Qass_ Book _ COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT WINFIELD SCOTT. THE LIVES WOFIELD SCOTT ANDREW JACKSON. J. T. HEADLEY, 'ATJTnOROF NAPOLEON AND HIS MARSHALS," "WASHINGTON AND HIS GENERALS,' &C., &C., &C. NEW YORK : CHARLES SCRIBNER, 145 NASSAU STREET. 1852. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1S52, by CUAKLES SCEIBNER, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District of New York. Stereotyped and Printed by C. W. BENEDICT, 201 William Street, N. Y. PREFACE. The following is designed to be the comraenceraent of a series of biographical sketches of distinguished men of the present generation. The extent to which it is carried will de- pend entirely on the success that attends it. There are many deserving a place in history, whose lives, nevertheless, do not furnish sufficient material for a complete book. These will be grouped together as circumstances may determine. No at- tempt has been made to give the various officers which served under Generals Scott and Jackson, their proper praise. This belongs to their individual sketches, or general history of the war. Scott and Jackson are here placed together, as the two military men who have made the deepest impressions on their country since the time of Washington. No other two have given it such character at home, or reputation abroad. Dif- fering widely in some characteristics, they were very similar in others. VI PREFACE. To tliose who may suspect the writer of endeavoruig to wield a pohtical influence, he would say, that one of these biographies was completed, and the other begun, and the con- tract for both made before either party had nominated its can- didate. Political matters had nothing to do with their pro- duction. The materials for them have been accumulating for nearly ten years, and there seems to be no reason why a pub- lication should be deferred, because the unexpected conjunc- tion of political events might give it, for the time being, a partizan character. If political pamphleteering had been the object, the sketch of Gen. Scott would have been used alone long ago, and scattered on the wings of the wind. But if men will insist that the time of its appearance is injudicially chosen, the work will be compelled to wrap itself up in its own rights, and falling back on the great laios of ■precedmce^ adduce the English Constitution, the usage of all nations, as proof that the parties should retire till its brief existence is run. In other words, the hook has the floor, and the speaker's hammer must protect its rights. Thus much may be said without blame ; but a writer may go farther, and insist that any time is proper in which to nar- rate the deeds of a man who has deserved well of his country. If his actions are worthy of record, the most appi-opriatc mo- ment for bringing them forward is when he is about to receive the reward of his deeds. There is a wide difference between writing a man into eminence, because unforeseen occurrences may place him in political power, and in defending and prais- ing one whose claims to immortality neither present success nor failure can affect. Many officers under Scott have been consulted in preparing PREFACE. VU this biogi'aphy, while Mansfield's Ilistory of the Mexican War is referred to as the best, or, indeed, the only reliable authority in the great movements and features of the campaign. Kendell's and Jenkins' Life of Jackson, newspapers of the time, Niles' Register, etc., are the chief soiu'ces of information in sketching the hfe of Jackson. CONTENTS WINFIELD SCOTT. PAGB CHAPTER I. Scott's Birth and Parentage — Became a Lawyer — Enters the Army — His Trial by Conrt-niartial, and Suspension — His Studies — Ee-enters tlie Army — Battle of Queenstown — Scott a Prisoner — Conflict with two Indians — Protection of his Irish Soldiers — Attack and Capture of Fort George, . 13 CHAPTER H. Scott superintends the Camp of Instruction at Buffalo — Drills the Army — Crosses the Niagara — Pursues the Marquis of Tweesdale behind the Chip- pewa — Battle of Chippewa — Company of Backwoodsmen — Battle of Niagara — Charge of Miller — Scott's Wound and Last Orders — Journey to Wash- ington — Reception at Princeton — Black Hawk War — Scott amid the Cliolera — Is challenged by Jackson — Becomes interested in the cause of Temperance — Takes command in South Carolina to crush tlie Disuniouists — Settles the Difficulties on the Northern Frontier — Pursues the Chcro- kees ,86 CHAPTER HI. Scott preserves peace on the Maine boundary — Friendship betv,een him and the Governor of New "ruuswick — Appomted Commander-in-Chief — X CONTENTS. PAGK Treatment at Washington — ^Takes charge of tlie Army in Mexico — Mar- tial Law orders — Pire in the Eear — Landing at Vera Cruz — The Siege and Captui'e of the City — March to Cerro Gordo — The Battle — Entrance of Jalapa — Of Puebla — Reduction of the Army, 70 CHAPTER IV. The Army at Puebla — ^Description of the Scenery — Arrival of Eeinforce- ments — Departure for Mexico — Ascent to the Cordilleras — Magnificent Scenery — First View of the Plain and City of Mexico — The Eoad found Impassible — Difficult March round Lake Chalco to the Acapulco Eoad — Attack on Contreras — Suffering and Anxiety of the Army at Night- Storming of the Fort — Enthusiastic Eeception of Scott by bis Victorious Troops — San Antonio Taken— The Three Battles of Churubusco — The Flight and Pursuit — Scott after Battlc^The Moxicans propose an Armis- tice, 93 CHAPTER V. Tlie Armistice— Scott resolves to carry Chapultepec by Storm — Description of tlic Fortress— Battle of Molino del Ecy— The Field after the Victory— The Condition and Prospects of the Army at this time — Misbehavior of the Government — Defence of Scott — His Plan of assaulting Chapultepec — Day preceding the Battle— The Final Attack, 180 ANDREW JACKSON. CHAPTER I. Jackson's Boyhood— Left an Orphan— His Mother— Massacre at Waxhaw — At thirteen becomes a Soldier— First Battle— His Courage— Taken Prisoner —His Republican Spirit— Is "Wounded— Presence of Mind— Digs through his prison walls to see Greene's Encampment- llobkirk-hill— His Eelease and Ivctitfn Home— Heroism of his Mother— Visits Charleston— Studies CONTENTS. xi Law — Eemoves to Tennessee — Fights a Bnlly— Pm-sued by Indians— His Chivalry — Jealousy of Eobai-ds — Marries Mrs. Eobards — Daring Arrest — Attacked by a mob — Becomes a Farmer — Duel with Dickinson — His failure —Defends the wronged — Care of tho Sick — Tecumseb — His Eloquence — Massacre of Fort Mimms — Jackson enters the Creek Country — Attacks the Indians — The Battle — Distress of his Troops — Mutiny in his Army — Quells a Mutiny — A second Mutiny — Defeats the Indians — Attacked by Indians — Eeinforcements — Battle of the Horse Shoe— Saves a Warrior — Ends the War— His Eesolution, 203 CHAPTER ir. Appointed Major-General — Attack on Fort Bowyer — March on Pensacola — Advances to New Orleans — Excitement in the City — Landing of the British — Jackson's Night Attack — Eesolves to Entrench himself — Turns the Le- gislature out of doors — British advance to the Assault and are Eepulsed — Second Attack — Arrival of Eeinforcements, and Final Battle — Jackson Fined by Judge Hall — Eeturns Home — Sent to Quell the Indians in Florida — Conduct there— Appointed Governor-*rigade has sucli a leader. The ghosts of regiments alone remained, yet before these the veterans of England were at last compelled to flee, and betake themselves to the darkness for safety. Sullen, mor- tified, and badly wounded, Drummond was carried from the field, and all farther attempts to take the hill were abandoned. The Americans, however, kept watch and ward, around the cannon that had cost them so great a sacrifice, till near day-break, when orders were received to retire to camp. ITo water could be obtained on the heights, and the troops wanted repose. Through the want of drag- ropes and horses, the cannon were left behind. This was a sad drawback to the victory, and Major Rip- ley should have detailed some men to have taken them at least down the hill. Trophies won with the blood of so many brave men were worth more effort than he put forth to secure them. A bloodier battle, in proportion to the numbers engaged, was never fought than this. jSTearly eight hundred Americans, and as many English, had fal- len on and around that single hill. It was loaded with the slain. Seventy-six officers were either killed or womided out of our army of some tliree THE VICTORY. 57 thousand men^ and not a general on either side re- mained unwounded. Among the slain was young Captain Hull, son of the general -who had so shamefully capitulated at Detroit. This young officer, who had fought one duel in defence of his father's honor, and struggled in vain to shake off the sense of disgrace that clung to him, told a friend at the opening of the battle, that he had resolved to fling away a life which had l)eeome insupportable. Where the battle was hot- test, there his sword was seen waving his company on. For a long time he seemed to bear a charmed life, and the more he wooed death, the more she avoided him. But when the conflict was done, he was found stark and stiff where the dead lay thickest. It would be impossible to relate all the deeds of daring and gallantry which distinguished this bloody engagement. Almost every man was a hero, and from that hour England felt a respect for our arms she never before entertained. The navy had estab- lished its reputation forever, and now the army chal- lenged the respect of the world. The timorous and the ignorant had been swept away with the old martinets, and the true genius of the country was shining forth in her young men, who, while they did not despise the past, took lessons of the present. Scott at this time, but twenty-eight years of age, 3* 58 WINFIELD SCOTT. hud sliown to the country wliat a single youth, fired with 2)atriotism, confident in his resources, and dar- ing in spirit, could accomplish. His brigade, it is true, had been almost annihilated, and nothing ap- parently been gained, but those err much who gra- duate the results of a battle by the number taken prisoners or the territory acquired. Moral power is always more valuable than physical, and though we are forever demanding something tangible to show as the reward of such a great eifort and sacrifice, yet to gain a national position is more important than to take an army. Tlius while many think that the battle of Niagara though gallantly fought, was a barren one, and furnished no compensation f)r the terrible slaughter that characterised it, yet there has been none since that of Bunker Hill, more important to this country, and which, directly and indirectly, has more affected its interests. It probably saved more battles than if, by stratagem or superior force. General Brown had succeeded in capturing Drummond's entire army. Brown and Scott both being disabled, the com- mand devolved on Major Ripley, who retreated to Fort Erie, where General Gaines soon after arrived, and relieved him. Scott's last wound was a severe one. A musket ball had shattered his shoulder dreadfully, and a long time it was extremely doubt- ful whether he ever recovered. lie suffered excrii- WOUNDED. 59 elating pain from it, and it was September before he ventured to travel, and then shDwly and with great care. His progress was a constant ovation. The young and wounded chieftain was hailed on his pas- sage with salvos of artillery, and shouts of freemen. He arrived at Princeton on commencement day of Nassau Hall. The professors immediately sent a delegation requesting his attendance at the church. Leaning on the arm of his gallant aid-de-camp, AVorth — ^his arm in a sling, and his countenance haggard and worn from his long suffering and con- finement, the tall young warrior slowly moved up the aisle, and with great difficulty ascended the steps to the stage. At lirst sight of the invalid, looking so unlike the dashing, fearless commander, a mur- mur of symj)athy ran through the house, the next moment there went up a shout that shook the build- ing to its foundations. A flush passed over the pal- lid features — -the eye kindled, and the enthusiastic young soldier received in that moment the reward w^hich springs from the consciousness of having ob- tained a place in the heart of his country. He was complimented with the honorary degree of Master of Arts. Passing on to Baltimore, then threatened with an attack by the British, he finally 80 far recovered as to take command in the middle of October of the tenth military district, and estab- lished his headrpiartcrs at Washington City. Here, 60 WmFIELD SCOTT. and at Baltimore, lie passed tlie winter. The treaty of peace having been received in February, he was offered the pLace of Secretary of "War, but declined on the ground of his youth. He then was asked to serve as Secretary, till Mr. Crawford, our Minister at Paris, could return, who was designated to fill the place. Tliis he also declined out of respect to Generals Brown and Jackson, his seniors, as the Secretary, under the President, has the control of the anny. Having assisted in reducing the army to the peace establishment, he was sent to Europe by the Government, for the double purpose of restoring his health, and the perfecting himself in military science. lie was also entrusted with certain diplo- matic power, and was instructed to ascertain tlie views entertained by the European Courts of the revolutionary movements in the Spanish possessions in this country, and also the designs of England on Cuba. He received letters of introduction from Kosciusko to Marshals McDonald Oudinot and Du- pont, who had been the props of Kapoleon tlirough his long and wondrous career. The battle of Water- loo had just been fought, and the greatest military captain of modern times was a homeless fugitive. Fresh from the l)attle-fields of his own country, young Scott trod those equally fresh and greater ones of Europe with strange feelings. Just at the VISITS EUKOPE. 61 point wliere he would devour all military informa- tion witli the greatest avidity, lie was in the midst of scenes, and men, and distingnished officers, who were best qnalified to impart it. Europe was tilled with nothing but Bonaparte and his campaigns, and it was not strange that under these circum- stances, and this tuition, he shoidd learn fast. He trod the great battle-fields of the Continent with a keen and inquiring spirit, and laid up treasures of knowledge, which afterwards served him well, and raised him and the nation from defeat and disgrace. lie also attended public lectures on the subject of military art. He retiu-ned in 1816, and was given the command of the sea-board. In March of the next year, he married Maria Mayo, daughter of John Mayo, of Richmond, Virginia, a lady of rare endowments and accomplishments. lie took up his. residence at Elizabethtown, which continued to be his home for the next twenty years. Honors were showered on him, swords presented him by the States of Virginia and New York, and medals struck to show the estimation placed on his services by the republic. At this time, a misunderstanding occurred be- tween him and General Jackson, growing out of an order of the latter to his division, forbidding the execution of commands of the department unless transmitted throulack Ilawk war. lie embarked with nine hundred and fifty men, at Bufi'alo for Chicago, but before lie liad proceeded far, the Asiatic cholera broke out among the troops. The footsteps of this terrible destroyer had just been heard on our shores, and consternation and dread seized tlie entire population. Men and women fled from his presence, and pale horror sat on every countenance. Scott witli liis staif, and two hundred and twenty men were on one boat, and though he landed at Cliicago only two days after the pestilence SOOIT AND TIIE CHOLERA. 63 appeared on board, — yet in that short interval, so swift and fearful were its ravages, that iiftj-two had died, and eighty were sick. The well were immedi- ately sent forward, but this invisible foe marched in their midst. Men sunk and died in groups under the trees, and their bodies were left unburied. The inhabitants fled from the presence of the sick, who were strewn along the road. In a short time, out of the nine hundred and fifty, only four hundred remained alive. Scott, though ill himself, remained at Chicago for some time to attend to the wretched sufterers that each of the four steamboats had disgorged in that port. Apparently forgetful of his own danger, he moved amid this terrible scourge, calm and fearless as he had done over the field of battle. He visited every sick room, bent over every dying soldier, and inhal- ing at every step the poisonous atmosphere, nobly strove to allay the panic of officers and the terror of the men. This fatherly care of his soldiers has always endeared him to the army, fur he shares with thein every privation. As soon as he could get away he followed the track of his decimated army and hastened to join Gen. Atkinson at Prairie du Cliien. lie arrived the duy after the battle of Bad Axe, which prostrated the power of Black Hawk, and ended the war. The regulars of the army were then established at Rock Island, where in the middle of August, the cholera 64 WINFIELD SCOTT. broke out, sending terror tlirougli the hearts of officers and men. Scott immediately devoted himself to the sick, and set an example of calm serenity, which evinced the true hero, far more than his desperate charges at Lundy's Lane. Says an officer an eye-witness of his conduct ; " it is well known that the troops in that service, suffered severely from the cholera, a disease frightful enough from its rapid and fatal effects ; but which came among us the more so from the known inex- perience of our medical men, and from the general be- lief at that time in its contagiousness. Under such circumstances, it was clearly the general's duty to give the best general directions he could for proper attend- ance to the sick, and fur preventing the epread of the disease. When he had done this, his duty was performed and he might have left the rest to his medical officers. But such was not his course. He thought he had other duties to perform, that his personal safety must be disregarded to visit the sick, to cheer the well, to encourage the attendants, to set an example to all — in a word to save the lives of otiiers at the risk of his own. All this he did faithfully, and when he could have no other motive than that of doing good. Here was no glory to be acquired ; here were none of the excitements of the battle-field ; here was no shame to be avoided or disgrace to be feared ; because his general arrangements CARE OF THE SICK. 65 and directions to those whose part it was to battle with sickness had satisfied duty. To those who can remember the terror which at that time paralyzed every heart, this conduct of Scott, while he himself vras suffering under the symptoms of disease, will stamp him not only the hero of the battle-field, but the hero of humanity, and the true heart will encircle his brow with a wreath more enduring and sweeter to look on than that which victory lias woven for his temples. The cholera having at length subsided, Scott turned his attention to the Indian difSculties, and at length, with the aid of Governor Reynolds, con- cluded satisfactory treaties with the Sacs, Foxes, and "VYinnebagoes. His conduct throughout the whole was marked by great ability, and while he secured the rights of his gtjvernment, he won the respect and love of the savage chiefs with whom he had negotiated. Soon after his return he was despatched by Gen. Jackson with a confidential order to take command in South Carolina, to arrest the arm of disunion. The quiet and unostentatious manner in which he assumed the direction of affairs — the deep solicitude he felt for the welfare of the people — his earnest anxiety to preserve peace, helped to allay the excite- ment, while at the same time his secret dispositions were made with so much skill and desjiatch, that before the disunionists were aware of his puri)0se, 66 WINFIELD SCOTT. the liarLor and defences of Cliarleston were com- pletely in his grasp and their power prostrated. In January, 1836, Scott was ordered into Florida, to brino- to a close the Seminole war which Osceola was waging so fiercely against the inhabitants. This short campaign was a failure, and Scott was ordered home in an extraordinary manner. On his return to Washington, he demanded a court-martial, which declared that his Seminole campaign was well de- vised and well carried out, and that his plans for ^prosecuting the Creek war were also w^ise, and in a fair way of leading to successful results when he was recalled. The next year he was ordered to the Niagara frontier to allay the excitement occasioned by Yan llanselaer's invasion of Canada, and the assistance rendered by American citizens to the patriots who had revolted from the British govern- ment. Enraged to find an American camp on their territory, the British resolved in revenge to seize the Caroline, a little steamer used as a ferry boat be- tween the American shore and Navy Island, on which Yan llanselaer's army lay. A secret expedi- tion was fitted out; the Caroline was attacked while moored to the American shore, one man on board of her killed, and several wounded, and she then cut adrift, set on fire, and sent over the Falls. The news soon spread, and with it a rumor that several American citizens had been sent over the A PEACE-MAKER. 67 falls ill lier. Great excitement lollowed ; men flew to arms ; threats of retaliation were lieard on every Bide, and a collision between the two govern- ments seemed inevitable. This was the state of things when Scott arrived on the scene of his early exploits, not to lead his columns to battle, but to act as a peacemaker. The winter of 1S38-9 was one of constant toil to him. From Detroit to Vermont all along the line he travelled almost constantly — ^baf- fling the efforts of conspirators — intercepting corres- 2)ondence and allaying excitement. lie frecpientl}'' addressed the citizens on their duties, proclaiming e's^erywhere that he would preserve the neutrality of the United States at all hazards. lie would walk alone into the midst of a band of patriots and harangue them on the course they were pursuing, and exhort them to return to their obedience. His name was written in light on every rood of that frontier — the fields of his fame lay in sight, and the people loved and honored him despite his deter- mined hostility to their wishes. In January, the Barcelona, a steamer, was cut out of the ice in Buf- falo harbor, and taken down the river to be offered to the patriots in place of the Caroline. Scott hear- ing of it, had those in possession of her arrested, while at the same time he hired her for the United States service before the patriots could find means to guarantee the owners against loss. The Brit- 08 wiNFiELD scorr. isli on Grand Island, knowing for wliat pur- pose tlic JJareelona bad been taken down the river, and being informed that she was on her way back, determined to sink her as she passed. Three armed seliooners Avcre also lying in wait for her. Scott had sent a pacific note to the commander of these last, remonstrating against any attack on a boat moving in the American waters. On the morning of the IGth of January, the smoke of the Barcelona was seen in the distance, as the boat slowly stennned the rapid current. Scott saw it, and saw too that the vessels kept their positiou, and that on the opposite shore cannon were placed in battery, so as to sink the steamer the moment she came within range. lie immediately ordered the American batteries in position, the guns loaded, and the matches lio-htcd. The shore was lined with thousands anxiously awaiting the moment that woidd probably decide the question of peace (U- war. In full uniform, in sight of all, his tall form erect and motionless, Scott stood on the i)ier of Black Tioek, with his eye fixed on the slowly approaching boat. The echo of the first hostile cannon would not have died away, before American balls would have been crashing into those schooners. The boat kept on her way unmolested, and the threatened rup- ture with England in-evented. The whole management of this aifair was mas- PEACE MADE. 69 tcrly, and exhibited the statesman, di])loniati.st, and patriot, in noble and striking harmony. A single mistake or foolish bravado might have precipitated the country in all the horrors of war. This triumph- ing as a })eace-maker on the very spot where he liad won his renown as a warrior, entitles him to a double chaplet. In the S2-)ring he was ordered to superintend tlic removal of the Cherokees west. Opposition and violence were expected, but General Scott by liis kindness, generosity, and humanity, won tlie entire nation to his views, and removed those fifteen tluni- sand exiles from their hunting-grounds — ^tlie graves of their fathers, and all tluit makes home dear, with- out being c<)mpelleulling the sluggish gun after them, while the other five hundred MORNLNa OF TUE BATTLE. 87 lay stretched around, presented a strange and pictu- rescj^ue spectacle to the beholder below. Inch by inch, and foot by foot, each heavy burden slowly ascended the heights, till after eight houvH of un- ceasing toil, the three guns were planted on the top- most rock. The arduous work was accomplished by three o'clock in the morning, and when the deep shadows that slept in the gorges below, j)aled before the early dawn, there stood the gallant band around the guns they had lifted to that perilous height. They were now above all the Mexican batteries ex- ce]3t the fort and tower of Cerro Gordo. This still overlooked them, and they knew would rain shot and shells into their midst the moment there was sufficient light to reveal their position. But they forgot for a moment the murderous work before them in the thrilling scene that spread beneath their feet. As the morning broke the " sweet music of the Mexican revillee" echoed amid the mountains, and floated in soft cadences over the summits. At length the rays of the sun tipped those lofty peaks, and stealing swiftly down their craggy sides, bathed the hostile encampment in tlie rosy light of a spring morning. Large bodies of lancers in brilliant iini- forms were moving about — dark masses of infantry followed, and the loud and stirring notes of the bugle echoed amid the rocks. Farther down, and beyond, stretched the luxuriant plain, through which rolled 88 WmFIELD SCOTT. tlie tranquil river, sinning like silver in tlie early sunbeams. A spirit of romance was slied over the scene, to be dispelled tlie next moment by the thunder of cannon and strife of men. The Mexicans saw with astonishment the appari- tion of an American battery in their midst, and the Fort of Cerro Gordo commenced a plunging fire upon it. Twiggs, in turn, hailed death on the entrench- ments below. But the lofty fort that beetled over all the rest was the key-stone of the whole, and Scott had, therefore, cut this side-road so that he could storm it in flank. Pillow was left to press in front against tlie lower batteries along the National Eoad ; while Harney, witli the rifles, 1st artillery, and Yth infautr}', supported by the 2d and 3d infantry and 4th artillery, was to make the crowning efibrt on Cerro Gordo itself. The columns were formed under the eye of Scott, and he rode slowly along, under a " per- fect canopy of balls," encouraging the troops, who answered him with loud shouts. At length, when all was ready to charge, " Forward" rung from the lips of their gallant leader, and the storming parties moved forward. In an instant the steep was in a blaze. A solid sheet of fire rolled down its rocky sides, while the explosion of cannon was so constant and deafen- ing that orders could be no longer heard. It was as if one of those terrific tropical thunder-storms had burst on the top. The echoes rolled down the gorg?". CnAEGE OF HAENEY. 89 and were sent back in deafening reverberations to tlie summits. But the plunging fire that swept to destruc- tion the front rank of that firm cohimn, could not arrest its onward movement. Scrambling up the naked, uncovered rocks that smoked mider the balls that smote them, they climbed higher and higher, the tall athletic form of Harney still in advance. Higher and higher, for seven hundred feet, they toiled through smoke and flame, until they were lost to view amid the sulphurous clouds that enveloped them. But the next moment, a thrilling shout burst from the summit, — they had mounted the barricades, and charging over the guns, swept that hill-top like a hurricane. Harney, suddenly finding himself almost alone in the presence of a large force, began to order Tip his fancied battalions, as though a brigade were at his heels. His stentorian voice rung through the battle, like a trumpet ; and no sooner was the enemy turned in flight, than his swift dragoons wheeled after them, chasing them to the very gates of Jalapa, and beyond them. Scott, while riding amid the raining balls, saw a man holding his shattered arm with the sound one. Keining up his horse, a member of his staff" told him it was Captain Patten. Halting, he inquired if he was badly hurt, but in the terrific thunder crash around them, neither question or reply was heard. Shields, gallantly leading his brigade to victory, was shot through the lungs. Pillow alone was unsuccess- 90 WINFIELD SC:OTT. fill. After the battle, Scott rode up to irarney, flushed with victory, and said, " Colonel Harney, I cannot now adequately express my admiration of your gallant achievement, but at the proper time I shall take great pleasure in thanking you in proper terms." That bright April morning had ended in storm and blood. The dead lay everywhere. The gorges were choked with, the Mexicans, while along the fiery track of Harney's dragoons, men were stretched in ghastly groups, each with his skull cleft, showing the sabre stroke. But on every height waved the Stars and Stripes. Scott, who by his position, had, in fact, been more exposed than the storming-party itself, no sooner saw the Americans in the works than he hastened up. The spectacle at this moment was thrilling. As he stood on that summit, amid the smoke of the guns that were still playing on the retiring ranks of the enemy, he saw below him the gorges and heights wrapped in war-clouds, amid which wandered broken columns and shattered battalions, and out of which arose the thrilling huzzas of his victorious army. Beside him, his lips moving in silent prayer, knelt his chaplain, amid the wounded and dying that lay in groups around the guns. The storming of that height had been a gallant exploit, and Scott witnessed it from first to last. And now, as he looked around on tJie panting soldiers, who had moved so fearlessly through the fire, his noble heart was filled with aflfec- TIIE VICTORY. 91 tion, and lie exclaimed, " Soldiers^ I could tal'e every one of you to my Ijosom f then turning to tlie young "West Point officers, who had been heroes every one, and who now gazed with kindling eyes and flushed cheeks on their beloved commander, he shook his hand at them, while his eye moistened and his lips trembled, and said, " Oli ! you young rascals^ you m Of the fifteen thousand who had defended that moun- tain, three thousand prisoners, and a multitude of wounded and dying remained on the field. As one wound up the ISTational Road after the battle, and underneath the frowning batteries, it seemed a dream, tluit with the loss of only a few hundred men, they had been taken. Positions, where apparently ten men could keep at bay a hundred, had fallen before inferior numbers. It was with feelings of exultation that Scott gazed from that conquered summit on his trophies below, and then turned to the rich plain that lay beyond, upon the domes and towers of Jalapa, and far away to the snow-capped summit of Orizaba. In a few days the fortifications were deserted, and the victorious army was streaming over the Mexican plains. The wolf-dog and the buzzard alone held sway, and the stench of putrid corpses filled the deep abysses of the mountain. The orders of General Scott, previous to this battle, 92 WIBTFIELD SCOTT. is one of the most remarkable in military annals. Thej are more like a jjrophecy than directions. " Hkadquarters of the Army, ) Plan del Rio, April 17, 1847. J "The enemy's whole line of intrenehments and batteries will be attacked in front, and at the same time turned, early in the day to-morrow — probably before ten o'clock, a.m. " The second (Twiggs') division of regulars is already advanced within easy turning distance towards the enemy's left. That division has instructions to move forward before daylight to-morrow, and take up a position across the National Road in the enemy's rear, BO as to cut off a retreat towards Salapa. It may be reinforced to-day, if unexpectedly attacked in force, by regiments — one or two taken from Shields' brigade of volunteers. If not, the two volunteer regiments will march for that purpose at daylight to-morrow morning, under Brigadier -general Shields, who will report to Brigadier-general Twiggs, on getting up with him, or the General-in-chief, if he be in advance. " The remaining regiment of that volunteer brigade will receive instructions in the course of this day. " The first division of regulars (Worth's) will fol- low the movement against the enemy's left at sunrise to-morrow morning. " As already arranged. Brigadier-general Pillow's HIS OEDEES. 93 brigade will marcli at six o'clock to-morrow morning along the route lie has carefully reconnoitered, and stand ready as soon as he hears the report of arms on our right, or sooner if circumstances should favor him, to pierce the enemy's line of batteries at such point — the nearer the river the better — as he may select. Once in the rear of that line, he will turn to the riglit or left, or both, and attack the batteries in reverse ; or, if abandoned, he will pursue the enemy with vigor until further orders. " AVall's field battery and the cavalry will be held in reserve on the National Road, a little out of view and range of the enemy's batteries. They will take up that position at nine o'clock in the morning. " The enemy's batteries being carried or abandoned, all our divisions and corps will pursue with vigor. " This pursuit may be continued many miles, until stopped by darkness or fortified positions towards Xalapa. Consequently, the body of the army will not return to this encampment, but be followed to- morrow afternoon, or early the next morning, by the baggage trains of the several corps. For this purpose, the feebler officers and men of each corps will be left to guard its camp and effects, and to load uj) the latter in the wagons of the corps. A commander of the present encampment will be designated in the course of this day. " As soon as it shall be known that the enemy's 94 WINriELD SCOTT. works have been carried, or that the general pursuit has been commenced, one wagon for each regiment, and one for the cavahy, will follow the movement, to receive, nnder the directions of medical officers, the wounded and disabled, who will be brought back to this place for treatment in general hospital. " The Surgeon-general will organize this important service and designate that hospital, as well as the medical officers to be left at it. " Every man who marches out to attack or pursue the enemy, will take the usual allowance of ammuni- tion, and subsistence for at least two days. By command of Maj. Gen. Scott, H. L. SCOTT, A. A. A. General." The next day after the battle, Jalapa was entered, and on the 22d, "Worth took possession of the castle and town of Perote without striking a blow. The 15th of May he entered the ancient city of Puebla. Thus, in two months, with twelve thousand men, Scott had taken ten thousand prisoners — nearly the amount of his entire army — four large cities, seven hundred cannon, ten thousand stand of small arms, and thirty thousand shells and shot. "When this news was brought back from that little army locked up in the Mexican mountains, the country, with all its ex- travagant expectations and boastful spirit, was taken by surprise. Men found that facts surpassed their HIS PKOCLAMATIOX. 95 own boasting, and the results exceeded their most vivid imaginations. Scott at Jalapa issued a proclamation to tlie Mexi- can people, in which he appealed to the bishops and clergy of the towns through which his army had passed, to confirm his declaration, that the rights of property, and the persons of individuals had been everywhere respected. The people eagerly sought for this proclamation — it spread on the wings of the wind — their conqueror promised what their own army refused. The victor swore to guarantee and protect rights, which for a long time had existed only in name. The good conduct of the troops, thanks to Scott's martial-law orders, fm-nished testimony to the truth of his declarations. Worth writing from Puebla, said, " it takes admirably, and has accom- plished more tlian all the blows from Palo Alto to Cerro Gordo." The people of Puebla were amazed when they saw the little army of the Americans enter their city. Measuring it by the deeds it had wrought, they expected to behold an army of giants, with terrific engines of war, and lo, four or five thousand men quietly took np their quarters in the town on tlieir way to the capital of Mexico. Scott at Puebla reminds one of Kapoleon in Italy. What w^ith detachments left behind, killed and wounded, sick, deserters, and the dismissed volun- 96 WINFIELD SCOTT. teers, wliose term of service liad expired, liis wliole effective force did not reacli five tliousand men, the remnant of tlie twelve thousand who had landed at Yera Cruz. Yet here he was, two hundred miles from the city of Yera Cruz, in a city of eighty thou- sand inhabitants, surrounded Ly two millions of peo- ple, and watched by an army of twenty thousand men. One can hardly conceive a position in which a com- mander would feel greater anxiety. The only thought would naturally be how to get safely back to his ships. But Scott was simply planning the best manner of marching on the capital, surrounded with fortifications, and teeming with a population of two hundred thousand. Nothing excites so much surprise as the rashness and dai-ing of such a scheme, except the genius and energy that earned it through. There, on that elevated plain, seven thousand feet high, encircled by the Cordilleras — on the very spot where stood the ancient city of Cholula, with its two hundred thousand inhabitants, and where the first Cortez gazed on the towers of four hundred idol temples, now stood the second Cortez, with his little band of brave men around him. Three hundred and twenty-four years divide those conquerors — the only two whose invading feet had ever pressed this soil, and both making an epoch in the history of the country. The first Cortez gazed on innumerable domes and towers, glittering PUEBLA. 97 in the sun — on gorgeous cities, and a land teeming with people. Of all their temples and palaces, nothing now remained save the lofty 2")yramid of Cholula, on the toj) of which sacrifices were of- fered to the gods. Solitary and alone it rises in gloomy grandeur from the midst of a vast and deso- late plain — an enduring monument above the grave of a buried city, and a memento of the life that was once there. Masses of lava scattered around, attesting that volcanoes had raged and died on that sjjot, gave a still more sombre asj^ect to the scene. On this high plain, as it were, away from the world, alone in its beauty, stands this " city of the angels." What a strange contrast does the American army present to all this. Kushing from the home of civi- lization, and out of all the stir and activity of modern life, it suddenly finds itself amid the jiast, surrounded with men, and dwellings, and imple- ments of all kinds that belonged to a former age. CHAPTER lY. The army at Puebla — Description of the scenery — Arrival of reinforcement — De- parture for Mexico — Ascent of the Cordilleras — Magnificent scenery — First view of the plain and city of Mexico — ^The road' found impassable — DiflBcult march round Lake Chalco to the Acapuico road — Attack on Contreras — Suffering and anxiety of the army at night — Storming of the fort— Enthusiastic reception of Scott by his victorious troops — San Antonio taken — The three battles of Cherii- busco — The flight and pursuit — Scott after battle — The Mexicans propose an armistice. The troops took possession of tlie city on tlie 15tli of May, and remained there nearly two months. In that short space, seven hundred perished from sick- ness. Tlie government at home was heartily sick of the war into which it had plunged the country, and began to show an anxiety to bring it to a termina- tion, half of which at the outset would have pre- vented it altogether. Mr. Trist was sent a commis- sioner to make certain proposals, which it was hoped might prevent farther hostilities. Tliis futile nego- tiation, together with the expectation of reinforce- MARCH TO MEXICO. 99 ments on tlieir way, delayed tlie army till mid sum- mer. On the 6tli of May, Col. M'Intosli left Vera Cruz with eight hundred men, and a train of one hundred and thirty-two wagons. He was followed five days after by Gen. Cadwallader, with six hun- dred. The next week, Gen. Pillow, with a thousand men, took the same route, and still later, General Pierce, with twenty-five hundred. Other detach- ments also arrived, swelling the anny to nearly eleven thousand men. Scott in the meantime had not been idle. lie had drilled the five thousand men under him almost daily till they had acquired a perfection of disci2)line that doubled their effi- ciency. The reinforcements brought everything the army needed, l)ut money. The military chest was in a sad condition, and great dissatisfaction prevailed among the troops. Everything, however, being put in the best preparation his straitened circumstances allowed. Gen. Scott having completed his plans, called his officers together and marked out before them the future course and operations of the army. On the morning of the Ytli, Harney's brigade of cavalry moved out of the city followed by Twiggs' division. It was a bright summer day, and the long array of horsemen, of artillery, and infantry, her- alded by bands of music, presented a beautiful ap- pearance as it wound over the rolling country, dotted with gardens, and began to ascend the Cor- 100 ^VIXFIELD SCOTT. dillcras, Scott siiiToimded with liis staff and a hun- dred dragoons soon followed, while shouts greeted hi in as he disappeared through the gates and moved with his glittering cortege along the road. As the troops kept ascending, the view became enlarged, and the wind of those tropical highlands blew cold and chill around them. Far away Popocatapatl lifted its snowy crest eighteen thousand feet into the clear heavens, while farther still another icy summit sent its cold breath over the army. Scott had so few troops that he could leave no depots and garrisons on the way, to keep open his communications. lie liad cut himself loose from help. One lost battle and all the avenues would close forever behind him. Victory alone could keep the road open. "With eleven thousand he was advancing on an army of thirty thousand, defended by fortresses and well supplied with heavy artillery. Over all these he must march into a city in whicli thirty thousand more combatants awaited his approach. Yet he issued his orders with the same contidence he would have done had fifty thou- sand men followed his standard. lie had started for Mexico, and it must be a fiercer fire than ever rolled from a Mexican battery that could stop him. lie had said to General Worth at Puebla, who wished to advance his division eighteen miles from the city, in order to watch the enemy, and who also remarked that it was in good retreating distance, " I never put VIEW OF MEXICO. 101 one foot forward without designing to bring tlie other up to it." Eitlier he woukl dictate terms to the enemy in their own capital, or they should exult over his grave. The army held its way through the wildest moun- tain scenery, upon the great stage-road, gradually reaching a still higher elevation — now winding along a densely wooded ravine, and again skirting the shore of some sw^eet lake, that reflected in its placid bosom the frowning heights around. All was new, and strange, and wild. Cool streams, gushing from the sides of the mountain, refreshed the weary trooj)s, but at night the wind from the icy heights around benumbed their limbs, and made them pine for the plains below^ On the third day they reached the pass of Kio Frio, more than ten thou- sand feet above the level of the sea. This icy little stream had cut aw^ay amid the rocks that here closed with a gloomy and threatening aspect over the road. ]^o human foot could scale the precipitous sides of the beetling cliffs, which left but a narrow gorge through which the traveller could pass. A stu])l)orn defence might have been made here, and the enemy at one time had evidently resolved to erect a barri- cade, and establish batteries ; for timber had been felled, and other preparations made. The design, however, had been abandoned, and the army passed on, and at length reached the highest crest of the 102 . WIIfFIELD SCOTT. mountains. For a long time officers and men had been looking out in eager expectation, to obtain tlie first view of Mexico. At length the last height was gained, and lo the city and plain were before them. A loud shout from the head of the column rolled down the mountain, and all was excitement and enthusiasm. Jerusalem lying like a sweet vision in the plain, could scarcely have presented a lovelier spectacle to the Crusaders of old than burst at once on the astonished army. The cold mountain air was rushing around them, but for, far down, and away, spread the vast plain of Mexico, shining in summer freshness and beauty. In its midst the domes and towers of the city glittered in the sunlight. All around it gleamed forth the countless lakes that almost lave its walls, while a soft haze overhung all, imparting still greater tranquillity to the scene. Farther away shone the white tops of Popocatapetl and Iztac-eithuatl — • their flashing helmets shining clear in the pure at- mosphere of the upper regions, while around their feet clung the warm vapor of the lakes that strove in vain to ascend their sides. Scott reined up with his escort, and gazed long and thoughtfully on the magnificent spectacle. Before him like a map, lay spread out the field of his labor — there, shining in summer tranquillity, was the city where his victori- ous march was to stop. But between him and it lay bloody fields, and perchance, into its crowded popu- DESCENDS INTO THE PLAIN. 103 lation, and amid all that magnificence and wealth, he would be compelled to spread devastation and ruin. The memories of the past mingled with anxious thoughts of the future. How many of that gallant armj which moved so gaily down the slope would ever recross those mountains. On that plain thousands of ambitious hearts would cease to beat, and when the lessening files should again disappear over this summit, their standards pointing homeward, sad remembrances would be mingled with joyous re- collections, and sad fiirewells be wafted to comrades sleeping in their glorious graves below. As the advance column descended into the valley, the soli- tude and silence of those highlands were exchanged for the bustle and activity of an army in presence of the enemy. Horsemen galloping along the roads, and scouts scouring the country in every direction, warned the American commander that his move- ments were watched, and his approach expected. Tliree routes to Mexico now oftered themselves to liim — the great road from Yera Cruz, along which he was moving, or the Acapulco road, or the Toluca road. Tlie Acapulco road entered the city at right angles to the former, while the Toluca was beyond it still farther west. Scott first made a reconnaissance of the road along which his army was marching, and found to his re- gret that it must be abandoned. El Penon, a forti- 104 WINFIELD SCOTT. lied liill, completely commanded the apiiroacli, and was made so impregnable, botli bj nature and art, tliat a greater sacrifice tlian be conld aftbrd wonld be required to carry it. On one side the hill was perfectly inaccessible, on the other a ditch twenty- four feet wide and ten feet deep had been cut, run- ning from marsh to marsh. Above this bristled fifty-one cannon, commanding the road and enfilad- ing tl^e ditch. From the fort to the city ran a cause- way four miles long and surrounded by water, Tlie place, therefore, could not be turned, and to carry it by assault was a task too great for even that gallant army. Besides, if the attempt should succeed, there remained four miles of causeway to be traversed, swept the whole length by the enemy's cannon. Scott, therefore, determined, if possible, to get across to the Acapulco road, whose defences, though strong, were not so impregnable. But Lake Chalco covered the whole intermediate space, and though a cause- way stretched across a portion that had been partially drained, it was two miles long and an army of fifty thousand men could not have forced it against the troops and cannon that defended it. Tlie only alternative left was to wheel back and go around the lake, but here he was met by the mountains that came down boldly to the shore. A passage, however, was deemed practicable, and "Worth, who command- ed the rear division, now took the lead and the army CONTRBKAS. 105 slowly picked its way amid rocks and along a broken patli v.'hicli a few hours labor of the enemy would have rendered wholly impassable. It was rough work for the artillery and wagons. In less than two days the twenty-seven miles were accomplished, and on the 17th, the head of Worth's column entered San Augustine on the Acapulco road, nine miles from Mexico. Here the depot of the army was established. Every precaution, however, had been taken to render this road impassable, but there was more ground to work on, and the army was not shut in between marshes and a mountain. San Antonia, a village a little in advance of San Augustine, was strongly fortified, and could be approached only by a long narrow causeway, on which the batteries of the enemy could play with deadly eflect. ISTear this villasre were the fortified heio-hts of Contreras and the bridge of Churubusco, and farther on and closer to the city, the hill of Chapultepec. Scott had apparently gained nothing by changing roads. Over all those fortifications, defended by a hundred cannon and thirty thousand men, his army of less than eleven thousand must march before they reached the narrow causeways leading to the city and to the in- terior lines of defence, which alone were by no means to be despised. But his practised eye saw at once that if Contreras could be can'ied San 106 WINTIELD 8COTT. Antonia would be turned, and hence rendered harm- less. Santa Anna never dreamed this was practicable. True the country stretched five miles from the road to the mountains, but it was a vast field of volcanic rocks and lava, and broken eminences, intersected by ditches, and covered with prickly pear, over which he thought artillery could not be carried. BATTLE OF CONTKERAS. Scott, however, ordered Pillow's division to cut a road to it, under the direction of Lee, the chief engineer. At four o'clock in the afternoon P. F. Smith, and Piley, of Twigg's division, and Pierce, and Cadwallader, of Pillow's, were with their brigades carefully picking their way over the rocks, steadily pushing their columns on towards the road that led from the fortress to the city. Tliis was a beautiful road, and as the enemy saw with astonishment an army approaching them over a country hitherto deemed impassible, reinforcements were ordered up, and along, large bodies of cavalry in quick suc- cession were seen to gallop, showing that Valen- cia was rapidly concentrating his forces on the menaced point. Caj)tain Magruder, with his battery of twelve and six pounders, and Lieut Callender, with his mountain howitzers and rockets, slowly forced their way towards the entrenchments. The FIEST DAY. 107 ground covered with rocks, prickly pear and cactus, and the ditches rendered doubly impassable to horses, by hedges of the maguey j)lant, made their progress so slow that long before they could get into position, grape, canister, and round shot were hurled into their ranks from twenty -two guns of the enemy. With the utmost eftbrt only three pieces could at last be got into battery. These three comparatively light guns made but a feeble response to the murder- ous cannonade from the heights. Still for two hours the infantry and artiller}nnen bravely stood their ground. At every discharge of the hostile batte- ries, they would fall flat on their faces, and let the iron storm rush over them, and then rise and serve their guns. This was disheartening work, and at length two of the pieces were dismounted, and most of the cannoneers killed or wounded. The force was then recalled. Kiley, in another part of the field, kept up a skirmishing with the enemy, and several times repulsed the charges of Mexican cavalry. But without cavalry or artillery, no de- monstration could be made against the force before him. If the troops charged in line, having no artil- lery, they would be cut asunder by cavalry, and if in column, they would be rent into fragments by Mexican batteries. All fm-ther attempts on the hill were therefore abandoned for that day, but Scott kept pushing his troops towards the road that led 108 WINTIELD SCOTT. from Contreras to tlie city. The reinforcementa that were pouring over it, must be stopped at all hazards, and he sent forward by another route. Col. Morgan followed soon after by Shields' brigade of 'New York and South Carolina volunteers to occupy the church and few houses of the settlement itself, and thus block up the road. Waiting till dark, they made a detour through a dense forest, and at length reached their destination. The night of the 19th closed cheerless and disheart- ening around the American army. Tlie heavens were black, and the sombre hue which a pending storm shed on everything, rendered the prospect still more desolate. The rifle regiment that had been toiling and fighting all the afternoon, was ordered with the 1st. artillery and 3d infantry to the same hamlet. Through chapparel and cactus they had forced their way, and late at night, tired and hungry, joined Kiley's brigade, which, with "Worth, occu- pied the road. ShiekFs brigade encamped in an ad- joining orchard, while Cadwallader's lay still nearer the enemy. The road being enfiladed by the bat- teries of the fortress, the troops occnj^ying it built breast works, both to conceal themselves and protect them from the grape shot. Nothing could be more discouraging than their position. Part had made their way over rocks, ditches, and through chapparel of thorns to that hamlet, and part through a dense TEE NIGHT. 109 forest, and now occupied ground tliey were utterly- ignorant of, or of tlie route to the other portions of the army. Each asked the other where was Scott, hut no one could tell. If they could only hear from him, all would be right ; one word from their com- mander, letting them know he was aware of their position, would be sufficient. But cut off from all communication with tlie army, without artillery, ignorant of the ground they occupied, crushed, as it were, between the overwhelming forces of Santa Anna in Mexico, and those under Yalencia in Con- treras, the gloomy night promised a still gloomier morning. Scott was weighed down with nearly equal anxiety, for he could obtain no tidings from these gallant brigades. He had sent out seven diiferent officers, but not one could get through. Capt. Lee at last reached him with a message from Shields, announcing that his orders had been fulfilled. Still he had reason to be anxious, for a vigilant and dar- ing enemy would, ere morning, have dealt him a staggering blow. To add to the gloom and despon- dency of the men, a heavy rain set in. Most of the officers had lost their blankets and overcoats in cross- ing the rough and thorny fields to their position, and uncovered, lay down beside their worn-out soldiers in the road and orchard. " Too weary to eat, too wet to sleej)," they lay packed together in the dirt which, at length, became a mass of mud, and a sorry 7 110 AVINFIKLU SCOTT, set of men tliey were. At leiigtli it was wliispcred from man to man, " we starvi at m'ulnigJd.''^ A sud- den thrill made tliem for a moment foi'gct their con- dition, but midnight came, and with it a deluge of rain. Tlie road soon became flooded with water as it poured in streams amid the weary troops, and they were compelled to abandon even that miserable couch, and stand crowded and shiveriug, shoulder to shoulder under the pelting storm, till near daylight. The orders were to have everything ready for an at- tack by daylight, but the darkness and the storm rendered this impracticable. But about four o'clock Riley and Smith defiled their troops silently from the road and moved towards the position assigned them in rear of the fort. A ravine lined with orch- ards and corn-fields presented an admirable protec- tion for them, and they reached their place of con- cealment unobserved. Cadwallader took position in their rear, while Shields, with Col. Morgan's regiment held the road to stop the approach of reinforcements from the city, and also to cut off the retreat of Va- lencia's army after the hill should be carried. The .IMexicans remained entirely ignorant of all these movements, and were expecting to have i\iQ attack in front renewed in the morning. The American trooj)S were now themselves again. Though every soldier was soaking wet and shivering with culd and hunger, not a heart beat faint. Ilun- THE ASSAULT. Ill ger, cold, and fotlgiie, were all Ibrgottei), for they were witljin tiger-s^priiig of the foe. Besides to stim- ulate their ardor, the Liill was shaking with the thun- der of Valencia's cannon, and clouds of smoke were rolling heavily away over their heads. The daylight which dawned so murkily through tlie morning vapors, revealed to the enemy General Shields' brigade occupying the road, and the Mexican Gene- ral had turned, his guns upon it, little drealning of the volcano that was about to open at his very feet. At length, at six o'clock, Smith slowly walked up to his men and asked if all was ready. The kindling eye and eager look answered him, and " men^ for- ward'''' rOiW along the line. The next moment they leaped over the slight ridge that concealed them, and pouring in a sudden deadly fire tliat seemed to the astonished Mexicans to issue from the very bowels of the earth, rushed forward with shouts and. yells that drowned even the crack of their own rifles and the roar of the enemy's guns. The fire (»f tlio fort was instantly turned on them, but owing to the rapid advance of the maddened Americans, it went over their heads, and they kept on their headlong way, firing as they ran, till they reached the para- pet. Scoffing at the volley that met them here, they cleared the breastwork with a bound, and the brave rifles having no bayonets, clubbed their pieces, and 112 •WINFIELD SOOTT. the heavy blows of the stocks could be plainly heard amid the cries and groans of the dying. The work of death then commenced, for though General Salas succeeded in rallying his troops, and endeavored bravely to stem the torrent, he only increased the carnage. He ordered a splendid body of lancers that came winding np the road in tlieir brilliant uni- forms, to charge the Americans, but frightened at the yells of the struggling, swaying mass, they turned and galloped away. The actual conflict lasted scarcely twenty minutes, but the pursuit and carnage continued. Every passage was literally blocked with the fugitives, among whom the fore- most of the Americans plunged so madly, that those in rear dared not fire, lest they should kill their comrades. The part that took the road to the city, was cut down or made prisoners by Shields' brigade. Every ravine was filled with Mexican corpses ; all through the cornfields and orchards, the earth was sprinkled with the dead and wounded. Five hun- dred getting jammed in a pass, thirty Americans headed them ofif, and firing down on them, took the whole prisoners, of whom one hundred were officers. It seemed as if the despondency, and suffering, and hunger of the night before had filled the troops with tenfold fury, so hotly and desperately did they press the fugitives. On every side small bodies of Americans were seen pouring their volleys into large THE PURSUIT. 113 masses of the enemy, as tliey crowded over the fiehls. Through the forest, amid the volcanic rocks, and thickets of chapparel, the incessant crack of the rifle and shouts of men were heard. Many were too frightened to ask for quarter. The awful yells and frightful ferocity with which the American troops had scaled that hill, and leaped into their midst, made them believe their doom was sealed if taken, and thus the slaughter was increased. This fierce ]3ursuit continued for hours, and when at length the last soldier had obeyed the recall, and the weary re- giments were once more in their respective places, that hill presented a frightful spectacle. Seventeen hundred killed and wounded, had been stretched around it, and along the roads that led away from its base. The wet earth was red with blood. Over eight hundred prisoners, and among them fom* gene- rals, twenty-two pieces of brass cannon, seven hun- dred pack-mules, and small arms, ammunition, stores, etc., in vast quantities, were the trophies of this great victory, and more than all, a strong posi- tion had been taken, and another rendered useless, with comparatively small loss to the American army. A great moral effect, moreover, had been secured. The prestige of success— the idea of invincibility, now surrounded the invaders, and no certain reliance could be placed by the enemy on their remaining strong defences. The shout of triumph that rolled 114 WmPIELD SCOTT. from tlie summit of Contreras carried consternation into the city, and Santa Anna, for tlie third time, trembled before the skill and daring that set at naught his strongest fortresses and choicest troops. But if the dismay and despondency were great on one side, the exultation and confidence were equally great on the other. That little army, stretched in the mud beneath the pitiless storm, and cut off from all communication with their leader, at midnight, and that same army sending up their shout of tri- umph at sunrise from the top of Contreras, present a wide contrast. The rifles had earned imperishable fame. Scott shared in the enthusiasm of the victory, as he had in the anxiety of the night before. Divided from his troops, and no longer able, with his presence, to remedy faults or check reverses, he knew that failure might easily occur, and felt how discouraging to his own troops, and inspiriting to the enemy it would be. But little sleep visited his eyes that night ; and as he gazed out into the darkness and pouring rain, and ever and anon asked if there were any tidings from the other half of his army, his staff saw that he felt more than he dare express. As one after another came back, drenching wet from his fruitless efforts to penetrate to those brigades, his anxiety increased, and not till the brave and indefatigable Lee brought a message from Shields, did he breathe free again. The fij'st gun UTS ADDRESS TO THE TROOrS. 115 tired at day-break on tlie brigade of Shields Lronglit him to the saddle, and he and his escort swept along the road towards Contreras. But before he arrived the hill was carried, the battle won, and he beheld with the enthusiastic joy of youth the dismembered and fugitive army of Valentia streaming over the fields. As those brave brigades saw him approach, there went up a shout as loud as that which greeted the morning sun when the American flag floated from the top of Contreras. Eiding up to the rifles, he exclaimed, " Brave rifles, you have heeii hajptlzed in fire and Mood, and come out steelP He was mounted on a horse seventeen or eighteen hands high, and with his tall form towering above all his escort, he rode slowly amid the ranks, while the very heavens shook with the acclamations of the sol- diers. There was a wildness and enthusiasm in the welcome that the composure of that iron-hearted chief could no longer resist. This almost fierce mani- festation of love unmanned him, and reining up his horse, he dropped the bridle, and stretching out hjs hands, while his lips quivered and his eye moistened with feeling, he exclaimed, " silence, silence?'^ The tumult suddenly hushed, and every ear was bent to catch the words that should fall from his lips. With his hand still outstretched, and his face turned towards heaven, he exclaimed, " Soldiers, ill the first ])lace, great glory to God; in the second 116 WDSTFIELD SCOTT. place great glory to this gallant little army.'"' " Oh," said one of tlie officers, " you sliould have heard the frantic shouts and hurrahs that followed." It seemed as if the soldiers would break their ranks and tear him from his horse. Tlie doubts and distrust of the night before had given way to unbounded confidence in their leader's skill, and at his command they now would have charged on ten or ten thousand alike. The gallant 4th artillery lost two guns at the battle of Buena Yista, though not until Captain O'Brien had seen his whole section shot down and stood alone with his pieces. Here they were retaken, and this noble company gathered round them with cheer after cheer. Scott riding up at the moment, waved his hand and shouted with the rest, and exultation and joy reigned throughout the army. Three thousand five hundred men had demolished, with a single blow, an army of seven thousand. Tlie day's work, however, glorious as it had been, was not yet completed. Three more battles and three more victories were to be fought and won be- fore sunset. The American army was now in the very midst of fortifications, and could not pause. Behind and near it lay San Antonia, and before it and only four miles distant Churubusco. The for- mer was in reality turned, and when Garland, ynih his brigade approached, the Mexicans fled, and he took possession without resistance, and uniting with cnuEUBusco. 117 Clarhe, whicli bad cut tlie retiring column in two, started in fierce pursuit. BATTLE OF CHUKtIBrSCO. But the great movement of tlie day was on Cliuru- busco, where Santa Anna had concentrated his troops, and where the fugitives from Contreras and San Antonia rallied. Churubusco was on the great causeway leading from San Antonia, to Mexico, but a canal stretched along in front of it, over which the causeway was continued by a bridge. This bridge was swept by batteries, and a column advanc- ing over the causeway to its still narrower entrance would be exposed to a concentrated and tremendous fire. To make the approach still more perilous, a field work had been erected some three hundred yards in front of this tete du jpont though a little one side of the causeway. Tliis was comj^osed of a hacienda surrounded by a wall pierced with a double row of embrasures and commanding the road • — a stone building inside still higher, and a fortified church higher than all. The batteries mounted here not only overlooked and swept the road along which the American columns must pass, but were within close cannon shot of tlie bridge which was to be car- ried by storm. There was, however, a side road to the hacienda from Coyhoacan, and along this thti 118 WINTIELD SCOTT. divisions of Twiggs and Pillow, together with Shields brigade, accompanied by the rifles, were to advance and divert its fire from Worth, who, keeping along the main causeway from San Antonia, would leave it one side, and be arrested only at the bridge. Thus two separate battles were to be fought within half cannon shot of each other. Scott, accompanying Pillow's division, had halted when within a mile of Churubusco, and arranged the whole attack. He then took his position on the top of a house, where he could survey both battle-fields, whose clouds were to mingle into one. The brigades of Shields and Pierce were ordered to occupy a cross road which led to the rear of Churubusco, and thus efi:ect the double purpose of deterring Santa Anna from sending reinforcements to the hacienda, by keep- ing him in constant fear of an attack on his rear and flank, and also of cutting ofl" the retreat of Rincon's army should Twiggs succeed in driving it out. "No- thing could be more perfect than this plan of General Scott's. By it, he prevented Santa Anna from con- centrating his overwhelming force on a single point. lie confused and distracted him so, that he did not know where the heaviest blow was to fall ; while, at the same time, so much was threatened, that defeat anywhere seemed to involve complete ruin. This spreading of so many meshes around the feet of the enemy, exhibits the wonderful generalship of Scott. HIS GENERALSHIP. 119 A commander is great in proportion to the extent of his resonrces ; and though the world generally does not understand this, it gives him full credit in tlie results which it can understand. "Wlien the soldier becomes aware of it, he moves to his station in perfect assurance of victory. He loves the com- mander who, by his daring and stubborn resolution, tramples under foot the best-laid schemes ; but he delights still more in one who can not only outfight^ but outwit the enemy. Especially is this true of the American soldier, for, to an American, a man OQjer- reached is already a beaten man. Besides, he feels a certain elasticity and confidence the moment that he finds his foe disconcerted. It was thus Scott acquired such an ascendancy over his troops. They did not care what his orders were — they knew they could be ful- filled. The character of the separate duties of brigades or regiments, or the difficulties in the path of each, were not to be considered, the general, final result would inevitably be a victory. Defeat under Scott the army came at last to consider impossible. He could not commit a blunder ; and should a repulse occur, the blame must rest on the troops, not on him. Their confidence was not misjjlaced, and that same confi- dence gave them tenfold power. Whether standing quietly under a murderous fire, or storming almost inaccessible heights, the thought of not succeeding, if 120 WINFIELD SCOTT. their chief was lookiug on, never entered their minds. His direction to do a thing, was conclusive evidence that it could be done. Everything being ready, at one o'clock the order was given to advance, and Scott saw the columns moving along the different roads in beautiful order. At length they came within reach of the Mexican batteries, which opened a tremendous fire upon them. Twiggs, marching full on the hacienda, planted his guns in close range, and the next moment the plain shook with their heavy explosions. The cannonading was like the incessant roll of thunder. Through the smoke that rolled over the causeway and past this blazing volcano, "Worth led his division swiftly towards the batteries on the bridge. Colonel Garland, a little to the right of the road, and Clarke and Cadwallader directly on the road, marched steadily forward through the fire. The heads of the columns melted away before the sweeping discharges from the batteries on the bridge, but the ranks closed steadily up, and under those gallant leaders, pressed firmly on. Garland's column suffered severely from a line of infantry as he approached, but nothing could check the ardor of his troops, that kept pushing on till the line before them broke and fled. Clarke's brigade, with equal coolness, kept moving up, making straight for the bridge. The uproar of the two battles, not over three hundred yards a])art, was at this moment CHUKUBUSCO. 121 terrific. Nothing like it had ever been heard on the plains of Mexico, and the domes and towers of the city were crowded with men and women gazing ofp where the white and sulphurous clouds rolling up in the distance revealed the place of conflict. After an hour and a half of incessant fighting, Clarke's brigade at length reached the tete du ])ont ', the order to charge passed through the excited ranks, and with a loud shout, they crowded across the ditch, stormed the parapets, and rushing furiously over the bridge streamed after the fugitives as they fled towards the capital. Twiggs heard the thunder of battle rolling away from him, and he knew the bridge was carried, and that the victorious division of "Worth was chasing the enemy before it, and he resolved it should not be the last victory of that day. He had stood for two hours and a half under the murderous fire of the batteries, and by directing them on himself, saved Worth from destruction. Santa Anna, seeing how the battle was froino-, suddenly poured four thousand infantry, and three thousand cavalry on the brigades of Pierce and Shields. Here were no defences, and it seemed im- possible that these two brigades could stand the weight of such overpowering masses. But these rifles "had been baptized in fire and blood," and their quick, deadly fii'c empted saddles with frightful rapidity. 122 WINTIELD SCOTT. The ISTew York and South Cai-olina volunteers vieing with each other in heroic daring and steady courage, bore up against these heavy onsets witli the firmness of veterans, and pouring themselves in tumultuous shouts on the enemy, swept them again and again from their batteries. They melted away like the morning mist, but still shoulder to shoulder they moved unflinchingly through the storm. The road was jDacked and piled with the dead, and that curtain of brave men, which alone kej^t Santa Anna's masses from falling on the already exhausted Twiggs, was rent into fragments, — still, with such a leader as Shields, they could not be beaten. Brave, resolute, and with a tenacity of will nothing but death could shake, he moved amid his men a tower of strength. Once surrounded, he told his troops to charge through the hostile ranks. They obeyed, rending the line asunder as though it had been a band of straw. Scott saw the peril of this brave commander, and the regiments of Kansom, Wood, and Morgan were successively hurried to his aid. One after another they came at the pas de charge^ and shouting cheer- fully to their hard beset comrades, went rolling like loosened cliffs on the foe. Shields heard their shouts with joy, for his brave Carolinian and New York volunteers were fast filling their glorious graves. The gallant Butler fell cheering on his men, and for TITE VICTORY. 123 a long time Twiggs listened to tliis incessant and tremendous firing in his rear with the deepest anxiety. Santa Anna was making a desperate effort to re- trieve the losses of the morning, and again and again bore fiercely down with the flower of the Mexican cavalry on the diminutive force that so steadily beat back his legions. But no defeat was to mar that day BO gloriously begim ; and Santa Anna was at length compelled to give way. The veteran Twiggs, drawing his girdle of fii-e still closer and closer around that hacienda, at length car- ried it sword in hand, and Rincon's army streamed after the other fugitives towards Mexico. The dead and the dying were left in their gore, and the tide of battle swept fiercely away towards the capital. That causeway was dark with men, and fluttering with standards, while white spots of smoke in the dis- tance, and the far off roll of cannon, and faintly heard shouts told that the work of death was not yet done. The gay and brilliant uniform of the Mexican lancers as they galloped frantically in long columns along the causeway over their own infantry, present- ed a striking contrast to the dark, compact body of American dragoons that pressed on their flying traces. It was a wild, exciting scene. The blood of those bold dragoons was up, and they never pulled rein till they reached the gates of Mexico. 124 VVINFIELD SCOTT. The American bngle, sounding tLe recall under the walls of the capital, was ominous of evil. Kearney, with one arm shattered, then led his troop back over the field of slaughter. Nine thousand Americans had trampled under foot thirty thousand Mexicans. The field presented a ghastly spectacle. Friend and foe lay side by side, while cries of distress and moans arose in every direction. The earth had been soaked with the blood of brave men, on whose cold dull ears, the triumphant shouts of regiment after regiment as they returned from the pursuit, fell unheed- ed. "What a day this had been, and what a scene the sun in his course had looked upon. His rising beams flashed on the crimson summit of Contreras ; his noonday splendor failed to pierce the war cloud that shrouded the tens of thousands struggling in mortal combat around Churubusco, and now his departing rays, as he stooped behind the Cordilleras, fell on a mournful field of slaughter. But they kissed in their farewell the American standard fluttering from every summit and tower, where in the morning the Mexi- can cross greeted his coming. What a contrast did the two nights present. At sunset the day before, the American soldiers had suf- fered defeat, and were desponding; to-night, they were frantic with joy and exultation. Scott, cut oft' from half his troops, who, discouraged, sad, and sorrowful, and drenched to the skin, stood at midnight under the AFTER THE BATT'LE. 125 batteries at Contreras ; and Scott ridmg tliroiigh liis gallant army, that rent the heavens with acclamations, is hardly the same man. Four brilliant victories in one day, and every strong defence but one between him and the capital broken down, lifted a w^eight from his heart, the pressm'e of which no one had known. And as he now rode iip to the thinned and blackened regiments, he addressed them by turn in enthusiastic praise. He called them his brave comrades, and as they crowded around to seize his hand, told them they had covered their country's flag with glory. He loves the brave, and as he passed along, his very face was eloquent with feeling. This open and unbounded commendation, raised to the last pitch of excitement the already enthusiastic troops, and their shouts and acclamations shook the very plain on which they stood. The brave old Rincon leaned from the balcony of the church he had so gallantly defended, and though a prisoner, gazed with undisguised delight on this manifestation of unbounded love for their leader. He could not escape the contagion of the enthusiasm, and loved his captors better for their devotion to their noble commander. Soldiers will ever love such a chief, and such a chief will ever be worshipped by his soldiers. Scott had good reason to be proud of his army. Since morning they had stormed and taken Contreras, the bridge and citadel of Churubuscu, cap- tured San Autonia, and beaten Santa Anna in the 12G WINPIELD SCOTT. open field. Such a day's work was never done by nine thousand men before. As one looked on those heavy batteries, and almost impregnable defences, it seemed impossible that they had all been carried within twelve hours. But a few more such days would annihilate the American army. A thousand men had fallen, and among them nearly eighty officers. The American uniform was sprinkled thick around those grim batteries ; and victories that cost him a ninth part of his men killed and wounded, would soon leave Scott destitute. He was nearly three hundred miles from Yera Cruz, with only eight thousand un- wounded men around him. With this comparative handful, he was yet to carry a still more impregnable fortress and the capital itself. He thought of those things on that night of triumph. But the weary army, flushed with victory, dreamed only of greater triumphs to come. The thunder of battle had ceased; the carnage and strife were done ; and the living and the dead slept side by side on the field where they had struggled. The uproar of the day gave way to the silence of night. Nature, taking no note of man's in- human strifes, wore the same tranquil look as ever, and the breath of summer fanned lowland and upland as gently as though no groaning men cumbered the field. The stars came out on the sky, and shed their pure radiance on the blackened batteries and crimson iutrenchments, keeping watch all that peaceful night NIGHT SCENE. 127 with the sentry as he walked his weary rounds. The flags that had been carried so resistlessly through the storm of battle, drooped adown their staves, — emblmes of victory all unheeded now by the fiery sleepers be- neath. The day had opened and closed in blood and slaughter, yet the night showed no change. Far away, along the green valleys and hill sides of this free land, were fathers, and mothers, and brothers, and sisters, .and wives, who little knew how laden with sorrrow that briglit summer day liad been to them. How inscrutable are the designs of heaven, and how unthinkingly men carry them out. Scott, who had seen enough of carnage, wrote after this dreadful day, " enough blood has been shed in this unnatural war ;" and to all thinking men, it seemed a wicked and use- less waste of life. The former it doubtless was ; of the latter, we are not so sure. Victories are no longer mere indications of prowess and strength. Linked together as nations now are, they tell on civilization and on the destiny of the world. The authors of this war are without excuse, but what necessary link it may form in the chain of human events no one is able to determine. It in the first place saved West Point Academy, which in the end may save the republic, and doubtless, will save more men than fell between Yera Cruz and Mexico. It gave us a position in Europe, and thus strength- ened the hopes of freedom everywhere. It gave us 128 WINFIELD SCOTT. alsoautliority in a country where we then thought '\vg had no interest ; but wliere now we see we have niucli. It removed (and we trust forever) the absurd and insane idea, that educated officers were not needed in this country — that from the masses woukl spring able generals like mushrooms after a rain. It has inspired respect abroad and confidence at home, bv showino; the real strena-th of the nation. That little ai*my sleeping almost under the walls of Mexi- co, has at least turned over a new leaf in the book of history, if not for good then for evil. The next morning Scott while moving to Coyhoa- can was met by conmiissioners from Santa Anna, proposing an armistice. lie replied that he was willing to accede to one, and they would find him that night at Tacubaya. The road thither passed within reach of the batteries of Chapultepec, and the commissioners told him if he would delay his inarch a few hours, orders would be issued to pre- vent him and his escort from being fired upon. Scott thanked them for their kindness, but with his hundred dragoons boldly j^roceeded on his way, and slept that night in the Archiepiscopal palace of Mexico, and in full view of the domes and towers of the capital. It is thought that at this time he could have prevented another battle by assailing the city with shells. But tlie carnaixc would be frIo;htful in that crowded population, and he humanely listened THE ARMISTICE. 129 to the first overtures for peace. This humanity, however, in the end cost him his bravest troo^js. The administration in jiower at this time did nothing but heap blunder on blunder in their efforts to conduct the war. Tlie insane project of j^lacing a lieutenant-general over Scott, was followed by- one not so despicable but ecpiallj absurd — the ap- pointment of an agent to treat wdth the Mexican powers. The mere tact announced at Puebla, excited the contempt of the officers, and inflated the Mexicans with arrogance. Having sent an army of invasion into Mexico it should have em2:>owered the com- mander-in-chief alone to treat with its rulei'S, until regular commissioners had been aj^pointed to nego- tiate a peace away from the field of battle. But it seemed fated that nothing but the gallantry of the American army should redeem the errors in wdiich this "unnatural war" had commenced. There was justice at least in this, for neither the merit or blame has ever been or will be divided. The cru/ie rests with the administration, the fflorf/ with the army. CHAPTEK y. Tbe Armistice — Scott resolves to carry Chapultepec ty storm— Descriiition of tbe Fortress— Battle of Molino Del Key— Tbe field iifter the victory— The con- dition and prospects of the Army at this time — Misbehaviour of tbe Government —Defence of Bcott— His plan for assaulting Chapultepec— Day preceding (ha Battle— The final attack. For nearly three weeks Scott and his patient little army sat down in full view of Mexico, waiting the movements of Mr. Trist and the Mexican Commis- sioners. This project of sending an agent two thou- sand miles distant, to present a treaty either before or after a battle, — claiming the right to arrest and delay the movements of an army, at a time when the Com- mander-in-chief might deem it of the utmost import- ance to advance, was another folly in that series of follies which had characterized the whole course of the administration from the commencement of the war. Scott, however, did not remain idle. In the first place, twenty-nine deserters taken in the citadel of Churubusco were tried by court-martial. Fighting EXECUTION OF EESEETEE8. 131 with a halter about their necks, they had fought like demons, doing more execution than a whole regiment of Mexicans. Sixteen of these wretches were huns:, and theii" blackened corpses left to swing in the wind, a terrible example to traitors. The citj, in the mean- time, was carefully studied, and every plan for secur- ing its downfall thoroughly weighed and examined. But his position, notwithstanding the great victories achieved, was perilous in the extreme. Cut off from all resources, with an army of more than thirty thou- sand men, and a fortified city of two hundred thou- sand inhabitants before him, he surveyed his little army of eight thousand men with an anxious heart. He could rely on them, for he had tried them. But one day of disaster would shake it sadly. To retreat after a severe defeat would be impossible. The terror of his arms alone kept down the inhabitants. "With that gone, the swarming population would gather in endless thousands around his path, and the Mexican cavalry tramj)le down his enfeebled battalions from the capital to Vera Cruz. Like Taylor at Buena Yista, it was victory or ruin with him. Anticipating failure in the negotiations, he had, after a close examination of the various modes of assaulting the capital, adoj^ted a plan of ojDerations, which he resolved to commence the moment the armistice should close. There were eight different avenues to the city in its entire circuit, terminating 133 WINFIELD SCOTT. in five gates, eacli of which constituted a small fort, where a few men and cannon could resist almost any force brought against it. Around a part of the city stretched an impassable morass, crossed by long causeways, commanded by batteries from the walls, and also by the castle of Chapultepec. Around the other portion stretched a wide canal, which it would be necessary to bridge under the enemy's fire. But could all these obstacles be overcome, there remained the fortress of Chapultepec, overlooking and com- manding the city, so that if the American army were once within, they could not hold it should the Mexicans resolve to bombard their own capital. But with Chapultepec in his power, Scott would have the town under his guns, and it must fall. He, there- fore, resolved to assail it, notwithstanding the almost impregnable fortifications that defended it. But with a less skilful commander than he, or with a less gallant army that closed resolutely around him, its conquest would have been impossible. It was sur- rounded at the base by a high massive wall ; its sides were spotted with forts and walls ; and from its top, a hundred and fifty feet high, arose the castle, with its wings, bastions, parapets, and redoubts, all surmounted by a splendid dome, that flashed proudly in the clear sunlight. Around this castle ran two strong walls, ten or fifteen feet high, over whicli the troops must climb before they could efiect an CriAPULTEPEC. 133 entrance. The whole frowning to_[„-was covered with heavy cannon defended by an army of thirty thousand men. Only on one side could this precipitous rock be scaled ; the western, towards the city. This was clothed with a heavy forest : but at tlie base were two fortified positions, Molino del Key, or the King's Mill, a thick stone building with towers, and Casa de Mata, anotlier massive stone building, the two stand- ing about four hundred yards apart. In this admir- able position, Santa Anna had placed an army four- teen thousand strong; its two extremities resting on these fortified structures, and his centre protected by a heavy battery. This force, stretching four hun- dred yards, from building to building, broken by only the field battery in the centre, presented an imposing appearance. Thus stood mattere on the Yth, when the armistice was broken off. Mr. Trist had demanded all that disputed country between Kueces and the Rio Grande, the whole of New Mexico and upper and lower Cali- fornia. The Mexican commissioners presented a counter j^i'^-^ject, differing widely from this basis. After much discussion, however, they acceded to all Mr. Trist's claims, with the exception of ceding the south part of New Mexico to the United States.'-^ * They refused to cede the territory between Nueces and the Rio Grande ; but were willing it should remain unoccupied by either na- tion — neutral territory. 8 134 WI^vFIELD SCOTT. By what process the administration obtained a right to this territory has not yet transpired nnless by right of conquest, which from the first was dischTimed. Scott perhaps might have submitted to this trifling a little longer, had not the representatives of Mexico, Jalisco and Zacatecas issued a protest against the negociations and the secretary of state, a circular to the states of Puebla and Mexico, calling for a levy en masse^ " in order that they may attack and harass the enemy with whatever weapons each may con- veniently procure, whether good or bad, by fire or sword, and by every practicable means which it is possible to employ, in the annihilating of an invading army." It was evidently high time that Scott was bestirring himself; and luckily for the army Mr. Trist had the good sense to see the unbounded folly of the administration, and to fall in with the views of the commander-in-chief. This was a catastrophe that had not been looked for at home, and completed the political blunder, out of which had grown such a terrible tragedy. On the 7th of September, Scott had resolved to storm the city of Mexico, and make peace within its walls. BATTLE OF MOLINO DEL EEY, But Chapultepec, with its strong defeiices, must first be carried. Preparatory to the final movement MOLING DEL R]!:Y. 10 J on tlie liclglits and castle, _ it was necessary to de- molish Santa Anna, with his fourteen thousand men at the base. General Worth was appointed on this perilous enterprise, and whether his reconnaissance could not have been more thorough than it was, or wdiether he unfortunately considered it complete and satisfactory, at all events he was ignorant of the true strength of the position, until his torn and mangled division revealed it to him. It was a des- perate undertaking to attonpt, in broad daylight, with a little over three thousand men, to carry those stone buildings, batteries, and all, defended by four- teen thousand troops. But Worth, like Murat, rarely counted his foes, and on the night of the 7th divided his force into three columns, with a reserve under Cadwallader, to act where it should be most needed. The right column, under Garland, received orders to march on the mill. A storming party of only five hundred men, commanded by Major Wright, was to commence the attack by falling sud- denly on the field battery in \\\q, centre, while tlie 2d brigade, under M'Intosh, was to move on Casa de Mata. Sunmer, with his dragoons, hovered on the Ame- rican left. Scott had given orders to have the attack made if possible before daylight. Tliis, how- ever, was not done, although the columns were in motion by three o'clock in the morning. Captain 136 ■WINFIELD SCOTT. Hugerbad been directed to place liis battery of twen- tv-fonr pounders, so as to cover Garband's advance, and divert tbe fire from tbe batteries of Cbapnlte- j)ec. As soon as dayligbt sulficiently revealed objects, be commenced a terrible cannonade on tbe mill. His beavy sbot tore tbrongb its solid walls witb such effect, tbat tbe position was soon sbaken. Tbe storming party, under Major "VVrigbt, tben dasbed forward on tbe field battery. Midway tbey were met by a most borrible and destructive fire from tbe artillery. Taking it witliout liincbing, tbey witb sbouts pressed forward and actually carried tbe battery. Tbe enemy seeing witb amazement wbat a bandful of men were in tbeir midst, rallied, and by tbe mere weiglit of tbeir masses, forced tbis gal- lant little band back. In a moment tbe wbole line of infantry poured in tbeir volleys, and for an instant it seemed as if tbe eartb bad swallowed up every man. Eleven^ out of the fourteen officers wbo com- manded it, were sbot down, and tbe stunned and sbattered column, staggered back. But disdaining to be tbe first of all tbat noble army to fly, it stood and bled on tbe field it could not win, till Captain Kirby Smitb, witb a ligbt battalion, and part of Cadwallader's brigade, came to tbe rescue. Tbe two forces joined witb sbouts and bastily forming, drove witb resistless power on tbe battery, and took it. Tbe Mexican line was tbus severed, and tbe gajiland's cuaege. 137 battle resolved itself into two distinct actions around the two buildings. Garland's column now took up its march, for the mill, wdiich seemed on tire from the blaze of its own guns. That fearless and fiery artillerist, Captain Drum, with two pieces, moved at its head, while above them the twenty- four pound shot of Magruder, swept with fearful accuracy on the building. The huge black balls could be traced in their iiight, and the dull heavy sound of their concussion was heard even amid the deafening explosions that shook the field. Drum seemed to bear a charmed life, and moved amid his guns with a buoyancy and excitement that presented a strange contrast to the carnage around him. The advance was slow and toilsome, for that slight bat- tery had to contend against overw^helming odds, and its j^rogress guaged the progress of the col- umn. Covering the infantry, it had to make a path for it to the very walls of the mill. Garland cheer- ing on his troops, watched with the deepest anxiety the effect of its fire, for should it be silenced, he would be compelled to march over the wreck of his guns and push the naked, uncovered head of his col- umn sternly up to the very muzzles of the Mexican cannon, or retreat. He did not mean that any con- tingency should force him to the latter alternative, for i^hen the moment of decision arrived, he had re- solved to charge with the bayonet over barricades, 138 WINFIELD SCOTT. guns, gunners, and all. At lengtli weaned witli the eifort to cany forward Ins column in the face of such a destructive fire, he, while Drum w^as advancing his pieces, called a drummer, and -bade him set down his drum as a seat on which he could for a moment rest. At the instant a grape shot struck the cap from his head. Had he been standing erect, it would have passed through his body, and one more name been added to the long list of heroes whose bones repose in the plains of Mexico. At length, under the concentrated and overwhelm- ing fire of the Mexican batteries, every gunner be- longing to Drum's pieces was killed or w^ounded. lie then called on the infantry to supply their j^laces, but not a man would give up his musket. Tlirough fire and blood he had toiled his way to the spot where the bayonet must decide the conflict, and he would not yield his weapon at the moment he most needed it. But those guns must be served, for every shot was worth a regiment of men in demolishing the defences before them. They were, at length, rolled to within a hundred yards of the Mexican batteries, where they played with a rapidity and power nothing could withstand. Yet Avhen they reached that fearful proximity, every artillerist he- s'lde them was a West Point officer. Seeing the guns deserted, and seeing too the vital importance of their being steadily worked, these brave and noble young THE MIL]. CAIMMKD. 13U officers left their commands and turned ^common artillerists, under tlie murderous lire tliat had cleared every gun of its man. The example told on the soldiers. Behind a battery worked by their own officers, men will march on death itself; and no sooner was the order to charge given, than clearing every obstacle that opposed their progress, they stormed that mill and its defences with resistless valor, and carried them. The Mexicans were driven from their stronghold, and the shout jDroclaiming another victory rolled up the rocky sides of Chapul- tepec. Oil, if the nation knev/ how those "lazy, book-educated officers " of West Point led that gal- lant little army from victory to victory, they would guard this institution and defend its honor with a zeal and energy that would palsy the hand lifted against it. As the fearless Garland listened to the shouts that rung from that battered mill-house, he hoped his brave troops would never ha\' e another such a task assigned them. But while the central battery had been carried, and the assault on the mill been pressed with such resistless vigor, a still more deadly combat had raged around the Casa de Mata. The troojos assign- ed to the assault of this building did not get under way till the sun had reached the horizon. The scene which his lio-ht then revealed was sufficient to 140 WINFIELD SCOTT. daunt tlie stoutest heart. The ground leading up to tlie huilding, with its bastions and ditches, was like a smooth open lawn. Not a tree or shrub fur- nished shelter to a storming j^arty. The base of the intrenchments was lined with the cactus, whose point- ed leaves, tipped with dew, sparkled in the sun- beams, appearing like ten times ten thousands lance points flashing in the light. Behind them full five thousand men stood in battle array, while the artillery swept every foot of the smooth green Bv/ard. It did not seem possible that troops could be carried over that exposed plain in the face of such batteries. M'Intosh, however, formed his men, and proceeded by Duncan's battery, moved boldly towards the building. Dimcan's guns wore served with great skill and ctiect, and vomiting forth fire and death, steadily advanced. But the unsheltered condition of the troops rendered them a fair mark for the enemy, while the latter, behind ditches and walls, were effectually protected. The ranks, however, closed firmly as the grape and canister-shot made huge gaps through them. But they were fast melting away, and demanded to be led to the charge. The command was given. PasL Duncan's battery, and over that plain, the madden- ed battalions swept like a storm, till they at last stood front to front with the enemy. Here they were stopped by the strong defences, of which, till CASA DE MATA. 141 then tliey liad been ignorant. In vain tliej made des- perate elibrts to push over them against the tremen- dous force upon the opposite side — ^to retreat was worse than death. The spectacle at this moment was frightful. Those brave regiments, without a bush to shelter them, standing breast to breast, and muzzle to muzzle, with a well sheltered foe out- numbering them five to one, was a sight to move the bravest heart. Duncan's battery was behind them, and could no longer fire, while the enemy's artillery kept hurling its loads of grape-shot in their midst. Tliere was no cessation to the volleys — ^no interval in the explosions. There was no fall- i]ig back and rallying to another charge. The doomed battalions never shook or faltered, but sunk where they stood, unconqnered to the last. Thus, for tioo hours did they stand on tliat open field withoiit sliriuking. iSTo sucli firing had ever before been witnessed in the army. It was one continuous, rattling, deafening, thunder-peal, of two hours dura- tion. Wrapped in cL^uds of their own making, out of which their shouts of defiance rose, the Ameri- cans fouglit that hopeless battle with a fury and desperation, more than human. The carnage was awful. At lengtli their heroic commander was shot down. Scott and Waite soon followed him, and the ofiicers in command, tired of the murderous work, fell back to give room for Duncan's battery to play 142 ■\VINFIELD SCOTT. again J and tliat tliunder-peal was for a moment liuslied. While these brave men were in the midst of thia unparalleled lire, a column of lancers, several thou- sand strong, came sweej^ing down, to crush them by a sudden charge on their flank. But Duncan, whose guns were now idle, saw the storm that was about to burst on them, and ordering the horses to his pieces swept in a gallop over the field towards the advancing column. The moment he got in good grape and canister range, he unlimbered and poured in sucli a rapid and scourging fire that it wheeled and fled, pressed hard by Sumner's cavalry. 'No sooner did the storming column, by retiring, unmask Duncan's guns, than they again opened on the building. The troops then rallied ; rushed forward and crowding over the ditches, drove the enemy before them. Tlie victory was won, but alas ! at what a sacrifice. That briglit green sward w\as loaded with bodies, and crimson with blood. One regiment of six hundred had left nearly every other man upon it. As the smoke of battle slowly lifted, before the morning sun, those two black and battered buildings, around wliich there had been such a death struggle, looked strangely grim and savage, amid the piles of dead bodies at their base. Brave men lay weltering in blood, or reclining on their elbows, were faintly calling for help. Hundreds borne on THE CAnxAG:^. 143 litters, or leaning on tlicir coniradoij' sliouklers, as they limped slowly away, were seen moving across the field. Mangled forms and pallid comitenances met tlie beholder at every turn, for in that line of four-hundred yards nearly eight hundred American;^ had fallen, or one-fourth of the whole division en- gaged. Tlie Mexicans had fought desperately. Leon, their bravest general, and some of their best officers were killed. Scott, as he rode over the field was filled with grief at tlie terrible slaughter, by which the victory liad been gained. lie had not anticipated it, and feared that an earlier attack or a more thorough reconnaissance might have prevented it. He went into the hospital and visited the wounded, and as he saw fifty brave officers lying before him, he felt how much he had been weakened. lie had, however, a word of encouragement and kindness for each. It was his custom as he rode over the field of battle to pause and give his canteen to some poor Rufterer who stood in greater need than otliers, or whisper a promise to a gallant young officer, from whose side the red drops were trickling. His care of the sick and wounded was of the tenderest kind, and those who had gazed with pride and veneration on him in battle, loved him as a father, when Avounded and suft'ering they saw him stooj)ing over tlieir couches in the hospital. The base of Chapultepec was now in possession of 144 AVIXFIELD SCOTT. the American army ; but commanded as it was 1)/ the guns of the fort, the position could not he held. Casa de Mata was, therefore, blown .up, and the mill rendered useless. Chapultepec was next to be assailed ; and yet, after deducting the sick, wounded, and the different garrisons, Scott had a force of but little over seven thousand men with which to do it. If he should be weakened in proportion to the numbers engaged and the difficulties to be encountered, as much as he had been at Molino del Key, but a handful of men would be left him to conquer Mexico. These repeated victories were telling frightfully on that unparalleled army, whose fate must be sealed before reinforcements could reach it. Nothing can reveal the utter ineffi- ciency, nay, downright madness of the administration, more than the position of that army at this moment. Victorious in every engagement, it now gathered around the last great obstacle that lay between it and Mexico. The impregnable character of the ibrtress, defended as it was by thirty thousand men, and covered with heavy artillery, rendered its ca])ture so difficult, that in the attempt the army would in all probability suffer more severely than in any of the battles it had hitherto fought. The most sanguine could not expect six thousand un wounded men, even if victors, to renniin after the assault. Six thousand men, nearly three hundred miles from their shij^s, without depots or garrisons on the way, a city of near FEKIL OF THE AEMY. 145 a quarter of a million before them, and defended bj twentj-five thousand troops, presented a noble, yet fearful spectacle. But who placed them in such a perilous position ? By whose neglect was the most gallant army that ever trod a battle-field so seriously endangered ? Where were the reinforcements that should have poured in by thousands long before that; little band gathered with undaunted hearts under the crags of Chapultepec? The inefficiency of a Com- mander-in-chief, unlooked for and overwhelming de- feats, disasters growing out of treachery or cowardice, may seriously compromise an army, and yet the government be blameless. Events that could not be foreseen, and hence not be guarded against, might leave it involved and reduced, as that under Scott now was. With fifty thousand men at his back, he, by his inefficiency or mistakes might easily have doTie it. But he could not he in the condition he loas^ witJtout hlame resting on some one. Neglect on the part of the government that was criminal, or blunders on the part of the Commander-in-chief almost equally crimi- nal, had brought on this crisis. But, did the blame rest with Scott? had he lost a battle? had he wantonly sacrificed his men ? had his losses been unexpectedly large ? had his army been wasted away by neglect of the sick and wounded, or want of provisions and care for the well? Coidd he, with the means in \\\%2)0we)\ have heen letter off than he loas ? Iso 1 Fortunately 146 WINFIELD SCOTT. the facts on tins point are so overwlielining, that every man is compelled to answer, No. Every victory but one at least, had been purchased at the least possible sacrifice. Fortresses had been taken and armies beaten at a loss numerically so small as to be almost incredible. The skill, genius, and humanity of the commander had stood in the place of men. They had supplied the want of regiments in every battle. 'No other living man could have carried that army so far, over so many obstacles, through so many unequal conflicts, and yet drawn it up at the base of Chapul- tepec so little weakened in numbers or demoralized in character. The government had no right to expect such re- sults — it might as well have based the campaign on probable miracles. ISTo, a careful and accurate man, one whose judgment could be relied on, would say that by the most favorable calculation, Scott could not get that army where it was without the loss, in killed and wounded, of at least eight thousand men, and that loss would have finished him. By the rules of every military campaign, he ought to have been ruined, and his army annihilated. Tlie country had no more right to expect success with such means than the French Directory had of Bonaparte, when it put him over the half-starved and miserable army of Italy. The American army ought, according to all reliable rules, to have perished, and nothing but rOLITICS m TUE ARilY. 147 tlie great (qualities of a single man saved it. If it had perished, a malediction would liave fallen on the administration, which, like "the primal eldest curse," would have clung to it for ever. These remarks are made in no feeling of party- spirit, but the reckless manner in which that army was left in the heart of Mexico, demands as a sim- ple act of justice condemnation from every man who attempts to chronicle its victories. The lives of our chivalrous volunteers, our tried regulars, and our noble officers, are not thus to be trifled with. The army of this Republic is too valual)le to be lost in mere political squabbles, or from culpable igno- rance. This fact cannot be urged too earnestly on the country. The President being the Commander-in- chief of all the forces, the army of course is under his control. But the President is usually unac- cpiainted with military science, and easily yields to the suggestions of his friends, or appoints ignorant connnanders, or adopts unmilitary plans that are certain to bring defeat. His patronage in the army, and the political use he can make of it, tempt him to many foolish and wicked acts. And even if he ho a true patriot like Jefferson, or Madison, he is almost sure to err as they did. Madison, in 1812, wished to shut up our ships of war, in port, against all the remonstrances of their brave commanders. In tliat war, success was gained in spite of the administra- 148 WINI'lELD SCOTT, tion. The truth is, in a govenuncnt like ours, where the Secretaries of War and Kavj are changed ahnost every four years, and those important departmenttj become tilled with men from the civil professions; who are necessarily ignorant of the duties attached to them, they shoidd both, so far as their organiza tion and management are concerned, be placed under the control of their respective senior com- manders. Public opinion should demand this as a settled policy, and every deviation of it by either party, be denounced and resisted. This political intermeddling with the army and navy, for the sake of popularity, will yet be visited on the nation witli disgrace and defeat. Scott, as we have seen, at length stood at the base of Chapultepec, with seven thousand men, resolved to carry it by storm, and then wheel his conquering battalions full on the capital, and beat down its gate* while the shouts of victory were still carrying terror and dismay into the ranks of the enemy. By the 1st of September the hill had been boldly and thoroughly reconnoitred, every assailable point noted down, and the route of the assaulting columns marked out. At the same time, to deceive the ene- my, and prevent reinforcements from being flung into the fortress, he ordered Pillow, Quitman, and Twiggs, to advance along the causeway from San Antonia, and open their fire on the gates of the city. cnAruLTEPEC. 140 He tluis kept Santa Anna in ignorance of ]ns real point of attack, and the latter at once concentrated a large force in the city to resist the entrance of the Ame- rican troops, whose standards were pointing towards its walls. Consternation and dismay reigned amid the crowded population ; the streets were throno-ed with terror-stricken men and women, who sup- posed this terrific cannonading was but the prelude to the final assault, and momentarily expected to hear the shouts of the Americans as they stormed over their defences. But as night came on, Quitman and Pillow witli their divisions, stole quietly back to Tacubaya, where Scott, with Worth's division had established his head- quarters. BATTLE OF CnAPFLTEPEC. All was bustle and preparation at the base of Cha- pultepec. Four heavy batteries were planted in easy range of the fortress, to be ready by daylight to play against its solid sides and upon its frowning ramparts. Ko. 1, commanded by Captain Drum, was placed within six hundred yards of the castle. ''No. 2, under Captain Huger took position a little farther ofi", while N"os. 3 and 4, commanded by Capt. Brock, Lieutenants Anderson and Stone, were placed, the former half way between Tacubaya and Molino del Key, and the latter near the mill itself. The 150 WIXFIELD SCOTT. object of these Avas to weaken those strong de- fences and open up some accessible avenues to the assaulting columns. Bj daylight tliey were all ready, and the heavy shot of the first gun knocked loudly on the portals of that fortress for admission, and called the astonished garrison to their pieces. In a few moments the whole, composed of eighteen and twenty-four j^ounders, and eight inch mortars, were in " awful activity," and when the early sun- beams gilded the splendid dome that crowned the height, they revealed many an ugly rent and ragged outline in the massive structure. Every shot could be traced in its flight, while its heavy concussion sent back the report of its own do- ings. Shells rising gracefully out of the smoke, swiftly ascended the hill, and hovering a moment above the doomed garrison, dropped, blazing within. Fragments of wall and timber hurled through the air, announced that its work was accomplished. Tlie enemy replied with all his heavy artillery, and soon the air was black with balls, and above them the heavens ablaze with burning shells. At the same time, Twiggs was thundering away at the gates of the city — explosion answered explosion, till the deafening reverberations were sent back from the distant Cordilleras. From daylight till dark the batteries never ceased playing. Since the army left Vera Cruz there had been no such opportunity to THE EO^MBAKDMENT. ir>l exliibit our artilleiy practice. The way tliose lieavy guns were liandled excited the admiration of the whole army. As soon as the distance and elevation were accurately gained, scarcely a shot was thrown away. Every one went with the precision of a rifle ball, and passed through and through the walls, sin-eading destruction in its path. Scarcely a shell wasted its force in the air, but tore up the ramparts as it dropped. The garrison, except those necessary to man the guns, were driven from the works by this incessant and deadly firing, and remained outside, towards the city. Here they stood to arms all day, ready the moment the firing ceased to return and re- pel the assault. At nightfall, Scott seeing that the fortress was severely shaken, prepared to storm it in the morning. -That was a busy night, and but little sleep visited either officers or men, and by daylight on the morning of the 13th the separate . divisions were all in their places. Scott had resolved to storm the heights in two columns — one, com- manded by Pillow, was to advance on the west side ; the other, by Quitman, on the southeast, each preced- ed by two hundred and fifty picked men. Worth's division received orders to act as a reserve, while Twiggs, away from the scene of action, was to keep playing on the gates of the city, and thus compel the portion of the enemy's army concentrated there to remain on the defensive. At daylight the Ameri- 152 WINFIELD SCOTT. can batteries again opened tlicir lire, and again tlie massive columns witliin tlie fortress were driven out. It was known tlu'oughont tlie army that the cessa- tion of the cannonading was to be the signal of as- sault. Every ear was therefore turned to catch the first lull in that incessant uproar, and every heart beat cpiicker as each explosion promised to be tlio last. But as hour after hour passed on, and the bat- teries still kept thundering on the heights, the im- patience of officers and men threatened to over-leap all bounds. At length Scott sent word that the signal would soon be given, and at nine the sudden silence of tlie batteries announced that the hour had come. " For- ward," passed through the ranks, and those intrepid columns began the ascent. The moment they were in motion the batteries again opened, and canopied them with shots and shells, that went before to open the path to victory, and keep back tlie reinforce- ments without. Pillow's column entered the forest, Avhicli was in a blaze from the sharpshooters that filled it, and sweeping it of the enemy, emerged on to the open ground, and under a rocky height. Here Pillow fell, and the command devolved on the brave Cadwallader, who shouted "forward" to that eager column, and it streamed up the rock, taking the destructive volleys that thinned their ranks, without flinching. Half way bet\v^een it and THE ASSAULT. 153 the castle walls stood a strong redouLt, whose bat- teries played with deadly etfect on its uncovered head. The ground that intervened was broken by chasms and rocks, over which the troops slowly made their difficult way, tiring as they went. The rapid and fatal volleys of the two hundred and lifty men that moved in advance, swept everything down, and onward firmly and irresistibly crept the column. Reaching the redoubt in which mines had been placed to blow up the victors, they carried it in one swift and terrible charge. So sudden and ra])id was the onset, and so complete the overthrow, that the enemy had no time to fire his mines, and those who attempted it were shot down. "There was death below as well as above ground," but nothing could resist the progress of that heroic column. Leav- ing that redoubt behind, it marched straight on the walls of the castle. Scott watched its advance through fire and smoke, with an anxious heart, till it at length reached the ditch. The spectacle it presented at this moment aroused all the latent fire of his nature. Halting a moment till the ditch could be filled with tascines, and the scaling ladders applied to the walls, it sternly stood, and melted away under the fire of the enemy. At length the chasm was bridged when the troops streamed over with shouts, and in a mo- ment the ladders were bending under the weight of those who seemed eager to be the first in the portals of 15-1 WmFIELD SCOTT. death. Pierced with balls or bayonets, the leaders fell back dead upon theh' comrades, but nothing could check the ardor of those that followed after. Bearing back by main force those that opposed their ascent, they climbed to the top, made a lodg- ment, and sent up a thrilling shout. " Streams of heroes followed," sweeping like a sudden inundation over the walls. Cheer after cheer arose from tlie ramparts ; flag after flag was flung out from the up- per walls, carrying " dismay into the capital." Quitman, in tlie meantime, had made his way to the southeast walls, but being compelled to advance along a causeway, defended by artillery and in- fantry, he was delayed in carrying them till the routed enemy above came on him in crowds. The troops turned on those with relentless fnry. Re- membering their brave comrades at Molino del Rey, to whom no quarter was given, they mowed the Mexicans down without mercy. The New York, South Carolina, and Pennsylvania volunteers, how- ever, by crossing a meadow, under a tremendous Are, and mounting swiftly to the castle, were in time for the assault. A detachment of New York volun- teers, under Lieutenant Ried, and another of 2d in- fantry, led by Lieutenant Steele, were foremost on the ramparts. The former, cheering his men on, was the first to scale the heights and the wall. Lie was at length wounded, but refusing to retire, limped on HIS IIUMAXITY. 155 liis way, fidvancing still higher and higher towards the Mexican banner that waved above him. At length he reached it, and tearing it down with his own hands, fainted beside it. It was gallantly, nobly done. The spectacle presented to Scott as he turned with his staif to ascend the hill filled his heart watli joy and exultation. Those walls and ramparts Avliich a few hours before bristled with the enemy's cannon, were now black with men, and fluttering with colors of his own regiments, while a perfect storm of hur- rahs, and cheers rolled towards heaven. As he passed up he saw his troops shooting down the helpless fu- gitives without mercy. He could not blame them, for he knew they were avenging the death of their brave comrades, to whom no mercy was shown at Molino del Key, but unable to endure the inhuman spectacle, he rode up to the excited troops, and ex- claimed, " Soldiers, deeds like yours are recorded in history. Be humane and generous^ my hoys, as you are mctorious, and I will yet down, on my hended hiees to God for you, to-nkjMP l^oble and elo- quent words, which immediately found a response in those brave hearts. Mercy blended with strength is ever beautiful. As he reined up on the summit in the view of all, the very hill shook under their acclamations. It "was a time for exultation to him, and he shared in 15G WINFIELD SCOTT. the liigli eiitliuslasm of his trooj^s. lie had conquer- ed — the day begun in anxiety was ending in glorj. The capital was at his mercy, and as he stood on the top of that castle and looked off on the domes and towers of the city crowded with spectators, and down on the fugitive army fleeing towards its walls for shelter, he resolved at once to march on the gates and carry them by storm. Two causeways starting from the base of the hill, diverged as they crossed the marsh, and again contracted in approaching the city. Over these the Mexican host was streaming, infantry and artillery in wild confusion, pressed hard after by Worth and Quitman. But arches and gate- ways occurring at intervals, presented points for making vigorous stands against their advance, so that the battle had only rolled down the hill — • not ended. Behind these, the Mexicans again and again ral- lied and fought bravely. Fighting under the walls of their capital, they struggled desperately to save it from becoming the spoil of the victor. Worth pressed fiercely against tlie column before him, toward the San Cosmo gate, while Quitman was forcing his way along the San Belen aqueduct. To a spectator from the top of Chapultei:)ec, the scene below at this time was indescribably fearful. Tlie Americans appeared like a mere handful amid the vast crowds that darkened the causeways in STORMING TIIE CITY. 157 front of tliem. Bat the clouds of smoke that wrapped the head of each column and the incessant explo- sions of cannon, revealed where the American artil- lery was sternly mowing a path through the swaying masses for the victorious troops behind. The living parapets were constantly falling along the edges of those causeways, while the shouts and yells of the struggling thousands rose up from the mingled din and crash of arms like the cries of a drowning mul- titude, heard amid the roar of the storm. Scott surveyed at a glance this wild scene and seeing what tremendous odds his brave troops below were contending against, hurried up reinforcements to their help. Officers were seen swiftly galloping from division to division, and soon Clarke's and Cadwallader's brigades moved rapidly over one causeway to the help of Worth, while that of Pierce took the other, on which Quitman was struggling. Crushing every obstacle in their j)ath, those columns slowly, but steadily advanced. As they came near the city where the causeways again approached each other. Worth sent an aid-de-camp to Scott, beggiiig that Quitman might cease firing on the Belen gate, and turn his artillery on the column he was pushing before him. A few raking discharges on its flank, would have rent it into fragments. Scott knowing that the San Cosmo gate presented the weakest de- fences, had determined to enter by it, and sent word 9 158 WINFIELD SCOTT. again and again to Qnitman to employ the en'^^my, rather than attempt to force the Bel en gate. But that brave officer had remained in idleness at San Angnstine long enongh, while the rest of the army was covering itself with laurels. The opportunity given him in the morning was bereft of half its value by the necessary delay of his column, till the castle was carried ; and he was resolved that he would not be second in that last crowning battle. Worth's victorious division should not open the gates for him from within, and through the deadly fires that smote him both from front and flank batteries, over every obstacle that opposed his progress, he still urged on his bleeding column till the gate was reached, when the gallant rifles dashed forward with a loud shout and carried it. -The entrance was won and Quitman stood within the city. Here he stubbornly maintained his position from 2 o'clock in the after- noon till night, under a galling fire from the guns of the citadel. Defences w^ere thrown up to shelter his valiant corps as much as possible from it, and he waited patientl}^ till daylight should appear. He had lost some of his best troops, and among them those noble officers. Captain Drum, and Lieutenant Benjamin. Worth, in the meantime, had advanced steadily towards the San Cosmo gate. Scott, after having seen to the prisoners of war and the wounded, has- tened down the hill of Chapultepec and joined him QUITMAN WITHIN. 159 ill tlie hottest of tlie fire. Here, while in the act of handing an order to an officer, the horse of the lat- ter was shot by his side. After giving directions to Worth, he returned to the foot of Chapultepec, and taking his station where the two causeways parted, directed the movements of both colnmns and sent forward help where it was most needed. By 8 o'clock, Worth was in the suburbs, and there, around two batteries which he had carried, rested his exhausted troops for the night. Another night had come, giving repose to the weary soldier. The tumult and carnage of the day had ceased, and silence rested on the city, and our army under its walls. Quitman's troops sleeping in heaps under the arches of the causeway, and Worth's by the San Cosmo gate, presented a striking contrast to these same soldiers a few hours before. What a day's march that army had made, and what a track it had left behind it. Two paths, lined with the dead, marked its passage up the slippery heights of Chapultepec — scattered masses of the slain showed where the tumultuous flight and headlong pursuit had swept like a loosened flood down the slope, while the two causeways shattered and blackened, and streaked with blood, revealed the course its fiery footsteps had last taken in the road to victory. Nearly nine hundred of the Americans had been killed or wounded, while the Mexican dead lay in uncounted heaps on every side. 160 ■WINFIELD SCOTT. It was an evening of rejoicing in that victo- rions army, but hundreds were writhing in suiFer- ing, and many a gaUant spirit that at morning had seen glory and promotion before it, was now swiftly passing to that still land, where warrior and war- horse are seen no more. To them the joy and en- thusiasm on every side, added but more sorrowful regrets for all they had lost. Through so many perils they had moved in safety, to sink at last at the end of the race. . Oh, how earthly glory fades at such a moment. Leaving aside the freezing spec- tacle of heaps of mutilated corpses — the gliastly wounds and moans of the sufferers, if those who slowly die after the battle is over, and its excite- ment has passed away, could tell us all their mental ' suffering — ^breathe into our ear their extinguished hopes — their vanished dreams of glory — let us see the inward scalding tears that drop over the absent loved and lost for ever — the sudden waking of conscience to a squandered life, and the anxious piercing glance into the dark unknown, whose shadows are slowly closing round the spirit, war would seem the saddest thing on earth. It is a blot on the race, and its evils cannot be magnified. But these evils, great as they are, do not lessen its necessity. "While the world is governed by physical power, truth and jiistice will be compelled to resort to the sword to maintain their rights, aye, to defend their very existence. Besides, EEFUSES TER:\IS TO SANTA ANNA. 101 death is the same, wlietlierit comes on tlie battle-field, or sinking wreck, or amid the storm, or earthquake. A course of action is to be judged, not by the sutiering attending it, but by the principles which govern and control it. That the Mexican war was forced on the country, without sufficient provocation, and secured nothing in comparison to the sacrifice it cost, few will doubt. The opinion of tlie world may be swayed, but the authors of that war will have a dif- ficult task to sway the calm verdict of eternal truth and justice. Many ofiicers in the army, and the noble Com- mander-in-chief himself, felt the want of that support which the consciousness of a good cause gives to the true soldier. " Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just." The morning of the 1-lth of September had not yet fully dawned when the army was in motion. A deputation from the city council in the mean time waited on the Commander-in-chief, announcing that Santa Anna, with the remnant of his army, had fled the city, and demanded " terms of capitulation in favor of the church, city, and the municipal autho- rities." Scott refused to grant any terms ; the city was in his power ; he was resolved to enter it sword in hand, and plant his triumphant batineron its walls by the right of conqliest alone. 162 WINFIELD SCOTT. Santa Anna, seeing that the capital was lost, bad sent to him the night before, asking what terms he required. The latter curtlj replied, that he had no answer to give, and no questions to ask. Slowly and cautiously, to guard against treachery, the columns proceeded in the early dawn towards the great public square. Quitman's division first ap- proached it, and his troops, rushing with shouts upon it, hoisted their flag on the walls of the JSTational Palace. Worth's division followed, and that little army of six thousand men stood in the heart of the capital, while long and deafening shouts proclaimed the joy of the conquerors. About nine o'clock a sudden bustle was seen in one corner of the square to which one of the streets led, and the next moment a long, loud hurrah broke forth. The troops had caught sight of the waving plumes and towering form of their Commander, slowly advancing in the midst of a body of cavalry. As he entered the plaza, the whole army shouted as one man. Again and again that loud, frenzied hurrah swelled over the city, and swords flashed in the air, and caps waved, and drums rolled. It was a wild, enthusiastic welcome, worthy of their chief, and his eye kindled with emotion. In a short time, however, a heavy volley of musketry was poured into the troops, dropping men who had passed unscathed the carnage of the day before. Some two thousand liberated convicts had armed THE ARMY IN THE CAPITAL. 163 themselves, and with as many soldiers, commenced firing on the Americans from the flat roofs of the houses, from the windows, and the corners of the sti'eets. Garland was wounded in endeavoring to disperse the assailants, and it was not till after twenty- four hours of toil that these miscreants were at length caught or scattered. Tranquillity being restored, Scott levied a contribu- tion on the city, and organized a temporary govern- ment. His army of six thousand men appeared a mere handful in that spacious square, where Santa Anna, a few hours before, had manoeuvred thirty thousand. But there was a grandeur about it as it stood up in the heart of that great city, surrounded with the memories of so many victories, and presenting in itself the em- bodiment of so much power. That vast po]3ulation might apparently rush upon it and crush it by the mere weight of their masses, yet there it stood, awing all by the terror of its name. The Mexicans gazed upon it in amazement. Since its conquering feet had been placed on their territory, it had taken twelve thousand prisoners, killed and wounded nearly ten thousand men, and captured colors and standards innumerable, together with more than seven hundred pieces of artillery, more than thirty thousand small arms, and shot and shells and munitions of war with- out end. In its very last onset it had trampled under foot thirty thousand men, defended by castle walls, iG4 WINFIELD SCOTT. iutrencliments, and Leav}^ ai'tillerj. Scoffing at nnra- LerSj defjing obstacles, it had moved on its victorious course with resistless power. Eeduced it indeed was, but its adamantine columns stood firm as ever. The mere mention of the numbers captured and slain and wounded bj it astounds one. The bare statistics sound like the fabulous deeds of some hero of romance. Never had so small an army so much glorj to divide among its numbers. Proud of their renown and their leader's praise, thej^ cheerfully obeyed his commands, and abstained from all those acts of violence and oppression which a conquering army in the heart of a city that has cost it such a sacrifice, feels it has a right to commit. Property and life were protected, and the inhabitants settled down into a feeling of security and peace, to which, under their own rulers, they had for years been strangers. The humblest individual could come to General Scott with his complaint, sure of receiving justice and protection. That army, whose name had carried terror into all hearts, was soon looked upon as the guarantee of their rights and the enjoyment of their social bless- ings. The Mexicans could not understand how such ferocious men in battle, such fire-eaters when raging amid their foes, could be so quiet in their deportment, so kind in their ways, and generous in their conduct. Scott, whose name had never been uttered without a shudder of fear, was ])cloved us their best protector AS A ETTLER. 165 and friend, and tliej sat down under liis mild but firm sway in perfect contentment. But in the midst of liis duties, on the very theatre of his exploits, surrounded by the battle-fields where he had ever been victorious, he was dragged before a court of inquiry to answ^er groundless charges pre- ferred against him. i^ay, his command was taken from him and given to another. We have seen that from the commencement of the war the administration had heaped blunder on blunder, as if on purpose to keej) up a contrast be- tween itself and the army, and thus let the latter have all the glory. The very eiforts to injure Scott had turned out blunders ; they had reacted like " curses that come home to roost." It had, therefore, resolved on open attack ; the veteran of threescore, covered w^ith laurels should be disgraced, and tried as a criminal on the very spot wdiere he had triumphed. Tlie Mexicans could not understand this. There was a cold-blooded hatred about it that seemed in their eyes to foretell his certain ruin. Yery probably it was this that induced them to believe he might be persuaded to remain in their midst, and prompted the offer of the presidency with a salary of two hun- dred thousand dollars per annum. Tlie army seemed to worship him, and tliey had no doubt would cheerfully share his fortunes. The troops were indignant at the treatment of 166 WINFIELD SCOTT. tlieir commander, and hailed him with shouts when- ever he ax^peared. One day they marched in front of the house he occupied, and would not be satisfied until he appeared on the balcony. The cheering that followed convinced the Mexican authorities that Scott had issued a pronunciamento, and they called upon him to ascertain the fact, and treat at once with him instead of the United States govern- ment. He, however, undeceived them ; told them the Americans were law-abiding men ; that the president was commander-in-chief of the whole army, and the commanding-general was therefore bound to obey his orders. They went away disappointed and puzzled. How a man, apparently disgraced by his government, could so quietly submit, when he evidently had power to do otherwise, was so contrary to the course their own commanders pursued, that they could not comprehend it. It was with a sad heart Scott took leave of that gallant a,rmy, in whose midst he had marched to so many victories. A common danger, common toils, and hardships, had endeared them to him. Their unbounded devotion to his person, and the bravery and daring with which they had fulfilled all his orders ; tlieir patience under privations, humanity in the hour of victory, and peaceful obedience in the heart of a great city, around whose walls they had AEKIVES IN NEW YORK. 167 shed their Tdoocl, had bound them to him by a tie strong and tender. It was a rutliless blow that severed it. But the deed was done, and the faithful servant of his country, the peerless chieftain, shorn of his com- mand, turned his footsteps homeward. And when, from the summit of the Cordilleras, where a few weeks before he gazed down on the plains below, he turned to take a farewell look of the fields of his fame, sad, bitter thoughts mingled with glorious re- membrance. Through the cities which he had conquered, down the steeps of Cerro Gordo, still blackened with the smoke of his cannon, he continued his way, and at last entered Yera Cruz, more as a prisoner than a conqueror. Here a large and commodious vessel, direct for jSTew Orleans, was offered him. But with that magnanimity and self-forgetfulness, which have always characterized him, he refused, saying, " JSTo, my soldiers will soon be liere and will need it," and taking a brig he set sail for JSTew York. Tlie vessel was crowded with sick and disabled men, and worn down by the incessant fetigue of the past six months, he himself was soon attacked by a disease that well nigh carried him to his grave. Weary and sick, ho at length reached the harbor of Xew York, and with- out stopping to receive the congratulations of the city, passed on to his residence in Elizabethtown. 168 WINFIELD SCOTT. Tliis sliunning tlie presence of his coimtiymen, as thougli lie suspected them of sharing the feelings of the administration, cut them to the heart,- and they re- solved to give him a manifestation of their love, which could not be misunderstood. A day was appointed for a public reception in oSTew York, so that the peo- ple could render their verdict on his conduct. He landed amid salvos of artillery, and escorted by the entire military force of the city, passed through its principal streets. The public buildings were deco- rated with flags — every window was crowded with sjiectators waving their handkerchiefs, and the streets from limit to limit thronged with the tens of thous- ands who strove to catch a glimpse of the man who had wi'oughtsuch wonders, and covered his country's flag with such unfading glory. As he rode slowly along a shout that shook the city arose around him. The ijeo^le were speaking. Party feeling was for- gotten, and the animosities of factions were buried under the boundless enthusiasm that burst forth on every side. The hero had been brought home to be disgraced, and the people were croiomng him. His gallant heart was to be irritated and annoyed by petty accusations and fault-findings, and lo the thundering shout of " All Hail to the Chief," that rolled over the land, frightened his persecutors from their cowardly purpose. Haman, was that day doomed to witness the triumph of the man he had HIS CHARACTER. 169 doomed to infamy, and liang on tlie gallows he liad reared for another. Tlie heart of this re.pnblic is sound, whatever its judgment may be. General Scott is now the Whig candidate for the Presidency. Tlie most striking points of General Scott's char- acter stand out in hold relief. In so long and event- ful a career, a man's character cannot be concealed. His actions reveal it. Probably a more fearless man never lived. Like Bonaparte, he may be irritated and disturbed by trifles,but danger always tranquilizes him. Tliose who have been with him most, say that in the moment of greatest peril, his lip w^ears its serenest expression. It is in the thunder crash of battle, and when the brave battalions are linked in deadliest combat that his heart beats calmest. It is a little singular that the greatest warriors (not merely desperate fighters, but men fit to be leaders of armies) have been distinguished for more than ordinary humanity, and tenderness of feeling. Murat, whose natural element seemed the smoke and carnage of battle, never drew his sword in com- bat, lest he should slay some one. Ney, who moved amid death like one above its power, was as simple and tender as a child. The same is true of Scott. The sick and the distressed have not merely command- ed his synqxtthy but he has again and again risked his life to succor them. Stern, nay, almost tyrannical, ITO WINFIELT) SCOTT. as a disciplinarian, liis lieart as a man is filled witli all generous amotions. He was in New York at the time of the Astor Place riot, and within hearing of the fir- ing. As his practiced ear caught the regular volleys of the soldiers, he wrung his hands and walked the room in an agony of excitement, exclaiming, " tltey are firing 'volleys, they are shooting down citizensy — What an apj^arently strange contradiction. This man, whose nerves seemed made of iron in battle and who had galloped with the joy of the war- rior for hours, amid a hail-storm of bullets, could not control his feeling when he knew the blood of American citizens was flowing in the streets of JSTew York. But in the one case he acted as a commander whose business it was to conquer; while here he was a man feeling for his fellow man. That burst of feel- ing did him more honor than the greatest victory he ever gained. Scott is also distinguished for great tenacity of purpose. "What he has once resolved uj)on, he can- not relinquish. As he said, he never puts one foot forward without designing to bring the other up to it. The desperate manner in which he clung to the height at Lundy's Lane — charging like fire, when, but a quarter of his brigade was left, and crying out, as mangled and bleeding, he was borne from the field, " Charge again,'''' reveal a strength and firmness of will, that no earthly power can shake. HIS CHAKACTER. 171 Sucli a man is hard to beat. As a military cliieftain, lie probably lias no superior, if erpial, in tbe world. Place a hundred and fifty thousand American troops, drilled under his own supervision, in his hands, and the miracles of ISTajioleon would be wrought over again. He possesses all the qualities necessary to make a great commander. Courage, coolness in the hour of danger, fertility of resources, extensive yet rapid combination, the power of covering a vast field ©f operations, yet losing none of its details, per- fect control over his troops, tireless energy, and great humanity, combine in him, as they are rarely found in any man. Success cannot intoxicate him, nor de- feat enervate him. Tempted by no sudden stroke of good fortune into rashness, he cannot be made listless by disappointment. A less nicely balanced character would never have carried us safely through the diffi- culties on our northern frontier. His life is singularly clear of moral blemishes. ISToble and confiding, he has often been wronged, yet he never could be forced into low retaliation or soured into distrust of his fellow-man. While in Mexico, a friend warned him against an officer, whom he sus- pected of being an enemy in disguise. " I cannot help it," said the General. " It has all my life been a positive luxury to me to confide in my fellow-man, and rather than give it up, I should jirefer being stabbed under the fifth rib daily." The temptations 172 AVINFIELD SCOTT. which surround elevation to rank and power have never corrnpted him ; and ho is, at this day, as firm a friend of religion, temperance, and all the moral virtues, as though his life had been devoted solely to their inculcation. It is rare to see a long and public career so unstained by any vice. The most severe and fiery trial to wliicli a man in this country can bo subjected, is to be a candidate for the highest office in the republic. Yet from even this, whether successful or unsuccessful, he will come out unscathed. ]N^ot a charge that could aftect the love and confidence of his countrymen will be fastened on him. The only two accusations made against him worthy of notice are, that he is dicta- toral, and vain ; and particular, and exacting about mere trifies. A dictatorial manner is almost inevi- tably attached to one wdio has always been accus- tomed to command. If self-conceit in him amounts to a fault, that fault never had a better or more sat- isfactory excuse. The latter defect, as it is termed, on which so many changes have been rung, is one of the most valuable elements in his character. It is the importance he places on details that makes his army so complete in all its departments and so like a single instrument in his hand. Knowing every- thing from the greatest to the least, he is accpiainted with all his resources, and hence does not attempt what he cannot carry out. HIS CIIAKAOTER. 1 ( 3 It was liis liabit in Mexico to require the attend- ance of tlie cliiefs of every dejyartment^ every even- ing at liis quarters, where he interrogated and con- versed about their individual matters. From the quartermaster, he learned everything relating to hospitals, quarters, forage, trains, horses, paclc mules, moneys in hand for fnture use, ifec. &c. ; from the commissary, he found out the resources of the coun- try for provisions, the quantity in store, the means of transportation, the expectations beyond, as the country developed itself; from the medical chief he invariably knew of the health of the command, of the wounded, of the number of deaths, of the sup- ply of medicines, and the due attendance of a suffi- cient corps of surgeons at the hospitals, while from the general officers he knew even to the most trifling details of the regiments and corps. There was an officer appointed to a new regiment, as colonel, who had large influence withal as a politician, and who came out opposed to General Scott politically and otherwise. At Jalapa, he called to see him, and when he left headquarters, he was amazed at the information in small matters that the general had at hand, " "Why," said he, " he verifies the stories of Napoleon." Those who carp about j^articularity in small matters, should remember what grand results they have accomplished ; and they should remember, too, that 174 WINFIELD SCOTT. tbis habit of sncb vital importance to a commander, like all other "babits, cannot be put on and off at plea- sure. It may exhibit itself in matters wholly unim- portant, and a person witnessing it in one of such re- nown, will be amazed, forgetting entirely out of what a great basis it sprung. " The world is made up of little things," is a favorite maxim with him; and the rigidity with wbich he enforced it in every depart- ment, alone saved the army in Mexico. " Republics," it is said, " are ungrateful," but posterity is just, and history eventually impartial.* " Headquarters National Palace oi' Mexico. OF THE Army. ) ,Sept. 18, 1847. J " Sir : — At tbe end of anotber series of arduous and brilliant operations of more tban forty-eigbt bours' continuance, tbis glorious army boisted, on the morn- ing of tbe 14:tb, tbe colors of tbe United States on tbe walls of tliis palace. " Tbe victory of tbe 8tb, at tbe Molino del Key was followed by daring reconnaissances on tbe part of om* distinguisbed engineers — Capt. Lee, Lieuts. Beauregard, Stevens, and Tower, — Major Smith, senior, being sick, and Capt. Mason, tbird in rank, wounded. Tlieir operations were directed princij)ally * For a more elaborate description of the movements on Chapul- tepec and Mexico, see the annexed despatch of the Commander-in- chief, dated from the capital. HIS DESPATCH. 175 to tlie soutli — towards the gates of tlie Piedad, San Angel, (Nino Perdido,) San Antonio, and tlie Paseo de la Yiga. "This city stands on a slight swell of ground, near the centre of an irregular basin, and is girdled with a ditch in its greater extent — a navigable canal of great breadth and dejDth — very difficult to bridge in the j)resence of an enemy, and serving at once for drainage, cnstom-honse purposes, and military de- fence ; leaving eight entrances or gates, over arches • — each of which we found defended by a system of strong works, that seemed to require nothing but some men and guns to be impregnable. " Outside and within the cross-fires of those gates, we found to the south other obstacles but litde less formidable. All the approaches near the city are over elevated causeways, cut in many places (to op- pose us), and flanked on both sides by ditches, also of unusual dimensions. The numerous cross-roads are flanked in like manner, having bridges at the intersections, recently broken. The meadows thus checkered, are, moreover, in many spots, under water or marshy ; for, it will be remembered, we were in the midst of the wet season, though with loss rain than usual, and we could not wait for the fall of the neighboring lakes and the consequent draiTiage of the wet grounds at the edge of the city — the lowest in the whole basin. 176 WINFIELD SCOTT. After a close personal survey of the southern gates, covered by Pillow's division and Riley's bri- gade of Twiggs' — with four times our numbers con- centrated in our immediate front — -I determined on the 11th to avoid that net-work of obstacles, and to seek, by a sudden diversion, to the southwest and west, less unfavorable approaches. To economise the lives of our gallant officers and men, as well as to ensure success, it became indis- pensable that this resolution should be long masked from the enemy ; and again, that the new movement, when discovered, should be mistaken for a feint, and the old as indicating our true and ultimate point of attack. Accordingly, on the spot, the 11th, I ordered Quitman's division from Coyoacan, to join Pillow, by daylight, before the southern gates, and then that the two major-generals, with their divisions, should by night, proceed (two miles) to join me at Tacubaya, where I was quartered with Worth's division. Twiggs, with Piley's brigade and Captain Taylor's and Steptoe's field batteries — the latter of 12-poun- ders — was left in front of those gates, to manoeuvre, to threaten, or to make false attacks, in order to oc- cupy and deceive the enemy. Twiggs' other bri- gade (Smith's) was left at supporting distance, in the rear, at San Angel, till the morning of the 13th, and also to support our general depot at Miscoac. HIS DESPATCH. 177 Tlie stratagem against tlie sor.tli was admirably exe- cuted tlirongliout the 12th and down to the afternoon of the 13th, when it was too hite for the enemy to recover from the effects of his delusion. " The first step i^^ the new movement was to carry Chapnltepec, a natural and isolated mound, of great elevation, strongly fortified at its base, on its accliv- ities, and heights. Besides a numerous garrison, here was the military college of the republic, with a large number of sub-lieutenants and other students. Those works were witliin direct gun-shot of the vil- lage of Tacubaya, and, until carried, we could not approach the city on the west, without making a circuit too wide and too hazardous. " In the course of the same night (that of the 11th) heavy batteries, within easy ranges, were established. Xo. 1, on our right, under the command of Capt. Drum, 4th artillery, (relieved late next day, for some hours, by Lieut. Andrews of the 3d,) and No. 2, commanded by Lieut. Ilagner, ordnance — both suj)- ported by Quitman's division. Nos. 3 and 4 on the opposite side, supported by Pillow's division, were commanded, the former by Capt. Brooks and Lieut. S. S. Anderson, 2d artillery, alternately, and the lat- ter by Lieut. Stone, ordnance. Tlie batteries were traced by Capt. linger and Capt. Lee, engineer, and constructed by them with the able assistance 178 WmFIELD SCOTT. of tlie young officers of tliose corps and the artil- lery. " To prepare for an assault, it was foreseen that the play of the batteries might run into the second day ; but recent captures had not only trebled our seige pieces, but also our ammunition ; and we knew that we should greatly augment both by carrying the place. I was, therefore, in no haste in ordering an assault before the woi'ks were well crippled by our missiles. "Tlie bombardment and cannonade, under the direction of Capt. linger, were commenced early in the morning of the 12th. Before nightfall, which necessarily stopped our batteries, we had perceived that a good impression had been made on the castle and its outworks, and that a large body of the enemy had remained outside, towards the city, from an early hour, to avoid our fire, and to be at hand on its ces- sation, in order to reinforce the garrison against an assault. The same outside force was discovered the next morning, after our batteries had re-opened upon the castle, by which we again reduced its garrison to the minimum needed for the guns. " Pillow and Quitman luid been in position since early in the night of the 11th. Major-general Worth was now ordered to hold his division in reserve, near the foundry, to support Pillow ; and Brigadier-general HIS DKSrATCH. 170 Smith, of Twiggs' division, had just arrived with his brigade from Piedad (two miles,) to support Quitman, Twiggs' guns, before the southern gates, again re- minded us, as the day before, that he, with Kiley's brigade, and Taylor's and Steptoe's batteries, was in activity, threatening the southern gates, and there holding a great part of the Mexican army on the de- fensive. " "Worth's division furnished Pillow's attack with an assaulting party of some two hundred and fifty volunteer officers and men, under Capt, M'Kenzie, of the 2d artillery ; and Twiggs' division supplied a similar one, commanded by Capt. Cassey, 2d infantry, to Quitman. Each of those little columns was fur- nished with scaling ladders. " The signal I had appointed for the attack was the momentary cessation of fire on the part of our heavy batteries. About eight o'clock in the morning of tlie 13th, judging that the time had arrived by the effects of the missiles we had thrown, I sent an aid-de-camp to Pillow, and another to Quitman, with notice that the concerted signal was about to be given. Both columns now advanced with an alacrity that gave assurance of prom^jt success. The batteries, seizing opportunities, threw shots and shells upon the enemy over the heads of our men, with good effect, particu- larly at every attempt to reinforce the works from without to meet our assault. 180 WLNFIELD SCOTT. " Major-general Pillow's approach, on the west side, lay through an open grove, filled with sharp-shooters, who were speedily dislodged ; when being up with tlie front of the attack, and emerging into open space, at the foot of a rocky acclivity, that gallant leader was struck down by an agonizing wound. The immediate command devolved on Brigadier-general Cadwall- ader, in the absence of the senior brigadier (Pierce) of the same division — an invalid since the events of August 19. On a previous call of Pillow, Worth had just sent him a reinforcement — Colonel CUirke's brigade. " The broken acclivity was still to be ascended, and a strong redoubt, midway, to be carried, before reach- ing the castle on the heights. The advance of our brave men, led by brave ofBcers, though necessarily slow, was unwavering, over rocks, chasms, and mines, and under the hottest fire of cannon and musketry. The redoubt now yielded to resistless valor, and the shouts that followed announced to the castle the fate that impended. The enemy were steadily driven from shelter to shelter. The retreat allowed not time to fire a single mine, without the certainty of blowing up friend and foe. Those who at a distance attempted to apply matches to the long trains, were shot down by our men. There was death below, as well as above ground. At length the ditch and wall of the main work were reached ; the scaling ladders were brought Ills DESPATCH. 181 up and planted by the storming parties; some of the daring spirits first in the assault were cast down — killed or wounded ; but a lodgment was soon made ; streams of heroes followed ; all oj)position was over- come, and several of our regimental colors flung out from the upper walls, amidst long-continued shouts and cheers, which sent dismay into the capital, l^o scene could have been more animating or glorious. " Major-general Quitman, nobly supported by Brigadier-generals Shields and Smith, (P. F.,) his other ofiicers and men, was up with the part assigned him. Simultaneously with the movement on the west, he had gallantly approached the southeast of the same works, over a causeway with cuts and bat- teries, and defended by an army strongly posted out- side, to the east of the works. Those formidable ob- stacles Quitman had to face, with but little shelter for his troops or space for manoeuvring. Deep ditches flanking the causeway, made it difficult to cross on either side into the adjoining meadows, and these again were intersected by other ditches. Smith and his brigade had been early thrown out to make a sweep to the right, in order to present a front against the enemy's line, (outside,) and to turn two interven- ing batteries near the foot of Chapultepec. This movement was also intended to support Quitman's storming parties, both on the causeway. The first of these, furnished by Twiggs' division, was commanded 10 1S2 WLNFIELD SUOTT. in succession by Captain Casey, 2d infantry, and Captain Paul, Ttli infantry, after Casey had been severely wounded ; and the second, originally under the gallant Major Twiggs, marine corps, killed, and then Captain Miller, 2d Pennsylvania volunteers. The storming party, now commanded by Captain Paul, seconded by Captain Roberts, of the rifles, Lieutenant Stewart, and others of the same regiment, Smith's brigade, carried the two batteries in the road, took some guns, with many prisoners, and drove the enemy posted behind in support. The New York and South Carolina volunteers (Shields' brigade) and the 2d Pennsylvania volunteers, all on the left- of Quitman's line, together with portions of his storm- ing parties, crossed the meadows in front, under a heavy fire, and entered the outer enclosure of Cha- piiltepec just in time to join in the final assault from the west. Besides Major-generals Pillow and Quitman, Bri- gadier-generals Shields, Smith, and Cadwallader, the following are the officers and corps most distinguish- ed in those brilliant operations : The voltigeur regi- ment in two detachments, commanded respectively by Colonel Andrews and Lieutenant-colonel John- stone — the latter mostly in the lead, accompanied by Major Caldwell ; Captains Barnard and Biddle, of the same regunent — the former the first to ]Aixnt a re- gimental color, and the latter among the first in the ms DESPATCH. 183 assault; the storming party of Worth's division, un- der Captain McKenzie, 2d artillery, with Lieutenant Seldon, 8th infantry, early on the ladder and badly wounded ; Lieutenant Armistead, 6th infantry, the first to leap into the ditch to plant a ladder ; Lieuten- ants Rogers of the 4th, and J. P. Smith of the 5th in- fantry — both mortally wounded ; the 9th infantry, under Colonel liansom, who was killed while gal- lantly leading that gallant regiment ; the loth in- fantry, under Lieutenant-colonel Howard and Major "Woods, with Captain Chase, whose company gallant- ly carried the redoubt, midway by the acclivity ; Col. Clarke's brigade, (Worth's division,) consisting of the 5th, 8th, and part of the 6th regiments of infantry, commanded respectively by Captain Chapman, Major Montgomery, and Lieutenant Edward Johnson — the latter specially noticed, with Lieutenants Longstreet, (l)adly wounded, advancing, colors in hand,) Pickett, and Merchant, the last three of the 8th infantry ; por- tions of the United States marines, New York, South Carolina, and 2d Pennsylvania volunteers, which, de- layed with their division (Quitman's) by the hot en- gagement below, arrived just in time to participate in the assault of the heights — particularly a detach- ment under Lieutenant Peid, New York volunteers, consisting of a company of the same, with one of marines ; and another detachment, a portion of the storming party, (Twiggs' division, serving with Quit- 184 WmFIELI) SCOTT. man,) under Lieutenant Steele, 2d infantry, after the fall of Lieutenant Gantt, Tth infantry. In this connection, it is but just to recall the deci- sive effect of the heavy batteries, E'os. 1, 2, 3, and 4, commanded by those excellent officers, Captain Drum, 4th artillery, assisted by Lieutenants Benja- min and Porter of his own company ; Captain Brooks and Lieutenant Anderson, 2d artillery, assisted by Lieutenant Bussell, 4th infantry, a volunteer ; Lieu- tenants Ilagner and Stone of the ordnance, and Lieu- tenant Andrews, 3d artillery ; the whole superintend- ed b}' Captain linger, chief of ordnance with this army — an officer distinguished by every kind of merit. The mountain howitzer battery, under Lieu- tenant Beno, of the ordnance, deserves, also, to be particularly mentioned. Attached to the voltigeurs, it followed tlie movements of that regiment, and again won applause. In adding to the list of individuals of conspicuous merit, I must limit myself to a few of the many names which might be enumerated : Captain Hooker, assistant adjutant-general, who won special applause, successively, in the staff of Pillow and Cadwallader ; Lieutenant Lovell, 4th artillery, (wounded,) chief of Quitman's staff; Captain Page, assistant adjutant- general, (wounded,) and Lieutenant Hammond, 3d artillery, both of Shields' staff, and Lieutenant Yan HIS DESPATCH. 185 Dorn, (7th infontiy,) aid-de-camp to Brigadier-general Smith. Those operations all occurred on tlie west, south- east, and heights of Chapultepec. To the north and at the base of tlie mound, inaccessible on that side, the 11th infantry, under Lieut. CoL Hebert, the 14th, under Col. Trousdale, and Capt. Magruder's field battery, 1st artillery — one section advanced under Lieut. Jackson — all of Pillow's division — had, at the same time, some spirited affairs against superior numbers, driving the enemy from a battery in the road, and capturing a gun. In these, the officers and corps named gained merited praise. Colonel Trous- dale, the commander, though twice wounded, con- tinued on duty imtil the heights were carried. Early in the morning of the 13th, I repeated the orders of the night before to Major-general Worth, to be, with his division at hand, to support the move- ment of Major-general Pillow from our left. The latter seems soon to have called for that entire division, standing momentarily in reserve, and "Worth sent him Col. Clarke's brigade. The call, if not unnecessary, was at least, from the circumstances, unknown to me at the time ; for, soon observing that the very large body of the enemy, in the road in front of Major-general Quitman's right, was receiving rein- forcements from the city — less than a mile and a half to the east — I sent instructions to Worth, on our 1S6 WINFTKLD SCOTT. opposite flank, to turn Cliapnltepcc witli Lis division, and to jDroceed cautiously, by the road at its northern base, in order, if not met by very superior numbers, to threaten or to attack, in rear, that body of the enemy. Tlie movement, it was also believed, could not fail to distract and to intimidate the enemy gen- erally. " Worth promply advanced with his remaining brigade — Colonel Garland's — Lieut. Col. C. F. Smith's light battalion, Lieut. Col. Duncan's field battery' — ^all of his division — and three squadrons of dragoons, imder Major Sumner, which I had just ordered up to join in the movement. " Having turned the forest on the west, and arriv- ing opposite to the north centre of Chapultepec, "Worth came up with the troops in the road, under Col. Trousdale, and aided, by a flank movement of a part of Garland's brigade, in taking the one gun breastwork, then under the fire of Lieut. Jackson's section of Capt. Magruder's field battery. Continu- ing to advance, this division passed Chapultepec, attacking the right of the enemy's line, resting on that road, about the moment of the general retreat consequent upon the capture of the formidable castle and its outworks. Arriving some minutes later, and mounting to the top of the castle, the whole field, to the east, lay plainly under my view. HIS DESPATCU. 187 ''Tliei'G are two routes from Clifipultepec to tlie capital — the one on the right entering the same gate, Belen, with the road from the south, via Piedad ; and the other obliquing to the left, to intersect the great western, or San Cosmo road, in a suburb out- side of the gate of San Cosmo. " Each of these routes (an elevated causeway,) pre- sents a double roadway on the sides of an aqueduct of strong masonry and great height, resting on open arches and massive pillars, which together afford fine points both for attack and defence. Tlio sideways of both aqueducts are, moreover, defended by many strong breastworks at the gates, and before reaching them. As we had expected, we found the four tracks unusually dry and solid for the season. " Worth and Quitman were prompt in pursuing the retreating enemy — the former by the San Cosm® aqueduct, and the latter along that of Belen. Each had now advanced some hundred yards. " Deeming it all-important to profit by our suc- cesses and the consequent dismay of the enemy, which could not be otherwise than general, I hastened to despatch from Chapultepec — first Clark's brigade, and then Cadwallader's, to the support of Worth, and gave orders that the necessary heavy guns should follow. Pierce's brigade was, at the same time, sent to Quitman, and, in the course of the afternoon, I caused some additional siege pieces to 188 WINFIKLD SCOTT. be added to his train. Tlien, after designating thG 15tli infantry, under Lient. Col. Howard — Mor- gan, the colonel, had been disabled bj a wonnd at Chui'ubnsco — as the garrison of Chapultepec, and giving directions for the care of the prison- ers of war, the captured ordnance and ordnance stores, I proceeded to join the advance of Worth, within the subnrb, and beyond the turn at the junc- tion of the aqueduct with the great highway from the west to the gate of San Cosmo. "At this junction of roads, we first passed one of those formidable systems of city defences, spoken of above, and it had not a gun ! — a, strong proof, 1. That the enemy had expected us to fail in the at- tack upon Chapultepec, even if we meant anything more than a feint ; 2. That, in either case, we de- signed, in his belief, to return and double our forces against the southern gates — a delusion kept up by the active demonstrations of Twiggs and the forces posted on that side ; and, 3. That advancing rapidl}'- from the reduction of Chapultepec, the enemy had not time to shift guns — our previous captures had left him, comparatively, but few — from the southern gates. "Within those disgarnished works, I found our troops engaged in a street iiglit against tlie enemy posted in gardens, at windows, and on house-tops — ■ all flat, with parapets. Worth ordered forward the HIS DESPATCH. 189 mountain howitzers of Carlwallader's brigade, pre- ceded by skirmishers and pioneers, with piclcaxes and crowbars, to force windows and doors, or to bur- row through walls. Tlie assailants were soon in an equalitity of position fatal to the enemy. By eight o'clock in the evening, Worth had carried two bat- teries in this suburb. According to my instructions, he here posted guards and sentinels, and placed his troops under shelter for the night. Tliere was but one more obstacle — the San Cosmo gate, (custom- house,) between him and the great square in front of the cathedral and palace, the heart of the city; and that barrier it was known could not, by daylight, resist our siege guns thirty minutes. " I had gone back to the foot of Chapultepec, the point from which the two arjueducts begin to diverge, some hours earlier, in order to be near that new depot, and in easy communication with Quitman and Twiggs, as well as with Worth. " From this point I ordered all detachments and stragglers to their respective corps, then in advance ; sent to Quitman additional siege guns, ammunition, intrenching tools ; directed Twiggs' remaining bri- gade (Riley's) from Piedad, to support Worth and Captain Steptoe's field-battery, also at Piedad, to re- join Quitman's division. " I had been, from the first, well aware tliat tlie western or San Cosmo, was the less difficult route to 190 ■WINFIELB SCOTT. the centre, and conqnest of tlie capital, and tlierefore intended that Quitman should only manoeuvre and threaten the Belen or southwestern gate, in order to favor the main attack by Worth, knowing that the strong defences at the Belen were directly under the guns of the much, stronger fortress, called the Citadel, just within. Both of these defences of the enemy were also within easy supporting distance from the San Angel, or Kino Perdido, and San Antonio gates. Hence the greater support, in numbers, given to Worth's movement as the main attack. " These views I repeatedly, in the course of the day, communicated to Major-general Quitman; but being in hot pursuit — 'gallant himself, and ably sup- ported by Brigadier-generals Shields and Smith, Shields badly wounded before Chapultepec, and re- fusing to retire, as well as by all the officers and men of the column — Quitman continued to press for- Avard, under flank and direct fires, carried an inter- mediate battery of two guns, and then the gate, before two o'clock in the afternoon, but not with- out proportionate loss, increased by his steady maintenance of that position. " Here, of the heavy battery, (-ith artillery,) Capt. Drum and Lieutenant Benjamin were mortally wounded, and Lieutenant Porter, its third in rank, slightly. The loss of those two most distinguished officers the army will long mourn. Lieutenants J. mS DESPATCH. 191 B. Morange and William Canty, of the Soutli Caro- lina volunteers, also of liigli merit, fell on the same occasion, besides many of onr bravest non-commis- sioned officers and men, particularly in Captain Drum's veteran company. I cannot, in this place, give names or numbers ; but full returns of the killed and wounded, of all corps, in their recent operations, will accompany this report. " Quitman within the city. — adding several new de- fences to the position he had won, and sheltering his corps as well as practicable — now awaited the return of daylight under the guns of the formidable citadel, yet to be subdued. "About tt o'clock next morning, (Sept. 14,) a deputation of the ayuntamiento (city council) waited upon me to report that the federal government and the army of Mexico had fled from the capital some three hours before ; and to demand terms of capitu- lation in tavor of the church, the citizens, and the municipal authorities. I promptly replied, that I would sign no capitulation ; that the city had been virtually in om- possession from the time of the lodg- ments effected by Worth and Quitman the day be- fore ; that I regretted the silent escape of the Mexi- can army ; that I should levy upon the city a mode- rate contribution, for special purposes ; and that the American army should come under no terms not self-imposed ; such only as its own honor, the dignity 192 WIXFIELD SCOTT. of tlie United States, and the spirit of tlie age, slionld, in my oj^inion, imperiously demand and impose. " For the terms, so imposed, I refer tlie department to subsequent General Orders, Nos. 287 and 289, (par- agraphs Y, 8, and 9 of the latter,) copies of which are herewith enclosed. " At the termination of the interview with the city deputation, I communicated, about daylight, orders to Worth and Quitman to advance slowly and cau- tiously (to guard against treachery) toward the heart of the city, and to occupy its stronger and more com- manding points. Quitman proceeded to the great plaza or square, planted guards, and hoisted the colors of the United States on the national palace, containing the halls of Congress and executive de- partments of federal Mexico. In this grateful service, Quitman might have been anticipated by Worth, but for my express orders, halting the latter at the head of the Alameda, (a green park,) within three squares of that goal of general ambition. The capital, how- ever, was aot taken by any one or two corps, but by the talent, the science, the gallantry, the prowess of this entire army. In the glorious conqviest, all had contributed, early and powerfully, the killed, the wounded, and the fit for duty, at Vera Cruz, Cerro Gordo, Contreras, San Antonia, Churubusco, (three battles,) the Molino del Eey, and Chapultepec, as HIS DESPATCH. 193 mucli as those who fought at the gates of Belen and San Cosmo. " Soon after we had entered, and were in the act of occupying the city, a fire was opened upon us from the flat roofs of the houses, from windows, and corners of streets, by some two thousand convicts, liberated the night before by the flying government, joined by, perhaps, as many Mexican sokliers, who had disbanded themselves, and thrown ofi" their uniforms. This un- lawful war lasted more than twenty -four hours, in spite of the exertions of the municipal authorities, and was not put down till we had lost many men, includ- ing several ofiicers, killed or wounded, and had punished the miscreants. Their objects were to gratify national hatred, and in the general alarm and confusion, to plunder the wealthy inhabitants, par- ticularly the deserted houses. But families are now generally returning ; business of every kind has been resumed, and the city is already tranquil and cheer- ful, under the admirable conduct (with exceptions very few and trifling) of our gallant troops. " This army has been more disgusted than sur- prised, that by some sinister process on the part of certain individuals at home, its numbers have been, generally, almost trebled in our public papers, begin- ning at Washington. " Leaving, as we all feared, inadequate garrisons at Vera Cruz, Perote, and Puebla, with much larger 194: WINFIELD SCOTT. hospitals ; and being obliged, most reluctantly, from the same cause (general paucity of numbers) to aban- don Jalapa, we marched (August 7-10) from Puebla with only 10,738 rank and file. Tliis number includes the garrison of Jalapa, and the 2,429 men brought up by Brigadier-general Pierce, August 6. " At Contreras, Churubusco, &c., [August 20,] we had but 8,497 men engaged — after deducting the garrison of San Augustin, (our general depot,) the in- termediate sick and the dead ; at the Molino del Pe}^, (September 8,) but three brigades, with some cavalry and artillery — making in all 3,251 men — were in the battle; in the two days — September 12th and 13th — our whole operating force, after deducting, again, the recent killed, wounded, and sick, together with the garrison of Miscoac (the then general depot) and that of Tacubaya, was but 7,180 ; and, finally, after deducting the new garrison of Chapultepec, with the killed and wounded of the two days, we took possession (September 14th,) of this great capital with less than 6,000 men. And I re-assert, upon accumu- lated and unquestionable evidence, that, in not one' of those conflicts was this army opposed by fewer than three-and-a-half times its numbers — in several of them, by a yet greater excess. " I recapitulate our losses since we arrived in the basin of Mexico. " August 19, 20. — Killed, 137, including 14 officers. HIS DESPATCH. 105 • — Wounded, 877, including 62 officers. Missing, (probably killed,) 38 rank and file. Total, 1,052. " September 8. — Killed, 116, including 9 officers. — "Wounded, 665, including 49 officers. Missing, 18 rank and file. Total, 789. " September 12, 13, 14.— Killed, 130, including 10 officers. Wounded, 703, including 68 officers. Miss- ing, 29 rank and file. Total, 862. " Grand total of losses, 2,703, including 383 officers. On the other hand, this small force has beaten on the same occasions in view of their capital, the whole Mexican armj, of (at the beginning) thirty-odd thou- sand men — posted, always, in chosen positions, behind intrenchments, or more formidable defences of nature and art ; killed or wounded, of that number, more than 7,000 officers and men ; taken 3,730 prisoners, one-seventh officers, including 13 generals, of whom 3 had been presidents of this republic ; captured more than 20 colors and standards, 75 pieces of ordnance, besides 57 wall pieces, 20,000 small arms, an immense quantity of shots, shells, powder, &c., &c. Of that enemy, once so formidable in numbers, appointments, artillery, &c., twenty-odd thousand have disbanded themselves in despair, leaving, as is known, not more than three fragments — the largest about 2,500 — now wandering in different directions, without magazines or a military chest, and living at free quarters upon their own people. 196 T\^lSfFIELD SCOTT. General Santa Anna, himself a fugitive, is believed to be on the point of resigning the chief-magistracy, and escaping to neutral Guatemala, A new Presi- dent, no doubt, will soon be declared, and the federal Congress is expected to reassemble at Queretaro, 125 miles north of this, on the Zacatecas road, some time in October. I have seen and given safe conduct through this city to several of its members. Tlie government will find itself without resources ; no army, no arsenals, no magazines, and but little reve- nue, internal or external. Still, such is the obstinacy, or rather infatuation, of this people, that it is very doubtful whether the new authorities will dare to sue for peace on the terms which in the recent negotia- tions, M-ere made known by ouv minister. In conclusion, I beg to enumerate, once more, with due commendation and thanks, the distinguished staff officers, general and personal, who, in our last operations in front of the enemy, accompanied me, and communicated orders to every point and through every danger. Lieutenant-colonel Hitchcock, acting inspector-general; Major Turnbull and Lieutenant Hardcastle, topographical engineers ; Major Kirby, chief paymaster ; Captain Irwin, chief quartermaster ; Captain Grayson, chief commissary ; Captain H. L. Scott, chief in the adjutant-general's department; Lieutenant Williams, aid-de-camp; Lieutenant Lay, HIS DESPATCH. 197 military secretary ; and Major J. P. Gaines, Kentucky, cavalry, volunteer aid-de-camp ; Captain Lee, engi- neer, so constantly distinguished, also bore important orders from me, (Sept. 13,) until he ftiinted from a wound and the loss of two nights' sleep at the batte- ries. Lieutenants Beauregard, Stevens, and Tower, all wounded, were employed with the divisions, and Lieutenants G. ^Y. Smith and G. B. McClellan, with the company of sappers and miners. Those five lieu- tenants of engineers, like their captain, won the admiration of all about them. The ordnance officers, Captain Huger, Lieutenants Hagner, Stone, and Reno, were highly efifective, and distinguished at the several batteries ; and I must add that Captain McKinstry, assistant quartermaster, at the close of the operations, executed several important commissions for me as a special volunteer. Surgeon-general Lawson, and the medical staff generally, were skilful and untiring, in and out of fire, in ministering to the numerous wounded. To illustrate the operations in this basin, I enclose two beautiful drawings, prepared under the directions of Major Turnbull, mostly from actual survey. - I ha^e the honor to be, sir, with high respect, your most obedient servant, WINFIELD SCOTT. The Hon. Wm. L. Maecy, Secretary of War. 198 WINFIELD SCOTT. " ' Head Quarters, Eastern Division U. S. Army. ] Augusta, Me., March 21, 1839. ) " ' The undersigaed, a Major-General in the Army of the United States, being specially charged with maintaining the peace and safety of their entire northern and eastern frontiers, having cause to appre- hend a collision of arms between tlie proximate forces of ]N^ew Brunswick and the State of Maine on the disputed territory^ which is claimed by both, has the honor, in the sincere desire of the United States to preserve the relations of peace and amity with Great Britain — relations which might be much endangered by such untoward collision — to invite from his Ex- cellency Major-General Sir John Harvey, Lieutenant- Governor, &c., &c., a general declaration to this effect : ■ " ' That it is not the intention of the Lieutenant-Gov- ernor of Her Britannic Majestj^'s Province of New Brunswick, under the expected renewal of negotia- tions between the cabinets of London and "Washington on the subject of the said disputed territory, without renewed instructions to that effect from his govern- ment, to seek to take military possession of that territory, or to seek, by military force, to expel therefrom the armed civil j^osse or the troops of Maine. " ' Should the undersigned have the honor to be favored with such declaration or assurance, to be by CORRESPONDENCE. 199 him communicated to his Excellency the Governor of the State of Maine, the undersigned does not in the least doubt that he would be immediately and fully authorized by the Governor of Maine to com- municate to his Excellency the Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick a corresponding pacific declaration to this effect : " ' That in the hope of a speedy and satisfactory settlement, by negotiation, between the governments of the United States and Great Britain, of the princi- pal or boundary question between the State of Maine and the Province of 'New Brunswack, it is not the intention of the Governor of Maine, without renewed instructions from the Legislature of the State, to attempt to disturb by arms the said Province in the possession of the Madawaska settlements, or to attempt to interrupt the usual communications be- tween that province and Her Majesty's Upper provinces ; and that he is willing, in the mean time, to leave the questions of possession and jurisdiction as they at present stand — that is. Great Britain hold- ing, in fact, possession of a part of the said territory, and the government of Maine denying her right to such possession; and the state of Maine holding, in fact, possession of another portion of the same ter- ritory, to which her right is denied by Great Britain. " ' With this understanding, the Governor of Maine will, without unnecessary delay, withdraw the military 200 ■WINFIELD SCOTT. force of the State from flie said disputed territory — leaving only, under a land agent, a small civil posse^ armed or unarmed, to protect the timber recently cut, and to prevent further dej^redations. " ' Reciprocal assurances of the foregoing friendly character having been, through the undersigned, interchanged, all danger of collision between the immediate parties to the controversy will be at once removed, and time allowed the United States and Great Bi'itain to settle amicably the great question of limits. " ' The undersigned has much pleasure in renewing to his Excellency Major-Gen eral Sir John Harvey, the assurances of his ancient high consideration and respect. " ' WiNFiELD Scott.' " To a copy of the foregoing. Sir John Harvey annexed the following — ■ " 'The undersigned, Major-General Sir John Har- vey, Lieutenant-Governor of Her Britannic Majesty's Province of New Brunswick, having received a proposition from Major-General "Winfield Scott, of .the United States Army, of which the foregoing is a copy, hereby, on his part, signifies his concurrence and acquiescence therein. COBKESrOKDENCK. 201 " ' Sir Jubu Harvey renews with great pleasure to Major-General Scott the assurances of his warmest personal consideration, regard, and respect. " ' J. Harvey. " ' Government House, Frederickton, ) New Brunswick, March 23, 1839.' ) The following letter from Governor Harvey makes it apparent without these docmnents whom he regarded as the pacificator. There can be no doubt that to Scott's prudence, noble forbearance and skill, we owe the entire settlement of this boundary question, which promised to end in blood. " My deae General Scott — " Upon my return from closing the session of the Provincial Legislature, I was grati- fied by the receipt of your very satisfactory commu- nication of the 21st instant. My reliance upon you^ iny dear general, has led me to give my willing assent to the proposition which you have made yourself the very acceptable means of conveying to me; and I trust that as far as the province and state respectively are concerned, an end will be put by it to all border disputes, and a way opened to an amicable adjust- 203 WLNTIELD SCOTT. ment of the national question involved. I shall hope to receive the confirmation of this arrangement on the part of the State of Maine at as early a period as may be practicable." ANDREW JACKSON. y^-'s^fut nothing could satisfy the suspicious husband, and he abruptly left, declaring he should never return. Mrs. Kobards, indignant at the treatment she had received, and the implica- tion cast upon her character, resolved that the separa- tion should be final. IS^ot long after, being informed that he intended to return, and take her to Kentucky, she determined to accom^^any Colonel Stark, an elderly , gentleman, and his family to Natchez, in order to avoid him. The colonel, fearful of the In- dians, requested Jackson to pilot him through the wilderness. As the latter was almost constantly called upon to perform this duty for other travellers and emigrants, he did not see why he should refuse in this case, and he therefore accomjDanied them. 234 ANDREW JACKSOISr. This was unwise, and strengtliened the suspicious that had ah-eady been whispered about. There is no doubt that he felt the attraction of a young and fascinating woman, and it is very probable she pre- ferred the high-minded, chivalric Jackson, to her own vicious, cruel, and heartless husband. She ought to have done so at all events, but there was never the shadow of proof of criminality, and it would not have been safe for any one to have said so openly within a hundred miles of where Jackson lived. Robards being confirmed in his suspicions, by this departure of his wife under the j^i'otection of Jack- son, a^jplied to the Legislature of Virginia for a divorce, — at least such was the report, — and Jackson, on his return to ^Nashville, was told that the appeal had been granted. Resolved at once to vindicate the character of an injured lady, from the aspersion this divorce cast upon it, and at the same time to show the high estimation in which he held her, — promj^ted, no doubt, too, by his feelings — he imme- diately returned to Natchez, and offered himself to her. At first she refused him, but afterwards, over- come by his importunity and ardor, she relented, and they were married in the fall. To some the marriage was damning proof of guilt, while others saw in it the evidence of an attachment which had never been sullied by any outward improj^er act. MARRIES MRS. EOBARDS. 235 It was one of tliose iiiifortunate occurrences whicli would be misconstrued, wliatever tlie termination might be. But tliere was anotlier feature in this affair which chagrined Jackson much. On his return with the bride to Nashville, he discovered that the act which had passed the Virginia legislature, was simply one granting permission to bring a suit for divorce in Kentucky, and not a hill of divorce. lie had mar- ried the wife of another man, to whom she was still bound by her marital vows. Luckily for him, however, the suit which had been brought in Ivcn- tucky just then terminated in favor of Eobards, and the divorced wife was free. Jackson immediately took out a license, and was married over again. Thus ended an aifair Mdiicli has since been so much distorted. The results to Jackson were of the hap- piest kind. The meek and genlle nature of his wife was just adapted to his impetuous, stormy, and yet frank and generous spirit, and they lived long and happily together. Notwithstanding llic scandal and excitement which this aftair had created, Jackson continued to increase in popularity and influence. Tennessee had been set off into a territory, of wliich he was appointed attorney-general. In 1T9G, when it was erected into a state, he was elected a member of the convention to frame a constitution. Tlie next year he was chosen 236 ANDREW JACKSON. representative of Congress, and tlie year after, sena- tor of the United States. lie took liis seat in No- vember, but tlie following April, asked leave of absence, and returned home. Soon after, he sent in liis resignation to tlie Legislature, which immediately appointed him Supreme Judge of the State, an ap- pointment which he had not solicited, and which he accepted with gi-eat reluctance. He distrusted his own abilities for such a station, being then but thirty-one years of age. But, however much he might be wanting in experience, he possessed some qualities exactly adapted to the rude and lawless inhabitants of the frontiers. One thing was certain, that law in his hands would not be a mere bit of parchment, nor its decisions allowed to be disre- garded. This was of vital importance in a new country, w^here threats and violence often turned aside the course of justice, and w^eakened respect for the mandates of law. His first court was held in Jonesborough, where his executiveness was strikingly developed. Among other cases to be tried, was that of a ruffianly fellow, named Russell Bean, who, in a drunken fit, had cut oif the ears of his infant child. He was a powerful, ferocious villian, and disdaining to flee, proudly pa- raded the court-yard, daring the sheriff to seize him. The latter, fearing to approach him, reported in court that "Russell Bean wovdd not be taken," Judge DARING AKEEST. 237 Jackson, witli an emphasis now seldom tised in court, rebuked the slieriif, and peremptorily ordered the arrest to be made, and if necessary to " summon tlie jjosse cotnitatusy Soon after, tlie court adjourned for dinner ; and, in the meantime, tlie sheriff summoned his '■'■jjosse comitatus^'' and among them the jxidges themselves. The sherifi', doubtless, thought that they would re- fuse to obey the summons, and he would thus avoid the danger of attempting to arrest this armed and desperate man. lie, however, very much miscalcu- lated as to one of the judges ; for Jackson, when tlie sherilf had finished reading his summons, coolly re- plied, " Very well, sir, I will attend you, and see that you do your dutyP Taking up a loaded pistol, he walked to the court- yard, where Bean stood, with a brace of pistols in his hands, and a dirk in his bosom. Fixing his eye on him, he said to the sheriff, " Advance and arrest him ; I will protect you from harm." Bean, how- ever, firmly stood his ground ; the sheriff hesitated, not liking the prospect of a ball through his body. Jackson observing the cowardice of the sheriff", sternly advanced upon Bean, when the latter began to retreat. " Stop," thundered Jackson, " and sub- mit to the law," Tlie bold borderer instantly threw down his pistols, exclaiming, "I will surrender to you, sir, but to no one else." Jackson might havo 238 ANDREW JACKSON. Bpared liimself tlie troiTble of evolving tlie majesty of the law ; it was not tlie law the fellow was afraid of, but the inan^ who was never known to flinch from danger, or turn back from his purpose. With such a representative, law soon became an object of fear, and the turbulent spirits that had heretofore defied its power, were tamed into submis- sion. This sudden, yet firm decision was one of Jack- son's peculiar characteristics. Men who make up their minds on the issue of the moment, are aj^t to hesitate in a crisis which includes life and. death. Not so with Jackson. His mobile nature was easily flung into a tumult of excitement ; but when there, it became rigid as iron. Quick to decide, action followed decision, as the bolt follows the lightning's flash. He possessed another peculiarity not commonly found among men. His excitements, though so high and terrible, were not transient gleams ; but perma- nent as the object that created them. A less hardy frame would have sunk under them. Li 1803, a difliculty occurred between him and Governor Sevier, who was candidate for re-election. Tlie quarrel was taken up by Sevier's political friends, and many threats of vengeance w^ere uttered against Jackson, This feeling was very strong in Jonesbo- roiigh, and when in the fall he proceeded thither to attackt:d by a mob. 239 liold his regnlar court, a mob was organized, witK Colonel Harrison at its liead, to tar and feather him. Jackson having been taken sick on the way, arrived with a high fever upon him ; and, scarcely able to dismount, retired to his room, and flung himself upon the bed. In a short time, the mob being notified of his arrival, assembled round the tavern. Being told the object of their assembling, Jackson arose, and throwing open his door, said to a friend, " Give my compliments to Colonel Harrison, and tell him my door is open to receive him and his regiment when- ever they choose to wait upon me ; and I hope the colonel's chivalry will induce him to lead his men, Wi^ifoUoio them." The hint was understood ; every individual of that mob well knew that the floor of that chamber would swim in blood with the first at- tempt to cross the threshold of the open door. No one liking to be the first to encounter Jackson, the crowd quietly dispersed. Harrison apologised for his rudeness, and ever after by his attachment evinced his regret. But not long after, while holding court at Kuox- ville, Jackson came in collision with Sevier himself. Leaving the court-room one day, he found the gover- nor in front of the building, haranguing in an excited manner a crowd of men, and swino-iu."- his naked sword about as if cutting oft" the heads of imaginary foes. No sooner did the latter observe Jackson ap- 240 AKDEEV^' JACKSOX. jiroacliing than lie turned fiercely upon liim, and addressed liim witli oatiis and insults. Tlie latter retorted, and a fierce fight of words ensued. The result of it was, Jackson sent the governor a chal- lenge, which he accepted, but deferred the time of meeting so often, that the former at length published him as a coward. This brought things apparently to a crisis, and an informal meeting was agreed on, just over the Indian boundary. Jackson repaired to the place, and waited two days for his opponent. He then wrote a letter, stating the nature and ground of the quarrel, and set out for Knoxville, determined that it should be adjusted in some way or other. He had not proceeded far, however, wdien he met the governor, accompanied by twenty men, on horse- back. Halting in front of this formidable array, he sent forward his friend with the letter he had pre- pared. The governor refused to receive it, which threw Jackson into a paroxysm of j)assion. The for- mer was armed with a brace of pistols and a sword ; Jackson also had a pair of pistols in his holsters, but without thinking of these more deadly weapons, he no sooner saw the letter returned, and heard the in- sjilt that accompanied it, than he set his cane, which he held in his hand in rest, and plunging the spurs into his horse, dashed full on the governor and his band. Tlie company parted to the right and left in dismay, and the astounded governor, seeing the BECOMES A FARMER. 241 maddened steed rusliiiig full upon liim, leaped from the saddle to avoid tlie sliock. In doing so, he trod on his scabbard and stumbled. In a moment Jack- son was upon him, and but for the interposition of friends woidd have punished him severely. This ended the duel, and the parties separated, if not good friends, at least peaceable enemies. The next year Jackson resigned his judgeship, and, tired of the turmoil and vexations of public life, bought a farm ten miles from ]Srashville, on the Cumberland Iliver, and devoted himself to agricul- tural pursuits. Beloved by his neighbors— rever- enced for his integrity, decision, and kindness — blessed with a wife who tilled his home with sun- light, he passed his days serenely, and coveted no higher honor than that of a successful farmer. Early in the morning he was out on his farm, looking at his stock and superintending the laborers, and evening found him enjoying the sweets of domestic comfort. lie took more pride in his stock than in his crops, and had an especial passion for horses. Nor -was this strange ; he had scarcely been off the back of one since he was thirteen years old. The horse had been his companion in long and perilous marches, and often the only one, for days together, in the boundless forest. To his sure feet and cour- age he had more than once been indebted for his life, both on the mountain side and in breasting the 242 ANDREW JACKSON. rapid stream. For f<3rty-eight liours on a stretch, witlioiit food or rest, his noble steed had borne him, when hard beset, and no wonder he became attached to him. He delighted in blooded animals, and im- ported many from North Carolina and Virginia. This naturally led to trials of speed and bottom on the race-course, where large sums often changed hands. This custom, so beneficial in improving the breed of horses, but so pernicious to the morals of men, led to one of the most painful events of Jackson's life. He had a favorite horse named Truxton, dis- tinguished for his speed and endurance. A match was made between him and a horse owned by a Mr. Erwin and his son-in-law Charles Dickinson, of two thousand dollars, with a forfeiture of eight hundred dollars, in case of the withdrawal of either party. On the course, Mr. Erwin and his son-in-law with- drew their horse, and offered to pay the forfeit. The notes tendered, however, were not cash notes, and Jackson refused to receive them, claiming the right to select from the list in the hands of the stake- holder. This was granted, the j^ayment received, and the affair settled. Kot long after, however, Dickinson was told that Jackson had accused his ftither-in-law of producing a false list. This the latter denied, when the author's name was given. It was then proposed to call him in, but Dickinson would not consent. Jackson, meeting the slanderer DUEL WITU DICKINSOJT. 243 not long afterwards, gave liim tlie lie, and a fist- fight followed. Notwitlistanding all this, either through the reck- lessness of Dickinson, who was a loose character, a trader in blacks and horses, and a professed duellist, or, through the persuasion of Jackson's enemies, who thought this an opportunity of getting rid of a man they feared and hated, not to be omitted, the quarrel was kept alive. Severe and insulting letters were published in the papers, and language used which exasperated both parties to the highest de- gree. At length, Jackson was informed that a letter, charging him among other things with cowardice, was in the hands of an editor. lie immediately mounted his horse, and in a tempest of passion rode to Nashville, and demanded a sight of it. Finding his information correct, he sent Dickinson a fierce challenge, and insisted on an immediate meeting. The latter, however, deferred it for a week, and spent the intermediate time in practising at Jack- son's figure chalked out on a b<^ard. This was hardly necessary, for he was a dead shot, and was certain to hit his antagonist if he fired. It was arranged that they should stand back to back, move off a certain distance, wheel, and then approach and fire as soon or as late as either party chose. Dickin- son had insisted on this mode of fighting, so as to get the first fire, or call forth Jackson's before he 244 ANDREW JACKSON. liad approaclied sufficiently near to make it danger- ous. His own practice liad Leen perfect, and lie knew lie could strike liis antagonist at a distance the latter would scarcely attempt to fire if he kept cool. Jackson understood this manceuvre, and had made up his mind to be shot. He wore a frock coat on the field, which he threw hack over his shoulders. At the word given they walked away, wheeled, and advanced towards each other. Soon after, Dickin- son fired. Jackson staggered a moment as he felt the ball enter him, but the next moment he drew his coat around him to staunch the blood, and walk- ing deliberately up to his foe, shot him dead. It was a bloody deed, and though sanctioned by the custom of the times, to which so many of our best men have fallen victims, it was a crime for which no apology should be ofiered. By nature Jackson was a man of terrible passions, and in this instance they had been aroused into tenfold fury, by the in- justice that refused the reconciliation he sought, and by the conviction that a sense of injury did not lay at the bottom of the tpiarrel, but the deliberate desire and determination to take his life. The friends of Dickinson were resolved to provoke him, BO that he must challenge his adversary or leave the country, and thus give to the latter the choice of time and mode of meeting. The plan was well laid and succeeded perfectly in every respect, except that the HIS FAILURE. 245 ball did not happen to reach a vital spot. It entered the breast, shattered two of his ribs, then lodged in his side, where it remained for years. lie, however, mounted his horse and rode twenty miles before his second discovered that he had been shot, and then only by seeing the blood ooze from his garments. He must have been in an extraordinary state of mind, to have borne all this in silence so long. Were his thoughts busy with the man he had slain ? Had he Teft his fierce hate on the field where his enemy lay weltering in his gore, and was remorse now gnawing at his heart, and conscience whispering in his ear, " You will meet that foe again beyond the tomb ?" There w^ere rumors of unfairness in the fight, &c. ; but these died away, and men spoke in astonishment of the steadiness of nerve which so seve^'e and painful a wound could not even for a moment shake. Jackson, after some weeks, resumed his agricul- tural i3ursuits, and not long after entered as silent partner in a mercantile house in Nashville. Placing entu'e confidence in his partner, he trusted everything to his sagacity and honesty. Things went on smooth- ly for awhile; but at length it was discovered that the house was insolvent. It could not pay its debts by some thousands of dollars. The concern was closed at once, and Jackson, with that high sense of honor and justice, which had so often entangled liim in quarrels among lawless men, immediately 240 ANDREW JACKSON. sold Lis fine plantation on the Cumberland, parted with his favorite stock, paid ofi' the debts of the house to the last cent, and retired to a log cabin to begin the world anew. Prompt to redress the wrongs of others as well as his own, he won the esteem of all upright men. Such a man is not to be measured by ordinary rules. A positive executive character like his must be ave- raged to be treated justly. Impelled by passion, he may at times commit deeds on which the staid mor- alist looks with horror ; but it must be remembered, too, that he would breast danger, venture his life for others, and undergo privations, toils, and sufferings, from which that same moralist would shrink in affright. The good in such a man must be made to balance the bad. The departures from the common track of life from hotli sides must be taken, before the balance against him is struck. lie must be credited as well as charged in the book of common morals before one is able to decide how he stands. This is the only just rule, and by it Jackson would stand head and shoulders above most of those who have condemned him. By his industry and perseverance, he soon recov- ered from his embarrassments, and became a flour- ishing farmer again. Having occasion to go to Kat- chez after some blacks for his plantation, he found at the station of the United States' agent, among the DEFENDS TITE \VRONGED. 24T Cboctaws, by wliicli his road passed, several families of emigrants detained because thej bad no passports from tbe governor of Mississij^pi. In tbe meantime, tbe agent was selling tbem provisions at an exorbi- tant price, and making tbem work for him at a very low one. Indignant at this outrage, he demanded of the agent how he dared thus to arrest a free Ameri- can on tbe public road. Taking the matter in his own hands, he told the frightened emigrants to gear up their teams, and follow him. The agent fumed and threatened ; hut seeing Jackson well armed, dared not interfere. He, however, determined to be revenged on the latter wdieu he returned, and armed some fifty men to arrest him, unless he came forti- fied w'itli a passport. Jackson heard of this, and his friends advised him to procure one ; but he indig- nantly refused, declaring it Avas a humiliation no American freeman should submit to. Arming his negroes witli axes and clubs, while he himself car- ried a loaded rifle and two pistols at his saddle-bow, he approached the station. The agent came forth, and asked if he intended to show his passport. " That depends on circumstances^'^ replied Jackson, as he carelessly swung his rifle so as to bring the muzzle where it could look the agent full in the face. The latter understood what circumstances, and the kind of 2')assport alluded to, and wisely let him pass on. 2-48 ANDREW JACKSON. lie afterwards reported tlie agent to the govern- ment, and tlie latter was removed. His liatred ot wrong and oppression was intense, and thongli bis way of defending the injured was not always strictly legal, it must be remembered that no other mode of redress was ojDen to him. Jackson bad scarcely reached home, when be re- ceived a letter from Governor Carroll, requesting bim to act as second, in a duel between him and a brother of Colonel Benton. He could not Avell re- fuse him, but Colonel Benton, who was also intimate with Jackson, took it unkindly, and spoke bitterly of him. A bitter corresjjondence in the papers fol- lowed, and some time afterwards, meeting at a pub- lic house in Nashville, a most desperate, murderous light took i:»lace, in which Jackson had his arm broken and mutilated by a pistol-ball. The estrange- ment which followed, was afterwards healed, and they became fast friends. Through such rough scenes of war and boi'der- life, was Jackson trained for the high responsibilities which were to be placed on him. He had not been indiiferent to the oppressive acts of the English gov- ernment, and his voice was loud for immediate re- dress. At length the long-surcharged clouds burst, war was declared, and the mustering of arms was beard over the land. The war of 1812 opened with the cowardly sur- BECOMES GENEEj\L. 249 render of Hull, at Detroit. Instantly tlie whole western country rose in arms, to revenge the insult, and wipe out the disgrace. An army of ten thou- sand men was organized, and put under General Winchester, who was soon after ranked by General Harrison. Jackson, among others, had volunteered his services, and petitioned for the post which was assigned to Winchester. Through the influence of the member of Congress from that district, the for- mer was preferred ; and taking command of his division, ended his short campaign with the massa- cre at the river liaisin. Had Jackson commanded those brave Kentuckians, that massacre, which clothed so many families in mourning, would never have taken place ; and in all probability, the whole character of the Northern war been changed. He resolved, however, not to remain idle, and issuing a patriotic and spirited address to the young men of the State, he soon saw twenty-five hundred volun- teers llock to his standard. He immediately offered his services to the Gene- ral Government, which were thankfully accej^ted, and he was ordered to proceed down the Mississippi to defend the southern frontier, then threatened by the enemy. As soon as he could collect his ])rovi- eions, means of transportation, &c., he set out. It was the middle of winter, and a bitter cold day, 250 ANDREW JACKSON. wlien this band of volunteers embarked on the Ohio for Natchez.' General Jackson started on his Southern expedi- tion the 7th of January. The next day, General Winchester, his successful rival, led his doomed column through the snow-filled forest towards the river Raisin, where it was to sink for ever in blood. ISTot long after Jackson's arrival at Katchez, all danger of an attack in that quarter disappeared, and he received orders from the Secretary of War to dis- band his troops, and deliver over the public property to General Wilkinson, commanding the regular army in that district. At the time this order amved, there w^ere a hun- dred and fifty men on the sick list, nearly sixty of whom were confined to their beds. Should the army be disbanded, these would be left uncared for, w^hile many of the sound troops, being without money, could not possibly return home. This was known to Wilkinson, who evidently had induced this order from the ignorant, ineflicient Secretary of War, for the sole purpose of compelling those of the volunteers who were without the means of subsis- tence to enlist in the regular army. But General Jackson was never known to desert a man in dis- tress ; his whole nature awoke at the call of pity, and, come what would, he resolved not to leave those sick soldiers, nor the destitute well ones, till he had DISOBEYS THE GOVERNMENT. 251 seen tliem safe back to the homes from which he had taken them. Trusting in his well-known chrac- ter and in his word, pledged to them when they gathered to his standard, that he would never desert them, they had cheerfully followed him to the South, and to abandon them destitute in that then remote region, would be an act of barbarity unworthy of a commander and of a man. Many of the invalids were young men, sons of his neighbors and friends, and they no sooner heard of the order that had been received, than they sent for him, and half-rising from their sick couches, prayed him, with tears, not to forsake them. They reminded him of his promise, and appealed to his honor. Tliis was not needed ; his heart had already fixed his determination ; — those brave young men he would watch over and protect, even though his act of disobedience should bring on him the vengeance of the Government. The field-officers coincided with him, wdien he made his resolution known to them ; but at night they held a secret meeting, in which it was resolved to remonstrate against the course he was pursuing, and recommend immediate obedience to the order of the Secretary of War. But Jackson was a man whom opposition only fixed firmer in his resolution, and the accumulation of difficulties and embarrass- ments roused to still higher exertions and greater 252 ANDREW JACKSON. sacrifices. Wlien tliis remonstrance was read to liim, lie burst into a torrent of indignation, charged home on tlie timorous officers deceit and duplicity, and heaped reproaches on them for wishing to leave the destitute and sick soldiers to want, while they themselves had horses and money with which to re- turn. He told them, in conclusion, that no power on earth could alter his purpose, and bade them pre- pare at once to march. In the meantime, he de- spatched to the Secretary a full and frank account of the matter, detailing all the circumstances, and his own conduct. General Wilkinson, hearing of Jackson's deter- mination, wrote him a letter of solemn expostulation, in winch he depicted the awful consequences of dis- obeying the General Government. The latter very curtly replied that he knew what he was about, and was willing to take the responsibility. Antici- pating the fulfilment of the Secretary's order, the former had sent officers to recruit from the volun- teers the moment they were disbanded. Tliis was reported to Jackson, who immediately issued orders to arrest and place in confinement, the first officer who entered the encampment for that purpose. In the meantime, he directed the quartermaster to pro- vide wagons for the transjDortation of the sick and the baggage. The latter dared not disobey, but played tlie laggard so well, that not a team was sent in CAllE OF THE SICK. 253 till the niglit previous to tlie morning appointed to marcli. Only eleven wagons then arrived, and these were discharged at once by the quartermaster. But Jackson was a dangerous man to play tricks upon, and preremptorily ordering the unfaithful officer from his presence, he seized the wagons, and com- menced loading. The sick, one after another, were handed out under his personal inspection, and made as comfortable as the means in his possession al- lowed. At last all but one was stowed away, whom the surgeon reported in a dying condition, and too far gone to be removed. " Kot a man shall be left who has life in him," replied Jackson ; " bring him care- fully out." The young man, apparently just on the verge of death, and wholly unconscious of what was passing about him, was lifted into the wagon, and the column turned its face homeward. Jackson had given up his own horse to a feeble soldier ; and, with his stern, and fiery heart beating with all a father's affection for the sick youths who had volunteered to fight and die by his side, trudged on foot amid the wagons containing the invalids, bestowing words of comfort, and cheering up the desponding with the promise of soon seeing home and friends. Ever and anon he was seen falling back from the head of the column, or hastening up from the rear to the wagon containing the young soldier who was suj^posed to 13 254 AJvDKEW JACKSOiS'. be dying. For a long time tlie poor invalid lay in- sensible ; but being at length aroused by the heavy jolting of the wagon over the uneven road, he opened his eyes, and gazing vaguely about him, faintly mur- mured, " "Where am I ?" Jackson, who was watch- ing with parental interest the first dawning of reason, replied in glad tones, " On, your way home, my good fellow." That word " home " reached the sources of life, and from that moment he began to improve ; and at length the kind-hearted commander had the satisfaction of presenting him restored to his family. Jackson on foot, wading through the swamps, and, day after day, toiling along the miry roads, an ex- ample of heroism, self-denial, and tenderness, seems an entirely different person from Jackson in the ex- citement and carnage of battle. But, in this respect, he was like Marshal Ney, possessing a heart which the world in arms could not shake, and yet which the cry of an infant could overcome. In both, there was a deep-seated tenderness, which lay among their other and sterner qualities like a green Aljjine val- ley amid the gigantic cliffs and glaciers that sur- round it. The spring opened gloomily for the western and northern frontier. The massacre at Fort Raisin had broken up Harrison's cam]>aign, and left Tecumseh leisure to travel South asain, and rouse the Indians TECUMSEH. 255 tliere to the same hostilities which had proved so successful at the North. At this time, the vast Mediterraneans that stretch along our northern boundary were embosomed in a boundless forest. Only here a fort, and there a settle- ment, showed that the foot of civilization had ever entered those almost limitless solitudes. All through Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, numerous and powerful tribes of Indians roamed undisturbed, and hung, in black and threatening war-clouds, on the borders of civilization. The English had succeeded in inciting most of these to hostilities against the settler. Their efforts were aided in a masterly manner by Tecum- seh, a Shawnee warrior, who had imbibed a bitter? undying hostility to the Americans. Brave, temj)e- rate, scorning a lie, and despising the spoils of war, he fought to restore his race to their ancient rights and power. Unable to cope with the Americans alone, he gladly availed himself of our declaration of war to form an alliance with the British. Lifted by native genius above the vices of savages, he also exhibited a greatness of intellect, and loftiness of character, which, in civilized life, would have led to the highest renown. Despising the petty rival- ries of tribes and chiefs, he became absorbed in the grand idea of uniting all the Indian clans in one great and desperate struggle for mastery with the whites. He had succeeded in carrying out his ^50 AM>K.K\V JAOliSOX. $oliemt\ tv> a great exh>ut> tlirvnighoiit the Xorth aud Woijit. - Of erect, athletic trame, iio^We^ eommaiuliug appearance, witlv the air of a king, and the ehxpteneo of a IXnnv^sthene* when rv^njdng the Greeks to jvrms against PhiUp, he went from tribe to triW electrify- ing them with hi$ api>eal$, and routing them to mad- ne$^ l\v hi$ fiery denunciation^ji against their oppre*- $or$^ llis brvuher, the pro'phet, accvMupanied him, — a dark, snhtle, cnuning im^wjtor, to wliose tricks Tecumseh j^ubmittevl tv>r awhile, hecan^e they foiled the hatrod and deceit of rival chief?, A$ he aA^^e Wforo hi* #iivago audiences, hi$ imjKVjting maimer creatCvl a fi>eling of awe : bnt when he kimllevl with hU great snhject, he ^eemeil like one inspireik Ills eye tlaj^he^l tire, hij^ swarthy bed from hi* Up* in *nch lite and vivid- ne*5!' that the *b>ici*m of the Indian vanished l)elV>ro them, and hi* *tatut<^like face gleamed with pa**ion. The people he alway* carrievl with him; Imt the chiet*s who feared hi* pv^wer over their lollower*, ot>en thwarted hi* plai\*, AMien not addre*^ng the clan*, he wa* rv^*ervevl, cold, and hanghty. lIi* withering *i»rca*m, when Proctor prepo*ed to retreat from Maiden ; hi* ry?ply to the interpreter, who 'I'Kri Msiii. ^57 (ilVi'riti;.': liiiii :i clKiir in tlu' |ii-i'sfiu'<' d" 1 IniTisoii, s;ii*I, '* \ o\i\- l";illuM- wishes v.)u to 1)0 soaird ;" '* l\l v TalluM-! tlu> siiu is iii\ lalluT, ami llu- cai-lii luv iiidlluT," a-i 111' slrt'Icliotl liiuisi'ir |ii'(Mi(ll\ on llio i;i'oiiii(l, rcxt'ai a ual iiro rousrious ol" ils i;roatiu'ss, ami sroniin^- t lio UisI iiictioiis which tho w hiu> man ariV)i;aUHl lo him- .so If. A I'hM' tlu> niassacvo at l''i"tMiclito\vn, lu> look liis 1>rolluM\ and wiMit Sonlli It) llu> (^-orks, to compK'tii (he plan ol" a ^om'ral allianco. Tho joniaicx o I' nearly :i thousand niilos thron^'h tho wildornoss, ol" Ihcsii two l>r(>tlu'rs, the discussion <>i' their dooplaiJ schome at nii;hl around thoii" camp lire, the day- di'cams ol' 'l\'cumsi'h, as <;-ori;'i'()ns as c\ cr llitlcd he- I'ort^ the imai;inatit>n ot'a Civsar,- the sa\aii,'(MMnpire ]\c would form, and the i;-reatni>ss lu> \V(udd reshu'O lo liis des])isiMl rai'c, wtudd maki' a i;'i"and epic. Pathless mi>untaius and <;-lotMuy swamps were Ira- ^•ersed ; di>ep riwi's swam, and weariness and toil tMidured, not lor spi>ils oi- re\tMii;e, but lo carry out a i;-ri'af idi>a. 'l'herc> is a rude, Tuscan i!,ramleur aUiuit him, as lu' thus mo\ cs llirouii,-h tlu> wi'sleru wilderness impelled h\' a hii^'h pur[>oso, — a bar- baric spU'iulor thrown about even Iho inercilof^s lueasuri^s he nu'ans lo adopt, l)y the i2;reat in(>ral HcluMue lo wliii'h tlu\v ari' to l)e subji'cl. lli^4 combinations oxliibitod the oonsunuuate general. While J'^Tigland ooeujiied ns along the sea-coast, lio 258 ANDREW JACKSON. was to sweep in one vast semi-circle from Micliili- mackinac to Florida uj)on the scattered settlements. Fires were to be kindled Kortli and South, and AVest, to burn towards the centre, while civilized warfara should desolate the eastern slope of the Alleghanies. Tecumgeh had seen Hull surrender, helped to cut to pieces a part of Harrison's army, and drive back the remainder. His prospects were brightening, and with this glorious news to back his burning eloquence, he had no doubt of exciting the Southern tribes to war. The Chickasaws and Choctaws in Mississippi, numbered over thirty thousand ; the Creeks twenty- five thousand, w^hile south of them dwelt the large and warlike tribe of the Seminoles. His chief mis- sion was to the Creeks, from whom, on his mother's side, he sprung. This powerful clan stretched from the southern borders of Tennessee nearly to Florida. The sun in his course looked on no fairer, richer land than the country they held. Some of them had learned the arts of civilization, and, hitherto, had evinced a friendly disposition towards the whites. But British influence working through the Spanish authorities in Florida, had already prepared them for Tecumseh's visit. Am alliance, oifensive and defen- sive, had been formed bctM'een England and Spain; and the armies of the former were then in the Pen- insula, endeavoring to wrest the throne from Bona- parte. Tlie later, therefore, was bound to assist her tecumsku'd eloquence. 259 ally on tliis continent, and so lent her aid in exciting the Southern Indians to hostility. But for this, Te- cumseh, with all his eloquence, might have failed. Co-operating with the British agents in Florida, as he had done with Brock and Proctor in Canada, he at length saw his cherished scheme about to be ful- filled. Tlie old and more peaceful, — those who had settled in well-built towns, with schools, and flocks, and farms, — opposed the war which should devastate their land, and drive them back to barbarism. But the eloquence of Tecumseh, as he spoke of the mul- tiplied wrongs of the Indians, their humiliation, de- scribed the glory to be won, and painted in glowing colors the victories he had gained in the North, kin- dled into a blaze the warlike feelings of the young ; and soon ominous tidings came from the bosom of the wilderness that stretched along the Coosa and Talapoosa rivers. Anxiety and alarm spread among the white settlers, and the scattered families sought shelter in the nearest forts. Twenty-four had thus congregated at Fort Minims, a mere block-house, situated on the Alabama, near the junction of the Tombigbee. It was garrisoned by a hundred and forty men, commanded by Major Beasely, and, with proper care, could have resisted the attacks of the savages. But the rumors of a rising among the In- dians were discredited. A negro who stated he had seen them in the vicinity, was chastised for spread- 260 AXDKKW JACK90JS". ing a false alarm. Tlie niglit preceding the massa- cre, tlie dogs growled and barked, showing that they scented Indians in the air. But all these warnings were unheeded, when suddenly, in broad midday, the savages, some seven hundred strong, made their appearance before the fort, and within thirty feet of it, before they were discovered. The gate was open, and with one terrific yell they dashed through into the outer enclosure, driving the panic-stricken sol- diers into the houses within. Mounting these they set them on fire, and shot down every soul that attempted to escape. Seeing, at once, their inevita- ble doom, the soldiers fought with the energy of despair. Rushing madly on their destroyers, they gave blow for blow, and laid sixty of them around the burning buildings before they were comj^letely overpowered. At last, a yell of savage triumph rose over the crackling of flames, and cries and shrieks of terrified women and children. Then followed a scene which may not be described. The wholesale butchery, — the ghastly spectacle of nearly three hundred mutilated bodies, hewed and hacked into fragments, were nothing to the inhuman indignities j^erpetrated on the women. Children were ripped from the maternal womb, and swung as war-clubs against the heads of the mothers, and all those hor- rible excesses, which seem the offspring of demons, aiASSACRE AT FORT MIMMS. 261 were committed on tlie dead and dying. Not more than twenty or thirty out of the whole, escaped. The news of this terrible disaster broke like a sudden thunder-clap on the neighboring States. Georgia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina, flew at once to arms. On the ITth of September a mass meeting assembled at Nashville, which, with one voice, nominated Jackson commander-in-cliief of the troops of the State. Ten days after, the nomination was confirmed by the legislature, and 200,000 dollars voted to carry on the war. Jackson immediately issued a stirring appeal to the people, in which, after describing the state of things, he urged them to as- semble to his standard with all speed, saying, " Al- ready are large bodies of the hostile Creeks march- ing to your borders, with their scalping-knives un- sheathed to butcher your women and children : time is not to be lost. We must hasten to the frontier, or we shall find it drenched in the blood of our citi- zens." At this time, he was suflfering from the arm which had been mutilated in his encounter with Benton, and was unable to be present at Fayetteville, the rendezvous, on the 4th of October ; but he sent an address to be read to the troops, and rules regu- lating the police of the camp. Although too feeble to take the field, he, three days after, with his arm in a sling, put himself at the head of the army. The next evening, a despatch arrived from Colonel 262 ANDEEW JACKSOX. Coffee, who had been previously sent forward with a large detachment to Hunts ville, thirty-two miles distant, stating that a body of nearly a thousand In- dians were on their way to ravage the frontiers of Georgia, and another party approaching Tennessee. The day after came a second express confirming the report. By nine o'clock the following morning, Jackson put his army of twenty-five hundred in mo- tion, and at eight in the evening reached Huntsville, making the thirty-two miles in eleven hours. Find- ing that the rumor was without foundation, he proceeded leisurely to Ditto's Landing, where Col. Coffee with his regiment was encamped. Here he paused to wait for supplies, and survey his posi- tion. With promptness on the part of those co-operating with him, he saw that the hostile Creeks could be crushed with one blow ; for on the west of their set- tlements were six hundred Mississippi volunteers and the 3d regiment of regular infantry, six hun- dred strong, under Colonel Russell ; on the east were twenty-five hundred Georgia militia, commanded by General Floyd ; while from the north, five thousand volunteers and militia — twenty-five hundred from East Tennessee, under Generals Cocke and "White, and the same number from the western section of the State — were moving down on the devoted tribes. This arm}^ of five thousand Tennesseans was under ENTF.KS TIIK CREEK COUNTET. 263 his own command, tlie western lialf of wliicli lie led in j^terson. There were, besides this formid- able array, a few posts held by small detachment-s, and a few hnndred friendly Indians, most of them Cherokees. When these separate armies should close around the hostile settlements, encircling them in a girdle of fire, it was universally believed that the war would be over. While Jackson remained at Ditto's Landing, wait- ing anxiously for the supplies which Generals Cocke and White had promised to forw\^rd, he despatched General Coffee, with six hundred jDicked men, to de- stroy Blackwarrior town, a hundred miles south. At length, being urged by the earnest appeals of friendly Indians, who w^ere in daily danger of beino- cut ofl' by the Creeks, he, on the 19th, started for Thompson's Creek, where he had ordered the provi- sions, which he supposed were near at hand, to be stopped. Cutting his way through the heavy forests, and dragging his artillery over steep mountains, he at length, after a painful march of two days, reached the place of depot but no provisions had arrived. Instead of supplies, came a letter from General White, w^ho was at Lookout Mountain in the Che- rokee country, stating that no flour could be spared from that post. His position was now becoming j)ain- ful and critical. Standing in the centre of the wil- derness, on the borders of the enemy's country, with 264 ANDREW JACKSOX. liiB little band around him, he saw no alternative but to retreat, unless he ran the risk of starving his army in the forest. But to abandon his design, would leave .the friendly Indians at tlie mercy of their enemies, an act not only cruel in the extreme, and utterly repugnant to his nature, but which would furnish a fatal example to the other friendly tribes, whose alliance it was of the highest imj)ort- ance to secure. Prudence would have dictated a retreat, but Jackson had never yet turned his back voluntarily on a foe, and he resolved, at all hazards, to proceed. Sending off expresses to Generals Cocke and Wliite, and to the Governors of Tennes- see and Georgia, and the American agents in the Choctaw and Cherokee nations, he issued a stirring address to his troops, in which he promised them that the " order to charge would be the signal for victory." In urging on them the importance of coolness, and presence of mind, in every emergency, even in " retreat," he adds, " Your general laments that he has been com- pelled, even incidentally, to hint at a retreat, when speaking to freemen and to soldiers. Never, until you forget all that is due to yourselves and your country, will you have any practical understanding of that word. Shall an enemy, wholly unacquaint- ed with military evolutions, and who rely more for victory on their grim visages, and hideous yells, HIS POSITION. 265 than upon their bravery or their weapons, — shall such an enemy ever drive before them, the well- trained youths of our country, whose bosoms pant for glory, and a desire to avenge the wrongs they have received ? Your general will not live to be- hold such a spectacle ; rather would he rush into the thickest of the enemy, and submit himself to their scalping-knives ; but he has no fear of such a result. He knows the valor of the men he commands, and how certainly that valor, regulated as it will be, will lead to victory." Cut off from supplies, locked up in the wilderness, through which swarmed thousand of savages, eagerly watching his advance, with only six days' rations of meat and two of flour, he issued this bold and con- fident address, and then gave orders for the army to march. Arriving at Ten Islands, he erected Fort Strother, to serve as a depot, and to cover his retreat. In a letter to Governor Blount, from this place, he says,— " Indeed, sir, we have been wretchedly supplied, — scarcely two rations in succession have been regularly drawn, yet we are not despondent. AVhile we can pro- cure an ear of corn apiece, or anything that will answer as a substitute for it, we shall continue our exertions to accomplish the object for which we were sent." Here, being informed that General White was only twenty-five miles distant up the river, he sent him a 206 ANDEEW JACKSON. despatch to hasten, at once, to the fort. In the mean time, General Coffee, who had returned successful from his southern expedition, was sent to attack a large body of Indians at Tallushatchee, some thirty miles distant. With nine hundred men, this gallant officer advanced, and succeeded in completely sur- rounding them ; and though the savages fought desper- ately to the last, but few escaped. A hundred and eighty warriors lay stretched around the ashes of their dwellings. Among the slain, was a mother, on whose bosom her infant boy was found, struggling in vain to draw nourishment from the lifeless breast. When he was brought to camp, Jackson endeavoured to per- suade some of the female captives to take care of him, but they all refused, saying, " His relations are all dead, kill him too." He then ordered some sugar to be given him, and sent him to Huntsville, where he could be jjroperly cared for. He afterwards adopted him, gave him a good education, and placed him at a saddler's to learn a trade. The latter was accustomed to spend every Sunday at the Hermitage, with his adopted father, who was strongly attached to him. But he always pined for the free, wild life of his race. The close air of the shop and the drudgery of an ap- prentice did not agree with liim, and he soon after sickened. He was then taken home to the Hermitage, where he lingered some time, and died. This care and solicitude for an Indian infant in ATTACKS TUE INDIANS. 2G7 the midst of the troubles and perils that surrounded him, remind one of a similar act of Marshal Nev, when his doomed army was fast sinking in the snow- drifts of Russia. At length, on the Yth of Kovember, an Indian runner arrived in camp, stating that Fort Talladega, about thirty miles distant, was surrounded by the hostile Eed-sticks, and if he did not hurry to its relief, the friendly Indians, who had taken refuge in it, must be massacred. The runner had scarcely finished his message when the order to march was issued, and in a few minutes the columns were in motion. It was midnight, and through the dim cathe- drals of nature, lighted only by the stars of heaven, Jackson led his two thousand men towards the Talla- dega. Eight hundred of these were mounted riflemen, who presented a picturesque appearance, as they wound slowly along the rough forest path underneath the autumnal woc-ds, each with unceasing watchful- ness, piercing the surrounding gloom, and every hand grasping a trusty rifle. Their heavy tramp frightened the wild beasts from their lairs, and awoke strange echoes in the solitude. Now straining up steep ascents, and now swimming deep rivers, the fearless and gallant band pressed forward. In three columns, so as to prevent the confusion that might arise from a sudden surprise, it forced its difiicult way through the forest, and at night arrived within six miles of the besieged fort. Here Jackson halted, and sent forward 268 iLNDEEW JACKSO^r. two friendlv Indians and a white man, to reconnoitre. About eleven o'clock tliey returned, and reported the enemy in great force, and within a quarter of a mile of the fort. 'No time was to be lost, and though the troops had been without sleep, and constantly on the strain for twenty-four hours, another night, and a battle, lay between them and repose. It was four o'clock of a cool November morning, when the three columns again moved forward. Ad- vancing with the utmost caution and quietness to wuthin a mile of the Indian encampment, they halted, and formed in order of battle. Two hundred and fifty of the cavalry, under Lieut.-Col. Dyer, were left in the rear of the centre to act as a reserve, while the remaining four hundred and fifty were ordered to push on to the right and left on either side, until the heads of their columns met beyond the hostile encampment, and thus completely encircle it. The two brigades ot Hall and Roberts, occupying the right and left, were directed to advance, while the ring of cavalry was steadily to contract, so as to shut in every savage and prevent escape. At eight o'clock. Colonel Carroll boldly charged the position in front of him, and caj-ried it; he then retreated, in order to draw the Indians in pursuit. They charged after him with such terrific whoops and screams, that a portion of General Robert's brigade, on whom they M-ere rushing with uplifted tomahawks, broke and fled. THE BATTLE. 269 This made a chasm in the line, which Jackson imme- diately ordered Colonel Bradley to fill with his regi- ment that for some reason, known only to the com- mander, had lagged behind, to the great detriment of the order of battle. But not only had he proved a laggard in the approach, but he refused to fill the chasm, as ordered by his commander, and the latter was compelled to dismount his reserve and hurry them forward. As these steadily and firmly advanced, and poured in their volleys, the panic-stricken militia recovered their courage and resumed their places in the line. In the mean time, the encirling cavalry came galloping, with loud hurrahs, towards the centre. The next moment the forest rang with the sharp re- ports of their rifles. In fifteen minutes the battle was over, and the terrified savages were wildly skirting the inner edge of this circle of fire, seeking, in vain, an avenue to the open forest beyond. Turned back at every step, they fell like the autumn leaves which the wind shook around them. At length they dis- covered a gap, made by the neglect of Colonel Brad- ley and the delay of a portion of the cavalry, which had taken too wide a circuit, and poured like a torrent that has suddenly found vent, through it. The mounted riflemen wheeled and streamed after ; and the quick, sharp reports of their pieces, and the receding yells rising from the forest, told how fiercely they pressed on the flying traces of the foe. The savages made 270 ANDREW JACKSON. straight for tlie mountains, three lines distant, fighting as they went. The moment they bounded up the steep acclivity they were safe, and the wearied horse- men turned again to the camp. Their way back was easily tracked by the swarthy forms that lay stretched on the leaves, showing where the flight and pursuit had swept. Of the thousand and more who had com- posed the force of the enemy, more than half were killed or wounded. Three hundred were left dead on the spot where they had first fought. The loss of the Americans in killed and wounded, was ninety-five. The friendly Indians, who had been so long shut up without a drop of water, in momentary expecta- tion of being massacred, listened to the uproar with- out, with beating hearts ; but when the battle was over, they rushed forth with the most frantic cries of joy, and leaped and shouted around their deliverers in all the wildness of savage delight. They crowded around Jackson as if he had been their deity, to- wards whom they could not show too much rever- ence. Tlie refusal of General White to march to Fort Strother, left the feeble garrison of the latter in a perilous state. If it should fall, Jackson's whole line of retreat would be cut ofi"; and he, therefore, with deep pain, was compelled to stop in his victorious progress, and return to the fort. On his arrival, he found that no supplies had reached it, and that the DISTRESS OF HIS TROOPS. 271 soldiers, half-starved, were bordering on mutiny. General Cocke, from the first, seemed resolved to withhold all aid from Jackson, lest he himself should be eclipsed in the campaign. The latter, however, endeavored to keep alive the spirits and courage of his troops, and distributed all his j)rivate stores to the feeble and wounded. Hav- ing nothing left for himself and staff, he repaired to the bullock-pen, and from the offals cut tripe, on which he and they lived for days, in the vain hope of receiving the long-promised supplies. One day, as he sat at the foot of a tree, thinking of the hard condition of his men, and planning how he might find some relief from the increasing difficulties that pressed so hard upon him, one of the soldiers, observ- ing that he was eating something, appr(xiched, and asked for a portion. Jackson looked up with a plea- sant smile, and said, " I will, most cheerfully, divide with you what I have ;" and taking some acorns from his pocket, he handed them to the astonished and mortified soldier. His solicitude for the army did not expend itself in words, for he shared with the meanest soldier his privations and his wants, while many of his subordinate officers possessed abun- dance. He let the latter enjoy the rations to which they were legally entitled, but himself scorned to sit down to a well-supplied table, while the army was perishing with want. 27'ii ANDREW JACKSON. Tliis state of things, of course, could not last long, Tlie soldiers believed themselves neglected by the State for whose safety they were fighing ; else why this protracted refusal to send them provisions ? The incipient discontent was fed and aggravated by seve- ral of the officers, who were getting tired of the cam- paign, and wished to return home, till at last it broke out into open revolt. The militia regiments, en masse, had resolved to leave. Jackson received the communication with grief and indignation. He felt for Ids poor, half-starved men, but all his passionate nature was roused at this deliberate defiance of his authority. The militia, however, did not regard his expostulations or threats, and they fixed on a morn- ing to commence their march. But as they drew out to take their departure, they found, to their as- tonishment, the volunteers paraded across their path, with Jackson at their head. He ordered them to re- turn to their position, or they should answer for their diobe'dience with their lives. They obeyed ; but the volunteers, indignant that they had been made the instrument of quelling the revolt, and anxious as the others were to get away, resolved next morning to depart themselves. To their surprise, however, they saw the militia drawn up in the same position they liad occupied the day before, to arrest the first for- ward movement that was made. This was a danger- MUTINY IN HIS AEMY. 273 Otis game to play witli armed men, and would not bear a second trial. Tlie cavalry, on the ground that the country yielded no forage for their horses, were permitted to retire to the neighborhood of Iluntsville, where they promised to wait the orders of their commander. In the meantime, Jackson hearing that provisions were on the way, made an effort to allay the excited, angry feelings that existed in the army, and so, on the 14tlx of ITovember, invited all the field and pla- toon officers to his quarters, and after informing them that abundant supplies were close at hand, ad- dressed them in a kind and sympathizing manner, told them how deej^ly he felt for their sufierings, and concluded by promising, if provisions did not arrive within two days, to lead them back himself to Tennessee. But this kind and conciliatory speech produced no eflect on a portion of the army, and the first reo-iment of volunteers insisted on abandonins: the fort. Permission to leave was granted, and Jackson, with chagrin and anguish, saw the men whom he refused to abandon at Natchez, forsake him in the heart of the forest, surrounded by hostile savages. The two days expiring without the arrival of pro- visions, he was compelled to fulfil his promise to the army, and preparations were made for departure. In the midst of the breaking up of the camp, he sat 27i ANDREW JACKSON. down and wrote a letter to Colonel Pope, the con- tractor, which exhibits how deeply he felt, not merely this abandonment of him, but the failure of the expedition. He says in conclusion : " I cannot express the torture of my feelings, when I reflect that a campaign so auspiciously be- gun, and which might be so soon and so gloriously terminated, is likely to be rendered abortive for the want of supplies. For God's sake, prevent so great an evil." As the baggage-wagons were loaded up, and the men fell into marching order, the palpable evi- dence of the failure of the project on which he had so deeply set his heart, and the disgrace that await- ed his army, became so painful, that he could not endure the sight, and he exclaimed in mingled grief and shame, " If only two men will remain with me, I will never abandon the post." " You have one. General !" exclaimed Captain Gordon, of the spies, who stood beside him. The gallant captain immediately began to beat up for volunteei'S, and it was not long before a hundred and nine brave fellows surrounded their general, swearing to stand by him to the last. The latter then put himself at the head of the militia, telling them he should order them back, if they met provisions near by. They had gone but ten QUELLS A MUTnTS". 275 or twelve miles, when they met an hundred and fifty- beeves on their way to the fort. The men fell to, and in a short time were gorging themselves with half- roasted meat. Invigorated by their gluttonous repast, most of them consented to return. One company, however, quietly resumed its journey homeward. When Jackson was informed of it, he sprang into his saddle, and galloping a quarter of a mile ahead,where General Coffee with his staff and a few soldiers had halted, ordered them to form across the road, and fire on the first man that attempted to pass. As the mutineers came up and saw that living barrier before them, and in front of it the stern and decided face of their commander, they wheeled about, and retraced their steps. Jackson then dismounted and began to mingle among the men, to allay their excitement, and conciliate their feelings. While he was thus endea- vouring to reduce to cheerful obedience this refactory company, he was told, to his utter amazement, that the other portion of the army had changed their mind, and the whole brigade was drawn up in column, and on the point of marching homeward. lie imme- diately walked up in front of the column, snatched a musket from the hands of a soldier, and resting it across the neck of his horse, swore he would shoot the first man who attempted to move. The soldiers stood and looked in sullen silence at that resolute face, un- decided whether to advance or not, when General 276 AJSTDKEW JACKSOir. Coffee and his staff galloped up. These, together with the foithful companies, Jackson ordered to form be- hind him, and fire when he did. Not a word was littered for some time, as the two parties thus stood face to face, and gazed on each other. At length a murmur rang along the column, — rebellion was crushed, and the mutineers consented to return. Dis- content, however, prevailed, and the volunteers looked anxiously forward to the 10th of December, the time when they supposed the term of their enlistment ex- pired. They had originally enlisted for twelve mouths, and counting in the time they had been dis- banded, after their return from Katchez, the year would be completed on that date. But Jackson re- fused to allow the time they were not in actual ser- vice. Letters passed between the officers and him- self, and every effort was made on his part to allay the excitement, and convince the troops of the justice of his demands. He appealed to their patriotism, their courage, and honor, and finally told them if the General Government gave permission for their dis- charge, he would discharge them, otherwise they should walk over his dead body, before they stirred a foot, until the twelve months' actual service was accomplished. Anticipating trouble, he wrote home for reinforcements, and sent off officers for recruits. In the mean time, the 10th of December drew near, and every heart was filled with anxiety for the result. A SECOND MUTINY. 277 A portion of the army was resolved to take their dis- charge, whether granted or not. It was not a sudden irajjulse, created by want and suffering, but a well- considered and settled determination, grounded on what they considered their rights. The thing had been long discussed, and many of the officers had given their decided opinion that the time of the men actually expired on the 10th. Jackson knew that his troops were brave, and when backed by the conscious- ness of right, would be resolute and firm. But he had made up his mind to prevent mutiny, though he was compelled to sacrifice a whole regiment in doing it. At length, on the evening of the 9th, General Hall entered the tent of Jackson, and informed him that his whole brigade was in a state of revolt. The latter immediately issued an order stating the fact, and cal- ling on all the officers to aid in quelling it. He then directed the two guns he had with him, to be placed, one in front and the other in the rear, and the militia on the rising ground in advance, to check any move- ment in that direction, and waited the result. The brigade assembled, and were soon in marching order. Jackson then rode slowly along the line, and address- ed the soldiers. He reminded them of their former good conduct, spoke of the love and esteem he had always borne them, of the reinforcements on the way, saying, also, that he expected every day, the decision of the government, on the question of their discharge, 14 278 ANDEEW JACKSON. and wound up by telling them emphatically, that he had done with entreaty, — go they should not, and if they persisted, he would settle the matter in a very few minutes. He demanded an immediate and ex- plicit answer. They persisted. He repeated his de- mand, and still receiving no answer, he ordered the artillerists to prepare their matches, and at the word " fire," to pour their volleys of grape-shot into the closely crowded ranks. There he sat, gazing sternly down the line, while the few moments of grace allowed them, were passing rapidly away. The men knew it was no idle threat. He had never been known to break his word, and that sooner than swerve one hair from his purpose, he would drench that field in blood. Alarmed, they began to whisper one to another, " Let us go back." The contagion of fear spread, and soon the officers advanced, and promised, on behalf of the men, that they would return to their quarters. As if to try this resolute man to the utmost, and drive him to despair, no sooner was one evil averted than another overtook him. He had, by his bold- ness, quelled the mutiny ; but he now began again to feel the horrors of famine. Supplies did not arrive ; or in such scanty proportion, that he was compelled, at last, to discharge the troops, and, not- withstanding all the distressing scenes through which he had passed to retain them, see them take DEFEATS THE INDIANS. 279 up tlieir line of march for home, leaving him, with only a hundred devoted followers, shut up in the forest. Here he remained till the middle of Jan- nary, when he was gladdened by the arrival of eight hundred recruits. Not deeming these, however, sufficient to penetrate into the heart of the Creek country, he resolved to make a diversion in favor of General Floyd, who was advancing from the east. Hearing that a large number of Indians, were en- camped on the Emuckfaw Creek, where it empties into the Tallapoosa River, he marched thither, and on the evening of the 21st of January, arrived with- in a short distance of their encampment. The In- dians were aware of his approach, and resolved to anticij^ate his attack. To prevent a surprise, how- ever, Jackson had ordered a circle of watch-fires to be built around his little band. The men stood to their arms all night ; and just before daylight, a wild, unearthly yell, which always precedes an at- tack, went up from the forest, and the next moment the savages charged down on the camp. But, the instant the light of the watch-fires fell on their tawny bodies they were swej)t with such a destruc- tive volley, that they again took shelter in the dark- ness. At length, daylight appeared, when General Coffee ordered a charge, which cleared the field. He was then directed to advance on the encamp- ment with four hundred men, and carry it by storm. 280 AOT3KEW JACK60N. On his approacli, however, he found it too strong for his force, and he retired. Jackson, attacked in re- turn, was com]3elled to charge repeatedly, before the savages finally took to flight. Many of their brav- est warriors fell in this short conflict ; while, on the American side, several valuable officers were badly wounded, among them General Cofifee, who, from the commencement to the close, was in the thickest of the fight. ^Notwithstanding his victory, Jackson prudently determined to retreat. He liad gained his object ; for in drawing; the attention of the Indians to his own force, he had diverted it from that under General Floyd. Besides, his horses had been without forage for two days, and %vould soon break down. He, therefore, buried the dead on the field where they bad fallen ; and, on the 23d, began to retrace his foot- steps. Judging from the quietness of the Indians since the battle, he suspected they were lurking in ambush ahead. Remembering also what an excel- lent place there was for a surprise at the ford of En- otochopeo, he sent men in advance to reconnoitre, who discovered another ford some six hundered yards farther down the stream. Reaching this just at even- ing, he encamped there all night, and the next morn- ing commenced crossing. He expected an attack while in the middle of the stream, and, therefore, had his rear formed in order of battle. His anticipa- ATTACKED BY INDIANS. 281 tions proved correct ; for no sooner had a part of the army reached the opposite bank, than an alarm-gun was lieard in the rear. In an instant, all was in com- motion. The next moment, the forest resounded with the war-whoop and yells of the savages, as they came rushing on in great numbers. As they crowded on the militia, the latter, with their officers, gave way in aflVight, and poured pell-mell down the bank. Jack- son was standing on the shore superintending the crossing of his two pieces of artillery, when his broken ranks came tumbling about him. Foremost among the fugitives was Captain Stump ; and Jackson, enraged at the shameful disorder, aimed a desperate blow at him with his sword, fully intending to cut him down. One glance of his eye revealed the whole extent of the danger. But for General Carroll, who,- with Captain Quarles and twenty-five men, stood nobly at bay, beating back with their deliberate vol- leys the hordes of savages, the entire rear of the army would have been massacred. But, over the din and tumult, Jackson's voice rang clear and steady as a bugle-note, as he rapidly issued his orders. The gal- lant and intrepid Coffee, roused by the tumult, raised himself from the litter on which he lay wounded, and casting one glance on the panic, and another upon the little band that stood like a rock embedded in the farther bank, leaped to the ground, and with one bound landed in his saddle. The next moment, his shout of 282 ANDREW JACKSON. encouragement broke on the ears of his companions as he dashed forward to the conflict. Jackson looked up in surprise as that pale face galloped up the bank, and then his rage at the cowardice of the men gave way to the joy of the true hero when another hero moves to his side, and he shouted, " We shall whip them yet, my men ! the dead have risen, and come to aid us.'''' The company of artillery followed, leaving Lieutenant Armstrong and a few men to drag up the cannon. "When one of the guns, at length, reached the top of the bank, the rammer and picker were no- where to be found. A man instantly wrenched the bayonet from his musket, and rammed home the car- tridge with his stock, and picked it with his ratnrod. Lieutenant Armstrong fell beside his piece ; but as he lay upon the ground, he cried out, " My brave fellows, some of you must fell ; but save the cannon." Such heroism is always contagious ; and the men soon rallied, and charging home on the savages, turned them in flight on every side. After burying his dead and caring for the wound- ed, Jackson resumed his march ; and, four days after, reached Fort Strother in safety. Nearly one-eighth of his little army had been killed or wounded since he left the post, and he now dismissed the remainder, who claimed that the time of their enlistment was ex- pired ; and quietly waited till sufiicient reinforcements should arrive for him to undertake a thorough cam- REINFORCEMENTS. 283 paign into the Creek country. They soon began to come in ; for liis bravery and success awakened con- fidence, and stimulated tbe ambition of thousands, who were sure to win distinction under such a leader, and, by March, he found himself at the head of four thousand militia and volunteers, and a regiment of re- gular troops, together with several hundred friendly Indians. While preparing to advance, mutiny again broke out in the camp. He determined this time to make an example which should deter others in future ; and a private, being tried and convicted, was shot. The spectacle was not lost on the soldiers, and nothing more was heard of a revolt. Having completed all his arrangements, Jackson, with four thousand men, advanced, on the 16th of March, into the Creek country. At the junction of the Cedar Creek with the Coosa River, he established Fort Williams, and left a garrison. He then contin- ued his march, with some two thousand five hundred men, towards his previous battle-ground at Emuckfaw. About five miles below it, in the bend of the Talla- poosa, the Indians, a thousand strong, had entrenched themselves, determined to give battle, — they were on sacred ground ; for all that tract between the Coosa and Tallapoosa Rivers, known as the " hickory ground," their prophets had told them the white man could never concpier. This bend contained about a hundred acres, around which the river wrapped itself 284 ANDREW JACKSON. in the form of a horse-slioe, from whence it derived its name. Across the neck leading to this open plain, the Indians had erected a breastwork of logs, seven or eight feet high, and pierced it with a double row of port-holes. Behind it, the ground rose into an elevation ; while still farther back, along the shore, lay the village, in which were the women and chil- dren. Early in the morning of the 25th, Jackson ordered General Coffee to take the mounted riflemen and the friendly Indians and cross the river at a ford below, and stretch around the bend, on the opposite bank from the village, so as to prevent the fugitives from escaping. He then advanced in front, and took up his position, and opened on the breastwork with his light artillery. The cannonade was kept up for two hours without producing any effect. In the mean time, the friendly Indians attached to General Coffee's command had swam the river and loosened a large number of canoes, which they brought back. Captain Kussell's company of sj)ies immediately leaped into them, and, with the friendly Indians, crossed over and set the village on fire, and with loud shouts pressed towards the rear of the encampment. The Indians returned the shout of defiance, and, with a courage and steadiness they seldom exhibited, repell- ed every effort to advance. The troops under Jackson heard the din of the conflict within, and clamored loudly to be led to the BATTLE OF THE HOKSE SHOE. 285 assault. He, however, held them back, and stood and listened. Discovering, at length, by the inces- sant firing in a single place, that the Americans were making no progress, he ordered the bugles to sound the charge. A loud and thrilling shout rolled along the American line, and, with levelled bayonets, the excited ranks precipitated themselves on the breast- work. A withering fire received them, the rifle-balls sweeping like a sudden gust of sleet, in their very faces. Not an Indian flinched, and many were pierced through the port holes ; while, in several in- stances, the enemy's bullets were welded to tlie Ame- rican bayonets. The swarthy warriors looked grimly through the openings, as though impervious to death. This, liowever,was of short duration, and soon the breast- work was black with men, as they streamed up the sides. Major Montgomery was the first who planted his foot on the top, but he had scarcely waved his sword in triumph above his head, when he fell back upon his companions, dead. A cry of vengeance swelled up from his followers, and the next moment the troops rolled like a sudden inundation over the barrier. It then became a hand-to-hand fight ; the savages refused to yield, and with gleaming knives and tomahawks, and clubbed rifles and muskets, the battle raged through the encampment. High and wild over the incessant rattle of musketry and clash of arms, arose the shouts of the prophets, as dancing 286 A2sDEEW JACKSON. frantically around their blazing dwellings, they con- tinued their strange incantations, still crying victory. At length one was shot in the mouth, as if to give the lie to his declarations. Pressed in front and rear, many at last turned and fled. But the uner- ring rifle droj^ped them along the shore ; while those who endeavored to save themselves by swimming, sunk in mid-stream under the deadly fire of Coflee's mounted men. The greater part, however, fought and fell, face to face, with their foes. It was a long and desperate struggle ; not a soul asked for quarter, but turned, with a last look of hate and defiance, on his conqueror. As the ranks became thinned, it ceased to be a fight, and became a butchery. Driven at last from the breastwork, the few surviving war- riors took refuge in the brush and timber on the hill. Wishing to spare their lives, Jackson sent an interpreter to them, oflfering them pardon ; but they proudly refused it, and fired on the messenger. He then turned his cannon on the spot, but failing to dislodge them, ordered the grass and brush to be fired. Driven out by the flames, they ran for the river, but most of them fell before they reached the water. On every side the crack of the rifle told how many eyes were on the fugitives. Darkness at last closed the scene, and ptill night, broken only by the cries of the wounded, fell on the forest and SAVES A WARRIOR. 287 river. N^oarlj eight Inindred of tlie Indians liad fallen, five lumdred and fifty-seven of wliom lay stark and stiff around and in tliat encampment. Tlie loss of the Americans, in killed and wounded, was about two hundred. An incident occurred after the battle, which pre- sented in striking contrast the two opposite natures of Jackson. An Indian wairior, severely wounded, was brought to him, whom he placed at once in the hands of a sur- geon. While under the operation, the bold, athletic warrior looked up, and asked Jackson in broken English, " Cure 'im, kill 'im again ?" The latter re- plied, " Ko ; on the contrary, he should be well taken care of." lie recovered, and Jackson pleased with his noble bearing, sent him to his own house in Tennessee, and afterwards had him taught a trade in Nashville, where he eventually married and set- tled down in business. When that terrible ferocity, which took entire possession of this strange, indo- mitable man in battle, subsided away, the most gen- tle and tender emotions usurped its place. The tiger and the lamb united in his single person. The tired soldier slept on the field of slaughter, around the smouldering fires of the Indian dwellings. Tlie next morning they sunk the dead bodies of their companions in the river, to save them from the 288 ANDREW JACKSON. scalping-knives of the savages, and then took up their backward march to Fort William. The original design of having the three armies from Tennessee, Georgia, and Mississippi, meet in the centre of the Creek nation, and thus crush it with one united effort, had never been carried. out, and Jackson now resolved alone to overrun and subdue the country. Issuing a noble address to his troops, he, on the 7th of April, set out for the Indian vil- lage of Hoithlowalle. But he met with no opposi- tion ; the battle of Tohopeka had comi^letely pros- trated the tribe, and the war was virtually at an end. He, however, scoured the country, the Indians everywhere fleeing before the terror of his name. On his mai'ch, he sent orders to Colonel Milton, who, with a strong force, was also advancing into the Creek country, to send him provisions. The latter returned a cavalier refusal. Jackson then sent a preremptory order, not only to forward provisions, but to join him at once with his trooi^s. Colonel Milton, after reading the order, asked the bearer what sort of a man Jackson was. " One," he re- plied, "who intends, when he gives an order, to have it obeyed." The colonel concluded to obey, and soon effected a junction with his troops. Jack- son then resumed his march along the banks of the Tallapoosa ; but he had hardly set the leading column in motion, when word was brought him ENDS THE WAR. 289 that Colonel Milton's brigade could not follow, as the wagon-horses had strayed away dimng the night, and could not be found, Jackson immedi- ately sent him word to detail twenty men to each wagon. The astonished colonel soon found horses sufficient to draw the wagons. The enemy, however, did not make a stand, and either fled, or came in voluntarily to tender their submission. The latter part of April, General Pinckney arrived at Fort Jackson, and assumed the command, and General Jackson returned to Tennessee, greeted with acclamations, and covered with honors. In a few months peace was restored with all the Southern tribes, and the machinations of England in that quarter completely frustrated. There is nothing in the history of our country more remarkable than this campaign, and nothing illustrates the genius of this nation more than it and the man who carried it triumphantly through. Rising from a sick couch, he called to the young men of every profession to rally to the defence of their country. Placing himself at the head of the brave but undisciplined bands that gathered at his call, he boldly plunged into the untrodden wilder- ness. Unskilled in the art of war, never having witnessed a battle since he was a boy, he did not hesitate to assume the command of an army without 290 ANDREW JACKSON. discipline, and witlioiit knowledge of tlie toils and difficulties before it. Yet with it he crossed broad rivers, climbed pathless mountains, and penetrated almost impassable swamps filled with crafty savages. More subtle and more tireless than his foes, he thwarted all their schemes. With famine on one side and an army in open mutiny on the other, he scorned to yield to discouragement, and would not be forced by the apparently insurmountable obsta- cles that opposed his j^rogress from his jDurpose. By his constancy and more than Roman fortitude, com- pelling adversity at length to relent, and quelling his rebellious troops by the terror of his presence and his indomitable will, he at last, with a smile of triumph, saw his columns winding over the conse- crated grounds of the savages. Soon his battle- shout was heard rising over the crackling of burn- ing villages. Kings, proj^hets, and chieftains fell imder his strokes ; and crushing towns, villages, and fortresses under his feet, he at last, with one terrible blow, paralysed the nation for ever. Indian warfare presents none of the pomp and grandeur of great battle-fields, yet it calls out equal- ly striking qualities, and often requires more promj^t- ness and self-possession, and greater mental resources in a commander. Especially with such an army as Jackson had under him, the task he accomplished was Herculean, and reveals a character of vast HIS RESOLUTION. 291 strengtli and execiitiveness. Tliat single man, stand- ing up alone in tlie heart of the wilderness, and boldly facing his famine-struck and rebellious army, presents a scene partaking far more of the moral sublime than Cromwell seizing a rebel from the very midst of his murmuring band. His gloomy isolation for a whole winter, with only a few devoted followers, reveals a fixedness of pur- pose and grandeur of character that no circum- stances could afi"ect. Inferior to the contagion of fear, unafl:ected by general discouragement, equal in himself to every emergency, he moves before us in this campaign the embodiment of the noblest quali- ties that distino-uish the American race. CHAPTER II. Appointed Major-General— Attack on Fort Bowyer— March on Pensacola — Ad- vances to New Orleans — Excitement in the city — Landing of the British — Jack- son's niglit attack— Eesolves to entrench himself— Turns the Legislature out of doors — British advance to the assault and are repulsed — Second attack — Arrival of reinforcements, and final battle — Jackson fined by Judge Hall — Returns home — Sent to quell the Indians in Florida— Conduct there — Appointed governor — Elected to the United States Senate — Democratic candidate for President — Elected President— Veto of UniLed States Bank— Elected for a second term— Arrests the spirit of disunion — Eeview of his administration — He retires to jirivate life — His last illness and death. Jackson did not rest long on liis laurels ; for the war seemed still farther from a termination than at its commencement. The abdication of Napoleon, and the re-ascendancy of the oppressive monarchies of Europe, gave England a breathing space, and the vast fleets and armies she had loaned to feudalism for the overthrow of free principles, could now be transferred to this continent to cany out here the tyrannical system which was fast covering her -vvith APPOINTED MAJOR-GENERAL. 293 infamy abroad. Recoiling from tlie impregnable coast that hurled back lier fleets in the North, she projected a grand descent on the more feebly pro- tected Southern cities. In the meantime, General Harrison having re- signed his command in the army, Jackson was ap- pointed major-general in his place, and the protec- tion of the coast, near the mouth of the Mississippi, intrusted to his care. Pensacola was then under Spanish authority, and as the resort of British emis- saries, who stirred up the surrounding savages to massacre and bloodshed, had long occupied his thoughts, and he was determined to take active mea- sures against it. In August, he sent Captain Gordon to reconnoitre the place, who reported, on his return, that he had seen a number of soldiers and several hundred savages in British uniform under drill by British officers. Jackson immediately despatched this report to government. Under such a palpable violation of treaty stipulations there was only one course to be pursued, and Gen. Armstrong, the Sec- retary of War, issued an order authorising Jackson to attack the town. This order was made out ; but, by some mysterious process, was so long in getting into the post-office, that it never reached its destina- tion till the 17th of January the next year. Jackson waited patiently for the sanction of his government to move forward, not wishing that his first important 204 ANDREW JACKSON. step as Major-General in tlie regular army slionld meet tlie disapproval of those who had entrusted liim with power. But a proclamation, issued by a British officer named NichoUs, and dated Pensacola, calling on all the negroes and savages, nay, even the Americans themselves, to rally to the British standard, put an end to his indecision, and he immediately made preparations to attack the place. In the meantime, Nicholls made an attempt on Fort Bowyer, a small redoubt, garrisoned by one hundred and twenty men, and defended by twenty pieces of cannon. This fortress commanded the en- trance from the Gulf to Mobile. To capture it, four British ships, carrying ninety guns, and a land force of over seven hundred men, started from Pensacola on the 12th of September. On the 15th, the ships took np their position within musket-shot of the fort, and opened their fire. The land force, in the mean- time, hud gained the rear, and commenced an attack. Major Lawrence, with the gallant garrison nnder his command, met this double onset with the coolness of a veteran. Scattering the motley collection under Nicholls, with a few discharges of grape-shot, he turned his entire attention to the vessels of war. Being in such close range, the cannonading on both sides was terrific. The incessant and heavy explo- sions shook that little redoubt to its foundations ; but at the end of three hours, the smoke slowly curled FORT BOWYER. 295 away from its battered sides, revealing the flag still flying aloft, and the begrimed canuoniers standing sternly beside their heated pieces. The firing of the enemy had ceased, and the ship Hermes disabled, was drifting on a sand-bank, while the other vessels were crowding all sail seaward. The former soon after grounded within six hundred yards of the fort, whose guns opened on her anew with such tremen- dous effect that, out of the one hundred and seventy who composed her crew, only twenty escaped. The other ships suffered severely, and the total loss of the enemy was one ship burned, and two hundred and thirty-two men killed and wounded, while only eifflit of the garrison were killed. Nicholls effected his retreat to Pensacola, where the governor received him as his guest, and threw open the public stores to the soldiers. On the flag-staff of the fort were " entwined the colors of Spain and England," as if on pur]30se to announce that all neutrality was at an end. Tliese things coming to Jackson's ear, he resolved without delay, to get possession of the town and fort, *' peaceably if he could, forcibly if he must." He immediately hastened to Fort Montgomery, where he had assembled four thousand men, and putting himself at their head, in four days encamped within two miles of the place. This was on the 6th of No- vember, and he at once despatched a flag to the 296 ANDEEW JACKSON. Spanish governor, disclosing Lis object and pur- pose. Tlie messenger was fired npon from the fort, and compelled to return. Jackson's fierj na- ture was instantly aroused by this insult, yet re- membering that he was acting without the sanc- tion of government, he resolved still to negotiate. Having, at length, succeeded in opening a corres- pondence with the governor, he told him that lie had come to take possession of the town, and hold it for Spain till she was able to preserve her neutral- ity. The governor refusing entirely to be relieved from his charge, Jackson put his columns in motion and marched straight on the town. At the entrance, a battery of two cannon o^^ened on his central col- umn ; but being speedily carried by storm, together with two fortified houses, the troops, with loud shouts, pressed forward, and in a few minutes were masters of the place. Tlie Spanish governor no sooner saw the American soldiers with loud hurrahs inundating the streets, than he rushed forward, im- ploring mercy, and promising an immediate surren- der, Jackson at once ordered the recall to be sounded, and retired without the town. The com- mandant of the fort, however, refused to surrender it, when Jackson ordered an assault. Tlie former wisely averted the approaching blow by lowering liis flag. The British fled, taking with them their ATTACKS PENSACOLA. 297 allies, four luindred of wliom being negroes, were carried to the West Indies, and sold for slaves. Having thus chastised the Spanish governor, and broken up the plans laid to renew the Lidian war, Jackson took up his march for New Orleans, which he knew would be the chief point of attack. He established his head-quarters there, on the 1st of December ; and three days after, the news that a large British fleet was approaching the coast, spread like wild-fire through the city. The report was soon confirmed, and Jackson, whom danger always tran- quillized, while it filled him with tenfold energy, began to prepare for the approaching shock. New Orleans, numbering at that time only thirty thou- sand inhabitants, was but recently purchased from France, and the population, being composed mostly of those in whose veins flowed Spanish and French blood, did not feel the same patriotic ardor that ani- mated the Eastern cities. Many were known to be hostile, and were suspected of carrying on treasona- ble correspondence with the enemy. Feeling that he had but a slender hold on the city, and knowing that secret foes watched and reported all his move- ment, Jackson was compelled to act with extreme caution. Tliis hostility, as it were, in his own camp, added immensely to the embarrassments that surrounded him. But calm, keen, resolute, tireless, and full of 298 ANDREW JACKSON. courage, lie soon inspired tlie patriotic citizens with confidence. Kesources tliey had not dreamed of, sprang up at liis bidding. But it needed all tlie re- nown lie had won, and all his personal influence, to impart the faintest promise of success. He had brought only a portion of his troops with him from Pensacola. But no sooner did he an*ive, than he inspected narrowly the inlets, bayous, and channels, marked out the location of works, ordered obstructions raised, and then called on the different States to send him help. A thousand regulars were immediately ordered to New Orleans, while the Ten- nessee militia, under General Carrol, and the mount- ed riflemen, under General Coffee, hastened as of old, to his side. Concealing as much as possible the weakness of his force, and the bad appointments of many of the soldiers, he strained every nerve to in- crease the means of defence. Tlie French inhabi- tants forgot their hostility to the Americans in the greater hate of the English, while many others, who, hitherto, had taken little or no interest in the war, roused by the sudden danger that threatened them, flew to arms. The free negroes and refugees from St. Domingo, formed themselves into a black regi- ment, and were incorporated into the army. Jack- son's energy and courage soon changed the whole current of feeling, and, day and night, the sounds of martial preparation echoed along the streets of ALAKM IX THE CITY. 299 the citj. Tlie excitement swelled higher and high- er, as the hostile fleet gradually closed towards the mouth of the Mississippi. But one thought occu- pied every bosom, — ^one topic became the theme of all conversation. Consternation and courage moved side by side ; for while the most, believed Jackson to be invincible, others, carefully weighing the force of the armament approaching, could not but antici- pate discomforture and destruction. Nor was this sui-prising ; for a fleet of more than eighty sail, un- der the command of Admiral Cochrane, carrying on their decks eleven thousand veteran troops, fresh from the bloody flelds of Spain, and led by men of renown, was steadily advancing on the city. Be- sides this formidable land force, there were twelve thousand seamen and marines. The facts alone were sufiicient to cause anxiety and alarm ; but rumor magnified them fourfold. To resist all this, New Orleans had no vessels of war, no strong fortresses, no army of veteran troops. General Jackson, with his undeciplined and half-armed yeomanry, alone stood between the city and destruction. He was not ignorant of the tremendous force advancing against him ; but still he was calm and resolute. To the panic-stricken women, who roamed the streets, fill- ing the air with shrieks and cries of alarm, he said, " The enemy shall never reach the cityy Their fears at once subsided, for he had the strange power of 800 AJSTDRKW JACKSOIT. infusing his own confidence into all wlio surrounded liim. 'New Orleans, situated on tlie eastern bank of the lyiississippi, was accessible not only through the various mouths of the river, but also with small ves- sels through lakes Borgne and Pontchartrain, and was therefore a difiicult city to defend, for no one could tell by what way, or by how many ways the enemy would approach. Jackson saw that he would be compelled to divide his forces in order to guard every avenue. In the meantime, while he watched the approaching force, he kept his eye on the city. The press did not manfully sustain him, and the legislature, then in session, looked upon his actions with susj)icion, if not with hostile feelings. Al- though a native of another State, and having no personal interest in the fate of the place, whose authorities treated him with coldness, he, neverthe- less, determined to save it at all hazards, and while apparently bending his vast energies to meet an external foe, boldly assumed the control of the city, declared martial law, and when Judge Hall liberated a traitor whom he had imprisoned, sternly ordered the Judge himself into confinement. At length, on the 9th of December, the excited inhabitants were told that the British fleet had reached the coast ; sixty sail being seen near the mouth of the Mississippi. Commodore Patterson LANDING OF TUB ENEMY. 301 immediately despatched Lieutenant Jones witli five gun-boats to watcli its motions. This gallant com- mander, in passing through Lake Borgne, disco- vered that the enemy, instead of approaching direct by the river, was advancing up the lakes. In hover- ing around them to ascertain their designs, he unfor- tunately got becalmed, and in that position Avas attacked by forty barges, containing twelve hundred men. ifotwithstanding he had under him less than two hundred men, he refused to surrender, and gal- lantly returned the fire of the enemy. For a whole hour he stubbornly maintained the unequal contest ; but, at length, after killing nearly double his entire force, he was compelled to strike his flag. The British had now complete control of lakes Ponchar- train and Borgne, and advancing up the latter, en- tered a canal, and finally effected a landing on the levee, about eight miles from the city. This levee acts as a bank to keep the river from the inland, which is lower than the surface of the water. Tliis levee, or bank, varies in width from a few hundred yards to two or three miles, and is covered with plantations.. Thus, now almost like a causeway, and again like an elevated plateau, it stretches away from the city, with the river on one side, and an im- passable swamp on the other. The forts that commanded the river were, by this manoeuvre of the enemy, rendered comparatively 15 302 ANDREW JACKSON. useless, and an open road to the city lay before liim, Jackson no sooner lieard that the British had effect- ed a landing, than he determined at once to attack them before their heavy artillery and the main body of the army conld be bronght forward. On the 23d, therefore, a few hours after they had reached the banks of the Mississippi, his columns were in motion, and by evening halted within two miles of the hos- tile force. His plans were immediately laid,' — the schooner of war, Caroline, commanded by Commo- dore Patterson, was ordered, soon after dark, to drop quietly down the river, and anchor abreast the Bri- tish encampment. General Coffee, with between six and seven hundred men, was directed to skirt the swamp to the left of the levee, and gain, undis- covered, the enemy's rear ; wdiile he himself, with thirteen hundred troops, would march directly down the river along the highway, and assail them in front. Tlie Caroline was to give the signal for a general attack. She, unmolested, swej3t noiselessly down with the cm'rent, gained her position, dropped her anchors, and opened her fire. The thunder and blaze of her guns, as grape-shot and balls came rat- tling and crashing into the camp of the British, were the first intimation they received of an attack. At the same time, Generals Coffee and Jackson gave the orders to advance. ISTight had now arrived, and although there w'as a moon, the fast rising mist from ATTACKS THE BRITISH. 303 tlie swamps and river mingling with tlie smoke of tlie guns, so dimmed her light that objects conld he discerned only a short distance, save the watch-fires of the enemy, whicli bumed brightly through the gloom. Guided by these, Coffee continued to ad- vance, when suddenly he was met by a sharp fire. The enemy, retiring before the shot of the Caroline, liad left the bank of the river, not dreaming of a foe in their rear. Coffee was taken by surprise ; but this gallant commander had been in too many peri- lous scenes to be disconcerted, and ordering the charge to be sounded, he swept the field before him. Again and again the British rallied, only to l)e driven from their position. At length they made a determined stand in a grove of orange trees, behind a ditch which was lined with a fence. But the ex- cited troops charged boldly over the ditch, fence, and all, and lighting up the orange grove with the fire of their guns, and awakening its echoes w^ith their loud huzzas, jn'essed fiercely after tlie astonish- ed enemy, and forced them back to the river. Here the latter turned at bay, and for half an hour main- tained a determined fight. But being swejjt by such close and destructive volleys, they at length clam- bered down the levee, and turning it into a breast- work, repelled every attempt to dislodge them. In the meantime, Jackson had advanced along 304 AOT)KEW JACKSON. the river. Guided by tlie guns of the Caroline, and the rockets of the enemy, that rose hissing from the gloom, he pressed swiftly forward. He had given directions to move by heads of companies, and, as soon as they reached the enemy, to deploy into line, which was to be extended till it joined that of General Coifee, thus forcing the British back upon the river, and keeping them under the guns of the Caroline. But, instead of doing this, they formed into line at the outset. The levee being wide where they formed, no inconvenience was felt from this marching order ; but, as it grew narrower, the left wing was gradually forced in, and being a little in advance, crowded and drove back the centre, creating confusion and arrest- ing its progress. The troops, however, continued to advance, and soon came upon the enemy, entrenched behind a deep ditch. Jackson, perceiving at a glance the advantage of their position, ordered it to be charged. The troops marched up to the edge of the ditch, poured one destructive volley over, then leaped after. The British retired behind another, and an- other, only to be again forced to retreat. At length, Jackson halted ; the enemy had withdrawn into the darkness, the Caroline had almost ceased her fire, while but random volleys were heard in the direction of Coffee's brigade. The uproar had ceased around him, while the rapidly increasing fog shrouded every- thing in gloom. Finding, too, that his left wing had HE RETREATS. 305 got into inextricable confusion, and that a part of Coffee's troops were in no better condition, be deter- mined to withdraw. He had laid his plans with skill, and entertained no doubt of success ; and but for the fact that the Caro- line commenced her fire a little too early, and that the after false movement of his left wing prevented the rapid advance of the centre, he no doubt would have slain or captured nearly the whole three thou- sand opposed to him. But night attacks are always subject to failure through mistakes caused by the darkness, especially if the movements are at all com- plicated. A sudden, heavy onset, overturning every- thing before it, — a single, concentrated blow, like the fall of an avalanche, — are best fitted for the night. Still, Jackson did not despair of success, and deter- mined at daybreak, to renew the attack. But it was soon ascertained, from prisoners and deserters, that by morning the enemy would be six thousand strong, making a disparity against him he could not hope to overcome. He therefore fell back to a deep ditcli that stretched from the Mississippi, across the entire levee, to the swamp. Behind this he arrayed his troops, resolved, since nothing else could be done, to make there a determined stand. In his unsuccessful assault, he had lost, in killed, wounded, and prison- ers, two hundred and forty men ; while the enemy had been weakened by nearly double that number. 306 ANDEEW JACKSON. Still, his plans had failed. One disaster after another had overtaken him, till now all his hopes rested on a bold and desperate battle. The gun-boats had been destroyed, leaving the lakes open to the enemy's ships. All the passes to the city had been guarded in vain. Through an unimportant and almost un- known canal, the enemy had passed unmolested, and landed where nothing but undisciplined troops lay between him and the city. Too strong to be assailed, the British could now complete their arrangements and array their strength at leisure. Undismayed, however, and unshaken in his confidence, Jackson gathered his little band behind this single ditch, and coolly surveyed his chances. He knew the history and character of the troops opposed to him ; he knew also how uncertain untrained militia were in a close and hot engagement. Still, he had resolved to try the issue in a great battle. No sooner was this deter- mination taken, than he set about increasing the strength of his position with every means in his power. He deepened and widened the ditch ; and where it terminated in the swamp, cut down the trees, thus extending the line still farther in, to pre- vent being outflanked. The gallant Coffee was placed here, who, with his noble followers, day after day, and night after night, stood knee-deep in the mud, and slept on the brush they piled together to keep them from the water. Sluices were also opened in FOKTiriES HIMSELF. 307 tlie levee, and the waters of the Mississippi turned on the plain, covering it breast-deep. The earth was piled still higher on the edge of the ditch ; cotton bales were brought and covered over, to increase the breadth and depth of the breastwork. With a will unyielding as fate itself, tireless energy, and a frame of iron to match, Jackson no sooner set his heart on a great object, than he toiled towards it with a reso- lution — nay, almost fierceness — that amazed men. Kight and day the soldiers were kept at work, the sound of the spade and jiickaxe never ceased, while the constant rolling of wheels was heard, as wagons and carts sped to and from the city. Jackson, with his w^hole nature roused to the highest pitch of excite- ment, moved amid this busy scene, its soul and centre. Impervious to fatigue, he worked on when others sank to rest ; and at midday and midnight, he was seen reviewing his troops, or traversing the trenches to cheer the laborers, and for four days and nights scarcely took a moment's rest. In addition to the breastwork he was rearing on the east bank, he ordered General Morgan to take position on the right bank, opposite his line, and fortify it. To prevent the ships from ascending the river to co-operate with the army, he despatched Major Reynolds to obstruct and defend the pass of Barataria, — the channel through which they would in all probability attempt to approach. 308 ANDREW JACKSON. In tlie meantime, the British were not idle. They had deepened the canal through which they had effected a landing, and thus assisted by the high waters of the Mississippi, been able to bring up larger boats, loaded with the heavy artillery. On the third day, a battery was observed, erected opposite the Caroline, which, after the good service she did in the night attack, had floated to the op- posite shore, where she continued to annoy the enemy. Jackson knew her perilous position, but there had been no wind sufficiently strong to enable her to stem the raj^id current ; and, on the morning of the 27th, the battery opened on her with shells and red-hot shot. She was soon in a blaze; and the crew, see- ing the attempt to save her useless, escaped to the shore. Soon after, she blew up, with a heavy ex- plosion. The next day. Sir Edward Packenham ordered an attack on the American works. The columns ad- vanced in beautiful order, and at the distance of half a mile opened their batteries, and, with bombshells and sky-rockets, endeavored to send confusion among the American militia. But the guns of the latter were admirably served, and told with great effect on the exposed ranks of the enemy. The Louisiana sloop of war, that lay opposite the American line, swung her broadside so as to bear on the advancing columns, and raked them with such a deadly fire that FIRST ATTACK. 809 the assault was abandoned, and tlie array returned to its camp, with the loss of over a hundred men, while that of the Americans was but seven killed and eiglit wounded. But among the slain of the latter was Colonel Henderson, of the Tennessee militia, a man deeply lamented. Events were now evidently approaching a crisis; and the anxiety and interest deepened daily and hourly. To add to the weight which already pressed the heart of Jackson, he was told that the legislature had become frightened, and was discussing the pro- priety of surrendering the city. He immediately sent a despatch to Governor Clairborne, ordering him to watch its proceedings, and the moment such a pro- ject should be fairly formed, to place a guard at the door of the chamber, and shut the members in. In his zeal and warm-hearted patriotism, the governor determined to make sure work of it, and so turned tlie whole of them out of doors. Just before the execu- tion of this high-handed measure, a committee of the legislature waited on Jackson, to inquire what he de- signed to do if compelled to abandon his position. " If," he replied, " I thought the hair of my head could divine what I should do, I would cut it off forthwith. Go back with this answer ; say to your honorable body that if disaster does overtake me, and the fate of war drives me from my line to the city, that they may expect to have a warm sessionP 310 ANDREW JACKSON. To one who asked liim afterwards what he would have done in such an emergency, he said, " I would have retreated to the city, fired it^ and fought the enemy amid the surrounding flames P A more heroic speech never fell from the lips of a commander. ITew Orleans in flames and Jackson charging down its blazing streets, would have presented one of the most frightfid exhibitions furnished in the annals of the war. The British, after the attack of the 2Sth, occupied their whole time in landing heavier cannon. Having completed their arrangements, thej resolved, on the 1st of January, to make another attempt on tlie Ame- rican works. The Kew Year opened with a heavy fog, which shrouded tlie whole plain and British en- cam])ment from sight. Bat, from its mysterious bosom, ominous, muffled sounds arose, which were distinctly heard in every part of the American line ; and the troops stood to arms. At length, as the sun gathered strength, the fog lifted and parted ; and no sooner did the enemy, who had advanced their bat- teries within six hundred yards of the American in- trenchments, see their long, black lino stretching through the haze, than a tremendous burst of artillery shook the solid levee on which it stood. A flight of Congreve rockets followed, crossing and recrossing the heavens in all directions, and weaving a iiery net- work over the heads of the astonished but undaunted SECOND ATTACK. 311 Americans. The first heavy explosion sent Jackson to the lines ; and luckily for him it did; for the British having been shown by a spy the house which he occupied, they directed a battery upon it, and in a few minutes it was riddled with balls. The Ameri- can artillery replied, and it was a constant roar of cannon till noon, when most of the English batteries being beaten down or damaged, ceased their fire. One near the river continued to play on the Ameri- can works till three o'clock, when it also became silent, and the enemy, baffled at every point, retired sullenly to his camp. The two armies, each expecting reinforcements, now rested for a w^eek from decisive hostilities. In the meantime, Jackson continued to strengthen his works and discipline his men. A Frenchman having come to him to complain of damage done to his prop- erty, the latter replied that, as he seemed to be a man of property, he knew of no one who had a better right to defend it, and, placing a musket in his hands, or- dered him into the ranks. During this week of comparative repose, ISTew Or- leans and the two hostile camps presented a spectacle of the most thrilling interest. The British army lay in full view of the American lines, their white tents look- ing, amid the surrounding water, like clouds of sail resting on the bosom of the river, while, at intervals, a random shot, or the morning and evening gun, sent 312 ANDREW JACKSON. tlieir stem challenge to the foe. There was marching and countermarching, strains of martial music, and all the confused sounds of a camp life, while to them the American intrenchment, which stretched in a dark line across the plain, seemed silent as death, ex- cept when a solitary gun sent forth its sullen defiance. At intervals, in diiferent parts of the plain, would be heard the rattle of musketry, as skirmishing parties encountered each other. To the farmers, merchants, mechanics, and youths, who lay behind that breast- work, the scene and the thoughts it awakened were new. Behind them stood their homes ; before them, the veterans of Spain, whom, in a few days, they were to meet in final combat. In the city, the ex- citement kept increasing; but after the first battle, the patriotism of the population received a new im- pulse. In the night attack many of the troojDS had lost all their clothing except that which they wore on their backs, and hence soon began to suffer. No sooner was this known to the ladies than their fair hands were in motion ; and in a short time the wants of the soldiers were supplied. In the meantime, the long-expected Kentucky troops, upwards of two thousand strong, arrived. Courier after courier had been sent to hurry tlieir march ; and the last day had been one of incredible toil and speed. Only five hundred of them, how- ever, had muskets ; the rest were armed with fowl- FINAL PRErARATTONS. 313 ing-pieccs, and such weapons as they could lay tlieir hands on. !Nor were there any means of sup- plying them, so that the accession of strength was comparatively trifling. General Lambert, too, had reinforced the British with several thousand veteran troops. A canal had been widened through the levee, by which boats were transported to the Mis- sissippi for that portion of the army which was des- tined to act against the fortifications on the west bank, commanded by General Morgan ; and now nothing remained to be done but advance at once to the assault of the American intrenchments, or aban- don the expedition. The latter alternative was not to be contemplated ; and, on the night of the 7tli, Jackson, surveying the encampment through his glass, discovered unmistakeable evidence that the enemy was meditating an important movement. The camp was in commotion ; the boats which had been dragged through the canal, and now lay moored to the levee, were being loaded with artillery and munitions of war, and everything betokened a hot to-morrow. Coffee still held the swamp on the left; Carroll, with his Tennesseans, the centre ; while Jackson, with the regulars under him, commanded in person the right, resting on the river. Behind Carroll were placed the Kentuckians, under General Adair: — in all, less than four thousand effective men. This was the position of affairs as the 314 ANDREW JACKSOX. Sabbatli morning of tlie 8tli of January began to dawn. The light had scarcely streaked the east, when the inhabitants of New Orleans were startled from their slumbers by an explosion of cannon that shook the city. The battle had opened. Under cover of the night, heavy batteries had been erected within eight hundred yards of the American in- trenchments, and, the moment the fog lifted above them, they oj^ened their fire. A rocket, rising through the mist near the swamp, and another an- swering it from the shore, announced that all was ready. The next moment, two columns, eight or nine thousand strong, — one moving straight on Car- rol's position, the other against the right of the in- trenchments, — swept in double quick step across the plain. Three thrilling cheers rose over the dark intrenchments at the sight, and then all was still again. The levee here was contracted to fom* hundred yards in width, and as the columns, sixty or seventy deep, crowded over this avenue, every cannon on the breastwork was trained upon them by Barrata- rian and French engineers, and the moment they came within range, a murderous fire oi:)ened. Fright- ful gaps were made in the ranks at every discharge, which were closed by living men only the next mo- ment to be re-opened. The Americans stood with their hands clenched THE BATTLE. 315 around tlieir muskets, gazing witli astonislinient on this new, unwonted scene. The cahu and steady advance under such an incessant and crushing lire carried with it the prestige of victory. As they ap proached the ditch, the columns swiftly, yet beauti- fully displayed, and under the cover of blazing bombs and sky-rockets, that filled the air in every direction, and stooped hissing over the American works, pressed forward, with loud cheers, to the assault. Nothing but cannon had hitherto spoken from that low breastwork ; but as those two doomed columns reached the farthest brink of the ditch, the word "Fire" ran along the American line, — the next moment the intrenchments were in a blaze. It was a solid sheet of flame rolling on the foe. Stun- ned by the tremendous and deadly volleys, tlie front ranks stopped and sunk in their footste2:)S, like snow when it meets the stream. But high over the thun- der of cannon were heard the words of command, and drums beating the charge ; and still bravely breasting the fiery sleet, the ranks pressed forward, but only to melt away on the brink of that fatal ditch. Jackson, with flashing eye and flushed brov,', rode slowly along the lines, cheering the men, and issuing his orders, followed by loud huzzas as he passed. From the eflect of the American volleys, he knew, if the troops stood firm, the day was his own, and with stirring appeals and confidant words he roused 310 ANDREW JACKSON. them to the same cntliusiasm wliicli animated his breast and beamed from his face. The soldiers of Gen. Adair, stationed in the rear of Carrol, loaded for those in front, so there was no cessation to the fire. It was a constant flash and peal along the wdiole line. Every man was a marksman, every shot told, and no troops in the world conld long withstand such a destructive fire. The front of battle, torn and rent, wavered to and fro on the plain, when Packen- ham galloped uj), and riding bravely through the shaking ranks, for a moment restored order. The next moment he reeled from his saddle mortally wounded. Generals Gibbs and Keane, while nobly struggling to rally the men, were also shot down, and the maddened columns turned and fled. Lam- bert, hastening up with the reserve, met the fugi- tives, and endeavored, but in vain, to arrest the flight. They never halted till they reached a ditch four hundred yards distant, into which they flung themselves to escape the scourging fire that pursued them. Here he at last rallied them to another charge. The bleeding column, strengthened by the reserve, again advanced sternly, but hopelessly, into the deadly fire, and attempted to deploy. It was a last vain efibrt, — it was like charging down the mouth of a volcano, and the troops again broke and fled, smote at every step by the batteries. Col. Kennie led the attack against the redoubt on the right, and DEFEAT OF THE BRITISH. 317 succeeded in entering, but found there his grave. Driven forth, the troops sought safety in flight ; hut the fire that pursued them was too fatal, and they threw themselves into a ditch, where they lay shel- tered till night, and then stole away under cover of the darkness. The ground in front of the American intrench- ments presented a frightful spectacle. It was red with the blood of men. The space was so narrow on which they had fought, that the dead literally cum- bered the field. The sun of that Sabbath morning rose in blood, and before he had advanced an hour on his course, a multitude of souls " unhouseled, unanneled," had passed to the stillness of eternity. 'New Orleans never before witnessed such a Sabbath morning. Anxiety and fear sat on every countenance. The road towards the American encampment was lined with trembling listeners, and tearful eyes were bent on the distance to catch the first sight of the retreat- ing army. But when the thunder and tumult ceased, and word was brought that the Americans still held the entrenchments, and that the British had re- treated in confusion, there went up a long, glad shout, — the bells of the churches rang out a joyous peal, and hope and confidence revived in every bosom. The attack on the rio;ht bank of the river had been 318 ANDREW JACKSON. Buccessful, and but for the terrible liavoc on the left sliore, this stroke of good fortune might had changed the results of the day. The fort, from which Gen. Morgan had fled, commanded the interior of Jack- son's entrenchments, and a fire opened from it would soon have shaken the steadiness of his troops. But Col. Thornton, who had captured it, seeing the com- plete overthrow of the main army, soon after aban- doned it. The Americans, with that noble-hearted generos- ity which had distinguished them on every battle- field, hurried forth, soon as the firing was over, to succor the wounded, who they knew had designed to riot amid their own peaceful dwellings. " Beauty and booty," was the watchword in an orderly-book found on the battle-field ; and though there is not sufiicient reason to believe that the city would have been given over to rapine and lust, yet no doubt great excesses would have been tolerated. Tlie recent conduct of the English troops on the Atlantic coast, where no such resistance had been ofiered to exasperate the troops, furnished grounds for the gravest fears. The British in this attack outnumbered the Amer- icans about two to one, and yet the loss on the part of the latter was only thirteen killed and wounded, while that of the former was nearly two thousand. ENTERS NEW ORLEA^NS. 819 An armistice was soon after concluded, and the British were allowed to retreat unmolested to tlieir sliips. The sails of that proud fleet, whose approaoJi had sent such consternation through the hearts of the inhabitants, were seen lessening in the horizon with feelings of unspeakable joy and triumph. All danger had now passed away, and Jackson made his triumphal entry into the city. The bells were rung, maidens dressed in white, strewed flowers in his path, the heavens echoed with acclamations, and blessings unnumbered were poured on his head. But as there had been foes and traitors to the American cause from the first appearance of the British fleet, so there were those now who stirred up strife, and by anonymous articles published in one of the city papers, endeavored to sow dissensions among the troops. It would, no doubt, have been better for Jackson, in the fulness of his triumph, and in the plenitude of his power, to have overlooked this. But these very men he knew had acted as spies while the enemy lay before his entrenchments, causing him innumerable vexations, and endanger- ing the cause of the country, and he determined as martial law had not yet been repealed, to seize the offenders. He demanded of the editor the name of the writer of a certain article, who proved to be a member of the legislature. lie then applied to Judge Ilall for a writ of habeas corpus, which was 320 ANDREW JACKSON. granted, and tlie recreant statesman was tlirown into prison. Soon after, martial law being removed, Judge Hall issued an attachment against Jackson for contempt of court, and lie was brought before him to answer interrogatories. This he refused to do, and asked for the sentence. The judge, still smarting- under the remembrance of his former arrest by Jack- son, fined him a thousand dollars. A burst of indig- nation followed this sentence, and as the latter turned to enter his carriage, the crowd around seized it, and dragged it home with shouts. The fine was paid im- mediately ; but in a few hours the outraged citizens refunded the sum to the general. He, however, refused it, requesting it to be appropriated to a charitable institution. Judge Hall by this act secured for him- self the fame of the man who, to figure in history, fired the temple of Delj)hos. The arbitrary manner in which Jackson disposed of the State legislature and judges of the court, be- came afterwards the subject of much discussion, and during his political life the ground of heavy accusa- tions. If the contest is respecting the manner in which lie assumed arbitrary power, it is not worth discussing. But if, on the other hand, the assumption of the power at all is condemned, then the whole thing turns on the necessities of the case, and whether that use was made of it which the general good and not personal feelings required. That it was necessary, TAKES LEAVE OF IIIS TROOPS. 321 W8 have no doubt. He had a right, as commander- in-chief of the army in that section to whom tlie de- fence of the Southern frontier had been intrusted, to force the civil power into obedience to the orders of the general government. lie was to defend and save New Orleans, and if the civil power proved treacher- ous or weak, it was his duty to see that it did not act against him while plainly in the path of his duty. New Orleans so considered it ; and six years after, the corporation appropriated fifty thousand dollars to the erection of a marble statue of him in the city. Con- gress thought so, when, thirty years after, it voted the repayment of the fine, with interest, from the date it was inflicted. Jackson remained in New Orleans till March, when he was relieved by General Gaines. On taking leave of his troops, who, by their cheerful endurance of hardships and their bravery, had become endeared to liim, he issued an address full of ecomiums on their conduct, and expressions of love for their character. lie concluded by saying, " Farewell, fellow-soldiers ! The expression of your General's thanks is feeble; but the gratitude of a country of freemen is yours, — yours the applause of an admiring world." "What a contrast does this man, covered with the laurels of his two recent campaigns, present to the captive boy, whose hand was brutally gashed by a subordinate British ofiicer, because he refused to black his boots ! 322 ANDKEW JACKSOJT. Tliis world has changes. The Lid with his eye to the knot-hole at Camden watching the defeat of the American troops with anguish, and the hero gazing i:)rondly on the flying columns of the veteran troops of the British empire, are the same in soul,-T-but how different in position ! They say, " Time sets all things even." In Jackson's case, the wrongs done to his family by an oppressive nation, and the outrages he himself liad received, were terribly avenged. The country was once more at peace, and General Jackson turned his footsteps towards his j^eaceful home near ]^ashville. Acclamations, and bonfires, and salutes of artillery marked his progress ; and " Old Hickory," as he had been named, both from the firmness of his character, and from the " hickory grounds" where he prostrated the Creek nation, was in every one's mouth. Still holding his rank in the army, he was once more absorbed in agricultural pursuits, and the warrior became the peaceful farmer. He thus con- tinued the life of an ordinarj'- citizen for two years, when the troubles on the Southern frontier, arising from the depredations of the fugitive Creeks and Seminoles, together with runaway slaves, directed the attention of the government to him. General Gaines had been stationed on the frontiers to pre- serve peace ; but instead of succeeding, he had lost one of his best officers, Lieutenant Scott, who with ORDEKED TO FLOEIDA. 323 forty-seven others, several of tliem women and clilldren, were massacred in cold blood. A prompt, resolute, ex- ecutive man, was evidently needed in that quarter, and Jackson was at once ordered to proceed to Fort Scott, and take command. He was authorized to call, if neces- sary, on the neighboring States for help ; also, if circum- stances should justify it, to cross the boundary line of Florida, on to S^janish ground. Putting himself at the head of the Tennessee volunteers, he repaired to the post assigned him. Finding that large bands of hostile negroes and Indians were protected by the S^janish authorities, either through fear or through enmity to the United States, he did not hesitate to cross the border. He marched at once into the Seminole towns, where strings of recent scalps attested the success of these marauders. Hastening on to St. Mark's, he found that it was virtually in possession of the enemy. Chiefs and warriors, and British incen- diaries, carried on their machinations, and held their councils of war in the commandant's own quarters. He, therefore, at once demanded the surrender of the fort, to be garrisoned by American troops for the pro- tection of American interests. A refusal being sent, he quietly marched his army into it, and seizing several British bandits, who were stirring up the Indians to massacre, made summary work with them. One Arbuthnot, an Indian trader, was tried by court- martial, and shot. Ambrister, formerly a lieutenant 324 ANDREW JACKSON. in the British marine corps, received a milder seii- tence, which Jackson disapproved of. It was, there- fore, reconsidered, and he, too, was shot. By this stern and decided action, having quelled the disturb- ances, he was about to dismiss the troops, when he received information that the Governor of Pensacola was giving protection to the hostile savages, furaishing them with ammunition, provisions, &c., and that a number had lately sallied out from that place and mur- dered eighteen Americans. On their return, they were received with favor by the Governor, and sup- plied with the means of escape from the pursuit of American troops. Enraged at this violation of treaty sti]3ulations, Jackson, with twelve hundred men, took up his line of march for the town, scouring the coun- try as he went. The Governor .of West Florida, hear- ing of his approach, sent a stern protest against the in- vasion of his territory, and threatened, if he advanced farther, to repel him by force of a^-ms. The next day the latter was in Pensacola. The terrified Governor fled to Fort Carlos de Barrancos. Thither the inde- fatigable American commander followed him, and soon the Stars and Stripes were floating above the fort. He then sent out small companies to overrun the surrounding country, and annihilate the small bands that still hutig together. Thus, in a short time, he finished the Seminole SEMINOLE WAR, 825 campaign ; and in June of the same year returned to the Ilermitage. The bold course he had taken, the responsibility he had assumed, demanded inquiry. Many blamed him for the execution of Arbuthnot and Ambrister, — others denounced his violation of Spanish territory. But his course, throughout, was sustained by the govern- ment ; and next year, when Florida was ceded to the United States, the president appointed him commis- sioner to receive the provinces, and governor, endowed with all the civil and judicial, as well as military author- ity, which the Spanish governors had wielded. He ac- cepted the appointment, though with reluctance, and in July, 1821, issued his gubernatorial proclamations at Pensacola. It was stipulated in the Treaty of Cession that all public documents and papers relating to the government should be surrendered. This, however, was not done ; and Jackson having received a petition stating that papers affecting the rights of some orphan females were wrongfully kept back by the ex-governor Callava, and that they were now in the hands of a man named Sousa, ordered three officers to wait on the latter gentleman, and demand them. Re- fusing to surrender them, he was summoned to ap- pear before the American Governor. He came ; but stated he had sent the papers to the ex- governor. Jackson then despatched officers to the ex-governor, with orders to demand them, 16 326 AISTDEEW JACKSON. and if he refused to give tliem \rp^ to seize botli him and his steward. The Governor treating the demand with contempt, he was unceremoniously walked off to Jackson. Refusing to surrender them to the latter also, he was locked up in prison. 'Next morning the papers were obtained, when the declaration of the petitioners was found to be true. Having obtained the papers, Jackson ordered the ex-governor to be re- leased from confinement. Tlie latter afterwards pub- lished a severe attack on him in one of the joxirnals, and the high-handed measures of the American Gov- ernor, as they were called by many, were denounced in various quarters. But he took the same course with the ex-governor of East Florida with regard to im- portant documents, who in turn protested against the act. Several Spanish officers attacked him through the newspapers, and attempted to create dissatisfaction and disturbance. Jackson disposed of them more eifectually than he did of the ex- governors. Telling them that by the treaty they were to leave the provinces in six months after its ratification, and as the time had now more than expired, he would give them only a week to depart- They hm-ried away from the jurisdiction of a man whose blows folloAved his words so fast, and who seemed to have so little respect for Castilian blood. Murmurs and complaints can make but little pro- gress against such prompt and decisive action, and RESIGNS HIS COMMISSION. 327 order and peace were soon restored. His liealth, however, failing, he was compelled to leave the direction of aflairs in the hands of his secretaries, and return home. It is not our province to discnss the conduct of Jackson in relation to the Seminole war, or his measures as governor. They were carefully sifted by the government, and approved of, and though afterwards used against him by political opponents, they have never been condemned by the only tribu- nal that has a right to adjudicate in the matter. Jackson's health continuing feeble, he resigned liis commission in the army, and became once more a private citizen. In 1823, President Monroe ten- dered him the office of minister plenipotentiary to Mexico, which was declined. In the fall, he was elected to the Senate of the United States, and held his seat for two years. During this time he became a candidate for the presidency. It is well known that at the election in 1824, although he received more electoral votes than either of his three rivals, he did not obtain the majority over all combined, as required by the Constitution, and the election, therefore went to the House of Representatives, which threw its vote for John Quincy Adams. Tlie next campaign, of 1828, was of a violent character. Jackson was again a candidate, and party spirit ran so high, and became so unscrupu- 328 ANDREW JACKSON. lous, that the most monstrous accusations were brought against him. His services to his country- seemed to be obliterated from the minds of his as- sailants, and hatreds were begun, and feelings en- gendered, whose desolating effects have scarcely yet passed away. Jackson, however, was triumphantly elected, having received a hundred and seventy- eight of the electoral votes, while but eighty-three were cast for Mr. Adams. The removal of the Indian tribes, intimation of his ajDproaching attack on the United States bank, and the avowal of a determination to adjust at once the northeastern boundary with Great Britain, then a bone of contention, and obtain payment of the claims of American citizens against France, were the chief topics of interest in his first inaugural. His veto of the bill which passed both houses of Congress in May, 1830, authorizing a subscription of stock in the " Maysville, Washington, Paris, and Lex- ington Turnpike Road Company," was an act which excited much discussion dm'ing the year .1830. In '32, the bill to recharter the Bank of the United States passed both houses of Congress, but was vetoed by Jackson. Probably the currency of a country never received so sudden and disastrous a blow from the hand of its ruler, as ours did from this veto message. But, notwithstanding the terrible derangement ABKESTS DISUNION. 329 into winch tlie moneyed interests had been thrown, and the wide-spread denunciation of the arbitrary act that had effected it, he was in this year re- elected to the presidency by an overwhelming ma- jority, receiving two hundred and nineteen votes, while Henry Clay received but forty-nine, John Floyd eleven from South Carolina, and William Wirt seven from Yermont. During the first summer of his second administra- tion, South Carolina openly proclaimed the right of secession from the confederacy. The organization of an army was commenced, and arms procured under the sanction of the State, to repel all attempts by the general government to execute the revenue laws, which she declared to be unjust in their oper- ation on her. The strength of the tie that bound the Union together, was now to be tested. Tlie power of a separate State to retire from the comj)act was no longer a claiin loudly vaunted, it had been assumed, and now it was to be seen, whether the power of the Federal government was only in words or whether it would dare to exercise it, if necessary, even at the bayonet's point. The attitude of this wayward, selfish, and disturbing State, had brought on a crisis, the termination of which would affect the history of our republic to remotest time. A weak and temporizing President, would, inevitably have produced a state of things from which the 330 ANDREW JACKSON. Federal government must have emerged weakened in its autliority and crippled in its power. The Union would have been a fiction and en unmixed republic the jest and bye-word of Europe. For such a crisis as South Carolina presented, no President since Washington was so well adapted as Jackson. The very executiveness of character — the readi- ness to assume responsibility, fearless of conse- quences — the frightful energy with which he exe- cuted what he thought to be right — qualities and characteristics certain to lead to error in the ordi- nary course of calm legislation, ware just what was wanted in this collision between a State and the Union. The same determination which overawed the lawless frontier men of Tennessee, quelled mu- tiny in his array, and frightened into inactivity the discontented spirits of I^ew Oi'leans, shone forth conspicuously and gloriously here. He immediately garrisoned the fortifications in that State, and in his next annual message called on Congress to attend to this matter. Still pursuing her treasonable course. South Carolina declared officially that the acts of Congress to which she had objected, were null and void. This was followed by Jackson's famous proclamation, which remains to this day, the noblest monument to his memory. Planting himself on the Constitution, he calmly, yet irresistibly struck down every argument used by the State, made clear as HIS PROCLAMATION. 331 noonday the duty of tlie Federal government, and then appealed to his native State in the language of true patriotism, calling on his fellow-citizens to re- member her Sumter's, Rutledges, and Pinckneys, to remember the glorious Union, for which they had fought, and implored heaven to preserve them from the guilt of " TREASON." In the meantime, he took steps which clearly indicated the course he had re- solved to pursue. His well-known character — the promj)tness and fearlessness with which he executed his plans — the absolute certainty that his blow would exceed the threat that preceded it, and that in j)ursuing the path of his duty, he would walk un- flinchingly over State authority, local legislature, armed citizens, and prostrate towns, awed the clam- orous, and hushed into silence the loud-talking poli- ticians, who delighted in high-sounding speeches, but swerved from an encounter, which was to be so deadly and final. A thousand errors growing out of such an executive character and affecting only the financial affairs of a nation, could be forgiven for one act, springing from the same source, that pre- served the integrity of the Union. His conduct in this crisis is a precedent for all our future chief ma- gistrates ; and taking into consideration not the j)os- sihle but ihe jprobable evils which are to threaten us, will more than compensate for the dangerous and unconstitutional use which he made of the veto 332 - ANDKEW JACKSON. power. ISTow that tlie liatred and injustice of party spirit have passed away, or been buried in the true patriot's grave, we can look calmly on his political life. His conduct towards the United States Bank, cannot be justified. Granting the corruption of that institution and the abuse of its influence and power, the duty of the President remained the same. The responsibility rested on Congress. In a republic, corruption and the abuse of public confidence is sure to be avenged in time, and the pecuniary loss which shall occur in the short interval between the crime and punishment, is not to be compared with the dangerous precedent set by a ruler who inter- feres with the ordinary course of legislation with his individual opinions, enforced through his official power. To re-charter the United States Bank, grant- ing all to be true that was said of it (and of its cor- ruption there can be no doubt,) would not have been so great a violation of the spirit of the Constitution, as was this stretch of the veto power, and the removal of the deposits in direct violation of the vote of Con- gress. Such conduct, if continued in and legitimately carried out, would end in making the Congress of the United States as destitute of authority and power as the French Senate and Assembly are under Louis ISTa- j)oleon. It would, in fact, place the control of the legislative action entirely in the hands of the execu- tive. Tlie Constitution bestowed the veto power to THE VETO POWER. 383 clieclv plain and intentional violations of its decrees, not to arrest the natnral course of legislation. In a republic, Congress has nothing to gain from the nse of arbitrary power, but an individual may have much to gain. A corrupt institution is bad, but the establishment of a principle or precedent dangerous to representative freedom is worse. At first sight, it seems strange, that one with Jackson's democratic feelings and tendencies, should have departed so far in this respect, from all who had preceded him, from those even who believed in concentrating all the power that could be obtained from the Constitution and patronage in the executive. But, it must be remembered, that he not only always exhibited this contradiction of character, but it made him the remarkable man he was. He loved the untutored freedom of western life, but he allowed no discus- sion or remonstrance to interfere with the discharge of his duty. He loved the volunteer system, and called on the young men of his State as freemen to gather under his banner, but when there, he de- manded implicit obedience to his commands, and paying no attention to remonstrances or menaces, punished with unrelenting severity those who refused. It is unjust and exhibits a narrow spirit to judge such a man by ordinary rules. Born evidently, to fulfil a certain destiny, he became a law, as it were, to himself, which those who denounce the strongest 334 ANDREW JACKSON. at first, in the end are compelled to acknowledge as good in its general workings. Besides, the same independent, resolute, and fearless character, which, in the commencement of his career, prompted him to disobey the orders of the Secretary of War, to disband his troops, — the same which faced down a mutinous army, and carried him gloriously through the Creek Campaign — the same which laid violent hands on the legislature and court of a State, and finally triumphed over the veteran troops of Eng- land, — the same which to finish the Seminole war, hesitated not to march into the territory of another State, — the same which saved the republic from civil war and the Union from shipwreck, would inevitably lead in civil matters to the arbitrary use of power. A character so formed by nature, and educated by circumstances cannot bend to a course that wars with its convictions. To expect it is to expect impossibilities. The use of the veto power and the removal of the deposits from the United States Bank, were undoubtedly unconstitutional, if the definition of one of England's greatest historians of an unconstitutional act be correct, viz., " one that is a perilous innovation on former usages." In this respect, Jackson was like Tiberius Gracchus, one of the Roman tribunes, who forcibly removed Octavius, his colleague, because lie vetoed his Agrarian bill. The speech by which the latter endeavored to justify ms rPvOTEST. 335 himself, reminds one forcibly of Jackson's defence. They were both made after the same model of Eoman virtue and fearlessness, and while striving for the wel- fare of the people sometimes transgressed their legiti- mate powers, and like Yergniaud, the great and elo- quent Girondin, were called upon to ponder that fearful problem which the latter uttered in the French Assembly, "Is a magistrate to le suffered constitio- tionaUy to ruin the Constitution f^ Tliat Jackson reverenced the Constitution no im- partial man can doubt ; and yet the resolution in- troduced by Mr. Clay in the Senate, declaring that he had acted in derogation of it, is also true in iact. The passage of this resolution called forth a protest from the President, and it now stands on the re- cords of that body, surrounded by a great black mark, put there by the expurgating act. The protest was an able one, and the closing sentences eloquent and noble. The imputation of acting from corrupt motives filled Jackson with sorrow. Said he : " I have lived in vain, if it be necessary to en- ter into a formal vindication of my character and motives from such an imputation. In vain do I bear upon my person enduring memorials of that contest in which American liberty was purchased, — in vain have I since perilled property, fame, and life, in defence of the rights and privileges so dearly bought, — in vain am I now, without a personal aspi- 336 ANDREW JACKSON. ration or the hope of individual advantage, encoun- tering resj^onsibilities and dangers from which, by mere inactivity in relation to a single point, I might have been exemj^t, — if any serious doubts can be entertained as to the purity of my purposes and motives. If I had been ambitious, I should have sought an alliance w^ith that powerful institution which, even now, aspires to no divided empire. If I had been venal, I should have sold -myself to its designs. Had I preferred personal comfort and of- ficial ease to the performance of my arduous duty, I should have ceased to molest it. In the history of conquerors and usurpers, never, in the fire of youth, nor in the vigor of manhood, could I find an attrac- tion tO' lure me from the path of duty ; and now I shall scarcely find an inducement to commence their career of ambition, when gray hairs and a decaying frame, instead of inviting to toil and battle, call me to the contemplation of other worlds, where con- querors cease to be honored, and usurper expiate their crimes. " The only ambition I can feel is, to acquit myself to Ilim to whom I must soon render an account of my stewardship, to serve my fellow-men, and live respected and honored in the history of my coun- try, No ! the ambition which leads me on is an anxious desire and a fixed determination to return to the people, unimpaired, the sacred trust they have HIS TEOTEST. 337 confided to my ctiarge ; to heal tlie wounds of tlie Constitution, and preserve it from further violation ; to persuade my countrymen, so far as I may, that it is not in a splendid government, supported by pow- erful monopolies and aristocratical establishments, that they will find hapj)iness, or their liberties pro- tection, but in a plain system, void of pomp, protect- ing all, and granting favors to none, dispensing its blessings like the dews of heaven, unseen and un- felt, save in the freshness and beauty they contri- bute to produce. It is such a government that the genius of our people requires ; — such an one only under which our States may remain, for ages to come, united, prosperous, and free. K the Almighty Being, who has hitherto sustained and protected me, will but vouchsafe to make my feeble powers instru- mental to such a result, I shall anticipate with plea- sure the place to be assigned me in the history of my country, and die contented with the belief that I have contributed, in some small degree, to in- crease the value, and prolong the duration of Ame- rican liberty." There is a noble sorrow in this allusion to his ser- vices and sufiering in the cause of his country's free- dom, — a lofty candor in the declaration of the purity of his motives, — which it is impossible to resist. He loved his country above life or fame. A more patriotic heart never beat in a human bosom ; and f38 AJ^DKEW JACKSON. ^.t was tlie consciousness of this that gave him such ;i strong hold upon the heart of the American people. This collision, however, between him and the Senate embittered the close of his administration ; for, as he had disregarded the resolutions of that body, so they disregarded his nominations ; and much hostility was engendered, which spread among the partisans of each. France neglecting to pay the instalment agreed upon in the Convention of 1831, Jackson, in the message of 1833, recommended the passage of a law authorizing reprisals to be made on French proj)erty on the high seas. This bold and decided step aroused the anger of the French government ; and our minister at Paris was offered his passports. Louis Philippe, however, thought better of it, paid the instalment, and, several years after, sent an artist to take Jackson's portrait, that he might hang it up beside that of Washington. Just before the close of Jackson's second term, he was seized with a severe hemorrhage of the lungs, which completely prostrated him. He, however, sufficiently recovered to attend the inauguration of his successor, and then returned to the Hermitage. 'No president since the time of Washington ever wielded BO great a political influence after his retirement as he. He was still the oracle of his party ; and every HIS DEATH. 339 ear was turned to catcli the words of counsel that should fall from his lips. Though feeble in health, he took a great interest in the j^olitics of his coun- try, and watched the course of public events with unceasing anxiety. He lived eight years after his retirement from office, most of which time he sj^eut on his estate. He was a member of the Presbyterian church ; and, to accommodate his servants and family, built a house of worship on his own j)lantation. In 1845 his health began to fail rapidly. His disease was dropsy, from which he suffered great pain, so that, for months previous to his death, he was unable to lie down at all, and could get no sleep except by taking opiates. He bore all, however, with forti- tude ; and the principles which his mother had in- stilled into his youthful heart now began to bear their fruit. Tlie hero of so many battles, and the fearless and desperate warrior, turned, with the meekness of a child, to the Bible for solace and sup- port. Said he : "I am in the hands of a merciful God. I have full confidence in his goodness and mercy. My lamp of life is nearly out, and the last glimmer is come. I am ready to depart when called. The Bible is true. Ui^on that sacred vol- ume I rest my hoj^e of eternal salvation, through the merits and blood of our blessed Lord and Saviom-, Jesus Christ." Sunday morning, the 8th 340 ANDEEW JACKSON. of June, lie swooned for a while, and it was supposed the spirit had fled. But, at length, reviving, he called around him his family and servants, and took his last farewell of them. Said he : " Do not grieve that I am about to leave you, for I shall be better off. Although I am afflicted with pain and bodily suffering, they are nothing, compared with the suf- ferings of the Saviour of the world, who was put to death on the accursed tree. I have fulfilled my destiny on earth ; and it is better that this worn-out frame should go to rest, and my spirit take up its abode with the Kedeemer." In this strain of reli- gious feeling he continued, at intervals, to talk to those around him, gradually sinking lower and lower until evening, when he quietly passed away. As memory runs back over the career of this in- domitable man, one turns with amazement to this death-scene. What an exhibition of the power of religion to calm and subdue the passionate natm*e, and turn the lion into the lamb ! Andrew Jackson was one of the most remarkable men our country has produced. He was a type — although a somewhat exaggerated one — of the true American character. Kind and gentle in domestic life, prompt, fearless and inflexible as a soldier, rapid in his perceptions, and resolute in executing his plans, cool and courageous in the hour of danger, and generous and self-sacrificing to a fallen foe, he niS CHAEACTER. 341 had mingled in him the finest traits of a man. He had also the power of adapting himself to the sit- uation he was in, and seemed always equal to every emergency. Warm in his attachments, and fierce in his anger, he had devoted friends, and bitter ene- mies. Irritable and impetuous, he, in moments of excitement, did many things that cannot be justified. Perhaps the weakest point in his character was his inability to deny a friend a favor. He could say " No " to a foe, but not to one who loved him. From this failing, no doubt, sprung that bad feature of his administration which has now become a set- tled policy, — viz., the distribution of all places of profit or honor to partisans. General Jackson was tall and thin ; — a perfect Cassius, as all men of irritable and impetuous tem- peraments are ; and it was the spirit, more than the body, that gave him such wonderful endurance. His blue eye, whesa no emotion mastered him, gave no indication of the terrible fire that lay beneath its kind expression ; for, when suddenly roused by pas- sion or danger, it shot forth lightning, and his large features were written all over with the soul ou fire. Honors were everywhere paid to his memory; and friends and foes acknowledged that a great man had fallen. -r-^-tyvYir^