• ^ ^^-.-^ V \i / % f N A MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF \ WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, »i. ■!-. » ■ -. ■ ■■. II.. ^ '^ ^. VJL \^ OF onio.>p>/ 2, ]^riV£li" BjY JAMES HALL i>*. mi '^ KEY & BIDD NOR STREET. 1836. Entered according to the act of Congress, air the year 1836, by Key & Biddle, in the clerk's office of the district court for the eastern district of Pennsylvania. stereotyped by John Fagan Philadelphia. PREFACE. In preparing for the press a work lately pub- lished, containing sketches of the History of the Western States, the author becanie pos- sessed of a large number of facts, connected with the public services of General Harrison. They would properly have formed a part of the work alluded to ; but as that had already swelled to a larger size than had been antici- pated, as these would form in themselves a connected narrative, and as they relate to an individual whose name is now placed before the people of the United States, under circum- stances calculated to awaken curiosity in regard to his history — it has been thought best to arrange these materials into a separate vol- ume. It is mostly a compilation from other waiters; among which the author especially acknowledges his obligations to Dawson, the biographer of General Harrison; and to M'Affee, the historian of the late war. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. Mr. Harrison's birtli, parentage, and education Piige 7 CHAPTER II. Situation of tlie North-western Territory previous to Wayne's campaign — Intrigues of the British — Defeat of Harmer and St. Clair — Appointment of Wayne — Organization of tlie Legion 14 CHAPTER III. Mr. Harrison's first appointment — His services under St Clair and Wilkinson — Wayne's campaign 28 CHAPTER IV. Captain Harrison appointed Secretary of the Territory — His first election to Congress — His services in refer- ence to the sale of public lands 56 CHAPTER V. AiFairs of Indiana — Duties of Mr. Harrison as Gover- nor, Superintendent of Indian affairs, and Commis- sioner for treating with the Indians 66 CHAPTER VI. Affairs of Indiana — The Governor's addresses to the Legislature 76 CHAPTER VII. Intrigues of Tccumthe and the Prophet — State of the frontier — Machinations of the British agents — Popu- larity of Mr. Harrison 94 CHAPTER VIII. Intrigues of Tecumthe — Council at VincenneS Ill CHAPTER IX. Hostilities commenced — Governor Harrison directed to march against the Prophet's Town 120 1* Vi CONTENTS. CHAPTER X. Battle of Tippecanoe 132 CHAPTER XI. Declaration of War— Its effect on the West— Harrison called into service by the people — Volunteers from Kentucky 156 CHAPTER XII. Unprepared state of the country at the commencement of the war — March of the volunteers — Their confi- dence in Harrison 170 CHAPTER XIII. Harrison appointed Commander-in-chief — Extent of his command — Difficulties by which he was surrounded — Plan of operations 177 CHAPTER XIV. Events in Indiana and Illinois — Movements on the North-western frontier — Massacre at the River Raisin 201 CHAPTER XV. Opening of the second campaign — Siege of Fort Meigs — Brilliant sortie — Defeat of Colonel Dudley 222 CHAPTER XVI. The mounted regiment under Col. R. M. Johnson. . . . 237 CHAPTER XVII. Second siege of Fort Meigs 245 CHAPTER XVIII. Preparations for the invasion of Canada 265 CHAPTER XIX. Perry's victory — Preparations for invading Canada . . . 270 CHAPTER XX. Invasion of Canada — Battle of the Thames, and capture of the British army — Expedition to Niagara — ^Resig- nation of Genersd Harrison 275 CHAPTER XXI. Civil services since the war 286 CHAPTER XXII. Conclusion — Character of General Harrison 309 MEMOIR OF WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. CHAPTER I. Mr. Harrison's birth, parentage, and education. It is one of the happiest results of our republican institutions, that no individual can claim respect on account of his parentage. The property accumu- lated by the industry of the parent may be trans- mitted to his offspring ; every man has a right to dispose, as he pleases, of the fruit of his own labour, and the law facilitates and sanctions its descent to those who stand nearest to the possessor in consan- guinity and affection. But the good name of an honest man, or the fame of an illustrious citizen, is earned by his own deeds ; it is neither gained by inheritance, nor bestowed by devise. If any class of citizens may with propriety in- dulge the pride of ancestry, it is those who are de- scended from the distinguished patriots and virtuous men, who, by their talents, their sacrifices, and 8 MEMOIR OF their blood, have become justly numbered among the benefactors of their country. The sages and heroes of the American Revolution were engaged in a noble enterprise, which they carried triumph- antly to a successful termination, by an exertion of wisdom, patience, courage, and forbearance, rarely paralleled in the history of the world. They disinterestedly and fearlessly exposed their lives, and jeoparded their fortunes, for their country, and for posterity — for a country too poor at that time to reward them for their services, and in a cause too uncertain to promise any immediate personal advantages to those who bore the heat and burthen of the struggle. Their contemporaries could admire their magnanimity ; it is for us, who are reaping the rich harvest of their patriotic labours, to testify the gratitude of a generous people, by holding their names in everlasting honour ; and when a descendant from that venerated stock combines in himself qua- lities worthy of admiration, his claim to the respect- ful consideration of his countrymen, is at least not diminished by the advantage of such a parentage. By many it would be considered as greatly en- hanced, and the services of a distinguished patriot would derive additional lustre from the fact that he had trodden in the footsteps of an equally illustri- ous father, whose unbought and unrequited ser- vices had been freely given to the nation, in its day of peril and weakness. Less than this we WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 9 could not say, in allusion to tlie eminent person wliose biography wc are about to place before the public — himself a warrior and statesman of no mean repute, and the son of one who was conspi- cuous among the founders of the American republic. The lives of public men, who have participated largely in affairs of general interest, form a part of the history of their country, and should be recorded with careful fidelity, for the instruction of those who follow afler them. To no one does this remark apply more justly than to General Har- rison, who has filled with honour the highest places in the gift of his country, and been an efficient actor in many of the most important national transac- tions which have taken place since the revolution. His public career has been long and eventful ; nearly his whole life has been devoted to the ser- vice of his country. He is one of the very few remaining among us, the commencement of whose career is dated back to the first days of the repub- lic, who have grown up with our political charac- ter and public institutions, have witnessed the gra- dual advance of our country from infant weakness to mature prosperity, and who form the connecting link between the generation which secured our liberty, and that which is enjoying its fruits. Reared up among the patriots of the revolution, under the pure and vigorous counsels of republican simplici- ty — appointed to his first office by the sagacious 10 MEMOIR OF Washington — and enjoying successively the confi- dence of the elder Adams, Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe, he may truly be said to have been taught and trusted in the purest school of democracy. William Henry Harrison was born in Vir- ginia, in the year 1773, and among his relations are numbered some of the most distinguished men of that state. His father was Benjamin Harrison, one of the signers of the declaration of independ- ence, to whose ardent zeal and intrepidity that body of patriots were greatly indebted for their harmonious organization. In the Biography of the signers of the declaration of independence, an inci- dent is recorded, which, witji the explanation we are enabled to add, is highly illustrative of the dis- interested love of country which animated the pub- lic men of that day. When Mr. Hancock was appointed to succeed Peyton Randolph as President of Congress, it is said, that, " with a modesty not unnatural at his years, and a consciousness of the difficulty he might experience in filling a station of such high importance and responsibility, he hesitated to take the seat. Mr. Harrison was standing beside him, and with the ready good-humour that loved a joke, even in the Senate house, he seized the modest candidate in his athletic arms, and placed him in the presidential chair ; then turning to some of the members around, he exclaimed, ' We will show mother Britain how little we care for her, by mak- WILLIAM HEMtY II AKKISO.N. 11 ing a Massachusetts man our president, whom she has excluded from pardon by public proclama- tion.' "* The truth is, that a large portion of the members of that Congress wished to call Mr. Har- risen to the chair, vacated by the death of his bro- ther-in-law Peyton Randolph ; but with noble self- denial, and admirable judgment, he declined in favour of John Hancock, and insisted on his taking the post of honour. The latter, not to be outdone in generosity, was willing to give way to the Vir- ginia delegate, when the amicable controversy was terminated in the manner described, and a coolness between Virginia and Massachusetts avoided, which might have resulted, had a contest for the most conspicuous place in Congress been permitted be- tween the distinguished delegates from those colo- nies. Benjamin Harrison afterwards filled the executive chair of Virginia, at a period when every energy of a great and powerful mind was neces- sary to keep up the spirits of his countrymen. William Henry Harrison, the third and youngest son of the illustrious patriot, whose name we have mentioned, was born the 9th of February, 1773, in Charles City county, Virginia, and was educated at Hampden Sydney College. He inherited from his father little save his noble example, and a name -»•-»•- "•-•-»^ * Waln's Biofrraplj^ p^ the Signers ot IKo^V^^*''^^*"" of Independence. ^,^ LIBRAKY '^^■ %^/NGTO- ^i'" 12 MEMOIR OF identified with the great struggle for liberty. His education having commenced during the storms of the revolution, he imbibed the sentiments of repub- licanism, and of resistance to oppression, which have always influenced him in his career through life. Dependent on his own exertions, he applied himself with great ardour to the study of medicine, and was about to graduate as a practitioner, when he conceived the idea of serving his country as a soldier, in the western wilderness. Being under age, his guardian, the celebrated Robert Morris, used every exertion to induce him to continue his studies ; for that penetrating statesman discerned, even then, in his young friend, the germs of a noble character, and was desirous of giving him all the advantages of scientific attainment, which our country could afford, and of placing him in a pro- fession, for which he considered him peculiarly fitted by his talents, the kindness of his nature, and the suavity of his manners. The desire of the young student to distinguish himself in the defence of our western frontiers, under the accomplished but unfortunate St. Clair, predominated ; and Pre- sident Washington, who had been the intimate friend of his father, sanctioned his views, and gave him an appointment in the army. Thus, although young Harrison was connected with those who were affluent, he commenced his eventful career in life, without the advantages of ^ WILLIAM IIEiNRV HARRISON. 13 fortune. Embracing a profession which seldom opens the way to wealth, he threw himself into the ranks of patriotism, and gave his energies to his country, with a patriot's devotion. His was not the service of a holi(]g,y soldier. He lingered not in the cities, to sport the gaudy habiliments of the warrior in the resorts of fashion and dissipation. The nation was too poor to support its officers in idleness ; and the independent spirit of Harrison would not permit him to lead a life of useless indo- lence. He began, at the early age of nineteen, to act the part of a man on the great theatre of life, and to build up the fabric of his fortunes. Select- ing a dangerous and laborious field of exertion, he proceeded at once to the post of honour and duty, and entered upon that perilous and active career of usefulness, in which he has continued to be en- gaged, with but little interruption, up to the present time. 2 14 MEMOIR OF CHAPTER II. Situation of the North-wes%rn Territory previous to Wayne^s campaign — Intrigues of the Brit- ish — Defeat of Harmer and St. Clair — Ap- pointment of Wayne — Organization of the Legion, The war in which Mr. Harrison first met the enemies of his country, may properly be considered as a continuation of the great struggle for inde- pendence. When peace was concluded with Great Britain in 1783, many of the Indian tribes, who had been in alliance with that power, refused to lay down the hatchet, but continued to perpetrate their merciless outrages upon the frontier settlements. These had now extended themselves into the beau- tiful valley of the Ohio, and were spreading rapidly over the fertile lands of that delightful region. About the year 1763, the hardy borderers from Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia, taking ad- vantage of a short season of peace with the Indians, had begun to cluster around the forts at Redstone, Pittsburgh, and Wheeling, and thence spread along the margins of the Monongahela and Ohio, in Penn- sylvania and Western Virginia. Previous to the breaking out of the revolution, the savages again WILLIAM HENKV HAKKISON. 15 became troublesome ; but the gallant pioneers main- tained their ground, and when the storm of the revolution thickened around them, they supported these distant outposts with the most obstinate va- lour. At a period a little later, and just before the com- mencement of the revolutionary war, Kentucky and - Tennessee began to be peopled from Virginia and North Carolina, and the work of emigration was carried successfully forward during the continu- ance of that hard-fought struggle. These early adventurers were not only opposed by hostile sav- ages, who fought for the possession of the soil which they had occupied through ages countless to the present historian, but by the wealth, the wea- pons, and the skill, of our European oppressor. While the armies of the republic were gaining im- perishable renown under the standard of liberty, at various points throughout the eastern, middle, and southern states, the patriotic inhabitants of the frontier were not less active; but honourably sus- tained the common cause, and under the orders of such men as Clark, Seveir, Shelby, Scott, Logan, and other equally gallant leaders, performed many brilliant achievements. When the American recurs with admiration to the eventful story of our contest for independence, it should never be forgotten, that the decisive battle of King's Mountain was fought by riflemen from the ^^■estern forests, who had 16 MEMOIR OF crossed the Allegheny ridge by laborious marches, to aid their oppressed brethren in breaking the yoke of the tory ascendancy, leaving their own homes exposed to the predatory incursions of the savage. Nor are these services to be slightly valued. They formed an important part of the great military drama. The pioneers, by keeping the savages employed on the western waters, held in check an immense mass of merciless warriors, who would otherwise have been poured into the heart of the middle and southern states, destroying the cities, and violating the firesides, of a country which, even without this scourge, was bleeding at every pore. Washington estimated these services at their true value, and Britain never forgave them. Scarcely had the thunder of artillery ceased to roll over the battle-fields, when the north-western territory began to receive inhabitants. A hardy band from New-Jersey and Pennsylvania founded Cincinnati, a colony of French settled at Gallipolis, and the people of New-England seated themselves at Marietta, and on the Connecticut reserve. Others followed them, and point after point was rapidly occupied ; but the war of the revolution was not yet concluded. The harvest was ripened, but not gathered in. The independence of America was acknowledged, but not secured. The billow had rolled over the Atlantic states, but the surge was WILLIAM HENKY HARRISON. 17 breaking upon the forests of the west. Here the tomahawk was still busy. A calm retrospect of these events must satisfy every unprejudiced mind that Great Britain, in reluctantly consenting to acknowledge the inde- pendence of the United States, had been driven by the valour of our fathers into a measure which she was determined to retract, upon the first favourable opportunity. The noble sentiment expressed by her King, at his first interview with Mr. Adams — " I was the last to conform to the separation ; but 'the separation having been made, I would be the first to meet the friendship of the United States as an independent power" — was not responded by the feelings of his people, or the action of his govern- ment. They never relinquished the hope of punish- ing the rebel, and regaining the country; and unhappily for us, they possessed the means of annoying us, and keeping alive their unhallowed lust for revenge. We were weak, and they were strons. Predominant on the ocean, our commerce was at their mercy ; nor did they cease to cripple our trade, to impress our seamen, and insult our flair, until a series of brilliant victories on the ocean had taught them that we had the strength and the spirit to maintain our rights. On the north-western frontier they held a chain of fortresses garrisoned by disciplined troops, and they had a band of trained emissaries moving over the vast wilderness, 2* 18 MEMOIR OF and uniting the tribes against us. With the single object in view of repressing the expansion of our population, by depriving us of the traffic with the Indians, and embittering them to acts of outrage, they conciliated them with presents, roused their passions by supplying them with the dreadful means of intoxication, and furnished them with weapons. , ♦ This fiendish combination between the civilized and savage man, warring against the social princi- ple and the sacred rights of the fireside, immolating the peaceful citizen, the female, and the helpless infant, upon the altar of revenge, — retarding the spread of the arts, and rolling back the tide of knowledge and religion, continued to operate until it was broken up by the successful valour of an indignant people. The brilliant victories on the northern, north-western, and southern frontiers, redeemed our country from the thraldom of foreign influence, and added the names of Macomb, Scott, Brown, Jackson, and Harrison, with a host of others, to the glorious list of those who fought for independence. Washington and his associates gained the victory, Wayne and his contemporaries improved it, and the military and naval heroes of the last war struck the final blow which rendered it secure and lasting. From 1783 to 1790, it was estimated that fifteen hundred men women, and children, had been WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 19 killed or taken prisoner by the Indians upon the waters of the Ohio ; more than two thousand horses were stolen from the inhabitants; houses had been burned, fields ravaged, boats plundered, and property destroyed to an unknown amount. Still the settlements grew, and the gallant pioneers sustained the war with undaunted spirit. The Bri- tish, in defiance of a solemn treaty, continued to hold military posts within our acknowledged terri- tory, to tamper with the tribes in our limits, and faithlessly to supply the munitions of war, to be used against a civilized people at peace with her- self. Every effort by negotiation having failed to restore peace. Brigadier General Harmer, a most accomplished gentleman and skilful ofiicer, was or- dered to advance into the Indian country with a force deemed sufficient to chastise the savages, break up their towns, and force them to peace. The defeat of that gallant officer, after he had ac- complished some of the objects of the campaign, and the annihilation of his army by an overwhelm- ing force, carried dismay throughout the frontier, and inspired the Indians with fresh confidence. A new army was raised, and placed under the command of Major General St. Clair, a veteran and skilful soldier of the revolution, in whom Washington placed entire confidence. The public had become aware of the magnitude of the trust 20 MEMOIR OF reposed in this gentleman, and the eyes of the nation were directed towards him with anxious solicitude. They hoped every thing from his tal- ents, experience, and unquestioned courage ; they feared every thing from the numbers and ferocity of the enemy, who were rendered audacious by their recent victory. The honour of the federal government was at stake ; the confidence of the people in its wisdom, and the respect of foreign nations, could only be secured by striking a suc- cessful blow, which should at once blast the cor- roding influence of the foreign incendiary, and give security to a frontier so long the scene of rapine, conflagration, and slaughter. The result is too well known. A variety of unforeseen and unpro- pitious circumstances combined to foil the skill of St. Clair; and on the 4th of November, 1791, his gallant army was defeated with great loss, near the Miami villages, by a confederated body of Indians, under the command of the Little Turtle, a consum- mate warrior, and aided by white auxiliaries from Canada. Upwards of thirty officers, and near a thousand men, were slain. Among the former was General Butler, a distinguished soldier of the revo- lution. The defeat of St. Clair filled the whole country with consternation and mourning. A succession of disasters had rendered the war unpopular. The gallant spirits whose inclinations would have led WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 21 them to the field, shrunk from a contest so laborious and unsuccessful, in which a victory would yield little honour, while defeat was attended with torture and death in their most horrible forms. To fall by the rifle, the tomahawk, and the seal ping-knife, had thus far been the fate of those who had ven- tured upon these perilous wars. The vast expend- itures made in the two recent expeditions had drained the treasury, and fallen heavily upon the resources of the country ; parties were becoming formed in the nation, and in Congress, for and against the prosecution of war, and the whole aspect of the times was gloomy. It was a crisis worthy the mind of Washington. To vindicate the honour of the nation, to crush the growing discontent of factions, to rescue the fron- tier from devastation, and to secure the permanency of the free institutions which had just been estab- lished by a long and bloody war, required all the coolness and discrimination of his great intellect. The war had risen into importance. It had ceased to be a matter of local interest, but had swelled into a national contest, involving danger to the union. The Indians were confederated, and the hand of Britain was seen directing their move- ments. It became necessary to place our armies under the command of a military chief of consum- mate abilities and established reputation — one who should be brave, energetic, and fertile in expedient 22 MEMOIR OF — a leader of sound judgment, ripe experience, and great prudence, who, besides possessing the highest qualities of the soldier, would command the confi- dence of the public. The choice of the President was balanced for a time between two distinguished individuals — George Rogers Clark, and Anthony Wayne. Both had served with brilliant reputation in the revolutionary war — both had rare endowments of intellect and military genius — both had held important separate commands, and had earned the most enviable dis- tinction in daring and successful exploits planned and executed by themselves. The latter was event- ually chosen, and by his able conduct in this pro- tracted and dangerous war, added a new laurel to his own wreath, and another to the already exist- ing proofs of the discriminating mind of Wash- ington. With Wayne were associated Brigadier Generals James Wilkinson and Thomas Posey, revolutionary officers of high repute : the former had shown himself an active partisan leader in several recent expeditions against the Indians ; the latter had shared for several years the toils and confidence of Wayne, had led a battalion in the desperate assault of Stony Point, and shared the eventful fortunes of Mad Anthony^ from the icy plains of the Canadian frontier, to the burning sands of Georgia. A writer who seems to have been intimately WILLIAM HENRY IIAKKISON. 28 versed in this subject, has given the Ibl lowing de- scription of the formation of Wayne's Legion. '' On the 25th of May, 1792, General Wayne hav- ing been furnished by the Secretary of War with the instructions of the President, in which it was emphatically expressed, ' that another defeat would be inexpressibly ruinous to the reputation of the government,' took leave of his family and friends, and repaired to Pittsburgh, the place appointed for the rendezvous of the troops, where he arrived early in June. By a new organization, the army was to consist of one major general, four brigadier generals and their respective staffs, the commis- sioned officers, and 5120 non-commissioned officers and privates, the whole to be denominated ' The Legion of the United States.' The legion to be divided into four sub-legions, each to consist of commissioned officers named, and 1280 non-cpm- missioned officers and privates. The previous army having been nearly annihilated, a new one was to be recruited. IMost of the experienced officers hav- ing been slain in the defeats of Harmer and St. Clair, or resigned their commissions, the labours of the commanding general were augmented to an extent which nothing but the most unwearied pa- tience and ardent zeal could have performed. Many of the officers, as well as of the soldiers, had yet to learn the rudiments of their profession. The or- ganization of the troops, military tactics, discipline, 24 , MEMOIR OF &c., devolved so far upon the general as to leave him scarcely time, without infinite labour, to keep up the correspondence incident to his station. His efforts were indefatigable ; and it is impossible at the present day to form an adequate idea of the difficulties he had to encounter, the labours to per- form, and the obstacles to surmount. So panic- struck was the whole country" (meaning that part of it distant from the scene of danger, — for the pioneers stood firm) " at the repeated and bloody successes of the enemy, that an engagement with them was looked to as certain defeat. A perfect horror seemed to seize the recruits, when marched from the rendezvous where they had enlisted, and their faces turned to join the army. In a letter to the Secretary of War, dated Pittsburgh, 20th July, 1792, General Wayne says, *The detachment under Major Ashton arrived at this place on Mon- day ; Lieutenant Campbell's, with Stokes' dragoons, and Captain Faulkner's riflemen, on Tuesday. I am, however, sorry to inform you of the alarming desertion that prevailed in Ashton's detachment and Stokes' dragoons. Not less than fifty of the for- mer, and seven of the latter, deserted on their march between Carlisle and Pittsburgh.' " Another fact will show the degree of terror that the name of Indian had inspired, and the extraor- dinary difficulties the general had to surmount, to introduce obedience, self-confidence, and courage. WILLIAM HENRY IIARKISON. 25 A letter to the Secretary of War, dated Pittsburgh, 10th of August, 1792, says, ' Desertions have been frequent and alarming. Two nights since, upon a report that a large body of Indians were close in our front, I ordered the troops to form for action, and rode along the line to inspire them with confi- dence, and gave a charge to those in the redoubts which I had recently thrown up in our front, and on the right flank, to maintain their posts at any expense of blood, until I could gain the enemy's rear with the dragoons ; but such was the defect of the human heart, that from excess of cowardice, one-third of the sentries deserted from their sta- tions, so as to leave the most accessible places un- guarded.' " By the salutary measures adopted to introduce order and discipline, the army soon began to assume its proper character. The troops were daily exer- cised in all the evolutions necessary to render them efficient soldiers, and more especially in those ma- noeuvres proper in a campaign against savages. Firing at a mark was constantly practised, and rewards given to the best marksmen. To inspire emulation, the riflemen and infantry strove to excel, and the men soon attained to an accuracy that gave them confidence in their own prowess. On the artillery, the general impressed the importance of that arm of the service. The draixoons he taught to rely on the broadsword, as all important to vic- 3 26 ME3I0IR OF tory. The riflemen were made to see how much success must depend on their coolness, quickness, and accuracy ; while the infantry were led to place entire confidence in the bayonet, as the certain and irresistible weapon, before which savages could not stand. The men were instructed to charge in open 'order ; each to rely on himself, and to prepare for a personal contest with an enemy. The confidence inspired, and rapid improvement in discipline, are frequently mentioned with pleasure in the letters of the commanding general written during the autumn ; but the season was too far advanced be- fore a reasonable force could be collected to warrant active operations."^ We have entered into this detail to show the perilous and unpromising nature of the service to which young Harrison devoted his youthful ener- gies. It could not have been the desire of an indo- lent life, nor the indulgence of a puerile vanity, which led the youthful candidate for fame into scenes so fraught with danger and hardship. The service was neither popular nor inviting. Toilsome marches in the wilderness, incessant watching, coarse fare, uncertain supplies, awaited these gal- lant adventurers under the most favourable event of the campaign, while a reverse of fortune would * Extracted from an able article in Atkinson's Casket for 1830. WILLIAM HENRY IIAKRISON. 27 bring torture, death, or a cruel captivity. A youth reared in alHuence, surrounded by friends, and with fair hopes in prospect, who resigned all these advantages to serve his country on the frontier at that gloomy period, must have been gifted with a high courage and generous patriotism, which ele- vated him above the selfish motives which ordina- rily govern human conduct. 28 MEMOIR OF CHAPTER III. Mr. Harrisoii's first appointment — His services under St. Clair and Wilkinson — Wayne's cam- paign. Mr. Harrison received his first commission as an ensign in the first regiment of United States artillery, then stationed at Fort Washington, and immediately set out to join the army. He arrived at Fort Washington just after the defeat of General St. Clair's army, and witnessed the gathering in at that post of the broken fragments of that gallant band, which had marched out but a few weeks before in the pride of military power, and now re- turned a mutilated, disorganized, and panic-stricken corps. The whole defence of the frontier now de- volved on a few men, while the Indians, flushed with victory, had grown more audacious than ever. The winter was setting in, and such were the hard- ships to be anticipated by those who were destined to protect the distant outposts of the wilderness, that the stoutest hearts might have failed, and the hardiest veterans have shrunk from the unequal contest. Harrison, young, slender, and apparently frail, was advised by his comrades to decline a ser- WILLIAM HENRY IIARKISON. 29 vice for wliicli liis constitution and early liabits seemed to have rendered him peculiarly unlit. P»ut liis was not a spirit to recoil from danger. The same boldness and energy of character — the same prodigal exposure of his own person to danger and fatigue, which have marked his conduct through life, were displayed at the commencement of his career. The first duty confided him was to command an escort having charge of a train of pack-horses bound for Fort Hamilton. The duty was difficult and perilous, requiring great exposure by night and by day, continual watchfulness, and a greater de- gree of sagacity than would ordinarily have been expected in a youth of nineteen. But he acquitted himself in a manner which proved his abilities to be equal to his spirit, and which elicited the com- mendations of General St. Clair. At this time the vice of intemperance was com- mon in the army, and many promising young men fell victims to the destroyer. The practice of drink- ing ardent spirits was universal ; public sentiment had not denounced it as immoral, nor was intoxi- cation considered, as it now is, degrading to the character of tlie gentleman. The hardships to which the army was exposed, and the privations which they often endured for days and weeks to- gether, predisposed the young officers to excess in their moments of relaxation. In other respects, 3* 30 MEMOIR or their situation exposed them to the contagion of bad habits. They were cut loose from the restraints of society, from the genial influence of domestic intercourse, and from the companionship of all those who might have awed or advised them to prudent and virtuous habits. They were encamped in the wilderness, or shut up in isolated fortresses, without books or amusements, and where the tempt- ations to gambling and intoxication, assailed them with tenfold force. Mr. Harrison had the good sense to see and avoid these dangers ; and strength- ened by the advice of General Wilkinson, who suc- ceeded General St. Ckir in 1792, resisted the temptation, and laid the foundation of those habits of temperance which have adhered to him through a long life, enabled him to support the fatigues of border warfare, and given him a degree of health and vigour which few men enjoy at his age. In 1792, he was promoted to the rank of lieu- tenant, and in 1793 joined the legion under General Wayne, who soon noticed the ardent young \^rgi- nian, and selected him as one of his aids-de-camp. In this honourable post he served with credit, and learned the art of war in a severe school. He who followed the footsteps of Wayne reposed not on beds of down, nor trod in paths strewed with flowers. On the 28th of November, 1792, the army left Pittsburgh, and took up a position on the Ohio WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 31 twenty-two miles below that place, and seven above the mouth of Beaver, which assumed tlie name of Legionvillc. Huts were constructed for the whole force ; the general^nd his officers remain- ing in tents until all the soldiers were completely accommodated. The position was strongly forti- fied, and every precaution taken to prevent sur- prise. The enemy was within striking distance, and the utmost vigilance was necessary to preserve the army, to teach it self-reliance, and to impress the foe with respect for our arms. One of the duties confided to Wayne by the sa- gacious Washington, was that of conciliating the friendly tribes ; and accordingly an early invitation was sent to Cornplanter and New Arrow, distin- guished chiefs of the Six Nations, to visit the com- mander-in-chief at Legionville. They came in March 1793, accompanied by Big Tree, and the aged Guasutha. On this occasion a toast was given by Cornplanter, at the general's table, which showed clearly their opinion of the terms upon which peace should be established between the red and white men. " My mind and heart are upon that river," said the chief, pointing to the Ohio — "may that water ever continue to run, and remain the boundary of lasting peace between the Ameri- cans, and the Indians on its opposite shore." If such was the language boldly held in the presence of the representative of our government, by the 32 MEMOIR or chiefs in amity with us, it is not difficult to infer the disposition of the hostile tribes. A permanent boundary, which should for ever separate them from the further encroachment of our people, had always been the natural and not unreasonable de- sire of the Indians. The Ohio was the boundary now insisted upon by British policy ; and in conse- quence of their intrigues, the American government was required by the Indians to relinquish all claims north and west of that river, although repeated treaties, and fair purchase, had transferred to them large portions of the territory, which had been pledged by Congress to the officers and soldiers of the revolution, and parts of which were now occupied by actual settlers. In the event of our refusal to comply with terms so entirely inadmissi- ble, so sternly opposed to our interest, honour, and good faith, a general and desolating war was the only alternative. These facts are necessary to a distinct understanding of the subsequent events. The war was not one of aggression upon our part. It was sanctioned by justice, and impelled by the duty of self-defence ; it was imperatively required to break up the pernicious influence of an insi- dious European foe, and to curb the ferocity of the savage. The dispatches of Wayne to the government soon assumed a tone of confidence, widely differ- ent from that which characterized his letters from WILLIAM IIKNUY HARRISON. 33 Pittsburgli. The troops improved rtipidly in disci- pline, liarmony and order were established, military pride and zeal were awakened, and an ardent de- sire for active duty animated the whole legion. Alluding to this change, and to a proposition of the government that commissioners should be ap- pointed to attempt a treaty with the Indians, he playfully expressed in one of his letters a desire to be present at the proposed convention, " with 2500 of his commissioners, with not a single Quaker among them ;" adding, " in which case I feel con- fident an honourable peace would be the result." 'On the 30th of April, 1793, General Wayne broke up his position at Legionville, and conveyed his army in boats to Fort Washington, an outpost upon the site now occupied by the city of Cincin- nati. Here he was detained by the orders of the government. The Indians had intimated a desire to treat ; and the government, earnestly intent on trying to the last tne benevolent medium of nego- tiation, deputed General Lincoln, Colonel Pickering, and Beverly Randolph, to meet the chiefs at San- dusky. The accurate writer from whom we have already quoted, describes in the following terms the situa- tion of the army during the pendency of the nego- tiation : " Thus restrained from active operations, General Wayne devoted himself to perfecting the prepara- 34 MEMOIR OF tions necessary, if the negotiations should not, as he was fully persuaded they would not, eventuate in peace. The troops were manoeuvred and disci- plined — arrangements were adopted for bringing into service an auxiliary aid of mounted volunteers from Kentucky. Vigorous exertions were made to insure a full supply of provisions, especially at the head of the line ; for the commanding general was fully impressed with the importance of placing the army not only beyond the reach, but beyond the apprehension, of want. It is scarcely possible to conceive the difficulties encountered in effecting this . indispensable object ; so inadequate were the con- tractor's supplies to accomplish the wishes of the commander-in-chief, that additional and effectual means were adopted to effect the purpose. In truth, from the moment of his taking the com- mand, from the want of experienced officers, in several departments, it became necessary for him to attend to them much in detaif. By the organiza- tion of the legion, he was entitled to the aid of* four brigadier generals, whereas he had but one during the greater period of his campaigns, and at no time more than two ; one of whom was his gallant and distinguished friend. General Thomas Posey. His vigilant eye, however, let nothing pass without the closest inspection, and his untiring industry and de- votion were repaid by the order and perfection intro- duced into every department of the army." * * * WILLIAM IIENKV IIAKUISON. 35 " In the extraordinary situation of the world, the conduct of France, Great Britain, aftd Sjjain, fre- quently influencing events in which the army were concerned, called for his animadversions, and they will uniformly be found to be those of a statesman of enlarged, liberal, and correct views, breathing throughout the purest patriotism." As had been foreseen by General Wayne, the negotiations failed. The Indians obstinately per- sisted in demanding that the Ohio should be the established boundary, and haughtily refused to treat upon any other terms. The government therefore ordered General Wayne to commence active ope- rations, to carry them forward with vigour, but by no means to risk a defeat, which, under existing circumstances, would have been ^^ pernicious in the highest degree to the interests of the country." Wayne had made his arrangements in advance of these instructions, had called to his assistance a thousand mounted men from Kentucky, broken up his head-quarters at Hobson's Choice, near Fort Washington, and commenced his march on the 7th of October. On the 13th of the same month, he took a position six miles in advance of Fort Jeffer- son, and eighty miles from Fort Washington, on the south-west branch of the Miami. This was fortified in a manner to render it impregnable to a savage force, and called Greeneville. In a dispatch dated 2:3d October, 1793, General 36 MEMOIR OF Wayne describes an attack on the 17th, upon a convoy of provisions, consisting of ninety men, under Lieutenant Lowry and Ensign Bdyd. " These two gallant young gentlemen, who promised at a future day to be ornaments to their profession, to- gether with thirteen men, non-commissioned offi- cers and privates, bravely fell, after an obstinate resistance against superior numbers, being aban- doned by the greater part of the escort upon the first discharge." Such was the terror inspired by the Indians, and such the difficulty of inducing even trained soldiers to face the imaginary dangers of the conflict. About this time a band of Kentuckians under General Scott joined the army ; but as the season was too far advanced for effective operations in the field, they were permitted to return. On the 23d of December, eight companies of infantry, and a detachment of artillery, under Major Burbeck, were dispatched to take possession' of the field of battle of the 4th November, 1791, and to fortify the position. To the new post thus established was given the name of Fort Recovery. The following general order was issued on the return of the troops from that mournful but highly interesting expedition : — " The commander-in-chief returns his most grate- ful thanks to Major Henry Burbeck, and to every officer, non-commissioned officer, and private, be- WILLIAM HENRY IlARRISOIV. 37 lonsxinn to tlic detachment under his command, for their soldierly and exemplary good conduct during their late arduous tour of duty, and the cheerfulness with which they surmounted every difficulty, at this inclement season, in repossessing General St. Clair's field of battle, and erecting thereon Fort Recover}/, a work impregnable by savage force ; as also for piously and carefully collecting and in- terring the bones, and paying the last respect and military honours to the remains of the heroes who fell on the 4th of November, 1791, by three times three discharges from the same artillery that was lost on that fatal day, but now recovered by this detachment of the legion. ' " The commander-in-chief also requests Major Mills, Captains De Butts and Butler, Lieutenant Harrison, and Dr. Scott, to accept his best thanks for their voluntary aid and services on this occa- sion." Thus early do we find the name of Harrison identified with deeds of patriotism and valour. The Indian councils were now cunningly direct- ed. Breathing war and vengeance, and bent on the expulsion of the whites from the north-western territory, they yet pretended to be still willing to accede to amicable terms; and shortly after the erection of Fort Recovery, a message was sent by them to General Wayne, to propose that negotia- tions should be opened, for the adjustment of all 4 38 MEMOIR OF existing difficulties. Fully empowered to make peace, or to prosecute the war, and satisfied of the earnest desire of the President to avoid bloodshed, General Wayne felt himself obliged to meet the overture with apparent satisfaction, and to open a treaty; while he was convinced that the secret object of the enemy was to gain time, to lull his vigilance, and to reconnoitre his strength. He re- quired as a preliminary to any treaty, that all American captives in the hands of the Indians should be released, and gave them thirty days in which to do this, and to make their propositions. A singular occurrence marked this temporary cessation of hostilities. On the departure of the flag, charged with the pacific message of Wayne, Big Tree, a distinguished Seneca warrior, who had attached himself to our cause, committed suicide. " I have lost," said he, " a very dear friend — the friend of my heart — General Richard Butler." He had sworn to sacrifice three victims to the manes of his friend ; and exasperated at the idea of a peace, which would defeat his purpose, he put an end to his existence. New difficulties accumulated round this gallant army. Combinations of persons were said to be formed in Kentucky, for the purpose of invading the Spanish territory on the lower Mississippi ; and the governor of Louisiana, to be prepared for the threatened aggression, had advanced within the WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 89 boundaries of the United States, and fortified a po- sition at the Chickasaw bluffs. The spoliations committed by the piratical fleets of Great Britain upon our commerce, the hostile spirit manifested in the whole tone of the measures of that government, the speech of Lord Dorchester to the Indians, in- citing them to rapine, the refusal to deliver up the posts still maintained in the wilderness of the north- western territory, — all contributed to render a war with Great Britain probable. Even lately a British force had been audaciously thrown into our terri- tory, and a fort erected by them at the rapids of the Miami. To meet the various points of danger indicated by these events. General Wayne garri- soned Fort Massac, on the Ohio, 60 miles above its confluence with the Mississippi, opened a cor- respondence with the patriotic governor of Ken- tucky, and proceeded to crush the intended irruption into Louisiana, as well as to guard against the military movements of the British. The Indians refused to treat, and active opera- tions were resumed. Nothing delayed the move- ment towards the enemy, but the expected arrival of the Kentucky volunteers, whose aid had been promised. On the 30th of June, 1794, an escort of riflemen and dragoons, under Major M'Mahan, was attacked under the guns of Fort Recovery, and a general assault made upon that post. The engagement 40 MEMOIR OF was obstinate ; the savages, though several times repulsed, renewed the fight with spirit, and were at last defeated with a considerable loss of their war- riors. An auxiliary force of British soldiers, com- manded by their proper officers, were mingled with the Indians on this occasion. • The assailants were about 1500 in number; their loss was great, and the victory over them triumphant and cheering. About the middle of July, General Scott arrived from Kentucky, with his command of mounted vo- lunteers; and on the 8th of August, General Wayne took up a position at Grand Glaise, in the very heart of the Indian country, and 70 miles in ad- vance of Greeneville. This movement was so rapid, and was executed with such consummate skill, that had it not been for the desertion of a soldier, who conveyed the intelligence to the Bri- tish, the surprise of the enemy would have been complete, and their defeat inevitable. By this bold and prudent measure, the army was established in the midst of extensive Indian settlements which were under the immediate protection of a British garrison. In a letter written upon this occasion to the Secretary of War, he remarks, " Thus, sir, we have gained possession of the grand emporium of the hostile Indians in the west, without loss of blood. The very extensive and highly cultivated fields and gardens show the work of many hands. The margins of those beautiful rivers, the Miami WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 41 of the Lake, and Au Glaise, appear like one conti- nued village for a number of nniles above and below the place ; nor have I ever before beheld such im- mense fields of corn in any part of America, from Canada to Florida." Having erected a stronfr work at the confluence of the rivers above mentioned, which he called Fort Defiance ; and being now prepared to strike the enemy, he made a last attempt at conciliation. " I have thought proper," he said, " to offer the enemy a last overture of peace ; and as they have every thing that is dear and interesting at stake, I have reason to expect they will listen to the pro- position mentioned in the inclosed copy of an ad- dress dispatched yesterday by a speoial flag, under circumstances that will insure his safe return, and which may eventually spare the effusion of much human blood." " But should war be their choice, that blood be upon their own heads. America shall no longer be insulted with impunity. To an all powerful and just God, I therefore commit myself and gallant army." The overture was rejected, against the advice of the distinguished, chief Little Turtle, a man of great capacity and unimpeached courage, who, in a coun- cil of the combined Indians, on the night previous to the battle, held the followino; lans^uasfe : " We have beaten the enemy twice under separate com- manders. We cannot expect the same good for- 4* 42 MEMOIR OF tune to attend us always. The Americans are now led by a chief who never sleeps : the night and the day are alike to him. And during all the time he has been marching upon our villages, not- withstanding the watchfulness of our young men, we have never been able to surprise him. . Think well of it. There is something whispers me it would be prudent to listen to his offers of peace." The splendid engagement which ensued, is me- morable as well from the consummate skill dis- played by the general, and the valour of the troops, as from the important consequences that flowed from our victory. The success of Wayne was owing to his vigilance, the high discipline of his army, and the system of tactics which he adopted. Abandon- ing the close order, which would have beei;i proper in fighting European troops, but which it is imprac- ticable to preserve in thickly wooded grounds, while it exposes men in solid masses to the uner- ring aim of the sharp-shooting savage, — he adopted an open order, which enabled his men to move with more facility among the trees, exposed them less to the fire of the enemy, and extended the line of battle, so as to defeat the usual stratagem of the foe, that of turning the flank and striking at the rear. We cannot describe the battle itself better than by quoting entirely the official account of the com- mander-in-chief: WILLIAM ILENRY HARRISON. 43 "IlEAn Quarters, > Grayid Glaizc, 2Sth August, 1704. } " Sir, " It is with infinite pleasure that I now announce to you the briUiant success of the federal army under my command, in a general action with the combined force of the hostile Indians, and a consi- derable number of the volunteers and militia of Detroit, on the 20th instant, on the banks of the Miami, in the vicinity of the British post and garri- son, at the foot of the rapids. " The army advanced from this place on the 15th instant, and arrived at Roche de Bout on the 18th; the 19th we were employed in making a temporary post for the reception of our stores and baggage, and in reconnoitring the position of the enemy, who were encamped behind a thick bushy wood, and the British fort. "At 8 o'clock on the 20th, the army again advanced in columns, agreeably to the standing order of march ; the legion on the right flank, co- vered by the Miami, — one brigade of mounted" vol- unteers on the left, under Brigadier General Todd, and the other in the rear, under Brigadier General Barbee : — a select battalion of mounted volunteers moved in front of the legion, commanded by Major Price, who was directed to keep sufficiently ad- vanced — so as to give timely notice for the troops to form, in case of action — it being yet undcter- I 44 MEMOIR OF mined whether the Indians would decide for peace or war. After advancing about five miles, Major Price's corps received so severe a fire from the enemy, who were secreted in the woods and high grass, as to compel them to retreat. " The legion was immediately formed in two lines, principally in a close, thick wood, which ex- tended for miles on our left ; and for a very consi- derable distance in front, the ground being covered with old fallen timber, probably occasioned by a tornado, which rendered it impracticable for cavalry to act with effect, and afforded the enemy the most favourable covert for their savage mode of warfare, they were formed in three lines, within supporting distance of each other, and extending nearly two miles, at right angles with the river. " I soon discovered, from the weight of the fire, and extent of their lines, that the enemy were in full force in front, in possession of their favourite ground, and endeavouring to turn our left flank. I therefore gave orders for the second line to advance, to support the first, and directed Major General Scott to gain and turn the right flank of the sav- ages, with the whole of the mounted volunteers, by a circuitous route ; at the same time I ordered the front line to advance with trailed arms, and rouse the Indians from their coverts at the point of the bayonet ; and, when up, to deliver a close and well directed fire on their backs, followed by a brisk WILLIAM HENRY IIARUISON. 45 charge, so as not to give them time to load again. [ also ordered Captain Miss Campbell, who com- manded the legionary cavalry, to turn the left flank of the enemy next the river, which aflbrded a fa- vourable field for that corps to act in. " All these orders were obeyed with spirit and promptitude ; but such was the impetuosity of the charge of the first line of infantry, that the Indians and Canadian militia and volunteers were driven from all their coverts in so short a time, that although every exertion was used by the officers of ihe second line of the legion, and by Generals Scott, Todd, and Barbcc, of the mounted volun- teers, to gain their proper positions, yet but a part of each could get up in season to participate in the action ; the enemy being driven, in the course of one hour, more than two miles, through the thick woods already mentioned, by less than one-half their numbers. " From every account, the enemy amounted to two thousand combatants ; the troops actually en- gaged against them were short of nine hundred. This horde of savages, with their allies, abandoned themselves to flight, and dispersed with terror and dismay, leaving our victorious army in full and quiet possession of the field of battle, which termi- nated under the influence of the guns of the British garrison, as you will observe by the inclosed cor- 46 MEMOIR OP respondence between Major Campbell, the com- mandant, and myself, upon the occasion. " The bravery and conduct of every officer be- longing to the army, froni the generals down to the ensigns, merit my highest approbation. There were, however, some whose rank and situation placed their conduct in a very conspicuous point of view, and which I observed with pleasure and the most lively gratitude : among Whom I beg leave to mention Brigadier General Wilkinson,* and Co- lonel Hamtramck, the commandants of the right and left wings of the legion, whose brave example inspired the troops ; and to these I must add the names of my faithful and gallant aids-de-camp. Captains De Butts and T. Lewis, and Lieutenant Harrison, who, with the adjutant general. Major Mills, rendered the most essential service by com- municating my orders in every direction, and by their conduct and bravery exciting the troops to press for victory. Lieutenant Covington, upon whom the command of the cavalry now devolved, cut down two savages with his own hand, and Lieutenant Webb one, in turning the enemy's left flank. "The wounds received by Captains Slough and Prior, and Lieutenants Campbell, Smith (an extra * The gallant and veteran General Posey was not in the battle. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 47 nid-do-camp to General Wilkinson) of the legionary infantry, and Captain Van Rcnsellacr, of the dra- goons, and Captain Rawlins, Lieutenant M'Kenney, and Ensign Duncan, of the mounted volunteers, bear honourable testimony of their bravery and conduct. " Captains H. Lewis and Brock, with their com- panies of light infantry, had to sustain an unequal fire for some time, which they supported with for- titude. In fact, every officer and soldier who had an opportunity to come into action, displayed that true bravery which will always insure success. " And here permit me to declare, that I never discovered more true spirit and anxiety for action than appeared to pervade the whole of the mounted volunteers ; and I am well persuaded that had the enemy maintained their favourite ground but for one half hour longer, they would have most severely felt the prowess of that corps. " But whilst I pay this just tribute to the living, I must not forget the gallant dead ; among whom we have to lament the early death of those worthy and brave officers. Captain Miss Campbell of the dragoons, and Lieutenant Towles of the light in- fantry of the legion, who fell in the first charge. "Inclosed is a particular return of the killed and wounded — the loss of the enemy was more than double that of the federal army. The woods were strewed for a considerable distance with the 48 ME3I0IR OF • dead bodies of the Indians, and their white auxilia- ries ; the latter armed with British muskets and bayonets. " We remained three days and nights on the banks of the Miami, in front of the field of battle, durincr which all the houses and corn-fields were consumed and destroyed for a considerable dis- tance, both above and below Fort Miami, as well as within pistol-shot of that garrison, who were compelled to remain tacit spectators of this general devastation and conflagration — among which were the houses, stores, and property of Colonel M'Kee, the British Indian agent, and principal stimulator •of the war now existing between the United States and the savages. " The army returned to this place on the 27th by easy marches, laying waste the villages and corn-fields for about fifty miles on each side of the Miami ; there remain yet a number of villages, and a great quantity of corn to be consumed or de- stroyed, upon Au Glaize and the Miami, which will be effected in the course of a few days. In the interim we shall improve Fort Defiance, and as soon as the escort returns with the necessary supplies from Greeneville and Fort Recovery, the army will proceed to the Miami villages, in order to accomplish the object of the campaign. " It is, however, not improbable that the enemy may make one more desperate effort against the ■1: WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 49 army; as it is said that a reinforcement was hourly expected at Fort Miami, from Niagara, as well as numerous tribes of Indians, living on the margins and islands of the lakes. This is a business rather to be wished for than dreaded, as long as the army remains in force. Their numbers will only tend to confuse the savages, and the victory will be more complete and decisive — and which may event- ually insure a permanent and happy peace. ■ " Under these impressions, I have the honour to be, " Your most obedient, " And very humble servant, " Anthony Wayne. "The Hon. Major Gen. Knox, Secretary Knox, ) of Warr 5 The reader need scarcely be informed, that the Lieutenant Harrison who is mentioned with such distinguished honour in this dispatch, is the indi- vidual whose biography we are writing, and who subsequently practised with so much ability and success the military lesson learned under the teach- ing of Wayne. . The action had scarcely terminated, when it was announced from one of the advanced guards of the army, that a British officer had presented himself, with a flag, bearing a letter to General Wayne. An aid-de-camp was sent to 'receive it. It proved to be a communication from the commandant of 5 60 MEMOIR OF Fort Miami, Colonel Campbell, requesting General Wayne to inform him whether he was to consider the American army as enemies, adding that he was ignorant of the existence of any war between the King his masteis and the United States. General Wayne replied, that his motive for coming there might have been readily inferred by Colonel Camp- bell, from the firing of the American arms in the battle that had just ceased, between his army and the hostile Indians, who, being defeated, had fled for protection to the fort which the colonel com- manded ; and required of him to say by what au- thority a British military post had been established within the acknowledged territories of the United States. To this Colonel Campbell replied, that he had been sent there by his superior officer, and being there, should defend the fort until the fortune of war should oblige him to surrender. General Wayne had authority from the Presi- dent to take this fort if it in any manner impeded his operations against the Indians, and was little disposed to suffer the permission to remain unacted upon. No service could have been so acceptable to his brave battalions, who would have embraced with eagerness an opportunity to avenge the suffer- ings of their countrymen upon the real instigators of the war. But that chief, though popularly called " Mad Anthony," was as cool and sagacious in his designs, as he was impetuous in their execution. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 61 The capture of the fort would have led to import- ant results, into which it was not politic to conrimit the nation, unless the measure should be actually- necessary to the success of the campaign ; nor did he think it prudent to weaken his army by the at- tempt, if the work should prove so strong as to require a great expenditure of life in its reduction. A thorough examination of the work was deter- mined upon ; and a grand reconnoissance was ac- cordingly made by the commander-in-chief, attend- ed by all the staff of the army, and escorted by the light troops. The general, attended by a troop of dragoons, approached to a ravine, within 100 yards of the fort. Here it was supposed he would have remained ; but after halting a few moments he be- gan leisurely to ascend the hill which formed the ravine, accompanied by his aids-de-camp De Butts and Harrison. As soon as they were unmasked by the hill, it was discovered that they were within 50 or 60 yards of a bastion of the fort, presenting numerous embrasures, out of which cannon of the largest calibre were protruded, with the gunners leaning over them with lighted portfires, prepared to fire. The sentinel upon the salient angle brought his piece to a recover, preparatory to firing. Har- rison announced the latter circumstance to the general, remarking that he would immediately be shot. With his accustomed coolness. General Wayne replied, that the sentinel dared not fire. 52 MEMOIR OP At this moment General Wilkinson, with his staff, came dashing up the ravine at a gallop ; and the British probably supposed that troops were ad- vancing to a charge. A bustle ensued in the bastion, and an officer was seen, restraining with difficulty the soldiers from firing. General Wayne reined back his horse, and retired slowly, followed by the staffi Before he reached his quarters, another letter was brought from Colonel Campbell, complaining of the insulting conduct of General Wayne, in ap- proaching so near his fort, and declaring that if it was repeated he must fire upon him. Wayne treated this as a ridiculous bravado ; but believing that the loss of life which must accompany an at- tempt to carry so strong a work by escalade, would not be compensated by the advantage to be gained, he gave up the idea of making the attack. The haughty spirit of the Indian tribes was broken by the decisive victory of the 20th of Au- gust. They were taught to respect and fear our arms, and to doubt the power of Britain to protect them. On the 1st of January, 1795, they opened a negotiation for peace, by agreeing to surrender all captives in their possession, to ratify former treaties, and to comply generally with the terms offered them by General Wayne ; for the faithful performance of which they gave hostages. Other beneficial results ensued. The news of the victory reached London on the 19th of November, ninety WILLIAM IIEXRV 11 ARUISON. 53 days after the battle, and produced such an impres- sion there, that the protracted negotiation pending between Mr. Jay and Lord Grenville, was brought to a conclusion highly advantageous to our govern- ment. A treaty was finally held at Greeneville between General Wayne and a numerous repre- sentation of the Indian tribes, in which important concessions were made to our government, and the Indians were as much conciliated by the affability, moderation, and fairness, of the American com- mander, and the liberality of our government, as they had been awed by the prowess of our troops. Shortly after the close of this campaign. Captain Harrison, though still retaining his rank as an aid- de4femp of General Wayne, was placed, as a con- fidential officer! in command of Fort Washinirton, under circumstances which show the high estima- tion in which his talents and discretion were held by the commander-in-chief. At this period, certain asjents of the French crovernmcnt were encaged in a deep-laid intrigue in Kentucky, the object of which was to excite that gallant people into a war with the Spanish of Louisiana, and by thus embroil- ing our government with Spain, to force it into a league with France. Commissions were offered to individuals, money and munitions were promised, and the adventurous spirits of the west were encou- raged to engage upon their own responsibility in a campaign for the purpose of wresting Louisiana 5* . 54 MEMOIR OF from the Spaniards, and settling by the sword the long disputed question of the right of the Ameri- cans to navigate the Mississippi. So alluring was this project in the eyes of those who had long felt themselves injured by the insolent and oppressive demands of Spain, and whose sterling patriotism and love for the union had alone induced them to suppress their indignation at the earnest solicitation of the President — that now, when the opportunity offered, some of the most distinguished men of the west, were disposed to engage in the adventure. It was even to be feared, that when peace should be established on the north-western frontier, many valuable young officers might be induced to resign their commissions, and seek employment in this popular though unauthorized war. General Wayne, besides keeping up a corres- pondence with the governor of Kentucky, and gar- risoning Fort Massac, placed Captain Harrison at Fort Washington, with extensive discretionary pow- ers to be used as circumstances might require. He was, among other duties, instructed to keep the general advised of all movements towards the pro- posed enterprise, and to prevent the passage down the river of boats laden with military stores, belong- ing to the French agents. The British posts on the northern frontier, so long held in violation of good faith, were about this time given up ; and the troops intended to oc- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 55 cupy them, together with the armament and stores, were sent to Fort Washington, and forwarded thence through the wilderness. Captain Harrison was the organ through which these troops received their orders, and the officer specially charged with the commands and intentions of the general in relation to the whole operation. It is no slight evidence of the prudence, ability, and intelligence of Harrison, that at an early age, and with the rank only of captain, he was selected by the dis- criminating Wayne to discharge duties so import- ant, and exercise a responsibility so delicate. It is enough to say, that in this, as well as in the vari- ous subsequent trusts reposed in him throughout a long career, he honourably vindicated, by his fidel- ity and zeal, the choice of the appointing power. While in command of Fort Washington, Captain Harrison married the lady who has been the faith- ful companion of this distinguished patriot, during the various perils and vicissitudes of his eventful life, and lives to witness the maturity of his fame, and the honours paid him by a grateful country. She was the daughter of John Cleves Symmes, the founder of the Miami settlements. 56 MEMOIR OP CHAPTER IV. Captain Harrison appointed Secretary of the Territory — His first election to Congress — His services in reference to the sale of public lands. On the death of General Wayne, in 1797, Cap- tain Harrison left the army, and received his first civil appointment — that of secretary of the north- western territory, and, ex officio, lieutenant-gover- nor. He had already perilled his life in defence of the scattered settlements of the west ; he now became identified with the people in their domestic hard- ships, and their arduous labours in founding liberal institutions in the wilderness. They had difficul- ties to encounter, which can hardly be realized by those who have only beheld the peace and pros- i perity which now prevail in our happy country. Emigrating from distant lands, they found them- selves placed in scenes where every thing was new. The freshness and beauty of nature, in her most fascinating and prolific forms, were around them ; but the elements of society, law, industry, and moral influence, existed only in a chaos, which required wisdom and power little less than creative, 1 WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON: 67 to unite them under a harmonious system. They had settled in damp forests, where sickness chilled their energies, and sometimes swept whole families to the grave. They had none of the luxuries, and few of the comforts, of life; the supply of absolute necessaries was comprised within the narrow bound of such food and shelter as the axe and the rifle could procure. They had houses to build, and farms to clear. The wolf and panther howled around them — the venomous serpent was in their path — and the wily Indian crept upon the sleeping family, in that unconscious hour when the toils of hard labour were succeeded by the repose of sleep. From these privations and toils none were ex- empt — the farmer, the hunter, the trader, and the civil officer, alike inhabited the log cabin, shared the dangers of battle, and mingled in labours for the civil improvement and political exaltation of the growing community. It was in this school that Mr. Harrison became intimately acquainted with the character, the wants, and the wishes of his countrymen. He learned the lessons of politi- cal economy out of the great volume of human na- ture. At the fireside of the farmer, at the camp of the hunter, at the frontier fortress, at the council of the governor, at the festive gatherings of the people, he learned all that could be known of the true state of the country and its inhabitants. Mr. Harrison's conduct in the office of secretary, 58 ' MEMOIR OF and his popular manners, met with marked public approbation ; and when, in the ensuing year, the north-western territory entered into the second grade of government, and the people were autho- rized to elect a delegate to Congress, he was the first individual chosen to fill that office. The mode of disposing of the public lands, by which, except in peculiar situations, they were offered in tracts o^ four thousand acres, was par- ticularly odious to the people, and subversive of their interests, if not of their rights. It was an arrangement presenting the most aristocratic fea- tures, and was calculated alike to benefit the wealthy monopolist, and to retard the settlement of a new and fertile country. At a period when money was scarce, and when commercial facilities had not been extended to the region west of the mountains, few individuals could make even so large a purchase as a single tract of that size. The actual settlers were poor, and as regarded ,them, the law amounted to an absolute denial of the ad- vantage of becoming freeholders. The very men who had the best claim to the ownership of the soil, and were most entitled to the protection of the government — the pioneer who had won the country by toil and peril, the farmer who was enduring the labour of clearing the soil, the sturdy yeomanry who formed the bone and muscle of the population, were precluded from all possibility of becoming WILLIAM HENRY IIAIIRISON. 59 the owners of the homes established by their enter- prise, courage, and industry ; and were threatened with the continuance of a system which would have reduced them and their children into the ten- ants and vassals of a few wealthy nabobs. The grants wdiich had in several instances been made, of large tracts in the western country, to in- dividuals or companies, were liable to a similar objection. The direct effect was to place extensive regions of desirable lands in the hands of specula- tors, and to force the settlers to become tenants, or purchasers at second hand. The operation of these measures, if we can suppose for a moment that the people would have tamely submitted to them, would have been the building up of a class of princely proprietors, who would have revelled in the wealth earned by a hard-working tenantry. The injustice of such a system forcibly struck Mr. Harrison, and he took the earliest opportunity of exposing its de- fects. The efficient stand made by him on this question, pointed him out to the people as the pro- per individual to represent them on the floor of Congress, and to effect a change in a system, which, if persisted in, would have been attended with the most disastrous results. Mr. Harrison acquiesced in the will of the people, and took his seat in Congress. When the representative of the north-western territory entered upon his duties, the Congress was 60 MEMOIR OF distinguished by an amount of talent which has seldom been equalled, even in that body. Among other well-known names, those of Ross, Bayard, Harper, Gallatin, Marshall, and Giles, stood pre- eminent. An association with such men was an admirable school for the young delegate ; and his subsequent course has proved that he did not suffer the opportunity to pass unimproved. The friends he then made remained through life, and many of the most distinguished men in that Congress saw, in the industry, quickness, and enterprise, of Mr. Harrison's character, those qualities which were to fit him for future usefulness. To the knowledge which the general government then acquired of Mr. Harrison's capacity for public business, may be fairly imputed the numerous appointments which he afterwards received. One of the first acts of Mr. Harrison, in his legis- lative character, had reference to a subject of ab- sorbing interest to the western population, and he has the honour of having led the way in that gra- dual improvement in the system of disposing of the public domain, which has led to the present equi- table arrangement. After the ordinary preliminary steps required by prudence, he offered a resolution, by which a committee was raised, with instructions to inquire into, and report, on the then existing mode of selling public lands. He was appointed chairman of that committee, and it is believed that WILLIAM HENKY IIAUUISON. 61 this is the only instance in which that distinction has been conferred upon a territorial delegate. In due time he made a report, accompanied by a bill, which was calculated to change the whdle sys- tem, and the chief feature of which was, to reduce the size of the tracts to a number of acres less than four thousand, so as to place them within the reach of the farmer and actual settler. It is difficult to imagine at this day, how a body so enlightened could have hesitated in the adoption of a measure of such obvious advantage to the government, and so eminently just to that hardy class who were to endure the toil of subduing the wilderness, and who had the best ri2;ht to become the owners of the soil. The report produced a powerful sensation, and gained for the chairman a reputation unexam- pled in the career of so young a man, and at his first appearance on the political arena. The docu- ment, however, was not, it is believed, his own ex- clusive production : the masterly pen and acute mind of iMr. Gallatin largely contributed to it; and although the earnest request of this able citizen, and the peculiar circumstances of the moment, forced Mr. Harrison to submit to the credit of being the sole author, ^the natural ingenuousness of his character prevented him from remaining the subject of undeserved eulogy an instant longer than sound policy required. As soon as he could honestly relieve himself from the constraint imposed by cir- 6 62 MEMOIR OP cumstances, he gave the merit of tlie report to Mr. Gallatin. However the fact may be, the able and discreet manner in which he conducted the debate, left no reason to suspect the authorship of the report, or the bill. It was warmly attacked by Cooper, of New- York, and by the eloquent and classic Lee, of Virginia. Mr. Harrison defended it alone; he exposed the folly and iniquity of the old system ; demonstrated that it could only result to the benefit of the wealthy monopolist and desperate land-job- ber, while that species of population which has since poured into the fertile plains of Ohio, and made it in forty years the third state in the union, must have been excluded from her borders, or taken the land at second-hand, from the wealthy purchasers from the government. Mr. Harrison was perfect master of the subject ; he had examined the whole ground, and his ardent zeal and manly eloquence bore down opposition. The bill was carried triumphantly through the lower house. It met with powerful opposition in the Senate, and a committee of conference was finally agreed upon between the two bodies. Messrs. Ross and Brown acted as managers on the part of the Senate, and Mr. Gallatin and Mr. Harrison on the part of the House of Representatives. The discussion at length resulted in a compromise, by which the land was to be sold in alternate whole WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 63 and half sections, instead of in half and quarter sections, as proposed in Mr. Harrison's bill. The point gained, however, was immense : a reduction in the minimvm size of the tracts from 4000 down to 040 and 320 acres, was of incalculable import- ance, and extinguished, in a great measure, the splendid visions of the wealthy speculator. Had the bill been delayed one year, it is more than pro- bable that a large portion of Ohio would have been sold otf in four thousand acre tracts to the capital- ists, to the exclusion of that useful class, which has since given the spring to the glory and prosperity of the state. Emboldened by his success in his first attempt in favour of popular rights, Mr. Harrison introduced a resolution to change the mode of locating military land-warrants. He exposed in a forcible manner the injustice of the mode then in operation. The House was again favourable to his views. A com- mittee was authorized to sit during the session, who reported a bill, which was passed. The effect of these measures was beneficially felt throughout the whole region north-west of the Ohio, and is now seen in the prosperity of a million and a half of freemen. Their results upon the popularity of Mr. Harrison were gratifying and substantial. Petitions were extensively circulated among the new settlers, who found themselves secured in the invaluable privilege of becoming 64 MEMOIR OF freeholders, requesting the President to appoint Mr. Harrison governor of the north-western territory. He was himself the first to oppose the object of these petitions. With a delicacy honourable to himself, and a respect for the venerable St. Clair, which was due to that eminent soldier, he refused to suffer his name to be placed in competition with that of his venerable friend. But as the territory was about this time divided, and that of Indiana erected, he accepted in 1801 the government of the latter. Thus far we have seen this distinguished gentle- man most honourably engaged in the service of his country. His bravery and conduct in the field won him the applause of Wayne, who was no in- different judge of merit ; and no sooner was the war ended, than he turned his attention to civil pursuits. Here we find him the zealous and able advocate of the best interests of the people, con- tending fearlessly for their rights. Though young and inexperienced, and though opposed by able and veteran statesmen, he did not shrink from his duty, but nobly earned the title which has since* been conferred upon him by common consent, — that of Father of the north-western territory. In politics, Mr. Harrison early identified himself with the republican party ; and though never vio- lent or acrimonious, he has steadily adhered to the political maxims of that school, and has always WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 65 been found the zealous advocate of popular rights. When in office, he has never shown a disposition to grasp at power, but has always endeavoured to ascertain the wishes of the people, to comply with their instructions, and to advance their interests. The administration that first appointed him to civil office, knew his devotion to the principles of the revolution, and his zeal for the diffusion of the pure maxims of democracy. Neither they, their suc- cessors, nor the people, have ever had cause to repent their confidence in his patriotism. 6* 66 MEMOIR OP CHAPTER V. Affairs of Indiana — Duties of Mr. Harrison as Governor, Superintendent of Indian Affairs, and Commissioner for treating with the Indians. The powers conferred on Mr. Harrison as go- vernor of Indiana, and tjie extent of the, territory- confided to his jurisdiction, were greater than have ever been committed to the charge of any citizen of the United States, except himself. Indiana had the boundaries of an empire, and its governor powers ahTiost unlimited. Ohio having been strick- en off with definite boundaries, the whole of the remainder of the territory of the United States, be- yond the Ohio and Mississippi, fell within his juris- diction — including the wide regions that now com- pose Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan, and for a period of nearly two years, the whole of Louisiana, which was attached to Indiana on its purchase in 1803, and was not erected into a separate territory until July, 1805. It was a new territory, whose institutions were to be formed, and whose prosperity depended on him who should direct its affairs. The right of suffrage had not been extended to the people, they WILLIAM IIENRV HARKISON. 67 had no voice in the election of oflicers, or in the adoption of measures for their own government ; all power in respect to the territory and its inhab- itants was reserved by the general government, and delegated by it to the territorial governor. The task of governing a region so new, and so far distant from the better settled parts of our coun- try, was surrounded with difficulties. The popula- tion was small and widely scattered. There were but three principal settlements — one at the falls of Ohio, opposite to Louisville, another at Vincennes, distant from the first more than a hundred miles, and the other, including the French settlements, in the tract denominated the American Bottom, on the Mississippi, extending from Kaskaskia to Cahokia, two hundred miles from Vincennes ; Detroit was added at the admission of the state of Ohio into the union, and Louisiana when first purchased — and numerous other settlements grew up during the administration of Mr. Harrison. The intermediate country was in the possession of the Indians, and was visited by hunters, who often became embroiled with the savages. The tribes were restless and dissatisfied. Even while peace nominally existed, and during the short inter- vals when the chiefs were disposed to act in good faith, the innate love of the Indian for plunder, the sudden impulse of revenge, or the madness of in- toxication, impelled desperate individuals to the 68 MEMOIR OF perpetration of robbery and murder ; and during the long and gloomy period which was only termi- nated by the war of 1812, the inhabitants scarcely enjoyed any interval of security or repose. The storm sometimes burst at one point, and sometimes at another ; here in petty depredations which were only vexatious, and there in acts of audacious atro- city. Between the distant settlements, the only roads were the paths beaten by the Indians, which were not accommodated with ferries or bridges. There were, of course, no houses of entertainment ; here and there an individual erected a station, consisting of a log house, surrounded by palisades, which afforded the only secure resting-places to travellers journeying through the wilderness. The seat of government was at Vincennes, a village beautifully situated on the Wabash, and inhabited chiefly by French, who, although attach- ed to the new authority recently placed over them, were entirely unacquainted with our language and laws, and preferred the simple institutions under which they had long lived at this isolated spot. Numerous tribes of Indians inhabited the vast wilderness lying beyond these settlements. With these the British traders from Canada carried on an extensive and lucrative traffic, to preserve which in their own hands, and to prevent the competition of our enterprising fellow-citizens, they spared no WILLIAM HENRY HARUISON. 69 pains to embitter the minds of the Indians against our people and government. The period of Gene- ral Harrison's administration was that immediately preceding the second war for independence — that during which our commerce was lawlessly plun- dered on the ocean, our flag insulted, and our native seamen impressed into the service of a for- eign despot, — and throughout all which, a series of fruitless negotiations was prosecuted between our cabinet and that of Great Britain. The impla- cable animosity of that nation, her deafness to the voice of remonstrance, and her obstinate persever- ance in acts of oppression, rendered it certain that a free and high-spirited people could not long main- tain with her the nominal relations of peace, while she was thus practising actual hostility. War was inevitable; and our adversary, in anticipation of that event, instructed her agents and officers on the frontiers of Canada, t^ encourage the dissen- sions between our people and the Indians. The latter were accordingly bribed with liberal presents, furnished with arms and ammunition, and incited to intoxication, war, and plunder. Thus was pre- sented the singular spectacle of one civilized go- vernment endeavourino; to allure the savages to the arts of peace, while another sedulously counteracted the efibrts of humanity, and rolled back, with a gi- gantic arm, the progress of religion and benevo- lence. 70 MEMOIR OF a Unhappily the state of affairs on the frontier afforded ample opportunities for carrying forward this detestable conspiracy against the interests of humanity, as well as the peace and advantage of both the Americans and Indians. Not only was every plausible cause of offence magnified, but the most benevolent acts of our government and peo- ple seized upon and misrepresented. The efforts made to induce the savages to abstain from the use of spirits, were censured as arbitrary, and the mis- sionaries who were sent to civilize and convert them, were denounced as the instruments of a pro- ject to destroy their ancient customs, and reduce them to servitude. In the organization of the first grade of territo- rial government, it was provided that the governor and judges should adopt and publish such laws of the original states, criminal and civil, as might be necessary, and best suited to the circumstances of the district; which laws should be in force until the organization of a legislature for the district. The legislative power therefore, embracing the dif- ficult office of selecting from the numerous statute- books of the different states, such provisions as were suited to the exigencies of a young people, fell chiefly upon the governor. All magistrates and other civil officers, and all militia officers below the grade of general, were WILLIAM IIKNRY IIARH190N. 71 appointed by the governor ; general ofiicers in the militia were to be appointed by Congress. He was commander-in-chief of the militia. The sole power of dividing the district into coun- ties and townships, was also vested in the governor. Besides the pardoning, and all ordinary powers incidental to the office of governor, he was the anient and representative of the general govern- ment, and kept up a voluminous correspondence with the cabinet at Washington, in reference to the affairs of the territory. Another immense power was confided to the governor of Indiana — that of confirming grants of land to a numerous class of individuals, having certain equitable claims which are enumerated in the law. It is a little remarkable that a power so extensive, and so susceptible of abuse, was placed in the hands of a single officer, without any check or limitation. No other officer was required to countersign, or to record, these grants. The appli- cation was made to the governor directly, and his sif^nature vested a title in the claimant. There was no special formality, or publicity, necessary to give validity to the act. It might have been a secret proceeding between the claimant and the granter, and yet have been unquestionable before any legal tribunal. Yet such was the prudence of Governor Harrison, such his scrupulous attention to the public interest, and his nice regard for his 72 MEMOIR OF own honour, that he has always been admitted to have discharged this duty, not only with integrity, but without having incurred suspicion. There are men who, under such circumstances, would have amassed splendid fortunes, by availing themselves of the facilities for speculation thus afforded ; but it is a fact highly creditable to Governor Harrison, and characteristic of the disinterestedness which has marked his public career, that he not only did not avail himself of these opportunities at the time, either directly or indirectly, but that he has never since taken any advantage of the intimate know- ledge of land titles gained in his official capacity, and has not to this day even owned a single acre of land held under a title which originally emanated from himself as the representative of the govern- ment. Nor were these all the labours of this disinter- ested patriot and indefatigable public officer. As governor, he was ex officio superintendent of Indian affairs ; and Mr. Jefferson appointed him sole com- missioner for treating with the Indians. The latter appointment he discharged for a series of years ; having the exclusive charge of this laborious de- partment, and the disbursement of the large sums of money appropriated by Congress to be expended in this quarter, in the purchase of land, and in gra- tuities to the tribes. The success which crowned his labours, and the great influence which he ac- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 78 quired over the north-western tril)cs, fully justified tlie wisdom of this selection. Nearly the whole period of his administration was a continued series of treaties ; and his efficiency as a negotiator is amply proved in his voluminous correspondence with the President, and in the treaties themselves. By one of these he procured the extinguishment of the title to the largest tract of country ever ceded at one time by the Indians, since the settlement of North America. This cession embraced all that territory, from the mouth of the Illinois to the mouth of the Wisconsin, on one side, and from the mouth of the Illinois to the mouth of Fox river, on the other. A line drawn from the latter point to a point on the Wisconsin, thirty-six miles above its mouth, forms the northern boundary of the pur- chase, which embraces fifty-one millions of acres. When it is considered that this territory comprises the richest mineral region in the union, some idea may be formed of its value. In 1805, the territory of Indiana was erected into the second grade of government. By this change, the people advanced one step towards the assumption of the republican rights of suffrage and self-government, and were allowed to elect the members of the popular branch of the legislature ; the latter nominated ten persons, out of whom Con- gress chose five, who constituted the less numerous branch. The assembly thus organized, appointed 7 74 MEMOIR OF a delegate to Congress, who was permitted to speak in that body, and was entrusted with the manage- ment of the business of the territory, but who, not representing a state, could of course have no vote. The change was urgently pressed by Governor Harrison, although it deprived him of much power, and great patronage, as it threw into the hands of the people the election of some officers who had previously been appointed by the executive, and established a legislature that relieved the governor of many of his responsibilities. In this place it may not be amiss to mention an occurrence which establishes the purity of Mr. Harrison's administration, while it reflects high credit on his private character. A person who had become soured against him, in consequence of the active part which he took in elevating the territory into the second grade of government, made some malicious insinuations in reference to the integrity of his negotiations with certain of the Indian tribes. Governor Harrison, conceiving it proper to have a full investigation of the charge, while the subject was fresh, and the testimony within his reach, brought a suit against the de- famer, in the supreme court of the territory. In order that the utmost fairness might be observed, two of the judges left the bench during the trial ; one being the personal friend of the governor, and the other of the defendant. An impartial jury was WILLIAM HENKY HAKRISON. 76 irnpannellcd, by a mode satisfactory to both parties, 'rin' trial had not advanced far before the defend- ant's counsel abandoned their plea of justification, and contended simply for a mitigation of damages. The jury, after an hour's consultation, returned a verdict for 4000 dollars ; an immense verdict in a new country, where money is scarce, and where juries seldom give heavy damages in cases of this description. The property of the defendant was levied upon, sold, and in the absence of the gover- nor bought in by his agent. Two-thirds of the property were afterwards returned to the defendant by General Harrison, and the remainder given to the orphans of some of the gallant citizens who fell in battle during the last war. 76 MEMOIR OF CHAPTER VI. Affairs of Indiana — The Governor's addresses to the Legislature* The speeches of Governor Harrison to the legis- lature, which was established when Indiana came into the second grade of government, are also wor- thy of notice. These embrace all the topics of legislation proper for a people just assuming their political rights, and preparing for admission into the union. They show an intimate acquaintance with the science of government, and with the con- dition of that population, and are characterized by an ardent love for the great principles of freedom. They evince also, that the office of governor was not a sinecure in the hands of Mr. Harrison, and that he participated largely in the organization of all the civil institutions of that state. Many men have been popular governors, whose good qualities were all of a negative character ; they have been respected by the people because they did no harm, and beloved by the members of the legislature be- cause they left to them all the labour and the credit of ruling. Mr. Harrison took his full share of duty and responsibility, and yet was popular. WILLIAM HENRY IIAKUISON. 77 We shall make some quotations from these docu- ments, for the purpose of showing the benign and republican spirit in which Mr. Harrison wrote, as well as the ease and vigour of his style as a writer. The following is an extract from his first message, in 1805:— " Upon a careful review of our situation, it will be found that we have much cause of felicitation, whether it respects our present enjoyments, or our future prosperity. An enlightened and generous policy has for ever removed all cause of contention with our western neighbours. The mighty river which separates us from the Louisianians will never be stained with the blood of contendinsr na- ' tions, but will prove the bond of our union, and will convey upon its bosom, in the course of many thousand miles, the produce of our great and united empire. The astonished traveller will behold upon either bank a people governed by the same laws, pursuing the same objects, and warmed with the same love of liberty and science. And if, in the immense distance, a small point should present itself, where other laws and other manners prevail, the contrast it will afford will serve the useful pur- pose of demonstrating the great superiority of a republican government, and how far the uncon- trolled and unbiassed industry of freemen excels the cautious and measured exertions of the subjects of despotic power. 7» 78 MEMOIR OF " The acquisition of Louisiana will form an im- portant epoch in the history of our country. It has secured the happiness of millions, who will bless the moment of their emancipation, and the gene- rous policy which has secured to them the rights of men. To us it has produced immediate and important advantages. We are no longer appre- hensive of waging an eternal war with the numer- ous and warlike tribes of aborigines that surround us, and perhaps being reduced to the dreadful alter- native of submitting to their depredations, or of ex- terminating them from the earth. "By cutting off their communication with every foreign power, and forcing them to procure from ourselves the arms and ammunition, and such of the European manufactures as habit has to them rendered necessary, we have not only secured their entire dependence, but the means of ameliorating their condition, and of devoting to some useful and beneficial purpose the ardour and energy of mind which are now devoted to war and destruction. The policy of the United States, with regard to the savages within their territories, forms a striking contrast with the conduct of other civilized nations. The measures of the latter appear to have been well calculated for the effect which has produced the entire extirpation of the unhappy people whose country they have usurped. It is in the United States alone that laws have been passed, not only WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 79 for their safety and protection from every species of injury, but considerable sums of money have been appropriated, and agents employed, to human- ize their minds, and instruct them in such arts of civilized life as they are capable of receiving. To provide a substitute for the chase, from which they derive their support, and which, from the extension of our settlements is daily becoming more pre- carious, has been considered a sacred duty. The humane and benevolent intentions of the govern- ment, however, will for ever be defeated, unless effectual measures be devised to prevent the sale of ardent spirits to those unhappy people. The law which has been passed by Congress for that pur- pose, has been found entirely ineffectual, because its operation has been construed to relate to the Indian country exclusively. In calling your atten- tion to this subject, gentlemen, I am persuaded that it is unnecessary to remind you, that the article of compact makes it your duty to attend to it. The interests of your constituents, the interests of the miserable Indians, and your own feelings, will suf- ficicntly urge you to take it into your most serious consideration, and provide the remedy which is to save thousands of our fellow-creatures. You are witnesses to the abuses ; you have seen our towns crowded with furious and drunken savages, our streets flowing with their blood, their arms and clothing bartered for the liquor that destroys them, 80 MEMOIR OF and their miserable women and children enduring all the extremities of cold and hunger. So destruc- tive has the progress of intemperance been among them, that whole villages have been swept away. A miserable remnant is .all that remains, to mark the names and situation of many numerous and warlike tribes. In the energetic language of one of their orators, it is a dreadful conflagration, which spreads misery and desolation through their coun- try, and threatens the annihilation of the whole race. Is it then to be admitted as a political axiom, that the neighbourhood of a civilized nation is incompatible with the existence of savages ? Are the blessings of our republican government only to be felt by ourselves ? And are the natives of North America to experience the same fate with their brethren of the southern continent? It is with you, gentlemen, to divert from those children of nature the ruin that hangs over them. Nor can I believe that the time will be considered misspent, which is devoted to an object so consistent with the spirit of Christianity, and with the principles of republic- anism." * « * * * " By a compact which is coeval with the estab- lishment of government north-west of the Ohio, the right of being admitted, as soon as our popula- tion will justify, into the great family which com- poses the American union, is firmly secured to us." WILLIAiM HENRY HARRISON. 81 The following extracts are taken from a speech delivered to the legislature in August, 1807 : — " I have directed the auditor to lay before you, ffontlemen, a statement of the causes which have produced the embarrassments in the collection of the taxes for the present year, which will enable you to determine more correctly on the remedy to be applied. An amendatory act to the one which is now in force, may answer for the present ; but nothing less, in my opinion, than a total change of the system, will save us in future from the disa- greeable consequences of a deficient revenue, and an empty treasury. The defects in the present system were early foreseen ; and at the opening of the last session, I strongly recommended to the two houses the adoption of a different plan. The com- bination of so many circumstances, such as this law requires, must always render the execution of it uncertain and precarious. It appears to me also, that it is bottomed on an improper principle. The quantum and the ratio of the tax should be fixed by the legislature alone, and not by an executive offi- cer. This important subject, gentlemen, claims your earliest attention. It will require the exercise of much industry and patience, to remedy the evils which have arisen from the present unfortunate system, and to provide one which shall give cer- tainty and stability to your revenue. In afliairs of this kind, experience is the best guide that the 82 MEMOIR OF legislator can follow. He will seek out cases that are parallel to the one on which he is called to act, and will thus possess himself of sure landmarks to guide him to his object. In the present instance, there is no necessity for a recurrence to foreign or distant examples; the neighbouring states afford precisely what we seek — a people similar in man- ners, in habits, and in the state of information, raising their revenue from the same objects. Not- withstanding the embarrassments which have hith- erto attended our financial operations, there is one consolatory circumstance which has been fully established : that a revenue equal to all our neces- sities can be raised ; and that too without oppression or inconvenience to the people." After some remarks relative to the law for reo-u- lating marriage licenses, the governor proceeds : — " Connected in some measure with this subject, is the law authorizing the general and circuit courts to grant divorces. The propriety and policy of a law of this kind have been strongly contested in many parts of the United States ; and it is believed that the principle has been everywhere condemned, save in one or two states only. It cannot be denied that the success of one applicant for a divorce, has always the effect of producing others, and that the advantages which a few individuals may derive from the dissolution of this solemn contract, are too dearly purchased by its injurious effects upon WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 83 the morals of the community. The scenes which arc frequently exhibited in trials of this kind, are shocking to humanity. The tics of consanguinity and nature are loosened — the child is brought to give testimony against his parent — confidence and affection are destroyed — family secrets disclosed — and human nature is exhibited in its wor^ colours. In the time of the Roman republic, divorces might be obtained by a summary and easy process ; but so great was the abhorrence of them amongst that enlightened people, that in a period of five hundred years, but one person had been found to take ad- 'vantage of the privilege which the law allowed. But when their manners became corrupted by lux- ury, divorces became so common that applications were frequently made to the college of augurs, to ascertain the father of a child born in legal wed- lock. A few years ago, there were but two in- stances on record, in the state of Virginia, of appli- cations for divorce. One only of these had been suc- cessful ; and although that was acknowledged to be a case which had as strong claims to indulgence as any that could happen, it was, nevertheless, opposed by some of the most enlightened patriots of that state, upon the principle that it was better for an individual to suffer some inconvenience, than that an example should be established, so injurious, as they supposed, to the morals of the community." » « # * * 84 MEMOIR OF " It is probable, gentlemen, that the moment is not far distant when every capable man will be called on to assume the character of a soldier. The situation of our affairs on the Atlantic coast, as well as on this frontier, makes it necessary that there should be no delay in preparing ourselves for the worst that may happen. A restless and dissatisfied disposition has manifested itself amongst some of the neighbouring tribes, and a few individuals are believed to be decidedly hostile. It gives me plea- sure, however, to state that I have, within a few days, received from two of the tribes the most posi- tive assurances of friendship, and their unalterable determination to submit themselves entirely to my direction. These assurances, though in my opinion sincere, ought not to be relied upon ; and the pre- parations for defence ought still to go on, until the real disposition of all the tribes is perfectly ascer- tained. Although the agency of a foreign power, in producing the discontents among the Indians, cannot be questioned, I am persuaded that the utmost endeavours to induce them to take up arms would be unavailing, if one only, of the many per- sons who have committed murders on their people, could be brought to punishment. Whilst we rigor- ously exact of them the delivery of every murderer of a white man, the neglect on our part to punish similar offences committed on them, forms a strong and just ground of complaint, for which I can offer WILLIAM IIENRV HARKI30N. .85 no excuse or palliation. A powerful nation render- ing justice to a petty tribe of savages, is a sublime spectacle, worthy of a great republic, and worthy of a people who have shown themselves as valiant in war, as in peace moderate and forbearing. I do not know, gentlemen, whether it will be in your power to remedy the evil complained of, as the defect seems to be not so much in the laws as in their execution. But if any means can be adopted, which would insure the execution of justice in cases in which the Indians are concerned, the measure would reflect honour on yourselves, and be of un- doubted advantage to your country." ***** The following extracts are from a speech deli- vered in 1809:— " Presenting, as we do, a very extended frontier to numerous and warlike tribes of the aborigines, the state of our relations with them must always form an important and interesting feature in our local politics. It is with regret tkat I have to inform you that the harmony and good understanding which it is so much our interest to cultivate with those our neighbours, have for some time past ex- perienced a considerable interruption, and that we have indeed been threatened with hostilities by a combination formed under the auspices of a bold adventurer, who pretended to act under the imme- diate inspiration of the Deity. His character as a 8 86 . MEMOIR OF prophet would not, however, have given him any very dangerous influence, if he had not been as- sisted by the intrigues and advice of foreign agents, and other disaffected persons, who have for years omitted no opportunity of counteracting the mea- sures of the government with regard to the Indians, and filling their naturally jealous minds with sus- picions of the justice and integrity of our views towards them. " The circumstance which was laid hold of to encourage disaffection, on a late occasion, was the treaty made by me at Fort Wayne in the autumn of the last year. Amongst the difficulties which were to be encountered, to obtain those extinguish- ments of title which have proved so beneficial to the treasury of the United States, and so necessary, as the means of increasing the population of the terri- tory, the most formidable was that of ascertaining the tribes which were to be admitted as parties to the treaties. The subject was accordingly discussed in a long correspondence between the government and myself, and the principles which were finally adopted, were made as liberal towards the Indians as a due regard to the interests of the United States would permit. Of the tribes which had formed the confederacy in the war which was terminated by the peace of Greeneville, some were residents upon the lands which were in the possession of their forefathers, at the time that the first settlements WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 87 were made in Atnerica by white people, whilst others were emigrants from distant parts of the country, and had no other claim to the tracts they occupied, than what a few years' residence, by the tacit consent of the real owners, could give. Upon common and general principles, the transfer of the title of the former description would have been sufficient to vest in the purchaser the legal right to lands so situated. But in all its transactions with the Indians, our government have not been content with doing that which was just only. Its savage neighbours have, on all occasions, experienced its liberality and benevolence. Upon this principle, in several of the treaties which have been made, several tribes have been admitted to a participation of their benefits, who had no title to the land ceded, merely because they had been accustomed to hunt upon, and derive part of their support from them. For this reason, and to prevent the Miamis, who were the real owners of the land, from experiencing any ill eflfects from their resentment, the Delawares, Potawatamics, and Kickapoos, were made parties to the late treaty at Fort Wayne. No other tribe was admitted, because it never had been suggested that any other could plead even the title of use or occupancy of the lands, which at that time were conveyed to the United States. " It was not until eight months after the conclu- sion of the treaty, and after his design of forming 88 MEMOIR OF a hostile combination against the United States had been discovered and defeated, that the pretensions of the prophet, with regard to the lands in question, were made known. A furious clamour was then raised by the foreign agents among us, and other disaffected persons, against the policy which had excluded from the treaty this great and influential character, as he was termed; and the doing so, expressly attributed to personal ill-will on the part of the negotiator. No such ill-will did in fact exist. I accuse myself, indeed, of an error, in the patron- age and support which I afforded him upon his first arrival on the Wabash, before his hostility to the' United States had been developed ; but on no prin- ciple of propriety or policy could he have been made a party to the treaty. The personage called the prophet is not a chief of the tribe to which he belongs, but an outcast from it, rejected and hated by the real chiefs, the principal of whom was pre- sent at the treaty, and not only disclaimed on the part of his tribe any title to the lands ceded, but used his personal influence with the chiefs of other tribes to effect the cession. " As soon as I was informed that his dissatisfac- tion at the treaty was assigned as the cause of the hostile attitude which the prophet had assumed, I sent to inform him, that whatever claims he might have to the lands which had been purchased for the United States, were not in the least affected by WILLIAM HENRY HAKUISON. 89 that purchase ; that he might come forward and exhibit his pretensions, and if they were really found to be just or equitable, the lands would be restored, or an ample equivalent given for them. His brother was deputed, and sent to me for that purpose ; but far from being able to show any co- lour of claim, either for himself or any of his fol- lowers, his objections to the treaty were confined to the assertion, that all the lands upon the conti- nent were the common property of all the tribes, and that no sale of any part of it could be valid, without the consent of all. A proposition so ex- tremely absurd, and which would for ever prevent any further purchase of lands by the United States, could receive no countenance from any friend of his country. He had, however, the insolence to declare, that by the acknowledgment of that prin- ciple alone could the effects of his resentment be avoided." * * * " I have been thus particu- lar, gentlemen, in giving you information upon the present state of our affairs with the neighbouring Indians, that you may have them fully before you, in case you should think proper to make them in any shape the subject of your deliberations. Al- though the management of the Indian affairs, in relation to their character as an independent peo- ple, and our trade with them in their own country, is entirely and exclusively under the control of the United States, it has been determined that the regu- 8* 90 , MEMOIR OF lations for the government of the latter, are of no force in our settlements. Every person has been allowed to trade with them that pleases, which proves a source of numberless abuses, of mischiev- ous effect both to the Indians and ourselves." " Should you think proper to pass a law, either prohibiting the trade of Indians within our settle- ments altogether, or confining it to the frontiers, and obliging those who follow it to take out licenses, I am persuaded that your constituents would re- ceive much benefit. It will be worthy of your con- sideration, also, whether some penalty might not be advantageously imposed upon those who, by improper interference, and by circulating false- hoods among the Indians, counteract the intentions of the government, and lay the foundation for dis- trust and enmity which may produce the most serious consequences." * * * "Although much has been done towards the extinguishment of In- dian titles in the territory, much still remains to be done. We have not sufficient space to form a tole- rable state. The eastern settlements are separated from the western by a considerable extent of Indian lands, and the most fertile tracts that are within our territorial bounds, are still their property. Almost entirely divested of the game from which they have drawn their subsistence, it has become of little use to them ; and it was the intention of the government to substitute for the precarious and WILLIAM HENRY IIAKKISON. 91 scanty supplies that the chase affords, the more certain support which is derived from agriculture, and the rearing of domestic animals. By the con- siderate and sensible amongst them, this plan is considered the only one which will save them from utter extirpation. But a most formidable opposition has been raised to it by the warriors, who will never agree to abandon their old habits, until driven to it by absolute necessity. As long as a deer is to be found in their forests, they will conti- nue to hunt ; it has therefore been supposed, that the confining them to narrow limits was the only means of producing this highly desirable change, and averting the destiny which seems to impend over them. Are then those extinguishments of native title, which are at once so beneficial to the Indians, the territory, and the United Stales, to be suspended upon account of the intrigues of a few individuals ? Is one of the fairest portions of the globe to remain in a state of nature, the haunt of a few wretched savages, when it seems destined by the Creator to give support to a large popula- tion, and to be the seat of civilization, of science, and true religion ? It may perhaps be asked, how these effects can be produced by a few persons, whose opportunities of intercourse with the Indians are so very limited. Nothing is more easy than to excite jealousy and suspicion in savages, and to make them believe they are imposed upon ; and on 92 MEMOIR OF no subject are their passions more easily raised, than on that of their lands. Every treaty that has been made with them has proved a work of diffi- culty ; besides their natural prejudices, the clashing interests of several tribes were to be accommodated — the injuries which they have received from the white people palliated and excused, and their fears, excited by seeing so many tribes driven from their ancient seats by the progress of our settle- ments, lulled or diverted by the opening of bright- er prospects, as the reward of their fidelity. A single artful or imprudent observation, from a de- signing or careless individual, is frequently sufficient to destroy the labour of weeks, and to induce the Indians to abandon an intention which they seemed to have adopted after the maturest consideration."* The limited size of our volume will not permit us to multiply these extracts ; yet it would not be difficult to select a variety of passages from the speeches of Governor Harrison, equally creditable to his feelings and his sagacity. The whole tenour of his official communications shows a mind culti- vated by study and reflection, an ardent zeal for the public service, and an enlightened benevolence towards all who came under his jurisdiction. His repeated admonitions to the legislature, and to the people, to render strict justice to the Indians, are worthy of especial notice. He never adopted * Dawson's Life of Harrison. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 98 towards the inifortunale savages the reckless poli- cy that tended to their extermination, or the callous inhumanity that was regardless of their rights. He met their chiefs with the dignity and the kindness that l)ecame his station as the high functionary of a civilized government ; he heard their complaints with patience, and replied to them in the language of conciliation ; while he laboriously endeavoured to impress on his own people the observance of justice and humanity. During his long adminis- tration, though continually harassed by the jealousy, the vindictiveness, and the treachery of the Indians, there is no instance of a passionate act of revenge on his part. He was always calm, moderate, and forbearing. Though dauntless and decisive when called to the field, he was merciful and considerate as a civil magistrate. Nor did he neglect any of the various civil duties which were confided to his care. All the depart- ments of the government were modelled under his direction ; and in his communications to the legisla- ture, the various subjects of legislation are freely discussed. His speeches are frank and manly; and he writes with the ease, correctness, and pre- cision of one who was accustomed to think with clearness, and who possessed in a high degree the faculty of fluent expression. Few of our public documents will be found to be couched in better language than those of Governor Harrison. 94 MEMOIR OF CHAPTER VII. Intrigues of Tecumthe and the Prophet — State of the frontier — Machinations of the British agents — Popularity of Mr. Harrison. In the year 1806, the celebrated impostor 01-li- wa-chi-ca, the prophet, called by some writers, from what authority we know not, E!s-kwa-taw-a, and his distinguished brother Tecumthe, began to disturb the frontier of Indiana, by a series of in- trigues which produced the most calamitous results. Tecumthe had matured a plan, suggested to him, as is said, by the celebrated Red Jacket, — a plan which the great Pontiac had attempted in vain, and which Little Turtle, another lofty spirit, was sup- posed to have favoured — to unite all the western tribes in a league against the white people, under the vain expectation that the combined Indian force would be sufficient to destroy all the western set- tlements, and drive the whites out of the great val- ley of the Mississippi. To effect this object, that crafty and daring warrior traversed the whole frontier, visited the different tribes, appealed ear- nestly to their prejudices, stirred up the recollection of their wrongs, and exerted upon them the subtle WILLIAM llENRV HAKRISON. 06 diplomacy, and masterly eloquence, in both which he was so consummately skilled. The two brothers, who were born at the same birth, differed widely in character, but were well fitted to act together in the prosecution of such an enterprise. The Indian name of the prophet signi- fied literally " a door opened^'''' in allusion proba- bly to the way of deliverance he was expected to point out to the red men ; while the interpretation of the word Tecumthe is, " a panther crouching.^'' Tecumthe was a daring and sagacious man — a shrewd and fluent orator, an able military chief, and a successful negotiator. He was full of enthu- siasm, and fertile of expedient. He possessed an intuitive hatred towards the white men, against whom he had sworn eternal vengeance, and with whom he held himself bound to observe no mea- sures of conciliation, until the purposes to which he had devoted himself should be accomplished. Pecu- liarly gifted in that kind of tact which distinguishes the artful demagogue, he appealed successfully to the people — touched artfully upon topics which awakened the vanity, the hatred, or the love of plunder of the Indian; and although the chiefs held back from motives of policy, and the old men paused at the prospect of a warfare which would cut off their annuities, and expose them to the ven- geance of a powerful nation, the younger warriors panted to follow him to the spoil of the white man. 96 MEMOIR OF The daring and improvident, the indolent, the thoughtless, and the intemperate — all the loose elements of society in the native villages — those who were careless of consequences, and to whom no change could be productive of injury — these were especially the minds to which Tecumthe addressed himself; while to the more prudent class he used arguments which at least won their respect, and in, some measure disarmed opposition. The prophet possessed none of the manly quali- ties of Tecumthe. He had no name in war, and was an indifferent hunter. He was crafty, cruel, pusillanimous, and haughty. He was also lazy and sensual, and, under various pretexts, obtained a livelihood by extorting supplies of food and other necessaries from the Indians. A variety of acci- dental circumstances gave him an ascendancy over the Indians, which his own talents could not have earned — the condition of the frontier, the supersti- tion of the savages, and the powerful protection of Tecumthe, who affected to treat his brother as a superior being. The superior mind of Tecumthe had obtained a complete mastery over that of the prophet; and when in council together, the latter never spoke. He was, however, a better speaker than Tecumthe, and his manner is said to have been more graceful than that of any other Indian. Without the dignity WILLIAM IIENKY IIAUIIISON. 97 of Tccumthc, he possessed more persuasion and plausibility' Tlic project of governing the Indians through the medium of a person supposed to be in immediate communication with the Great Spirit, probably originated with Tecumthe, who found a suitable instrument in his cunning and unprincipled brother. The Shawanese, to which tribe they belonged, had long held the belief that they were the favourite tribe, in the estimation of the Great Spirit. In a speech made to Governor Harrison in 1803, an old man of that nation said that the Shawanese had once possessed all the knowledge in the world, but that having offended the Great Spirit, he had taken it from them and lent it to the white people, who would soon be obliged to surrender it to the Sha- wanese. Acting upon this delusion, the prophet commenced a series of incantations, and from time to time communicated the supposed r^ults of his intercourse with the Great SpiVit. He uttered the most extravagant prophecies, in reference to the speedy downfall of the whites, the restoration of the Indians to all their former hunting-grounds, and the resumption of the customs of their ances- tors. To hasten this desirable end, the Indians were admonished to abstain from the use of all articles manufactured by the whites, and to cease their intercourse with that hated race. Tecumthe acted upon this plan- He seldom ate with a white 9 98 • MEMOIR OF man, and uniformly declined all articles of food which were peculiar to our tables, unless when necessity compelled him to eat them. The consequences of these intrigues may be readily imagined. The plans of the government in reference to the Indians were completely thwart- ed. Confidence between the parties was shaken, and it became equally difficult to protect the settlements, and to carry into effect the benevolent measures which had been planned for the amelioration of the condition of the savage. Nor were the obstacles to the establishment of harmonious relations, those only which were raised by the Indians. Although the government desired to treat the tribes with kindness and liberality, and its views were ably seconded by Governor Harri- son, there was no corresponding spirit of concilia- tion on the part of the people of the settlements. Mutual and long-continued injuries had engrafted upon the minds of both parties a deadly feeling of hatred, which continually broke out in acts of ag- gression. The white people intruded into the hunt- ing-grounds of the Indians, and destroyed the game, without which this latter could not subsist. Hunters from distant settlements — from Kentucky and Ohio, — passed frequently into the Indian territory ; and as they killed deer, bear, and buffalo, merely for the skins, the havoc committed by them was far greater than that of the savages, who followed the WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 99 chase only to procure food. In many places the game was almost entirely destroyed. The Indians, in return for these injuries, destroyed the hogs and cattle of the nearest settlers, believing the retalia- tion fair, and not waiting to inquire whether it fell upon the proper aggressor. A still more prolific source of discord was the illicit trade carried on with the Indians, by a few mercenary white men. Congress had passed laws to regulate the traffic with the tribes, and to prevent the sale of spirituous liquors to any of that race ; but the courts had so construed those laws as to confine their operation to the Indian territory, and had pronounced them inoperative within any state, or organized territorial government. The most shocking disorders resulted, in all the villages bor- dering on the frontier. The means of intoxication were furnished to the Indians, and they were cheated out of their furs and peltries. Governor Harrison, in one of his letters to the Secretary of War, remarks : " I have had much difficulty with the small tribes in this neighbourhood, viz. the Piankishaws, the VVeas, and the Eel River Miamis. These three tribes form a body of the most depraved wretches upon earth. They are daily in this town in considerable numbers ; and are frequently intox- icated to the number of thirty or forty at once, when they commit the greatest disorders, drawing their knives, and stabbing every one they meet 100 ' MEMOIR OF with ; breaking open the houses of citizens ; killing their cattle and hogs, and breaking down their fences. But in all their frolics they generally suf- fer most themselves ; they kill each other without mercy."* "The Indian chiefs complain heavily of the mischiefs produced by the enormous quantity of whiskey which the traders introduce into their country. I do not believe that there are more than six hundred warriors upon the Wabash, and yet the quantity of whiskey brought here annually for their consumption, is said to amount to six thou- sand gallons. This noxious liquor not only inca- pacitates them to obtain a living by hunting, but it leads to the most atrocious crimes. Killing each other has become so customary amongst them, that it is no longer thought criminal." "Whether something ought not to be done to prevent the reproach which will attach to the American name and character, by the extirpation of so many human beings, I beg most respectfully to submit to the consideration of the President." Among the Indians, as well as among civilized men, there are many lawless individuals, who evade, or openly defy, the established regulations of the community to which they belong. From savages of this description, the frontiers suffered * Dawson's Life of Harrison. WILLIAM HENRY IlARKlSOX. 101 much. At a time when the tribe to which they were attached was nominally at peace with us, and even when they as a body acted in good faith, small parties often stole into the settlements, and, under the cover of night, perpetrated the most atrocious acts of robbery and murder. From these various causes, there was not at any time a season of entire peace and security. Mur- ders were frequently committed, houses were burn- ed, property was stolen, and horses — without which the farmer could not carry on his labours, which were indispensable in the defence of the country, and could not be replaced — wei*e carried away. Retaliation followed ; and the governor was conti- nually called upon for redress, and clamorously appealed to, to lead the incensed pioneers into a war against the maraudins: tribes. Under these circumstances, councils were held with the Indians, and the delicate duty devolved upon Mr. Harrison, of conducting negotiations with a people thus offending, and thus exasperated. He had to purchase their lands, and to inculcate upon them the benevolent views of the government. The various interests and opinions of the chiefs were to be conciliated, and their passions to be soothed. Some were friendly, some mercenary, and some hostile; but it was necessary to unite all in any treaty that was made. Previous to such a council the British agents 9* 102 MEMOIR OF usually paid them a visit, and, by inflammatory speeches, poisoned their minds against us. Such was the speech of Colonel M'Kee, in November, 1804. ".My children," said he, "it is true that the Americans do not wish you to drink any spirit- ous liquors, and therefore have told their traders that they should not carry any liquor into your country — but, my children, they have no right to say that one of your fat];ier's traders, (that is, the British traders,) should carry no liquor among his children." " My children, your father. King George, loves his red children, and wishes his red children supplied with every thing they want ; he is not like the Americans, who are continually blinding your eyes, and stopping your ears with good words, that taste sweet as sugar, and getting all your lands from you." Thus also, on a similar occasion, in 1805, he said to them, " My children, there is a powerful enemy of yours to the east, now on his feet, and looks mad at you, therefore you must be on your guard ; keep your weapons of war in your hands, and have a look-out for him." While it was the duty of Governor Harrison to treat with Indians thus prejudiced and incensed, their greatest orator, Tecumthe, the firm ally of the British, the inveterate foe of the Americans, was usually present, exerting all his energies to advance his own purposes, and to defeat the inten- tions of our government. To effect these^ objects WILLIAM HEXBY HARRISON. 103 he spared no pains — in council he spoke with the boldness of the untamed savage, or with the subtlety of the trained diplomatist, as the occasion required ; and in the intervals between the sittings, he em- ployed himself in tampering with the chiefs, or in- flaming the minds of the multitude. He more than once planned the assassination of the governor; and his violent appeals and audacious conduct in the councils, on several occasions, were calculated to produce immediate hostilities. Governor Harrison felt it his duty, on more than one occasion, to stipulate that a certain number of warriors only should attend the tveaties ; yet in breach of these previous arrangements, and in vio- lation of his instructions, thev often came in larger numbers, and completely armed ; as if determined to overawe him by a show of power, or to perpe- trate violence under the guise of friendship. The man who could sit in council, surrounded bv hun- dreds of armed savages, burning with vindictive feelings, and in whose faith no confidence could be placed — who could \^-itness calmly the turbulent appeals of Tecumthe to that unruly multitude, and could see the workings of their fierce natures, "with- out betraying his own solicitude — and could control and sway them to his purposes, — must have been gitted with more than ordinarv* presence of mind, and powers of conciliation. He made, while go- vernor of Indiana, thirteax important treaties with 104 HEMOIR OF the Indians, and never attempted to make one with- out success. By these he extinguished the Indian title to sixty millions of acres, for a less price than has since been given for a tenth part of that quan- tity. Mr. Jefferson, then President, testified pub- licly his approbation of these measures ; and the people, as well as the legislature of Indiana, mani- fested their sense of the importance of Mr. Harri- son's services, by complimentary resolutions. It is difficult to point out any department of the public service in which a patriotic citizen has been more honourably or usefully employed, or one requiring greater talent, application to business, and devotion to country. For thirteen years of civil service he knew neither repose nor safety. He led the life of a warrior, yet discharged the duties of the civil magistrate. He was obliged to expose his own person, and the lives of his family, to defend the homes of his people, while he was executing the laws, and building up the institutions of a new state. During all the same time, he was, on the part of his government, a minister of benevolence to the deluded tribes — inculcating peace upon them, and upon the injured citizens under his jurisdiction. When we say that duties so various, so complicated, and of such magnitude, were discharged with fidel- ity and success, we claim for Mr. Harrison a dis- tinguished rank among the statesmen of his native country. WILLIAM HENKY HARRISON. 105 in connexion with Mr. Harrison's services as superintendent of Indian affairs, it is proper to allude here to his voluminous correspondence with tlie government, which was published with the offi- cial documents of that period. His numerous let- ters alone afibrd evidenceof great industry, as they comprise a mass of valuable facts. They are dis- tinguished by great minuteness of detail, showing a close and vigilant attention to all the concerns of his department, and are written with spirit and clearness. An elevated and benevolent tone of policy reigns throughout — a forbearing and kind spirit towards the Indians, becoming the high func- tionary of a great, civilized, and Christian people, together with a considerate rejrard for the interests of the population under his government. We dwell on this, because it shows great goodness of heart, and steadfastness of principle, connected with an ability for conducting public affairs. Such was the situation occupied by Mr. Harri- son during the whole period of his government of Indiana. His post was one of labour and responsi- bility, as well as great delicacy and danger. In- structed to pursue peace, and to avoid every appear- ance of a hostile or jealous disposition in his inter- course with the tribes, yet his situation rendered it necessary to be always prepared for defence. The intrigues of the British agents on our borders were at that period particularly active, and the savages 106 MEMOIR OF unusually fierce, turbulent, and vindictive; and while all the energy and military skill of the terri- torial governor were placed in requisition to defend a long line of exposed frontier against a numerous and daring enemy, the American cabinet continually instructed him to avoid hostility, to practise for- bearance, and cultivate amicable relations with the savase. However consistent these instructions were with the dictates of benevolence, they were fatal to the security of the frontier ; our conciliatory mea- sures never stayed the work of desolation, but only afforded impunity to the lawless savage, while they encouraged the audacity of the foreign emissary. With the Indian war-whoop yelling on one hand, and a government commanding the peace upon the other — with a feeble settlement claiming protection at one point, and a band of martial borderers de- manding to be led to battle at another — wjiile the agents of a nation at peace with our own, urged on the savage, and her military posts supplied him with arms, there can scarcely be imagined a post requiring the exertion of greater skill, prudence, and firmness, than that of the governor of Indiana. Yet Mr. Harrison filled that station with honour, and while he gave efficient protection to the fron- tier, never sullied his fame by any act of military violence or gratuitous cruelty. The popularity of his administration is best illustrated by the fact, that at every expiration of his commission, he was WILLIAM HKNKV HARRISON- 107 recommended for re-appointment by the people. On his first entrance upon the duties of his office, he had declared his intention not to hold the station a moment longer than his administration should be satisfactory to the citizens of the territory ; and at their request, his successive re-appointments were given by Mr. Adams, Mr. Jefferson, and Mr. Madison. It may not be improper to add here a few of the evidences which are upon record, of the decided approbation with which his conduct as a public officer was viewed by those who witnessed his ser- vices, and over whom his administration extended. The following is the expression of the sentiments of the citizens of St. Louis, on the occasion when their connexion with the territory of Indiana was about to cease : — " To his Excellency William H. Harrison, Governor, and the honourable the Judge3 of tlie Indiana Territory. " Gentlemen, " An arduous public service assigned you by the general government of the United States, is about to cease. The eve of the anniversary of American Independence will close the scene ; and on that celebrated festival will be organized, imder the most auspicious circumstances, a government for the territory of Louisiana. Local situation and circumstances forbid the possibility of a perma- 108 MEMOIR OF nent political connexion. This change, however congenial to our wishes, and conducive to our happiness, will not take effect without a respectful expression of our sentiments to you, gentlemen, for your assiduity, attention, and disinterested punc- tuality, in the temporary administration of the go- vernment of Louisiana. " St. Louis, July 2, 1805." The officers of the militia, in the district of St. Louis, presented to Governor Harrison an address on the same occasion, which concludes with the foUowino; remark : — " Accept, sir, these sentiments as the pledge of our affectionate attachment to you, and to the mag- nanimous policy by which you have been guided. May the chief magistrate of the American nation duly estimate your worth and talents, and long keep you in a station where you have it in your power to gain hearts by virtuous actions, and pro- mulgate laws among men who know how to re- spect you, and are acquainted with the extent of their own rights." The Legislative Council, at its first session, in an address to the governor, said : — " The confidence which our fellow-citizens have uniformly had in your administration is such, that they have hitherto had no reason to be jealous of the unlimited power which you possess over our WILLIAM HKNKV HAFIRISON. 109 legislntive proceedings. We ho'^ever cannot help rotjrcttingthat such powers should have been lodged in the hands of any one; especially when it is re- collected to what dangerous lengths the exercise of those powers may be extended." The House of Representativ<3s, on the same oc- casion, used the following language: — " Accept, sir, the thanks of t;he House of Repre- sentatives for the speech you niade to both houses, on the opening of the present session. In it we dis- cern the solicitude for the future happiness and prosperity of the territory, v/^hich has uniformly been evinced by your past administration." In the year 1809, the Houfje of Representatives of Indiana vnanimously requested the re-appoint- ment of Governor Harrison. The following is an extract from their resolution : — " They cannot forbear rec< )mmending to, and re- questing of, the President rmd Senate, most ear- nestly in their own names, and in the names of their constituents, the re-app ointment of their pre- sent governor, William Hen ry Harrison, — because he possesses the good wis! les and affection of a great majority of his fellow-i citizens ; — because they believe him sincerely attac-.hed to the union, the prosperity of the United St ates, and the adminis- tration of its government ;• — because they believe him in a superior degree cs .pable of promoting the interest of our territory, frc )m long experience and 10 110 MEMOIR OF laborious attention to its concerns, from his influ- ence over the Indians, and wise and disinterested management of that department ; — and because they have confidence in his virtues, talents, and republicanism." The other branch concurred in this resolution, with but two dissenting voices. At a meeting of the officers of the militia, for the county of Knox, at which the venerable Colonel Vigo presided, in October, 1809, the following resolution was passed : — " Resolved, That the attention paid, and the un- remitted exertions used, by William Henry Harri- son, to organize and discipline, by frequent train- ings, the militia of the territory, and the masterly skill and great military talents displayed in such his exertions, together with the anxious solicitude with which he has ever watched over the peace and happiness of the territory ; to which may be added, the confidence reposed in him by the neighbouring tribes of Indians, and the great facility and ease with which he manages their affairs, — induce this meeting to have great confidence in him, as emi- nently qualified to govern the territory, not only because of his superior talents, but also his integ- rity, patriotism, and firna attachment to the general government." WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. Ill CHAPTER VIII. Intrigues of Tecumthe — Council at Vincennes. Up to the year 1811, Tecumthe and his brother were cnjiafied, as we have seen, in constant in- trigues against the United Slates. They had dis- turbed all the councils that were held, and endea- voured to prevent every treaty that was made. Surrounded by a lawless band, composed of des- perate renegadoes from various tribes, by the young and hot, the dissolute and dishonest, they scarcely practised even the Punic faith of the Indian code. They asserted that all the lands inhabited by In- dians belonged to the tribes indiscriminately — that no tribe had a right to transfer any soil to the whites without the assent of all — and that, conse- quently, all the treaties that had been made were invalid. In 1808, the prophet established his principal place of rendezvous on the Wabash, near the mouth of the Tippecanoe — a spot which soon be- came known as the Prophet's Town. Here a thou- sand young warriors, such as we have described, rallied around him ; sallying forth in greater or smaller parties, to commit the most atrocious deeds 112 I MEMOIR OF of depredatioiji and murder, along the whole fron- tier of Indian a. Vincennes, the seat of govern- ment, was often threatened ; and the governor's house was scarcely considered safe from the intru- sion of the maddened savages. But the prophet, while he exeircised his priestly function in such a manner as to excite the superstition of his motley crew of followers, was indolent, sensual, and cow- ardly ; and his maladministration soon reduced the number of his followers to less than three hundred. Even these were so much impoverished by their excesses and improvidence, that on one occasion they must have starved, had not the benevolence of Governor Harrison induced him to send them a supply of provisions. The return of Tecumthe, who had been absent on a visit to the distant tribes, restored order. In 1809, Governor Harrison purchased from the Delawares, Miamis, and Potawatamies, a large tract of country on both sides of the Wabash, and extending up that river about sixty miles above Vincennes. Tecumthe was absent, and his bro- ther, not feeling himself interested, made no oppo- sition to the treaty ; but the former, on his return, expressed great dissatisfaction, and threatened some of the chiefs with death, who had made the treaty. Governor Harrison, hearing of his displeasure, dis- patched a messenger to invite him to come to Vin- cennes, and to assure him, " that any claims he WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 113 miijht have to the lands which had been ceded, were not afTccted by the treaty ; that he might come to Vincennes and exhibit his pretensions, and if they were found to be vaHd, the land would either be given up, or an ample compensation made for it." Having no confidence in the faith of Tecumthe, the governor directed that he should not bring with him more than thirty warriors ; but he came with four hundred, completely armed. The people of Vincennes were in great alarm, nor was the governor without apprehension that treachery was intended. This suspicion was not diminished by the conduct of the chief, who, on the morning after his arrival, refused to hold the council at the place appointed, under an affected belief that treachery was intended on our side. A large portico in front of the governor's house had been prepared for the purpose with seats, as well for the Indians, as for the citizens who were expected to attend. When Tecumthe came from his camp, with about forty of his warriors, he stood off, and on being invited by the governor, through an interpreter, to take his seat, refused, observing that he wished the council to be held under the shade of some trees in front of the house. When it was objected that it would be troublesome to remove the seats, he replied, "that it would only be necessary to remove those intended for the 10* 114 MEMOIR OF whites — that the red men were accustomed to sit upon the earth, which was their mother, and that they were always happy to recline upon her bosom." At this council, held on the 12th of August, 1810, Tecumthe delivered a speech, of which we find the following report, containing the sentiments uttered, but in a language very different from that of the Indian orator : — " I have made myself what I am ; and I would that I could make the red people as great as the conceptions of my mind, when I think of the Great Spirit, that rules over all. I would not then come to Governor Harrison to ask him to tear the treaty ; but I would say to him. Brother, you have liberty to return to your own country. Once there was no white man in all this country : then it belonged to red men, children of the same parents, placed on it by the Great Spirit to keep it, to travel over it, to eat its fruits, and fill it with the same race — once a happy race, but now made miserable by the white people, who are never contented, but always encroaching. They have driven us from the great salt water, forced us over the mountains, and would shortly push us into the lakes — but we are determined to go no further. The only way to stop this evil, is for all the red men to unite in claiming a common and equal right in the land, as it was at first, and should be now — for it never WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 115 was divided, but belongs to all. No tribe has a right to sell, even to each other, much less to strangers, who demand all, and will take no less. The white people have no right to take the land from the Indians who had it first — it is theirs. They may sell, but all must join. Any sale not made by all, is not good. The late sale is bad — it was made by a part only. Part do not know how to sell. It requires all to make a bargain for all." Governor Harrison, in his reply, said, " that the white people, when they arrived upon this conti- nent, had found the Miamis in the occupation of all the country of the Wabash ; and at that time the Shawanese were residents of Georgia, from which they were driven by the Creeks. That the lands had been purchased from the Miamis, who were the true and original owners of it. That it was ridiculous to assert that all the Indians were one nation ; for if such had been the intention of the Great Spirit, he would not have put six different tongues into their heads, but would have taught tltem all to speak one language. That the Miamis had found it for their interest to sell a part of their lands, and receive for them a further annuity, in addition to what they had long enjoyed, and the benefit of which they had experienced, from the punctuality with which the seventeen fires complied with their engagements ; and that the Shawanese 116 MEMOIR OP had no right to come from a distant country, to control the Miamis in the disposal of their own property." The interpreter had scarcely finished the expla- nation of these remarks, when Tecumthe fiercely exclaimed, " It is false !" and giving a signal to his warriors, they sprang upon their feet, from the green grass on which they were sitting, and seiz€d their war-clubs. The governor, and the small train that surrounded him, were now in imminent danger. He was attended by a few citizens, who were unarmed. A military guard of twelve men, who had been stationed near him, and whose pre- sence was considered rather as an honorary than a defensive measure, — being exposed, as it was thought unnecessarily, to the heat of the sun in a sultry August day, had been humanely directed by the governor to remove to a shaded spot at some distance. But the governor, retaining his presence of mind, rose and placed his hand upon his sword, at the same time directing those of his friends and suite who were about him, to stand upon their guard. Tecumthe addressed the Indians in a pas- sionate tone, and with violent gesticulations. Major G. R. C. Floyd, of the U. S. army, who stood near the governor, drew his dirk ; Winnemak, a friendly chief, cocked his pistol, and Mr. Wi- nans, a Methodist preacher, ran to the governor's house, seized a gun, and placed himself in the door WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 117 to defend the family. For a few moments all ex- pected a bloody rencounter. The guard was or- dered up, and would instantly have fired upon the Indians, had it not been for the coolness of Go- vernor Harrison, who restrained them. He then calmly, but authoritatively, told Tecumthe, that " he was a bad man — that he would have no fur- ther talk with him — that he must return now to his camp, and take his departure from the settlements immediately." The next morning, Tecumthe having reflected on the impropriety of his conduct, and finding that he had to deal with a man as bold and vigilant as himself, who was not to be daunted by his auda- cious turbulence, nor circumvented by his specious manoeuvres, apologized for the affront he had of- fered, and begged that the council might be renew- ed. To this the governor consented, suppressing any feeling of resentment which he might naturally have felt, and determined to leave no exertion un- tried, to carry into eliect the pacific views of the government. It was agreed that each party should have the same attendance as on the previous day ; but the governor took the precaution to place him- self in an attitude to command respect, and to pro- tect the inhabitants of Vincennes from violence, by ordering two companies of militia to be placed on duty within the village. Tecumthe presented himself with the same un- 118 MEMOIR OF daunted bearing which always marked him as a superior man ; but he was now dignified and col- lected, and showed no disposition to resume his former insolent deportment. He disclaimed having entertained any intention of attacking the governor, but said he had been advised by white men to do as he had done. Two white men — British emis- saries undoubtedly — had visited him at his place of residence, had told him that half the white peo- ple were opposed to the governor, and willing to relinquish the land, and urged him to advise the tribes not to receive pay for it, alleging that the governor would soon be recalled, and a good man put in his place, who would give up the land to the Indians. The governor inquired whether he would forcibly oppose the survey of the purchase. He replied, that he- was determined to adhere to the old boundary. Then arose a Wyandot, a Kick- apoo, a Potawatamie, an Ottawa, and a Winnebago chief, each declaring his determination to stand by Tecumthe. The governor then said that the words of Tecumthe should be reported to the President, who would take measures to enforce the treaty ; and the council ended. The governor, still anxious to conciliate the haughty savage, paid him a visit next day at his own camp. He was received with kindness and attention, — his uniform courtesy, and inflexible firmness, having won the respect of the rude war- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 119 riors of the forest. They conversed for some time, but Tecumthe obstinately adhered to all his former positions ; and when Governor Harrison told him, that he was sure the President would not yield to his pretensions, the chief replied, " Well, as the great chief is to determine the matter, I hope the Great Spirit will put sense enough into his head to induce him to direct you to give up this land. It is true, he is so far off, he will not be injured by the war. He may sit still in his town, and drink his wine, while you and I will have to fight it out." This is an accurate account of an interesting council, the proceedings of which have been much misrepresented. A love for the romantic and the marvellous has induced speeches to be written for Tecumthe, which were never delivered. His con- duct was distinguished on this occasion by violence, not by eloquence ; his art was displayed in attempts to intimidate the Americans, and to create an affray, by stirring up the vindictive feelings of his followers, and not by any display of argument. 120 MEMOIR OF CHAPTER IX. Hostilities commenced — Governor Harrison di- rected to march against the Prophet^s Town* In 1811, the near approach of a war between the United States and Great Britain, rendered Te- cumthe and his brother more audacious than ever. They began to assemble a new body of warriors at the Prophet's Town ; the impostor practised his infernal incantations with great industry, and his gift of prophecy renewed itself with invigorated fecundity ; marauding parties roved more frequently than ever towards the settlements ; and a number of murders were committed on the frontiers of Illi- nois and Indiana. These circumstances induced the governor to place the territory in the best pos- ture for defence which its limited resources would admit ; and he was soon after, at his own earnest instance, and the repeated petitions of the people, directed by the President to move with an armed force towards the Prophet's Town. But he was imperatively commanded to avoid hostilities, " of any kind, or to any degree, not indispensably re- quired." The situation of a commander, thus ordered to WILLIAM IIENRV II ARKL>=!ON. 121 the field with a limited discretion, which gave every advantage to the enemy, while it placed his own troops in constant jeopardy, was by no means en- viable. At the head of undisciplined troops, always difficult to control, and now panting for revenge, a continued exertion of prudence was required, to re- strain their impatience. Before him was a numer- ous army prepared for war, and led by an accom- plished leader ; behind him a long line of scattered settlements, the safety of which depended on his success. With the conviction, founded on evidence that could scarcely be deceptive, that a battle must be fought, the event of which must decide the fate of hundreds of defciiceless women and children, he was shackled by instructions which gave to his foe the important advantage of choosing the time and place of attack, of selecting his own ground, and strikini; the first blow. He was to fij^ht when at- tacked, but not till then — when the prophet should decide that the propitious hour had arrived — when the savage chieftain should have matured his plan, and the shadows of the forest should be deepened by the gloom of a moonless night. When the news reached Kentucky, that Governor Harrison was authorized to march against the Indians, the public mind was excited to enthusiasm. So many years had been spent in sufTering, so long had the Indians and their British allies devastated the frontier, that an opportunity for vengeance was 11 122 MEMOIR OF hailed with universal acclamation. The name of Harrison excited confidence and expectation. The western people had long witnessed his sterling patriotism, his unyielding intrepidity, his untiring industry in the public service ; and volunteers at once announced their readiness to follow his stand- ard. Many of them were men of high standing for military and civil character. Of this number were General Samuel Wells of the militia, who had been actively engaged in the former wars with the Indians — Joseph H. Daviess, an eminent lawyer, and a man of extraordinary talents, eloquence, and popularity — Colonel Abraham Owen, a veteran warrior in Indian warfare — and Colonel Guiger, who raised a small company of young men near Louisville ; in this army also were Croghan, O'Fal- lon, Shipp, Cheem, and Edwards, who afterwards distinguished themselves as officers in the army of the United States. The 4th regiment of United States infantry, commanded by Colonel Boyd, was placed under the orders of Governor Harrison, at his request; and the army then consisted of little more than nine hundred men, of whom about three hundred and fifty were infantry of the regular service, and the remainder volunteer militia, of whom the chief por- tion were from Indiana, and sixty or seventy men from Kentucky. One hundred and twenty were dragoons. The governor in person exercised these WILLIAM HENRY HAKRISON. 123 troops, in that mode of formation which had been so successfully practised by Wayne ; giving them the instruction which was equally necessary for the regular troops and the militia, as this kind of manoeuvring was entirely new to the former. On the 28th of October, 1811, the march was commenced from Fort Harrison, a post on the Wa- bash about sixty miles above Vincennes. In the mean while an attempt was made, through the in- tervention of the Delaware and Miami tribes, to induce the prophet to deliver up the murderers and stolen horses. The impostor and his council treat- ed these overtures with insolence, and rejected them with disdain. To leave no doubt of their intentions, a small war-party was detached to commence hos- tilities; who, not meeting with any stragglers from our camp, advanced to the vicinity of the army, and fired upon a sentinel. The march to Tippecanoe was conducted with great prudence. The troops were encamped in the order of battle ; and they marched in a form from which that order could be assumed with facility, at a moment's warning : the infantry in two col- umns, in single file on each side of the trace, so that by a single conversion they could be formed in two lines to receive the enemy at any point, or be reduced into a hollow square — the cavalry, and mounted riflemen, of the latter of which there were two companies, covering the advance, flank, and 124 MEMOIR OF rear, and exchanging positions with each other as the ground varied, so as to keep them upon that which best suited the mode of fighting they prac- tised respectively. The utmost vigilance was used to guard against surprise ; to prevent the Indians from availing themselves of the art of ambuscading, in which they are perfectly skilled ; and to save the army from being attacked in a disadvantageous position. The country through which the army passed was chiefly open, beautiful prairie, intersected by thick woods, deep creeks, and ravines, At some distance above Fort Harrison, two routes were pre- sented to the choice of the commander. The one leading along the south side of the Wabash, was the shorter ; but it passed through a woody uneven country, while that on the other side led over wide plains, affording few coverts for the protection of the insidious foe. To deceive the enemy, the go- vernor caused a road to be marked on the south side, advanced upon it for a short distance, and then suddenly changed his direction, and by a masterly operation threw his army across the river, to the right bank. The Indians were completely deceived by this manoeuvre, and their stratagems defeated. After crossing the Wabash, our army continued to ad- vance for three days, without seeing an Indian, or discovering any recent sign. But the vigilance of WILLIAM HENRY HAKKISON. 125 the governor was not diminished ; his experience had taught him, that the Indians arc expert in lull- inn; the suspicions of an enemy, and that the storm of their vengeance is often preceded by a deceptive calm. For the purpose of keeping himself advised as to the position of the enemy, whose peculiar tactics and mode of life enable them to elude with facility the i)ursuit of a regular force, the governor had, from the commencement of his march, adopted the plan of keeping up an intercourse with them through five of the friendly Indians, and a French- man, who were sent from Fort Harrison, and were to meet him on the way. For several days he had heard nothing of the persons thus employed, and their delay in returning became a subject of serious uneasiness. The hostile Indians had avoided our troops during the whole march, and some uncer- tainty began to be created as to their position and intentions. It was doubtful whether they were am- bushed in advance, whether they had retired to the Prophet's Town to make a stand there, or had passed the flanks of the army, for the purpose of falling upon the settlements in its rear. The last was a manceuvre entirely practicable ; and it was one greatly to be dreaded, as it would have brought the horrors of war to the domestic fireside, and have caused avast destruction of life and property. Vincennes was at this time an outpost in the 11* 126 MEMOIR OF i wilderness — the most westward of a narrow and loosely connected line of settlements, extending across the territory of Indiana, from the falls of Ohio. It was a line having length without much breadth or solidity — having little strength in itself, and difficult to be protected. A large proportion of the able-bodied men were in the army, leaving their homes defenceless, and the country exposed to almost certain destruction, should a sudden inroad be made by the Indians. The uncertainty of the position of the enemy threw upon Governor Harrison a heavy weight of responsibility. Had he been opposed to a regular army, it would have been his duty to know its po- sition, and to become advised of its movements, in accordance with those rules of the military art, which are familiar to the accomplished command- er ; and he might have been expected to interpose his force between the foe and the points to be pro- tected, in such a manner as to insure the safety of the latter. But no army, however large or active, can present a barrier against an irruption of sav- ages, who, having no artillery, baggage, nor com- mon store of provisions, can at any moment dissolve tneir army into its elements, disperse themselves so as to leave no organized force, and re-unite at any point proposed to be attacked — who can pass the forest without roads, and the rivers without bridges, and leave scarcely a trace of their foot-prints. WILLIAM HEXRV HARRISON. 127 Such circumstances were calculated to create ^^reat anxiety in the mind of a commander ; and especially when, as the civil chief magistrate, as well as the military head, the whole responsibility rested upon himself, and it became his duty to pro- tect the houses of his people from outrage, while he was invading the strong-hold of the enemy. Afler crossing the river, the suspense of the go- vernor, on this intensely interesting subject, became painful. Anxious as he was to push forward, the idea that the enemy might even now be rushing upon the settlements, caused deep solicitude for the safety of the defenceless population at home — and had he retraced his steps, the measure would have been one of such obvious prudence, that no military man would have been found to censure it. These reflections pressed upon the governor's mind so heavily as to become painful, and to drive away the sleep which is usually so sound to him, who lies wrapped in his blanket by the camp fire, after a weary day's march. He determined to per- severe in his march upon the Tippecanoe Town, but to make further provision for the protection of the settlements ; he rose one night from the hard couch of the border leader, and dispatched his or- derly for Major Jordan of the Indiana volunteers, in whom he had great confidence. He directed that officer to take forty picked men, and return to 128 MEMOIR OF Vincennes, to protect that post, and to place that, and the other settlements, upon their guard. The order to Jordan was minute, as well in rela- tion to his conduct on reaching the settlement, as in case of disaster to the army. In the latter event, he directed him to fortify the court-house in Vin- cennes, and other houses capable of defence, and place in them the women and children, and to send expresses to the governor of Kentucky, inviting volunteers from that state. By this conveyance he wrote to his friend Dr. Scott of Frankfort, who had come to Vincennes to attend Mrs. Harrison in an expected indisposition, and to remain with the go- vernor's family during his absence. This gentle- man, who had served in the army of Wayne with Harrison, had written him a letter from Vincennes, * urging him to caution, reminding him of the subtle nature of his enemy, and that his honour, as well as his life, depended upon his circumspection. In his letter, by Major Jordan, the governor informed his friend that his only uneasiness was for the wives and children of himself and his gallant fellow-sol- diers. That although his force was much smaller than it should have been for such an expedition, he had no fears for the issue of the campaign. That he well understood the danger to which he was personally exposed, from the knowledge which the Indians had of his person, and their hostility towards him. But that his life was in the hands WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 129 of Providence, and his friend might rest assured that he would hring no disgrace upon tlic character of a pupil of Wayne. In the event of his fall, he rcconiniended his family to the care of his friend.* Major Jordan proceeded reluctantly on this duty, which, although it imposed an honourable service, witlidrew him from the active scenes of the cam- paign, and deprived him of his share of the antici- pated laurels. On the 4th of November, the army reached Pine creek, and prepared to cross its difficult pass. This stream presents a character not usually found in that region of country. Its course, for many miles above its confluence with the Wabash, is through a deep channel, worn into an immense mass of * Dr. Scott, the gentleman to whom this letter was ad- dressed, afterwards commanded the 1st regiment of Ken- tucky volunteers under General Harrison, His regiment composed a part of tlie detachment ordered by the general from Fort Wayne, to destroy the Potawatamie towns at Elk Hart. IJoing in bad health, the general desired him not to accompany the detachment, assuring him that there would be no fighting, as the Indians could not assemble in that quarter, in time to make head against the detachment. In despite of these remonstrances, the gallant colonel appeared at the head of his regiment, and declared that no other per- son should lead it towards the enemy, while he was able to mount his horse. The service was effected witliout opposi- lion ; but tfie patriotic colonel was taken ill upon his return, and shortly afterwards expired, a victim to his high sense of military etiquette. 130 MEMOIR OF rock, the sides of which, in many places, are formed into perpendicular precipices. But few crossing- places can .be found, and these are approached by- deep, narrow, and difficult defiles, in passing which the order of a regular army must be broken, and its troops exposed, under the most disadvantageous circumstances, to the danger of an ambuscade. The Indian path upon which our gallant troops were then marching, led to one of these dangerous defiles. It had been selected for an ambuscade in the year 1786, when General George Rogers Clarke led an expedition into the Indian country, and afterwards in 1790, when Colonel Hamtramck marched a body of troops against the same enemy. With a knowledge of these facts, the governor skil- fully avoided the danger, by suddenly quitting the usual trail when near the place of crossing, and pass- ing the creek at another place, which he had caused to be reconnoitred during the preceding night. It is by such attention to details, and such ready adapt- ation of measures to present circumstances, that the talents of the consummate commander are dis- played. To be brave and skilful in battle is highly meritorious ; but to be wise and prudent in guard- ing against defeat, in securing the means of victory, and in sparing the effusion of blood, requires mili- tary genius and knowledge of the highest order. Leaders have gained brilliant names by their suc- cess in a single battle — and those who risk life for WILLIAM lIENRk' HARRISON. 131 their country, deserve that country's gratitude; but how much greater is the merit of the commander, who by unceasing vigilance preserves the lives of his brave countrymen who follow his banner, while he leads them, by a carefully matured plan, to ul- timate victory, and at the same time that he gains unfading glory for his country, demonstrates that his triumph is not the result of a blind chance! 132 " MEMOIR OF CHAPTER X. i Battle of Tippecanoe. Heretofore we have seen Governor Harrison employed in negotiations for peace, and earnestly endeavouring to dissuade the Indians from a war which must prove ruinous to themselves. We have seen him approaching the Indian fortress with the circumspection of an able commander, anxious to avoid hostilities, but always prepared for battle — foiling the enemy in every attempt to deceive or surprise him, and instilling into his troops the con- fidence, the discipline, and the obedience, which always insure victory. We are now to see him on the field of battle, and to record the events of an engagement which ranks among the most brilliant in our history, and in which he achieved a victory as complete, as it was honourable to himself and his brave army. As this engagement has been well described by M'Affee, a gallant and accomplished Kentuckian, we shall follow his account, making some slight corrections from other authorities. " On the evening of the 5th of November, the army encamped at the distance of nine or ten miles from the Prophet's Town. It was ascertained that WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 133 the approach of the army had been discovered be- fore it reached Pine creek. The traces of recon- noitring parties were very often seen, but no Indians were discovered until the troops arrived within five or six miles of the town on the 6th of November. The interpreters were then placed with the advanced guard, to endeavour to open a communication with them. The Indians would, however, return no answer to the invitations that were made to them for that purpose, but continued to insult our people by their gestures. Within about three miles of the town, the ground became broken by ravines and covered with timber. The utmost precaution be- came necessary, and every difficult pass was exa- mined by the mounted riflemen before the army was permitted to enter it. The ground being unfit for the operation of the squadron of dragoons, they were thrown in the rear. Through the whole march, the precaution had been used of changing the disposition of the different corps, that each might have the ground best suited to its operations. Within about two miles of the town, the path de- scended a steep hill, at the bottom of which was a small creek running through a narrow wet prairie, and beyond this a level plain partially covered with oak timber, and without underbrush. Before the crossing of the creek, the woods were very thick and intersected by deep ravines. No place could be better calculated for the savages to attack 12 134 MEMOIR OF with a prospect of success, and the governor appre- hended, that the moment the troops descended into 'the hollow, they would be attacked. A disposition was therefore made of the infantry to receive the enemy on the left and rear. A company of mounted riflemen was advanced a considerable distance from the left flank to check the approach of the enemy ; and the other two companies were directed to turn the enemy's flanks, should he attack in that direc- tion. The dragoons were ordered to move rapidly from the rear, and occupy the plain in advance of the creek, to cover the crossing of the army from an attack in front. In this order the troops were passed over ; the dragoons were made to advance to give room to the infantry, and the latter having crossed the creek, were formed to receive the enemy in front in one line, with a reserve of three compa- nies — the dragoons flanked by mounted riflemen forming the first line. During all this time, Indians were frequently seen in front and on the flanks. The interpreters endeavoured in vain to bring them to a parley. Though sufficiently near to hear what was said to them, they would return no answer, but continued by gestures to menace and insult those who addressed them. Being now arrived within a mile and a half of the town, and the situ- ation being favourable for an encampment, the go- vernor determined to remain there and fortify his camp, until he could hear from the friendly chiefs. V WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 135 whom he had dispatched from Fort Harrison, on the day he had left it, for the purpose of making another attempt to prevent the recurrence to hos- tilities. These chiefs were to have met him on the way, but no intelligence was yet received from thein. Whilst he was engaged in tracing out the lines of the encampment, Major Daviess and seve- ral other field officers approached him, and urged the propriety of immediately marching upon the town. The governor answered that his instructions would not justify his attacking the Indians, as long as there was a probability of their complying with the demands of the government, and that he still hoped to hear something in the course of the even- ing from the friendly Indians, whom he had dis- patched from Fort Harrison. " To this it was observed, that as the Indians seen hovering about the army had been frequently invited to a parley by the interpreters, who had proceeded some distance from the lines for the pur- pose ; and as these overtures had universally been answered by menace and insult, it was very evi- dent that it was their intention to fight j that the troops were in high spirits and full of confidence ; and that advantage ought to be taken of their ar- dour to lead them immediately to the enemy. To this the governor answered, that he was fully sen- sible of The eagerness of the troops ; and admitting the determined hostility of the Indians, and that 136 MEMOIR OF their insolence was full evidence of their intention to fight, yet he knew them too well to believe that they would ever do this but by surprise, or on ground which was entirely favourable to their mode of fightinfr. He was therefore determined not to advance with the troops, until he knew pre- cisely the situation of the town, and the ground adjacent to it, particularly that which intervened between it and the place where the army then was — that it was their duty to fight when they came in contact with the enemy — it was his to take care that they should not engage in a situation where their valour would be useless, and where a corps upon which he placed great reliance would be unable to act — that the experience of the last two hours ought to convince every officer, that no reliance should be placed upon the guides, as to the topography of the country — that relying on their information, the troops had been led into a situation so unfavourable, that but for the celerity with which they changed their position, a few In- dians might have destroyed them : he was there- fore determined not to advance to the town, until he had previously reconnoitred, either in person, or by some one on whose judgment he could rely. Major Daviess immediately replied, that from the right of the position of the dragoons, which was still in front, the openings made by the low grounds of the Wabash could be seen ; that with his adju- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 137 tant D. Floyd, he had advanced to the bank, which descends to the low grounds, and had a fair view of the cultivated fields and the houses of the town ; and that the open woods, in which the troops then were, continued without interruption to the town. Upon this information, the governor said he would advance, provided he could get any proper person to go to the town with a flag. Captain T. Dubois of Vincennes having oflered his services, he was dispatched with an interpreter to the prophet, desir- ing to know whether he would now comply with the terms that had been so often proposed to him. The army was moved slowly after, in order of bat- tle. In a few moments a messenger came from Captain Dubois, informing the governor, that the Indians were near him in considerable numbers, but that they would return no answer to the inter- preter, although they were sufficiently near to hear what was said to them, and that upon his advanc- ing, they constantly endeavoured to cut him off from the army. Governor Harrison, deeming this last effort to open a negotiation, sufficient to show his wish for an accommodation, resolved no longer to hesitate in treatinoj the Indians as enemies. He therefore recalled Captain Dubois, and moved on with a determination to attack them. He had not proceeded far, however, before he was met by three Indians, one of them a principal counsellor to the prophet. They were sent, they said, to 12* 138 MEMOIR OF know why the army was advancing upon them — that the prophet wished, if possible, to avoid hos- tiUties ; that he had sent a pacific message by the Miami and Potawatamie chiefs, who had come to him on the part of the governor — and that those chiefs had untbrtunately gone down on the south side of the Wabash. "A suspension of hostiUties was accordingly agreed upon ; and a meeting was to take place the next day between Harrison and the chiefs, to agree upon the terms of peace. The governor further informed them that he would go on to the Wabash, and encamp there for the night. Upon marching a short distance further, he came in view of the town, which was seen at some distance up the river upon a commanding eminence. Major Daviess and Adjutant Floyd had mistaken some scattering houses in the fields below, for the town itself. The ground below the town being unfavourable for an encamp- ment, the army marched on in the direction of the town, with a view to obtain a better situation be- yond it. The troops were in an order of march, calculated by a single conversion of companies, to form the order of battle which it had last assumed, the dragoons being in front. This corps, however, soon became entangled in ground covered with brush and tops of fallen trees. A halt was ordered, and Major Daviess directed to change position with Spencer's rifle corps, which occupied the open fields WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 139 ndjacent to the river. The Indians seeing this ma- nccuvre, at the approach of the troops towards the town, supposed that they intended to attack it, and immediately prepared for defence. Some of them sallied out, and called to the advanced corps to halt. The governor, upon this, rode forward, and request- ing some of the Indians to come to him, assured them, that nothing was farther from his thoughts than to attack them — that the ground below the town on the river was not calculated for an encamp- ment, and that it was his intention to search for a better one above. He asked if there was any other water convenient besides that which the river af- forded ; and an Indian with whom he was well ac- quainted, answered, that the creek which had been crossed two miles back, ran through the prairie to the north of the village. A halt was then ordered, and some officers sent back to examine the creek, as well as the river above the town. In half an Iiour, Brigade Major Marston Clarke and Major Waller Taylor returned, and reported that they had found on the creek every thing that could be de- sirable in an encampment — an elevated spot, nearly surrounded by an open prairie, with water conve- nient, and a sufficiency of wood for fuel. " An idea was propagated by the enemies of Governor Harrison, after the battle of Tippecanoe, that the Indians had forced him to encamp on a place chosen by them as suitable for the attack 140 MEMOIR OF they intended. The place^ however, was chosen by Majors Taylor and Clarke, after examining all the environs of the town ; and when the army of General Hopkins was there in the following year, they all united in the opinion that a better spot to resist Indians was not to be found in the whole country. *' The army now marched to the place selected, and encamped, late in the evening, on a dry piece of ground, which rose about ten feet above the level of a marshy prairie in front towards the town, and about twice as high above a similar prairie in the rear ; through which, near the bank, ran a small stream clothed with willows and brushwood. On the left of the encampment, this bench of land be- came wider; on the right 'it gradually narrowed, and terminated in an abrupt point, about one hun- dred and fifty yards from the right flank. The two columns of infantry occupied the front and rear. The right flank being about eight yards wide, was filled with Captain Spencer's company of eighty men. The left flank, about one hundred and fifly yards in extent, was composed of three companies of mounted riflemen, under Greneral Wells, com- manding as major." The front line was composed of one battalion of U. S. infantry, under Major Floyd, and a regiment of Indiana militia, under Colonel Bartholomew. The rear line consisted of a battalion of U. S. in- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 141 fantry, under Captain Baen, commanding as Major, and four companies of Indiana volunteers, under Lieutenant Colonel Decker. The right flank was composed of Spencer's company of Indiana volun- teer riflemen ; the left flank of Robb's company of Indiana volunteers, and Guiger's, a mixed company of Kentucky and Indiana volunteers — a portion of U. S. troops turning the left front, and left rear angles respectively. The cavalry under Major Daviess were encamped in the rear of the front line, and lefl; flank, and held in reserve as a dispo- sable force. The encampment was not more than three-fourths of a mile from the Indian town. " The order given to the army, in the event of a night attack, was for each corps to maintain its ground at all hazards till relieved. The dragoons were directed in such case to parade dismounted, with their swords^ on and their pistols in their belts, and to wait for orders. The guard for the night consisted of two captain^' commands of twenty-four men and four non-commissioned officers ; and two subalterns' guards of twenty men and non-com- missioned officers — the whole under the command of a field officer of the day. " On the night of the 6th of November, the troops went to rest, as usual, with their clothes and accou- trements on, and their arms by their sides. The officers were ordered to sleep in the same manner, and it was the governor's invariable practice to be 142 MEMOIR OP ready to mount his horse at a moment's warning. On the morning of the 7th, he arose at a quarter before four o'clock, and sat by the fire conversing with the gentlemen of his family, who were reclin- ing on their blankets waiting for the signal, which in a few minutes would have been given, for the troops to turn out. The orderly drum had already been roused for the reveille. The moon had risen, but afforded little light, in consequence of being overshadowed by clouds, which occasionally dis- charged a drizzlincr rain. At this moment the attack commencecjl. " The treacherous Indians had crept up so near the sentries as to hear them challenge when re- lieved. They intended to rush upon the sentries and kill them before they could fire ; but one of them discovered an Indian creeping towards him in the grass, and fired. This was immediately fol- lowed by the Indian yell, and a desperate charge npott the left flank. The guard in that quarter gave way, and abandoned their officer without making any resistance. Captain Barton's company of regulars, and Captain Guiger's company of mounted riflemen, forming the left angle of the rear line, received the first onset. The fire there was excessive ; but the troops who had lain on their arms, were immediately prepared to receive, and had gallantry to resist the furious savage assailants. The manner of the attack was calculated to discou- WILLIAM IIEMiY HAKRlbON. 143 rage and terrify the men; yet as soon as they could \)e. formed and posted, they maintained their ground with desperate valour, though but few of them had ever before been in battle. The fires of the camp were extinguished immediately, as the light they atforded was more serviceable to the Indians than to our men" — except those opposite Barton's and Guiger's companies, which the suddenness of the attack left no time to put out. Upon the first alarm the governor mounted his horse, and proceeded towards the point of attack ; and findinu the line much weakened there, he or- dered two companies from the centre of the rear line to march up, and form across the angle in the rear of Barton's and Guiger's companies. In pass- inii throujih the camp towards the left of the front line, he met with Major Daviess, who informed him that the Indians, concealed behind some trees near the line, were annoying the troops very se- verely in that quarter, and requested permission to dislodge them. In attempting this exploit he fell, iniirtally wounded, as did Colonel Isaac White of Indiana, who acted as a volunteer in his troop. " In the mean time the attack on Spencer's and Warwick's companies, on the right, became very severe. Captain Spencer and his lieutenants were all killed, ana Captain Warwick was mortally wounded. The governor, in passing towards that flank, found Captain Robb's company near the cen- 144 MEMOIR OF tre of the camp. They had been driven from their post; or rather, had fallen back without orders. He led them to the aid of Captain Spencer, where they fought very bravely, having seventeen men killed during the battle. While the governor was leading this company into action. Colonel Owen, his aid, was killed at his side. This gallant officer was mounted on a very white horse, and as the governor had ridden a grey on the day before, it is probable that Owen was mistaken for him, as it is certain that he was killed by one of the only In- dians who broke through the lines, and who are supposed to have resolved to sacrifice themselves in an attempt to insure victory by killing the com- mander-in-chief. The governor happened not to be mounted on his own grey ; his servant had acci- dentally tied that animal apart from the other horses belonging to the general staff*, and in the confusion occasioned by the attack, not being able to find this horse as quickly as was desirable, the governor mounted another. " Captain Prescott's company of U. S. infantry had filled up the vacancy caused by the retreat of Robb's company. Soon after Daviess was wounded, Captain Snelling, by order of the governor, charged upon the same Indians, and dislodged them with considerable loss. The battle was now maintained on all sides with desperate valour. The Indians advanced and retreated by a rattling noise made WILLIAM IIEXRY HARRISON. 145 with deer hoofs : they fought with enthusiasm, and scomrd determined on victory or death." W'licn the day dawned, Captain SneUing's com- pany, Captain Posey's under Lieutenant Allbright, Caj)tain Scott's, and Captain Wilson's, were drawn from the rear, and formed on the left flank ; while Cook's and Baen's companies were ordered to the ri^ht. (Teneral Wells was ordered to take com- mand of the corps formed on the left, and with the aid of some dragoons, who were now moimted, and commanded by Lieutenant Wallace, to charge the enemy in that direction, which he did success- fully — driving them into a swamp through which the cavalry could not pursue them. "At the same time Cook's and Lieutenant Larrabe's companies with the aid of the riflemen and militia on the right flank, charged the Indians and put them to flight in that quarter, which terminated the battle." " During the time of the contest, the prophet kept himself secure on an adjacent eminence, sing- ing a war-song. He had told his followers that the Great Sptrit would render the army of the Americans unsuccessful, and that their bullets would not hurt the Indians, who would have lin-lit, while their enemies would be involved in thick darkness. Soon after the battle commenced, he was informed that his men were falling. He told them to fight on, it would soon be as he had pre- dicted, and then began to sing louder." 13 146 MEMOIR OF Tecumthe was not present at this engagement. He was absent from his people, on a visit to the southern tribes, whom he was endeavouring to unite in the league he was attempting to form against the United States. The battle of Tippecanoe gave rise to much dis- cussion. Some were found who censured Governor Harrison, and a few claimed a part of the glory of the day for Colonel Boyd. The discontented, how- ever, were chiefly those who were opposed to the war, and who, from party feelings, denounced as well the acts of the administration, as those of the oflicers appointed to carry them into eflfect. Mr. Harrison's well-known republican principles, his attachment to Mr. Madison, his high standing, and the zeal with which he seconded the views of the government, all conspired to render him a mark for party detraction. Time has silenced those idle rumours, and the laurels of the hero are now brightened by the gratitude and admiration of his country. The field of Tippecanoe has become classic ground ; the American traveller pauses there to contemplate a scene which has become hallowed by victory; the people of Indiana contemplate with pride the battle-ground on which their militia won imperishable honour, and their infant state became enrolled in the ranks of patriotism. But the handsome manner in which all the offi- cers who served in that engagement have since WILLIAM IIENKV liAKRlSON. 147 testified to the coolness, self-possession, and intre- pidity of the general, has placed this matter in its proper light. As far as any commander is entitled to credit, independent of his army, he merits, and has received it. He shared every danger and fatigue to Avhich his army was exposed. In the battle, he was in more peril than any other individual ; for he was personally koown to every Indian, and ex- posed himself fearlessly, on horseback, at all the points of attack, during the whole engagement. Every important movement was made by his ex- press order. The Kentucky legislature, notwithstanding the gloom which was spread over the state by the un- timely loss of some of her most cherished and gal- lant sons, took an early opportunity of testifying their approbation, by the following resolution: — " Resolved, That in the late campaign against the Indians on the Wabash, Governor VV. H. Har- rison has, in the opinion of this legislature, behaved like a hero, a patriot, and a general ; and that for his cool, deliberate, skilful, and gallant conduct, in the late battle of Tippecanoe, he deserves the warm- est thanks of the nation." The legislature of Indiana, also, passed compli- mentary resolutions, in which the " superior capa- city," " integrity," and " important services" of the governor, are recognized in the most grateful terms ; while the militia who were in the engage- 148 MEMOIR OF ment, at a meeting held after their return, unani- mously expressed their confidence in their leader, the cheerfulness with which they had followed him, and the opinion that their success was attributable " to his masterly conduct in the direction and ma- noeuvring of the troops." In 1816, a work was published at Keene, in New-Hampshire, entitled " A Journal of two cam- paigns of the 4th regiment of United States infantry, by Adam Walker, a private in the 4th regiment." At the thirty-first page of this book are found the following remarks, which form the conclusion of Mr. Walker's account of the battle of Tippecanoe. They were written by a person with whom Gene- ral Harrison had no acquaintance, and who doubt- less expressed the opinion of the common soldiers of that army. " General Harrison received a shot through the rim of his hat. In the heat of the action his voice was frequently heard, and easily distinguished, giving his orders in the same calm, cool, and col- lected rnanner, with which we had been used to receive them on drill or parad6. The confidence of the troops in the general was unlimited." Again he remarks, in speaking of a small portion of the militia who became dissatisfied by being de- tained from home longer than they had expected : *' He appeared not disposed to detain any man against his inclination,; being endowed by nature WILLIAM HENRY HAKRISON. 149 with a lieart as humane as brave, in his frequent addresses to the militia, his eloquence was formed to persuade ; appeals were made to reason as well as feeling, and ntjver were they made in vain." On the night preceding the morning of the bat- tle, a negro man, who was among the followers of the camj), but had been missed from his duty, was found lurking near the governor's marquee, and arrested. A drum-head court-martial was called for his trial the next morning, of which Colonel Boyd was president, and the prisoner was convicted of having deserted to the enemy, under circumstances which led to the belief that he was engaged in a plan against the governor's life, and had returned secretly into camp for that purpose. The sentence was that the prisoner was guilty, and should suffer death. The sentence was approved, and it was intended that it should be carried into execution in one hour. But the troops were en- gaged in fortifying the camp, and could not be called ofT to witness the execution, and he was at last saved bv the benevolence of the ijovernor. The reasons^ for this lenity, as described by himself in a letter to Governor Scott of Kentucky, do great honour to his heart : — " The fact was that I began to pity him, and I could not screw myself up to the point of giving the fatal order. If he had been out of my sight, he would have been executed. But when he was first taken. General Wells and Colo- 13* 150 MEMOIR OF nel Owen, who were old Indian fighters, as we had no irons to put on him, had secured him after the Indian fcshion. This is done by throwing a per- son on his back, splitting a log and cutting notches in it to receive the ankles, then replacing the sev- ered parts, and compressing them together with forks, driven over the log into the ground. The arms are extended and tied to stakes secured in the same manner. The situation of a person thus placed, is as uneasy as can possibly be conceived. The poor wretch thus confined lay before my fire, his face receiving the rain that occasionally fell, and his eyes constantly turned upon me, as if im- ploring mercy. I could not withstand the appeal, and I determined to give him another chance for his life. I had all the commissioned officers assem- bled, and told them that his fate depended upon them. Some were for executing him, and I believe that a majority would have been against him, but for the interference of the gallant Snelling. 'Brave comrades,' said he, ' let us save him. The wretch deserves to die ; but as our commander, whose life was more particularly his object, is willing tp spare him, let us also forgive him. I hope, at least, that every officer of the 4th regiment will be on the side of mercy.' Snelling prevailed ; and Ben was brought to this place, where he v^^as discharged." This simple account of the motives which influ- enced Governor Harrison in the performance of an WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 151 act of magnanimous lenity, needs little comment from his biographer. It shows a heart warm with the finest feelings of humanity, and is in consonance with the whole tenor of his life, in which we find. no act of irascible precipitation, military violence, or selfish revenue. The commander-in-chief of an army was not exalted so high in his own estima- tion, as to forget the feelings of the man ; and he could pity the wretchedness of a poor negro, though that negro was an assassin employed by savages to take his life. It appeared afterwards that another plan for his assassination had been laid by the prophet. Two Winnebago Indians had engaged to execute this detestable plan. A council was to have been held with the governor, attended with all the usual forms. The prophet and his chief men were to concede all disputed points, and the suspicion of the Americans lulled by submission. The two bravoes, who had devoted themselves to death, were to rush upon the governor at an unguarded moment, and instantly dispatch him. At this signal, the warriors were to rush from an ambuscade, and raising the terrific war-whoop, to attack our army during the confu- sion and dismay occasioned by the loss of its com- mander. Had this plan been persevered in, the governor would probably have fallen, whatever might have been the fate of the army. But it was probably too daring for the genius of the prophet, 152 MEMOIR OF who, when he came to take counsel of his pillow, might have reflected that his own person would be exposed in its execution. On the night preceding the day when this plan was to have been put in action, he suddenly changed his mind, and ordered the attack, telHng his men that the Great Spirit had appeared to him and promised him success — and Ben, the negro, was sent into camp to murder the governor before the attack, or at its commence- ment. The battle of Tippecanoe was one of the most decisive engagements that ever was fought between the Indians and the whites. The numbers on either side were nearly equal ; the place and time of at- tack were chosen by the Indians, who were the assailants ; and who not only sought to surprise our troops, but fought with an audacity unprece- dented in the annals of savage warfare. Laying aside the usual cunning and caution of their pecu- liar system of tactics, which teaches them to avoid exposure, and to strike by stealth, they boldly rushed upon the American troops, and fought hand to hand with the most desperate ferocity. They were not only completely beaten, but their loss was unusually great. The high sense entertained by the government of the importance of this victory, is emphatically expressed in a message from the President to Con- gress, dated December 18, 1811. "While it is WILLIAM IIENRV HARRISON. 153 deeply to be lamented," says Mr. Madison, " that so many valuable lives have been lost in the action wliich took place on the 9th ult., Congress will see with satisfaction the dauntless spirit and fortitude victoriously displayed by every description of troops engaged, as well as the collected firmness which distinguished their commander, on an occa- sion requiring the utmost exertion of valour and discipline." Jt was no mean jRhicvcment which could extort from the justice of the mild and upright Madison, a compliment expressed in terms of such decided ap- probation. The immediate results of this gallant victory were highly honourable to the commander-in-chief, and beneficial to the country. The frontier became quiet; the farmer resumed his labours, and the mo- ther could press her infant to her bosom, without shuddering at the thought of the moment when its blood might be shed in her presence. As the intelligence spread rapidly from tribe to tribe, the terror of our arms pervaded the Indian country, and the numerous warriors of that wide region of wilderness assembled hastily around their respec- tive council-fires, to deliberate on the measures which policy might dictate in such a crisis. Some of the tribes had openly, and others secretly, par- ticipated in the hostile schemes of Tecumthe and the prophet ; while others had stood aloof, awaiting < ■w 154 MEMOIR OF the issue of the approaching contest, and prepared to congratulate the party which might prove victo- rious. Had Harrison been beaten, the triumphant bands of Tecumthe, reinforced by tribes hitherto neutral, would have been poured upon the settle- ments, the tomahawk would have been bathed in blood, and the whole frontier have been lighted up with the dreadful glare of the conflagration. The decisive blow which Harrison had struck against the Indian power, at mice determined the doubts of the wavering, and quelled the rising spirit of the discontented. As far as it was possible to impress the minds of these fickle barbarians, the, impression was made ; and the governor was soon apprised that his bayonets had produced a deep and salutary conviction, which the admonitions of years had failed to inculcate. Deputations from a num- ber of tribes waited upon him, to disclaim all con- nexion with Tecumthe, to profess their unaltered friendship towards our government, and to depre- cate the consequences of the delusion which led to the recent conflict. The conduct of these deputies was entirely dif- ferent from that of the chiefs and warriors, who had formerly met the governor in council ; submission and respect were now substituted for the insolence which had on some previo^ps occasions marked their deportment. In February, 1812, the gover- nor received intelligence that eighty Indians, depu- WILLIAM IIENKY HARRISON. 155 ties from all the tribes who were engaged in the hite hostilities, except the Shawanese, had arrived at Fort Harrison, on their way to Vincennes. He immediately sent a messenger to meet them, to inquire the reason of their coming in so large a body, and to propose to them to send back all but a few chiefs from each tribe, or that the whole band should come unarmed. This step he adopted in consequence of a private notice, which intimated the existence of a treacherous design against his person. On the arrival of the deputies, however they delivered up their arms without the slightest hesitation ; and evinced, in every particular, the subdued deportment of men who had been taught to respect the talents and power of him with whom they came to treat. 156 MEMOIR OP CHAPTER XI. Declaration of War — Its effect on the West — Harrison called into service by the people — Volunteers from Kentucky* The deceptive calm which succeeded the battle of Tippecanoe, was not of long continuance. The Indians were awed, but not conciliated. The ap- proaching war between the United States and Great Britain revived their appetite for plunder, and Te- cumthe renewed his intrigues with greater activity than ever. The Indians again commenced their bloody system of border warfare, and many depre- dations were committed on the borders of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, at points so far distant from each other, as to distract public attention, and cre- ate an universal panic. As the murders became more frequent, and more aggravated by the cruel- ties which attended their perpetration, the alarm increased, until the whole frontier became an ex- tensive scene of dismay and suffering : the labours of husbandry were suspended, families deserted their homes and sought safety in flight, and the governor found himself surrounded by fugitives claiming protection, and by suiferers demanding WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 157 vcngcanrc. Wc pass over all these events with (he riMiiark, that Governor Harrison exerted his usual ac- tivity in placing the country in the best posture for ilolbnce, in meeting the enemy at every point where it was possible to anticipate their approach, and in aflbrding to the defenceless inhabitants that protec- tion which was dictated as well by a high sense of official responsibility, as by the native benevolence of his disposition. On the 18th of June, 1812, war was declared against Great Britain. The eflect of this measure upon the western people has never been sufficiently appreciated ; nor have their patriotism, their sacri- fices, and their sufferings, received the full measure of applause to which they are justly entitled. Though more exposed than most of their fellow- citizens, none received the intelligence of the decla- ration of war with such enthusiasm, or entered into ihc contest with more cheerful gallantry. While some of those whose homes were safe from inva- sion, and who risked nothing by the contest, but the profits of an advantageous traffic, were bitterly denouncing the government, the western people, whose borders became the seat of a war with an enemy as unsparing as their own savage allies, and whose families were exposed to all its horrors, cheerfully acquiesced in that decision which put in jeopardy all that they held most dear. Instead of murmuring at an act of Congress which was to 14 158 MEMOIR OF bring the desolation of the firebrand and the toma- hawk to their firesides, they indignantly spurned from office those few of their representatives, who, preferring security to honour, advocated weaker counsels. The popularity of the war was sUch, that the whole mass of the able-bodied population was ready, if required, to take the field. The wealthiest, the most influential, the most highly gifted in talent, were prepared to serve in the ranks of patriotism. The battle for independence was again to be fought, and they were eager to emu- late, by deeds of peril, the stern republican virtues of their venerated forefathers. No sooner was war declared, than the western governors proceeded with alacrity to place their respective states and territories in a posture for de- fence, and to call out volunteers for distant opera- tions. It is no small evidence of the confidence reposed in the tafents, military skill, and patriotism of Governor Harrison, that at a time when all were willing to serve, and when the best abilities of this region might have been put in requisition, he was the man to whom the whole people of the west looked as their leader, in whose hands they were willing to confide the protection of their families, property, and honour, and who was immediately placed, almost by acclamation, at the head of their armies. The records of those times, too voluminous to b*^ WILLIAM HENKY IIARKISON. 159 repeated here, show how justly tliat deserving pa- triot had earned the popularity which he enjoyed. His indefatigable exertions had not ceased with the victory at Tippecanoe. The interval between that time and the declaration of war, had been improved by him in preparing for the approaching contest, — in consulting with the governor of Kentucky with regard to the employment of the militia of that state, in assisting Governor Edwards to place the exposed frontier of Illinois in a posture for defence, and in pointing out to the general government the weak places that would be endangered by the breaking out of hostilities. Shortly after war was declared. Governor Har- rison received a letter from Governor Scott of Ken- tucky, in which the latter earnestly requested a conference in relation to the disposition* of the Ken- tucky troops, who were destined to protect the frontiers. Governor Harrison immediately went to Frankfort, where he was received with public honours. The militia was paraded, and the gover- nor of Kentucky received him in person, at the head of the troops, amid the firing of cannon, and the acclamations of the people. Such was the dis- tinirnished rank which even then he held amonor the citizens of the west. He remained at Frankfort several days, diligently engaged in council, giving all the energies of his active mind to the maturing of those plans on which the lives and property of 160 MEMOIR OP his fellow-citizens depended. During this visit to Kentucky, an incident occurred, which is thus re- corded in the valuable biography of Harrison by Mr. Dawson : — " Governor Harrison dined in Lexington, with a large party of gentlemen of that town and its vicini- ty, all of them ardent friends to the war ; the conver- sation turning upon the north-western campaign, and the governor delivering his sentiments, similar to those contained in the letter, (afterwards written,) the company were so struck with the justice of his remarks, that he was urged to communicate them to the Secretary of War. To this he objected, on the ground that it might be considered as interfer- ing with matters which were foreign to his own duty, which was confined to the defence of the ter- ritories ; but being assured by Mr. Clay, one of the party, who is always alive to the true interests and honour of his country, that it would be well received by the government, the letter was written." In this letter, besides suggesting a system of operations, in which the writer displays an inti- mate acquaintance, as well with the military art, as with the actual posture of affairs throughout the whole western frontier, he evinces the sagacity of a strong and penetrating mind, by predicting events which, unhappily for the country, had not been an- ticipated by the government. " If it were certain," he writes, " that General WILLIAM HENKY HAUKlSON. 161 Hull would be able, even with the reinforcement which is now about to be sent to him, to reduce Maiden and retake Macinac, there would be no ne- cessity of sending other troops in that direction. But I greatly fear that the capture of Macinac will give such eclat to the British and Indian arms, that the northern tribes will pour down in swarms upon Detroit, oblige General Hull to act entirely upon the defensive, and meet, and perhaps overpower, the convoys and reinforcements which may be sent him. It appears to me, indeed, highly probable that the large detachment which is now destined for his relief, under Colonel Wells, will have to fight its way. I rely greatly upon the valour of those troops, but it is possible that the event may be adverse to us, and if it is, Detroit mvst fall^ and with it every hope of re-establishing our affairs in that quarter until the next year." Again, he says : " There arc other considerations which strongly recommend the adoption of this measure. I mean the situation of Chicago, which must be in danger, and if it is not well supplied with provi- sions, the danger must be imminent." This letter was written on the 10th of August; on the 15th Chicago was taken, and the mortifying intelligence of the fall of Detroit, soon after, filled the breast of every patriot with indignant sorrow. Thus far we have seen Governor Harrison act- ing as a civil officer, and only engaging in military 14* 162 MEMOIR OF affairs when engaged in defence of his own terri- ton', in his executive capacity. We shall now fol- low him to that brilliant theatre on which his brow became crowned with imperishable laurels, and his name associated with those of our most illustrious warriors. He became commander-in-chief of the north-western army, under circumstances as re- markable, as they were honourable to him, to his fellow-citizens, and to the appointing power. He was called to that responsible station by the voice of the people, who in the hour of danger selected him as the individual in whose capacity and pa- triotism thev had most confidence, and whom thev esteemed most worthy to be entrusted to lead them to the field. The war had now commenced. Macinac and Chicago had been taken by the enemy, and De- troit, the most important of the north-western posts, was threatened by the combined British and Indian force. The fall of this place, and the capture of the army of Hull, would leave the whole frontier exposed — the vast region including western Penn- sylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri, would be at the mercy of a remorseless foe. The most active preparations were making in Ohio and Kentucky, to avert a catastrophe which must lead to such complete and wide-spread deso- lation. The governor of Ohio, as soon as advised WILLIAM IIKNKY HARRISON. 163 of the precarious situation of the army of Hull, ordered twelve hundred militia to be embodied, and marched to Urbana, under Brigadier General Luppcr. The governor of Kentucky had organized five thousand five hundred men, who were waitinir for orders. Two thousand of these were ordered to rendezvous in Georgetown, to be placed under the orders of Brigadier General John Payne for immediate duty. Never did the patriotism of Ken- tucky shine more conspicuously than on this occa- sion. These citizens were not drafted unwillingly into the service — they were volunteers who offered themselves cheerfully to their country. The ranks were filled by men of every grade in life — young men of high promise, farmers who forsook com- fortable homes, mechanics who threw aside their occupations, and professional gentlemen who left their books and their practice, to brave the fatigues of the wilderness. The officers were gentlemen of high estimation for talents and private worth — among them were such men as Colonels John Allen and Martin D. Hardin, who stood among: the fore- most at the bar — Major George Madison, who was auditor of public accounts of the state — Colonels Scott and Lewis, who were experienced in Indian warfare — Captain John Simpson, who had been speaker of the house of representatives in Kentucky, and was now a member elect to Consress — and the Rev. Samuel Shannon, who volunteered as a chap- 164 MEMOIR OF lain. This venerable divine bad left Princeton College in the early part of the revolution, to enter as a lieutenant in the army, in which he served throughout the war. Again, when the liberties of his country were threatened, he stepped forward, and at an advanced age threw himself into the ranks of patriotism. On the 16th of August the troops were reviewed by Governor Scott; they were addressed by the Rev. James Blythe, President of Transylvania Uni- versity, and afterwards by Henry Clay. At the very moment when the dastardly Hull was con- summating an act of unparalleled meanness, by surrendering an important post, and a gallant army, without striking a blow for the honour of our flag — the unrivalled orator of Kentucky was pouring out those strains of fervid eloquence, which would have kindled up the latent spark of courage in bo- soms less generous than those to which he appeal- ed, and to which the sons of the hardy pioneers responded in bursts of patriotic enthusiasm. These troops were then marched to Newport, and Cincin- nati. Such was the spirit of the west — such were the men over whom Harrison was called to take com- mand ; and we utter no extravagant compliment in saying, that when the best blood, the best muscle, the best talents of the country, were in the field, it was no small proof of merit to be selected to take WILLIAM in:\KV IIAKUISO.N. 105 the cliief command of an army composed of such materials. Tlie manner in which the selection of General Harrison was made, and the reasons which induced his appointment, are thus recorded by M'Afiee, an intelligent Kcntuckian, who was an actor in these stirring scenes, and has since risen to high distinc- tion in civil office. "A ihw days before the actual attack on Detroit by General Brock, an express had been sent by General Hull, to hasten the reinforcement which had been ordered to join him from Kentucky. By this conveyance, several of the principal officers of the army had written to their friends in Cincin- nati, as well as to the governor of Kentucky, stat- ing their entire want of confidence in their com- mander, and their apprehensions of some fatal disiister from his miserable arrangements and ap- parent imbecility and cowardice. These letters, also, declared it to be the common wish of the army, that Governor Harrison should accompany the expected reinforcements. He was also very popular in Kentucky, and was anxiously desired as their commander by the troops marching from that state to the north-western army. But the au- thority with which he had been invested by the President, did not entitle him to command any corps, which was not intended for operations in the western territories. 166 MEJioiii or "The question of giving Harrison the command of the detachment on the march from Kentucky for Detroit, presented great difficulties to the mind of Governor Scott. The motives to make the appoint- ment were numerous. He had ample testimony of its being the wish of the army at Detroit. The fourth United States regiment in particular, which had acquired so much fame at Tippecanoe, under the command of Harrison, he was assured by an officer of that corps, were eager to see their old commander again placed over them. The same desire was felt by the Kentucky militia ; and the citizens echoed their sentiments in every part of the state. To these may be added his own ardent attachment to Governor Harrison, and entire con- fidence in his fitness for the command. The ob- stacles in the way of the appointment were, that Harrison was not a citizen of Kentucky, the laws of which would not sanction the appointment of any other to an office in the militia ; and that a major general had already been appointed for the detach- ed militia, one only being required and admissible in that corps. Had Governor Scott been capable of shrinking from his duty and the responsibility of the occasion, he might have easily evaded this delicate business, as the day on which he was de- liberating upon it, was the last but one that he had to remain in office. That he might, however, nei- ther act unadvisedly, nor appear to assume tc* WILLIAM MKXUY IIAUUISON. 1G7 much, in this situation, he determined to ask the advice of the covernor elect, and such members of Ct>ii;;ress, and officers of the general and state go- vernments, as could be conveniently collected. At this would otherwise have been. He commenced n system of organization and discipline, to which he devoted a degree of severe attention and personal labour, under which nothini^ but a hiiih sense of military pride, united with patriotic devotion to his country, could have supported him. His own en- thusiasm was communicated to those around him, 168 MEMOIR OF and the troops, as well as the people at large, looked upon him with cheerful confidence as the chosen leader who was destined to conduct the raw but brave soldiery of the west to victory. His own views, and the hopes of the country, received a tern porary check by the appointment of General Win Chester, of the regular army, to take the command Shortly after, General Harrison received a com munication from the war department, which in formed him that he had been appointed a brigadier general in the army of the United States ; an ap- pointment which he declined accepting, until he could learn whether his acceptance would make him subordinate to General Winchester. Mr. M'Affee remarks, " The troops had confi- dently expected that General Harrison would be confirmed in the command ; and by this time he had completely secured the confidence of every soldier in the army. He was affable and coun:eous in his manners, and indefatigable in his attention to every branch of business. His soldiers seemed td antici- pate the wishes of their general : it was only aeces,-, sary to be known that he wished something done, and all were anxious to risk their lives in its ao complishment. His men would have fought bette and suffered more with him, than with any other general in America ; and whatever might have been the merits of General Winchester, it was cer- tainly an unfortunate arrangement which trans- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 1C9 ferred the command to him at this moment. It is absolutely necessary that militia soldiers should have great confidence in their general, if they are required either to obey with promptness, or to fight with bravery. The men were at last reconciled to inarch under Winchester, but with a confident be- fief that Harrison would be reinstated in the com- mand ; and which accordingly was done, as soon as the war department was informed of his appoint- ment in the Kentucky troops, and his popularity in the western country." It is only to be regretted that the command had not been conferred upon Harrison at an earlier pe- riod, as in that case the dreadful tragedy of the massacre at the river Raisin would not have been exhibited, and the British army might have been saved from the blackest stain ever indelibly im- pressed upon the military character of a nation, by disgraceful outrage and cowardly revenge. 15 170 MEMOIR OF CHAPTER XII. Unprepared state of the countr)/ at the commence- ment of the war — March of the volunteers — Their confidence in Harrison, Those who look back at the events of the late war, are not more forcibly struck with the brilliant success of our arms upon sea and land, than with the unprepared condition of the country, even for de- fensive warfare. The latter circumstance was used by the party opposed to the administration, as an argument against the expediency of declaring the war ; when in fact hostilities had for years been waged against us, on the frontiers and on the ocean? and the taking up of arms on our part was a mea- sure of self-defence, which had been delayed until longer forbearance would have been neither safe nor honourable. The unprepared state of the coun- try, under such circumstances, is an evidence of the pacific character of our institutions, and of the great reluctance with which our government or people consent to appeal to the last resort of nations. In- sulted and abused as we were, we had relied con- fidently upon argument and negotiation, and had I appealed to the justice of our enemy rather than her WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 171 fears. The trust reposed by us in the magnanimity of a great nation, was misplaced ; the language of conciliation and manly remonstrance was new to the ears of despotism, and instead of winning favour, encouraged the foe to greater audacity of aggres- sion. Yet even up to the last moment there was no preparation for war — the insulted flag, the im- pressed seamen, and the ravaged frontier, failed to disturb the love and the habit of peace which are inherent elements in our national character. Posterity will read the history of the last war with a surprise bordering on incredulity. In open hostilities with one of the most powerful and war- like of nations — we began without an army, with- out magazines, without resources. With an exten- sive sea-board, and a long line of interior frontier accessible to the enemy, we had few ships, and scarcely any forts that deserved the name. The north-western country was especially ex- posed. After the capture of Hull, there remained ' no fortress on the upper lakes, in our hands, nor any regular force. Corps of militia, hastily col- , lected, were advancing towards the lines ; but they were undisciplined, and destitute of supplies. Some idea of the condition of all these troops may be formed from the description given of those assem- bled at Newport and Cincinnati, in a letter from . General Harrison to the Secretary of War, dated : August 28, 1S12. 172 MEMOIR OF He says, " 1 shall march to-morrow morning with the troops that I have here, taking the route of Dayton and Piqua. The relief of Fort Wayne will be my first object, and my after operations will be governed by circumstances, until I receive your instructions. " Considering my command as merely provi- sional, I shall cheerfully conform to any other ar- rangement which the government may think pro- per to make. The troops which I have with me, and those which are coming from Kentucky, are, perhaps, the best materials for forming an army that the world has produced. But no equal num- ber of men was ever collected, who knew so little of military discipline ; nor have I any assistance that can give me the least aid, if there was even time for it, but Captain Adams of the fourth regi- ment who was left here sick, and whom I have ap- pointed deputy adjutant general, until the pleasure of the President can be known. " No arms for cavalry have yet arrived at New- port, and I shall be forced to put muskets in the hands of all the dragoons. I have written to the quarter-master at Pittsburgh to request him to for- ward all supplies of arms, equipments, and quar- ter-master's stores, as soon as possible. I have also requested him to send down a few pieces of artillery, without waiting for your order ; and wait your instructions as to a further number. There WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 173 is but one piece of artillery, an iron four-pounder, anywhere that I can hear of in the country. If it is intehded to retake tlie posts that we have lost, and reduce Maiden, this season, the artillery must be sent on as soon as possible. There is no longer a possibility of getting money for drafts in this country. The paymaster (General Taylor's de- puty) continues to act, and I have been obliged to agree with the bank here, called the Miami Export- ing Company, that the United States shall be at the expense and risk of sending on specie for the drafts that are now given for the pay of the troops, and for the quarter-master's department." Having received advices informing him that Fort Wayne was invested by a large body of Indians, and was in danger of being reduced. General Har- rison hastened, without waiting for the orders of government, to march to the relief of that place ; but on the 5th of September was obliged to halt, to await a supply of flints, a small but indispensable article. The few facts which we have stated, show the importance of the duties intrusted to General Har- rison, and the insufficiency of the means with which he was to operate. With a line of frontier to pro- tect of several hundred miles in extent, composed of a wilderness without roads, — a vast wilderness of forest, intersected with swamps and streams of diiRcult passage — without the ordinary means of 15* 174 MEMOIR OP receiving or conveying information, and destitute of depots of provisions and munitions of war — op- posed to well-trained battalions, aided by hordes of savages who could move unobserved from point to point — he had an army without discipline, cav- alry without swords, artillery-men without guns, infantry without flints, and paymasters without money. Most of these deficiencies were eventually supplied through his own exertions ; and in addition to the usual duties of commander-in-chief, he was obliged to attend personally to the drilling of the soldiers, the procurement of arms, munitions, and camp equipage, and the arrangement of pecuniary resources. His indefatigable attention to these va- rious details soon won the respect and confidence of the army. A writer of that day says, " Briga- dier General Harrison is at Piqua with 2000 Ken- tucky soldiers, and 2000 more in his rear. Har- rison's presence appears to inspire every person with courage, and makes even cowards brave. His present conduct evinces a determination to retrieve the injured reputation of our country. He has made a most animating speech to the friendly na- tives at Piqua, who are numerous and suing for a continuation of peace." On the 9th of September the army arrived at Shane's Crossing of the St. Mary's, not far from Fort Wayne; and on the 11th the general wrote to the Secretary of War, " You need not fear the WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 175 issue of the action, wliich I expect will take place to-morrow. My troops are in liigh spirits, and will, I ann persuaded, do honour to themselves and their country." The anticipations of the general were not real- ized. Instead of having to fight his way to the fort, he found the positions of the besieging army abandoned. The enemy fled at his approach ; and he had the merit of relieving that import- ant post, by his prompt and skilful conduct, with- out any expenditure of blood. Previous to the arrival of General Winches- ter, who had been ordered to take the com- mand, General Harrison employed himself in measures to strike terror into the hostile Indians. Detachments were sent to destroy the Indian towns, and the corn-fields, in the surrounding region, some of which the general attended in per- son. Large quantities of corn were destroyed, and the enemy disabled, from the want of subsist- ence, from embodying themselves for any further mischief. The arrival of General Winchester to take the command caused much discontent among the troops. M' A flee says, he had been a revolutionary officer, and was now advanced in years. He was a wealthy citizen of Tennessee, where he had lived many years, in a degree of elegant luxury and «ase, which was not calculated to season him for 176 MEMOIR OF a northern campaign in the forest. His arrival produced much uneasiness among the troops ; being a regular officer with whom they were unac- quainted, many of the military seemed disposed not to be commanded by him; and General Harrison, with the field officers, had to exert all their influence to reconcile the army to the change." WILLIAM HENRV IIAUKISON. 177 CHAPTER XIII. Harrison appointed Commander-in-chief — Extent of his command — Difficulties hij which he was surrounded — Plan of operations. When General Harrison retired from the army, his intention was to return to his residence in In- diana, and resume his duties as governor of that territory, from which he had been called by the urgent request of his fellow-citizens. He had felt himself obliged to obey that call, when it was made, because there was no other commander in the field ; but when the President, unaware of the wishes of the western people, designated another individual as commander-in-chief, it became Mr. Harrison's obvious duty to acquiesce cheerfully in the deci- sion. No sooner, however, did the President learn the actual state of affairs on the frontier, that Mr. Har- rison was the choice of the whole western people, and that ho had been industriously enfrawed in making extensive preparations for active operations, y than he saw the propriety of conferring on him the chief command. Accordingly, when Governor Harrison reached Piqua, on his return, he met an express, conveying to him the following dispatch : 178 MEMOm OF " War Department, Sept. 17, 1812. " Sir, " The President is pleased to assign to you the command of the north-western army, which in ad- dition to the regular troops and rangers in that quarter, will consist of the volunteers and militia of Kentucky, Ohio, and three thousand from Vir- ginia and Pennsylvania, making your whole force ten thousand men. " Having provided for the protection of the west- ern frontier, you will retake Detroit, and with a view to the conquest of Upper Canada, you will penetrate that country as far as the force under your command will in your judgment justify. " Every exertion is making to give you a train of artillery from Pittsburgh ; to effect which, you must be sensible, requires time. Major Stoddard, the senior officer of artillery at that place, will ad- vise you of his arrangements and progress, and receive your instructions. Captain Gratiot, of the engineers, will report himself to you, from Pitts- burgh ; he will receive your orders, and join you with the first piece of artillery which can be pre- pared, or receive such orders as you may direct. Major Ball, of the 2d regiment of dragoons, will also report himself, and join you immediately. Such staff officers as you may appoint conformably to law, will be approved by the President. "Copies of all contracts for supplying provisions WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 179 have been transmitted. Mr. Denny, the contractor at Pittsburgh, is instructed to furnish magazines of provisions at such places as you may direct. " The deputy quarter-master at Pittsburgh will continue to forward stores and munitions of every kind, and will meet your requisitions. " Colonel Buford, deputy commissary, at Lex- ington, is furnished with funds, and is subject to your orders. Should an additional purchasing commissary become necessary, you will appoint one, and authorize him to draw and sell bills on this de- partment. It seems advisable to keep the local con- tractors in requisition as far as they can supply. With these objects in view, you will command such means as may be practicable, exercise your own discretion, and act in all cases according to your own judgment. " Very respectfully, dec. " W. EusTis. "Brig. Gen. Wm. H. Harrison." In a letter to Governor Shelby, of the same date, the Secretary remarks, "It has been determined to vest the command of all the forces on the west- ern and north-western frontier, in an officer whose military character, and knowledge of the country, appeared to be combined with the public confi- dence. General Harrison has accordingly been appointed to the chief command, with authority to employ officers, and to draw from the public stores. 180 MEMOIR OF and every other practicable source, all the means of effectuating the object of his command." The command bestowed on General Harrison was the most extensive and important that was ever intrusted to any officer of the United States — " Washington and Greene excepted. The territory assigned to him was very large, and contained an endless number of posts and scattered settlements which he was required to defend against numerous hordes of Indians, at the same time that he carried forward the regular operations of the campaign against a well-disciplined British army. His forces were raw, undisciplined militia — full of ardour, self-devotion, and patriotism, but wholly destitute of the habits or experience of the soldier. The dif- ficulties which he had to encounter were of no ordinary character, and imposed a weight of duty which required an union of all the qualities that con- stitute an able leader. The commissariat of the army was wretchedly appointed, and almost with- out organization; and the general found himself called upon to act in the wilderness, far from the country from which his supplies must be drawn, distant from all highways or other channels of in- tercourse, and without any regular system for fur- nishing provisions to his army. A trackless and swampy desert, almost impassable for heavy wa- gons, and filled with hostile savages, intervened between the seat of war and the nearest settlements. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 181 On the other hand, the most ample powers were given to the general ; he was permitted to make appointments in all the various departments of his army, and the olTicers thus designated by himself, were confirmed by the President. He was autho- rized to draw on the government for money to an unlimited amount, and to make any contracts which he might deem expedient, for the furnishing of his army. These extraordinary powers were exercised by him with moderation, and with ener- gy. Though clothed with authority inferior only to that of the President, and far greater than that conferred on any other commander, he always con- ducted himself with the prudence of a citizen who understood the respect due to the laws, and the re- sponsibility which he owed the people. It is worthy of remark, that this extensive com- mand was conferred on General Harrison by Mr. Madison, whose official relations had been such as to enable him to form an accurate opinion of the capacity of the individual whom he thus trusted. Mr. Madison was called to the office of Secretary of State, by Mr. Jetfcrson, in 1801, shortly after ^fr. Harrison had been appointed governor of In- diana. They had both served throughout the whole eight years of the administration of Mr. Jefferson ; and the Secretary of State must have been well advised of the estimation in which the territorial go%ernor was held by the President. He doubtless 16 182 MEMOIR OF had access to the voluminous correspondence of Mr. Harrison, on subjects of grave importance and immediate interest. No man in the nation had a more intimate knowledge of all Mr. Harrison's offi- cial acts, or was possessed of more ample testimo- ny upon which to form a judgment of his capacity and habits of transacting business. This illustrious patriot became President in 1809, and Mr. Harri- son remained in office under him, enjoying his con- fidence, as he had enjoyed that of Mr. Jefferson. It was therefore after an intimate official inter- course of nearly twelve years, that the President conferred on General Harrison the chief command of an important division of the army, and intrusted him with powers and responsibilities the most weighty and delicate. It was with such a know- ledge of the character of the new commander-in- chief, that he gave him an unlimited command of means, and authorized him to " act in all cases according to his own judgment." With the force now under his command, Gene- ral Harrison proceeded to St. Mary's, and thence to Defiance, where he found General Winchester encamped. During the march the troops suffered much. The weather was cold and rainy, and the army being unprovided with tents, were greatly exposed. General Harrison and his staff were in the same situation, and endured similar hardships. The following description of a bivouac of one even- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 183 ing on tlmt marcli, is given as a specimen of what was customary during this campaign. The troops, boinir on a forced march, were not suffered to halt until dark. They were then formed, as nearly as practicable, in the order of a regular encampment, and tiie proper guards posted. The ground now spoken of was on the bank of the Au Glaise river, in a flat beech bottom, which was nearly covered with water, from the rain which fell in torrents during the whole night. The troops were destitute of axes, and could only procure such fuel as was furnished by the dry limbs lying scattered on the ground. Those who could find a dry log, against which a fire could be kindled, were fortunate; many sat, without fire, upon their saddles, at the roots of trees, against which they leaned, and en- deavoured to sleep. Being separated from the bag- gage, few had any thing to eat, or drink. The men became peevish, and were not sparing in their complaints. To set an example to the soldiers, and give a ditfcrcnt turn to their thoughts, the general, who, with his staff, sat at a small fire, wrapped in his cloak, receiving the rain as it fell, requested one of his olficers to sing an Irish song, — the humour of which, and the determination evinced at head quar- ters to make the best of the circumstances, soon pro- duced good-humour throughout the camp.* An- * Dawson. 184 31EMOIR OF Other officer sang a song, of which the chorus was: " Now 's the time for mirth and glee, Sing, and laugh, and dance with me." The ludicrous contrast between these words, and the gloom of the woods and the tempest, produced such an impression, that they soon became prover- bial ; and whenever afterwards the army was placed in a similar situation — when enduring the pelting of the storm, or wadincj to the knees in mud and ice, some gallant spirit would roar out, — " Now 's the time for mirth and glee," and the whole line of march would take up the words, in full chorus. This rapid movement had been induced by an express from General Winchester, bearing the in- telligence that his march had been impeded by par- ties of Indians ; and that on arriving near Defiance, he had discovered that they were accompanied by British troops, with artillery. At the same time a communication from Governor Meigs, with a letter from General Kelso, commanding a body of Penn- sylvania militia on Lake Erie, conveyed the intel- ligence, that on the 16th of September, 2000 In- dians, with some British regulars and militia, had left Fort Maiden on an expedition against Fort Wayne.* * M'Affee. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 185 The proinptitiido with which General Harrison moved towards the jxtint threatened hy tlic enemy, was creditahle to his zeal and capacity. But before his arrival, the enemy, whose force had been mag- nili^jd by report, had retired. An incident wiiich occurred on the arrival of General Harrison at ^^ inchester's camp, is too honourable to himself, and the troops, to be omit- ted ; and we shall do but justice to our contempo- rary, Mr. Butler, by extracting it from his history of Kentucky, as he has written it. " Soon after General Harrison's arrival at camp, and after he had retired to enjoy some little repose, so welcome to one who had been exposed on the preceding comfortless and forced expedition, he found himself suddenly awakened by Colonel Allen and Major M. D. Hardin. These officers were the bearers of the mortifying news, that Allen's regi- ment, exhausted by the hard fare of the campaign, and disappointed in the expectation of an immediate engagement with the enemy, had, in defiance of their duty to their country, and all the earnest re- monstrances of their officers, determined to return home. These officers assured General Harrison that they could do nothing with their men ; that their representations were answered by insults alone. They begged the general to rise and inter- fere, as the only officer who had any prospect of bringing the mutineers back to their duty. He re- 16 '^ 186 mj:moik of fused to interfere at that time ; but assured the gen- tlemen that he would attend to the serious object of their request, in his own way, and at his own time. The officers retired ; in the mean time Ge- neral Harrison sent one of his aids to direct Gene- ral Winchester to order the alarm to be beat on the ensuing morning, instead of the reveille. This adroit expedient brought all the troops to their arms, the first thing in the morning. It diverted the spirits of the discontented troops into a new channel of feeling ; and prepared them for the sub- . sequent events." " On the parading of the troops at their posts, General Winchester was ordered to form them into a hollow square. General Harrison now ap- peared upon parade, m.uch to the surprise of the troops, who, from his late arrival in camp, were un- apprised of his presence. If the sudden and unex- pected arrival of their favourite commander had so visible an effect upon the men, his immediate ad- dress to them fully preserved the impression. He began by lamenting that there was, as he was in- formed, considerable discontents in one of the Ken- tucky regiments: this, although a source of mortifica- tion to himself, on their account, was happily of little consequence to the government. He had more troops than he knew well what to do with, at the present stage of the campaign ; and he was expecting daily the aYrival of the Virginia and Pennsylvania quo- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 187 tas. It was fortunate, said this officer, with the ready oratory for which his native Virginia is so famed, that he had found out this dissatisfaction before the campaign was farther advanced, when the discovery might have been mischievous to the public interests, as well as disgraceful to the par- ties concerned. Now, so far as the government was interested, the discontented troops, who had come to the woods with the expectation of finding all the luxuries of home and peace, had full liberty to return. He would, he continued, order facilities to be furnished for their immediate accommodation. But he could not refrain from expressing the mor- tification he anticipated from the reception they would meet from the old and the young, \^ho had greeted them on their march to the scene of war, as their gallant neighbours." " What must be their feelings, said the general, to see those whom they had hailed as their gene- reus defenders, now returninsr without striking- a blow, and before their term of plighted service had expired? But if this would be the state of public sentiment in Ohio, what would it be in Kentucky? If their fathers did not drive back their dcijenerate sons to the field of battle, to recover their wounded honour, their mothers and sisters would hiss them from their presence. If, however, the discontented men were disposed to put up with all the taunts and 188 MEMOIR OF disdain wnich awaited them wherever they might go, they were at full liberty to go back." The influence of this animated address was in- stantaneous. This was evinced in a manner most flattering to the tact and management of the com- mander. Colonel J. M. Scott, the senior colonel of Kentucky, addressed his men. " You, my boys," said the generous veteran, " will prove your attach- ment for the service of your country, and your general, by giving him three cheers." The appeal was effective, and the air resounded with shouts. Colonel Lewis took the same course, and a similar effect resulted. The noble Allen then appealed to the disaffected regiment, and, with a feeling which almost choked his utterance, called upon his men to follow the patriotic example of the other Ken- tucky regiments. They also threw up their voices in loud acclamation, while many a sob of deep feeling was mingled with the shout of military ardour. They returned cheerfully to their duty ; and no troops served more faithfully, until the fatal day when most of them gave their lives to their country, on the bloody field of Raisin. We take this occasion to remark, that on various occasions the eloquence of General Harrison was exerted with admirable effect, throughout the whole of his military career. It was his practice to win obedience by kindness, and to enforce the perform- ance of duty by appeals to the reason of his troops. WILLIAM HENKY HARRISON. 189 His experience and good sense taught him that mi- litia — Irecnien serving voluntarily in the ranks of patriotism — did not expect, nor deserve, the same kind of treatment as is observed towards mercena- ry troops. Those who olfered their services on such occasions, were the high-spirited and gene- rous ; they were the choice men of a magnanimous population ; they had talent, intelligence, and chiv- alry; and their leaders were the popular men of the region. The commander who would have offended such men by an arrogant bearing, or have attempted to wound their pride by disgraceful pun- ishments, would have shown himself a bad judge of human nature. General Harrison adopted the opposite course; and while he observed a strict military etiquette, and required obedience from those under him, always treated his men with respect ; considering every soldier a patriot, who wae mak- ing sacrifices for his country, and reflecting that each had the delicate feelings of pride, which are always found associated with generous valour, and disinterested love of country. IXuring the whole of his command, he never caused nor permitted a degrading punishment to be inflicted on a militia soldier. Like a father, he often gave in private the affectionate admonition, which precluded the neces- sity of a public exposure, and produced the desired end ; or availing himself of his remarkable talent for extemporaneous speaking, he addressed his 190 MEMOIR OF troops in strains of elegant and forcible eloquence, which won them to their duty ; while his series of general orders were full of animating appeals to the reason, patriotism, and sense of duty of his brave fellow-soldiers. General Harrison is a man of remarkably con- ciliatory habits and manners. It is seldom that an individual of so ardent a temperament is endowed with such evenness of temper. He is by nature kind, has great warmth of heart, and buoyancy of spirits ; and though easily excited, is not readily discouraged, or awakened to anger. This has been the great secret of his popularity. His talents and public services have commanded respect ; but his uniform good temper, considerate- ness, and forbearance, — his conciliating manners, and his freedom from the arbitrary habits, and pas- sionate bearing, which sometimes accompany great military talents, won for him the love and confi- dence of those who followed him to the field. Their commander, their companion in danger and privation, he was on all occasions their friend and fellow-citizen. He demanded no homage to which he was not entitled. He claimed only what his commission gave, what his talents as a commander assured to him, and his qualities as a gentleman confirmed to be his right. The immediate objects of the campaign commit- ted to the sole direction of General Harrison, were, WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 191 'Jic recapture of Detroit, and the expulsion of the British from the territory of the United States — tlie protection of the north-western and western border — and the reduction of Maiden in Upper Canada. The extensive line of frontier committed to his protection, included the whole of the shores of the northern lakes, of which the numerous harbours and mouths of rivers were undefended by fortifica- tions, and easily accessible to the enemy ; while it also comprised the detached settlements on the Wabash and the Mississippi, which were exposed to the depredations of the Indians. The means for effecting these objects were wholly inadequate. The soldiers were militia, hastily raised, badly armed, and badly clothed. No regular sys- tem for furnishing supplies had as yet been estab- lished in any department of the army. Steamboats had not at that period been introduced upon i!he western waters ; nor was there a turnpike road west of the Ohio river. The points at which the various corps of the army were to operate, were far beyond the settlements ; and the w^agons or pack- horses employed in the transportation of stores or baggage, were driven through a wilderness encuni- bered with a luxuriant vegetation — over a rich deep soil, whose porous and spongy surface became con- verted by every rain into an almost impassable niire — and through swamps, as gloomy and un- wholesome as they were difficult to be passed. 192 MEMOIR OF There are few difficulties which may not be sur- mounted by genius and perseverance, with the proper aids ; but it will be seen that the govern- ment was enabled to give but little assistance to General Harrison, and that he was obliged to ac- complish much by his personal influence, which ought properly to have been effected by the regular operation of several different departments organized by law, and controlled by their proper chiefs. He was intrusted with the delicate responsibility of ap- pointing officers in the purchasing and disbursing departments, assigning to them their duties, and drawing in their favour for moneys to an unlimited amount. He was obliged to appeal personally to the governors of Ohio and Kentucky for their co- operation ; and was happy in finding, in Meigs and Shelby, men whose patriotism was of the elevated character which the emergency of the times, and their own high stations, required. His calls upon the people were made in many instances upon his individual responsibility ; while the volunteers who followed him to the field were often so disheartened by the hardships they had to endure, and the want of all the comforts and necessaries to which they were entitled, that they were only induced to per- severe in the generous enterprise in which they had engaged, by his eloquent harangues, and the con- tinual exertion of his personal popularity. We shall not attempt to enumerate the different WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 193 corps which served under General Harrison in thia campaign ; nor to place upon our brief record the names of the patriotic gentlemen who were leaders under him. They are omitted, not from any want of a due appreciation of their services, but because ■we have not room for these particulars: we are not writing a history of the war, but recounting the public services of one distinguished individual. His meritorious deeds, with those of other gentlemen, whose services deserve equally to be remembered by their countrymen, will be found related in more minute detail, in the several histories of the war. We make this explanation now, that none may ex- pect to find in this work more than it professes to give — a biography of Harrison. A few remarks only are necessary as to the great objects of the campaign, and its leading movements. To recapture Detroit, and to break up the power of the enemy by driving them from Maiden, were the main purposes; while it was necessary in the mean while to watch the movements of their troops, and defend the frontier settlements. Before Gene- ral Harrison arrived at Defiance, he had already formed a plan of operations, which elicited from the galUmt and accomplished engineer, Colonel Wood, the hifrhest encomium on the military so- nius of the commander-in-chief. The point from which the principal movement upon the enemy was to be made, was the Rapids of the Miami of the 17 194 MEMOIR OF Lake. This was the point of concentration. A military base was formed, extending from Upper Sandusky on the right, to Fort Defiance on the left. At these extreme points the right and left corps of the army were to be assembled ; the right division, to be composed of a Virginia and a Penn- sylvania brigade, the general selected for his own personal command. The left, composed of the troops then at Defiance, and three Kentucky regi- ments, then at or near St. Mary's, was commanded by General Winchester ; and the centre corps, com- posed of a brigade of the Ohio quota of militia, as- sembled at Fort M'Arthur, was commanded by Brigadier Tupper, of Ohio. Each of these corps had a separate line of operation, terminating at the Rapids. " This," says Colonel Wood, " was an excellent plan ; for, by sending the corps by differ- ent routes, with a view of concentrating somewhere - in the neighbourhood of the enemy, the march of the army would not only be expedited, but the fron- tiers much more effectually protected." General Harrison caused a new fort to be erect- ed on the Au Glaise, near the old one, and another on the same river about twelve miles from St. Mary's ; while he instructed General Winchester to direct his attention for the present chiefly to the transportation of supplies to Defiance, for the main expedition against Detroit. We pass over a number of minor operations, WILLIAM IIENKY HARRISON. 195 wliicli we have not room to detail. General Har- rison proceeded by Piqua to Urbana, and Irom the latter place to Franklinton, employing himself ac- tively in expediting the march of troops towards the frontier, and in forwarding artillery and sup- plies. The troops at different points were actively engaged ; those under Winchester completed Fort Winchester ; the regiment of Barbee at St. Mary's built Fort Barbee ; Poasjue's regiment erected Fort Amand on the Au Glaise ; and Colonel Jennings threw up a fortified work at his encampment. These regiments were also actively engaged in preparing boats and canoes, in escorting provisions and stores, and in other duties preparatory to the object of the campaign. The hardships borne by the troops, and the diffi- culties to be surmounted in carrying forward the views of the government, were of a character and magnitude, of which those who have not been en- gaged in similar scenes can have little conception. In the voluminous correspondence of General Har- rison with the government, these are forcibly point- ed out ; and we regret that our limits will not allow us to quote from those letters as extensively as we could wish.* In one of them, written on the 22d of October, he remarks, " I am not able to fix any * They may be found in Niles' Register, M'AfTee's His- tory, and Dawson's Life of Harrison. 196 MEMOIR OF period for the advance of the troops to Detroit. It is pretty evident that it cannot be done on proper principles, until the frost shall become so severe as to enable us to use the rivers and the margin of the lake for the transportation of baggage on the ice. To get supplies forward through a swampy- wilderness of near two hundred miles, in wagons or on pack-horses, which are to carry their own provisions, is absolutely impossible. ^^ " No spe- cies of supplies are calculated on being found in the Michigan territory. The farms upon the River Raisin, which might have afforded a quantity of forage, are nearly all broken up and destroyed. This article, then, as well as the provisions for the men, is to be taken from this state — a circumstance which must at once put to rest every idea of a land conveyance at this season, since it would require at least two wagons with forage, for each one that is loaded with provisions and other articles." On the 15th of November he writes, " You can scarcely form an idea, sir, of the difficulty with which land transportation is effected north of the fortieth degree of latitude in this country. The country beyond that is almost a continued swamp to the lakes. Where the streams run favourably to your course, a small strip of better ground is generally found ; but in crossing from one river to another, the greater part of the way, at this season, is covered with water. Such is actually the situa- i WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 197 tion of that space between the Sandusky and tlic Miami Rapids ; and from tlic best information 1 could acquire, while I was at Huron, the road over it must be causewayed at least half the way." The autumn of this year was thus passed in laborious preparations for active service — in col- lecting troops, in building forts, in creating depots, in cutting roads, in opening resources for supplies, and in organizing the various departments of the army. A few minor operations in the field only were attempted, for the purpose of driving back the par- ties of the enemy, or dislodging them from posts from which they could annoy our troops, or em- barrass the plans of the commander-in-chief. One under General Tupper was unsuccessful ; another under the same officer was, according to M'Affee, boldly attempted, and the object partially attained. The expedition sent by General Harrison to the Mississineway River, consisting of six hundred men, under Lieutenant Colonel Campbell, was handsomely conducted, and brilliantly successful. An Indian village, fortified, and well defended, was gallantly assailed, and taken after a spirited action of an hour. Eight of our men were killed, and forty-eight wounded — but a large number was ren- dered unfit for duty by fatigue, exposure to frost, and sickness. In the general order, issued on the return of the troops, the commander-in-chief com- 17* % 198 MEMOIR OF mends the firmness with which they endured the extraordinary hardships to which they were sub- jected, as well as their bravery and good conduct in battle. " But the character of this gallant de- tachment," continues General Harrison, " exhibit- ing, as it did, perseverance, fortitude, and bravery, would, however, be incomplete, if, in the midst of victory, they had forgotten the feelings of human- ity. It is with the sincerest pleasure that the gene- ral has heard, that the most punctual obedience was paid to his orders, in not only saving all the women and children, but in sparing all the war- riors who ceased to resist; and that even when vigorously attacked by the enemy, the claims of mercy prevailed over every sense of their own dan- ger, and this heroic band respected the lives of their prisoners. Let an account of murdered innocence be opened in the records of heaven, against our enemies alone. The 'American soldier will follow the example of his government ; and the sword of one will not be raised against the fallen and help- less, nor the gold of the other be paid for the scalps of a massacred enemy." These are noble senti- ments, finely expressed. Until late in the season. General Harrison con- tinued to indulge the hope, that he should be able to overcome the numerous obstacles which prevent- ed his moving in force against the enemy, and that he would eventually close the campaign by the cap- WILLIAM IIENKY HARRISON. 199 ture of Maiden. Reserving his army for lliis grand object, he avoided all unnecessary exposure of the troops, abstained from sending out detachments whicli miglit have been cut off by lurking bodies of Indians, and by which, even if successful, the strength of the army would have been weakened, without commensurate advantage. In the mean while he urged upon the govern- ment the importance of creating a navy iipon the lakes. In one of his letters he remarks — "Admit- ting that Maiden and Detroit are both taken, Maci- naw and St. Joseph's will both remain in the hands of the enemy, until we can create a force capable of contending with the vessels which the British have in Lake Michigan, and which they will be enabled to maintain there as long as the canoe route by Grand River and Lake Nipissin shall remain, and for six months after." The sagacity of this suggestion was afterwards fully proved by the splendid achievement of Perry, and the import- ant results which followed from the acquisition of the naval ascendency upon the lakes. As the season advanced, and the difficulties which impeded the preparation of the army for active ope- rations increased, General Harrison was reluctantly compelled to abandon the idea of taking Maiden during this campaign, and to advise the government of the necessity of postponing a movement for that purpose, which could only be made at a sacrifice 200 MEMOIR OF of life, and a risk of failure, which in his opinion would not be warrantable,, under any correct mili- tary principles. Mr. Monroe, then acting as Sec- retary of War, replied as follows : — "At this distance, and with an imperfect know- ledge of the actual state of things, it is impossible for the President to decide, satisfactorily to himself, or with advantage to the public, whether it is prac- ticable for you to accomplish the objects of the ex- pedition, in their full extent, during the present winter. No person can be so competent to that decision as yourself; and the President has great confidence in the solidity of the opinion which you may form. He wishes you to weigh maturely this important subject, and take that part which your judgment may dictate." WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 201 CHAPTER XIV. Eccnts in Indiana and Illinois — Movements on the North-western frontier — Massacre at the River Raisin. On the 'Sd of September, a body of Kickapoo and Winnebago Indians assembled at Fort Harri- son on the Wabash, and endeavoured by treacher- ous pretences of friendship to gain admission. Cap- tain Zachary Taylor, who commanded, was not deceived by this stratagem ; but kept his garrison prepared to defend the post ; and on the 4th an as- sault was made. The enemy was repelled with gallantry. Exasperated by the failure of this attempt, a large war-party of savages broke into the settle- ments on the Pigeon Roost Fork of White River, where they massacred, under circumstances of the most shocking barbarity, twenty-one persons, in- cluding women and children. These Indians, it will be recollected, were regularly in the pay of the British government, as their allies. Such was the character of the war carried on ajiainst us, for the purpose of enforcing an alleged right to impress our seamen, and of rc^ducing us to a state of depend- ence, by a civilized and Christian people. 202 MEMOIR OF An escort of provisions, of thirteen men, on its way to Fort Harrison, was also surprised, and literally cut to pieces. The Illinois and Missouri territories became the scenes of similar atrocities ; and Governor Edwards, of Illinois, made strong appeals to the government, and to the governors of the neighbouring states, for assistance. Colonel Russel, a veteran officer of the U. S. army, commanding in this region, hastened to cover the exposed points, by sending such volun- teers as could be raised to Fort Harrison, assisting the governor of Illinois in organizing the militia, and employing the rangers on the borders of Mis- souri. It is only necessary to glance at the map, to dis- cover the distance of these various points from each other, the total inadequateness of the means at the disposal of the officers whose duty it became to defend them, and the great responsibility imposed upon those gentlemen. Upon General Harrison, as the commander-in-chief, charged with the care of this widely-extended field of action, fell of course the chief weight, and upon him were the eyes of the country directed, for its defence; but other offi- cers acting at a distance from head quarters, were often obliged to use a liberal discretion in the direc- tion of their own talents, and the patriotism of their fellow-citizens. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 203 Governor Shelby, whose zealous patriotism has rciideretl his name so conspicuous in tlie annals of this war, made an eloquent appeal to the people of Kentucky, settinj; forth the critical condition of the more exposed portions of the frontier, and calling for the aid of volunteer soldiers. Such was the alacrity with which this summons was obeyed, that 2000 mounted men were immediately assem- bled at Louisville, and other points on the Ohio — while so great was the excess of numbers, that many others were turned back. One old veteran, belonging to a company whose services were not accepted, after venting his disappointment, was heard to remark, " Well, well, Kentucky has often glutted the market with hemp, flour, and tobacco ; and now she has done it with volunteers." These troops were, by General Harrison's ap- pointment, assembled at Vincennes, about the 1st of October, where the army was organized, and the command assumed by General Samuel Hop- kins, of the Kentucky militia. The Wabash was crossed, and a march attempted over the boundless plains of Illinois, towards the Kickapoo villages on the Illinois river. Deceived by the guides, however, several days were spent in wandering in difierent directions, without advancing far towards the point of destination. Provisions became scarce, and both horses and men were sinkinc under fa- tiguc. Under these circumstances, it was deter- 204 MEMOIR OF mined to return. The expedition was considered to have failed in its principal object ; and mortified pride induced the men to cast severe reflections upon their leader. But a court of inquiry, after- wards held, at the request of General Hopkins, de- cided that his conduct merited the applause, rather than the censure, of his country. Perhaps all that could have been expected from an army thus has- tily raised, and wholly unfurnished with provisions and munitions, was accomplished — the frontier was covered at that point, for the moment, the depre- dators were induced to withdraw, and the inhabit- ants relieved from their present panic. After dismissing the mounted men. General Hop- kins led a body of infantry from .Fort Harrison against the Indians on the Wabash. The march was commenced on the 11th of November, and conducted with great caution. On the 19th they arrived at the Prophet's Town, which was destroy- ed — as were a Winnebago village, a few miles- lower down, and a Kickapoo village, on the western side of the river. The operations were continued until the 24th, when the " shoeless, shirtless condi- tion of the troops, now clad in remnants of their summer clothes ; a river full of ice ; hills covered with snow ; a rigid climate, and no certain point against which he could further direct his opera- tions," induced the general to return to Vincennes. A successful enterprise was in the mean while WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 205 conducted nritisii pressed upon the disordered troops, the In- dians chained their rij^ht flank, and the men began to retreat in confusion across the river. Lewis and Allen gallantly endeavoured to regain the ground that had been lost, but in vain ; the Indians had now gained the other flank, and were in possession of the woods in the rear. Confusion increased ; a large party of our troops which had reached the woods were surrounded, and massacred without distinction and without mercy. Nearly one hun- dred were tomahawked at one spot. Every fucri- tive was slaughtered. The brave Allen, after he'm^r badly wounded, and retreating two miles, surren- dered to an Indian ; another savage assailed him, and Allen, with a blow of his sword, struck the assassin dead, and was himself shot down by a third Indian. Lieutenant Garrett having surrendered himself, with a party of fifteen or twenty men, all but him- self were instantly butchered. Another party, of -•thirty men, had retreated three miles, when they were surrounded and compelled to surrender; half of them were murdered. Winchester and Lewis were taken, and their coats stripped off; in this con- dition they were taken to Colonel Proctor's head quarters. 212 MEMOIR OF The troops within the picketing, under Graves and Madison, still maintained that position with Spar- tan valour. Major Graves, when severely wound- ed, sat down, exclaiming, " Never mind me — fight on." Proctor, at length, wearied with the ineffec- tual sacrifice of his men, withdrew his mercenary troops and savage allies from the vain attempt to dislodge this little band of heroes. But Proctor at length procured, by an act of in- describable baseness, that which he could not effect by valour. He represented to General Winchester, his captive, that unless the remainder of our troops should surrender, the whole of the prisoners would be given up to the tomahawk. Shocked as the general must have been by so brutal a violation of the laws of war, he had seen enough to satisfy him that he was in the power of a monster, who only required an apology to steep his hands still more deeply in blood. A flag was sent by him, there- fore, with an order to Major Madison to surrender, borne by Major Overton, the aid of Winchester, and accompanied by Proctor. The latter insolently demanded an immediate surrender — threatening, in case of refusal, to deliver over the whole garrison * to the vengeance of the Indians. Major Madison observed, " That it had been customary for the In- dians to massacre the wounded and prisoners, and that he would not agree to any capitulation which General Winchester might direct, unless the safety J WILLIAM MK.NKV IIAKHISON. 213 and protection of his men were slipulaled." Colo- nrl Proctor said, " Sir, do you mean to dictate to me ?" " No," replied the brave Madison, " I intend to dictate for myself, and we prefer selling our lives as dearly as possible, rather than be massacred in cold blood." Proctor then received the surrender, on the conditions that private property should be respected, that the prisoners should be protected by a guard, the sick and wounded removed on sleds, and the officers allowed to retain their side-arms. We forbear to shock our readers by recounting in detail the atrocities that ensued, and which have covered the name of Proctor with eternal infamy. T\\G prisoners thus taken were given over to the Indians to be slain in cold blood. A few were saved by the interposition of some of the officers. Graves, Hart, Hickman, and other gallant officers, with their brave companions, were coldly delivered up, by British officers, to the infuriated Indians, and butchered in their presence. Some of their bodies were thrown into the flames of the burning village, and others, shockingly mangled, left exposed in the streets. Major Woolfolk, the secretary of Winchester, was shot some days after his capture, and Major Graves murdered at some later period, which has never been ascertained. For several days this horrid tragedy continued to be acted ; and every prisoner who became exhausted in the 214 MEMOIR OF march towards Maiden, was handed over to the savage. The historian M'Affee indignantly remarks, " For the massacre at the River Raisin, for which any other civiHzed government would have dismissed, and perhaps have gibbeted the commander, Colo- nel Proctor received the rank of major general in the British army!" So far from disgracing the perpetrator of such atrocities, he was rewarded; and the commander of the forces in Upper Canada, in a general order distinguished for its falsehood and malignity, boasted of this " brilliant action, and of the '" gallantry" of Proctor, which he de- clares to have been " nobly displayed !" Pursuing the account of M'Affee, we quote the following paragraphs : — " A disaster so calamitous would necessarily ex- cite much discussion with respect to its causes ; and as much blame was thrown upon those who com- mitted no error, and who were not instrumental in causing the defeat of Winchester, which proved to be the defeat of the campaign, it may not be amiss to vindicate, in a cursory manner, the conduct of those on whom public opinion, or the censure of their enemies, was unjustly severe. General Har- rison was blamed by his enemies for the advance of the detachment to the River Raisin ; for not rein- forcing it in time ; or, finding that impracticable, n ) WILLIAM IIEMIY HARRISON- 215 for not ordering a retreat ; besides many other matters of less importance. " It is evident from the statement of facts alrea- dy made, that CJeneral Harrison is not answerable f«>r the advance of the detachment. It was sent by (leneral Winchester, without the knowledge or consent of Harrison, and contrary to his views and plans for the future conduct of the campaign, and to the instructions communicated with his plans through Ensign Todd, before the left wing had marched for the Rapids. If the advance was im- proper, the blame does not lie upon Harrison ; if it was proper. General Winchester is entitled to the credit of having ordered it. The following extract ; from the journal of Colonel Wood, shows the im- pression made at head quarters by the first intelli- gence of the advance received at that place. " ' This news for a moment paralyzed the army, ' or at least the thinking part of it, for no one could t imagine that it was possible for him to be o-uilty of I such a hazardous step. General Harrison was t astonished at the imprudence and inconsistency of I such a measure, which if carried into execution, i could be viewed in no other light than as attended I with certain and inevitable destruction to the left I wing. Nor was it a difficult matter to foresee and i predict the terrible consequences which were sure to mark the result nf a scheme, no less rash in its conception, than hazardous in its execution.' " 216 MEMOIR OF " With respect to reinforcing the detachment," continues M'Affee, " a recurrence to facts equally proves that Harrison is not blameable, as he made every exertion in his power to support it. It was not until the night of the 16th that he received in- formation indirectly through General Perkins, that Winchester had arrived at the Rapids. By the same express he was advised that Winchester medi- tated some unknown movement against the enemy. Alarmed at this information, he immediately made every exertion which the situation of his affairs required. He was then at Upper Sandusky, his principal deposit of provisions and munitions of war, which is sixty miles from the Rapids by the way of Portage river, and seventy-six by the way of Lower Sandusky ; and about thirty-eight more from the River Raisin. He immediately sent an express to the Rapids, for information ; gave orders for a corps of 300 men to advance with the artil- lery, and escorts to proceed with provisions ; and in the morning he proceeded himself to Lower Sandusky, at which place he arrived in the night following, a distance of forty miles, which he trav- elled in seven hours and a half, over roads requir- ing such exertion, that the horse of his aid, Major Hakill, fell dead on their arrival at the fort. He found there, that General Perkins had prepared to .send a battalion to the Rapids, in conformity with r a request from General Winchester. That battalion r WILLIAM HEMIV HAUKISON. 217 was dispatched the next morning, the 18th, with a piece of artillery ; but tlic roads were so bad, tliat it was unable, by its utmost exertions, to reach the liiver Kaisin, a distance of seventy-five miles, be- fore the fatal disaster. "General Harrison then determined to proceed to the Ka|)ids himself, to learn personally from General ^Vinchester his situation and views. At four o'clock on the morning of the 19th, while ho still remained at Lower Sandusky, he received the information, that Colonel Lewis had been sent with a detachment, to secure the provisions on the River Raisin, and to occupy, with the intention of hold- ing, the village of Frcnchtown. There was then but one regiment and a battalion at Lower Sandus- ky, and the regiment was immediately put in mo- tion, with orders to make forced marches for the Rapids ; and General Harrison himself immedi- ately proceeded to the same place. On his way he met an express with intelligence of the successful battle, which had been fought on the preceding day. The anxiety of General Harrison to push forward, and either prevent or remedy any misfortune which might occur, as soon as he was apprized of the ad- vance to the River Raisin, was manifested by the great personal exertions which he made in this instance. He started in a sleigh with General Perkins, to overtake the battalion under Cotgrove, attended by a single servant. As the sleigh went 19 218 MEMOIR OF very slow, from the roughness of the road, he took the horse of his servant, and pushed on alone. Night came upon him in the midst of the swamp, which was so imperfectly frozen that the horse sunk to his belly at every step. He had no resource but to dismount and lead his horse, jumping him- self from one sod to another which was solid enough to support him. When almost exhausted, he met one of Cotgrove's men coming back to look for his bayonet, which he said he had left at a place where he stopped, and for which he would have a dollar stopped from his pay, unless he reco- vered it. The general told him he would not only pardon him for the loss, but supply him with an- other, if he would assist him to get his horse through the swamp. By his aid, the general was enabled to reach the camp of the battalion. " Very early on the morning of the 20th he ar- rived at the Rapids, from which place General Winchester had gone, on the preceding evening, with all his disposable force, to the River Raisin. Nothing more could now be done, but wait the arrival of the reinforcements from Lower San- dusky." J " Instead of censure being due to Harrison, he merits praise for his prudent exertions, from the moment he was apprized of Winchester's arrival at the Rapids." " What human means," says Colonel M^ood, WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 219 " within the control of Harrison, could prevent the anticipated disaster, and save that corps which was already looked upon as lost, as doomed lo inevi- table destruction'? Certainly none." He adds, *' What could a Turcnne or an Eugene have done, under such a pressure of embarrassing circum- stances, more than Harrison did." When the intelligence of the disaster at the River Raisin reached the head quarters of the army, at the Rapids, General Harrison called a council of war, who, acting on the best information then attainable, came to the opinion, that the position at the Rapids would probably be attacked. Such an event was to be avoided, as the position was untena- ble, and the force of the enemy supposed to be much greater than our own. On the next morn- ing, therefore, the army abandoned the Rapids, and retired to the Portage, 18 miles distant, where the general established, and strongly fortified his camp, to await an expected reinforcement under General Leflwich, on the arrival of which, it was his inten- tion to return to the Rapids. A series of rainy weather, which rendered the roads impassable, de- layed the arrival of General Leftwich until the 30th of January ; and on the following day, the army, now amounting to 1700 men, marched to the foot of the Rapids, and a good position was selected, on the opposite side of the river from that formerly occupied. 220 MEMOIR OF Expecting to be able still to lead the contemplated expedition against Maiden during the season, the general continued to exert himself unremittingly in making preparations. All the troops in the rear were ordered to join him immediately ; except a few companies which were left on the Au Glaise and St. Mary's. The Ohio and Kentucky troops soon after arrived, which rendered the advance 2000 strong; but it was now ascertained, that the different corps were so far reduced from their origi- nal and nominal strength, that the whole effective force would not eventually exceed 4000 men. The weather remained unfavourable, and the arrival of the troops in the rear continued to be delayed until General Harrison was at length constrained, with much reluctance and mortification, to abandon all thoughts of advancing this season against Maiden. The general now turned his attention to the security of his troops for the present winter, and the making arrangements for an active campaign in the ensuing year. His camp was strongly for- tified, under the direction of Colonel (then Captain) Wood, an engineer of great talent, who afterwards distinguished himself highly, and fell with honour. An area of 2500 yards in circumference was in- closed with strong pickets, composed of timbers fifteen feet in length, and ten or twelve inches in diameter, set three feet deep in the ground. " To complete this picketing," says Wood, in his account, I WILLIAM HENRY HAKUISON. 221 *' to put up eight block- houses of double timber, to elevate four large batteries, to build all the store- houses and magazines required to contain the sup- plies of the army, together with the ordinary fa- ticrues of the camp, was an undertaking of no small magnitude. Besides, an immense deal of labour was likewise required in excavating ditches, making abbatis, and clearing away the wood about the camp ; and all this was to be done too at a time when the weather was inclement, and the ground so hard frozen that it could scarcely be opened with a mattock or pick-axe." The position thus fortified was called Camp Meigs, in honour of the patriotic governor of Ohio. 19* 222 MEMOIR OF CHAPTER XV. Opening of the second campaign — Siege of Fort Meigs — Brilliant sortie — Defeat of Colonel Dudley. The small garrison of Fort Meigs spent a dreary and toilsome winter at that post. A variety of minor incidents occurred to test their patience and courage ; but the garrison maintained itself under a variety of privations, of threatened assaults, and of adverse circumstances. General Harrison returned to Cincinnati, to visit his family, and to make arrangements for a vigor- ous opening of the ensuing campaign, by procuring reinforcements of men, and supplies of money, pro- visions, and military stores. Ever indefatigable in his exertions, he continued to maintain a volumi- nous correspondence with the cabinet at Washing- ton, and the governors of the states from which militia were expected to be drawn, and to sustain, by animated appeals to their patriotism, the confi- dence of the people. Again we look back, as at a former period, with emotions of surprise at the gloomy aspect of affairs on all our frontiers. Thus far the war had been prosecuted with little energy, and less success. A few individuals had been WILLIAM IIENKY IIAUKISON. 223 prodigal of thoir lives, their talents, and their labours, in high commands ; and many men had gone bravely to the field. Some brilliant exploits had been achieved ; but these partial successes had been more than balanced by a series of disasters. The want of system and organization, of supplies, and of all the sinews of war, except brave men and gallant leaders, liad created distraction in the coun- cils of the nation, ahd despondency in the public mind. Had it not been for the personal influence, energy, and talent, of such commanders as Harri- son, Jackson, Brown, Scott, and Perry, and such men as Meigs, Shelby, and other patriotic gover- nors, it is difficult to imagine how the honour of the country could have been rescued from indelible disgrace ; nor will the nation fully appreciate the weight of gratitude due to those individuals, and to Monroe, Clay, Cheves, Calhoun, and other patriots, who intrepidly sustained the administration at this crisis, until the history of those times shall be fully and calmly written, and the services of those great men carefully examined and explained. Intelligence having been received of an intention on the part of the enemy to ipvest Camp Meigs, General Harrison hastened back to the frontier. His plan was formed, to relieve Camp Meigs, should he find it besieged, by storming the batteries of the enemy, in the same manner which he after- wards adopted, and caused to be practised by the 224 MEMOIR OF troops under Dudley. With this view, he wrote for reinforcements to the governor of Kentucky and endeavoured to raise hastily a strong force. But on reaching Camp Meigs, on the 12th of April, he found that position not yet invested. The enemy, however, were daily expected; and the most vigor- ous exertions were made to prepare for a siege. On the 19th, intelligence was brought that the British were making active preparations, were as- sembling an immense Indian force, and that Te- cumthe and the prophet had joined them with 600 warriors. General Green Clay, with 3000 men from Ken- tucky, under Colonels Boswell, Dudley, Caldwell, and Cox, was daily expected ; but the deepness of the roads, and the difficulty of crossing streams swelled by the spring floods, delayed his march. The companies, however, which had been dis- patched in advance by Harrison, and were less en- cumbered with baggage, reached the Rapids before the arrival of the enemy. The troops under Clay reached Defiance on the 3d of May, where they were met by the news of the investment of Camp Meigs, by the allied British and Indian forces. On the 28th of April, a reconnoitring party from Camp Meigs discovered the approach of the enemy in full force. General Harrison instantly dispatched letters to General Clay, and to the governors of Ohio and Kentucky. The perilous duty of bearing I f' WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 225 these dispatches, was undertaken and handsomely performed by Captain Oliver,* a brave and intclli- c^cnt olHcer, who, accompanied by a single white man and an Indian, successfully surmounted the danijjcrs that beset his path through the wilderness. The troops were paraded ; General Harrison ad- dressed them with his usual eloquence, and loud bursts of applause showed that he had kindled up their military pride and love of country. Presently the enemy appeared, ascending the river in boats, and approaching the site of the old Fort Miami, on the opposite side of the rivCr from Camp Meigs. Here they landed the artillery, and began to con- struct batteries, while the Indians debarked on the south-eastern shore, and surrounded our camp. The position occupied by the American army was within a short distance of the field on which Wayne had conquered the Indians in his great bat- tle. Alluding to this circumstance. General Har- rison used the following language, in a general order issued on the next morning after the arrival of the enemy : — " Can the citizens of a free country, who have taken up arms to defend its rights, think of submit- ting to an army composed of mercenary soldiers, reluctant Canadians goaded to the field by the bavonet, and of wretched, naked savages? Can the breast of an American soldier, when he casts * Major William Oliver, of Cincinnati. 226 MEMOIK OF his eyes to the opposite shore, the scene of his country's triumphs over the same foe, be influenced by any other feelings than the hope of glory? Is not this army composed of the same materials with that which fought and conquered under the immor- tal Wayne? Yes, fellow-soldiers, your general sees your countenances beam with the same fire that he witnessed on that occasion ; and although it would be the height of presumption to compare himself to that hero, he boasts of being that hero's pupil. To your posts then, fellow-citizens, and remember that the eyes of your country are upon you." The British camp was established about two miles down the river; and in the night after their landing, they commenced three batteries opposite the fort, on a high bank three hundred yards from the river; the intervening ground was open, and partly covered with water. They proceeded with these . so far in the night, as to be able to work at them in daylight. Works to counteract those of the enemy were com- menced with spirit on our side. The whole army, except the requisite guards, was placed on fatigue, and the works pushed forward under the active management of Wood and Gratiot, the engineers. On the 30th of April the breastworks of the enemy were completed, and the guns ready to be mounted. Troops and Indians were crossed to the south-eastern side ; and as this demonstration led WILLIAM HEAKY IIARIilSO.\. 227 the general to suspect, that while his attention should be directed to the opening of the batteries, his works were to be stormed from the opposite direction, the men were ordered to rest on their arms, prepared to take post at a moment's warning. The morning of the 1st of May disclosed the British batteries completed, and the artillerists at their posts, loading and training the guns, as if ready to open their fire upon our camp. An im- posing movement now took place. While the enemy were busily engaged in erecting batteries, a grand traverse had been constructed, twelve feet high, upon a base of twenty feet, three hundred yards long, running entirely across our camp. Orders were now given for all the tents in front of this work to be removed to its rear. At a word they were struck, and in a few minutes disap- peared ; and the prospect of cannonading the unco- vered tents, which a few minutes before had excited the skill of the British engineer, vanished. In their place, nothing was to be seen but a long breast- work of earth, behind which the whole army was securely encamped. Not a tent, nor an individual, was visible from the British lines. The canvas shelters which had concealed the construction of the traverse, were now in turn concealed by it. The enemy's batteries however were opened, and for five days a continued shower of balls was poured against our defences, with little effect. A 228 MEMOIR OF few were killed and wounded. Among the latter was Major Amos Stoddart, of the artillery, a meri- torious officer, who had served in the revohition, and is well known as the author of a valuable work entitled " Sketches of Louisiana." He was slightly hurt, and died a few days after, of lockjaw. On our side a vigorous fire was kept up from the batteries, while the troops were constantly employed in streno-theninor the defences. » It will be recollected that General Cjay, with his command, was still on the way. This circumstance was adroitly turned to advantage by General Har- rison, and a plan devised, which evinced the most admirable generalship, in adapting his means to his situation. Captain Oliver met General Clay at Fort Win- chester, at which place the cannonading at the siege was distinctly heard. On the 4th of May he was ready to advance ; when Major David Trimble, of Kentucky, volunteered to accompany Captain Oli- ver on his return to Fort Meiu;s, in a boat with fifteen men, to apprize General Harrison of the ap- proach of the reinforcement. This was a hazard- ous attempt; Captain Combs had lately endeavoured, by order of Colonel Dudley, to penetrate the besieg- ing lines, but was attacked by Indians when near the fort, and driven back, after a brave contest, in which he lost nearly all his men. Oliver was more successful ; and at midnight General Harri- WILLIAM llENKY IIAUUISON. 229 son was iiitbrnied, that General Clay would reach his camp at the dawn of the ensuing morning. Harrison immcdftitely determined to make a sortie upon the enemy ; and dispatched Captain Hamilton to Clay, with the necessary orders, which ^vere de- livered, five miles from Camp Meigs, at daylight. General Clay was directed to land about 800 men at a point to be shown by Captain Hamilton, a mile and a half above Camp Meigs. Hamilton was to conduct the detachment to the British batteries on the left bank of the river. These were to be taken, the cannon spiked, and the carriages cut down ; the troops were then to return to the boats, and cross to the fort. The remainder of the troops were to land on the other bank, and cut their way through the Indians into the fort, conducted by a subaltern sent for that purpose. General Harrison intended, while this operation was going forward, to send out a party to destroy the batteries on the south side of the river, which had been erected subsequently to the establishment of those on the other side. Colonel Dudley proceeded to lead the detach- ment against the enemy's batteries, while General Clay followed with the remainder of his men. In attempting to land, the boats of Clay became sepa- rated by the swiftness of the current, and were landed at different points. Captain Peter Dudley, with fifty men, marched into camp without loss, 20 230 MEMOIR OF under a heavy fire of the enemy. Colonel Boswell, with the rear boats, deceived by a movement of those in advance, was about to land on the wrong shore, when he was instructed to cross over, and fight his way into camp. The Indians annoyed his landing, but he formed, and returned their fire. General Harrison perceived his situation, and sent out a detachment under Major Alexander, in which the Pittsburgh Blues and the Petersburgh volunteers were included — a battalion under Major Johnson, — and the companies of Nearing and Dudley, to relieve him, and enable him to beat the enemy. The Ken- tuckians had fought their way to the gates of the fort, when these troops joined them. They now formed, Boswell on the right, Alexander on the left, and Johnson in the centre, and charged the Indians, who, though much superior in numbers, were driven for half a mile at the point of the bayonet. Such was the spirit of ihese brave troops, that their officers with difficulty restrained their ardour. General Harrison, who stood on a battery watching their operations, discovered a body of British and Indians filing along the edge of the woods, to gain the left flank and rear of Boswell. He immediately sent his volunteer aid, J. T. John- son, Esq., to recall the detachment ; but the horse of this gentleman was shot under him before he could deliver the order, which was then carried by WILLIAM IIENRV ItAKUISON. 231 Major Graham. Tlie troops reluctantly obeyed, and reached the camp in good order. " General Harrison," says M'AfTee, " now or- dered a sortie from the fort, under the command of Colonel John ^Miller of the regulars, against the batteries which had been erected on that side. This detachment was composed of the companies and parts of companies, commanded by Captains Lang- ham, Croghan, Bradford, Nearing, Elliot, and Lieu- tenants Gwynne and Campbell of the regulars; the volunteers of Alexander's battalion, and Captain Sebree's company of Kentucky militia. The whole amounted only to 350 men. Colonel Miller, ac- companied by Major Todd, led on his command with the most determined bravery, charged upon the British, and drove them from their batteries — spiked their cannon, and took forty-one prisoners, including an officer, having completely beaten and driven back the whole force of the enemy. That force consisted of 200 British regulars, 150 Cana- dians, and 500 Indians, being considerably more than double the force of the brave detachment that attacked them ; but our troops charged with such irresistible impetuosity that nothing could withstand them." Sebree's company was particularly distinguished ; 1 1 and at one time plunged with such fearless ardour ' into the enemy's ranks, as to be entirely surround- ed. Bravely contendinir ajjainst four times their 232 MEMOIR OF numbers, they maintained their ground for some time, but must ultimately have been cut to pieces, had not Lieutenant* Gwynne, of the 19th, gallantly charged through the enemy to their relief. Miller accomplished the whole object of the sortie, and re- tired triumphantly into the fort. In no instance during the war was there harder fio;hting than in this brilliant sortie. It lasted but forty-five minutes, during which 180 men were killed and wounded on our side. In the mean while, Dudley had effected a land- ing on the opposite side of the river, and marched rapidly towards the enemy's batteries. The dis- tance was two miles from the point of debarkation ; but so successful was the movement, that the ene- my was completely surprised, the batteries were charged " at full speed," and carried without the loss of a man ; the British flag was pulled down, and the shouts of the garrison announced their joy at the victory. Unhappily these gallant citizens were not suffi- ciently practised in the new profession which their patriotism had induced them to assume, to be able to appreciate the full value of the service they had so nobly performed, or the danger of the position in which they stood. Having effected their purpose, their orders and their duty required them to retreat , j * Now Major Gwynne, of Cincinnati. WILLIAM HENRY HAKKISON. 2Xi but they loitered in the batteries with the most per- fect indirterence to any approaching peril. Gene- ral Harrison made them signals to retire — but they remained, examining the batteries they had taken, and curiously surveying the novel scene before them. Flushed with victory, they were reluctant to turn their backs on the foe. Lieutenant Camp- bell was sent by the general to recall them ; but before he could perform the. service, the fate of these brave men was decided. The outlying In- dians gathered upon their flank, and attacked Cap- tain Combs' company ; Dudley hastened to his relief with part of his force, charged the foe, and drove them — but even now these impetuous Ken- tuckians were not satisfied, and instead of retreat- ing, pursued the enemy for two miles. The left oolumn, under Major Shelby, which remained in jjDssession of the batteries, was charged by the enemy, who had rallied, some made prisoners, and others driven to the boats. Major Shelby rallied the remainder, drove back the assailants, and has- tened to the assistance of Dudley. A retreat was now attempted ; but in such disorder, that the great- er part of the men were captured by the Indians, or surrendered to the British. Thus ended in sig- nal disaster, an affair planned with wisdorp, com- menced with the brightest hopes, conducted for a time with skill and gallantry, and blasted in its event by the imprudence of a generous band, who 20* 234 MEMOIR OF suffered their own impulse to lead them, instead of obeying the orders of their general. Had the in- structions given to Dudley been pursued, or an or- dinary degree of military judgment exercised, the 'M events of that day would have been among the brightest in the annals of our country, and Ken- tucky saved from the mournful office of lamenting the loss of some of her noblest sons. , The British and Indians now perpetrated their usual atrocities. The gallant Dudley fell by the tomahawk, with many of his brave companions. The prisoners were taken to head quarters, put into Fort Miami, and the Indians permitted to station themselves on the ramparts, and fire into the dis- armed crowd. " Those," says Colonel Wood, " who preferred to inflict a still more cruel and 'M savage death, selected their victims, and led them to the gateway, and there, under the eye of Gene- ral Proctor, and in the presence of the whole Bri- tish army, tomahawked and scalped them.'''' This horrid work of destruction continued until the arri- val of Tecumthe from the batteries. No sooner did the savage warrior behold the massacre, than he exclaimed, " For shame ! it is a disgrace to kill a defenceless prisoner ;" and stopped the carnage. One of our historians remarks, " In this single act, Tecumthe displayed more humanity, magnanimity, and civilization, than Proctor, with all his British WILLIAM IIEXRY HARUISON. 235 associates in command, displayed tlirough the whole war on the north-western frontiers." \Vc forbear from making any comment on the cruel and insulting treatment of our prisoners by Proctor and his subordinates. It stands recorded in letters of blood, upon the page of history. General Proctor made a proposition to exchange such of the Kentucky militia as were his captives, for the friendly Indians residing within our limits, who were not prisoners, but neutrals, living in our country. Whether this was intended as an insult, is not known. General Harrison contented him- self with replying courteously, that he would refer the subject to the decision of the President. After the close of the action of the 5th, Proctor sent a formal summons to Harrison to surrender, to which our gallant commander simply responded, that he considered such a message an affront, which he desired might not be repeated. The boasting Briton, findinu!; that Harrison would not consent to be beaten, judged it expedient to be the vanquished party himself; and on the 8th he raised the siege and decamped. ' General Harrison, leaving General Clay in com- mand, proceeded to Lower Sandusky and Cleave- land, to make arrangements for the better security of those places. He then passed into the interior. Governor Meigs, of Ohio, had used the most active exertions to carry assistance to the besieged 236 MEMOIR OF American army ; and was on the way, leading a stout column of armed citizens, in person, towards the scene of operations, when the news of the re- treat of the discomfited army was received, and the troops were disbanded. The gallant Perry was, in the mean while, quietly and vigorously building up that fleet, in the command of which he afterwards achieved a vic- tory as brilliant, as complete, as advantageous, as it was unprecedented in the annals of American naval warfare. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 237 CHAPTER XVI. The mounted regiment wider Col. R. M. Johnson. "■is' While these operations were going forward, Colonel Richard M. Johnson, a member of Con- gress from Kentucky, had devised the organization of two regiments of mounted militia, to be employed in traversing the whole Indian country, from Fort Wayne, by Lake Michigan, and the Illinois river, round to Louisville. The Secretary of War sub- mitted the plan to General Harrison, who made the following judicious reply: "I am sorry not to be able to agree with my friend. Colonel Johnson, upon the propriety of the contemplated mounted expedition. An expedition of this kind, directed against a particular town, will probably succeed. The Indian towns cannot be surprised in succes- sion, as they give the alarm from one to another with more rapidity than our troops can move. In the months of February, March, and April, the towns are all abandoned. The men are huntinir, and the women and children, particularly to the north of the Wabash, are scattered about, makins sugar. The corn is, at that season, universally hid in small parcels in the earth, and could not be 238 MEMOIR OF found. There are no considerable villages in that direction. Those that are there, are composed of bark huts, which the Indians do not care for, and which, during the winter, are entirely empty. The detachment might pass through the whole extent of country to be scoured, without seeing an Indian, except at the first town they struck ; and it is more than probable that they would find it empty. But the expedition is impracticable to the extent pro- posed. The horses, if not the men, would perish. The horses that are now to be found, are not like those of the early settlers, and such as the Indians and traders now have. They have been accus- tomed to corn, and must have it. Colonel Camp- bell went but seventy or eighty miles from the frontiers, and the greater part of his horses could scarcely be brought in. Such an expedition in the summer and fall would be highly advantageous, because the Indians are then at their towns, and their corn can be destroyed. An attack upon a particular town, in the winter, when the inhabitants are at it, as we know they are at Mississineway, and which is so near as to enable the detachment to reach it without killing their horses, is not only practicable, but if the snow is on the ground, is per- haps the most favourable." This statement is equally creditable to the patriot- ism of Johnson, and the sagacity of Harrison ; and it was happy for the country, that while the govern- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISOX. 239 ment accepted the services of the former, the advice of the latter was approved. The plan was so modi- fied, that Colonel Johnson was authorized, on the 26th of February, 1813, to raise a mountcd.regi- ment to serve under the command of Harrison. James Johnson, the brother of Richard, was ap- pointed lieutenant colonel ; Duval Payne, and Da- vid Thompson, majors ; R. B. M'Affee, (the writer of the history of the war,) Richard JMatson, Jacob Elliston, Benjamin Warfield, John Payne, Elijah Craig, Jacob Stucker, James Davidson, S. R. Combs, \V. M. Price, and James Coleman, captains ; Jere- miah Kirtby, adjutant ; B. S. Chambers, quarter- master ; S. Theobalds, judge advocate ; L. Dick- inson, Serjeant major ; James Sugget, chaplain ; Doctors Ewing, Coburn, and Richardson, surgeons. The regiment proceeded to St. Mary's, and thence to Fort Wayne, employing every leisure moment in drilling; and several demonstrations were made ajrainst the Indian villaores in different directions. In the mean while, the tomahawk and firebrand were busily employed along the frontiers of Illinois and Missouri. In April the Indians invested Fort Madison, on the upper Mississippi ,• and soon after Fort Mason, on the same river, about eighty miles above St. Louis, but were bravely repulsed in both instances. The Osages solicited employment against tho 240 MEMOIR OF ' British ; but the government, unwilling to engage the savages in war, and determined not to do so, except where the vicinity of the tribe to the scene of aoJion made it necessary for them to take up the hatchet in their own defence, — decUned their ser- vices. The British, by great exertions, collected nearly all the Indian warriors of the north and north-west, beyond the lakes, and many from our territories, into the neighbourhood of Maiden, where they were regularly supplied with rations. The number of warriors was about 2500. Johnson's regiment was now at Fort Winchester, when a dispatch from General Clay announced that Fort Meigs was threatened with a second siege, and required the aid of the mounted men. Johnson immediately paraded his men, addressed them in animated terms, and made preparations for the march. The regiment set out in high spirits, resolved to fight their way, if necessary, into Fort Meigs ; which post, however, they reached without opposition. General Harrison received at Franklinton the intelligence of the threatened attack of Fort Meigs, and immediately hastened to the scene of action. Before leaving Franklinton, he held a council with the chiefs of some of the friendly tribes, when he informed them that a crisis had arrived, in which it became necessary for the neutral tribes WILLIAM IIENKY HARUISON. 241 residing near the frontier to decide against or for us. Tlie latter alternative was unanimously adopt- ed. The general then told them, that they would be informed when their services would be wanted — " but," said he, " you must conform to our mode of warfare. You are not to kill defenceless prison- ers, old men, women, or children." He remarked, that by their conduct he would be able to determine whether the British could restrain the Indians em- ployed by them ; for if the Indians fighting with him should abstain from such atrocities, the British could have equal influence with their own allies. He humorously told them that General Proctor had promised to deliver li'nn into the hands of Tecum- the, to be treated as that warrior might determine. " Now if I can succeed in taking Proctor," said he, " you shall have him for your prisoner, provided . you will agree to treat him as a squaw, and do him no other harm than to dress him in petticoats ; for he must be a coward who would kill a defenceless prisoner." On the 28th of June, General Harrison arrived by forced marches at Fort Meigs, with 300 men of the 24th regiment of U. S. infantry, under Colonel Anderson. We omit here a variety of services in which de- tachments were employed, and which are detailed in the histories of the war. By an order dated June 9th, I'^IS, the War 21 242 MEMOIR OF Department, at the urgent request of Governor Edwards, of Illinois, and General Howard, com- manding in Missouri, instructed General Harrison to order Colonel Johnson's mounted volunteers to proceed to Kaskaskia, to report to General Howard. The mounted men were indignant at this order, which would take them from a field in which the harvest of glory was ripening, and banish them into a wilderness four hundred miles distant, which they could scarcely reach before the expiration of their term of service. Colonel Johnson immediately addressed the following letter to General Harrison, in behalf of his regiment : — Camp at Lower Sandusky, July 4, 1813. " Dear Sir, " I arrived at this place last evening with a part of the mounted regiment, after two days' march from Camp Meigs, leaving two companies four miles in the rear, who were unable to reach this place ; besides about twenty horses left on the way, which I am in hopes will be able to get back to Camp Meigs, or come to this place in a few days, where we can keep them together, and recruit them. Having been in the most active service for upwards of forty days, and having travelled upwards of seven hundred miles, much of it forced march- ing, it is natural to conclude, that most of the horses are weak ; and we feel great pleasure, and obliga- WILLIAM HENRY HAKUI30N. 243 tions to you, in finding your arrangements such as to enable us to recruit the horses of the regiment. To be ready to move with you to Detroit and Can- ada, against the enemies of our country, is the first wish of our hearts. Two great objects induced us to come — first, to be at the regaining of our own territory and Detroit, and at the taking of Maiden — and secondly, to serve under an officer in whom we have confidence. We would not have engaged in the service without such a prospect, when we recollected what disasters have attended us for the want of good generals. We did not want to serve under cowards, drunkards, old grannies, nor traitors, but under one who had proved him- self to be wise, prudent, and brave. The officers of the mounted refjiment had some idea of address- ing you on their anxiety to be a part of your army in the campaign against Canada, and of giving you a statement of the importance of having an oppor- tunity to make the regiment efficient for such a campaign, by recruiting their horses. As to the men, they are active, healthy, and fond of service. This morning I have sent 100 on foot to scour the surrounding country; and wherever we are we wish continual service. Our regiment is about 900 strong when all together. I have left 100 at Defi- ance to regain some lost horses, and to guard that frontier. " You have not witnessed the opposition I en- 244 MEMOIR OF countered in raising the regiment. Every personal enemy, every traitor and tory, and your enemies, all combined — but in vain. Nothing but the hurry which attended our march prevented me from hav- ing 1500 men. Nothing but the importance of the service which I thought we could render, would have justified my absence from the present catch- penny Congress. My enemies, your enemies, the enemies of the cause, would exult if the mounted regiment should, from any cause, be unable to carry a strong arm against the savages and British, when 5''ou strike the grand blow. "It is with diffidence I write you any thing touching military matters ; but the desires of my soul, and the situation of the regiment, have induced me thus freely to express myself. In the morning we shalUeave this place for Huron, ready to receive your orders, which will be always cheerfully exe- cuted at every hazard. " Your obedient servant, " Rh. M. Johnson." On learning the situation of the regiment. Gene- ral Harrison advised the War Department, and the order for detaching it to Illinois was rescinded. WILLIAM HENRV HARRISON. 245 CHAPTER XVII. Second siege of Fort Meigs. Early in July 1813, the Indians began again to infest the country around Fort Meigs. Tecum- the was in the field with a large force ; and Dick- son, an active partisan who had great control among the British Indians, was also there. Their united bands amounted to 5000 warriors. General Harrison received this intellisjence at Lower San- dusky, to which place he had just returned from Cleaveland. Leaving Major Croghan with 160 regulars at Fort Stephenson, Lower Sandusky, he established his head quarters at Seneca Town, nine miles further up the river; and with only 140 regu- lars, began to fortify a camp. He was soon after joined by 450 regulars, under Colonels Paul of the infantry, and Ball of the dragoons ; and by Gene- rals M'Arthur and Cass, of Ohio. At Seneca, the general, with his usual sagacity, had chosen a position from which he could with facility fall back to the protection of his principal depot at Upper Sandusky, should the enemy endea- vour to turn his flank and attack that place ; or he would be able, should the safety of Fort Meigs re- quire it, to proceed there undiscovered, on a secret 21* 246 MEMOIR OF route, and cut his way into the fort ; or he would be in a situation from which, whenever his force should be sufficient, he could carry on offensive operations. Fort Meigs and Upper Sandusky were the points to be defended — Lower Sandusky was comparatively unimportant. General Harrison supposed that a movement of the Indians which had just taken place towards Fort Winchester, was intended as a feint to draw his attention in that direction, while an attack would be made on Cleaveland or Lower Sandusky. He was therefore actively engaged in reconnoitring the routes to Upper Sandusky, and watching the lake. On the 28th of July, the enemy abandoned the siege of Fort Meigs, and sailed round into Sandus- ky bay ; their savage allies marching across, to co- operate in a combined attack on Lower Sandusky. General Harrison, expecting this movement, was preparing for it. He had, with Major Croghan, and some other officers, made a thorough exami- nation of Fort Stephenson, and the surrounding heio-hts, and was satisfied that this work was en- tirely untenable. It was calculated for a garrison of only 200 men, was commanded by the neigh- bouring grounds, and could not be defended against heavy artillery. The orders, therefore, to Major Croghan, were, " Should the British troops approach you in force, with cannon, and you can discover them in time to effect a retreat, you will do so im- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. *J47 mediately." " You must be aware, that the attempt to retreat iu the face of an Indian force woul^l be vain. Against such an enemy your garrison would be safe, however great the number."* The general received the intelligence of the rais- ins: of the siejic of Fort Mei2;s on the eveninf;^ of July 29 ; and anffcipating an attack on Fort Ste- phenson, or on his head quarters at Seneca, called a council of war, consisting of M'Arthur, Cass, Ball, Paul, Wood, Hukill, Holmes, and Graham, who unanimously concurred with him that Fort Stephenson could not be defended against artillery, and that, being an unimportant post, the garrison should be withdrawn. The followinsr order was in consequence sent to Major Croghan : — « Sir, Immediately on receiving this letter, you will abandon Fort Stephenson, set fire to it, and repair with your command this night to head quarters. Cross the river and come up on the opposite side. If you should deem and find it impracticable to make good your march to this place, take the road to Huron, and pursue.it with the utmost circumspec- tion and dispatch." The messenger who carried this order missed his way, and Major Croghan did not receive it until * M'Affcc, Dawson. 248 MEMOIR OF the next day, when he did not conceive he could retreat with safety, as the Indians were hovering round the fort, in large numbers. A majority of his officers coincided with him in opinion, and' the following note was written to the general : — "Sir, « " I have just received yours of yesterday, ten o'clock, P. M., ordering me to destroy this place and make good my retreat, which was received too late to be carried into execution. We have deter- mined to maintain this place, and by Heavens we can." Major Croghan, in writing this note, took into consideration the probability of its falling Into the hands of the enemy, and used language of which, under other circumstances, he would have seen the impropriety. General Harrison, who was not ac- quainted with the secret reasons which dictated the dispatch, no sooner received it, than he sent Colonel Wells to Fort Stephenson, escorted by a squadron of dragoons, with the following letter : — ' " July 30, 1813. " Sir, " The general has just received your letter of this date, informing him that you had thought proper to disobey the order issued from this office, and deliv- ered to you this morning. Tt appears that the in- WILLIAM IIENKY HAKRISON. 249 formation which dictated tlie order was incorrect ; and as you did not receive it in the night as was expected, it might have been proper that you should have reported the circumstances, and your situation, before you proceeded to its execution. This might have been passed over ; but I am directed to say to you, that an officer who presumes to aver that he has made his resolution, and that he will act in direct opposition to the orders of his general, can no longer be intrusted with a separate command. Colonel Wells is sent to relieve you. You will deliver the command to him, and repair with Colo- nel Ball's squadron to this place. By command, &;c. "A. H. Holmes, Ass't. Ad't. Gen." The squadron of dragoons by whom this order was sent, found the fort surrounded by lurking par- ties of Indians, some of whom they pursued and cut down. Major Croghan returned to head quarters, as directed, and was politely received by General Harrison, to whom he made siich explanations as were deemed entirely satisfactory. The next morn- ing he was reinstated in his command, with orders of the same tenor as those above stated. No op- portunity, however, was afforded to the gallant major to evacuate his post. On the morning of the 31st of July, the enemy approached Fort Ste- phenson by water, and landed a number of troops, with a light howitzer. The fort was then summoned, 250 MEMOIR OF and the same declaration made, which was usually employed by the British during this campaign; namely, that unless the garrison should surrender, they could not be protected from massacre by the Indians, in case the fort should be taken. To this atrocious threat, as unjustifiable by any of the usages of war, as it was cowardly and discourteous, Ensign Shipp, who received the flag, replied on the part of Major Croghan, " That when the fort should be taken, there would be none left to mas- sacre ; as it would not be given up while a man was able to fight." A fire was opened from some six-pounders in the boats, and from the howitzer, with little effect. The fort was surrounded by 500 British regulars, and 800 Indians, the whole commanded by General Proctor in person ; while Tecumthe, with 2000 In- dians, watched the road to Fort Meigs, to intercept any reinforcement that might attempt to approach in that direction. Croghan had but one piece of artillery, a six-pounder, which he removed from place to place, and fired in different directions, to induce the belief that he had several guns. Thus passed the evening and night. The firing was commenced early the next morn- ing, and continued through the day. In the even- ing an assault was made by the whole force of the enemy, in two columns, one led by Colonel Short, the other by Colonel Warburton and Major Cham- WILLIAM IIEMIV HARRISON. 251 bers. They rushed to the works with great bra- very ; but one column was completely prostrated by a fire from the six-pounder, which was suddenly opened from a masked embrasure; while the other was thrown into confusion by a destructive fire of musketry, kept up by Captain Hunter. Colonel Short, a lieutenant, and twenty-five privates, were left dead in the ditch, and twenty-six of the enemy, badly wounded, were taken. The loss on our side was one killed, and seven slightly wounded. There were probably 150 of the enemy killed and wounded. When the fighting ceased, it was dark, and the situation of the wounded in the ditch was deplora- ble. Complete relief could not, with safety, be afforded them from either side. Major Croghan, however, instead of imitating the conduct of the enemy, who usually caused the wounded and pris- oners to be dispatched, or subjected them to insults and cruelty worse than death, continued to convey water to them over the picketing, and opened a passage, through which such as chose crept into the fort, and were kindly treated. At three o'clock the next morning, the ^vhole British and Indian force commenced a disorderly retreat. Fort Stephenson, which was the scene of this singular and gallant achievement, was not a regu- lar fortification. It was originally an Indian trading post, consisting of a large house surrounded by 252 MEMOIR or pickets. For the convenience of making it a tem- porary depot for provisions, General Harrison had enlarged the enclosure on one side, and had caused a ditch to be drawn round the whole, so as to ren- der it safe from any attack by an Indian force ; but it was never contemplated that it could be held against regular troops. It was a mere outpost, of little importance ; and has derived its consequence solely from the remarkable facts of which it was the scene — from being assailed by the British com- manding general in person, at the head of an im- posing force, and successfully defended by a hand- ful of brave but inexperienced soldiers. In his official report, General Harrison remarks, " It will not be among the least of General Proc- tor's mortifications, to find that he has been baffled by a youth who has just passed his twenty-first year. He is however a hero, worthy of his gallant uncle. General George Rogers Clarke." The offi- cers under Croghan in this noble affair, were Cap- tain Hunter, of the 17th, Lieutenants Johnson and Baylor, of the 17th, Anthony and Anderson, of the 24th, Meeks, of the 7th, and Ensigns Shipp and Duncan,* of the 17th — -all of whom behaved hand- somely. The best acts of distino-uished men are often mis- understood, or mischievously perverted. No sooner was the brilliant achievement of Croghan known * Joseph Duncan, now governor of Illinois, WILLIAM HENKY HARRISON. 253 to the public, than the enemies of Harrison assailed him with the most bitter denunciations. The men who sate by their (iresides, enjoying all the com- forts of peace, while war was raging on our bor- ders — the opposers of the administration of the virtuous Madison — the craven spirits who would have purchased a peace from Britain by dishonour- able submission, now poured out a stream of mahg- nant sarcasm upon the leader of an army, whose patriotism and sufferings they were incompetent to appreciate. The decided disapprobation with which these charfres against the character of their accom- plished leader, were viewed by the officers under Harrison, must be evident from the prompt and indignant manner in which they were refuted? When the newspapers in which these unjust stric- tures were published, reached the army, the officers highest in rank, who had witnessed all the trans- actions, conceived it their duty to publish the truth, while the circumstances were yet fresh in memory ; and the following paper was signed, and forwarded to the interior for publication ; — "Lower Seneca Town, Aug. 19, 1813. " The undersigned, being the general, field, and staflT officers, with that portion of the north-western army under the immediate command of General Harrison, have observed with regret and surprise, that charges, as improper in the form as in the 22 254 MEMOIR OF substance, have been made against the conduct of General Harrison, during the recent investment of Lower Sandusky. At another time, and under ordinary circumstances, we should deem it improper and unmilitary thus publicly to give any opinion respecting the movements of the army. But public confidence in the commanding general is essential to the success of the campaign, and causelessly to withdraw or to withhold that confidence, is more than individual injustice; it becomes a serious injury to the service. A part of the force of which the American army consists, will derive its greatest strength and efficacy from a confidence in the com- manding general, and from those moral causes which accompany and give energy to public opin- ion. A very erroneous idea respecting the number of the troops then at the disposal of the general, has doubtless been the primary cause of those un- fortunate and unfounded impressions. In that re- spect we have fortunately experienced a very favour- able change. But we refer the public to the general's official report to the Secretary of War, of Major Croghan's successful defence of Lower Sandusky. In that will be found a statement of our whole dis- posable force ; and he who believes that with such a force, and under the circumstances which then occurred. General Harrison ought to have advanced upon the enemy, must be left to correct his opinion in the school of experience. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 255 " On a review of the course then adopted, we are decidedly of the opinion, tliat it was such as was dictated by military wisdom, and by a due regard to our own circumstances and to the situation of the enemy. The reasons for this opinion it is evidently improper now to give ; but we hold ourselves ready at a future period, and when other circumstances shall have intervened, to satisfy every man of its correctness who is anxious to investigate and will- ing to receive the truth. And with a ready acqui- escence, beyond the mere claims of military duty, we are prepared to obey a general, whose measures meet our most deliberate approbation, and merit that of his country. Lewis Cass, Brig. Gen. U. S. A. Samuel Wells, Col. 17 R. U. S. I. Tho3Ias D. O wings. Col. 28 R. U. S. I. George Paul, Col. 17 R. U. S. I. J. C. Bartlett, Col. Q. M. G. James V. Ball, Lieut. Col. Robert Morrison, Lieut. Col. George Todd, Maj. 19 R. U. S. L William Trigg, Maj. 28 R. U. S. I. James Smile v, Maj. 28 R. U. S. I. Rd. Graham, IMaj. 17 R. U. S. L George Croghan, Maj. 17 R. U. S. I. L. Hukill, Maj. & Assist. Insp. Gen. E. D. Wood, Maj. Engineers." 256 MEMOIR OF The gallant Croghan, too, scorning to receive applause at the expense of the honour of a general whose intrepidity and wisdom had been the themes of eulogy throughout the whole army, immediately published a document which reflects as high credit on the character of this noble-spirited Kentuckian, as the victory to which it alludes. We lay it before the reader, that the opinion of Croghan may be seen, as written by himself, on the battle-ground at Sandusky. " Lower Sandusky, Aug. 27, 1813. *' I have with much regret seen in some of the public prints such misrepresentations respecting my refusal to evacuate this post, as are calculated not only to injure me in the estimation of military men, but also to excite unfavourable impressions as to the propriety of General Harrison's conduct rela- tive to this affair. "His character as a military man is too well established to need my approbation or support. But his public service entitles him at least to com- mon justice. This affair does not furnish cause of reproach. If public opinion has been lately misled respecting his late conduct, it will require but a mo- ment's cool, dispassionate reflection, to convince them of its propriety. The measures recently ADOPTED BY HIM, SO FAR FROM DESERVING CEN- SURE, ARE THE CLEAREST PROOFS OF HIS KEEN PENETRATION AND ABLE GENERALSHIP. It is tl'Ue WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 257 that I did not proceed imrncdijitely to execute his order to evacuate this post ; but this disobedience was not, as some would wish to beheve, the result of a fixed determination to maintain the post con- trary to his most positive orders, as will appear from the following detail, which is given to explain my conduct. "About 10 o'clock on the morning of the 30th ultimo, a letter from the adjutant general's office, dated Seneca Town, July 29th, 1813, was handed me by Mr. Connor, ordering me to abandon this post, burn it, and retreat that night to head quar- ters. On the reception of the order, I called a coun- cil of officers, in which it was determined not to" abandon the place, at least until the further plea- sure of the general should be known, as it was thought that an attempt to retreat in the open day, in the face of a superior force of the enemy, would be more hazardous than to remain in the fort, under all its disadvantages. I therefore wrote a letter to the general, couched in such terms as I thought were calculated to deceive the enemy should it fall into his hands, which I thought more than proba- ble, — as well as to inform the general, should it be so fortunate as to reach him, that I would wait to hear from him, before I should proceed to execute his order. This letter, contrary to my expectations, was received by the general, who, not knowing what reasons urged me to write in a tone so decisive, 22* 258 MEMOIR OF concluded very rationally that the manner of it was demonstrative of the most positive determina- tion to disobey his order under any circumstances. 'J was therefore suspended from the command of the fort, and ordered to head quarters. But on ex- plaining to the general my reason for not executing his orders, and my object in using the style I had done, he was so perfectly satisfied with the expla- nation, that I was immediately reinstated in the command. *' It will be recollected that the order above al- luded to, was written on the night previous to my receiving it — had it been delivered to me, as was intended, that night, I should have obeyed it with- out hesitation ; its not reaching me in time was the only reason which induced me to consult my offi- cers on the propriety of waiting the general's fur- ther orders. " It has been stated, also, that ' upon my repre- £ sentations of my ability to maintain the post, the H general altered his determination to abandon it.' ', This is incorrect. No such representations were | ever made. And the last order I received from the "); general was precisely the same as that first given, viz. * That if I discovered the approach of a large British force by water, (presuming that they would bring heavy artillery,) time enough to effect a re- treat, I was to do so ; but if I could not retreat with safety, to defend the post to the last extremity.' WILLIAM IIEMtY IIAIJRISON. 259 « 'A day or two before the enemy appeared before Fort Meigs, the general had reconnoitred the sur- rounding ground, and being informed that the hill on the opposite side of Sandusky completely conv manded the fort, I offered to undertake, with the troops under my command, to remove it to that side. The general, upon reflection, thought it best not to attempt it, as he believed that if the enemy again appeared on this side of the lake, it would be before the work could be finished. " It is useless to disguise the fact, that this fort is commanded by the points of high ground around it ; a single stroke of the eye made this clear to me the first time I had occasion to examine the neish- bourhood, with a view of discovering the relative strength and weakness of the place. " It would be insincere to say that I am not flat- tered by the many handsome things which have been said about the defence which was made by the troops under my command ; but I desire no plaudits which are bestowed upon me at the ex- pense of General Harrison. " I have at all times enjoyed his confidence so far as my rank in the army entitled me to it, and on proper occasions received his marked attention. I have felt the warmest attachment for him as a man, and my confidence in him as an able com- mander remains unshaken. I feel every assurance that he will at all times do me ample justice ; and 260 MEMOIR OF nothing could give me more pain than to see his enemies seize upon this occasion to deal out their unfriendly feelings and acrimonious dislike — and as long as he continues (as in my humble opinion he has hitherto done) to make the wisest arrange- ments and most judicious disposition which the forces under his command will justify, I shall not hesitate to unite with the army in bestowing upon him that confidence which he so richly merits, and which has on no occasion been withheld. " Your friend, " George Croghan, " Maj. \lth Infantry, commanding Lower Sandusky.''' It would be improper to pass over so important a passage in the life of General Harrison, without comment ; and the more so, as there is no event in the brilliant career of this accomplished leader, in which he has evinced such consummate general- ship ; yet none in which his conduct has been so little understood, or so grossly misrepresented. At the period when Croghan was ordered to evacuate Fort Stephenson, Fort Meigs was invested by 1500 British regulars and Canadians, and by 5000 Indian warriors led by Tecumthe and Dick- son. A large portion of the latter were Winneba- goes, and others, of the fiercest of the Indian ■ tribes, from the shores of the upper lakes ; who were brought for the first time to operate against WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 201 tlic army of Harrison, by a promise that Fort Meigs should be stormed, and that the garrison and property should be given over to the Indians, to be dealt with according to their own rules of warfare. Information of tliese facts was brought to Gene- ral Harrison by Captains Oliver and M'Cune, who intrepidly passed through the invading force, to head quarters, to solicit a reinforcement. Captain M'Cune returned with advices from General Harrison to General Clay, and had just reached Fort Meigs, when the allied enemy prac- tised a subtle manoeuvre, for the purpose of draw- ing our troops out from the fort. A sham fight was acted in sight of the garrison : the Indian yell was heard, and the savages seen attacking a column of Canadians, who were but partially visible, and vvho were intended to represent the troops of Harrison. The white men were thrown into confusion ; and then rallied, and the Indians gave back. It was supposed that General Clay would mistake the Canadians for a strong reinforcement coming to his relief; and seeing them thus engaged, would rush out with his whole force to their support. But the recent arrival of M'Cune with advices from head quarters, prevented the American general from being deceived; although the stratagem was so well executed, that the troops, notwithstanding the 262 MEMOIR OF representations of M'Cune, could scarcely be re- strained. Some dissatisfaction on the part of Tecumthe at an alleged act of bad faith in Proctor, induced that chief to withdraw with 500 warriors in the direction of Fort Winchester. This movement being at vari- ance with the most recent advices, and with the supposed plans of the enemy, made it more neces- sary for the commander-in-chief to look closely to the present safety of several important points, which he was preparing to defend. The most important places to be looked to, were Upper Sandusky and Cleaveland. The former was the principal depot of provisions, upon which the whole army depended for its support ; and at the latter the boats were building, under the direc- tion of Major Jessup, for the transportation of the troops in the intended descent upon Maiden. On the receipt, therefore, of the intelligence brought by the intrepid Oliver, and of other in- formation, the general fell back, with the small disposable force under his immediate command, to Seneca, thirty miles in advance of Upper San- dusky, for the purpose of covering that important place, and of throwing out assistance to Cleaveland or Fort Meigs, as circumstances might require. The Indian force then in the field was the largest and most formidable which had ever been assem- bled ; it was one with which General Harrison had WILLIAM llENKY IIAKRISON. 2G3 not the strength to contend in open battle ; but he Avell knew that it could not be kept together for any considerable length of time ; and his undoubted policy was to keep his inferior force as nnuch toge- ther as possible, under the cover of their fortifica- tions — to avoid weakening his army by detach- ments, which would probably be cut off — to cover his provisions and boats — and to be prepared, on the dispersion of the Indians, to strike a decisive blow at the enemy, in his strong-hold at Maiden. Fort Stephenson was an outpost, used for a tem- porary purpose, and not forming any material part of the great plan, either of defence or attack ; and which, therefore, it would not have been good policy to maintain at any great expense of blood, or by any hazard of more important objects. The order therefore to Croghan to abandon that work, was dictated by sound military principles. The acci- dental delay of the delivery of that order to Major Croghan, and the more rapid approach of the enemy than had been expected, justified that brave and chivalrous ofiicer in the determination to main- , tain his post. But the same reason which rendered it impracticable for Croghan to retire, made it N equally impossible for the general to advance a de- tachment to liis relief. An immense Indian force was lying in wait for such a movement ; and al- though the small parties of mounted men, who bore the orders to and fro, eluded or cut their way 264 MEMOIR OF through them, any larger body of troops attempting to pass between Seneca and Lower Sandusky, must have been cut to pieces — a catastrophe which would have given renewed audacity to the enemy, while it would have so crippled our army as to have dis- abled the general from giving efficient protection to Upper Sandusky and Cleaveland. Add to all this the facts, that Fort Meigs was strong and ably defended, and needed no reinforce- ment, unless the siege should be protracted ; and that the strongest corps under Harrison's immediate command, was a fine squadron of dragoons which could not act efficiently in the wooded country around Seneca, and towards Lower Sandusky, but would form a potent force in the open plains around Upper Sandusky, to which the general proposed to retire, — and it will be seen that this sagacious leader had maturely weighed every con- tingent circumstance, and adopted the only mea- sures consistent with the safety of his army, and the honour of the American name. WILLIAM HENRY HAllIUSON. 265 CHAPTER XVIII. Preparations for the invasion of Canada. The time had now arrived when General Harri- son found himself in a condition to reap the fruits of his long and arduous exertions, to carry into effect the intentions of the government, and to real- ize the hopes and expectations of the country. Through a long series of hardships, and in the face of the most appalling obstacles, he had successfully defended the frontier from depredation, and the fire- side of the citizen from the desecration of brutal violence. The troops, animated by the spirit of the commander-in-chief, and by the noble examples of the distinguished gentlemen who held high com- mands under him, had borne themselves with great courage in action, and with heroic patience under the severities of the climate and the privations of the wilderness. It is not to be disguised, that on some occa- sions disaffection showed itself in the army ; the men became impatient for action, or clamorous to return to their homes, and the conduct of General Harrison was censured in the newspapers of the day. It is almost fruitless to inquire, now, why any attempt should have been made to discredit a 266 MEMOIR OF commander possessing the confidence of the troops and the people in a most remarkable degree, and directine his force with such uniform conduct and discretion. It is to be recollected, however, that this army was composed chiefly of militia, who volunteered their services for short periods ; and that the individuals composing each corps, would naturally desire that their own brief term of em- ployment should be signalized by some brilliant exploit. The American volunteer goes to the field under high excitement — with lively feelings of pa- triotism and of personal honour, which induce an eagerness for battle, and an impatience to return home with the laurels of viq^ory. Patient endurance of delay, blind obedience, passive and uninquiring submission, are not the virtues of irregular troops. The army of Harrison was made up chiefly of citizens — high-spirited men, of every grade of intel- lect—recently from home — unused to military re- straint — and accustomed to think for themselves. Some of the officers were lawyers and politicians ; some were members of Congress, or of the state legislatures; and a few had served in previous wars. There was of course a great diversity of opinion in relation to every movement of the army, graduated from the extreme of caution to that of rashness. They did not reflect that General Har- rison had military experience, knowledge of the country, and intimacy with the Indian character. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 12G7 superior to their own ; that he had more extensive means of acquiring information ; that he was acting under instructions whicli it was not his duty to make public; and that, after all, he was the respon- sible individual, who would have to bear all the blame in case of failure, and who was bound to think for himself. He consulted his officers freely, and then acted accordinij to his own iudo;ment. O JO Nor was the peculiar situation of General Har- rison understood by those who clamoured for more speedy results than those which seemed at first to follow his operations. His first and most sacred duty was to defend the firesides of his countrymen. An immense line of exposed frontier was commit- ted to his care ; and he would have been a traitor to his trust, had he permitted a thirst for personal fame to lead him madly into the enemy's country, while his own was at the mercy of the savage. Idke every other gallant soldier, he coveted mili- tary reputation, and ardently longed to meet the foe on the battle-field ; but it is, and ever has been, a noble trait in the character of this distinjruished man, to sacrifice all personal considerations to his sense of duty. Few men in hi£;h station have ever evinced such uniform disinterestedness. We hope we shall not be misunderstood when we say that discontents, on a few occasions, pre- vailed among our troops. It would have been ex- traordinary if such had not been the case. Seldom 268 MEMOIR OF have troops suffered so much or so cheerfully ; sel- dom has there been an army so badly supported by the government, and upon whose individual patriot- ism^ courage, and resources, so great dependence was unavoidably placed. A large majority of the citizens who were thus situated were rash hot- blooded young men, the sons of independent farm- ers, — the pride and flower of the chivalrous West. They were men who thought, and had a right to think ; and whenever men think, there will be a diversity of opinion. As a general fact, however, and with only a few rare and brief exceptions, Harrison enjoyed the affection and confidence of his followers to an unlimited extent, and the utmost harmony prevailed throughout the army. When, in a few instances, the troops became dissatisfied, his manner of bringing them back to their sense of duty was as characteristic of himself, as it was indicative of his talent for commanding, and know- ledge of human nature. He did not forget that he commanded an army of citizens, that he was but a citizen himself, elevated for the time above his equals, for the public good, and occupying a pa- triarchal station. Instead, therefore, of employing coercion, or using degrading punishments, he ap- pealed to their patriotism in animated harangues, which never failed to produce the desired effect. During the whole term of his service, he never caused a inilitia soldier to be punished, yet always WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 2G9 co?n7nandi'(l the respect and obedience of the mili- tia. His speeches are said to have been uncom- monly happy ; they were pointed, glowing, and always appropriate to the occasion. Like the cele- brated General Mifllin of Pennsylvania, his elo- quence enabled him to command, without the ap- pearance of effort. Having with consummate skill carried forward the defensive operations of the war up to this point, General Harrison now proceeded to mature his plan for the capture of Maiden, and the conquest of Upper Canada. Commodore Perry had been di- rected to co-operate with him ; Colonel Johnson's mounted regiment, which had returned home, was again called into service ; Governor Meigs exerted himself to bring the brave Ohians into the field ; and the venerable Shelby, at the invitation of Har- rison, resolved to lead in person, to the invasion of Canada, a fresh band of Kentuckians. 23* 270 MEMOIR OP CHAPTER XIX. Perry* s victory — Preparations for invading Canada. Our attention will now be directed briefly to the naval armament upon Lake Erie, which had grown up, as if by magic, in the bosom of the wilderness. At the commencement of the year 1813, the British had a fleet, which gave them the command of the lake, while not a vessel floated under our flag west- ward of the Falls of Niagara. The government, finding how necessary it was to gain the ascendency upon the lakes, determined to proceed vigorously in the creation of a fleet ; and the heroic Perry was, in a happy hour for his country, appointed to su- perintend this important work. It is said that seve- ral officers of the same grade declined the command on Lake Erie, under the impression that there would be less opportunity of reaping laurels there than on the ocean ; but the gallant Perry more sagaciously reflected, that an officer gained the highest honour by serving where the country most demanded his services, and that a victory achieved upon an inland lake, in the command of a fleet, would be more unique and brilliant than any exploit which could be performed with a single ship on the ocean. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 271 The ditlk'iilties that attended tlie biiildiiifr of a fleet at Hrie, need not he dwelt upon. Like Harri- son, he had every thing to create, and was obhged to rely much on his own mental resources, his per- sonal influence, and his industry. Persevering with indefatigable resolution, through a series of per- plexing and disheartening circumstances, his little fleet slowly but gradually swelled into maturity ; and before the enemy was aware of the formidable character of the preparations v/hich were going forward, the enterprising commodore was afloat on his favourite element, flushed with hope, and eager for battle. On the 2d of August, 1813, the commodore commenced getting his heavier vessels over the bar at the mouth of the harbour of Erie. The opera- tion required time and care, and it was successfully effected in the sight of the enemy, whose fleet arrived off Erie on the 3d, and after watching this operation, retired as soon as all our vessels were seen riding safely on the lake. The commodore now proceeded to Sandusky Bay, where he was visited by General Harrison, who supplied him with some men, to act as marines. Our fleet then proceeded towards Maiden, and the American flag was proudly displayed before the strong-hold of the enemy. The British launched another vessel, and the two fleets were apparently of equal force ; but the superiority was luidouhtedly 272 MEMOIR OF theirs, as their vessels were larger, and carried more guns than ours. The whole number of guns carried by our squadron was fifty-four cannon, and two swivels ; while the British mounted sixty-three cannon, two swivels, and four howitzers. As the enemy made no show of an intention to accept the challenge thrown out by the appearance of our fleet on their shores, the gallant commodore retired ; and again visited Maiden after an absence of some days. At length, on the 10th of Septem- ber, Commodore Barclay, a skilful and veteran officer, sailed from Maiden, and offered battle to our eager seamen. We shall not repeat here the details of this brilliant action, which are familiar to our countrymen. The battle was hard fought, and skilfully directed — and the chivalrous Perry gather- ed laurels as lasting as they were dearly earned and richly merited. With a fleet constructed under his own eye, and crews disciplined by himself — on an untried scene — he planned his battle with saga- city, and conducted it with a coolness, and a prodi- gality of self-exposure, never excelled. For two hours and a half, the victory was doubtful ; but our triumph in the event was complete, and the whole of the enemy's squadron was captured. " We have met the enemy, and they are ours," were the brief words in which Perry announced his splendid triumph to the commander-in-chief of the north- western army. WILLIAM HENRY HAKKISON. 273 Mad the nol)Io deeds of Perry ended here, his name would deservedly have been placed among the foremost of naval heroes — but the brightness of his fame was enhanced by other circumstances — his courtesy to the prisoners, his humanity to the wounded, the modesty with which he announc- ed his victory, the disinterestedness with which he divided the glory of the triumph with his subordi- nates, and his subsequent conduct, leave us nothing to regret and nothing to wish in relation to the moral beauty of this achievement, and the spotless reputation of its hero. Many brave young officers distinguished themselves under his command, who are now serving with reputation, or are remembered with respect. In the mean while, preparations were in active progress for the descent upon Canada. General M'Arthur, of Ohio, had been placed in command of Fort Meigs, with instructions to reduce the area of the works, and to make arrangements to ship the heavy artillery, and a portion of the military stores. The mounted regiment of Johnson repaired again to the frontier. By the 1st of September, the arrival of thirty wagons, and a brigade of pack- horses, placed the general in a condition to begin the business of transportation. The 9th of the same month had been appointed by the President, at the request of Congress, as a day of fasting, humilia- tion, and prayer ; and little as religion is usually 274 -MEMOIR OF respected in armies, -this day was observed with decorum by all, and employed by many in exercises of sincere devotion. Governor Shelby was on his way to the frontier with a strong body of mounted men ; General Adair, a distinguished soldier, was one of his aids, and John J. Crittenden, equally eminent as a law- yer and politician, the other. These troops were organized, on their arrival at Urbana, into eleven regiments, commanded by Colonels Trotter, Don- aldson, Poague, Montjoy, Renwick, Davenport, Paul, Calloway, Limral, Barbour, and Williams. These regiments were formed into five brigades, commanded by Brigadiers Calmes, Chiles, King, Allen, and Caldwell, and the whole into two divi- sions, under Major Generals William Henry and Joseph Desha. WILLIAM IIENUY HAKKIsiON. 275 CHAPTER XX. Invasion of Canada — Battle of the Thames , and capture of the British army — Expedition to Niagara — Resignation of General Harrison. The artillery, military stores, and provisions, at Fort Meigs, were embarked on the IGtli of Septem- ber, 1813, by General M'Arthur. General Clay, with the Kentuckians at that place, whose term of service had expired, had solicited permission to ac- company the proposed expedition, and now pro- ceeded with the stores. The provisions from Upper Sandusky were also pushed forward ; and the troops were concentrated at the place of embarkation on Sandusky Bay. On the 20th, General Harrison embarked with the regular troops under Generals M'Arthul' and Cass ; and between that time and the 24th, the remainder of the army followed to the place of rendezvous, at Put-in Bay. On the 26th, General Harrison sailed with Commodore Perry, in the Ariel, to reconnoitre Maiden ; and on his return issued a general order, prescribing minutely the order of debarkation, march, and battle, in the clear and accurate manner customary witii tiiis accomplished commander. 276 MEMOIR OF On the 27th the army was embarked, and pro- ceeded towards the Canada shore ; the general hav- ing first circulated among the troops a spirited address, in which, among other things, he said, " Remember the River Raisin ; but remember it only whilst victory is suspended. The revenge of a soldier cannot be gratified on a fallen enemy." The army landed in high spirits; but not an enemy wrs to be seen. Proctor had burned the fort and navy-yard, and retreated to Sandwich. The victory of Perry, and the advance of Harrison, had daunted the courage of the British commander ; yet he had, a few days before, proclaimed martial law, and was issuing 15,000 rations per day — a fact which shows him to have been at the head of a numerous force. The troops encamped that night on the ruins of Maiden. This was a proud moment for the pa- triotic Harrison. Surrounded by his gallant fel- low-citizens, he stood upon the ruined breastworks of that fortress from which destruction had been poured upon the frontier, whence the Indian had been sent forth with the firebrand and tomahawk to his work of desolation, and where the gory scalps of Americans — of women and children, as well as of men slain in fight — were exhibited as trophies of British victory. The strong-hold of the enemy was abandoned. Harrison wrote to the War Department, " I will WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 277 pursue the enemy to-morrow, althougli there is no probabihty of overtaking him, as he has upwards of 1000 liorses, and we have not one in the army." He proceeded, accordingly, the next day, to Sand- wich ; but Proctor had fled. " The inhabitants of Canada had fled from their houses, and hid their property, on the approach of the American army, fully expecting that the Kcn- tuckians, like the British^ would plunder and mas- sacre all before them : but they found themselves happily disappointed in these expectations."* Go- vernor Shelby, who accompanied General Harri- son, had issued an order to the Kentucky volunteers, in which he said, " While the army remains in this country, it is expected that the inhabitants will be treated with justice and humanity, and their prop- erty secured from unnecessary and wanton injury." On the 1st of October, the general officers were convened, and General Harrison stated his intention of pursuing the enemy. He informed them, says M'Affee, " that there were but two ways of doing it — one of which was, to follow him up the strait, by land — the other, to embark and sail down Lake Erie to Long Point, then march hastily across by land twelve miles to the road, and intercept him. *But the governor thinks, and so do I, that the best way will be, to pursue the enemy up the * M'Affee. 24 278 MEMOIR OF strait, by land.' The general officers unanimously concurred in the same opinion, together with Gene- ral Adair, first aid to the governor, who had been invited to the council. I have been thus particular in stating the facts," continues M'Affee, " relative to the determination to pursue the enemy, because it has been reported and believed that General Har- rison never would have pursued farther than Sand- wich, had it not been for Governor Shelby," &c. The fact is, there never was any difference of opin- ion between thern^ either as to the propriety of the pursuit, or the manner of performing it. We shall pass over a number of interesting de- tails which are not material to the issue ; and bring .;|J| the reader at once to the battle-ground. After a severe pursuit, the enemy was overtaken, on the 5th I of October. General Proctor was well posted, in a | position where his left was flanked by the river ij Thames, and his right by a swamp. Beyond the j latter, and between it and another swamp still further J to the right, were the Indians under Tecumthe. It ' ' was on this occasion that General Harrison practised a movement which, while it insured an easy victory, evinced a high degree of military genius, and promptitude of character. The army was formed , upon proper military principles, with the addition, that the flanks and rear were more strongly se- j cured than usual, to guard against the Indian mode | of warfare, — when Colonel Wood reported to the -j WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 279 gonoral, tliat he had just reconnoitred the enemy, and tbund their regular infantry formed in open order. Proctor had probably heard that this mode of formation was practised by us in fighting the In- dians, and had misapplied the principle. He had committed an egregious error, and Harrison in- stantly availed himself of it. Aware that troops in . open order, that is, with intervals of three or four feet between the files, could not resist a charge of mounted men, he directed Colonel Johnson to dash through the enemy's line in column. The experi- ment was made with brilliant success. The mount- ed men charn;ed with ease through the ranks of the enemy, formed in their rear, and assailed their broken line. The battle was gained. No sooner was their line broken, than the British began to throw down their arms, and a victory, almost bloodless on our part, was obtained by the consum- mate ability with which the commander-in-chief wielded his forces, and the rapidity with which he took advantage of the mistakes of his adversary On our left, some fighting took place with the Indians. A lively fire was kept up for a short time. The Indians rushed up to the mounted men, and fiercely contested the ground for a few min- utes, until Tecumthe fell, as is supposed, by the hand of Colonel Johnson. The whole British array was captured, with the exception of a few that galloped ofi' with General 280 MEMOIR OF Proctor. A guilty conscience gave wings to the flieht of this miscreant, whose whole career on our borders had been a continued series of treachery, rapine, and murder ; and who having pledged him- self to the Indians to give up to them General Harrison and his men, when talcen, to be massa- cred and scalped, may have thought it not prudent to trust his own person in the hands of the Ameri- cans. A greater monster never existed in human shape ; yet the British government sanctioned his atrocities, by giving him promotion. The British had eighteen killed and twenty-six wounded ; the number of prisoners taken was 600. Our loss was about the same in killed and wounded. The number of troops engaged on our side was less than 2500, of whom nearly all were militia. The enemy brought into the field 845 regular soldiers, and 2000 Indians ; so that if there was any differ- ence in point of numbers, it was in their favour. We must close our protracted account of this splendid achievement. The defeat of the enemy was the consequence of a novel and most able dis- position of our army by its commander, and the quickness with which he took advantage of the enemy's errors on the field of battle, at the mo- ment of engaging, and of the gallantry of our brave troops. It closed the war in that quarter ; and, together with the brilliant victory of Perry on the adjacent lake, rescued the whole north-western WILLIAM IlENKV irAUWlSOX. 291 frontier from the depredations of the savage, and from all the accumulated horrors of war. In the lan WILLIAM HENRY IIARKISON. 285 assumed to liinisclf tlio liigh prerogative of ac- ccjiting the resignation. Tlie President expressed his great regret that tlie letter of Governor Shelby had not been received earlier, as in that case the valuable services of General Harrison would have been preserved to the nation in the ensuing cam- paign."* If General Harrison had not been a disinterested and high-minded man — if he could have sacrificed his sense of duty to pecuniary considerations, he might have remained with his family, enjoying his high rank, and its emoluments, and reposing upon his laurels ; but he disdained command, or the re- ception of pay for services which he was not per- mitted to perform, and cheerfully retired to private life when he could no longer be useful in the field. * Dawson's Life of Harrison. 286 ' MEMOIR OF CHAPTER XXI. Civil services since the war. In the summer of 1814, General Harrison was appointed, in conjunction with Governor Shelby and General Cass, to treat with the Indians on the north-western frontier, and was successful in con- cluding a treaty at Greeneville, the old head quarters of General Wayne. In 1815, after the peace with Great Britain, it became requisite, in compliance with the treaty made at Ghent, to offer to the several tribes who had taken part with the enemy, the restoration of the territories which they had occupied before the war, and from which they were driven by the vic- torious arms of Harrison. General Harrison was placed at the head of this commission, and Gene- ral M'Arthur, and the Hon. John Graham, asso- ciated with him. A treaty was made by these commissioners, at Detroit, in the same year. In 1816, he was elected a member of the house of representatives in Congress, to fill a vacancy occasioned by the resignation of the Hon. John M'Lean, and also for the succeeding two years. There were on this occasion six candidates, but he received a majority of more than a thousand votes WILLIAM IIEMIV HAKKIi^ON. 287 over the number given for all his competitors, when added toircther. About this time, one of the contractors of the army, wiiose gains had been reduced by General 1 larrison's rigid integrity, endeavoured to injure his character, by charging him with improper conduct while in command of the army. General Harri- son demanded an investigation by Congress, and a committee was appointed, who, after a strict exami- nation, reported by their chairman, Richard M. Johnson, that General Harrison " stood above sus- picion," and " that he was, in his measures, go- verned by a proper zeal and devotion to the public interest." One of the members of the committee, Mr. Hulbert, in a few remarks which he made on the occasion, said that he had been prejudiced against General Harrison, but this investigation satisfied him that the accusation was false and cruel. " He was confident that directly the reverse was true. There was the most satisfactory evi- dence that the general, in the exercise of his official duties, and in his devotion to the public interest, had neglected his private concerns to his material detriment and injury. In a word," said Mr. Hul- bert, " I feel myself authorized to say, that every member of the committee is fully satisfied, that the conduct of General Harrison in relation to the sub- ject-matter of this inquiry, has been that of a brave honest, and honourable man ; and that, instead of 288 MEMOIR OF deserving censure, he merits the thanks and ap- plause of his country." This investigation also satisfied Congress, that General Harrison had been unjustly treated by the War Department ; and a resolution giving him a gold medal, and the thanks of Congress, was now passed, unanimously in the senate, and with only one dissenting voice in the house. There were two subjects which General Harri- son had greatly at heart, in seeking a seat in Con- gress. One of these was the adoption of an efficient militia system ; and the other, the relief of the vete- ran soldiers who had served in the two wars for in- dependence. President Washington, and all his successors, had urged upon Congress the necessity of a more perfect organization of the militia ; but the difficulties which surrounded the subject had been such, that nothing had been done in relation to it. As it was well understood, that General Harrison not only took a great interest in this sub- ject, but fully understood it, he was placed at the head of the committee to whom it was referred ; and he reported a bill, together with an explanatory report, in the latter of which are discussed the points: first, that a government constituted like ours should rely upon its militia for defence, rather than on a standing army; secondly, that the militia should be disciplined ; and thirdly, that a state of discipline adequate to the object can only be ob- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 289 tained by the adoption of a system of military in- struction combined with the ordinary education of youtli. The bill seemed to be generally approved ; but the indisposition which has always been evinc- ed in Congress towards the discussion of this sub- ject, caused a delay in taking it up ; and it was not until near the close of the session that General Harrison, by great exertions, succeeded in getting it debated in committee of the whole. His speech on that occasion has not been fully reported ; but Mr. Williams of North Carolina, afterwards, in speaking on another question, remarked that " the gentleman from Ohio had depicted the dangers of a standing army to a government like ours, in a strain of eloquence such as had rarely been wit- nessed in that house." We are enabled to present a very meagre outlme of the argument of that mas- terly effort. Mr. Harrison remarked, that the devoted attach- ment which has always been manifested by the soldiers of a veteran army towards a successful general, had its source in a principle of the human mind, which was the same in all countries, and in all ages. The people of the United States had no reason to expect that they would be exempt from the fate of other republics, unless they took wisdom from experience, and avoided the errors which had been fatal to the liberties of other nations. The greatest of those errors was the employment of 25 290 MEMOIR OF mercenary armies for their defence — in other words, making the military a distinct profession. The necessity of adopting this system arose from the neglect of qualifying the citizens to become their own protectors. If the citizens were not soldiers, sol- diers must be employed in war who were not citizens ; or citizens who, by devoting themselves to the use of arms, as a profession, would soon lose the char- acter of citizens. In a republic which would secure safety from foreign aggression and domestic insur- rection, the two characters must be united. But the mere enrolment of persons for military service did not render them soldiers. To become such, they must be subjected to a rigid discipline. The source of courage in armies is the conscious- ness, on the part of the soldier, of possessing the power to annoy his enemy, and to defend himself. To acquire the knowledge and the expertness to give this confidence, long practice in the use of arms, and in military evolutions, is necessary — so long, that the citizens who were enrolled for militia duty, could never spare the time from their other avocations, to acquire them. To force them to do so, would prove, to the poorer class especially, an intolerable burthen, unless they were paid, which would not be practicable, with the limited resources of our treasury. The opinion prevailed generally, that arming and enrolling the militia was sufficient, and the exploits of the armed citizens during the WILLIAM HENUY HARRISON. 291 late war had been quoted, as sustaining that posi- tion ; in answer to which Mr. Harrison said, that glorious as were the performances of the undisci- plined militia in the late contcs, the victories gained by them were, with a single exception, achieved under circumstances peculiarly adapted to their mode of warfare, or where their superiority in the use of small-arms cave them a decided advantan;e ; while the disasters they suffered, were all attributa- ble to the want of discipline, not the absence of gallantry — for the latter was conspicuous on every occasion. Catties in the field were gained, in modern times, as far as troops are concerned, by a facility in performing evolutions, not by superiority in firing ; or as was observed by the famous Count Saxe, " by the legs, rather than the arms." In the commencement of the late war, continued Mr. H., it was believed that a small body of regular troops, with the aid of the militia, would be suffi- cient. The establishment accordingly consisted of two major generals, and twenty regiments ; but it was increased at every session of Congress, until it amounted to six major generals and fifty regi- ments, and if the war had continued two years longer, there would have been one hundred of the latter — so fully established had become the opinion, that the resources of the nation would be inadequate to carry on a protracted war with undisciplined militia. If then standing armies were dangerous 292 MEMOIR OF to a republic, and if an undisciplined militia is in- adequate to its defence, what course was to be adopted? The militia must be disciplined. But how was this to be accomplished ? Mr. H. entered into a minute examination of all the plans that had been proposed at various times, and found them unsatisfactory. Among them was one proposed by General Knox, during the administration of Washington. This came nearer to Mr. Harrison's own plan than any other. It established the prin- ciple, that the military education of youth should take place between the ages of eighteen and twenty- one, and in camps of discipline. This was rejected upon the ground, that it would occupy too large a portion of that important period of life, when a young man was engaged in learning a trade or profession. The plan proposed in the report, and supported by Mr. H., was that of the ancient republics, which mingled military instruction with the ordinary edu- cation of youth, commencing with the elementary military duties at the primary schools, and ending with the higher tactics at the colleges. The expense was to be borne by the United States ; but to obvi- ate the objection of the increase of patronage which it would give to the general government, the in- structors were to be appointed by the states re- spectively. The system explained in the speech of which we WILLIAM HENRY HAURISON. 29'S have given a faint outline, was subniiUcd to the executive, and was approved by all the heads of departments — especially by Mr. Monroe and Mr. Crawford. The latter, having doubts of the con- stifbtionality of such a national plan of education, drew up an amendment to the constitution in regard to it, to be submitted to Congress. We have seen the draft in his handwriting. But the whole scheme was unpalatable to Congress. Just escaped from a war, and wearied with military details, with which few of the members had any personal acquaint- ance, they were willing to escape from the consid- eration of a subject so little in accordance with their tastes. We shall only remark, that General Har- . ' rison's bill was strongly recommended by the repub- lican features with which it was stamped. Had it been adopted, there would have existed no ground for the dispute about the preference for situations at West Point. The children of the rich and the poor would have received the same military edu- cation. The subject of training the militia was one to which General Harrison's attention had been early directed. Although he had spent several years in the army as a regular officer, he had never thought of becoming a soldier by profession. But on enter- ing upon civil duties, being always strongly addict- ed to historical reading, it was natural that his knowledge of military details should induce him to 25* 294 MEMOIR OF relish those parts of history which treat of war. Having been educated in the strictest repubUcan principles, he was particularly attracted by the early periods of the history of the ancient repub- lics, when every citizen was a soldier ; and seeifcg that their downfall was usually produced by the change in their military systems, which committed their defence to the hands of soldiers by profession, the predilections which, as a regular officer, he might be supposed to have imbibed, were com- pletely obliterated by the impression, that the liber- ties of his own country might fall through the same cause. With such opinions he became governor of Indiana ; and rejoicing in the opportunity offered by the possession of almost unlimited power, for trying the practicability of his views in regard to a militia, he commenced a system of discipline, in the expectation of rendering the citizens of the ter- ritory as efficient in its defence, as regular soldiers. The situation of the country rendered the experi- ment as necessary as it became popular ; and the people cheerfully seconded the views of the gover- nor. Being qualified for the task, he instructed them personally, performing all the duties of the drill officer; while he at the same time pursued that extensive course of reading which has rendered him one of the most accomplished soldiers of our country. Few men have read history with more care, or greater instruction. By these means, the WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 295 militia of Indiana were so well trained, that when the exigency occurred, they were found to equal regular soldiers. Had not such been the case, the advance upon Tippecanoe would not have been conducted with such consummate skill, nor closed with so brilliant a result. During the march, this body of troops was always ready to meet an ene- my — ^t night they could be paraded in the order of battle without confusion — and when at last the enemy assailed them under the cover of darkness, they performed the frequent changes of position, which circumstances required, with facility and accuracy. It was a splendid triumph of genius — in which the reading, the thought, and the labour of years, were rewarded by a triumphantly success- ful result. In the war which followed. General Harrison again exerted himself to show the efficiency of the militia. He omitted no opportunity to inculcate upon his countrymen that they were as capable of self-defence as of self-government, and that they needed as little a standing armv to fio-ht their bat- ties, as an hereditary government to conduct their civil affairs ; and he again proved the correctness of his views, by leading the gallant men of the West to battle and to victory. In January, 1818, Mr. Harrison introduced a resolution, m the House of Representatives, in ho- 296 MEMOIR OF nour of the memory of Kosciusko, then recently deceased ; and made a feeling and classical speech. He also advocated warmly the proposition to ac- knowledge the independence of the South American republics. While Greneral Harrison was in the House of Rep- resentatives, the important debate arose, on the reso- lution to censure General Jackson for his conduct in the Seminole war ; and he delivered on this sub- ject a most elaborate and eloquent speech. It was one of the finest efforts elicited by that interesting occasion ; but is chiefly admirable for its impartial and patriotic spirit. While he disapproved the course of General Jackson, and commented on his conduct with the manly independence of a freeman, he defended such of the acts of that distinguished citizen as he thought right, and did justice to his motives. His concluding remarks were as fol- lows : — " If the highest services could claim indemnity for crime, then might the conqueror of Platsea have been suffered to continue his usurpations until he had erected a throne upon the ruins of Grecian liberty. Sir, it will not be understood that I mean to compare General Jackson with these men. No ; I believe that the principles of the patriot are as firmly fixed in his bosom as those of the soldier. But a republican government should make no dis- tinctions between men, and should never relax its WILLIAM I[ENI:Y HARRISON. 297 maxims of security for any individual, however distinguished. No man should be allowed to say that he could do that with impunity which another could not do. If the father of his country were alive, and in the administration of the government, and had authorized the taking of the Spanish posts, I would declare my disapprobation as readily as I do now. Nav, more — because the more distin- guishcd the individual, the more salutary the exam- ple. No one can tell how soon such an example may be beneficial. General Jackson will be faith- ful to his country ; but I recollect that the virtues and patriotism of Fabius and Scipio, were soon fol- lowed by the crimes of Marius and the usurpation of Sylla. I am sure, sir, that it is not the intention of any gentleman upon this floor to rob General Jackson of a single ray of glory ; much less to wound his feelings, or injure his reputation. And whilst I thank my friend from Mississippi, (Mr. Poindexter,) in the name of those who agree with me that General Jackson has done wrong, I must be permitted to decline the use of the address which he has so obligingly prepared for us, and substitute the following, as more consonant to our views and opinions. If the resolutions pass, I would address him thus : ' ^n the performance of a sacred duty imposed by their construction of the constitution, the representatives of the people have found it necessary to disapprove a single act of your brilliant 29S MEMOIR OF career; they have done it in the full conviction that the hero who has guarded her rights in the field, will bow with reverence to the civil institutions of his country — that he has admitted as his creed, that the character of the soldier can never be com- plete without eternal reference to the character of the citizen. Your country has done for you all that a country can do for the most favoured of her sons. The age of deification is past ; it was an age of tyranny and barbarism : the adoration of man should be addressed to his Creator alone. You have been feasted in the Pritanes of the cities. Your statue shall be placed in the capitol, and your name be found in the songs of the virgins. Go, gallant chief, and bear with you the gratitude of your country. Go, under the full conviction, that as her .glory is identified with yours, she has no- thing more dear to her but her laws, nothing more sacred but her constitution. Even an unin- tentional error shall be sanctified to her service. It will teach posterity that the government which could disapprove the conduct of a Marcellus, will have the fortitude to crush the vices of a Marius.' " These sentiments, sir, lead to results in which all must unite. General Jackson will still live in the hearts of his fellow-citizens, and the constitution £)f your country will be immortal." In 1819, General Harrison was elected a mem- be^X of the senate in the legislature of Ohio; he WILLIAM HENRY JIAURISON. 299 served in this capacity two years, devoting his mind to public business with his usual ability and industry. He was also, during this period, one of the electors of president and vice-president, and voted for Jaincs Monroe and Daniel D. Tompkins. He atlcr wards, as an elector, voted for Mr. Clay. In 182xJ he was again a candidate for Congress, and was defeated in consequence of having voted against the Missouri restriction. In 1824 he was elected to the Senate of the United States ; and was appointed chairman of the Military Committee, in place of General Jackson, who had resigned. He introduced, from that com- mittee, a bill for the prevention of desertion in the army. He proposed to effect this object, not by increasing the punishment, but by raising the moral character of the army, elevating the grade of the non-commissioned officer, increasing his pay, and making him more respectable — and by holding out inducements to the soldier to perform his duty. These points he enforced in an elaborate and ani- mated speech. He also introduced a bill for decreasing the duty on salt ; which he supported on the ground, that as this article is a necessary of life, it should not be burthened,with a tax which would increase its price. A bill to confer the appointment of cadets at \Vest Point on the sons of those who had fallen in battle, in defence of the country, was introduced 300 MEMOIR OF into the Senate by Mr. Robertson of Louisiana ; and on his resignation, was left in the care of Gene- ral Harrison, who advocated it warmly. He also devoted his attention while in the House, and afterwards in the Senate, to the subject of military pensions, and endeavoured to procure the passage of an uniform law, which should embrace the cases of all those who should be deserving of this kind of justice from their country. His efforts in favour of the claims of the surviv- ing soldiers of the revolution, will not soon be for- gotten by the descendants of those heroes. His exertions, joined with those of the venerable Bloom- field, who, as chairman of the committee of the House, reported the bill, and of some other mem- bers, prevailed in rescuing those meritorious men from the evils of neglect and poverty. A speech delivered by him on this occasion has been pub- lished in the newspapers, and is one of the ablest of this gentleman's efforts — replete with good sense, eloquence, and humanity. The next high station filled by General Harrison was that of minister plenipotentiary to the Republic of Colombia, which he received in the year 1828. He proceeded immediately upon his mission, landed at Maracaybo on the 22d of December in that year, and repaired thence to Bogota. He found the coun- try in a wretched state of confusion ; the govern- ment a military despotism, and the people as igno- WILLIAM HENRY HAKRISON. 301 rant of their rights as they were lawless in their conduct. He was received with the most flatterinii- demonstrations of respect ; but his liberal opinions, his stern republican integrity, and the plain sim- plicity of his dress and manners, contrasted too strongly with the arbitrary opinions and ostenta- tious behaviour of the public officers, to allow him to be long a favourite with those who had usurped the power of that government. They feared that the people would perceive the diflerence between a real and a pretended patriot, and commenced a series of persecutions against our minister, which rendered his situation extremely irksome. He sus- tained himself, however, with his usual gallantry and prudence. The letter of General Harrison to Bolivar has already been published ; but wc must take the lib- erty of reprinting this elegant and vigorous produc- tion, which does honour to the talents of the writer, while it shows how deeply his mind is imbued with the principles of liberty, and the fear of military encroachment. No American can read it without emotions of pride- BoHOTA, 27th September, 1829. Sir.— If there is any thin^ in tlie style, the matter, or the object, of this letter, w hich is calculated to give ofl'ence to your Excellency, I am persuaded you will readily foreive it, when you reflect on the motives which induced lue to \\ riti' it. An old soldier could possess no feelings but those of the kindest character towards one who has shed so much lustre on the profession of arms; nor can a citizen of the country of VVashinpton cease to wish that, in Bolivar, the world might behold another instance of the highest military atiainnients 26 302 MEMOIR OF united with the purest patriotism, and the greatest capacity for civil government. Such, sir, have been the fond hopes, not only of the people of the United States, but of the friends of liberty throughout the world. I will not say that your Excellency has formed projects to defeat these hopes. But there is no doubt, that they have not only been formed, but are, at this moment, in progress to maturity, and openly avow- ed by those who possess your entire confidence. I will not attribute to these men impure motives ; but can they be disinterested advi- sers ? Are they not the very persons who will gain most by the proposed change ? — who will, indeed, gain all that is to be gained, without furnishing any part of the equivalent? That that, the price of their future wealth and honours, is to be furnished exclusively by yourself? And of what does it consist ? Your great character. Such a one, that, if a man were wise, and possessed of the empire of the Cffisars, in its best days, he would give all to obtain. Are you prepared to make this sacrifice, for such an object ? I am persuaded that those who advocate these measures, have never dared to induce you to adopt them, by any argument founded on your personal interests ; and that, to succeed, it would be neces- sary to convince you that no other course remained, to save the country from the evils of anarchy. This is the question, then, to be examined. Does the history of this country, since the adoption of the consti- tution, really exhibit unequivocal evidence that the people are unfit to be free? Is the exploded opinion of a European philosopher, of the last age, that " in the new hemisphere, man is a degraded being." to be renewed, and supported by the example of Colombia? The proofs should, indeed, be strong, to induce an American to adopt an opinion so humiliating. Feeling always a deep interest in the success of the revolutions in the late Spanish America, I have never been an inattentive ob- server of events pending, and posterior to the achievement of its independence. In these events, I search in vain for a single fact to show that, in Colombia at least, the state of society is unsuited to the adoption of a free government. Will it be said that a free go- vernment did exist, but, being found inadequate to the objects for which it had been instituted, it has been superseded by one of a dif- ferent character, with the concurrence of a majority of the people? It is the most difficult thing in the world for me to believe that a people in the possession of their rights as freemen, would ever be willing to surrender them, and submit themselves to the will of a master. If any such instances are on record, the power thus trans- ferred has been in a moment of extreme public danger, and then limited to a very short period. I do not think that it is by any means certain, that the majority of the French people favoured the elevation of Napoleon to the throne of France. But, if it were so, how different were the circumstances of that country from those of Colombia, when the constitution, of Cucuta was overthrown! At the period of the elevation of Napoleon to the first consulate, all the powers of Europe were the open or secret enemies of France — civil war raged within her borders ; the hereditary king possessed many partisans in every province ; the people, continually betrayed by the factions which murdered and succeeded each other, had im- WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. ^03 l>il"(l a portion ol" their ferocity, and every town and village wit- I -' il the in(hsrriniinute s;l;iu;:hter of hotli nnii ami uciinen, of all jiuriHs and prim iples. Does the history of Colnniliia, since the ex- pulsion of the tJpaniards, present any parallel to ihcsi- scenes? Her iVonlicrs liave lieeii never seriously menaced — no civil war ra^'ed not a partisan of the former jfovcrnment was to he found in the whole extent of her territory — no factions contended witlnach other fur the possession of power; the executive government remained in tlie hands of tiiosc to whom it liad heen committed hy the people, in a fair electu)n. In fact, no people ever passed from under the yoke uf a des|M(tic povernment, to the enjoyment of entire freedom, with less disposition to abuse their newly acfjuired power, than those of Colomhia. They submitted, inde<-d. to a continuance of some of the most arbitrary and unjust fealuns whichdistin^'uished the former ;.'o- vernmenf. If tin r<' was any disposition, on the part of the L'reiit mass of the people, to etfect any chanj,'e in the existing order of things; if the Colombians act from the same motives and ujion tlie sanie principles which govern mankind elsewhtre, and in all ages, they would have desired to take from the government a part of the power, which, in their inexperience, they had conlid(!d to it. The monopoly of certain articles of agricultural produce, and the oppressive duty of the Alcavala, mi-rht have been tolerated, until the la.st of their tyrants were driven from the country. Ihit when peace w as restored, when not one enemy remained within its borders, it might reason- ably hate been supposed that the people would liave desired to abolish these remains of arbitrary government, and substitute for them some tax- more equal and accordant with republican principles. On the contrary, it is pretended that they had become enamoured with these despotic measures, and so disirusted with the freedom they did enjoy, that they were m«re than willing to commit their destinies to the uncontrolled will of your Excellency. Let me assure you, sir, that these assertions w i"ll gain no credit with the present generation, or with posterity. They will demand the facts which had induced a people, by no means deficient in intelliirence, BO soon to abandon the. i)ri/iciples for winch they Jiad so gallantly fouuht, and tamely surrender that liberty, which had been obtained at the expense of so nmch blood. And what facts can be produced? It cannot be said that life anil j)roperty were not as well |irotected tinder tlie republican government, as they have ever been ; nor that there existed any opposition to the constitution and laws, too strong for the ordinary powers of the government to put down. If the insurrection of General Paez, in Venezuela, is adduced, I would ask, by what means was he reduced to obedience? Yolir E.xcellency, the legitimate head of the republic, ajipeared, and, in a moment, all opposition ceased, and Venezuela was restored to the republic. Hut. it is said, that this was effected bv vour personal influence, or the dread of your military talents, an'd'that. to keep General Paez, and other ambitious chiefs, from dismembering the republic, it was necessary to invist your E.xcellency with^he extra- ordinary powirs you posse.es. There would be sonie reason in this, if you had refii.sed to act without these powers; or, having acted as you did, you had been unable to accomplish any thing without them. But you succeeded completely, and there can be no iwssible reason 304 MEMOIR OF « assigned, why you would not have succeeded, with the same means, against any future attempt of general Paez, or any other general. There appears, however, to be one sentiment, in which all parties unite; that is, that, as matters now stand, you alone can save the country from ruin, at least, frdm much calamity.. They differ, how- ever, very widely, as to the measures to be taken to pirt your Excel- lency in the way to render this important service. The lesser, and more interested party, is for placing the government in your hands for life ; either with your present title, or with one which, it must be confessed, better accords with the nature of the powers to be exercised. If they adopt the less offensive title, and if they weave into their system some apparent checks to your will, it is only for the purpose of masking, in some degree, their real object ; which is nothing short of the establishment of a despotism. The plea of necessity, that eternal argument of all conspirators, ancient or modern, against the rights of mankind, will be resorted to, to induce 3'ou to accede to their measures ; and the unsettled state of the country, which has been designedly produced by them, will be adduced as evidence of that necessity. There is but one way for your Excellency to escape from the snares which have been so artfully laid to entrap you, and that is, to stop short in the course which, unfortunately, has been already commenced. Every step you advance, under the influence of such councils, will make retreat more difficult, until it will become im- practicable. You will be told that the intention is only to vest you with authority to correct what is wrong in the administration, and to i)iit down the factions, and that, when the country once enjoys tranquillity, the government may be restored to the people. Delu-' sive will be the hopes of those who rely ui)on this declaration. The promised hour of tranquillity will never arrive. If events tended to produce it, they would be counteracted by the government itself. It was the strong remark of a former President of the United States, that, " Sooner will the lover be contented with the first smiles of his mistress, than a government cease to endeavour to preserve and extend its powers." With whatever reluctance your Excellency may commence the career ; with whatever disposition to abandon it, when the objects for which it was commenced have been obtained; when once fairly entered, you will be borne along by the irresistible force of pride, habit of command, and, indeed, of self-preservation, and it will be impossible to recede. But, it is said, that it is for the benefit of the people that the pro- posed change is to be made ; and that by your talents and influence, alone, aided by unlimited power, the ambitious chiefs in the differ- ent departments are to bei-estrained, and the integrity of the repub- lic preserved. I have said, and I most sincerely believe, that, from the state into which the country has been brought, that you alone can preserve it from the horrors of anarchy. But I cannot conceive that any extraordinary powers are necessary. The authority to see that the laws are executed; to call out the strength of the country, to enforce their execution, is all that is required, and is what is pos- sessed by the Chief Magistrate of the United States, and of every other republic; and is what was confided to the executive, by the constitution of Cucuta. Would your talents or your energies be WILLIAM HK?iRY HAKKISON. 305 iiiipuiruii ill tlu; coiiiicil, or tlio fiohi.or your intliicncc It-sseiied, wlifii uctiiig as the licad of a rrpiililii- ? I projuisc to cxniiiiiic, very lirielly, iho rrsiilts wliirh aro likfly to flow from the pro|Kisetl cliaiiije of {roverngient : 1st, in relation to the country ; ami, 'Jd, to yourself, pi rsonally. Is the trancpiillity of thn country to he secured Iiy it ? is it possihle for ynnr Kxcilicncy to believe, tliat when the mask has been thrown ort', anil thi' peoph- dis- covi'r that a desiinlic jrovernment lias been fi.Vfd iipun tiitni. that they will quieily submit to it? Will they foriret the pass-word which, like tlie cross of lire, was the sijrnal for rallyiiif; to oppose their former tyrants? Will the vir^Miis, at your binding, cease to chaunt the soiil's of liberty, wiiicii so lately animated the youth to victory ? Was the patriotic blood