape of the garrison,
until artillery to reduce it, should be brought from Buffalo.
General Scott with his usual promptness, made good his
landing, and was on the ground at the hour appointed, and by the
aid of a few Indians and volunteers who accompanied him as
guides, invested the fort, so as to secure its garrison. General
Ripley though prompt in his departure, was delayed in reaching
his position, by a dense fog which misled his pilots.
As the sun rose the British commandant and his
officers, could see the busy operations going on in ferrying
across from Buffalo, artillery, Indians and soldiers, with their
various preparations of war. They discovered also how completely
they were invested. At the demand of General Brown, without
firing a gun or making any attempt at resistance, the fort and
garrison were surrendered.
This part of their enterprise being accomplished, they
next turned their thoughts toward Chippewa.
The Chippewa or Welland river, is a considerable stream
not far from one hundred yards wide, and from twelve to twenty
feet deep, entering the Niagara at right angles, as it flows in
from the west.
On the north or left bank of this stream, near its
mouth, the British army had its station and defenses, consisting
of two block houses, connected and flanked by a parapet.
Street's creek was two miles above, or south of this, a
small sluggish stream, which enters the Niagara in a direction
parallel with the Chippewa. The mouth of this creek was selected
by the American commanders, as affording a favorable position
for their army before the battle.
On the evening of the same day of the capture of Fort
Erie, General Scott with his brigade and Towson's artillery,
proceeded down the river on his way toward Chippewa, and on the
morning of the fourth, encamped in the open field, on the south
side of Street's creek, having driven in some advanced posts of
the enemy. In the evening he was joined by General Brown, with
General Ripley's brigade, which took post in the same field, in
rear of General Scott.
General Porter with the Indians, and Pennsylvania
volunteers, crossed the Niagara at Black Rock during the night
of the fourth, and on the morning of the fifth, marched for the
camp, arriving there at about noon.
The two armies nearly equal in numbers, and well
qualified by their thorough equipments, and the skill of their
commanders, to harm each other effectually, were now encamped
with only two miles, and the two streams, on whose banks they
rested, between them.
But though thus near, intervening objects prevented
their seeing each other. Between them was a strip of woodland
about one-fourth of a mile in width, extending from the forest
on the west, near to the bank of the river, where it was cleared
for the public highway. This effectually shut out from the view
of the other, the maneuvers of each army.
The Indians and militia from the British army infested
these woods, and became annoying to our forces. General Porter
being well acquainted with the country, and having charge of the
Indians, was requested to take them, and a part of his
Pennsylvania volunteers, and dislodge this portion of the enemy;
General Brown assuring him, that none of the British regulars
would be found south of the Chippewa on that day, and promising
him in case of so improbable a contingency, the support of
General Scott's brigade.
At about three o'clock of the same day of his arrival,
General Porter formed his men, half a mile in rear of the main
camp, into single or Indian file, placing the Indians on the
left, and a part of the Pennsylvanians on the right.
"Thence he marched into the woods in the same order, in
a line at right angles to the river, until the whole Indian
force was immerged in the forest, leaving the white troops in
the open field; they had only to halt and face to the right,
when the whole were formed in line of battle, three-fourths of a
mile long and one man deep, looking in the direction of
Chippewa. Red Jacket was placed on the extreme left of the line,
and General Porter took his station on the margin of the woods
between his white and red troops, accompanied by Captain
Pollard, a Seneca chief, who, in this campaign, was considered
first in command among the Indians; Colonel Flemming, the
Quarter-master of the Indian corps, Lieutenant Donald Fraser his
aid, and Henry Johnson his interpreter. He was also accompanied
by Major Jones, and Major Wood of the Engineers, as volunteers;
and was supported by a company of regular infantry, marching in
column in rear, as a reserve.
"The Indians were commanded by their war-chiefs, who
were indulged in their own mode of conducting the attack,
marching about twenty yards in advance of the warriors of their
respective tribes. General Porter having sent out scouts to
reconnoiter the enemy, the march was commenced by signal, and
proceeded at first with great stillness and caution. The chiefs
have signals, by which, on the discovery of any circumstance
requiring consultation, or change of route or action, they
convey notice through their ranks with great celerity, on which
the whole line of warriors drop instantly on the ground, and
remain there until further orders. Two maneuvers of this kind
occurred on the march, the first of little moment, but the
second communicating through the scouts, the exact position of
the enemy, who, apprised of their assailants' approach, lay
concealed in a thicket of bushes, along the margin of Street's
creek.
"A consultation was thereupon held, and new orders
given, the purport of which was to change the line of march, so
as to meet the enemy to more advantage, to increase the speed as
much as was consistent with the preservation of order, and to
receive their first fire, but not to return it except singly,
and when it could be done with certain effect, and then to raise
the war-whoop, pursue, capture, and slay as many as practicable,
until they should reach the open ground in front of Chippewa,
and thence return to camp.
"The march was accordingly resumed, the fire of the
enemy received, and a rush accompanied with savage yells made
upon them, and continued for more than a mile, through scenes of
frightful havoc and slaughter, few only of the fugitives
offering to surrender as prisoners, while others, believing that
no quarter would be given, suffered themselves to be cut down
with the tomahawk, or turning back upon their pursuers, fought
hand to hand to the last.
"On reaching the open field in front of Chippewa, the
assailants were met by a tremendous discharge of musketry, by
which the warriors, who were principally in front, were thrown
back upon the volunteers and reserve, who for want of equal
speed were a short distance in the rear. Presuming that the fire
had come from the enemy he had been pursuing, and who had
rallied on reaching the open ground, General Porter made an
effort, not without success, to reform his line with volunteers,
reserve and a portion of the warriors; but on again advancing to
the margin of the woods, found himself within a few yards of the
whole British regular army, formed in line of battle, and
presenting within a given space at least three men fresh from
their camp, to a single one in his own attenuated and exhausted
line. After receiving and returning two or three fires, the
enemy rushed forward with charged bayonets, when hearing nothing
from General Scott, he gave the order to retreat and form again
on the left of General Scott's brigade, wherever it should be
found.
"It appears that the British commander had resolved on
making a general attack, that day, on the American camp; and in
execution of this purpose had marched his whole force across the
Chippewa, a short time before General Porter entered the woods
with the Indians; and having sent forward his Indians and
militia, which was the British force met in the woods, to
commence his attack on the left flank of the Americans, formed
in the meantime his battalions of regulars on the plain, under
cover of the strip of woodland which divided the two camps, with
his artillery on his left, near the gorge occupied by the road
along the bank of the river; ready to act the moment the effect
of the flank attack should be developed.
"The repulse of General Porter's command was thus
effected by the main body of the British army, while General
Scott's brigade was more than a mile in the rear, and had not
yet crossed the bridge over Street's creek.... In a retreat of a
mile in a diagonal direction to the right, so as to uncover the
enemy to the fire of the American line, then just beginning to
form, they gained but little distance on the British columns,
who were in hot pursuit. When General Porter and his staff
arrived at Street's creek, they were met by Major Jessup's
battalion, then in the act of taking its position, which was on
the left, and a short distance from the remainder of General
Scott's brigade; and the volunteers fatigued as they were, aided
Major Jessup's evolutions, which were executed with great order
and celerity, by breaking down the fences to enable him to pass
from the road bordering on Street's creek, to his position in
the field.
"Nothing could exceed the coolness and order with which
General Scott's brigade crossed the bridge and formed its line,
under the galling fire of the enemy's artillery, and the
headlong approach of his infantry, who, when only fifty yards
distant, were received by a tremendous discharge of musketry
from the American line, which forced them to fall back for a
considerable distance. But they speedily rallied and advanced
again, when they were met in the same gallant manner; and they
thereupon fled, with as much precipitation as they had entered
it, not halting until they had recrossed the Chippewa and
destroyed their bridge.
"General Scott pursued them around the point of woods,
beyond which he could only advance in face of their batteries,
and these he could not reach by reason of the intervening river.
He therefore deployed to the left, and forming a line in the
open field, in front of Chippewa, directed his men to lie down
with their heads toward the batteries, the better to avoid the
effect of their fire.
"The battle between the regular troops, was but of a
few minutes duration, with the exception of the artillery, which
on both sides was earliest and longest engaged, and served with
the most destructive effect; Colonel Towson occupying the right
of the American line, on Street's creek, and the British
artillery the left of theirs, at the point of woods, and both
commencing with the first movements of the regular troops.
"Immediately after the two lines had encountered on
Street's creek, a magnificent charger completely caparisoned,
but without a rider, was seen prancing and curveting in the
center of the battle field, and endeavoring to make his escape
through the American line to the rear. Presuming that he
belonged to some officer who had fallen, he was forthwith
secured by the servant of General Porter, and immediately
mounted by the General, to whom he was a most acceptable
acquisition, after the labors of the day, which he had performed
on foot.
"Riding up to General Brown, who was also in the midst
of the action, General Porter received his orders to march with
the two hundred Pennsylvanians, who had been left in camp, to
the support of General Scott; which orders were promptly
executed by following General Scott's brigade around the point
of woods, receiving the fire of the British batteries, and
taking post on his left, with the men in the same recumbent
position. Here they awaited the arrival of General Ripley's
brigade, which on the first discovery that the whole British
army was in the field, had been ordered to make a detour through
the woods, and attack the enemy's right. They soon came up, in
the same muddy plight with the volunteers and Indians, who had
previously traversed the same ground; when the whole army at
about sundown quietly retired to their camp, on the south side
of Street's creek.
"And thus ended the battle of Chippewa, which probably
produced more important results in favor of the American arms,
than any other engagement by land in the course of that war;
although there were several battles fought on the Niagara, if
not elsewhere, during the same campaign, exhibiting a greater
number of combatants engaged, a larger number of slain, and a
result equally creditable to the gallantry and good conduct of
the American soldiers.
"The first advantage gained was in driving from the
British army those troublesome enemies, their Indian allies, who
had been the terror of our troops in the west, during all the
preceding stages of the war, and had kept the camps of General
Dearborn, General Lewis, and General Boyd, in a perpetual panic
during the campaign of 1813. Terrified and disheartened by the
reception they met with at Chippewa, they fled from the battle
field to the head of Lake Ontario, a distance of thirty miles,
without halting, and never again during the remainder of the war
appeared in the British camp94."
The Indians during this engagement performed a most
important service. Their conduct was highly commended by General
Porter. Speaking of those under his command, General Porter
says: "The great body of warriors as well as volunteers, engaged
in the opening attack, fought with boldness, not to say
desperation, unsurpassed by any other troops, until they were
placed in a situation where it would have been madness not to
retreat."
The part Red Jacket took in this battle, though by no
means conspicuous, was such as to call forth from an early
biographer the affirmation, that "he displayed the most
undaunted intrepidity, and completely redeemed his character
from the suspicion of that unmanly weakness, with which he had
been charged in early life; while in no instance did he exhibit
the ferocity of the savage, or disgrace himself, by any act of
outrage towards a prisoner, or a fallen enemy."
The same writer adds: "His therefore was that true
moral courage, which results from self respect, and the sense of
duty, and which is more noble, and a more active principle, than
that mere animal instinct which renders many men insensible to
danger. Opposed to war, not ambitious of martial fame, and
unskilled in military affairs, he went to battle from principle,
and met its perils with the spirit of a veteran warrior, while
he shrunk from its cruelties with the sensibility of a man and
of a philosopher95."
Red Jacket as a civil officer was not called to take so
prominent a place on the field of battle, as the war chiefs. Yet
in all of their deliberations, which were frequent during the
campaign, he could act as their counsellor, as he did on every
such occasion. He was uniformly their principal orator, and his
manner on these occasions is represented as being "graceful and
imposing in the eye of every beholder, and his voice music,
especially in the ears of his own people. He had the power of
wielding them at will, and the soul stirring trumpet could not
produce a more kindling effect in the bosoms of a disciplined
army, than would his appeals upon the warriors of his race96."
That the battle of Chippewa was particularly severe to
the Indian forces engaged in it, may be inferred from the fact
that the British Indians retreated not only beyond the Chippewa,
but stayed not until they had gone thirty miles further. The
battle ground was strewed with many of their number who had been
slain. Two, who had been mortally wounded, and were still alive,
were despatched by a party of New York Indians, who were looking
for the bodies of their fallen friends. Being reproached for
their conduct in taking the life of an unresisting foe, one of
them replied, in a manner that indicated evident sorrow for the
deed done, "That it did seem hard to take the lives of these
men, but they should remember that these were very hard times97."
The sight of slain warriors was far from being a
pleasing object for Red Jacket to behold, and having ever been
opposed to his people engaging in contests that did not really
concern them, he proposed now that the Indians had helped
chastise the British for burning one of their villages, and as
they were no longer on Indian ground, that they should withdraw
from a further participation in the war, in case they could
prevail on their Canadian brethren to do the same.
With the consent and approval of General Brown, a
deputation of two brave and influential chiefs was sent to the
Indians, who had fought with the British, with this in view.
They were successful in persuading them to enter into this
arrangement. The Indians therefore after this retired to their
villages, with the exception of a few young braves, with whom
the love of war, was a more potent influence, than the counsels
of the aged and more considerate of their nation.
Soon after the battle, our army forced a passage across
the Chippewa, and after a short engagement the enemy gave way,
and retired to Lake Ontario. Our army continued its march down
the Niagara river, destroying some of the British works on their
way.
With new forces brought into the field, General Drummond took
command of the British, and on the 25th of July the two armies
met again, and there was a hard fought, but not very decisive
battle, at Lundy's Lane, near Niagara Falls. The American army
soon after fell back to Fort Erie. A British force of five
thousand advanced and laid siege to the Fort, making a vigorous
assault on the 15th of August. They were repulsed with a loss of
a thousand men. Later, General Brown issued from the fort and
gave them so stunning a blow as caused them to relinquish the
siege.
Other successful engagements during the year, ending
with the signal victory at New Orleans under General Jackson,
inspired greatly the hopes of the American people, and served
likewise to repress the ardor of their opponents; which led to
the return of peace with England, which was concluded at Ghent
on the 24th of December, 1814.

94. Colonel Stone's Life and Times of Red
Jacket. Mr. Stone refers to General Porter, as his authority,
representing him as having voluntarily prepared the account
given of this campaign.
95. Life of Red Jacket. McKenny's Indian
Biography.
96. Col. Stone's Life of Red Jacket.
97. Col. Stone.
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