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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14619 ***
+
+ Châteauguay Literary and Historical Society
+
+
+ AN ACCOUNT
+
+ OF
+
+ THE BATTLE OF CHÂTEAUGUAY
+
+ BEING
+
+ A LECTURE DELIVERED AT ORMSTOWN,
+
+ MARCH 8TH, 1889
+
+ BY
+
+ W.D. LIGHTHALL, M.A.,
+
+ _Honorary Member of the Châteauguay Literary and Historical Society,
+ Secretary of the Antiquarian Society of Montreal, Life Corresponding
+ Member of the Scottish Society of Literature and Art, Author of "The
+ Young Seigneur," "Songs of the Great Dominion," etc._
+
+ WITH
+
+ SOME LOCAL AND PERSONAL NOTES
+
+ BY
+
+ W. PATTERSON, M.A.,
+
+ _Corresponding Secretary of the C.L.H.S._
+
+ "Raise high the Monumental Stone."
+ --_Charles Sangster_
+
+
+ MONTREAL
+
+ W. DRYSDALE & CO., PUBLISHERS, 232 ST. JAMES STREET.
+
+ 1889.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: LT.-COL CHARLES DE SALABERRY.]
+
+
+
+
+ LIST OF OFFICERS FOR 1888-89.
+
+
+ President.
+ Lt.-Col. Archibald McEachern, C.M.G,
+
+ Vice-Presidents.
+ J.E. Robidoux, Q.C., M.P.P.
+ Edward Holton, Esq., M.P.
+ Thomas Baird, Esq.
+
+ Recording Secretary.
+ Peter McLaren, B A., M.D.
+
+ Corresponding Secretary.
+ Wm. Patterson, M.A.
+
+ Treasurer.
+ Wm. McDougall, Esq.
+
+ Councillors.
+ Dr. McCormick.
+ Wm. J. Bryson, Esq.
+ Dugald Thomson. Esq.
+ Dr. Hall.
+ Rev. D.W. Morison, B.A.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LIST OF HONORARY MEMBERS
+
+ Edward Holton, M.P.
+ J.E. Robidoux, Q.C., M.P.P.
+ Dr. W. Geo. Beers.
+ James McGregor, Esq.
+ Watson Griffin, Esq.
+ J.R. Dougall, M.A.
+ W.D. Lighthall, M.A., B.C.L.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+On October 26th, 1888, the Châteauguay Literary and Historical Society
+was organized at Ormstown, Quebec, to foster Canadian patriotism by
+encouraging the study of Canadian history and Canadian literature. The
+Society began its labours at home, taking as its subject the battle
+whence it derives its name. Mr. W.D. Lighthall, M.A., B.C.L., an
+honorary member, was asked to prepare an account of that victory, and
+kindly responded by his lecture, which he delivered before the Society
+on March 8th, 1889. Pleasure is now felt in offering this lecture, in
+the interests of the Society, to the Canadian world, no apology being
+required at a time when patriotic literature is in great demand. Mr.
+Lighthall's researches have been discussed by the members, and the
+belief is prevalent that his work touching this important item of
+history, in so far as accuracy is concerned, stands unrivalled, the
+previous authorities having been carefully compared and their
+testimony put together.
+
+In the Appendix will be found a number of notes having a bearing on
+the battle and its times. The portrait frontispiece is from a line
+engraving kindly lent by Gerald E. Hart, Esq., President of the
+Society for Historical Studies. The drawing of the map, after the
+design of the author, is due to J.A.U. Beaudry, Esq., C.E., Curator of
+the Antiquarian Society of Montreal.
+
+The first part of the account is partly based upon R. Christie's
+History of Lower Canada; but William James' Military Occurrences of
+the War of 1812, was found the most accurate in statistical details,
+and is, therefore, frequently followed. Other authorities are referred
+to in their places.
+
+The battle of Châteauguay, in view of the important results that
+followed it, is an event which all Canadians will appreciate, and to
+which posterity will have reason to point the finger of admiration.
+All nationalities concerned in building up this country, when united
+by a common danger, bore in it an honorable part, as they fought side
+by side in defence of their homes and those that were dear to them,
+from the wanton aggression of an ungenerous foe.
+
+The Society hopes to continue its work and to offer other pamphlets in
+the near future, so that this effort on its part may be regarded as
+the first of a series. Another of its immediate objects is the
+erection of a monument on the battlefield, to accomplish which
+pecuniary assistance is required. The belief is held that no
+opportunity should be lost to educate the rising generation to form a
+true conception of the grandeur of the heritage that is ours,
+
+ W.P.
+
+ ORMSTOWN,
+ _October 29th, 1889._
+
+
+
+
+THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY.
+
+
+The War of 1812 has been called by an able historian "the afterclap of
+the Revolution." The Revolution was, indeed, true thunder--a
+courageous and, in the main, high-principled struggle. Its afterclap
+of 1812 displayed little but empty bombast and greed. In the one,
+brave leaders risked their lives in that defence of rights which has
+made their enterprise an epoch in man's history; in the other, a mean
+and braggart spirit actuated its promoters to strike in the back that
+nation which almost alone was carrying on, in the best spirit of the
+Revolution, the struggle for the liberties of Europe against the
+designs of Napoleon. The brave spirits of the War of Freedom led the
+affairs of the United States no longer. All the contemptible elements,
+all the boasters, all those who had done least in the real fighting,
+had long come out of their shells and united to establish the mighty
+rhetorical school of the Spread Eagle! It was the legions of Spread
+Eagleism who wore to have the glory to be got in taking advantage of
+harassed England. The Battle of Châteauguay was one of the answers to
+that illusion.
+
+The War was introduced by a Declaration, in which President Madison,
+in smooth and elaborate terms, pretended that his nation found cause
+for it in the tyrannical exercise by British warships of what was
+called _The Right of Search_--that is to say, a claim of ships of war
+to stop the ships of other nations and search them for deserters and
+contraband goods. That this was not, however, the true cause, was
+shown by the facts and cries of the war.
+
+Firstly, the right was one belonging to all nations by international
+law; secondly, though it was at once relinquished by Britain in a
+conciliatory spirit, the Americans persisted in their campaign;
+thirdly, at the close of the war they did not insist at all on the
+abrogation of the Right of Search, in the treaty of peace.
+
+It would be much easier to show what the real causes were:-(1), hatred
+of England, lasting over from the Revolution; (2), envy of her
+commerce and prestige; and especially (3) the scheme for the conquest
+of Canada.
+
+The course of the negotiations exhibit a thoroughly ungenerous course
+on the part of the American authorities, contrasted with a desire not
+to offend on the part of Britain. President Madison's Declaration of
+War was made on the 18th of June, 1812, and the British Government,
+after using every honorable overture for friendship, only issued
+theirs in October, couching it, besides, in terms of regret and
+reproach at the unfairness in which Madison's party persisted. Owing
+to that unfairness and other causes the enterprise also was by no
+means unanimously popular in the States. A convention of delegates
+from the counties of New York, held in the capitol at Albany, on the
+17th and 18th of September, and called the New York Convention,
+condemned Madison's party for declaring the war, on account of its
+injustice, and "as having been undertaken," they said, "from motives
+entirely distinct from those which have been hitherto avowed." The New
+England States treated it coldly. Maryland disapproved through her
+Legislature. Many persons everywhere looked on it as a mere political
+scheme, and when drafted for service in frequent cases bought
+themselves substitutes.
+
+It was soon found that a mistake had been made in attacking Canada.
+That happened which might be expected where bodies of men with
+inflated ideas of glory and no experience attack men fighting
+desperately for their homes, and officers and veterans who had seen
+such service as the Napoleonic wars. The British, with an astuteness
+which is oftener the character credited to their opponents, managed to
+get earliest word of the Declaration sent to their own forts on the
+Lakes, and promptly captured the American fort Michilimackinac. They
+then followed with the daring capture of the stronghold of Detroit,
+amply equipped and garrisoned, by a little handful of men under the
+heroic General Brock, who simply went before it and demanded its
+surrender, whereupon it was given up, together with the whole
+Territory of Michigan. The presence of such trained British officers
+as Brock and of army veterans in the ranks was a very great advantage.
+Poor Brock soon afterwards died in his memorable charge at the victory
+of Queenston Heights.
+
+That year--the first of the War--is known as a succession of fiascos
+for the Americans. The other conspicuous aspect of it is that the
+attacked points were, with the exception of a little skirmishing at
+St. Regis and Lacolle, all in the Province of Upper Canada.
+
+It was only towards the close of the campaign of the next
+year--1813--that Lower Canada was gravely threatened.
+
+The Americans, emboldened by several successes, and having put a great
+many men into the field, believed that the struggle might easily be
+terminated by capturing Montreal. The advance upon Lower Canada took
+place under General James Wilkinson in chief command, with 8,826 men
+and 58 guns and howitzers.[1] He had intended to attack Kingston. "At
+Montreal, however," wrote the Secretary of War, Armstrong, in phrases
+colored by the prevailing school of rhetoric, "you find the weaker
+place and the smallest force to encounter.... You hold a position
+which completely severs the enemy's line of operations, and which,
+while it restrains all below, withers and perishes all above itself."
+This great position--for it is so--Colonel Coffin[2] compares it to
+Vicksburg for natural strength--was to be approached by two routes: by
+Wilkinson himself in boats down the St Lawrence, and by Major-General
+Wade Hampton, his almost independent subordinate, from the Champlain
+border; and it was planned that the two armies should meet at the
+foot of Isle Perrot,[3] thence to strike together across the Lake to
+Lachine, and on to the city, which seems to have had not over, if as
+many as, a thousand regulars to defend it.
+
+Wade Hampton, with over 5,000 men (an effective regular force of 4,053
+rank and file, about 1,500 militia and ten cannon[4]), was at first on
+the Vermont side of Lake Champlain at Burlington[5]. He crossed to the
+New York side, directing his march for Caughnawaga on the St.
+Lawrence. His army[6], except the militia, was the same which, with a
+certain General Dearborn at its head, paraded irregularly across the
+lines and returned to Pittsburgh in the autumn of 1812. During the
+year since elapsed the men had been drilled by Major-General Izard,
+who had served in the French Army. They were all in uniform, well
+clothed and equipped--in short, Hampton commanded, if not the most
+numerous, certainly the most effective, regular army which the United
+States were able to send into the field during the War. Crossing the
+border on the 20th of September, 1813, he surprised a small picket of
+British at Odelltown, a Loyalist settlement afterwards celebrated for
+a battle in the Rebellion of 1837. He soon found himself met with what
+seemed to him great difficulties, for the army was plunged into an
+extensive swampy wood, the only road through which was rendered
+impracticable by fallen trees and barricades, behind which and in the
+gloomy forests surrounding were every here and there to be seen
+Indians and infantry crawling and flitting about, who fired upon them
+from unexpected ambushes. Hampton's men were not of a kind to face
+this. "The perfect rawness of the troops," writes he, "with the
+exception of not a single platoon, has been a source of much
+solicitude to the best-informed among us."[7] They were ignorant,
+insubordinate, and forever "falling off."[8]
+
+Urging on the scattered defenders was, no doubt, to be seen from time
+to time a stout-built, vigorous officer with stripes across the breast
+of his dark gray uniform, dashing about from point to point giving
+fierce orders. This was De Salaberry.
+
+Not reflecting--for he seems to have had the information--that the
+wood was only fifteen miles or so in depth, the Canadians few in
+number, and that a short press forward would have brought him into the
+open country of L'Acadie leading towards Montreal, the American
+General in two days withdrew along the border towards Châteauguay Four
+Corners, alleging the great drought of that year as a reason for
+wishing to descend by the River Châteauguay. At the Corners he rested
+his army for many days.
+
+Wade Hampton was a type of the large slaveholders of the South. Nearly
+sixty years of age, self-important, fiery and over-indulgent in drink,
+of large, imposing figure, of some reputed service in the Revolution,
+and with a record as Congressman and Presidential elector, he was one
+whose chief virtues were not patience and humility. In 1809 he had
+been made a brigadier-general and stationed at New Orleans; but in
+consequence of continual disagreements with his subordinates, was
+superseded in 1812 by Wilkinson, whom he consequently hated. In the
+spring of 1813 he received his Major-General's commission. He had
+acquired his large fortune by land speculations, and at his death some
+time later was supposed to be the wealthiest planter in the United
+States, owning 3,000 slaves. He is said to have ably administered his
+estate.[9]
+
+Hampton had another slave-holding South Carolinian by his side, young
+Brigadier-General George Izard, son and descendant of aristocrats and
+statesmen, well-educated in the soldier's profession, college-bred,
+travelled, and who had served in the French Army. Izard led the main
+column at the battle shortly to ensue.[10]
+
+Another officer of the circle--who seems to have been the ablest--was
+Colonel James Purdy, on whom the brunt of the American work and
+fighting were to fall, and who seems to have done his best in a
+struggle against natural difficulties and against the incompetency of
+both his commander and men.
+
+When Hampton moved to Four Corners, Lieut-Colonel De Salaberry, with
+the Canadian Voltigeurs, moved in like manner westward to the region
+of the Châteauguay and English Rivers. The Voltigeur troops were
+French-Canadians with a small sprinkling of British. Their
+organization was as follows:--Sir George Prevost, on the approach of
+war, May 28th, 1812, ordered the levy of four French volunteer
+battalions, to be made up of unmarried men from 18 to 25 years old.
+They were to be choice troops, and trained like regulars. Charles
+Michel d'Irumberry De Salaberry, then high in the regard of his people
+as a military hero, was chosen to rally the recruits, issued a
+stirring poster calling the French-Canadians to arms, and acted with
+such extraordinary energy that the troops were in hand in two days.
+
+De Salaberry was a perfect type of the old French-Canadian military
+gentry, a stock of men of whom very little remains, a breed of leaders
+of, on the whole, more vigorous forms, more active temperaments, than
+the average--descendants inheriting the qualities of the bravest and
+most adventurous individuals of former times. They were the natural
+result of the feudal _régime_, with which they have passed away.
+Though a gentry, they were a poor one, possessed of little else than
+quantities of forest lands. The officers of the Voltigeurs were
+selected out of the same class, united with a number of English of
+similar stamp. De Salaberry himself was born in the little cottage
+manor-house of Beauport, near Quebec, on the 19th of Nov., 1778.[11]
+Taking to soldiering like a duck to water when very young, he enrolled
+as volunteer in the 44th. At sixteen, the Duke of Kent, who was then
+in Canada, and delighted in friendly acts towards the seigneurs, got
+him a commission in the 60th, with which regiment he left at once for
+the West Indian Isle of Dominica. There he saw terrible service, for
+all the men of his battalion except three were killed or wounded
+during the seige of Fort Matilda. Nevertheless, the young fellow kept
+gay. "Our uniforms," he wrote to his father, "cost very dear; but I
+have received £40, and with that I am going to give myself what will
+make a fine figure." "This fine large boy of sixteen years," says
+Benjamin Sulte in his History of the French-Canadians, "strong as a
+Hercules ... with smiling face ... made a furore at parties.... As he
+was never sick, they employed him everywhere. Fevers reduced his
+battalion to 200 men, but touched not him." Though so young, he was
+charged with covering the evacuation of Fort Matilda.[12]
+
+The Duke of Kent, who was commanding at Halifax, kept a friendly eye
+upon him, and gave him much personal advice, on one occasion
+dissuading him from an inadvisable marriage. He now took him into his
+own regiment. De Salaberry still saw rough service, was shipwrecked,
+served in the West Indies again, and then fought in Europe and the
+disastrous expedition to Walcheren, where he was placed in the most
+advanced posts.[13] Returning to his 60th, he was made captain in
+1799. "I have often heard say," narrates De Gaspé, "that his company
+and that of Captain Chandler were the best drilled in the regiment."
+In the West Indies he was drawn into a duel which caused him sorrow
+until his dying day, for in it he was forced by the "code of honor" to
+kill a German fellow-officer, and bore a scar of the affair ever after
+on his forehead. It is related that by his great strength he cut the
+German in two.
+
+"The prodigious force with which he was endowed," says Sulte, "had
+made of him an exceptional being in the eyes of the soldiers," and
+when he returned to Canada after West Indian service of eleven
+years[14] a little before the war of 1812, he was already the hero of
+the French-Canadians. That the stories of his strength and vigor are
+true is corroborated by every circumstance which has been perpetuated
+about him. His ruddy, energetic face is preserved in portraits among
+his family, and his walking-stick, said to be an enormous article, is
+kept at Quebec in the collection of the Literary and Historical
+Society.
+
+De Salaberry's Voltigeurs were organized at a peculiar juncture. "The
+discords between French and English in Quebec had emboldened the
+United States," says Garneau, "and the English Governors harassed the
+French. An opposite conduct might bring back calm to men's spirits.
+The Governor of Nova Scotia, Sir George Provost, a former officer, of
+Swiss origin, offered all the conditions desirable.... Arriving at
+Quebec, Sir George Provost strove to introduce peace and to remove
+animosity. He showed the completest confidence in the fidelity of the
+French-Canadians, and studied how to prove at every opportunity that
+the accusations of treason which had been brought against them had
+left no trace in the soul of England nor in his own.... Soon the
+liveliest sympathy arose between Sir George Prevost and the
+people."[15] It was in pursuance of this policy that the order to
+raise the Voltigeur force was given by him.
+
+While Hampton was at Four Corners, Sir George, thus now
+Commander-in-Chief of all the forces in Canada, was at the camp which
+had just been formed at La Fourche, and of which a description is
+given by Mr. Sellar in his history of the district. Sir George was a
+man quite devoid of the decisiveness necessary to a soldier, and
+though, as we have seen, he was useful in reconciling the French, his
+errors in military matters several times brought disgrace on the
+British forces, and gave rise to storms of rage and disgust among
+them.[16] De Salaberry was now ordered by him on the Quixotic errand
+of attacking, with about 200 Voltigeurs and some Indians, the large
+camp of Hampton at Four Corners. De Salaberry promptly obeyed these
+impracticable orders, and it is probably at this juncture that a
+little anecdote comes in which I have heard as told by one of his men.
+De Salaberry was down the river dining at a tavern, when a despatch
+was brought to him.
+
+"D---- it!" he exclaimed, jumping up from his seat, "Hampton is at
+Four Corners, and I must go and fight him!" and mounting his fine
+white charger, he dashed away from the door.
+
+On the 1st of October he crept up with his force to the edge of the
+American camp. There they saw the assemblage spread out in all the
+array of war, with its host of tents, stacked guns, flags, moving men
+and sentries, and he prepared to strike it as ordered. One of his
+Indians indiscreetly discharged his musket. The camp was in alarm in
+an instant. De Salaberry, finding his approach discovered, immediately
+collected about fifty of his Voltigeurs, with whom and the Indians he
+pushed into the enemy's advanced camp, consisting of about 800 men,
+and, catching them in their confusion, drove them for a considerable
+distance, until, seeing the main body manoeuvring to cut off his
+little handful, he fell back and took up his position at the skirt of
+the woods. Once again he sallied out and charged, but with all the
+army now thoroughly aroused it was useless, and the Indians having
+retreated, most of his own men ran off, leaving him and Captains
+Chevalier Duchesnay and Gaucher, officers much like himself in stamp,
+with a few trusty Voltigeurs to skirmish with the enemy as long as
+daylight permitted it.[17] He then withdrew to Châteauguay, taking the
+precaution of breaking up the forest road in his rear, in pursuance of
+the general policy of the campaign, which was to destroy and obstruct
+as much as possible in the path of the enemy. Acquainting himself also
+with the ground over which Hampton was expected to make his way into
+the Province, he finally stopped, selected and took up the position
+where the battle afterwards took place, in a thick wood on the left
+bank of the Châteauguay River at the distance of two or three leagues
+above its _Fork_ with English River, where he threw up his works of
+defence, with the approval of General De Watteville. The plan of the
+British commanders, owing to the smallness and inefficiency of their
+forces, was the stern one of burning and destroying all houses and
+property, and retreating slowly to the St. Lawrence, harassing the
+enemy in his advance.[18] The position chosen was as strong as the
+nature of that flat and wooded country and the route of the American
+march would allow. Here his experience and quick eye came in.[19]
+
+Now as to the measures of fortification taken by De Salaberry. In his
+rear there was a small rapid where the river was fordable in two spots
+close to one another. He commanded this with a strong breastwork and a
+guard. There were four ravines which issued from the very thick woods,
+crossing the road, and distant from each other two hundred yards or
+so. On their banks he made his men fell trees and build them into
+breastworks--"a kind of parapet extending into the woods some
+distance." To prevent the American cannon from bearing on these
+breastworks, he felled trees and bush, covering a large stretch of
+ground with obstructions in the front. The breastwork on the
+front-line formed an obtuse angle at the right of the road, and
+extended along the curves of the ravine. The Colonel then sent forward
+to a spot some distance in advance of the front-line a party of
+Beauharnois' axemen, well accustomed to felling trees, who destroyed
+the bridges and obstructed the road with their fragments and fallen
+trees and brush. Lieut. Guy, with twenty Voltigeurs, guarded them in
+front, and Lieut. Johnson, with about the same number, in rear.
+Working incessantly, these axemen made a formidable series of such
+obstructions in front of the first line, extending from the river
+three or four acres into the woods, where they joined an almost
+impracticable marsh. On the opposite bank of the river De Salaberry
+also placed a picket of sixty Beauharnois militia under Captain
+Bruyère, so as to check any advance on the ford, which was his weak
+point in the rear.
+
+Part of De Salaberry's line at the abattis, was a small blockhouse on
+the river-bank (which, however, is not that which has since been
+reputed to be the one concerned), and the works there blocked the
+commencement of the wood and looked out on a broadening plain or level
+of clearings, across which the enemy would have to pass.
+
+The Glengarry men now came down, under McDonell of Ogdensburgh, famous
+for his adventurous capture of that place, and whose exploit the
+Salaberry was about to match. Lieut.-Colonel McDonell--"Red
+George"--was at Prescott drilling a new force of Canadian Fencibles,
+made up, some say, chiefly of Scotch and loyalists,[20] others chiefly
+of French boatmen, when Sir George Prevost asked him how soon he could
+have his men ready to go down to Châteauguay. "As soon as they have
+done their dinner!" he responded. Within a few hours he had provided
+them with _batteaux_, and they were off down the rapids. When Sir
+George himself, who was on the way, got there, he, to his great
+surprise found McDonell before him. "Where are your men?" said he.
+"There," said the Highland Colonel, pointing to his force resting on
+the ground--"not a man absent."[21]
+
+For nearly three weeks the parties of Canadian workers worked
+continually upon the plan of De Salaberry, while Hampton was
+considering, preparing, reviewing his troops, and arranging for a
+communication with Wilkinson so soon as the latter should have passed
+Ogdensburg on his way down the St. Lawrence.
+
+On the 21st of October the advance down the Châteauguay commenced. The
+first move was a rapid march by General Izard with the light-equipped
+troops and a regiment of the line, who surprised a party of about
+ten[22] Indians sitting late in the afternoon at their evening meal at
+the junction of the Outarde and Châteauguay Rivers, and killed one of
+them. There Izard encamped and proceeded to establish a road of
+communication with Hampton. Word was soon brought to Major Henry, of
+the Beauharnois' Militia, commanding on the English River. Henry sent
+word to General De Watteville at La Fourche, and had Captains Levesque
+and Debartzch advance immediately with the flank companies of the 5th
+Battalion of embodied militia and about 200 men of the Beauharnois'
+division. This was the preliminary move towards the battle.
+
+They advanced about six miles that night up the Châteauguay from La
+Fourche, when they came to a wood which it would not have been prudent
+to enter in the dark. Next morning early they were joined by De
+Salaberry with his Voltigeurs and the light company of Captain
+Ferguson, an officer who took a front place in the affair. De
+Salaberry brought all these companies about a league up the bank to
+the place he had fortified, and there stopped. An American patrol
+party being observed in front, General De Watteville came over
+himself, visited the outposts, approved of them, and the work
+proceeded.[23] That evening the main body of the Americans encamped at
+Sear's, about twenty-five miles above the Châteauguay's mouth. The
+engineers had cut a road for the ten cannon, and with great labor and
+difficulty had dragged them thus far.[24]
+
+Within two days more Hampton's men had opened and completed a large
+and practicable road, which is still traceable, from his position at
+Four Corners twenty-four miles through the woods and morasses, and
+brought up his guns and stores to his new position, about seven miles
+from De Salaberry's. (About Dewittville?)
+
+[Illustration: SKETCH OF THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY--OCT 26, 1813]
+
+From this point he despatched Colonel Purdy with about 1,500 men,
+composed of a light brigade (the 1st Brigade of the American Army[25])
+and a strong body of the infantry of the line, at an early hour in the
+night of the 25th, across the Châteauguay and down its right bank[26]
+at a bend adjoining what is now known as the Cross Farm, with orders
+to gain the ford and fall on the rear of Lieut.-Colonel De Salaberry's
+position, while the main body, under General Izard, were to commence
+the attack in front. Purdy's brigade crossed not far above De
+Salaberry, and proceeded into the woods of the opposite side. A cedar
+swamp, an unexpected stream in which they floundered, and the
+ignorance of their guides misled and bewildered them. This was the
+fault of Hampton, and due to his headstrongness, for the guides had
+protested that they did not know that side of the Châteauguay; but he
+had ordered them to proceed. Purdy's command became scattered, were
+forced to halt in confusion, and had to sleep in the open woods, cold,
+wet, exhausted, and apprehensive.[27] General Hampton, however, in the
+morning, fully expected to hear them attacking the ford, advanced, and
+at ten o'clock his troops appeared in sight of the party of busy
+woodchoppers, about 3,500 men, with three squadrons of cavalry,
+marching in column along the high road, commanded by General Izard.
+Lieut. Guy's picket fired, the workmen dropped work and ran, Guy
+retired upon Johnson, and both Lieutenants retreated with their men to
+the completed abattis, where they formed up again and began to fire
+smartly.
+
+De Salaberry, on hearing the firing, promptly advanced with the light
+company of the Canadian Fencibles, commanded by Captain Ferguson,
+"flanked by twenty-two Indians on the right and centre,"[28] and two
+companies of his Voltigeurs, commanded by Captains Chevalier and Louis
+Juchereau Duchesnay. Ferguson's companies he posted on the right, in
+front of the abattis, in extended order, its right skirting on the
+adjoining woods and abattis, among which were distributed a few
+Abenaquis Indians. The three officers, Ferguson and the two
+Duchesnays, executed the movements required of them with the coolness
+of a day of parade. The Voltigeur company of the oldest of the
+Duchesnays, known as "the Chevalier," occupied, in extended order, the
+ground from the left of Ferguson's Company to the Châteauguay, and the
+company under Captain Louis Juchereau Duchesnay, with about
+thirty-five[29] Sedentary Militia under Captain Longtin, were thrown
+back along the margin of the river, hidden among the trees and bushes,
+so as to flank Colonel Purdy's men, or prevent him from flanking the
+Canadian position. Between the abattis and the front line were a
+company of Voltigeurs, Captain Lecuyer commanding, and beyond them on
+the right a light company (that of the 5th Battalion) of embodied
+militia with their side pickets, under Captain Debartzch; then, to the
+right of them, in the woods, the Indians under Captain La Mothe. There
+were thus in the front only about 240 Canadians. The positions,
+however, occupied about a mile along the river, and the rest of the
+troops--some 600--were distributed among the other breastworks, under
+command of McDonell.[30]
+
+The battle was now on the point of commencing. In the centre of the
+front stood De Salaberry watching the enemy, whose characteristics he
+had noted twice before. All waited in suspense. A touching scene was
+taking place among the Beauharnois Militia further back, where Captain
+Longtin caused his men to kneel, went through a short prayer with
+them, and then rising, said: "that now they had fulfilled their duty
+to their God, they would fulfil that to their King."[31]
+
+Meanwhile, the enemy kept steadily moving along the road in column. A
+tall mounted American officer rode forward and began a harangue to the
+Canadians in French. "Brave Canadians," said he, "give yourselves
+over; we do not wish to do you any harm!"[32] De Salaberry, seeing
+that his moment was come, sprang upon a stump,[33] discharged his
+musket as a signal to begin, and brought the American officer off his
+horse by the shot. The enemy at the time were exposed to being taken
+on both front and side. The bugles blared, the front companies
+immediately opened fire, and the battle was begun. Izard's force were
+in the open plain, while their foes were hidden in a thick wood. The
+squadrons of cavalry and four cannon which they had brought thus far
+were found to be useless there. They, however, commenced a
+spirited[34] fire in battalion volley; but, from the position of the
+line, it was almost totally thrown to the right of the Canadians, and
+of no effect whatever. They soon faced to the right, and filing up
+with speed, changed their front parallel with the lines of
+breastworks, when the engagement became general, and their fire
+compelled the retreat, behind the front edge of the breastwork[35] of
+a few skirmishers near the left, who had been rather advanced in the
+centre of the line. This retreat being mistaken by the enemy for a
+flight, a universal shout ensued, which was re-echoed, to their
+surprise, by the Canadians and the Glengarry men in reserve under
+Lieut.-Colonel McDonell. Now was the supreme moment of the battle. De
+Salaberry ordered his bugleman to sound the advance. "This was heard
+by Lieut-Colonel McDonell, who, thinking the Colonel was in want of
+support, caused his own bugles to answer, and immediately advanced
+with two of his companies from the third and fourth lines to the first
+and second."[36] "All these movements were executed with great
+rapidity." De Salaberry, at the same time, as a _ruse de guerre_,
+ordered "ten or twelve buglemen into the adjoining woods with orders
+to separate and blow with all their might."[37] The enemy, as De
+Salaberry calculated, suspected that the Canadians were advancing in
+great numbers to circumvent them. The Colonel, while giving these
+orders, is said to have done so facing his men, with his back against
+a tree.[38] The noise of the engagement towards its end brought on
+Colonel Purdy's division on the opposite side of the river, which,
+having driven in the picquet of sixty Beauharnois Sedentary Militia
+under Captain Bruyère, were pressing on for the ford, whereupon De
+Salaberry ordered Lieut.-Colonel McDonell, who had returned to his
+position to check the enemy there, and Captain Daly was chosen, with
+the light company of the 3rd Battalion Embodied Militia, numbering
+seventy men,[39] to cross and take up the ground abandoned by the
+picket.
+
+De Salaberry, then seeing that the action was about to become serious
+on the right, left his position in the centre of the front and placed
+himself on the left with the troops along the bank, where, standing on
+a stump.[40] he could see, through his field-glass, Captain Daly with
+his men crossing the ford. The latter took with him such of the
+Beauharnois men as had rallied[41] up, and led by him, they advanced
+along the river-bank and made, in the words of Purdy afterwards, "a
+furious assault" upon the advanced guard of the Americans, whom they
+drove back upon themselves. "The bravery of Captain Daly," wrote the
+Temoin Oculaire--whose account, it is to be remembered, was published
+a few days afterwards--"who literally led his company into the midst
+of the enemy, could not be surpassed."
+
+Purdy's main body finally recovered, and charged forward, however,
+emerging in great force from the wood.
+
+Captain Daly's men, as they had been taught by Lieut.-Colonel
+McDonell, knelt and fired a volley kneeling. The return volley was
+fired by tenfold numbers, and but for that precaution would have
+destroyed nearly the whole of Captain Daly's command. As it was, he
+received a severe wound, and with his men, several of whom were
+wounded and himself a second time, was compelled to retreat, which the
+men did in very good order under Lieut. Benjamin Schiller. The latter
+distinguished himself greatly. He bore off his wounded captain to a
+safe place, and returning, took command at request of the men. At one
+juncture he was engaged, hand to hand, with a very formidable
+adversary, whose head he cut off with a single blow of his sabre.[42]
+
+Purdy's force eventually were moving on in overwhelming numbers, and
+for a moment their shouts of victory were heard by the little force
+lying in suspense behind the barricades on the opposite bank. In
+coming out of the wood they swarmed down along the bank of the river.
+Now was the time for Captains Louis Duchesnay and Longtin's companies
+concealed in the river-side bushes opposite. De Salaberry instantly
+appears upon the scene, gives the word of command, and the bushes
+flame out with a hidden and destructive fire. The American shouts of
+victory turn into cries of confusion. In the utmost disorder they make
+a tumultuous and precipitate retreat into the woods. Thus, at 2.30
+p.m., came the failure of Purdy's flanking movement.
+
+As one may easily imagine, this series of incidents took several
+hours.
+
+In the front, General Hampton for about an hour kept his soldiers
+ready in momentary expectation of attack by De Salaberry, and of
+hearing of Purdy's success. When he heard that the latter had failed,
+however, he sent him word to withdraw his column to a shoal four or
+five miles above and cross over, and ordered General Izard to retire
+his brigade to a position about three miles in the rear, to which
+place the baggage had been ordered forward. Hampton thus retired,
+leaving De Salaberry master of the field, with scarcely 300 men in
+actual action, and no British guns anywhere within seven miles.[43]
+
+Sir George Prevost, with Major-General De Watteville, arrived on the
+ground at the close of the engagement and overlooked De Salaberry's
+arrangements, thanked him with great praise, and then immediately
+wrote an inaccurate despatch to England, in which he claimed the
+principal credit for _himself_.[44] That evening De Salaberry wrote to
+his father; "I have won a victory mounted on a wooden horse!"[45]
+
+After the battle was over the American firing did not cease, for no
+sooner did darkness come on than Purdy's scattered command, moving up
+the right bank, commenced a most destructive fire on each other,
+mistaking them for the British, and they continued it the greater part
+of the night. The final incident took place just as day dawned on the
+27th, when about twenty Americans, mistaking some of the Canadian
+militia on the left bank for their own people, were compelled by them
+to surrender.
+
+That day at dawn McDonell came up in command of Captain Rouville's
+Company of Voltigeurs, Captain Levesque's Company of Grenadiers (of
+the 5th Battalion Incorporated Militia), and sixty men of the
+Beauharnois Division. De Salaberry turned over to McDonell the defence
+of the abatis or obstructions in front, and the hero of Ogdensburgh
+pushed on to two miles further than before. The day passed in
+expectation of a second attack, but no enemy appeared.
+
+Meanwhile, the straggling order which the nature of the swamp and
+forest imposed on Purdy's retreat exposed him to rear attacks from the
+Indians, which were repeated after dark and caused him loss.[46]
+
+A large quantity of muskets, drums, knapsacks, provisions and arms
+were found on Purdy's shore, especially indicating the confusion just
+previous to their retreat. Upwards of ninety bodies and graves were
+found on that bank,[47] among them two or three officers of
+distinction. On Hampton's field were two dead horses, and the enemy
+were there seen carrying off several of the wounded in carts.
+
+The Canadian loss was only two killed, sixteen wounded, and four
+missing. Three missing were by mistake at first included among the
+killed in the returns.[48]
+
+Time now wore on, another night was passed, and the morning of the
+28th arrived, when Captain La Mothe, with about 150 Indians,
+reconnoitred the enemy, who, according to the report of Captain
+Hughes, of the Engineers, had abandoned his camp the day before.
+
+A party of the Beauharnois Militia, supported by Captain Debartzch,
+burnt and destroyed the newly-erected bridges within a mile of the
+enemy's camp, which was now about one and a half leagues from Piper's
+Road, _i.e._, about two leagues from his former position. On the same
+evening the Indians, under Captain La Mothe,[49] proceeded through the
+woods and came up with the enemy's rear-guard. Here a slight skirmish
+ensued, in which the Americans lost one killed and seven wounded.
+
+Hampton, having re-occupied his late position, called a council of
+war, where it was determined to fall back and occupy the former
+position at Four Corners, to secure their communication with the
+United States; from thence either to retire to winter quarters or be
+ready to re-enter Lower Canada.
+
+"On that day or the day previous Captain Debartzch, of the Militia,
+was sent to the American headquarters with a flag. When he stated the
+number and description of troops by which General Hampton had been
+opposed, the latter, scarcely able to keep his temper, insisted that
+the British force amounted to 7,000 men. On being assured of the
+contrary, he asked: 'What, then, made the woods ring so with bugles?'
+Captain Debartzch explained this; but it was apparently to no
+purpose."[50]
+
+The Americans retired on the 29th. "On the 30th a party of Indian
+Chasseurs, under Captain Ducharme, reported that the enemy had
+abandoned his camp at Piper's Road in the greatest disorder, and was
+on the road to Four Corners." The Canadians followed up and hung upon
+the rear and embarrassed the retreat. Canada was saved!
+
+General Wilkinson was very severe on his fellow-general. "On the 4th
+of November," he complains, "the British garrison of Montreal
+consisted solely of 400 marines and 200 soldiers. What a golden,
+glorious opportunity has been lost by the caprice of Major-General
+Hampton!"[51] Poor man, he was to have pretty much the same luck
+himself just afterwards! Wilkinson's army proceeded on its own course
+down the river, but was almost as ignominiously defeated at Chrysler's
+Farm on the 10th of November, where his 3,000 or 4,000 men were
+matched, partly in open field and partly with the assistance of a ruse
+as at Châteauguay, against 800 British and thirty Indians, under
+Colonel Morison, a man equally brave and able with McDonell and De
+Salaberry.
+
+Mr. Dion, of Chambly, to whom the erection of a fine bronze statue of
+De Salaberry is due, has related to me a number of particulars from De
+Salaberry's letters held by his relatives. The hero complains bitterly
+of Prevost and De Watteville--"those two Swiss"--and that on account
+of his religion he could get no higher than a Lieut.-Colonel. From the
+same letters it appears that the "Temoin Oculaire" was a young lawyer
+named O'Sullivan, later, Judge O'Sullivan, a man partly of Irish
+family, in person large and handsome, and a great friend of De
+Salaberry, who ever remained grateful to him for preserving record of
+his deed in his celebrated letter. It is commonly attributed to D.B.
+Viger. Another little fact mentioned in the correspondence of De
+Salaberry is that his men in the battle were barefooted.
+
+The almost unique nature of the victory strikes one. Its keystone was
+De Salaberry's masterly use of illusion. Of it was the choice of a
+thick wood to conceal his small force, their entrenchment behind the
+abatis and in bush positions, the unexpected fire from the left bank
+upon Purdy, the Indians in the woods, and, more than everything, the
+ruse of the multiplied bugles. But besides illusion there was the
+ablest possible disposition, for there seems no doubt but that no
+spot could have keen chosen along his projected route greater in
+strength when fortified and guarded just as that was. The enemy could
+only reach it fatigued, and far from sources of supply, the wood was
+thick, the ravines occurred happily, the river was free from fords for
+a long distance, and a frightful swamp occupied the opposite bank. How
+would De Watteville's small and raw army have acted in the open
+country had this position not been tried?
+
+Next, how ought the credit of the affair to be apportioned, for it is
+clear that it is due to a number concerned? De Salaberry is, of
+course, in every way the leading figure. His courage and spirit were
+perfect, his intelligence rapid, his labor incessant, and the whole
+choice of the field and strategy of the battle were, by all the
+testimony, due to him. On the whole, it almost seems, in its broad
+lights, like a battle of this one man against the enemy. His task was
+the greater from the extent and obscurity of the battlefield. On these
+accounts, some of those holding the positions used afterwards to say
+there was no battle at all, and one--Lieut. Delisle, who received a
+pension--that the whole thing was a farce. Frankly--and it may seem at
+first sight like a discourtesy to say it--it is doubtful whether the
+Voltigeurs would have stood much real fighting had they been opposed
+to veterans. On reasonable consideration this objection must
+disappear. It is well known that recruits away from their homes are
+utterly unstable in their first battles. For instance, at Bull's Run,
+in the first two battles of the American Civil War, it was a toss-up
+which side would run away from the other, and they decided it by one
+side doing so the first day, and the other side the second. Many of
+the Upper Canadians were fearful and undecided at the beginning of the
+War of 1812. It is pretty probable that the promptitude of the few
+regulars in the country, including such officers as Brock, was its
+salvation at the outset. Most of De Salaberry's own men had withdrawn
+a month previous at the attack on the camp at Four Corners, though so
+disproportionate an enterprise was no fair test of recruits. The
+Sedentary Militia, when drafted, deserted in great numbers, and the
+duty assigned to the newly raised Voltigeurs by their commander at
+Chrysler's Farm just afterwards was that merely of making a temporary
+display in the woods. De Salaberry probably intended to do more with
+his division at Châteauguay, and might have succeeded if put to the
+test, for they were now probably superior to the American force in the
+very important respect of acquired confidence in a leader, who was
+even then the hero of the Province. Being of the same stock as
+Napoleon's men, a long course of fighting under a De Salaberry would
+have undoubtedly made them into a similar force; but in any case, too
+much cannot be said for the patriotism and willingness exhibited by
+these young men in defence of united Canada.
+
+Every man on the field, apparently, did the duty assigned to him.
+One--Jean Bte. Leclaire, was also one of the heroes of Fort Detroit
+and afterwards Chrysler's Farm. To the memory of such a man let his
+country do some honor. To the axemen's force also is due credit for
+cheerful and dangerous labor in chopping trees and working at the
+obstructions and defences. The Temoin Oculaire names "Vincent,
+Pelletier, Vervais, Dubois, Caron," who swam the river and took
+prisoners those who refused to surrender.
+
+Captain Daly is the name to be mentioned next to De Salaberry. His
+courageous onslaught is testified to by both Purdy and the Temoin, and
+twice wounded, he fought until he fell. It may be truthfully said that
+it was he who bore the brunt of the fight. Schiller also specially
+distinguished himself, and won his captaincy on the field. Of Ferguson
+and the two Captains Duchesnay we have spoken. The Temoin Oculaire
+praises the courage of Captain La Mothe, of Lieuts. Pinguet, Hebden,
+Guy, Johnson, Powell, and Captain L'Ecuyer (the latter two for
+captures of prisoners in the woods.) Captains Longtin and Huneau, of
+the Beauharnois Militia, are also mentioned by him for good conduct.
+Louis Langlade, Noël Annance, and Bartlet Lyons, of the Indian
+Department, were in the action of the 26th and the affair of the 28th.
+McDonell of Odgensburg, and no doubt many others, ought to be added.
+As to credit, in fact, every man in the region who did his duty and
+was ready to defend his country deserves it, and those named are but
+the examples who were put to the test. The brave Scotch settlers, few
+as they then were, were inspired with that spirit. The women stood
+literally ready to burn the roofs over their heads. The men, except
+those who had teams, who were drafted into an invaluable transport
+service, were formed into a company and drilled for the defence, under
+Lieut. Neil Morison and Captain James Wright, whose house was the
+headquarters of General De Watteville and a frequent scene of the
+council of officers. He was a tall and stern man, a Highlander, his
+name of "Wright" being a translation of his Gaelic one, "MacIntheoir."
+His Châteauguay sword is said to have long hung on the wall in the
+house of one of his descendants.
+
+We should not be so ungrateful also as to forget the services of those
+faithful Indians, to whom, as all through the war, a share of the
+success was due.
+
+In 1847 it was decided in England, after much agitation, to issue what
+was called "the War Medal," rewarding all those who had fought British
+battles during the years 1793 to 1814 and not received any special
+medal. Clasps were attached for each battle in which the recipient was
+engaged. A medal seems to have been given, as was meet, to almost
+every one on the field of Châteauguay, for 260 were distributed. It
+was, in fact, erroneously issued to some who were not present. One
+lieutenant, in particular, says Mr. Dion, is known from the De
+Salaberry letters to have himself lamented that he only came up the
+day after. The Indians and regulars also got medals. The simple record
+of what was done, however, is the best memorial of honor to those who
+were present on that memorable day.
+
+Mr. R.W. McLachlan relates his recollections of one of the veterans at
+Montreal. "Clad in an old artillery uniform, he was always seen
+marching out alongside of the troops on review days. He was ever ready
+to recount his adventures on the day of battle. Although we have heard
+it often from his lips, all that we can remember is that: 'De Yankee
+see me fore I see him, and he shoot me drough de neck.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is the privilege of the men of Châteauguay to remember that their
+region is haunted by the spirits of heroes.
+
+ "The dead still play their part"
+
+sings the Canadian poet Sangster, and here the musing thought must for
+ever conjure up De Salaberry, McDonell, the 800 waiting behind their
+breastworks in the gloom of the woods, the touching scene of Captain
+Longtin and his Beauharnois men, and the stubborn onset of Daly
+against overwhelming odds. The meaning of it all is: that given a good
+cause, and the defence of our homes against wanton aggression, we can
+dare odds that otherwise would seem hopeless; that it is in the
+future, as in the past, the spirits of men, and not their material
+resources, which count for success; that we need only be brave and
+just, and ready to die, and our country can never be conquered; and
+that we shall always be able to preserve ourselves free in our course
+of development towards our own idea of a nation.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+NOTES BY W. PATTERSON, M.A.
+
+
+1. Mr. James Walsh, Sr., who still resides in Ormstown, Que., was
+informed by one Saint Charles Moreau, alias Legault, that the stone
+house, situated on the Châteauguay about two miles below the village
+of Ste. Martine, and known during the early years of the present
+century as "The Stone Tavern," had just been built and finished the
+day before the battle, and the officers of the Canadian forces
+unceremoniously took possession of it on coming forward that evening.
+
+2. This same Legault or Moreau, shortly after the battle and before
+the dead were removed, visited the scene of the fight. There he saw
+several dead and several dying. He had a vivid recollection of the
+cruelty of the Indians. "The cursed savages," said Legault, "did
+nothing to secure the victory, and yet were foremost in plundering the
+dead and dying." He remembered in particular having seen an American
+officer, who was seriously wounded, lying on the field. The officer
+had a coin in his mouth which he was evidently anxious to save. An
+Indian, upon noticing this, bade him by making signs open his mouth
+and give up the piece. The command being apparently misunderstood, the
+Indian impatiently struck him with his tomahawk on the forehead. As
+his head was knocked back by the blow, the man opened his mouth, and
+his assailant taking out the coin passed on.
+
+3. Mr. David Monique, who lived at the "Portage" (modern Dewittville)
+at the time of the war, used to say, as Mr. Walsh many a time heard
+him relate, that his impression was that the Canadians did not hang
+upon the American rear after the fight, for had they done so, the
+American guns, which were all left behind, would have been captured. A
+division retreated up the Island of Jamestown by way of the "Portage,"
+on the South side of the Châteauguay, passing on their route Mr.
+Monique's farm. There they had their morning meal near his house, on
+October 27th, 1813. Their pork they fried on the ends of sticks before
+little fires. They were poorly clad. All were quite civil. They said
+that they had been "badly licked the day before." Their retreat was
+witnessed by this man and his family, and certainly they were not
+pursued by the Canadians, nor, in his opinion, did the Canadians
+pursue the other division, which retired across the Outarde by way of
+the ford, made on their inward march, and since known as the "American
+Ford," for in the following year, they returned for their guns and
+carried them off without molestation.
+
+4. Mr. Thomas Baird, merchant, of Ormstown, remembers well a Mr.
+Laberge, a very old man, who had been one of the soldiers on picquet
+duty at Ormstown, when the Americans invaded this country, in 1813.
+Laberge said that the Canadians stationed at this point were few in
+number, and were posted near the mouth of the Outarde, along the North
+bank of the Châteauguay, and also along the creek which now runs
+through the village of Ormstown. There the Canadians were taken by
+surprise. Those who escaped, retreated to De Salaberry's headquarters
+a few miles down the Châteauguay.
+
+Laberge also said that some of the Americans who were killed in the
+battle of the next day, October 26th, were buried on the bank of the
+creek, to which reference has been made. In this connection it is
+interesting to relate that while excavations were being made a few
+years ago for a roadway through this bank, the remains of five or six
+men were unearthed. The U.S.A. military buttons, the belt buckles and
+the bayonet found in their grave removed any doubt that these were the
+remains of American soldiers. This last item was kindly given the
+writer by Mr. Chas. Moe, who assisted in making the road.
+
+5. The ford over the Outarde, by which the Americans crossed, still
+remains and is known as the "American Ford." It is about three miles
+west of Ormstown village. The annual Spring floods have undoubtedly
+changed it somewhat. Both banks of the river shew the place to be a
+coarse gravel bed. By the addition of more gravel they easily made a
+fine roadway.
+
+6. Mr. John Symons, who came to the Châteauguay River in 1828, and has
+lived in its vicinity ever since, and who at the time of writing
+resides in Ormstown, informed the writer that Alexander Williamson,
+one of the earliest settlers, used to say that what is spoken of as
+the battle of Châteauguay, is greatly magnified. Williamson regarded
+the Americans as a great lot of cowards who were glad to take
+advantage of the slightest opposition to return home.
+
+7. Mr. James Brodie, a retired farmer, residing in the village of
+Ormstown, and who also was well acquainted with Alexander Williamson,
+states that Williamson was about twelve years of age when the battle
+was fought and was not present at the fight, but what he knew of it he
+had learned from others.
+
+8. Mr. William Allan who for years did business as a general
+storekeeper at Allans Corners, Que., informed the writer that he heard
+Alexander Williamson describe what is generally known as the battle,
+many times. "Williamson," says Mr. Allan, "could not repeat the same
+story twice."
+
+9. Mr. Brodie, in view of all the information he could gather from the
+early settlers, including Mr. Williamson, sincerely believes that the
+merits of De Salaberry have been much over-estimated. "That officer
+has no claims," said he, "to being a hero by what he did in that
+encounter."
+
+Yet the Canadians, so that gentleman gives the account, were most
+skilfully managed and made the best of their opportunity. Wearing the
+red coats, they were made to march in a circle for a time under the
+cover of the woods, and for a time exposed to the view of the
+Americans. To them, as they marched along, they gave the impression
+that they were a numerous force. These same Canadians, (Miss Anne
+Bryson, an aged lady, residing at Allans Corners, relates the story),
+still further exaggerated their strength by turning their coats whilst
+behind the trees, the white lining then giving them the appearance of
+being another regiment. The story is also told how the Indians, being
+well scattered, made the forests resound with their war cry.
+
+10. Where was the battle fought? The battlefield is situated about
+five or six acres west of the passenger bridge at Allans Corners,
+which is a small village on the Châteauguay River, thirteen miles
+below Huntingdon, three miles below Ormstown village, and about
+forty-three miles from Montreal. The site was a position on the North
+bank of the Châteauguay, where, almost at right angles to it, a deep
+and wide creek, then a large stream, emptied itself into the river. At
+that point was the foremost line of De Salaberry's breastworks,
+consisting of felled trees, stones and earth. There the main division
+of the Americans was repulsed. A sharp encounter in which the enemy
+were defeated by Captain Daly took place several acres below this on
+the opposite bank. Bullets are found every year on the scene.
+
+11. It is popularly believed that some of the American guns were sunk
+in the Châteauguay River at the point where the battle took place,
+although no trace of them has ever been found. The river is very deep
+there.
+
+12. About 13 acres west of Allans Corners there was a settlement of
+American squatters who fled the country before the outbreak of the
+war. They had planted an orchard which was always afterwards known as
+the "American Orchard." Traces of it were to be seen a few years ago.
+The early settlers, Mr. Williamson among others, have handed down the
+fact that some of these people were employed as guides by the American
+invaders.
+
+13. Mr. James Gilbert, who was the first settler on the land on the
+south bank opposite the point where De Salaberry was encamped, years
+ago, when ploughing, unearthed the remains of a man wrapped in the
+American military dress, and at various times, Mr. George Nussey
+informed the writer, ploughed up bones.
+
+14. Mr. Williamson remembered well, Mr. Brodie informed the writer,
+that the settlers on the Châteauguay at the time of the battle,
+excepting of course the militia, were prepared to flee towards
+Montreal, intending to take with them what household effects they
+conveniently could, should the Canadian forces suffer defeat.
+
+15. Near De Salaberry's first line, on the north bank of the river,
+stood the old block house. Miss Anne Bryson remembers it well.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+[1] Wm. James' Mil. Oc. of War of 1812.
+
+[2] History of the War of 1812.
+
+[3] James says at St. Regis.
+
+[4] James.
+
+[5] Letter of Hampton to Armstrong.
+
+[6] James.
+
+[7] To the Secretary of War, Sept. 25th, 1813, in Palmer's Hist.
+Register of the U.S., I., for 1814.
+
+[8] Ibid.
+
+[9] Chiefly Appleton's Cycl. of Am. Biog.
+
+[10] Supplement to same. It contains a portrait of Izard.
+
+[11] H. Sulte.
+
+[12] Garneau, Hist. Can.
+
+[13] Garneau.
+
+[14] Garneau.
+
+[15] Christie gives him credit for this point.
+
+[16] See letters of "Veritas."
+
+[17] Christie Hist. Can.
+
+[18] Wilkinson's letters
+
+[19] All full accounts of the battle from this stage on are chiefly
+founded on that remarkable letter of a participant signing "Temoin
+Oculaire," published in Montreal, 29 Oct., 1813. It is open, however,
+to some corrections of detail.
+
+[20] Garneau and Sellar; but Coffin says they were French-Canadian
+_voyageurs_, and Mr. John Fraser, from tradition, says _five-sixths_
+French-Canadians. I have been unable to obtain the necessary
+verifications from Ottawa or elsewhere.
+
+[21] W.F. Coffin, Hist. War of 1812.
+
+[22] Jame's Military Occurrences, I., 306.
+
+[23] Coffin.
+
+[24] James.
+
+[25] Coffin.
+
+[26] James, I., p. 308.
+
+[27] Purdy gives an interesting and clear account (_Vide_ Palmer's
+Hist. Register for 1814) of this march and some other matters, in his
+report to Wilkinson.
+
+[28] James.
+
+[29] James says sixty.
+
+[30] James.
+
+[31] Temoin Oc.
+
+[32] Garneau.
+
+[33] Tradition.
+
+[34] James.
+
+[35] James.
+
+[36] Temoin Oculaire.
+
+[37] James.
+
+[38] Tradition.
+
+[39] James.
+
+[40] Coffin.
+
+[41] James.
+
+[42] This was "a fact known to many persons now alive," according to a
+petition for a medal by his family in 1849.
+
+[43] James.
+
+[44] See his despatch.
+
+[45] Sulte.
+
+[46] Hampton's Report on the Battle: Palmer's Hist. Register, 1814.
+
+[47] James.
+
+[48] James.
+
+[49] "Officier actif et zelé." (Temoin Oculaire.)
+
+[50] James.
+
+[51] Palmer's Hist. Register.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of An Account Of The Battle Of Chateauguay
+by William D. Lighthall
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14619 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14619 ***</div>
+
+<h3>Ch&acirc;teauguay Literary and Historical Society</h3>
+
+<h2>AN ACCOUNT</h2>
+
+<h4>OF</h4>
+
+<h1>THE BATTLE OF CH&Acirc;TEAUGUAY</h1>
+
+<h4>BEING</h4>
+
+<h2>A LECTURE DELIVERED AT ORMSTOWN,</h2>
+
+<h4>MARCH 8th, 1889</h4>
+
+<h4>BY</h4>
+
+<h2>W.D. LIGHTHALL, M.A.,</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Honorary Member of the Ch&acirc;teauguay Literary and Historical Society,
+Secretary of the Antiquarian Society of Montreal, Life Corresponding
+Member of the Scottish Society of Literature and Art, Author of &quot;The
+Young Seigneur,&quot; &quot;Songs of the Great Dominion,&quot; etc.</i></p>
+
+<h4>WITH</h4>
+
+<h3>SOME LOCAL AND PERSONAL NOTES</h3>
+
+<h4>BY</h4>
+
+<h2>W. PATTERSON, M.A.,</h2>
+
+<h4><i>Corresponding Secretary of the C.L.H.S.</i></h4>
+
+<h5>&quot;Raise high the Monumental Stone.&quot;</h5>
+<p class="author">&mdash;<i>Charles Sangster</i></p>
+
+<br />
+<h4>MONTREAL:</h4>
+
+<h4>W. DRYSDALE &amp; CO., PUBLISHERS, 232 ST. JAMES STREET.</h4>
+
+<h4>1889.</h4>
+
+<br />
+<br />
+<div class="trans-note">
+Transcriber's Note: The Table of Contents and the list of
+illustrations were added by the transcriber.
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="Contents" id="Contents">TABLE OF CONTENTS</a></h3>
+<div class="toc">
+<p><a href="#illustrations">ILLUSTRATIONS</a></p>
+<p><a href="#PREFACE">PREFACE.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#THE_BATTLE_OF_CHATEAUGUAY">THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#APPENDIX">APPENDIX.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES.</a></p>
+
+<a name="illustrations" id="illustrations"></a>
+<h3>ILLUSTRATIONS</h3>
+<p class="illustrations">
+<a href="#fig01">LT.-COL CHARLES DE SALABERRY.</a></p>
+<p class="illustrations">
+<a href="#fig02">SKETCH OF THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY&mdash;OCT 26, 1813.</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<br />
+<br />
+
+<a name="fig01" id="fig01"></a>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/0002.png" name="fig0002" id="fig0002">
+<img src="images/0002.png"
+alt="LT.-COL CHARLES DE SALABERRY." title="" /></a>
+<h5>LT.-COL CHARLES DE SALABERRY.</h5>
+</div>
+
+<h3>LIST OF OFFICERS FOR 1888-89.</h3>
+
+<p class="center"><b>President.</b></p>
+<p class="members">Lt.-Col. Archibald McEachern, C.M.G,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Vice-Presidents.</b></p>
+<p class="members">J.E. Robidoux, Q.C., M.P.P.</p>
+<p class="members">Edward Holton, Esq., M.P.</p>
+<p class="members">Thomas Baird, Esq.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Recording Secretary.</b></p>
+<p class="members">Peter McLaren, B A., M.D.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Corresponding Secretary.</b></p>
+<p class="members">Wm. Patterson, M.A.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Treasurer.</b></p>
+<p class="members">Wm. McDougall, Esq.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Councillors.</b></p>
+<p class="members">Dr. McCormick.</p>
+<p class="members">Wm. J. Bryson, Esq.</p>
+<p class="members">Dugald Thomson. Esq.</p>
+<p class="members">Dr. Hall.</p>
+<p class="members">Rev. D.W. Morison, B.A.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>LIST OF HONORARY MEMBERS</b></p>
+
+<p class="members">Edward Holton, M.P.</p>
+<p class="members">J.E. Robidoux, Q.C., M.P.P.</p>
+<p class="members">Dr. W. Geo. Beers.</p>
+<p class="members">James McGregor, Esq.</p>
+<p class="members">Watson Griffin, Esq.</p>
+<p class="members">J.R. Dougall, M.A.</p>
+<p class="members">W.D. Lighthall, M.A., B.C.L.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page3" id="page3"></a>[pg 3]</span>
+<br />
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>
+PREFACE.
+</h2>
+
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+ Contents</a></p>
+
+<p>On October 26th, 1888, the Ch&acirc;teauguay Literary and Historical Society
+was organized at Ormstown, Quebec, to foster Canadian patriotism by
+encouraging the study of Canadian history and Canadian literature. The
+Society began its labours at home, taking as its subject the battle
+whence it derives its name. Mr. W.D. Lighthall, M.A., B.C.L., an
+honorary member, was asked to prepare an account of that victory, and
+kindly responded by his lecture, which he delivered before the Society
+on March 8th, 1889. Pleasure is now felt in offering this lecture, in
+the interests of the Society, to the Canadian world, no apology being
+required at a time when patriotic literature is in great demand. Mr.
+Lighthall's researches have been discussed by the members, and the
+belief is prevalent that his work touching this important item of
+history, in so far as accuracy is concerned, stands unrivalled, the
+previous authorities having been carefully compared and their
+testimony put together.</p>
+
+<p>In the Appendix will be found a number of notes having a bearing on
+the battle and its times. The portrait frontispiece is from a line
+engraving kindly lent by Gerald E. Hart, Esq., President of the
+Society for Historical Studies. The drawing of the map, after the
+design of the author, is due to J.A.U. Beaudry, Esq., C.E., Curator of
+the Antiquarian Society of Montreal.</p>
+
+<p>The first part of the account is partly based upon R. Christie's
+History of Lower Canada; but William James' Military Occurrences of
+the War of 1812, was found the most accurate in statistical details,
+and is, therefore, frequently followed. Other authorities are referred
+to in their places.</p>
+
+<p>The battle of Ch&acirc;teauguay, in view of the important results that
+followed it, is an event which all Canadians will appreciate, and to
+which posterity will have reason to point the finger of admiration.
+All nationalities concerned in building up this country, when united
+by a common danger, bore in it an honorable part, as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page4" id="page4"></a>[pg 4]</span>
+they fought side
+by side in defence of their homes and those that were dear to them,
+from the wanton aggression of an ungenerous foe.</p>
+
+<p>The Society hopes to continue its work and to offer other pamphlets in
+the near future, so that this effort on its part may be regarded as
+the first of a series. Another of its immediate objects is the
+erection of a monument on the battlefield, to accomplish which
+pecuniary assistance is required. The belief is held that no
+opportunity should be lost to educate the rising generation to form a
+true conception of the grandeur of the heritage that is ours,</p>
+
+
+<p class="author">W.P.</p>
+<p><span class="sc">Ormstown,</span><br />
+<i>October 29th, 1889.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page5" id="page5"></a>[pg 5]</span>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_BATTLE_OF_CHATEAUGUAY" id="THE_BATTLE_OF_CHATEAUGUAY"></a>
+THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY.
+</h2>
+
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+ Contents</a></p>
+
+<p>The War of 1812 has been called by an able historian &quot;the afterclap of
+the Revolution.&quot; The Revolution was, indeed, true thunder&mdash;a
+courageous and, in the main, high-principled struggle. Its afterclap
+of 1812 displayed little but empty bombast and greed. In the one,
+brave leaders risked their lives in that defence of rights which has
+made their enterprise an epoch in man's history; in the other, a mean
+and braggart spirit actuated its promoters to strike in the back that
+nation which almost alone was carrying on, in the best spirit of the
+Revolution, the struggle for the liberties of Europe against the
+designs of Napoleon. The brave spirits of the War of Freedom led the
+affairs of the United States no longer. All the contemptible elements,
+all the boasters, all those who had done least in the real fighting,
+had long come out of their shells and united to establish the mighty
+rhetorical school of the Spread Eagle! It was the legions of Spread
+Eagleism who wore to have the glory to be got in taking advantage of
+harassed England. The Battle of Ch&acirc;teauguay was one of the answers to
+that illusion.</p>
+
+<p>The War was introduced by a Declaration, in which President Madison,
+in smooth and elaborate terms, pretended that his nation found cause
+for it in the tyrannical exercise by British warships of what was
+called <i>The Right of Search</i>&mdash;that is to say, a claim of ships of war
+to stop the ships of other nations and search them for deserters and
+contraband goods. That this was not, however, the true cause, was
+shown by the facts and cries of the war.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page6" id="page6"></a>[pg 6]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Firstly, the right was one belonging to all nations by international
+law; secondly, though it was at once relinquished by Britain in a
+conciliatory spirit, the Americans persisted in their campaign;
+thirdly, at the close of the war they did not insist at all on the
+abrogation of the Right of Search, in the treaty of peace.</p>
+
+<p>It would be much easier to show what the real causes were:-(1), hatred
+of England, lasting over from the Revolution; (2), envy of her
+commerce and prestige; and especially (3) the scheme for the conquest
+of Canada.</p>
+
+<p>The course of the negotiations exhibit a thoroughly ungenerous course
+on the part of the American authorities, contrasted with a desire not
+to offend on the part of Britain. President Madison's Declaration of
+War was made on the 18th of June, 1812, and the British Government,
+after using every honorable overture for friendship, only issued
+theirs in October, couching it, besides, in terms of regret and
+reproach at the unfairness in which Madison's party persisted. Owing
+to that unfairness and other causes the enterprise also was by no
+means unanimously popular in the States. A convention of delegates
+from the counties of New York, held in the capitol at Albany, on the
+17th and 18th of September, and called the New York Convention,
+condemned Madison's party for declaring the war, on account of its
+injustice, and &quot;as having been undertaken,&quot; they said, &quot;from motives
+entirely distinct from those which have been hitherto avowed.&quot; The New
+England States treated it coldly. Maryland disapproved through her
+Legislature. Many persons everywhere looked on it as a mere political
+scheme, and when drafted for service in frequent cases bought
+themselves substitutes.</p>
+
+<p>It was soon found that a mistake had been made in attacking Canada.
+That happened which might be expected where bodies of men with
+inflated ideas of glory and no experience attack men fighting
+desperately for their homes, and officers and veterans who had seen
+such service as the Napoleonic wars. The British, with an astuteness
+which is oftener the character credited to their opponents, managed to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page7" id="page7"></a>[pg 7]</span>
+get earliest word of the Declaration sent to their own forts on the
+Lakes, and promptly captured the American fort Michilimackinac. They
+then followed with the daring capture of the stronghold of Detroit,
+amply equipped and garrisoned, by a little handful of men under the
+heroic General Brock, who simply went before it and demanded its
+surrender, whereupon it was given up, together with the whole
+Territory of Michigan. The presence of such trained British officers
+as Brock and of army veterans in the ranks was a very great advantage.
+Poor Brock soon afterwards died in his memorable charge at the victory
+of Queenston Heights.</p>
+
+<p>That year&mdash;the first of the War&mdash;is known as a succession of fiascos
+for the Americans. The other conspicuous aspect of it is that the
+attacked points were, with the exception of a little skirmishing at
+St. Regis and Lacolle, all in the Province of Upper Canada.</p>
+
+<p>It was only towards the close of the campaign of the next
+year&mdash;1813&mdash;that Lower Canada was gravely threatened.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans, emboldened by several successes, and having put a great
+many men into the field, believed that the struggle might easily be
+terminated by capturing Montreal. The advance upon Lower Canada took
+place under General James Wilkinson in chief command, with 8,826 men
+and 58 guns and howitzers.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1" /><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> He had intended to attack Kingston. &quot;At
+Montreal, however,&quot; wrote the Secretary of War, Armstrong, in phrases
+colored by the prevailing school of rhetoric, &quot;you find the weaker
+place and the smallest force to encounter.... You hold a position
+which completely severs the enemy's line of operations, and which,
+while it restrains all below, withers and perishes all above itself.&quot;
+This great position&mdash;for it is so&mdash;Colonel Coffin<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2" /><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> compares it to
+Vicksburg for natural strength&mdash;was to be approached by two routes: by
+Wilkinson himself in boats down the St Lawrence, and by Major-General
+Wade Hampton, his almost independent subordinate, from the Champlain
+border; and it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page8" id="page8"></a>[pg 8]</span>
+was planned that the two armies should meet at the
+foot of Isle Perrot,<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3" /><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> thence to strike together across the Lake to
+Lachine, and on to the city, which seems to have had not over, if as
+many as, a thousand regulars to defend it.</p>
+
+<p>Wade Hampton, with over 5,000 men (an effective regular force of 4,053
+rank and file, about 1,500 militia and ten cannon<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4" /><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>), was at first on
+the Vermont side of Lake Champlain at Burlington<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5" /><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>. He crossed to the
+New York side, directing his march for Caughnawaga on the St.
+Lawrence. His army<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6" /><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>, except the militia, was the same which, with a
+certain General Dearborn at its head, paraded irregularly across the
+lines and returned to Pittsburgh in the autumn of 1812. During the
+year since elapsed the men had been drilled by Major-General Izard,
+who had served in the French Army. They were all in uniform, well
+clothed and equipped&mdash;in short, Hampton commanded, if not the most
+numerous, certainly the most effective, regular army which the United
+States were able to send into the field during the War. Crossing the
+border on the 20th of September, 1813, he surprised a small picket of
+British at Odelltown, a Loyalist settlement afterwards celebrated for
+a battle in the Rebellion of 1837. He soon found himself met with what
+seemed to him great difficulties, for the army was plunged into an
+extensive swampy wood, the only road through which was rendered
+impracticable by fallen trees and barricades, behind which and in the
+gloomy forests surrounding were every here and there to be seen
+Indians and infantry crawling and flitting about, who fired upon them
+from unexpected ambushes. Hampton's men were not of a kind to face
+this. &quot;The perfect rawness of the troops,&quot; writes he, &quot;with the
+exception of not a single platoon, has been a source of much
+solicitude to the best-informed among us.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7" /><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> They were ignorant,
+insubordinate, and forever &quot;falling off.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8" /><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page9" id="page9"></a>[pg 9]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Urging on the scattered defenders was, no doubt, to be seen from time
+to time a stout-built, vigorous officer with stripes across the breast
+of his dark gray uniform, dashing about from point to point giving
+fierce orders. This was De Salaberry.</p>
+
+<p>Not reflecting&mdash;for he seems to have had the information&mdash;that the
+wood was only fifteen miles or so in depth, the Canadians few in
+number, and that a short press forward would have brought him into the
+open country of L'Acadie leading towards Montreal, the American
+General in two days withdrew along the border towards Ch&acirc;teauguay Four
+Corners, alleging the great drought of that year as a reason for
+wishing to descend by the River Ch&acirc;teauguay. At the Corners he rested
+his army for many days.</p>
+
+<p>Wade Hampton was a type of the large slaveholders of the South. Nearly
+sixty years of age, self-important, fiery and over-indulgent in drink,
+of large, imposing figure, of some reputed service in the Revolution,
+and with a record as Congressman and Presidential elector, he was one
+whose chief virtues were not patience and humility. In 1809 he had
+been made a brigadier-general and stationed at New Orleans; but in
+consequence of continual disagreements with his subordinates, was
+superseded in 1812 by Wilkinson, whom he consequently hated. In the
+spring of 1813 he received his Major-General's commission. He had
+acquired his large fortune by land speculations, and at his death some
+time later was supposed to be the wealthiest planter in the United
+States, owning 3,000 slaves. He is said to have ably administered his
+estate.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9" /><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
+
+<p>Hampton had another slave-holding South Carolinian by his side, young
+Brigadier-General George Izard, son and descendant of aristocrats and
+statesmen, well-educated in the soldier's profession, college-bred,
+travelled, and who had served in the French Army. Izard led the main
+column at the battle shortly to ensue.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10" /><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page10" id="page10"></a>[pg 10]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Another officer of the circle&mdash;who seems to have been the ablest&mdash;was
+Colonel James Purdy, on whom the brunt of the American work and
+fighting were to fall, and who seems to have done his best in a
+struggle against natural difficulties and against the incompetency of
+both his commander and men.</p>
+
+<p>When Hampton moved to Four Corners, Lieut-Colonel De Salaberry, with
+the Canadian Voltigeurs, moved in like manner westward to the region
+of the Ch&acirc;teauguay and English Rivers. The Voltigeur troops were
+French-Canadians with a small sprinkling of British. Their
+organization was as follows:&mdash;Sir George Prevost, on the approach of
+war, May 28th, 1812, ordered the levy of four French volunteer
+battalions, to be made up of unmarried men from 18 to 25 years old.
+They were to be choice troops, and trained like regulars. Charles
+Michel d'Irumberry De Salaberry, then high in the regard of his people
+as a military hero, was chosen to rally the recruits, issued a
+stirring poster calling the French-Canadians to arms, and acted with
+such extraordinary energy that the troops were in hand in two days.</p>
+
+<p>De Salaberry was a perfect type of the old French-Canadian military
+gentry, a stock of men of whom very little remains, a breed of leaders
+of, on the whole, more vigorous forms, more active temperaments, than
+the average&mdash;descendants inheriting the qualities of the bravest and
+most adventurous individuals of former times. They were the natural
+result of the feudal <i>r&eacute;gime</i>, with which they have passed away.
+Though a gentry, they were a poor one, possessed of little else than
+quantities of forest lands. The officers of the Voltigeurs were
+selected out of the same class, united with a number of English of
+similar stamp. De Salaberry himself was born in the little cottage
+manor-house of Beauport, near Quebec, on the 19th of Nov., 1778.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11" /><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>
+Taking to soldiering like a duck to water when very young, he enrolled
+as volunteer in the 44th. At sixteen, the Duke
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>[pg 11]</span>
+of Kent, who was then
+in Canada, and delighted in friendly acts towards the seigneurs, got
+him a commission in the 60th, with which regiment he left at once for
+the West Indian Isle of Dominica. There he saw terrible service, for
+all the men of his battalion except three were killed or wounded
+during the seige of Fort Matilda. Nevertheless, the young fellow kept
+gay. &quot;Our uniforms,&quot; he wrote to his father, &quot;cost very dear; but I
+have received &pound;40, and with that I am going to give myself what will
+make a fine figure.&quot; &quot;This fine large boy of sixteen years,&quot; says
+Benjamin Sulte in his History of the French-Canadians, &quot;strong as a
+Hercules ... with smiling face ... made a furore at parties.... As he
+was never sick, they employed him everywhere. Fevers reduced his
+battalion to 200 men, but touched not him.&quot; Though so young, he was
+charged with covering the evacuation of Fort Matilda.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12" /><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Duke of Kent, who was commanding at Halifax, kept a friendly eye
+upon him, and gave him much personal advice, on one occasion
+dissuading him from an inadvisable marriage. He now took him into his
+own regiment. De Salaberry still saw rough service, was shipwrecked,
+served in the West Indies again, and then fought in Europe and the
+disastrous expedition to Walcheren, where he was placed in the most
+advanced posts.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13" /><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> Returning to his 60th, he was made captain in
+1799. &quot;I have often heard say,&quot; narrates De Gasp&eacute;, &quot;that his company
+and that of Captain Chandler were the best drilled in the regiment.&quot;
+In the West Indies he was drawn into a duel which caused him sorrow
+until his dying day, for in it he was forced by the &quot;code of honor&quot; to
+kill a German fellow-officer, and bore a scar of the affair ever after
+on his forehead. It is related that by his great strength he cut the
+German in two.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The prodigious force with which he was endowed,&quot; says Sulte, &quot;had
+made of him an exceptional being in the eyes of the soldiers,&quot; and
+when he returned to Canada after West Indian service of eleven
+years<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14" /><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> a little before the war of 1812,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12"></a>[pg 12]</span>
+he was already the hero of
+the French-Canadians. That the stories of his strength and vigor are
+true is corroborated by every circumstance which has been perpetuated
+about him. His ruddy, energetic face is preserved in portraits among
+his family, and his walking-stick, said to be an enormous article, is
+kept at Quebec in the collection of the Literary and Historical
+Society.</p>
+
+<p>De Salaberry's Voltigeurs were organized at a peculiar juncture. &quot;The
+discords between French and English in Quebec had emboldened the
+United States,&quot; says Garneau, &quot;and the English Governors harassed the
+French. An opposite conduct might bring back calm to men's spirits.
+The Governor of Nova Scotia, Sir George Provost, a former officer, of
+Swiss origin, offered all the conditions desirable.... Arriving at
+Quebec, Sir George Provost strove to introduce peace and to remove
+animosity. He showed the completest confidence in the fidelity of the
+French-Canadians, and studied how to prove at every opportunity that
+the accusations of treason which had been brought against them had
+left no trace in the soul of England nor in his own.... Soon the
+liveliest sympathy arose between Sir George Prevost and the
+people.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15" /><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> It was in pursuance of this policy that the order to
+raise the Voltigeur force was given by him.</p>
+
+<p>While Hampton was at Four Corners, Sir George, thus now
+Commander-in-Chief of all the forces in Canada, was at the camp which
+had just been formed at La Fourche, and of which a description is
+given by Mr. Sellar in his history of the district. Sir George was a
+man quite devoid of the decisiveness necessary to a soldier, and
+though, as we have seen, he was useful in reconciling the French, his
+errors in military matters several times brought disgrace on the
+British forces, and gave rise to storms of rage and disgust among
+them.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16" /><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> De Salaberry was now ordered by him on the Quixotic errand
+of attacking, with about 200 Voltigeurs and some Indians, the large
+camp of Hampton at Four Corners.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page13" id="page13"></a>[pg 13]</span>
+ De Salaberry promptly obeyed these
+impracticable orders, and it is probably at this juncture that a
+little anecdote comes in which I have heard as told by one of his men.
+De Salaberry was down the river dining at a tavern, when a despatch
+was brought to him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;D&mdash;&mdash; it!&quot; he exclaimed, jumping up from his seat, &quot;Hampton is at
+Four Corners, and I must go and fight him!&quot; and mounting his fine
+white charger, he dashed away from the door.</p>
+
+<p>On the 1st of October he crept up with his force to the edge of the
+American camp. There they saw the assemblage spread out in all the
+array of war, with its host of tents, stacked guns, flags, moving men
+and sentries, and he prepared to strike it as ordered. One of his
+Indians indiscreetly discharged his musket. The camp was in alarm in
+an instant. De Salaberry, finding his approach discovered, immediately
+collected about fifty of his Voltigeurs, with whom and the Indians he
+pushed into the enemy's advanced camp, consisting of about 800 men,
+and, catching them in their confusion, drove them for a considerable
+distance, until, seeing the main body manoeuvring to cut off his
+little handful, he fell back and took up his position at the skirt of
+the woods. Once again he sallied out and charged, but with all the
+army now thoroughly aroused it was useless, and the Indians having
+retreated, most of his own men ran off, leaving him and Captains
+Chevalier Duchesnay and Gaucher, officers much like himself in stamp,
+with a few trusty Voltigeurs to skirmish with the enemy as long as
+daylight permitted it.<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17" /><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> He then withdrew to Ch&acirc;teauguay, taking the
+precaution of breaking up the forest road in his rear, in pursuance of
+the general policy of the campaign, which was to destroy and obstruct
+as much as possible in the path of the enemy. Acquainting himself also
+with the ground over which Hampton was expected to make his way into
+the Province, he finally stopped, selected and took up the position
+where the battle
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>[pg 14]</span>
+afterwards took place, in a thick wood on the left
+bank of the Ch&acirc;teauguay River at the distance of two or three leagues
+above its <i>Fork</i> with English River, where he threw up his works of
+defence, with the approval of General De Watteville. The plan of the
+British commanders, owing to the smallness and inefficiency of their
+forces, was the stern one of burning and destroying all houses and
+property, and retreating slowly to the St. Lawrence, harassing the
+enemy in his advance.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18" /><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> The position chosen was as strong as the
+nature of that flat and wooded country and the route of the American
+march would allow. Here his experience and quick eye came in.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19" /><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
+
+<p>Now as to the measures of fortification taken by De Salaberry. In his
+rear there was a small rapid where the river was fordable in two spots
+close to one another. He commanded this with a strong breastwork and a
+guard. There were four ravines which issued from the very thick woods,
+crossing the road, and distant from each other two hundred yards or
+so. On their banks he made his men fell trees and build them into
+breastworks&mdash;&quot;a kind of parapet extending into the woods some
+distance.&quot; To prevent the American cannon from bearing on these
+breastworks, he felled trees and bush, covering a large stretch of
+ground with obstructions in the front. The breastwork on the
+front-line formed an obtuse angle at the right of the road, and
+extended along the curves of the ravine. The Colonel then sent forward
+to a spot some distance in advance of the front-line a party of
+Beauharnois' axemen, well accustomed to felling trees, who destroyed
+the bridges and obstructed the road with their fragments and fallen
+trees and brush. Lieut. Guy, with twenty Voltigeurs, guarded them in
+front, and Lieut. Johnson, with about the same number, in rear.
+Working incessantly, these axemen made a formidable series of such
+obstructions in front of the first line, extending
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id="page15"></a>[pg 15]</span>
+from the river
+three or four acres into the woods, where they joined an almost
+impracticable marsh. On the opposite bank of the river De Salaberry
+also placed a picket of sixty Beauharnois militia under Captain
+Bruy&egrave;re, so as to check any advance on the ford, which was his weak
+point in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>Part of De Salaberry's line at the abattis, was a small blockhouse on
+the river-bank (which, however, is not that which has since been
+reputed to be the one concerned), and the works there blocked the
+commencement of the wood and looked out on a broadening plain or level
+of clearings, across which the enemy would have to pass.</p>
+
+<p>The Glengarry men now came down, under McDonell of Ogdensburgh, famous
+for his adventurous capture of that place, and whose exploit the
+Salaberry was about to match. Lieut.-Colonel McDonell&mdash;&quot;Red
+George&quot;&mdash;was at Prescott drilling a new force of Canadian Fencibles,
+made up, some say, chiefly of Scotch and loyalists,<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20" /><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> others chiefly
+of French boatmen, when Sir George Prevost asked him how soon he could
+have his men ready to go down to Ch&acirc;teauguay. &quot;As soon as they have
+done their dinner!&quot; he responded. Within a few hours he had provided
+them with <i>batteaux</i>, and they were off down the rapids. When Sir
+George himself, who was on the way, got there, he, to his great
+surprise found McDonell before him. &quot;Where are your men?&quot; said he.
+&quot;There,&quot; said the Highland Colonel, pointing to his force resting on
+the ground&mdash;&quot;not a man absent.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21" /><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
+
+<p>For nearly three weeks the parties of Canadian workers worked
+continually upon the plan of De Salaberry, while Hampton was
+considering, preparing, reviewing his troops, and arranging for a
+communication with Wilkinson so soon as the latter should have passed
+Ogdensburg on his way down the St. Lawrence.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>[pg 16]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>On the 21st of October the advance down the Ch&acirc;teauguay commenced. The
+first move was a rapid march by General Izard with the light-equipped
+troops and a regiment of the line, who surprised a party of about
+ten<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22" /><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> Indians sitting late in the afternoon at their evening meal at
+the junction of the Outarde and Ch&acirc;teauguay Rivers, and killed one of
+them. There Izard encamped and proceeded to establish a road of
+communication with Hampton. Word was soon brought to Major Henry, of
+the Beauharnois' Militia, commanding on the English River. Henry sent
+word to General De Watteville at La Fourche, and had Captains Levesque
+and Debartzch advance immediately with the flank companies of the 5th
+Battalion of embodied militia and about 200 men of the Beauharnois'
+division. This was the preliminary move towards the battle.</p>
+
+<p>They advanced about six miles that night up the Ch&acirc;teauguay from La
+Fourche, when they came to a wood which it would not have been prudent
+to enter in the dark. Next morning early they were joined by De
+Salaberry with his Voltigeurs and the light company of Captain
+Ferguson, an officer who took a front place in the affair. De
+Salaberry brought all these companies about a league up the bank to
+the place he had fortified, and there stopped. An American patrol
+party being observed in front, General De Watteville came over
+himself, visited the outposts, approved of them, and the work
+proceeded.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23" /><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> That evening the main body of the Americans encamped at
+Sear's, about twenty-five miles above the Ch&acirc;teauguay's mouth. The
+engineers had cut a road for the ten cannon, and with great labor and
+difficulty had dragged them thus far.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24" /><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
+
+<p>Within two days more Hampton's men had opened and completed a large
+and practicable road, which is still traceable, from his position at
+Four Corners twenty-four miles through the woods and morasses, and
+brought up his guns and stores to his new position, about seven miles
+from De Salaberry's. (About Dewittville?)
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>[pg 17]</span>
+</p>
+
+<a name="fig02" id="fig02"></a>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<p class="returnTOC">
+<a href="images/0019.png" name="fig0019" id="fig0019">Larger Image</a></p>
+<a href="images/0019.png" name="fig0019L" id="fig0019L">
+<img src="images/0019t.png"
+alt="SKETCH OF THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY&mdash;OCT 26, 1813" title="" /></a>
+<h5>SKETCH OF THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY&mdash;OCT 26, 1813</h5>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>From this point he despatched Colonel Purdy with about 1,500 men,
+composed of a light brigade (the 1st Brigade of the American Army<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25" /><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>)
+and a strong body of the infantry of the line, at an early hour in the
+night of the 25th, across the Ch&acirc;teauguay and down its right bank<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26" /><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>
+at a bend adjoining what is now known as the Cross Farm, with orders
+to gain the ford and fall on the rear of Lieut.-Colonel De Salaberry's
+position, while the main body, under General Izard, were to commence
+the attack in front. Purdy's brigade crossed not far above De
+Salaberry, and proceeded into the woods of the opposite side. A cedar
+swamp, an unexpected stream in which they floundered, and the
+ignorance of their guides misled and bewildered them. This was the
+fault of Hampton, and due to his headstrongness, for the guides had
+protested that they did not know that side of the Ch&acirc;teauguay; but he
+had ordered them to proceed. Purdy's command became scattered, were
+forced to halt in confusion, and had to sleep in the open woods, cold,
+wet, exhausted, and apprehensive.<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27" /><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> General Hampton, however, in the
+morning, fully expected to hear them attacking the ford, advanced, and
+at ten o'clock his troops appeared in sight of the party of busy
+woodchoppers, about 3,500 men, with three squadrons of cavalry,
+marching in column along the high road, commanded by General Izard.
+Lieut. Guy's picket fired, the workmen dropped work and ran, Guy
+retired upon Johnson, and both Lieutenants retreated with their men to
+the completed abattis, where they formed up again and began to fire
+smartly.</p>
+
+<p>De Salaberry, on hearing the firing, promptly advanced with the light
+company of the Canadian Fencibles, commanded by Captain Ferguson,
+&quot;flanked by twenty-two Indians on the right and centre,&quot;<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28" /><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> and two
+companies of his Voltigeurs, commanded by Captains Chevalier and Louis
+Juchereau Duchesnay. Ferguson's companies he posted on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page18" id="page18"></a>[pg 18]</span>
+the right, in
+front of the abattis, in extended order, its right skirting on the
+adjoining woods and abattis, among which were distributed a few
+Abenaquis Indians. The three officers, Ferguson and the two
+Duchesnays, executed the movements required of them with the coolness
+of a day of parade. The Voltigeur company of the oldest of the
+Duchesnays, known as &quot;the Chevalier,&quot; occupied, in extended order, the
+ground from the left of Ferguson's Company to the Ch&acirc;teauguay, and the
+company under Captain Louis Juchereau Duchesnay, with about
+thirty-five<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29" /><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> Sedentary Militia under Captain Longtin, were thrown
+back along the margin of the river, hidden among the trees and bushes,
+so as to flank Colonel Purdy's men, or prevent him from flanking the
+Canadian position. Between the abattis and the front line were a
+company of Voltigeurs, Captain Lecuyer commanding, and beyond them on
+the right a light company (that of the 5th Battalion) of embodied
+militia with their side pickets, under Captain Debartzch; then, to the
+right of them, in the woods, the Indians under Captain La Mothe. There
+were thus in the front only about 240 Canadians. The positions,
+however, occupied about a mile along the river, and the rest of the
+troops&mdash;some 600&mdash;were distributed among the other breastworks, under
+command of McDonell.<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30" /><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
+
+<p>The battle was now on the point of commencing. In the centre of the
+front stood De Salaberry watching the enemy, whose characteristics he
+had noted twice before. All waited in suspense. A touching scene was
+taking place among the Beauharnois Militia further back, where Captain
+Longtin caused his men to kneel, went through a short prayer with
+them, and then rising, said: &quot;that now they had fulfilled their duty
+to their God, they would fulfil that to their King.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31" /><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the enemy kept steadily moving along the road in column. A
+tall mounted American officer rode forward and began a harangue to the
+Canadians in French. &quot;Brave
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19"></a>[pg 19]</span>
+ Canadians,&quot; said he, &quot;give yourselves
+over; we do not wish to do you any harm!&quot;<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32" /><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> De Salaberry, seeing
+that his moment was come, sprang upon a stump,<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33" /><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> discharged his
+musket as a signal to begin, and brought the American officer off his
+horse by the shot. The enemy at the time were exposed to being taken
+on both front and side. The bugles blared, the front companies
+immediately opened fire, and the battle was begun. Izard's force were
+in the open plain, while their foes were hidden in a thick wood. The
+squadrons of cavalry and four cannon which they had brought thus far
+were found to be useless there. They, however, commenced a
+spirited<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34" /><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> fire in battalion volley; but, from the position of the
+line, it was almost totally thrown to the right of the Canadians, and
+of no effect whatever. They soon faced to the right, and filing up
+with speed, changed their front parallel with the lines of
+breastworks, when the engagement became general, and their fire
+compelled the retreat, behind the front edge of the breastwork<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35" /><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> of
+a few skirmishers near the left, who had been rather advanced in the
+centre of the line. This retreat being mistaken by the enemy for a
+flight, a universal shout ensued, which was re-echoed, to their
+surprise, by the Canadians and the Glengarry men in reserve under
+Lieut.-Colonel McDonell. Now was the supreme moment of the battle. De
+Salaberry ordered his bugleman to sound the advance. &quot;This was heard
+by Lieut-Colonel McDonell, who, thinking the Colonel was in want of
+support, caused his own bugles to answer, and immediately advanced
+with two of his companies from the third and fourth lines to the first
+and second.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36" /><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> &quot;All these movements were executed with great
+rapidity.&quot; De Salaberry, at the same time, as a <i>ruse de guerre</i>,
+ordered &quot;ten or twelve buglemen into the adjoining woods with orders
+to separate and blow with all their might.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37" /><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> The enemy, as De
+Salaberry calculated, suspected that the Canadians were advancing in
+great numbers to circumvent them. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20"></a>[pg 20]</span>
+ Colonel, while giving these
+orders, is said to have done so facing his men, with his back against
+a tree.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38" /><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> The noise of the engagement towards its end brought on
+Colonel Purdy's division on the opposite side of the river, which,
+having driven in the picquet of sixty Beauharnois Sedentary Militia
+under Captain Bruy&egrave;re, were pressing on for the ford, whereupon De
+Salaberry ordered Lieut.-Colonel McDonell, who had returned to his
+position to check the enemy there, and Captain Daly was chosen, with
+the light company of the 3rd Battalion Embodied Militia, numbering
+seventy men,<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39" /><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> to cross and take up the ground abandoned by the
+picket.</p>
+
+<p>De Salaberry, then seeing that the action was about to become serious
+on the right, left his position in the centre of the front and placed
+himself on the left with the troops along the bank, where, standing on
+a stump.<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40" /><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> he could see, through his field-glass, Captain Daly with
+his men crossing the ford. The latter took with him such of the
+Beauharnois men as had rallied<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41" /><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> up, and led by him, they advanced
+along the river-bank and made, in the words of Purdy afterwards, &quot;a
+furious assault&quot; upon the advanced guard of the Americans, whom they
+drove back upon themselves. &quot;The bravery of Captain Daly,&quot; wrote the
+Temoin Oculaire&mdash;whose account, it is to be remembered, was published
+a few days afterwards&mdash;&quot;who literally led his company into the midst
+of the enemy, could not be surpassed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Purdy's main body finally recovered, and charged forward, however,
+emerging in great force from the wood.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Daly's men, as they had been taught by Lieut.-Colonel
+McDonell, knelt and fired a volley kneeling. The return volley was
+fired by tenfold numbers, and but for that precaution would have
+destroyed nearly the whole of Captain Daly's command. As it was, he
+received a severe wound, and with his men, several of whom were
+wounded and himself a second time, was compelled to retreat, which the
+men did in very good order under Lieut. Benjamin Schiller. The latter
+distinguished himself greatly. He bore off his wounded
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>[pg 21]</span>
+captain to a
+safe place, and returning, took command at request of the men. At one
+juncture he was engaged, hand to hand, with a very formidable
+adversary, whose head he cut off with a single blow of his sabre.<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42" /><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></p>
+
+<p>Purdy's force eventually were moving on in overwhelming numbers, and
+for a moment their shouts of victory were heard by the little force
+lying in suspense behind the barricades on the opposite bank. In
+coming out of the wood they swarmed down along the bank of the river.
+Now was the time for Captains Louis Duchesnay and Longtin's companies
+concealed in the river-side bushes opposite. De Salaberry instantly
+appears upon the scene, gives the word of command, and the bushes
+flame out with a hidden and destructive fire. The American shouts of
+victory turn into cries of confusion. In the utmost disorder they make
+a tumultuous and precipitate retreat into the woods. Thus, at 2.30
+p.m., came the failure of Purdy's flanking movement.</p>
+
+<p>As one may easily imagine, this series of incidents took several
+hours.</p>
+
+<p>In the front, General Hampton for about an hour kept his soldiers
+ready in momentary expectation of attack by De Salaberry, and of
+hearing of Purdy's success. When he heard that the latter had failed,
+however, he sent him word to withdraw his column to a shoal four or
+five miles above and cross over, and ordered General Izard to retire
+his brigade to a position about three miles in the rear, to which
+place the baggage had been ordered forward. Hampton thus retired,
+leaving De Salaberry master of the field, with scarcely 300 men in
+actual action, and no British guns anywhere within seven miles.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43" /><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
+
+<p>Sir George Prevost, with Major-General De Watteville, arrived on the
+ground at the close of the engagement and overlooked De Salaberry's
+arrangements, thanked him with great praise, and then immediately
+wrote an inaccurate
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id="page22"></a>[pg 22]</span>
+despatch to England, in which he claimed the
+principal credit for <i>himself</i>.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44" /><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> That evening De Salaberry wrote to
+his father; &quot;I have won a victory mounted on a wooden horse!&quot;<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45" /><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a></p>
+
+<p>After the battle was over the American firing did not cease, for no
+sooner did darkness come on than Purdy's scattered command, moving up
+the right bank, commenced a most destructive fire on each other,
+mistaking them for the British, and they continued it the greater part
+of the night. The final incident took place just as day dawned on the
+27th, when about twenty Americans, mistaking some of the Canadian
+militia on the left bank for their own people, were compelled by them
+to surrender.</p>
+
+<p>That day at dawn McDonell came up in command of Captain Rouville's
+Company of Voltigeurs, Captain Levesque's Company of Grenadiers (of
+the 5th Battalion Incorporated Militia), and sixty men of the
+Beauharnois Division. De Salaberry turned over to McDonell the defence
+of the abatis or obstructions in front, and the hero of Ogdensburgh
+pushed on to two miles further than before. The day passed in
+expectation of a second attack, but no enemy appeared.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the straggling order which the nature of the swamp and
+forest imposed on Purdy's retreat exposed him to rear attacks from the
+Indians, which were repeated after dark and caused him loss.<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46" /><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p>
+
+<p>A large quantity of muskets, drums, knapsacks, provisions and arms
+were found on Purdy's shore, especially indicating the confusion just
+previous to their retreat. Upwards of ninety bodies and graves were
+found on that bank,<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47" /><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> among them two or three officers of
+distinction. On Hampton's field were two dead horses, and the enemy
+were there seen carrying off several of the wounded in carts.</p>
+
+<p>The Canadian loss was only two killed, sixteen wounded, and four
+missing. Three missing were by mistake at first included among the
+killed in the returns.<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48" /><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23"></a>[pg 23]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Time now wore on, another night was passed, and the morning of the
+28th arrived, when Captain La Mothe, with about 150 Indians,
+reconnoitred the enemy, who, according to the report of Captain
+Hughes, of the Engineers, had abandoned his camp the day before.</p>
+
+<p>A party of the Beauharnois Militia, supported by Captain Debartzch,
+burnt and destroyed the newly-erected bridges within a mile of the
+enemy's camp, which was now about one and a half leagues from Piper's
+Road, <i>i.e.</i>, about two leagues from his former position. On the same
+evening the Indians, under Captain La Mothe,<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49" /><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> proceeded through the
+woods and came up with the enemy's rear-guard. Here a slight skirmish
+ensued, in which the Americans lost one killed and seven wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Hampton, having re-occupied his late position, called a council of
+war, where it was determined to fall back and occupy the former
+position at Four Corners, to secure their communication with the
+United States; from thence either to retire to winter quarters or be
+ready to re-enter Lower Canada.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On that day or the day previous Captain Debartzch, of the Militia,
+was sent to the American headquarters with a flag. When he stated the
+number and description of troops by which General Hampton had been
+opposed, the latter, scarcely able to keep his temper, insisted that
+the British force amounted to 7,000 men. On being assured of the
+contrary, he asked: 'What, then, made the woods ring so with bugles?'
+Captain Debartzch explained this; but it was apparently to no
+purpose.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50" /><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Americans retired on the 29th. &quot;On the 30th a party of Indian
+Chasseurs, under Captain Ducharme, reported that the enemy had
+abandoned his camp at Piper's Road in the greatest disorder, and was
+on the road to Four Corners.&quot; The Canadians followed up and hung upon
+the rear and embarrassed the retreat. Canada was saved!
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>[pg 24]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>General Wilkinson was very severe on his fellow-general. &quot;On the 4th
+of November,&quot; he complains, &quot;the British garrison of Montreal
+consisted solely of 400 marines and 200 soldiers. What a golden,
+glorious opportunity has been lost by the caprice of Major-General
+Hampton!&quot;<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51" /><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> Poor man, he was to have pretty much the same luck
+himself just afterwards! Wilkinson's army proceeded on its own course
+down the river, but was almost as ignominiously defeated at Chrysler's
+Farm on the 10th of November, where his 3,000 or 4,000 men were
+matched, partly in open field and partly with the assistance of a ruse
+as at Ch&acirc;teauguay, against 800 British and thirty Indians, under
+Colonel Morison, a man equally brave and able with McDonell and De
+Salaberry.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dion, of Chambly, to whom the erection of a fine bronze statue of
+De Salaberry is due, has related to me a number of particulars from De
+Salaberry's letters held by his relatives. The hero complains bitterly
+of Prevost and De Watteville&mdash;&quot;those two Swiss&quot;&mdash;and that on account
+of his religion he could get no higher than a Lieut.-Colonel. From the
+same letters it appears that the &quot;Temoin Oculaire&quot; was a young lawyer
+named O'Sullivan, later, Judge O'Sullivan, a man partly of Irish
+family, in person large and handsome, and a great friend of De
+Salaberry, who ever remained grateful to him for preserving record of
+his deed in his celebrated letter. It is commonly attributed to D.B.
+Viger. Another little fact mentioned in the correspondence of De
+Salaberry is that his men in the battle were barefooted.</p>
+
+<p>The almost unique nature of the victory strikes one. Its keystone was
+De Salaberry's masterly use of illusion. Of it was the choice of a
+thick wood to conceal his small force, their entrenchment behind the
+abatis and in bush positions, the unexpected fire from the left bank
+upon Purdy, the Indians in the woods, and, more than everything, the
+ruse of the multiplied bugles. But besides illusion there was the
+ablest possible disposition, for there seems no doubt but that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25"></a>[pg 25]</span>
+no
+spot could have keen chosen along his projected route greater in
+strength when fortified and guarded just as that was. The enemy could
+only reach it fatigued, and far from sources of supply, the wood was
+thick, the ravines occurred happily, the river was free from fords for
+a long distance, and a frightful swamp occupied the opposite bank. How
+would De Watteville's small and raw army have acted in the open
+country had this position not been tried?</p>
+
+<p>Next, how ought the credit of the affair to be apportioned, for it is
+clear that it is due to a number concerned? De Salaberry is, of
+course, in every way the leading figure. His courage and spirit were
+perfect, his intelligence rapid, his labor incessant, and the whole
+choice of the field and strategy of the battle were, by all the
+testimony, due to him. On the whole, it almost seems, in its broad
+lights, like a battle of this one man against the enemy. His task was
+the greater from the extent and obscurity of the battlefield. On these
+accounts, some of those holding the positions used afterwards to say
+there was no battle at all, and one&mdash;Lieut. Delisle, who received a
+pension&mdash;that the whole thing was a farce. Frankly&mdash;and it may seem at
+first sight like a discourtesy to say it&mdash;it is doubtful whether the
+Voltigeurs would have stood much real fighting had they been opposed
+to veterans. On reasonable consideration this objection must
+disappear. It is well known that recruits away from their homes are
+utterly unstable in their first battles. For instance, at Bull's Run,
+in the first two battles of the American Civil War, it was a toss-up
+which side would run away from the other, and they decided it by one
+side doing so the first day, and the other side the second. Many of
+the Upper Canadians were fearful and undecided at the beginning of the
+War of 1812. It is pretty probable that the promptitude of the few
+regulars in the country, including such officers as Brock, was its
+salvation at the outset. Most of De Salaberry's own men had withdrawn
+a month previous at the attack on the camp at Four Corners, though so
+disproportionate an enterprise was no fair test of recruits. The
+Sedentary Militia, when drafted, deserted
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26"></a>[pg 26]</span>
+in great numbers, and the
+duty assigned to the newly raised Voltigeurs by their commander at
+Chrysler's Farm just afterwards was that merely of making a temporary
+display in the woods. De Salaberry probably intended to do more with
+his division at Ch&acirc;teauguay, and might have succeeded if put to the
+test, for they were now probably superior to the American force in the
+very important respect of acquired confidence in a leader, who was
+even then the hero of the Province. Being of the same stock as
+Napoleon's men, a long course of fighting under a De Salaberry would
+have undoubtedly made them into a similar force; but in any case, too
+much cannot be said for the patriotism and willingness exhibited by
+these young men in defence of united Canada.</p>
+
+<p>Every man on the field, apparently, did the duty assigned to him.
+One&mdash;Jean Bte. Leclaire, was also one of the heroes of Fort Detroit
+and afterwards Chrysler's Farm. To the memory of such a man let his
+country do some honor. To the axemen's force also is due credit for
+cheerful and dangerous labor in chopping trees and working at the
+obstructions and defences. The Temoin Oculaire names &quot;Vincent,
+Pelletier, Vervais, Dubois, Caron,&quot; who swam the river and took
+prisoners those who refused to surrender.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Daly is the name to be mentioned next to De Salaberry. His
+courageous onslaught is testified to by both Purdy and the Temoin, and
+twice wounded, he fought until he fell. It may be truthfully said that
+it was he who bore the brunt of the fight. Schiller also specially
+distinguished himself, and won his captaincy on the field. Of Ferguson
+and the two Captains Duchesnay we have spoken. The Temoin Oculaire
+praises the courage of Captain La Mothe, of Lieuts. Pinguet, Hebden,
+Guy, Johnson, Powell, and Captain L'Ecuyer (the latter two for
+captures of prisoners in the woods.) Captains Longtin and Huneau, of
+the Beauharnois Militia, are also mentioned by him for good conduct.
+Louis Langlade, No&euml;l Annance, and Bartlet Lyons, of the Indian
+Department, were in the action of the 26th and the affair of the 28th.
+McDonell of Odgensburg, and no doubt many others, ought to be added.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page27" id="page27"></a>[pg 27]</span>
+
+As to credit, in fact, every man in the region who did his duty and
+was ready to defend his country deserves it, and those named are but
+the examples who were put to the test. The brave Scotch settlers, few
+as they then were, were inspired with that spirit. The women stood
+literally ready to burn the roofs over their heads. The men, except
+those who had teams, who were drafted into an invaluable transport
+service, were formed into a company and drilled for the defence, under
+Lieut. Neil Morison and Captain James Wright, whose house was the
+headquarters of General De Watteville and a frequent scene of the
+council of officers. He was a tall and stern man, a Highlander, his
+name of &quot;Wright&quot; being a translation of his Gaelic one, &quot;MacIntheoir.&quot;
+His Ch&acirc;teauguay sword is said to have long hung on the wall in the
+house of one of his descendants.</p>
+
+<p>We should not be so ungrateful also as to forget the services of those
+faithful Indians, to whom, as all through the war, a share of the
+success was due.</p>
+
+<p>In 1847 it was decided in England, after much agitation, to issue what
+was called &quot;the War Medal,&quot; rewarding all those who had fought British
+battles during the years 1793 to 1814 and not received any special
+medal. Clasps were attached for each battle in which the recipient was
+engaged. A medal seems to have been given, as was meet, to almost
+every one on the field of Ch&acirc;teauguay, for 260 were distributed. It
+was, in fact, erroneously issued to some who were not present. One
+lieutenant, in particular, says Mr. Dion, is known from the De
+Salaberry letters to have himself lamented that he only came up the
+day after. The Indians and regulars also got medals. The simple record
+of what was done, however, is the best memorial of honor to those who
+were present on that memorable day.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. R.W. McLachlan relates his recollections of one of the veterans at
+Montreal. &quot;Clad in an old artillery uniform, he was always seen
+marching out alongside of the troops on review days. He was ever ready
+to recount his adventures on the day of battle. Although we have heard
+it often from
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28"></a>[pg 28]</span>
+his lips, all that we can remember is that: 'De Yankee
+see me fore I see him, and he shoot me drough de neck.'&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>It is the privilege of the men of Ch&acirc;teauguay to remember that their
+region is haunted by the spirits of heroes.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<p>&quot;The dead still play their part&quot;</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>sings the Canadian poet Sangster, and here the musing thought must for
+ever conjure up De Salaberry, McDonell, the 800 waiting behind their
+breastworks in the gloom of the woods, the touching scene of Captain
+Longtin and his Beauharnois men, and the stubborn onset of Daly
+against overwhelming odds. The meaning of it all is: that given a good
+cause, and the defence of our homes against wanton aggression, we can
+dare odds that otherwise would seem hopeless; that it is in the
+future, as in the past, the spirits of men, and not their material
+resources, which count for success; that we need only be brave and
+just, and ready to die, and our country can never be conquered; and
+that we shall always be able to preserve ourselves free in our course
+of development towards our own idea of a nation.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29"></a>[pg 29]</span>
+<br />
+<h2><a name="APPENDIX" id="APPENDIX"></a>
+APPENDIX.
+</h2>
+
+<h3>NOTES BY W. PATTERSON, M.A.</h3>
+
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+ Contents</a></p>
+
+<p>1. Mr. James Walsh, Sr., who still resides in Ormstown, Que., was
+informed by one Saint Charles Moreau, alias Legault, that the stone
+house, situated on the Ch&acirc;teauguay about two miles below the village
+of Ste. Martine, and known during the early years of the present
+century as &quot;The Stone Tavern,&quot; had just been built and finished the
+day before the battle, and the officers of the Canadian forces
+unceremoniously took possession of it on coming forward that evening.</p>
+
+<p>2. This same Legault or Moreau, shortly after the battle and before
+the dead were removed, visited the scene of the fight. There he saw
+several dead and several dying. He had a vivid recollection of the
+cruelty of the Indians. &quot;The cursed savages,&quot; said Legault, &quot;did
+nothing to secure the victory, and yet were foremost in plundering the
+dead and dying.&quot; He remembered in particular having seen an American
+officer, who was seriously wounded, lying on the field. The officer
+had a coin in his mouth which he was evidently anxious to save. An
+Indian, upon noticing this, bade him by making signs open his mouth
+and give up the piece. The command being apparently misunderstood, the
+Indian impatiently struck him with his tomahawk on the forehead. As
+his head was knocked back by the blow, the man opened his mouth, and
+his assailant taking out the coin passed on.</p>
+
+<p>3. Mr. David Monique, who lived at the &quot;Portage&quot; (modern Dewittville)
+at the time of the war, used to say, as Mr. Walsh many a time heard
+him relate, that his impression was that the Canadians did not hang
+upon the American rear after the fight, for had they done so, the
+American guns, which were all left behind, would have been captured. A
+division retreated up the Island of Jamestown by way of the &quot;Portage,&quot;
+on the South side of the Ch&acirc;teauguay, passing on their route Mr.
+Monique's farm. There they had their morning meal near his house, on
+October 27th, 1813. Their pork they fried on the ends of sticks before
+little fires. They were poorly clad. All were quite civil. They said
+that they had been &quot;badly licked the day before.&quot; Their retreat
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>[pg 30]</span>
+was
+witnessed by this man and his family, and certainly they were not
+pursued by the Canadians, nor, in his opinion, did the Canadians
+pursue the other division, which retired across the Outarde by way of
+the ford, made on their inward march, and since known as the &quot;American
+Ford,&quot; for in the following year, they returned for their guns and
+carried them off without molestation.</p>
+
+<p>4. Mr. Thomas Baird, merchant, of Ormstown, remembers well a Mr.
+Laberge, a very old man, who had been one of the soldiers on picquet
+duty at Ormstown, when the Americans invaded this country, in 1813.
+Laberge said that the Canadians stationed at this point were few in
+number, and were posted near the mouth of the Outarde, along the North
+bank of the Ch&acirc;teauguay, and also along the creek which now runs
+through the village of Ormstown. There the Canadians were taken by
+surprise. Those who escaped, retreated to De Salaberry's headquarters
+a few miles down the Ch&acirc;teauguay.</p>
+
+<p>Laberge also said that some of the Americans who were killed in the
+battle of the next day, October 26th, were buried on the bank of the
+creek, to which reference has been made. In this connection it is
+interesting to relate that while excavations were being made a few
+years ago for a roadway through this bank, the remains of five or six
+men were unearthed. The U.S.A. military buttons, the belt buckles and
+the bayonet found in their grave removed any doubt that these were the
+remains of American soldiers. This last item was kindly given the
+writer by Mr. Chas. Moe, who assisted in making the road.</p>
+
+<p>5. The ford over the Outarde, by which the Americans crossed, still
+remains and is known as the &quot;American Ford.&quot; It is about three miles
+west of Ormstown village. The annual Spring floods have undoubtedly
+changed it somewhat. Both banks of the river shew the place to be a
+coarse gravel bed. By the addition of more gravel they easily made a
+fine roadway.</p>
+
+<p>6. Mr. John Symons, who came to the Ch&acirc;teauguay River in 1828, and has
+lived in its vicinity ever since, and who at the time of writing
+resides in Ormstown, informed the writer that Alexander Williamson,
+one of the earliest settlers, used to say that what is spoken of as
+the battle of Ch&acirc;teauguay, is greatly magnified. Williamson regarded
+the Americans as a great lot of cowards who were glad to take
+advantage of the slightest opposition to return home.</p>
+
+<p>7. Mr. James Brodie, a retired farmer, residing in the village of
+Ormstown, and who also was well acquainted with Alexander
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page31" id="page31"></a>[pg 31]</span>
+ Williamson,
+states that Williamson was about twelve years of age when the battle
+was fought and was not present at the fight, but what he knew of it he
+had learned from others.</p>
+
+<p>8. Mr. William Allan who for years did business as a general
+storekeeper at Allans Corners, Que., informed the writer that he heard
+Alexander Williamson describe what is generally known as the battle,
+many times. &quot;Williamson,&quot; says Mr. Allan, &quot;could not repeat the same
+story twice.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>9. Mr. Brodie, in view of all the information he could gather from the
+early settlers, including Mr. Williamson, sincerely believes that the
+merits of De Salaberry have been much over-estimated. &quot;That officer
+has no claims,&quot; said he, &quot;to being a hero by what he did in that
+encounter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Yet the Canadians, so that gentleman gives the account, were most
+skilfully managed and made the best of their opportunity. Wearing the
+red coats, they were made to march in a circle for a time under the
+cover of the woods, and for a time exposed to the view of the
+Americans. To them, as they marched along, they gave the impression
+that they were a numerous force. These same Canadians, (Miss Anne
+Bryson, an aged lady, residing at Allans Corners, relates the story),
+still further exaggerated their strength by turning their coats whilst
+behind the trees, the white lining then giving them the appearance of
+being another regiment. The story is also told how the Indians, being
+well scattered, made the forests resound with their war cry.</p>
+
+<p>10. Where was the battle fought? The battlefield is situated about
+five or six acres west of the passenger bridge at Allans Corners,
+which is a small village on the Ch&acirc;teauguay River, thirteen miles
+below Huntingdon, three miles below Ormstown village, and about
+forty-three miles from Montreal. The site was a position on the North
+bank of the Ch&acirc;teauguay, where, almost at right angles to it, a deep
+and wide creek, then a large stream, emptied itself into the river. At
+that point was the foremost line of De Salaberry's breastworks,
+consisting of felled trees, stones and earth. There the main division
+of the Americans was repulsed. A sharp encounter in which the enemy
+were defeated by Captain Daly took place several acres below this on
+the opposite bank. Bullets are found every year on the scene.</p>
+
+<p>11. It is popularly believed that some of the American guns were sunk
+in the Ch&acirc;teauguay River at the point where the battle took place,
+although no trace of them has ever been found. The river is very deep
+there.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page32" id="page32"></a>[pg 32]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>12. About 13 acres west of Allans Corners there was a settlement of
+American squatters who fled the country before the outbreak of the
+war. They had planted an orchard which was always afterwards known as
+the &quot;American Orchard.&quot; Traces of it were to be seen a few years ago.
+The early settlers, Mr. Williamson among others, have handed down the
+fact that some of these people were employed as guides by the American
+invaders.</p>
+
+<p>13. Mr. James Gilbert, who was the first settler on the land on the
+south bank opposite the point where De Salaberry was encamped, years
+ago, when ploughing, unearthed the remains of a man wrapped in the
+American military dress, and at various times, Mr. George Nussey
+informed the writer, ploughed up bones.</p>
+
+<p>14. Mr. Williamson remembered well, Mr. Brodie informed the writer,
+that the settlers on the Ch&acirc;teauguay at the time of the battle,
+excepting of course the militia, were prepared to flee towards
+Montreal, intending to take with them what household effects they
+conveniently could, should the Canadian forces suffer defeat.</p>
+
+<p>15. Near De Salaberry's first line, on the north bank of the river,
+stood the old block house. Miss Anne Bryson remembers it well.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<br />
+<h2><a name="FOOTNOTES" id="FOOTNOTES"></a>
+FOOTNOTES.
+</h2>
+
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+ Contents</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1" /><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Wm. James' Mil. Oc. of War of 1812.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2" /><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> History of the War of 1812.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3" /><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> James says at St. Regis.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4" /><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5" /><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Letter of Hampton to Armstrong.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6" /><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7" /><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> To the Secretary of War, Sept. 25th, 1813, in Palmer's
+Hist. Register of the U.S., I., for 1814.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8" /><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9" /><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Chiefly Appleton's Cycl. of Am. Biog.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10" /><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Supplement to same. It contains a portrait of Izard.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11" /><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> H. Sulte.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12" /><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Garneau, Hist. Can.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13" /><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Garneau.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14" /><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Garneau.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15" /><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Christie gives him credit for this point.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16" /><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> See letters of &quot;Veritas.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17" /><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Christie Hist. Can.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18" /><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Wilkinson's letters</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19" /><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> All full accounts of the battle from this stage on are
+chiefly founded on that remarkable letter of a participant signing
+&quot;Temoin Oculaire,&quot; published in Montreal, 29 Oct., 1813. It is open,
+however, to some corrections of detail.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20" /><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Garneau and Sellar; but Coffin says they were
+French-Canadian <i>voyageurs</i>, and Mr. John Fraser, from tradition, says
+<i>five-sixths</i> French-Canadians. I have been unable to obtain the
+necessary verifications from Ottawa or elsewhere.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21" /><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> W.F. Coffin, Hist. War of 1812.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22" /><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Jame's Military Occurrences, I., 306.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23" /><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Coffin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24" /><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25" /><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Coffin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26" /><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> James, I., p. 308.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27" /><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> Purdy gives an interesting and clear account (<i>Vide</i>
+Palmer's Hist. Register for 1814) of this march and some other
+matters, in his report to Wilkinson.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28" /><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29" /><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> James says sixty.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30" /><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31" /><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Temoin Oc.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32" /><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Garneau.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33" /><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> Tradition.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34" /><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35" /><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36" /><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Temoin Oculaire.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37" /><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38" /><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Tradition.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39" /><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40" /><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Coffin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41" /><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42" /><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> This was &quot;a fact known to many persons now alive,&quot;
+according to a petition for a medal by his family in 1849.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43" /><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44" /><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> See his despatch.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45" /><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Sulte.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46" /><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> Hampton's Report on the Battle: Palmer's Hist. Register,
+1814.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47" /><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48" /><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49" /><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> &quot;Officier actif et zel&eacute;.&quot; (Temoin Oculaire.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50" /><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51" /><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> Palmer's Hist. Register.</p></div>
+
+
+</div>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14619 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14619 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14619)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of An Account Of The Battle Of Chateauguay
+by William D. Lighthall
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: An Account Of The Battle Of Chateauguay
+ Being A Lecture Delivered At Ormstown, March 8th, 1889
+
+Author: William D. Lighthall
+
+Release Date: January 6, 2005 [EBook #14619]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Wallace McLean, Richard J. Shiffer and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Châteauguay Literary and Historical Society
+
+
+ AN ACCOUNT
+
+ OF
+
+ THE BATTLE OF CHÂTEAUGUAY
+
+ BEING
+
+ A LECTURE DELIVERED AT ORMSTOWN,
+
+ MARCH 8TH, 1889
+
+ BY
+
+ W.D. LIGHTHALL, M.A.,
+
+ _Honorary Member of the Châteauguay Literary and Historical Society,
+ Secretary of the Antiquarian Society of Montreal, Life Corresponding
+ Member of the Scottish Society of Literature and Art, Author of "The
+ Young Seigneur," "Songs of the Great Dominion," etc._
+
+ WITH
+
+ SOME LOCAL AND PERSONAL NOTES
+
+ BY
+
+ W. PATTERSON, M.A.,
+
+ _Corresponding Secretary of the C.L.H.S._
+
+ "Raise high the Monumental Stone."
+ --_Charles Sangster_
+
+
+ MONTREAL
+
+ W. DRYSDALE & CO., PUBLISHERS, 232 ST. JAMES STREET.
+
+ 1889.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: LT.-COL CHARLES DE SALABERRY.]
+
+
+
+
+ LIST OF OFFICERS FOR 1888-89.
+
+
+ President.
+ Lt.-Col. Archibald McEachern, C.M.G,
+
+ Vice-Presidents.
+ J.E. Robidoux, Q.C., M.P.P.
+ Edward Holton, Esq., M.P.
+ Thomas Baird, Esq.
+
+ Recording Secretary.
+ Peter McLaren, B A., M.D.
+
+ Corresponding Secretary.
+ Wm. Patterson, M.A.
+
+ Treasurer.
+ Wm. McDougall, Esq.
+
+ Councillors.
+ Dr. McCormick.
+ Wm. J. Bryson, Esq.
+ Dugald Thomson. Esq.
+ Dr. Hall.
+ Rev. D.W. Morison, B.A.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LIST OF HONORARY MEMBERS
+
+ Edward Holton, M.P.
+ J.E. Robidoux, Q.C., M.P.P.
+ Dr. W. Geo. Beers.
+ James McGregor, Esq.
+ Watson Griffin, Esq.
+ J.R. Dougall, M.A.
+ W.D. Lighthall, M.A., B.C.L.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+On October 26th, 1888, the Châteauguay Literary and Historical Society
+was organized at Ormstown, Quebec, to foster Canadian patriotism by
+encouraging the study of Canadian history and Canadian literature. The
+Society began its labours at home, taking as its subject the battle
+whence it derives its name. Mr. W.D. Lighthall, M.A., B.C.L., an
+honorary member, was asked to prepare an account of that victory, and
+kindly responded by his lecture, which he delivered before the Society
+on March 8th, 1889. Pleasure is now felt in offering this lecture, in
+the interests of the Society, to the Canadian world, no apology being
+required at a time when patriotic literature is in great demand. Mr.
+Lighthall's researches have been discussed by the members, and the
+belief is prevalent that his work touching this important item of
+history, in so far as accuracy is concerned, stands unrivalled, the
+previous authorities having been carefully compared and their
+testimony put together.
+
+In the Appendix will be found a number of notes having a bearing on
+the battle and its times. The portrait frontispiece is from a line
+engraving kindly lent by Gerald E. Hart, Esq., President of the
+Society for Historical Studies. The drawing of the map, after the
+design of the author, is due to J.A.U. Beaudry, Esq., C.E., Curator of
+the Antiquarian Society of Montreal.
+
+The first part of the account is partly based upon R. Christie's
+History of Lower Canada; but William James' Military Occurrences of
+the War of 1812, was found the most accurate in statistical details,
+and is, therefore, frequently followed. Other authorities are referred
+to in their places.
+
+The battle of Châteauguay, in view of the important results that
+followed it, is an event which all Canadians will appreciate, and to
+which posterity will have reason to point the finger of admiration.
+All nationalities concerned in building up this country, when united
+by a common danger, bore in it an honorable part, as they fought side
+by side in defence of their homes and those that were dear to them,
+from the wanton aggression of an ungenerous foe.
+
+The Society hopes to continue its work and to offer other pamphlets in
+the near future, so that this effort on its part may be regarded as
+the first of a series. Another of its immediate objects is the
+erection of a monument on the battlefield, to accomplish which
+pecuniary assistance is required. The belief is held that no
+opportunity should be lost to educate the rising generation to form a
+true conception of the grandeur of the heritage that is ours,
+
+ W.P.
+
+ ORMSTOWN,
+ _October 29th, 1889._
+
+
+
+
+THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY.
+
+
+The War of 1812 has been called by an able historian "the afterclap of
+the Revolution." The Revolution was, indeed, true thunder--a
+courageous and, in the main, high-principled struggle. Its afterclap
+of 1812 displayed little but empty bombast and greed. In the one,
+brave leaders risked their lives in that defence of rights which has
+made their enterprise an epoch in man's history; in the other, a mean
+and braggart spirit actuated its promoters to strike in the back that
+nation which almost alone was carrying on, in the best spirit of the
+Revolution, the struggle for the liberties of Europe against the
+designs of Napoleon. The brave spirits of the War of Freedom led the
+affairs of the United States no longer. All the contemptible elements,
+all the boasters, all those who had done least in the real fighting,
+had long come out of their shells and united to establish the mighty
+rhetorical school of the Spread Eagle! It was the legions of Spread
+Eagleism who wore to have the glory to be got in taking advantage of
+harassed England. The Battle of Châteauguay was one of the answers to
+that illusion.
+
+The War was introduced by a Declaration, in which President Madison,
+in smooth and elaborate terms, pretended that his nation found cause
+for it in the tyrannical exercise by British warships of what was
+called _The Right of Search_--that is to say, a claim of ships of war
+to stop the ships of other nations and search them for deserters and
+contraband goods. That this was not, however, the true cause, was
+shown by the facts and cries of the war.
+
+Firstly, the right was one belonging to all nations by international
+law; secondly, though it was at once relinquished by Britain in a
+conciliatory spirit, the Americans persisted in their campaign;
+thirdly, at the close of the war they did not insist at all on the
+abrogation of the Right of Search, in the treaty of peace.
+
+It would be much easier to show what the real causes were:-(1), hatred
+of England, lasting over from the Revolution; (2), envy of her
+commerce and prestige; and especially (3) the scheme for the conquest
+of Canada.
+
+The course of the negotiations exhibit a thoroughly ungenerous course
+on the part of the American authorities, contrasted with a desire not
+to offend on the part of Britain. President Madison's Declaration of
+War was made on the 18th of June, 1812, and the British Government,
+after using every honorable overture for friendship, only issued
+theirs in October, couching it, besides, in terms of regret and
+reproach at the unfairness in which Madison's party persisted. Owing
+to that unfairness and other causes the enterprise also was by no
+means unanimously popular in the States. A convention of delegates
+from the counties of New York, held in the capitol at Albany, on the
+17th and 18th of September, and called the New York Convention,
+condemned Madison's party for declaring the war, on account of its
+injustice, and "as having been undertaken," they said, "from motives
+entirely distinct from those which have been hitherto avowed." The New
+England States treated it coldly. Maryland disapproved through her
+Legislature. Many persons everywhere looked on it as a mere political
+scheme, and when drafted for service in frequent cases bought
+themselves substitutes.
+
+It was soon found that a mistake had been made in attacking Canada.
+That happened which might be expected where bodies of men with
+inflated ideas of glory and no experience attack men fighting
+desperately for their homes, and officers and veterans who had seen
+such service as the Napoleonic wars. The British, with an astuteness
+which is oftener the character credited to their opponents, managed to
+get earliest word of the Declaration sent to their own forts on the
+Lakes, and promptly captured the American fort Michilimackinac. They
+then followed with the daring capture of the stronghold of Detroit,
+amply equipped and garrisoned, by a little handful of men under the
+heroic General Brock, who simply went before it and demanded its
+surrender, whereupon it was given up, together with the whole
+Territory of Michigan. The presence of such trained British officers
+as Brock and of army veterans in the ranks was a very great advantage.
+Poor Brock soon afterwards died in his memorable charge at the victory
+of Queenston Heights.
+
+That year--the first of the War--is known as a succession of fiascos
+for the Americans. The other conspicuous aspect of it is that the
+attacked points were, with the exception of a little skirmishing at
+St. Regis and Lacolle, all in the Province of Upper Canada.
+
+It was only towards the close of the campaign of the next
+year--1813--that Lower Canada was gravely threatened.
+
+The Americans, emboldened by several successes, and having put a great
+many men into the field, believed that the struggle might easily be
+terminated by capturing Montreal. The advance upon Lower Canada took
+place under General James Wilkinson in chief command, with 8,826 men
+and 58 guns and howitzers.[1] He had intended to attack Kingston. "At
+Montreal, however," wrote the Secretary of War, Armstrong, in phrases
+colored by the prevailing school of rhetoric, "you find the weaker
+place and the smallest force to encounter.... You hold a position
+which completely severs the enemy's line of operations, and which,
+while it restrains all below, withers and perishes all above itself."
+This great position--for it is so--Colonel Coffin[2] compares it to
+Vicksburg for natural strength--was to be approached by two routes: by
+Wilkinson himself in boats down the St Lawrence, and by Major-General
+Wade Hampton, his almost independent subordinate, from the Champlain
+border; and it was planned that the two armies should meet at the
+foot of Isle Perrot,[3] thence to strike together across the Lake to
+Lachine, and on to the city, which seems to have had not over, if as
+many as, a thousand regulars to defend it.
+
+Wade Hampton, with over 5,000 men (an effective regular force of 4,053
+rank and file, about 1,500 militia and ten cannon[4]), was at first on
+the Vermont side of Lake Champlain at Burlington[5]. He crossed to the
+New York side, directing his march for Caughnawaga on the St.
+Lawrence. His army[6], except the militia, was the same which, with a
+certain General Dearborn at its head, paraded irregularly across the
+lines and returned to Pittsburgh in the autumn of 1812. During the
+year since elapsed the men had been drilled by Major-General Izard,
+who had served in the French Army. They were all in uniform, well
+clothed and equipped--in short, Hampton commanded, if not the most
+numerous, certainly the most effective, regular army which the United
+States were able to send into the field during the War. Crossing the
+border on the 20th of September, 1813, he surprised a small picket of
+British at Odelltown, a Loyalist settlement afterwards celebrated for
+a battle in the Rebellion of 1837. He soon found himself met with what
+seemed to him great difficulties, for the army was plunged into an
+extensive swampy wood, the only road through which was rendered
+impracticable by fallen trees and barricades, behind which and in the
+gloomy forests surrounding were every here and there to be seen
+Indians and infantry crawling and flitting about, who fired upon them
+from unexpected ambushes. Hampton's men were not of a kind to face
+this. "The perfect rawness of the troops," writes he, "with the
+exception of not a single platoon, has been a source of much
+solicitude to the best-informed among us."[7] They were ignorant,
+insubordinate, and forever "falling off."[8]
+
+Urging on the scattered defenders was, no doubt, to be seen from time
+to time a stout-built, vigorous officer with stripes across the breast
+of his dark gray uniform, dashing about from point to point giving
+fierce orders. This was De Salaberry.
+
+Not reflecting--for he seems to have had the information--that the
+wood was only fifteen miles or so in depth, the Canadians few in
+number, and that a short press forward would have brought him into the
+open country of L'Acadie leading towards Montreal, the American
+General in two days withdrew along the border towards Châteauguay Four
+Corners, alleging the great drought of that year as a reason for
+wishing to descend by the River Châteauguay. At the Corners he rested
+his army for many days.
+
+Wade Hampton was a type of the large slaveholders of the South. Nearly
+sixty years of age, self-important, fiery and over-indulgent in drink,
+of large, imposing figure, of some reputed service in the Revolution,
+and with a record as Congressman and Presidential elector, he was one
+whose chief virtues were not patience and humility. In 1809 he had
+been made a brigadier-general and stationed at New Orleans; but in
+consequence of continual disagreements with his subordinates, was
+superseded in 1812 by Wilkinson, whom he consequently hated. In the
+spring of 1813 he received his Major-General's commission. He had
+acquired his large fortune by land speculations, and at his death some
+time later was supposed to be the wealthiest planter in the United
+States, owning 3,000 slaves. He is said to have ably administered his
+estate.[9]
+
+Hampton had another slave-holding South Carolinian by his side, young
+Brigadier-General George Izard, son and descendant of aristocrats and
+statesmen, well-educated in the soldier's profession, college-bred,
+travelled, and who had served in the French Army. Izard led the main
+column at the battle shortly to ensue.[10]
+
+Another officer of the circle--who seems to have been the ablest--was
+Colonel James Purdy, on whom the brunt of the American work and
+fighting were to fall, and who seems to have done his best in a
+struggle against natural difficulties and against the incompetency of
+both his commander and men.
+
+When Hampton moved to Four Corners, Lieut-Colonel De Salaberry, with
+the Canadian Voltigeurs, moved in like manner westward to the region
+of the Châteauguay and English Rivers. The Voltigeur troops were
+French-Canadians with a small sprinkling of British. Their
+organization was as follows:--Sir George Prevost, on the approach of
+war, May 28th, 1812, ordered the levy of four French volunteer
+battalions, to be made up of unmarried men from 18 to 25 years old.
+They were to be choice troops, and trained like regulars. Charles
+Michel d'Irumberry De Salaberry, then high in the regard of his people
+as a military hero, was chosen to rally the recruits, issued a
+stirring poster calling the French-Canadians to arms, and acted with
+such extraordinary energy that the troops were in hand in two days.
+
+De Salaberry was a perfect type of the old French-Canadian military
+gentry, a stock of men of whom very little remains, a breed of leaders
+of, on the whole, more vigorous forms, more active temperaments, than
+the average--descendants inheriting the qualities of the bravest and
+most adventurous individuals of former times. They were the natural
+result of the feudal _régime_, with which they have passed away.
+Though a gentry, they were a poor one, possessed of little else than
+quantities of forest lands. The officers of the Voltigeurs were
+selected out of the same class, united with a number of English of
+similar stamp. De Salaberry himself was born in the little cottage
+manor-house of Beauport, near Quebec, on the 19th of Nov., 1778.[11]
+Taking to soldiering like a duck to water when very young, he enrolled
+as volunteer in the 44th. At sixteen, the Duke of Kent, who was then
+in Canada, and delighted in friendly acts towards the seigneurs, got
+him a commission in the 60th, with which regiment he left at once for
+the West Indian Isle of Dominica. There he saw terrible service, for
+all the men of his battalion except three were killed or wounded
+during the seige of Fort Matilda. Nevertheless, the young fellow kept
+gay. "Our uniforms," he wrote to his father, "cost very dear; but I
+have received £40, and with that I am going to give myself what will
+make a fine figure." "This fine large boy of sixteen years," says
+Benjamin Sulte in his History of the French-Canadians, "strong as a
+Hercules ... with smiling face ... made a furore at parties.... As he
+was never sick, they employed him everywhere. Fevers reduced his
+battalion to 200 men, but touched not him." Though so young, he was
+charged with covering the evacuation of Fort Matilda.[12]
+
+The Duke of Kent, who was commanding at Halifax, kept a friendly eye
+upon him, and gave him much personal advice, on one occasion
+dissuading him from an inadvisable marriage. He now took him into his
+own regiment. De Salaberry still saw rough service, was shipwrecked,
+served in the West Indies again, and then fought in Europe and the
+disastrous expedition to Walcheren, where he was placed in the most
+advanced posts.[13] Returning to his 60th, he was made captain in
+1799. "I have often heard say," narrates De Gaspé, "that his company
+and that of Captain Chandler were the best drilled in the regiment."
+In the West Indies he was drawn into a duel which caused him sorrow
+until his dying day, for in it he was forced by the "code of honor" to
+kill a German fellow-officer, and bore a scar of the affair ever after
+on his forehead. It is related that by his great strength he cut the
+German in two.
+
+"The prodigious force with which he was endowed," says Sulte, "had
+made of him an exceptional being in the eyes of the soldiers," and
+when he returned to Canada after West Indian service of eleven
+years[14] a little before the war of 1812, he was already the hero of
+the French-Canadians. That the stories of his strength and vigor are
+true is corroborated by every circumstance which has been perpetuated
+about him. His ruddy, energetic face is preserved in portraits among
+his family, and his walking-stick, said to be an enormous article, is
+kept at Quebec in the collection of the Literary and Historical
+Society.
+
+De Salaberry's Voltigeurs were organized at a peculiar juncture. "The
+discords between French and English in Quebec had emboldened the
+United States," says Garneau, "and the English Governors harassed the
+French. An opposite conduct might bring back calm to men's spirits.
+The Governor of Nova Scotia, Sir George Provost, a former officer, of
+Swiss origin, offered all the conditions desirable.... Arriving at
+Quebec, Sir George Provost strove to introduce peace and to remove
+animosity. He showed the completest confidence in the fidelity of the
+French-Canadians, and studied how to prove at every opportunity that
+the accusations of treason which had been brought against them had
+left no trace in the soul of England nor in his own.... Soon the
+liveliest sympathy arose between Sir George Prevost and the
+people."[15] It was in pursuance of this policy that the order to
+raise the Voltigeur force was given by him.
+
+While Hampton was at Four Corners, Sir George, thus now
+Commander-in-Chief of all the forces in Canada, was at the camp which
+had just been formed at La Fourche, and of which a description is
+given by Mr. Sellar in his history of the district. Sir George was a
+man quite devoid of the decisiveness necessary to a soldier, and
+though, as we have seen, he was useful in reconciling the French, his
+errors in military matters several times brought disgrace on the
+British forces, and gave rise to storms of rage and disgust among
+them.[16] De Salaberry was now ordered by him on the Quixotic errand
+of attacking, with about 200 Voltigeurs and some Indians, the large
+camp of Hampton at Four Corners. De Salaberry promptly obeyed these
+impracticable orders, and it is probably at this juncture that a
+little anecdote comes in which I have heard as told by one of his men.
+De Salaberry was down the river dining at a tavern, when a despatch
+was brought to him.
+
+"D---- it!" he exclaimed, jumping up from his seat, "Hampton is at
+Four Corners, and I must go and fight him!" and mounting his fine
+white charger, he dashed away from the door.
+
+On the 1st of October he crept up with his force to the edge of the
+American camp. There they saw the assemblage spread out in all the
+array of war, with its host of tents, stacked guns, flags, moving men
+and sentries, and he prepared to strike it as ordered. One of his
+Indians indiscreetly discharged his musket. The camp was in alarm in
+an instant. De Salaberry, finding his approach discovered, immediately
+collected about fifty of his Voltigeurs, with whom and the Indians he
+pushed into the enemy's advanced camp, consisting of about 800 men,
+and, catching them in their confusion, drove them for a considerable
+distance, until, seeing the main body manoeuvring to cut off his
+little handful, he fell back and took up his position at the skirt of
+the woods. Once again he sallied out and charged, but with all the
+army now thoroughly aroused it was useless, and the Indians having
+retreated, most of his own men ran off, leaving him and Captains
+Chevalier Duchesnay and Gaucher, officers much like himself in stamp,
+with a few trusty Voltigeurs to skirmish with the enemy as long as
+daylight permitted it.[17] He then withdrew to Châteauguay, taking the
+precaution of breaking up the forest road in his rear, in pursuance of
+the general policy of the campaign, which was to destroy and obstruct
+as much as possible in the path of the enemy. Acquainting himself also
+with the ground over which Hampton was expected to make his way into
+the Province, he finally stopped, selected and took up the position
+where the battle afterwards took place, in a thick wood on the left
+bank of the Châteauguay River at the distance of two or three leagues
+above its _Fork_ with English River, where he threw up his works of
+defence, with the approval of General De Watteville. The plan of the
+British commanders, owing to the smallness and inefficiency of their
+forces, was the stern one of burning and destroying all houses and
+property, and retreating slowly to the St. Lawrence, harassing the
+enemy in his advance.[18] The position chosen was as strong as the
+nature of that flat and wooded country and the route of the American
+march would allow. Here his experience and quick eye came in.[19]
+
+Now as to the measures of fortification taken by De Salaberry. In his
+rear there was a small rapid where the river was fordable in two spots
+close to one another. He commanded this with a strong breastwork and a
+guard. There were four ravines which issued from the very thick woods,
+crossing the road, and distant from each other two hundred yards or
+so. On their banks he made his men fell trees and build them into
+breastworks--"a kind of parapet extending into the woods some
+distance." To prevent the American cannon from bearing on these
+breastworks, he felled trees and bush, covering a large stretch of
+ground with obstructions in the front. The breastwork on the
+front-line formed an obtuse angle at the right of the road, and
+extended along the curves of the ravine. The Colonel then sent forward
+to a spot some distance in advance of the front-line a party of
+Beauharnois' axemen, well accustomed to felling trees, who destroyed
+the bridges and obstructed the road with their fragments and fallen
+trees and brush. Lieut. Guy, with twenty Voltigeurs, guarded them in
+front, and Lieut. Johnson, with about the same number, in rear.
+Working incessantly, these axemen made a formidable series of such
+obstructions in front of the first line, extending from the river
+three or four acres into the woods, where they joined an almost
+impracticable marsh. On the opposite bank of the river De Salaberry
+also placed a picket of sixty Beauharnois militia under Captain
+Bruyère, so as to check any advance on the ford, which was his weak
+point in the rear.
+
+Part of De Salaberry's line at the abattis, was a small blockhouse on
+the river-bank (which, however, is not that which has since been
+reputed to be the one concerned), and the works there blocked the
+commencement of the wood and looked out on a broadening plain or level
+of clearings, across which the enemy would have to pass.
+
+The Glengarry men now came down, under McDonell of Ogdensburgh, famous
+for his adventurous capture of that place, and whose exploit the
+Salaberry was about to match. Lieut.-Colonel McDonell--"Red
+George"--was at Prescott drilling a new force of Canadian Fencibles,
+made up, some say, chiefly of Scotch and loyalists,[20] others chiefly
+of French boatmen, when Sir George Prevost asked him how soon he could
+have his men ready to go down to Châteauguay. "As soon as they have
+done their dinner!" he responded. Within a few hours he had provided
+them with _batteaux_, and they were off down the rapids. When Sir
+George himself, who was on the way, got there, he, to his great
+surprise found McDonell before him. "Where are your men?" said he.
+"There," said the Highland Colonel, pointing to his force resting on
+the ground--"not a man absent."[21]
+
+For nearly three weeks the parties of Canadian workers worked
+continually upon the plan of De Salaberry, while Hampton was
+considering, preparing, reviewing his troops, and arranging for a
+communication with Wilkinson so soon as the latter should have passed
+Ogdensburg on his way down the St. Lawrence.
+
+On the 21st of October the advance down the Châteauguay commenced. The
+first move was a rapid march by General Izard with the light-equipped
+troops and a regiment of the line, who surprised a party of about
+ten[22] Indians sitting late in the afternoon at their evening meal at
+the junction of the Outarde and Châteauguay Rivers, and killed one of
+them. There Izard encamped and proceeded to establish a road of
+communication with Hampton. Word was soon brought to Major Henry, of
+the Beauharnois' Militia, commanding on the English River. Henry sent
+word to General De Watteville at La Fourche, and had Captains Levesque
+and Debartzch advance immediately with the flank companies of the 5th
+Battalion of embodied militia and about 200 men of the Beauharnois'
+division. This was the preliminary move towards the battle.
+
+They advanced about six miles that night up the Châteauguay from La
+Fourche, when they came to a wood which it would not have been prudent
+to enter in the dark. Next morning early they were joined by De
+Salaberry with his Voltigeurs and the light company of Captain
+Ferguson, an officer who took a front place in the affair. De
+Salaberry brought all these companies about a league up the bank to
+the place he had fortified, and there stopped. An American patrol
+party being observed in front, General De Watteville came over
+himself, visited the outposts, approved of them, and the work
+proceeded.[23] That evening the main body of the Americans encamped at
+Sear's, about twenty-five miles above the Châteauguay's mouth. The
+engineers had cut a road for the ten cannon, and with great labor and
+difficulty had dragged them thus far.[24]
+
+Within two days more Hampton's men had opened and completed a large
+and practicable road, which is still traceable, from his position at
+Four Corners twenty-four miles through the woods and morasses, and
+brought up his guns and stores to his new position, about seven miles
+from De Salaberry's. (About Dewittville?)
+
+[Illustration: SKETCH OF THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY--OCT 26, 1813]
+
+From this point he despatched Colonel Purdy with about 1,500 men,
+composed of a light brigade (the 1st Brigade of the American Army[25])
+and a strong body of the infantry of the line, at an early hour in the
+night of the 25th, across the Châteauguay and down its right bank[26]
+at a bend adjoining what is now known as the Cross Farm, with orders
+to gain the ford and fall on the rear of Lieut.-Colonel De Salaberry's
+position, while the main body, under General Izard, were to commence
+the attack in front. Purdy's brigade crossed not far above De
+Salaberry, and proceeded into the woods of the opposite side. A cedar
+swamp, an unexpected stream in which they floundered, and the
+ignorance of their guides misled and bewildered them. This was the
+fault of Hampton, and due to his headstrongness, for the guides had
+protested that they did not know that side of the Châteauguay; but he
+had ordered them to proceed. Purdy's command became scattered, were
+forced to halt in confusion, and had to sleep in the open woods, cold,
+wet, exhausted, and apprehensive.[27] General Hampton, however, in the
+morning, fully expected to hear them attacking the ford, advanced, and
+at ten o'clock his troops appeared in sight of the party of busy
+woodchoppers, about 3,500 men, with three squadrons of cavalry,
+marching in column along the high road, commanded by General Izard.
+Lieut. Guy's picket fired, the workmen dropped work and ran, Guy
+retired upon Johnson, and both Lieutenants retreated with their men to
+the completed abattis, where they formed up again and began to fire
+smartly.
+
+De Salaberry, on hearing the firing, promptly advanced with the light
+company of the Canadian Fencibles, commanded by Captain Ferguson,
+"flanked by twenty-two Indians on the right and centre,"[28] and two
+companies of his Voltigeurs, commanded by Captains Chevalier and Louis
+Juchereau Duchesnay. Ferguson's companies he posted on the right, in
+front of the abattis, in extended order, its right skirting on the
+adjoining woods and abattis, among which were distributed a few
+Abenaquis Indians. The three officers, Ferguson and the two
+Duchesnays, executed the movements required of them with the coolness
+of a day of parade. The Voltigeur company of the oldest of the
+Duchesnays, known as "the Chevalier," occupied, in extended order, the
+ground from the left of Ferguson's Company to the Châteauguay, and the
+company under Captain Louis Juchereau Duchesnay, with about
+thirty-five[29] Sedentary Militia under Captain Longtin, were thrown
+back along the margin of the river, hidden among the trees and bushes,
+so as to flank Colonel Purdy's men, or prevent him from flanking the
+Canadian position. Between the abattis and the front line were a
+company of Voltigeurs, Captain Lecuyer commanding, and beyond them on
+the right a light company (that of the 5th Battalion) of embodied
+militia with their side pickets, under Captain Debartzch; then, to the
+right of them, in the woods, the Indians under Captain La Mothe. There
+were thus in the front only about 240 Canadians. The positions,
+however, occupied about a mile along the river, and the rest of the
+troops--some 600--were distributed among the other breastworks, under
+command of McDonell.[30]
+
+The battle was now on the point of commencing. In the centre of the
+front stood De Salaberry watching the enemy, whose characteristics he
+had noted twice before. All waited in suspense. A touching scene was
+taking place among the Beauharnois Militia further back, where Captain
+Longtin caused his men to kneel, went through a short prayer with
+them, and then rising, said: "that now they had fulfilled their duty
+to their God, they would fulfil that to their King."[31]
+
+Meanwhile, the enemy kept steadily moving along the road in column. A
+tall mounted American officer rode forward and began a harangue to the
+Canadians in French. "Brave Canadians," said he, "give yourselves
+over; we do not wish to do you any harm!"[32] De Salaberry, seeing
+that his moment was come, sprang upon a stump,[33] discharged his
+musket as a signal to begin, and brought the American officer off his
+horse by the shot. The enemy at the time were exposed to being taken
+on both front and side. The bugles blared, the front companies
+immediately opened fire, and the battle was begun. Izard's force were
+in the open plain, while their foes were hidden in a thick wood. The
+squadrons of cavalry and four cannon which they had brought thus far
+were found to be useless there. They, however, commenced a
+spirited[34] fire in battalion volley; but, from the position of the
+line, it was almost totally thrown to the right of the Canadians, and
+of no effect whatever. They soon faced to the right, and filing up
+with speed, changed their front parallel with the lines of
+breastworks, when the engagement became general, and their fire
+compelled the retreat, behind the front edge of the breastwork[35] of
+a few skirmishers near the left, who had been rather advanced in the
+centre of the line. This retreat being mistaken by the enemy for a
+flight, a universal shout ensued, which was re-echoed, to their
+surprise, by the Canadians and the Glengarry men in reserve under
+Lieut.-Colonel McDonell. Now was the supreme moment of the battle. De
+Salaberry ordered his bugleman to sound the advance. "This was heard
+by Lieut-Colonel McDonell, who, thinking the Colonel was in want of
+support, caused his own bugles to answer, and immediately advanced
+with two of his companies from the third and fourth lines to the first
+and second."[36] "All these movements were executed with great
+rapidity." De Salaberry, at the same time, as a _ruse de guerre_,
+ordered "ten or twelve buglemen into the adjoining woods with orders
+to separate and blow with all their might."[37] The enemy, as De
+Salaberry calculated, suspected that the Canadians were advancing in
+great numbers to circumvent them. The Colonel, while giving these
+orders, is said to have done so facing his men, with his back against
+a tree.[38] The noise of the engagement towards its end brought on
+Colonel Purdy's division on the opposite side of the river, which,
+having driven in the picquet of sixty Beauharnois Sedentary Militia
+under Captain Bruyère, were pressing on for the ford, whereupon De
+Salaberry ordered Lieut.-Colonel McDonell, who had returned to his
+position to check the enemy there, and Captain Daly was chosen, with
+the light company of the 3rd Battalion Embodied Militia, numbering
+seventy men,[39] to cross and take up the ground abandoned by the
+picket.
+
+De Salaberry, then seeing that the action was about to become serious
+on the right, left his position in the centre of the front and placed
+himself on the left with the troops along the bank, where, standing on
+a stump.[40] he could see, through his field-glass, Captain Daly with
+his men crossing the ford. The latter took with him such of the
+Beauharnois men as had rallied[41] up, and led by him, they advanced
+along the river-bank and made, in the words of Purdy afterwards, "a
+furious assault" upon the advanced guard of the Americans, whom they
+drove back upon themselves. "The bravery of Captain Daly," wrote the
+Temoin Oculaire--whose account, it is to be remembered, was published
+a few days afterwards--"who literally led his company into the midst
+of the enemy, could not be surpassed."
+
+Purdy's main body finally recovered, and charged forward, however,
+emerging in great force from the wood.
+
+Captain Daly's men, as they had been taught by Lieut.-Colonel
+McDonell, knelt and fired a volley kneeling. The return volley was
+fired by tenfold numbers, and but for that precaution would have
+destroyed nearly the whole of Captain Daly's command. As it was, he
+received a severe wound, and with his men, several of whom were
+wounded and himself a second time, was compelled to retreat, which the
+men did in very good order under Lieut. Benjamin Schiller. The latter
+distinguished himself greatly. He bore off his wounded captain to a
+safe place, and returning, took command at request of the men. At one
+juncture he was engaged, hand to hand, with a very formidable
+adversary, whose head he cut off with a single blow of his sabre.[42]
+
+Purdy's force eventually were moving on in overwhelming numbers, and
+for a moment their shouts of victory were heard by the little force
+lying in suspense behind the barricades on the opposite bank. In
+coming out of the wood they swarmed down along the bank of the river.
+Now was the time for Captains Louis Duchesnay and Longtin's companies
+concealed in the river-side bushes opposite. De Salaberry instantly
+appears upon the scene, gives the word of command, and the bushes
+flame out with a hidden and destructive fire. The American shouts of
+victory turn into cries of confusion. In the utmost disorder they make
+a tumultuous and precipitate retreat into the woods. Thus, at 2.30
+p.m., came the failure of Purdy's flanking movement.
+
+As one may easily imagine, this series of incidents took several
+hours.
+
+In the front, General Hampton for about an hour kept his soldiers
+ready in momentary expectation of attack by De Salaberry, and of
+hearing of Purdy's success. When he heard that the latter had failed,
+however, he sent him word to withdraw his column to a shoal four or
+five miles above and cross over, and ordered General Izard to retire
+his brigade to a position about three miles in the rear, to which
+place the baggage had been ordered forward. Hampton thus retired,
+leaving De Salaberry master of the field, with scarcely 300 men in
+actual action, and no British guns anywhere within seven miles.[43]
+
+Sir George Prevost, with Major-General De Watteville, arrived on the
+ground at the close of the engagement and overlooked De Salaberry's
+arrangements, thanked him with great praise, and then immediately
+wrote an inaccurate despatch to England, in which he claimed the
+principal credit for _himself_.[44] That evening De Salaberry wrote to
+his father; "I have won a victory mounted on a wooden horse!"[45]
+
+After the battle was over the American firing did not cease, for no
+sooner did darkness come on than Purdy's scattered command, moving up
+the right bank, commenced a most destructive fire on each other,
+mistaking them for the British, and they continued it the greater part
+of the night. The final incident took place just as day dawned on the
+27th, when about twenty Americans, mistaking some of the Canadian
+militia on the left bank for their own people, were compelled by them
+to surrender.
+
+That day at dawn McDonell came up in command of Captain Rouville's
+Company of Voltigeurs, Captain Levesque's Company of Grenadiers (of
+the 5th Battalion Incorporated Militia), and sixty men of the
+Beauharnois Division. De Salaberry turned over to McDonell the defence
+of the abatis or obstructions in front, and the hero of Ogdensburgh
+pushed on to two miles further than before. The day passed in
+expectation of a second attack, but no enemy appeared.
+
+Meanwhile, the straggling order which the nature of the swamp and
+forest imposed on Purdy's retreat exposed him to rear attacks from the
+Indians, which were repeated after dark and caused him loss.[46]
+
+A large quantity of muskets, drums, knapsacks, provisions and arms
+were found on Purdy's shore, especially indicating the confusion just
+previous to their retreat. Upwards of ninety bodies and graves were
+found on that bank,[47] among them two or three officers of
+distinction. On Hampton's field were two dead horses, and the enemy
+were there seen carrying off several of the wounded in carts.
+
+The Canadian loss was only two killed, sixteen wounded, and four
+missing. Three missing were by mistake at first included among the
+killed in the returns.[48]
+
+Time now wore on, another night was passed, and the morning of the
+28th arrived, when Captain La Mothe, with about 150 Indians,
+reconnoitred the enemy, who, according to the report of Captain
+Hughes, of the Engineers, had abandoned his camp the day before.
+
+A party of the Beauharnois Militia, supported by Captain Debartzch,
+burnt and destroyed the newly-erected bridges within a mile of the
+enemy's camp, which was now about one and a half leagues from Piper's
+Road, _i.e._, about two leagues from his former position. On the same
+evening the Indians, under Captain La Mothe,[49] proceeded through the
+woods and came up with the enemy's rear-guard. Here a slight skirmish
+ensued, in which the Americans lost one killed and seven wounded.
+
+Hampton, having re-occupied his late position, called a council of
+war, where it was determined to fall back and occupy the former
+position at Four Corners, to secure their communication with the
+United States; from thence either to retire to winter quarters or be
+ready to re-enter Lower Canada.
+
+"On that day or the day previous Captain Debartzch, of the Militia,
+was sent to the American headquarters with a flag. When he stated the
+number and description of troops by which General Hampton had been
+opposed, the latter, scarcely able to keep his temper, insisted that
+the British force amounted to 7,000 men. On being assured of the
+contrary, he asked: 'What, then, made the woods ring so with bugles?'
+Captain Debartzch explained this; but it was apparently to no
+purpose."[50]
+
+The Americans retired on the 29th. "On the 30th a party of Indian
+Chasseurs, under Captain Ducharme, reported that the enemy had
+abandoned his camp at Piper's Road in the greatest disorder, and was
+on the road to Four Corners." The Canadians followed up and hung upon
+the rear and embarrassed the retreat. Canada was saved!
+
+General Wilkinson was very severe on his fellow-general. "On the 4th
+of November," he complains, "the British garrison of Montreal
+consisted solely of 400 marines and 200 soldiers. What a golden,
+glorious opportunity has been lost by the caprice of Major-General
+Hampton!"[51] Poor man, he was to have pretty much the same luck
+himself just afterwards! Wilkinson's army proceeded on its own course
+down the river, but was almost as ignominiously defeated at Chrysler's
+Farm on the 10th of November, where his 3,000 or 4,000 men were
+matched, partly in open field and partly with the assistance of a ruse
+as at Châteauguay, against 800 British and thirty Indians, under
+Colonel Morison, a man equally brave and able with McDonell and De
+Salaberry.
+
+Mr. Dion, of Chambly, to whom the erection of a fine bronze statue of
+De Salaberry is due, has related to me a number of particulars from De
+Salaberry's letters held by his relatives. The hero complains bitterly
+of Prevost and De Watteville--"those two Swiss"--and that on account
+of his religion he could get no higher than a Lieut.-Colonel. From the
+same letters it appears that the "Temoin Oculaire" was a young lawyer
+named O'Sullivan, later, Judge O'Sullivan, a man partly of Irish
+family, in person large and handsome, and a great friend of De
+Salaberry, who ever remained grateful to him for preserving record of
+his deed in his celebrated letter. It is commonly attributed to D.B.
+Viger. Another little fact mentioned in the correspondence of De
+Salaberry is that his men in the battle were barefooted.
+
+The almost unique nature of the victory strikes one. Its keystone was
+De Salaberry's masterly use of illusion. Of it was the choice of a
+thick wood to conceal his small force, their entrenchment behind the
+abatis and in bush positions, the unexpected fire from the left bank
+upon Purdy, the Indians in the woods, and, more than everything, the
+ruse of the multiplied bugles. But besides illusion there was the
+ablest possible disposition, for there seems no doubt but that no
+spot could have keen chosen along his projected route greater in
+strength when fortified and guarded just as that was. The enemy could
+only reach it fatigued, and far from sources of supply, the wood was
+thick, the ravines occurred happily, the river was free from fords for
+a long distance, and a frightful swamp occupied the opposite bank. How
+would De Watteville's small and raw army have acted in the open
+country had this position not been tried?
+
+Next, how ought the credit of the affair to be apportioned, for it is
+clear that it is due to a number concerned? De Salaberry is, of
+course, in every way the leading figure. His courage and spirit were
+perfect, his intelligence rapid, his labor incessant, and the whole
+choice of the field and strategy of the battle were, by all the
+testimony, due to him. On the whole, it almost seems, in its broad
+lights, like a battle of this one man against the enemy. His task was
+the greater from the extent and obscurity of the battlefield. On these
+accounts, some of those holding the positions used afterwards to say
+there was no battle at all, and one--Lieut. Delisle, who received a
+pension--that the whole thing was a farce. Frankly--and it may seem at
+first sight like a discourtesy to say it--it is doubtful whether the
+Voltigeurs would have stood much real fighting had they been opposed
+to veterans. On reasonable consideration this objection must
+disappear. It is well known that recruits away from their homes are
+utterly unstable in their first battles. For instance, at Bull's Run,
+in the first two battles of the American Civil War, it was a toss-up
+which side would run away from the other, and they decided it by one
+side doing so the first day, and the other side the second. Many of
+the Upper Canadians were fearful and undecided at the beginning of the
+War of 1812. It is pretty probable that the promptitude of the few
+regulars in the country, including such officers as Brock, was its
+salvation at the outset. Most of De Salaberry's own men had withdrawn
+a month previous at the attack on the camp at Four Corners, though so
+disproportionate an enterprise was no fair test of recruits. The
+Sedentary Militia, when drafted, deserted in great numbers, and the
+duty assigned to the newly raised Voltigeurs by their commander at
+Chrysler's Farm just afterwards was that merely of making a temporary
+display in the woods. De Salaberry probably intended to do more with
+his division at Châteauguay, and might have succeeded if put to the
+test, for they were now probably superior to the American force in the
+very important respect of acquired confidence in a leader, who was
+even then the hero of the Province. Being of the same stock as
+Napoleon's men, a long course of fighting under a De Salaberry would
+have undoubtedly made them into a similar force; but in any case, too
+much cannot be said for the patriotism and willingness exhibited by
+these young men in defence of united Canada.
+
+Every man on the field, apparently, did the duty assigned to him.
+One--Jean Bte. Leclaire, was also one of the heroes of Fort Detroit
+and afterwards Chrysler's Farm. To the memory of such a man let his
+country do some honor. To the axemen's force also is due credit for
+cheerful and dangerous labor in chopping trees and working at the
+obstructions and defences. The Temoin Oculaire names "Vincent,
+Pelletier, Vervais, Dubois, Caron," who swam the river and took
+prisoners those who refused to surrender.
+
+Captain Daly is the name to be mentioned next to De Salaberry. His
+courageous onslaught is testified to by both Purdy and the Temoin, and
+twice wounded, he fought until he fell. It may be truthfully said that
+it was he who bore the brunt of the fight. Schiller also specially
+distinguished himself, and won his captaincy on the field. Of Ferguson
+and the two Captains Duchesnay we have spoken. The Temoin Oculaire
+praises the courage of Captain La Mothe, of Lieuts. Pinguet, Hebden,
+Guy, Johnson, Powell, and Captain L'Ecuyer (the latter two for
+captures of prisoners in the woods.) Captains Longtin and Huneau, of
+the Beauharnois Militia, are also mentioned by him for good conduct.
+Louis Langlade, Noël Annance, and Bartlet Lyons, of the Indian
+Department, were in the action of the 26th and the affair of the 28th.
+McDonell of Odgensburg, and no doubt many others, ought to be added.
+As to credit, in fact, every man in the region who did his duty and
+was ready to defend his country deserves it, and those named are but
+the examples who were put to the test. The brave Scotch settlers, few
+as they then were, were inspired with that spirit. The women stood
+literally ready to burn the roofs over their heads. The men, except
+those who had teams, who were drafted into an invaluable transport
+service, were formed into a company and drilled for the defence, under
+Lieut. Neil Morison and Captain James Wright, whose house was the
+headquarters of General De Watteville and a frequent scene of the
+council of officers. He was a tall and stern man, a Highlander, his
+name of "Wright" being a translation of his Gaelic one, "MacIntheoir."
+His Châteauguay sword is said to have long hung on the wall in the
+house of one of his descendants.
+
+We should not be so ungrateful also as to forget the services of those
+faithful Indians, to whom, as all through the war, a share of the
+success was due.
+
+In 1847 it was decided in England, after much agitation, to issue what
+was called "the War Medal," rewarding all those who had fought British
+battles during the years 1793 to 1814 and not received any special
+medal. Clasps were attached for each battle in which the recipient was
+engaged. A medal seems to have been given, as was meet, to almost
+every one on the field of Châteauguay, for 260 were distributed. It
+was, in fact, erroneously issued to some who were not present. One
+lieutenant, in particular, says Mr. Dion, is known from the De
+Salaberry letters to have himself lamented that he only came up the
+day after. The Indians and regulars also got medals. The simple record
+of what was done, however, is the best memorial of honor to those who
+were present on that memorable day.
+
+Mr. R.W. McLachlan relates his recollections of one of the veterans at
+Montreal. "Clad in an old artillery uniform, he was always seen
+marching out alongside of the troops on review days. He was ever ready
+to recount his adventures on the day of battle. Although we have heard
+it often from his lips, all that we can remember is that: 'De Yankee
+see me fore I see him, and he shoot me drough de neck.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is the privilege of the men of Châteauguay to remember that their
+region is haunted by the spirits of heroes.
+
+ "The dead still play their part"
+
+sings the Canadian poet Sangster, and here the musing thought must for
+ever conjure up De Salaberry, McDonell, the 800 waiting behind their
+breastworks in the gloom of the woods, the touching scene of Captain
+Longtin and his Beauharnois men, and the stubborn onset of Daly
+against overwhelming odds. The meaning of it all is: that given a good
+cause, and the defence of our homes against wanton aggression, we can
+dare odds that otherwise would seem hopeless; that it is in the
+future, as in the past, the spirits of men, and not their material
+resources, which count for success; that we need only be brave and
+just, and ready to die, and our country can never be conquered; and
+that we shall always be able to preserve ourselves free in our course
+of development towards our own idea of a nation.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+NOTES BY W. PATTERSON, M.A.
+
+
+1. Mr. James Walsh, Sr., who still resides in Ormstown, Que., was
+informed by one Saint Charles Moreau, alias Legault, that the stone
+house, situated on the Châteauguay about two miles below the village
+of Ste. Martine, and known during the early years of the present
+century as "The Stone Tavern," had just been built and finished the
+day before the battle, and the officers of the Canadian forces
+unceremoniously took possession of it on coming forward that evening.
+
+2. This same Legault or Moreau, shortly after the battle and before
+the dead were removed, visited the scene of the fight. There he saw
+several dead and several dying. He had a vivid recollection of the
+cruelty of the Indians. "The cursed savages," said Legault, "did
+nothing to secure the victory, and yet were foremost in plundering the
+dead and dying." He remembered in particular having seen an American
+officer, who was seriously wounded, lying on the field. The officer
+had a coin in his mouth which he was evidently anxious to save. An
+Indian, upon noticing this, bade him by making signs open his mouth
+and give up the piece. The command being apparently misunderstood, the
+Indian impatiently struck him with his tomahawk on the forehead. As
+his head was knocked back by the blow, the man opened his mouth, and
+his assailant taking out the coin passed on.
+
+3. Mr. David Monique, who lived at the "Portage" (modern Dewittville)
+at the time of the war, used to say, as Mr. Walsh many a time heard
+him relate, that his impression was that the Canadians did not hang
+upon the American rear after the fight, for had they done so, the
+American guns, which were all left behind, would have been captured. A
+division retreated up the Island of Jamestown by way of the "Portage,"
+on the South side of the Châteauguay, passing on their route Mr.
+Monique's farm. There they had their morning meal near his house, on
+October 27th, 1813. Their pork they fried on the ends of sticks before
+little fires. They were poorly clad. All were quite civil. They said
+that they had been "badly licked the day before." Their retreat was
+witnessed by this man and his family, and certainly they were not
+pursued by the Canadians, nor, in his opinion, did the Canadians
+pursue the other division, which retired across the Outarde by way of
+the ford, made on their inward march, and since known as the "American
+Ford," for in the following year, they returned for their guns and
+carried them off without molestation.
+
+4. Mr. Thomas Baird, merchant, of Ormstown, remembers well a Mr.
+Laberge, a very old man, who had been one of the soldiers on picquet
+duty at Ormstown, when the Americans invaded this country, in 1813.
+Laberge said that the Canadians stationed at this point were few in
+number, and were posted near the mouth of the Outarde, along the North
+bank of the Châteauguay, and also along the creek which now runs
+through the village of Ormstown. There the Canadians were taken by
+surprise. Those who escaped, retreated to De Salaberry's headquarters
+a few miles down the Châteauguay.
+
+Laberge also said that some of the Americans who were killed in the
+battle of the next day, October 26th, were buried on the bank of the
+creek, to which reference has been made. In this connection it is
+interesting to relate that while excavations were being made a few
+years ago for a roadway through this bank, the remains of five or six
+men were unearthed. The U.S.A. military buttons, the belt buckles and
+the bayonet found in their grave removed any doubt that these were the
+remains of American soldiers. This last item was kindly given the
+writer by Mr. Chas. Moe, who assisted in making the road.
+
+5. The ford over the Outarde, by which the Americans crossed, still
+remains and is known as the "American Ford." It is about three miles
+west of Ormstown village. The annual Spring floods have undoubtedly
+changed it somewhat. Both banks of the river shew the place to be a
+coarse gravel bed. By the addition of more gravel they easily made a
+fine roadway.
+
+6. Mr. John Symons, who came to the Châteauguay River in 1828, and has
+lived in its vicinity ever since, and who at the time of writing
+resides in Ormstown, informed the writer that Alexander Williamson,
+one of the earliest settlers, used to say that what is spoken of as
+the battle of Châteauguay, is greatly magnified. Williamson regarded
+the Americans as a great lot of cowards who were glad to take
+advantage of the slightest opposition to return home.
+
+7. Mr. James Brodie, a retired farmer, residing in the village of
+Ormstown, and who also was well acquainted with Alexander Williamson,
+states that Williamson was about twelve years of age when the battle
+was fought and was not present at the fight, but what he knew of it he
+had learned from others.
+
+8. Mr. William Allan who for years did business as a general
+storekeeper at Allans Corners, Que., informed the writer that he heard
+Alexander Williamson describe what is generally known as the battle,
+many times. "Williamson," says Mr. Allan, "could not repeat the same
+story twice."
+
+9. Mr. Brodie, in view of all the information he could gather from the
+early settlers, including Mr. Williamson, sincerely believes that the
+merits of De Salaberry have been much over-estimated. "That officer
+has no claims," said he, "to being a hero by what he did in that
+encounter."
+
+Yet the Canadians, so that gentleman gives the account, were most
+skilfully managed and made the best of their opportunity. Wearing the
+red coats, they were made to march in a circle for a time under the
+cover of the woods, and for a time exposed to the view of the
+Americans. To them, as they marched along, they gave the impression
+that they were a numerous force. These same Canadians, (Miss Anne
+Bryson, an aged lady, residing at Allans Corners, relates the story),
+still further exaggerated their strength by turning their coats whilst
+behind the trees, the white lining then giving them the appearance of
+being another regiment. The story is also told how the Indians, being
+well scattered, made the forests resound with their war cry.
+
+10. Where was the battle fought? The battlefield is situated about
+five or six acres west of the passenger bridge at Allans Corners,
+which is a small village on the Châteauguay River, thirteen miles
+below Huntingdon, three miles below Ormstown village, and about
+forty-three miles from Montreal. The site was a position on the North
+bank of the Châteauguay, where, almost at right angles to it, a deep
+and wide creek, then a large stream, emptied itself into the river. At
+that point was the foremost line of De Salaberry's breastworks,
+consisting of felled trees, stones and earth. There the main division
+of the Americans was repulsed. A sharp encounter in which the enemy
+were defeated by Captain Daly took place several acres below this on
+the opposite bank. Bullets are found every year on the scene.
+
+11. It is popularly believed that some of the American guns were sunk
+in the Châteauguay River at the point where the battle took place,
+although no trace of them has ever been found. The river is very deep
+there.
+
+12. About 13 acres west of Allans Corners there was a settlement of
+American squatters who fled the country before the outbreak of the
+war. They had planted an orchard which was always afterwards known as
+the "American Orchard." Traces of it were to be seen a few years ago.
+The early settlers, Mr. Williamson among others, have handed down the
+fact that some of these people were employed as guides by the American
+invaders.
+
+13. Mr. James Gilbert, who was the first settler on the land on the
+south bank opposite the point where De Salaberry was encamped, years
+ago, when ploughing, unearthed the remains of a man wrapped in the
+American military dress, and at various times, Mr. George Nussey
+informed the writer, ploughed up bones.
+
+14. Mr. Williamson remembered well, Mr. Brodie informed the writer,
+that the settlers on the Châteauguay at the time of the battle,
+excepting of course the militia, were prepared to flee towards
+Montreal, intending to take with them what household effects they
+conveniently could, should the Canadian forces suffer defeat.
+
+15. Near De Salaberry's first line, on the north bank of the river,
+stood the old block house. Miss Anne Bryson remembers it well.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+[1] Wm. James' Mil. Oc. of War of 1812.
+
+[2] History of the War of 1812.
+
+[3] James says at St. Regis.
+
+[4] James.
+
+[5] Letter of Hampton to Armstrong.
+
+[6] James.
+
+[7] To the Secretary of War, Sept. 25th, 1813, in Palmer's Hist.
+Register of the U.S., I., for 1814.
+
+[8] Ibid.
+
+[9] Chiefly Appleton's Cycl. of Am. Biog.
+
+[10] Supplement to same. It contains a portrait of Izard.
+
+[11] H. Sulte.
+
+[12] Garneau, Hist. Can.
+
+[13] Garneau.
+
+[14] Garneau.
+
+[15] Christie gives him credit for this point.
+
+[16] See letters of "Veritas."
+
+[17] Christie Hist. Can.
+
+[18] Wilkinson's letters
+
+[19] All full accounts of the battle from this stage on are chiefly
+founded on that remarkable letter of a participant signing "Temoin
+Oculaire," published in Montreal, 29 Oct., 1813. It is open, however,
+to some corrections of detail.
+
+[20] Garneau and Sellar; but Coffin says they were French-Canadian
+_voyageurs_, and Mr. John Fraser, from tradition, says _five-sixths_
+French-Canadians. I have been unable to obtain the necessary
+verifications from Ottawa or elsewhere.
+
+[21] W.F. Coffin, Hist. War of 1812.
+
+[22] Jame's Military Occurrences, I., 306.
+
+[23] Coffin.
+
+[24] James.
+
+[25] Coffin.
+
+[26] James, I., p. 308.
+
+[27] Purdy gives an interesting and clear account (_Vide_ Palmer's
+Hist. Register for 1814) of this march and some other matters, in his
+report to Wilkinson.
+
+[28] James.
+
+[29] James says sixty.
+
+[30] James.
+
+[31] Temoin Oc.
+
+[32] Garneau.
+
+[33] Tradition.
+
+[34] James.
+
+[35] James.
+
+[36] Temoin Oculaire.
+
+[37] James.
+
+[38] Tradition.
+
+[39] James.
+
+[40] Coffin.
+
+[41] James.
+
+[42] This was "a fact known to many persons now alive," according to a
+petition for a medal by his family in 1849.
+
+[43] James.
+
+[44] See his despatch.
+
+[45] Sulte.
+
+[46] Hampton's Report on the Battle: Palmer's Hist. Register, 1814.
+
+[47] James.
+
+[48] James.
+
+[49] "Officier actif et zelé." (Temoin Oculaire.)
+
+[50] James.
+
+[51] Palmer's Hist. Register.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of An Account Of The Battle Of Chateauguay
+by William D. Lighthall
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of An Account Of The Battle Of Chateauguay
+by William D. Lighthall
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: An Account Of The Battle Of Chateauguay
+ Being A Lecture Delivered At Ormstown, March 8th, 1889
+
+Author: William D. Lighthall
+
+Release Date: January 6, 2005 [EBook #14619]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Wallace McLean, Richard J. Shiffer and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<h3>Ch&acirc;teauguay Literary and Historical Society</h3>
+
+<h2>AN ACCOUNT</h2>
+
+<h4>OF</h4>
+
+<h1>THE BATTLE OF CH&Acirc;TEAUGUAY</h1>
+
+<h4>BEING</h4>
+
+<h2>A LECTURE DELIVERED AT ORMSTOWN,</h2>
+
+<h4>MARCH 8th, 1889</h4>
+
+<h4>BY</h4>
+
+<h2>W.D. LIGHTHALL, M.A.,</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Honorary Member of the Ch&acirc;teauguay Literary and Historical Society,
+Secretary of the Antiquarian Society of Montreal, Life Corresponding
+Member of the Scottish Society of Literature and Art, Author of &quot;The
+Young Seigneur,&quot; &quot;Songs of the Great Dominion,&quot; etc.</i></p>
+
+<h4>WITH</h4>
+
+<h3>SOME LOCAL AND PERSONAL NOTES</h3>
+
+<h4>BY</h4>
+
+<h2>W. PATTERSON, M.A.,</h2>
+
+<h4><i>Corresponding Secretary of the C.L.H.S.</i></h4>
+
+<h5>&quot;Raise high the Monumental Stone.&quot;</h5>
+<p class="author">&mdash;<i>Charles Sangster</i></p>
+
+<br />
+<h4>MONTREAL:</h4>
+
+<h4>W. DRYSDALE &amp; CO., PUBLISHERS, 232 ST. JAMES STREET.</h4>
+
+<h4>1889.</h4>
+
+<br />
+<br />
+<div class="trans-note">
+Transcriber's Note: The Table of Contents and the list of
+illustrations were added by the transcriber.
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="Contents" id="Contents">TABLE OF CONTENTS</a></h3>
+<div class="toc">
+<p><a href="#illustrations">ILLUSTRATIONS</a></p>
+<p><a href="#PREFACE">PREFACE.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#THE_BATTLE_OF_CHATEAUGUAY">THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#APPENDIX">APPENDIX.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES.</a></p>
+
+<a name="illustrations" id="illustrations"></a>
+<h3>ILLUSTRATIONS</h3>
+<p class="illustrations">
+<a href="#fig01">LT.-COL CHARLES DE SALABERRY.</a></p>
+<p class="illustrations">
+<a href="#fig02">SKETCH OF THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY&mdash;OCT 26, 1813.</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<br />
+<br />
+
+<a name="fig01" id="fig01"></a>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/0002.png" name="fig0002" id="fig0002">
+<img src="images/0002.png"
+alt="LT.-COL CHARLES DE SALABERRY." title="" /></a>
+<h5>LT.-COL CHARLES DE SALABERRY.</h5>
+</div>
+
+<h3>LIST OF OFFICERS FOR 1888-89.</h3>
+
+<p class="center"><b>President.</b></p>
+<p class="members">Lt.-Col. Archibald McEachern, C.M.G,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Vice-Presidents.</b></p>
+<p class="members">J.E. Robidoux, Q.C., M.P.P.</p>
+<p class="members">Edward Holton, Esq., M.P.</p>
+<p class="members">Thomas Baird, Esq.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Recording Secretary.</b></p>
+<p class="members">Peter McLaren, B A., M.D.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Corresponding Secretary.</b></p>
+<p class="members">Wm. Patterson, M.A.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Treasurer.</b></p>
+<p class="members">Wm. McDougall, Esq.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>Councillors.</b></p>
+<p class="members">Dr. McCormick.</p>
+<p class="members">Wm. J. Bryson, Esq.</p>
+<p class="members">Dugald Thomson. Esq.</p>
+<p class="members">Dr. Hall.</p>
+<p class="members">Rev. D.W. Morison, B.A.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>LIST OF HONORARY MEMBERS</b></p>
+
+<p class="members">Edward Holton, M.P.</p>
+<p class="members">J.E. Robidoux, Q.C., M.P.P.</p>
+<p class="members">Dr. W. Geo. Beers.</p>
+<p class="members">James McGregor, Esq.</p>
+<p class="members">Watson Griffin, Esq.</p>
+<p class="members">J.R. Dougall, M.A.</p>
+<p class="members">W.D. Lighthall, M.A., B.C.L.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page3" id="page3"></a>[pg 3]</span>
+<br />
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>
+PREFACE.
+</h2>
+
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+ Contents</a></p>
+
+<p>On October 26th, 1888, the Ch&acirc;teauguay Literary and Historical Society
+was organized at Ormstown, Quebec, to foster Canadian patriotism by
+encouraging the study of Canadian history and Canadian literature. The
+Society began its labours at home, taking as its subject the battle
+whence it derives its name. Mr. W.D. Lighthall, M.A., B.C.L., an
+honorary member, was asked to prepare an account of that victory, and
+kindly responded by his lecture, which he delivered before the Society
+on March 8th, 1889. Pleasure is now felt in offering this lecture, in
+the interests of the Society, to the Canadian world, no apology being
+required at a time when patriotic literature is in great demand. Mr.
+Lighthall's researches have been discussed by the members, and the
+belief is prevalent that his work touching this important item of
+history, in so far as accuracy is concerned, stands unrivalled, the
+previous authorities having been carefully compared and their
+testimony put together.</p>
+
+<p>In the Appendix will be found a number of notes having a bearing on
+the battle and its times. The portrait frontispiece is from a line
+engraving kindly lent by Gerald E. Hart, Esq., President of the
+Society for Historical Studies. The drawing of the map, after the
+design of the author, is due to J.A.U. Beaudry, Esq., C.E., Curator of
+the Antiquarian Society of Montreal.</p>
+
+<p>The first part of the account is partly based upon R. Christie's
+History of Lower Canada; but William James' Military Occurrences of
+the War of 1812, was found the most accurate in statistical details,
+and is, therefore, frequently followed. Other authorities are referred
+to in their places.</p>
+
+<p>The battle of Ch&acirc;teauguay, in view of the important results that
+followed it, is an event which all Canadians will appreciate, and to
+which posterity will have reason to point the finger of admiration.
+All nationalities concerned in building up this country, when united
+by a common danger, bore in it an honorable part, as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page4" id="page4"></a>[pg 4]</span>
+they fought side
+by side in defence of their homes and those that were dear to them,
+from the wanton aggression of an ungenerous foe.</p>
+
+<p>The Society hopes to continue its work and to offer other pamphlets in
+the near future, so that this effort on its part may be regarded as
+the first of a series. Another of its immediate objects is the
+erection of a monument on the battlefield, to accomplish which
+pecuniary assistance is required. The belief is held that no
+opportunity should be lost to educate the rising generation to form a
+true conception of the grandeur of the heritage that is ours,</p>
+
+
+<p class="author">W.P.</p>
+<p><span class="sc">Ormstown,</span><br />
+<i>October 29th, 1889.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page5" id="page5"></a>[pg 5]</span>
+
+<h2><a name="THE_BATTLE_OF_CHATEAUGUAY" id="THE_BATTLE_OF_CHATEAUGUAY"></a>
+THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY.
+</h2>
+
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+ Contents</a></p>
+
+<p>The War of 1812 has been called by an able historian &quot;the afterclap of
+the Revolution.&quot; The Revolution was, indeed, true thunder&mdash;a
+courageous and, in the main, high-principled struggle. Its afterclap
+of 1812 displayed little but empty bombast and greed. In the one,
+brave leaders risked their lives in that defence of rights which has
+made their enterprise an epoch in man's history; in the other, a mean
+and braggart spirit actuated its promoters to strike in the back that
+nation which almost alone was carrying on, in the best spirit of the
+Revolution, the struggle for the liberties of Europe against the
+designs of Napoleon. The brave spirits of the War of Freedom led the
+affairs of the United States no longer. All the contemptible elements,
+all the boasters, all those who had done least in the real fighting,
+had long come out of their shells and united to establish the mighty
+rhetorical school of the Spread Eagle! It was the legions of Spread
+Eagleism who wore to have the glory to be got in taking advantage of
+harassed England. The Battle of Ch&acirc;teauguay was one of the answers to
+that illusion.</p>
+
+<p>The War was introduced by a Declaration, in which President Madison,
+in smooth and elaborate terms, pretended that his nation found cause
+for it in the tyrannical exercise by British warships of what was
+called <i>The Right of Search</i>&mdash;that is to say, a claim of ships of war
+to stop the ships of other nations and search them for deserters and
+contraband goods. That this was not, however, the true cause, was
+shown by the facts and cries of the war.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page6" id="page6"></a>[pg 6]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Firstly, the right was one belonging to all nations by international
+law; secondly, though it was at once relinquished by Britain in a
+conciliatory spirit, the Americans persisted in their campaign;
+thirdly, at the close of the war they did not insist at all on the
+abrogation of the Right of Search, in the treaty of peace.</p>
+
+<p>It would be much easier to show what the real causes were:-(1), hatred
+of England, lasting over from the Revolution; (2), envy of her
+commerce and prestige; and especially (3) the scheme for the conquest
+of Canada.</p>
+
+<p>The course of the negotiations exhibit a thoroughly ungenerous course
+on the part of the American authorities, contrasted with a desire not
+to offend on the part of Britain. President Madison's Declaration of
+War was made on the 18th of June, 1812, and the British Government,
+after using every honorable overture for friendship, only issued
+theirs in October, couching it, besides, in terms of regret and
+reproach at the unfairness in which Madison's party persisted. Owing
+to that unfairness and other causes the enterprise also was by no
+means unanimously popular in the States. A convention of delegates
+from the counties of New York, held in the capitol at Albany, on the
+17th and 18th of September, and called the New York Convention,
+condemned Madison's party for declaring the war, on account of its
+injustice, and &quot;as having been undertaken,&quot; they said, &quot;from motives
+entirely distinct from those which have been hitherto avowed.&quot; The New
+England States treated it coldly. Maryland disapproved through her
+Legislature. Many persons everywhere looked on it as a mere political
+scheme, and when drafted for service in frequent cases bought
+themselves substitutes.</p>
+
+<p>It was soon found that a mistake had been made in attacking Canada.
+That happened which might be expected where bodies of men with
+inflated ideas of glory and no experience attack men fighting
+desperately for their homes, and officers and veterans who had seen
+such service as the Napoleonic wars. The British, with an astuteness
+which is oftener the character credited to their opponents, managed to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page7" id="page7"></a>[pg 7]</span>
+get earliest word of the Declaration sent to their own forts on the
+Lakes, and promptly captured the American fort Michilimackinac. They
+then followed with the daring capture of the stronghold of Detroit,
+amply equipped and garrisoned, by a little handful of men under the
+heroic General Brock, who simply went before it and demanded its
+surrender, whereupon it was given up, together with the whole
+Territory of Michigan. The presence of such trained British officers
+as Brock and of army veterans in the ranks was a very great advantage.
+Poor Brock soon afterwards died in his memorable charge at the victory
+of Queenston Heights.</p>
+
+<p>That year&mdash;the first of the War&mdash;is known as a succession of fiascos
+for the Americans. The other conspicuous aspect of it is that the
+attacked points were, with the exception of a little skirmishing at
+St. Regis and Lacolle, all in the Province of Upper Canada.</p>
+
+<p>It was only towards the close of the campaign of the next
+year&mdash;1813&mdash;that Lower Canada was gravely threatened.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans, emboldened by several successes, and having put a great
+many men into the field, believed that the struggle might easily be
+terminated by capturing Montreal. The advance upon Lower Canada took
+place under General James Wilkinson in chief command, with 8,826 men
+and 58 guns and howitzers.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1" /><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> He had intended to attack Kingston. &quot;At
+Montreal, however,&quot; wrote the Secretary of War, Armstrong, in phrases
+colored by the prevailing school of rhetoric, &quot;you find the weaker
+place and the smallest force to encounter.... You hold a position
+which completely severs the enemy's line of operations, and which,
+while it restrains all below, withers and perishes all above itself.&quot;
+This great position&mdash;for it is so&mdash;Colonel Coffin<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2" /><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> compares it to
+Vicksburg for natural strength&mdash;was to be approached by two routes: by
+Wilkinson himself in boats down the St Lawrence, and by Major-General
+Wade Hampton, his almost independent subordinate, from the Champlain
+border; and it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page8" id="page8"></a>[pg 8]</span>
+was planned that the two armies should meet at the
+foot of Isle Perrot,<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3" /><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> thence to strike together across the Lake to
+Lachine, and on to the city, which seems to have had not over, if as
+many as, a thousand regulars to defend it.</p>
+
+<p>Wade Hampton, with over 5,000 men (an effective regular force of 4,053
+rank and file, about 1,500 militia and ten cannon<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4" /><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>), was at first on
+the Vermont side of Lake Champlain at Burlington<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5" /><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>. He crossed to the
+New York side, directing his march for Caughnawaga on the St.
+Lawrence. His army<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6" /><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>, except the militia, was the same which, with a
+certain General Dearborn at its head, paraded irregularly across the
+lines and returned to Pittsburgh in the autumn of 1812. During the
+year since elapsed the men had been drilled by Major-General Izard,
+who had served in the French Army. They were all in uniform, well
+clothed and equipped&mdash;in short, Hampton commanded, if not the most
+numerous, certainly the most effective, regular army which the United
+States were able to send into the field during the War. Crossing the
+border on the 20th of September, 1813, he surprised a small picket of
+British at Odelltown, a Loyalist settlement afterwards celebrated for
+a battle in the Rebellion of 1837. He soon found himself met with what
+seemed to him great difficulties, for the army was plunged into an
+extensive swampy wood, the only road through which was rendered
+impracticable by fallen trees and barricades, behind which and in the
+gloomy forests surrounding were every here and there to be seen
+Indians and infantry crawling and flitting about, who fired upon them
+from unexpected ambushes. Hampton's men were not of a kind to face
+this. &quot;The perfect rawness of the troops,&quot; writes he, &quot;with the
+exception of not a single platoon, has been a source of much
+solicitude to the best-informed among us.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7" /><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> They were ignorant,
+insubordinate, and forever &quot;falling off.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8" /><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page9" id="page9"></a>[pg 9]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Urging on the scattered defenders was, no doubt, to be seen from time
+to time a stout-built, vigorous officer with stripes across the breast
+of his dark gray uniform, dashing about from point to point giving
+fierce orders. This was De Salaberry.</p>
+
+<p>Not reflecting&mdash;for he seems to have had the information&mdash;that the
+wood was only fifteen miles or so in depth, the Canadians few in
+number, and that a short press forward would have brought him into the
+open country of L'Acadie leading towards Montreal, the American
+General in two days withdrew along the border towards Ch&acirc;teauguay Four
+Corners, alleging the great drought of that year as a reason for
+wishing to descend by the River Ch&acirc;teauguay. At the Corners he rested
+his army for many days.</p>
+
+<p>Wade Hampton was a type of the large slaveholders of the South. Nearly
+sixty years of age, self-important, fiery and over-indulgent in drink,
+of large, imposing figure, of some reputed service in the Revolution,
+and with a record as Congressman and Presidential elector, he was one
+whose chief virtues were not patience and humility. In 1809 he had
+been made a brigadier-general and stationed at New Orleans; but in
+consequence of continual disagreements with his subordinates, was
+superseded in 1812 by Wilkinson, whom he consequently hated. In the
+spring of 1813 he received his Major-General's commission. He had
+acquired his large fortune by land speculations, and at his death some
+time later was supposed to be the wealthiest planter in the United
+States, owning 3,000 slaves. He is said to have ably administered his
+estate.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9" /><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
+
+<p>Hampton had another slave-holding South Carolinian by his side, young
+Brigadier-General George Izard, son and descendant of aristocrats and
+statesmen, well-educated in the soldier's profession, college-bred,
+travelled, and who had served in the French Army. Izard led the main
+column at the battle shortly to ensue.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10" /><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page10" id="page10"></a>[pg 10]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Another officer of the circle&mdash;who seems to have been the ablest&mdash;was
+Colonel James Purdy, on whom the brunt of the American work and
+fighting were to fall, and who seems to have done his best in a
+struggle against natural difficulties and against the incompetency of
+both his commander and men.</p>
+
+<p>When Hampton moved to Four Corners, Lieut-Colonel De Salaberry, with
+the Canadian Voltigeurs, moved in like manner westward to the region
+of the Ch&acirc;teauguay and English Rivers. The Voltigeur troops were
+French-Canadians with a small sprinkling of British. Their
+organization was as follows:&mdash;Sir George Prevost, on the approach of
+war, May 28th, 1812, ordered the levy of four French volunteer
+battalions, to be made up of unmarried men from 18 to 25 years old.
+They were to be choice troops, and trained like regulars. Charles
+Michel d'Irumberry De Salaberry, then high in the regard of his people
+as a military hero, was chosen to rally the recruits, issued a
+stirring poster calling the French-Canadians to arms, and acted with
+such extraordinary energy that the troops were in hand in two days.</p>
+
+<p>De Salaberry was a perfect type of the old French-Canadian military
+gentry, a stock of men of whom very little remains, a breed of leaders
+of, on the whole, more vigorous forms, more active temperaments, than
+the average&mdash;descendants inheriting the qualities of the bravest and
+most adventurous individuals of former times. They were the natural
+result of the feudal <i>r&eacute;gime</i>, with which they have passed away.
+Though a gentry, they were a poor one, possessed of little else than
+quantities of forest lands. The officers of the Voltigeurs were
+selected out of the same class, united with a number of English of
+similar stamp. De Salaberry himself was born in the little cottage
+manor-house of Beauport, near Quebec, on the 19th of Nov., 1778.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11" /><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>
+Taking to soldiering like a duck to water when very young, he enrolled
+as volunteer in the 44th. At sixteen, the Duke
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>[pg 11]</span>
+of Kent, who was then
+in Canada, and delighted in friendly acts towards the seigneurs, got
+him a commission in the 60th, with which regiment he left at once for
+the West Indian Isle of Dominica. There he saw terrible service, for
+all the men of his battalion except three were killed or wounded
+during the seige of Fort Matilda. Nevertheless, the young fellow kept
+gay. &quot;Our uniforms,&quot; he wrote to his father, &quot;cost very dear; but I
+have received &pound;40, and with that I am going to give myself what will
+make a fine figure.&quot; &quot;This fine large boy of sixteen years,&quot; says
+Benjamin Sulte in his History of the French-Canadians, &quot;strong as a
+Hercules ... with smiling face ... made a furore at parties.... As he
+was never sick, they employed him everywhere. Fevers reduced his
+battalion to 200 men, but touched not him.&quot; Though so young, he was
+charged with covering the evacuation of Fort Matilda.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12" /><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Duke of Kent, who was commanding at Halifax, kept a friendly eye
+upon him, and gave him much personal advice, on one occasion
+dissuading him from an inadvisable marriage. He now took him into his
+own regiment. De Salaberry still saw rough service, was shipwrecked,
+served in the West Indies again, and then fought in Europe and the
+disastrous expedition to Walcheren, where he was placed in the most
+advanced posts.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13" /><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> Returning to his 60th, he was made captain in
+1799. &quot;I have often heard say,&quot; narrates De Gasp&eacute;, &quot;that his company
+and that of Captain Chandler were the best drilled in the regiment.&quot;
+In the West Indies he was drawn into a duel which caused him sorrow
+until his dying day, for in it he was forced by the &quot;code of honor&quot; to
+kill a German fellow-officer, and bore a scar of the affair ever after
+on his forehead. It is related that by his great strength he cut the
+German in two.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The prodigious force with which he was endowed,&quot; says Sulte, &quot;had
+made of him an exceptional being in the eyes of the soldiers,&quot; and
+when he returned to Canada after West Indian service of eleven
+years<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14" /><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> a little before the war of 1812,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12"></a>[pg 12]</span>
+he was already the hero of
+the French-Canadians. That the stories of his strength and vigor are
+true is corroborated by every circumstance which has been perpetuated
+about him. His ruddy, energetic face is preserved in portraits among
+his family, and his walking-stick, said to be an enormous article, is
+kept at Quebec in the collection of the Literary and Historical
+Society.</p>
+
+<p>De Salaberry's Voltigeurs were organized at a peculiar juncture. &quot;The
+discords between French and English in Quebec had emboldened the
+United States,&quot; says Garneau, &quot;and the English Governors harassed the
+French. An opposite conduct might bring back calm to men's spirits.
+The Governor of Nova Scotia, Sir George Provost, a former officer, of
+Swiss origin, offered all the conditions desirable.... Arriving at
+Quebec, Sir George Provost strove to introduce peace and to remove
+animosity. He showed the completest confidence in the fidelity of the
+French-Canadians, and studied how to prove at every opportunity that
+the accusations of treason which had been brought against them had
+left no trace in the soul of England nor in his own.... Soon the
+liveliest sympathy arose between Sir George Prevost and the
+people.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15" /><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> It was in pursuance of this policy that the order to
+raise the Voltigeur force was given by him.</p>
+
+<p>While Hampton was at Four Corners, Sir George, thus now
+Commander-in-Chief of all the forces in Canada, was at the camp which
+had just been formed at La Fourche, and of which a description is
+given by Mr. Sellar in his history of the district. Sir George was a
+man quite devoid of the decisiveness necessary to a soldier, and
+though, as we have seen, he was useful in reconciling the French, his
+errors in military matters several times brought disgrace on the
+British forces, and gave rise to storms of rage and disgust among
+them.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16" /><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> De Salaberry was now ordered by him on the Quixotic errand
+of attacking, with about 200 Voltigeurs and some Indians, the large
+camp of Hampton at Four Corners.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page13" id="page13"></a>[pg 13]</span>
+ De Salaberry promptly obeyed these
+impracticable orders, and it is probably at this juncture that a
+little anecdote comes in which I have heard as told by one of his men.
+De Salaberry was down the river dining at a tavern, when a despatch
+was brought to him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;D&mdash;&mdash; it!&quot; he exclaimed, jumping up from his seat, &quot;Hampton is at
+Four Corners, and I must go and fight him!&quot; and mounting his fine
+white charger, he dashed away from the door.</p>
+
+<p>On the 1st of October he crept up with his force to the edge of the
+American camp. There they saw the assemblage spread out in all the
+array of war, with its host of tents, stacked guns, flags, moving men
+and sentries, and he prepared to strike it as ordered. One of his
+Indians indiscreetly discharged his musket. The camp was in alarm in
+an instant. De Salaberry, finding his approach discovered, immediately
+collected about fifty of his Voltigeurs, with whom and the Indians he
+pushed into the enemy's advanced camp, consisting of about 800 men,
+and, catching them in their confusion, drove them for a considerable
+distance, until, seeing the main body manoeuvring to cut off his
+little handful, he fell back and took up his position at the skirt of
+the woods. Once again he sallied out and charged, but with all the
+army now thoroughly aroused it was useless, and the Indians having
+retreated, most of his own men ran off, leaving him and Captains
+Chevalier Duchesnay and Gaucher, officers much like himself in stamp,
+with a few trusty Voltigeurs to skirmish with the enemy as long as
+daylight permitted it.<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17" /><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> He then withdrew to Ch&acirc;teauguay, taking the
+precaution of breaking up the forest road in his rear, in pursuance of
+the general policy of the campaign, which was to destroy and obstruct
+as much as possible in the path of the enemy. Acquainting himself also
+with the ground over which Hampton was expected to make his way into
+the Province, he finally stopped, selected and took up the position
+where the battle
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>[pg 14]</span>
+afterwards took place, in a thick wood on the left
+bank of the Ch&acirc;teauguay River at the distance of two or three leagues
+above its <i>Fork</i> with English River, where he threw up his works of
+defence, with the approval of General De Watteville. The plan of the
+British commanders, owing to the smallness and inefficiency of their
+forces, was the stern one of burning and destroying all houses and
+property, and retreating slowly to the St. Lawrence, harassing the
+enemy in his advance.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18" /><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> The position chosen was as strong as the
+nature of that flat and wooded country and the route of the American
+march would allow. Here his experience and quick eye came in.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19" /><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
+
+<p>Now as to the measures of fortification taken by De Salaberry. In his
+rear there was a small rapid where the river was fordable in two spots
+close to one another. He commanded this with a strong breastwork and a
+guard. There were four ravines which issued from the very thick woods,
+crossing the road, and distant from each other two hundred yards or
+so. On their banks he made his men fell trees and build them into
+breastworks&mdash;&quot;a kind of parapet extending into the woods some
+distance.&quot; To prevent the American cannon from bearing on these
+breastworks, he felled trees and bush, covering a large stretch of
+ground with obstructions in the front. The breastwork on the
+front-line formed an obtuse angle at the right of the road, and
+extended along the curves of the ravine. The Colonel then sent forward
+to a spot some distance in advance of the front-line a party of
+Beauharnois' axemen, well accustomed to felling trees, who destroyed
+the bridges and obstructed the road with their fragments and fallen
+trees and brush. Lieut. Guy, with twenty Voltigeurs, guarded them in
+front, and Lieut. Johnson, with about the same number, in rear.
+Working incessantly, these axemen made a formidable series of such
+obstructions in front of the first line, extending
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id="page15"></a>[pg 15]</span>
+from the river
+three or four acres into the woods, where they joined an almost
+impracticable marsh. On the opposite bank of the river De Salaberry
+also placed a picket of sixty Beauharnois militia under Captain
+Bruy&egrave;re, so as to check any advance on the ford, which was his weak
+point in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>Part of De Salaberry's line at the abattis, was a small blockhouse on
+the river-bank (which, however, is not that which has since been
+reputed to be the one concerned), and the works there blocked the
+commencement of the wood and looked out on a broadening plain or level
+of clearings, across which the enemy would have to pass.</p>
+
+<p>The Glengarry men now came down, under McDonell of Ogdensburgh, famous
+for his adventurous capture of that place, and whose exploit the
+Salaberry was about to match. Lieut.-Colonel McDonell&mdash;&quot;Red
+George&quot;&mdash;was at Prescott drilling a new force of Canadian Fencibles,
+made up, some say, chiefly of Scotch and loyalists,<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20" /><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> others chiefly
+of French boatmen, when Sir George Prevost asked him how soon he could
+have his men ready to go down to Ch&acirc;teauguay. &quot;As soon as they have
+done their dinner!&quot; he responded. Within a few hours he had provided
+them with <i>batteaux</i>, and they were off down the rapids. When Sir
+George himself, who was on the way, got there, he, to his great
+surprise found McDonell before him. &quot;Where are your men?&quot; said he.
+&quot;There,&quot; said the Highland Colonel, pointing to his force resting on
+the ground&mdash;&quot;not a man absent.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21" /><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
+
+<p>For nearly three weeks the parties of Canadian workers worked
+continually upon the plan of De Salaberry, while Hampton was
+considering, preparing, reviewing his troops, and arranging for a
+communication with Wilkinson so soon as the latter should have passed
+Ogdensburg on his way down the St. Lawrence.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>[pg 16]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>On the 21st of October the advance down the Ch&acirc;teauguay commenced. The
+first move was a rapid march by General Izard with the light-equipped
+troops and a regiment of the line, who surprised a party of about
+ten<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22" /><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> Indians sitting late in the afternoon at their evening meal at
+the junction of the Outarde and Ch&acirc;teauguay Rivers, and killed one of
+them. There Izard encamped and proceeded to establish a road of
+communication with Hampton. Word was soon brought to Major Henry, of
+the Beauharnois' Militia, commanding on the English River. Henry sent
+word to General De Watteville at La Fourche, and had Captains Levesque
+and Debartzch advance immediately with the flank companies of the 5th
+Battalion of embodied militia and about 200 men of the Beauharnois'
+division. This was the preliminary move towards the battle.</p>
+
+<p>They advanced about six miles that night up the Ch&acirc;teauguay from La
+Fourche, when they came to a wood which it would not have been prudent
+to enter in the dark. Next morning early they were joined by De
+Salaberry with his Voltigeurs and the light company of Captain
+Ferguson, an officer who took a front place in the affair. De
+Salaberry brought all these companies about a league up the bank to
+the place he had fortified, and there stopped. An American patrol
+party being observed in front, General De Watteville came over
+himself, visited the outposts, approved of them, and the work
+proceeded.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23" /><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> That evening the main body of the Americans encamped at
+Sear's, about twenty-five miles above the Ch&acirc;teauguay's mouth. The
+engineers had cut a road for the ten cannon, and with great labor and
+difficulty had dragged them thus far.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24" /><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
+
+<p>Within two days more Hampton's men had opened and completed a large
+and practicable road, which is still traceable, from his position at
+Four Corners twenty-four miles through the woods and morasses, and
+brought up his guns and stores to his new position, about seven miles
+from De Salaberry's. (About Dewittville?)
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>[pg 17]</span>
+</p>
+
+<a name="fig02" id="fig02"></a>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<p class="returnTOC">
+<a href="images/0019.png" name="fig0019" id="fig0019">Larger Image</a></p>
+<a href="images/0019.png" name="fig0019L" id="fig0019L">
+<img src="images/0019t.png"
+alt="SKETCH OF THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY&mdash;OCT 26, 1813" title="" /></a>
+<h5>SKETCH OF THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY&mdash;OCT 26, 1813</h5>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>From this point he despatched Colonel Purdy with about 1,500 men,
+composed of a light brigade (the 1st Brigade of the American Army<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25" /><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>)
+and a strong body of the infantry of the line, at an early hour in the
+night of the 25th, across the Ch&acirc;teauguay and down its right bank<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26" /><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>
+at a bend adjoining what is now known as the Cross Farm, with orders
+to gain the ford and fall on the rear of Lieut.-Colonel De Salaberry's
+position, while the main body, under General Izard, were to commence
+the attack in front. Purdy's brigade crossed not far above De
+Salaberry, and proceeded into the woods of the opposite side. A cedar
+swamp, an unexpected stream in which they floundered, and the
+ignorance of their guides misled and bewildered them. This was the
+fault of Hampton, and due to his headstrongness, for the guides had
+protested that they did not know that side of the Ch&acirc;teauguay; but he
+had ordered them to proceed. Purdy's command became scattered, were
+forced to halt in confusion, and had to sleep in the open woods, cold,
+wet, exhausted, and apprehensive.<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27" /><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> General Hampton, however, in the
+morning, fully expected to hear them attacking the ford, advanced, and
+at ten o'clock his troops appeared in sight of the party of busy
+woodchoppers, about 3,500 men, with three squadrons of cavalry,
+marching in column along the high road, commanded by General Izard.
+Lieut. Guy's picket fired, the workmen dropped work and ran, Guy
+retired upon Johnson, and both Lieutenants retreated with their men to
+the completed abattis, where they formed up again and began to fire
+smartly.</p>
+
+<p>De Salaberry, on hearing the firing, promptly advanced with the light
+company of the Canadian Fencibles, commanded by Captain Ferguson,
+&quot;flanked by twenty-two Indians on the right and centre,&quot;<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28" /><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> and two
+companies of his Voltigeurs, commanded by Captains Chevalier and Louis
+Juchereau Duchesnay. Ferguson's companies he posted on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page18" id="page18"></a>[pg 18]</span>
+the right, in
+front of the abattis, in extended order, its right skirting on the
+adjoining woods and abattis, among which were distributed a few
+Abenaquis Indians. The three officers, Ferguson and the two
+Duchesnays, executed the movements required of them with the coolness
+of a day of parade. The Voltigeur company of the oldest of the
+Duchesnays, known as &quot;the Chevalier,&quot; occupied, in extended order, the
+ground from the left of Ferguson's Company to the Ch&acirc;teauguay, and the
+company under Captain Louis Juchereau Duchesnay, with about
+thirty-five<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29" /><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> Sedentary Militia under Captain Longtin, were thrown
+back along the margin of the river, hidden among the trees and bushes,
+so as to flank Colonel Purdy's men, or prevent him from flanking the
+Canadian position. Between the abattis and the front line were a
+company of Voltigeurs, Captain Lecuyer commanding, and beyond them on
+the right a light company (that of the 5th Battalion) of embodied
+militia with their side pickets, under Captain Debartzch; then, to the
+right of them, in the woods, the Indians under Captain La Mothe. There
+were thus in the front only about 240 Canadians. The positions,
+however, occupied about a mile along the river, and the rest of the
+troops&mdash;some 600&mdash;were distributed among the other breastworks, under
+command of McDonell.<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30" /><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
+
+<p>The battle was now on the point of commencing. In the centre of the
+front stood De Salaberry watching the enemy, whose characteristics he
+had noted twice before. All waited in suspense. A touching scene was
+taking place among the Beauharnois Militia further back, where Captain
+Longtin caused his men to kneel, went through a short prayer with
+them, and then rising, said: &quot;that now they had fulfilled their duty
+to their God, they would fulfil that to their King.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31" /><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the enemy kept steadily moving along the road in column. A
+tall mounted American officer rode forward and began a harangue to the
+Canadians in French. &quot;Brave
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19"></a>[pg 19]</span>
+ Canadians,&quot; said he, &quot;give yourselves
+over; we do not wish to do you any harm!&quot;<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32" /><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> De Salaberry, seeing
+that his moment was come, sprang upon a stump,<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33" /><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> discharged his
+musket as a signal to begin, and brought the American officer off his
+horse by the shot. The enemy at the time were exposed to being taken
+on both front and side. The bugles blared, the front companies
+immediately opened fire, and the battle was begun. Izard's force were
+in the open plain, while their foes were hidden in a thick wood. The
+squadrons of cavalry and four cannon which they had brought thus far
+were found to be useless there. They, however, commenced a
+spirited<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34" /><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> fire in battalion volley; but, from the position of the
+line, it was almost totally thrown to the right of the Canadians, and
+of no effect whatever. They soon faced to the right, and filing up
+with speed, changed their front parallel with the lines of
+breastworks, when the engagement became general, and their fire
+compelled the retreat, behind the front edge of the breastwork<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35" /><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> of
+a few skirmishers near the left, who had been rather advanced in the
+centre of the line. This retreat being mistaken by the enemy for a
+flight, a universal shout ensued, which was re-echoed, to their
+surprise, by the Canadians and the Glengarry men in reserve under
+Lieut.-Colonel McDonell. Now was the supreme moment of the battle. De
+Salaberry ordered his bugleman to sound the advance. &quot;This was heard
+by Lieut-Colonel McDonell, who, thinking the Colonel was in want of
+support, caused his own bugles to answer, and immediately advanced
+with two of his companies from the third and fourth lines to the first
+and second.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36" /><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> &quot;All these movements were executed with great
+rapidity.&quot; De Salaberry, at the same time, as a <i>ruse de guerre</i>,
+ordered &quot;ten or twelve buglemen into the adjoining woods with orders
+to separate and blow with all their might.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37" /><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> The enemy, as De
+Salaberry calculated, suspected that the Canadians were advancing in
+great numbers to circumvent them. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20"></a>[pg 20]</span>
+ Colonel, while giving these
+orders, is said to have done so facing his men, with his back against
+a tree.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38" /><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> The noise of the engagement towards its end brought on
+Colonel Purdy's division on the opposite side of the river, which,
+having driven in the picquet of sixty Beauharnois Sedentary Militia
+under Captain Bruy&egrave;re, were pressing on for the ford, whereupon De
+Salaberry ordered Lieut.-Colonel McDonell, who had returned to his
+position to check the enemy there, and Captain Daly was chosen, with
+the light company of the 3rd Battalion Embodied Militia, numbering
+seventy men,<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39" /><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> to cross and take up the ground abandoned by the
+picket.</p>
+
+<p>De Salaberry, then seeing that the action was about to become serious
+on the right, left his position in the centre of the front and placed
+himself on the left with the troops along the bank, where, standing on
+a stump.<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40" /><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> he could see, through his field-glass, Captain Daly with
+his men crossing the ford. The latter took with him such of the
+Beauharnois men as had rallied<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41" /><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> up, and led by him, they advanced
+along the river-bank and made, in the words of Purdy afterwards, &quot;a
+furious assault&quot; upon the advanced guard of the Americans, whom they
+drove back upon themselves. &quot;The bravery of Captain Daly,&quot; wrote the
+Temoin Oculaire&mdash;whose account, it is to be remembered, was published
+a few days afterwards&mdash;&quot;who literally led his company into the midst
+of the enemy, could not be surpassed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Purdy's main body finally recovered, and charged forward, however,
+emerging in great force from the wood.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Daly's men, as they had been taught by Lieut.-Colonel
+McDonell, knelt and fired a volley kneeling. The return volley was
+fired by tenfold numbers, and but for that precaution would have
+destroyed nearly the whole of Captain Daly's command. As it was, he
+received a severe wound, and with his men, several of whom were
+wounded and himself a second time, was compelled to retreat, which the
+men did in very good order under Lieut. Benjamin Schiller. The latter
+distinguished himself greatly. He bore off his wounded
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>[pg 21]</span>
+captain to a
+safe place, and returning, took command at request of the men. At one
+juncture he was engaged, hand to hand, with a very formidable
+adversary, whose head he cut off with a single blow of his sabre.<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42" /><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></p>
+
+<p>Purdy's force eventually were moving on in overwhelming numbers, and
+for a moment their shouts of victory were heard by the little force
+lying in suspense behind the barricades on the opposite bank. In
+coming out of the wood they swarmed down along the bank of the river.
+Now was the time for Captains Louis Duchesnay and Longtin's companies
+concealed in the river-side bushes opposite. De Salaberry instantly
+appears upon the scene, gives the word of command, and the bushes
+flame out with a hidden and destructive fire. The American shouts of
+victory turn into cries of confusion. In the utmost disorder they make
+a tumultuous and precipitate retreat into the woods. Thus, at 2.30
+p.m., came the failure of Purdy's flanking movement.</p>
+
+<p>As one may easily imagine, this series of incidents took several
+hours.</p>
+
+<p>In the front, General Hampton for about an hour kept his soldiers
+ready in momentary expectation of attack by De Salaberry, and of
+hearing of Purdy's success. When he heard that the latter had failed,
+however, he sent him word to withdraw his column to a shoal four or
+five miles above and cross over, and ordered General Izard to retire
+his brigade to a position about three miles in the rear, to which
+place the baggage had been ordered forward. Hampton thus retired,
+leaving De Salaberry master of the field, with scarcely 300 men in
+actual action, and no British guns anywhere within seven miles.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43" /><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
+
+<p>Sir George Prevost, with Major-General De Watteville, arrived on the
+ground at the close of the engagement and overlooked De Salaberry's
+arrangements, thanked him with great praise, and then immediately
+wrote an inaccurate
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id="page22"></a>[pg 22]</span>
+despatch to England, in which he claimed the
+principal credit for <i>himself</i>.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44" /><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> That evening De Salaberry wrote to
+his father; &quot;I have won a victory mounted on a wooden horse!&quot;<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45" /><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a></p>
+
+<p>After the battle was over the American firing did not cease, for no
+sooner did darkness come on than Purdy's scattered command, moving up
+the right bank, commenced a most destructive fire on each other,
+mistaking them for the British, and they continued it the greater part
+of the night. The final incident took place just as day dawned on the
+27th, when about twenty Americans, mistaking some of the Canadian
+militia on the left bank for their own people, were compelled by them
+to surrender.</p>
+
+<p>That day at dawn McDonell came up in command of Captain Rouville's
+Company of Voltigeurs, Captain Levesque's Company of Grenadiers (of
+the 5th Battalion Incorporated Militia), and sixty men of the
+Beauharnois Division. De Salaberry turned over to McDonell the defence
+of the abatis or obstructions in front, and the hero of Ogdensburgh
+pushed on to two miles further than before. The day passed in
+expectation of a second attack, but no enemy appeared.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the straggling order which the nature of the swamp and
+forest imposed on Purdy's retreat exposed him to rear attacks from the
+Indians, which were repeated after dark and caused him loss.<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46" /><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p>
+
+<p>A large quantity of muskets, drums, knapsacks, provisions and arms
+were found on Purdy's shore, especially indicating the confusion just
+previous to their retreat. Upwards of ninety bodies and graves were
+found on that bank,<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47" /><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> among them two or three officers of
+distinction. On Hampton's field were two dead horses, and the enemy
+were there seen carrying off several of the wounded in carts.</p>
+
+<p>The Canadian loss was only two killed, sixteen wounded, and four
+missing. Three missing were by mistake at first included among the
+killed in the returns.<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48" /><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23"></a>[pg 23]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Time now wore on, another night was passed, and the morning of the
+28th arrived, when Captain La Mothe, with about 150 Indians,
+reconnoitred the enemy, who, according to the report of Captain
+Hughes, of the Engineers, had abandoned his camp the day before.</p>
+
+<p>A party of the Beauharnois Militia, supported by Captain Debartzch,
+burnt and destroyed the newly-erected bridges within a mile of the
+enemy's camp, which was now about one and a half leagues from Piper's
+Road, <i>i.e.</i>, about two leagues from his former position. On the same
+evening the Indians, under Captain La Mothe,<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49" /><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> proceeded through the
+woods and came up with the enemy's rear-guard. Here a slight skirmish
+ensued, in which the Americans lost one killed and seven wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Hampton, having re-occupied his late position, called a council of
+war, where it was determined to fall back and occupy the former
+position at Four Corners, to secure their communication with the
+United States; from thence either to retire to winter quarters or be
+ready to re-enter Lower Canada.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On that day or the day previous Captain Debartzch, of the Militia,
+was sent to the American headquarters with a flag. When he stated the
+number and description of troops by which General Hampton had been
+opposed, the latter, scarcely able to keep his temper, insisted that
+the British force amounted to 7,000 men. On being assured of the
+contrary, he asked: 'What, then, made the woods ring so with bugles?'
+Captain Debartzch explained this; but it was apparently to no
+purpose.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50" /><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Americans retired on the 29th. &quot;On the 30th a party of Indian
+Chasseurs, under Captain Ducharme, reported that the enemy had
+abandoned his camp at Piper's Road in the greatest disorder, and was
+on the road to Four Corners.&quot; The Canadians followed up and hung upon
+the rear and embarrassed the retreat. Canada was saved!
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>[pg 24]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>General Wilkinson was very severe on his fellow-general. &quot;On the 4th
+of November,&quot; he complains, &quot;the British garrison of Montreal
+consisted solely of 400 marines and 200 soldiers. What a golden,
+glorious opportunity has been lost by the caprice of Major-General
+Hampton!&quot;<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51" /><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> Poor man, he was to have pretty much the same luck
+himself just afterwards! Wilkinson's army proceeded on its own course
+down the river, but was almost as ignominiously defeated at Chrysler's
+Farm on the 10th of November, where his 3,000 or 4,000 men were
+matched, partly in open field and partly with the assistance of a ruse
+as at Ch&acirc;teauguay, against 800 British and thirty Indians, under
+Colonel Morison, a man equally brave and able with McDonell and De
+Salaberry.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dion, of Chambly, to whom the erection of a fine bronze statue of
+De Salaberry is due, has related to me a number of particulars from De
+Salaberry's letters held by his relatives. The hero complains bitterly
+of Prevost and De Watteville&mdash;&quot;those two Swiss&quot;&mdash;and that on account
+of his religion he could get no higher than a Lieut.-Colonel. From the
+same letters it appears that the &quot;Temoin Oculaire&quot; was a young lawyer
+named O'Sullivan, later, Judge O'Sullivan, a man partly of Irish
+family, in person large and handsome, and a great friend of De
+Salaberry, who ever remained grateful to him for preserving record of
+his deed in his celebrated letter. It is commonly attributed to D.B.
+Viger. Another little fact mentioned in the correspondence of De
+Salaberry is that his men in the battle were barefooted.</p>
+
+<p>The almost unique nature of the victory strikes one. Its keystone was
+De Salaberry's masterly use of illusion. Of it was the choice of a
+thick wood to conceal his small force, their entrenchment behind the
+abatis and in bush positions, the unexpected fire from the left bank
+upon Purdy, the Indians in the woods, and, more than everything, the
+ruse of the multiplied bugles. But besides illusion there was the
+ablest possible disposition, for there seems no doubt but that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25"></a>[pg 25]</span>
+no
+spot could have keen chosen along his projected route greater in
+strength when fortified and guarded just as that was. The enemy could
+only reach it fatigued, and far from sources of supply, the wood was
+thick, the ravines occurred happily, the river was free from fords for
+a long distance, and a frightful swamp occupied the opposite bank. How
+would De Watteville's small and raw army have acted in the open
+country had this position not been tried?</p>
+
+<p>Next, how ought the credit of the affair to be apportioned, for it is
+clear that it is due to a number concerned? De Salaberry is, of
+course, in every way the leading figure. His courage and spirit were
+perfect, his intelligence rapid, his labor incessant, and the whole
+choice of the field and strategy of the battle were, by all the
+testimony, due to him. On the whole, it almost seems, in its broad
+lights, like a battle of this one man against the enemy. His task was
+the greater from the extent and obscurity of the battlefield. On these
+accounts, some of those holding the positions used afterwards to say
+there was no battle at all, and one&mdash;Lieut. Delisle, who received a
+pension&mdash;that the whole thing was a farce. Frankly&mdash;and it may seem at
+first sight like a discourtesy to say it&mdash;it is doubtful whether the
+Voltigeurs would have stood much real fighting had they been opposed
+to veterans. On reasonable consideration this objection must
+disappear. It is well known that recruits away from their homes are
+utterly unstable in their first battles. For instance, at Bull's Run,
+in the first two battles of the American Civil War, it was a toss-up
+which side would run away from the other, and they decided it by one
+side doing so the first day, and the other side the second. Many of
+the Upper Canadians were fearful and undecided at the beginning of the
+War of 1812. It is pretty probable that the promptitude of the few
+regulars in the country, including such officers as Brock, was its
+salvation at the outset. Most of De Salaberry's own men had withdrawn
+a month previous at the attack on the camp at Four Corners, though so
+disproportionate an enterprise was no fair test of recruits. The
+Sedentary Militia, when drafted, deserted
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26"></a>[pg 26]</span>
+in great numbers, and the
+duty assigned to the newly raised Voltigeurs by their commander at
+Chrysler's Farm just afterwards was that merely of making a temporary
+display in the woods. De Salaberry probably intended to do more with
+his division at Ch&acirc;teauguay, and might have succeeded if put to the
+test, for they were now probably superior to the American force in the
+very important respect of acquired confidence in a leader, who was
+even then the hero of the Province. Being of the same stock as
+Napoleon's men, a long course of fighting under a De Salaberry would
+have undoubtedly made them into a similar force; but in any case, too
+much cannot be said for the patriotism and willingness exhibited by
+these young men in defence of united Canada.</p>
+
+<p>Every man on the field, apparently, did the duty assigned to him.
+One&mdash;Jean Bte. Leclaire, was also one of the heroes of Fort Detroit
+and afterwards Chrysler's Farm. To the memory of such a man let his
+country do some honor. To the axemen's force also is due credit for
+cheerful and dangerous labor in chopping trees and working at the
+obstructions and defences. The Temoin Oculaire names &quot;Vincent,
+Pelletier, Vervais, Dubois, Caron,&quot; who swam the river and took
+prisoners those who refused to surrender.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Daly is the name to be mentioned next to De Salaberry. His
+courageous onslaught is testified to by both Purdy and the Temoin, and
+twice wounded, he fought until he fell. It may be truthfully said that
+it was he who bore the brunt of the fight. Schiller also specially
+distinguished himself, and won his captaincy on the field. Of Ferguson
+and the two Captains Duchesnay we have spoken. The Temoin Oculaire
+praises the courage of Captain La Mothe, of Lieuts. Pinguet, Hebden,
+Guy, Johnson, Powell, and Captain L'Ecuyer (the latter two for
+captures of prisoners in the woods.) Captains Longtin and Huneau, of
+the Beauharnois Militia, are also mentioned by him for good conduct.
+Louis Langlade, No&euml;l Annance, and Bartlet Lyons, of the Indian
+Department, were in the action of the 26th and the affair of the 28th.
+McDonell of Odgensburg, and no doubt many others, ought to be added.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page27" id="page27"></a>[pg 27]</span>
+
+As to credit, in fact, every man in the region who did his duty and
+was ready to defend his country deserves it, and those named are but
+the examples who were put to the test. The brave Scotch settlers, few
+as they then were, were inspired with that spirit. The women stood
+literally ready to burn the roofs over their heads. The men, except
+those who had teams, who were drafted into an invaluable transport
+service, were formed into a company and drilled for the defence, under
+Lieut. Neil Morison and Captain James Wright, whose house was the
+headquarters of General De Watteville and a frequent scene of the
+council of officers. He was a tall and stern man, a Highlander, his
+name of &quot;Wright&quot; being a translation of his Gaelic one, &quot;MacIntheoir.&quot;
+His Ch&acirc;teauguay sword is said to have long hung on the wall in the
+house of one of his descendants.</p>
+
+<p>We should not be so ungrateful also as to forget the services of those
+faithful Indians, to whom, as all through the war, a share of the
+success was due.</p>
+
+<p>In 1847 it was decided in England, after much agitation, to issue what
+was called &quot;the War Medal,&quot; rewarding all those who had fought British
+battles during the years 1793 to 1814 and not received any special
+medal. Clasps were attached for each battle in which the recipient was
+engaged. A medal seems to have been given, as was meet, to almost
+every one on the field of Ch&acirc;teauguay, for 260 were distributed. It
+was, in fact, erroneously issued to some who were not present. One
+lieutenant, in particular, says Mr. Dion, is known from the De
+Salaberry letters to have himself lamented that he only came up the
+day after. The Indians and regulars also got medals. The simple record
+of what was done, however, is the best memorial of honor to those who
+were present on that memorable day.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. R.W. McLachlan relates his recollections of one of the veterans at
+Montreal. &quot;Clad in an old artillery uniform, he was always seen
+marching out alongside of the troops on review days. He was ever ready
+to recount his adventures on the day of battle. Although we have heard
+it often from
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28"></a>[pg 28]</span>
+his lips, all that we can remember is that: 'De Yankee
+see me fore I see him, and he shoot me drough de neck.'&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>It is the privilege of the men of Ch&acirc;teauguay to remember that their
+region is haunted by the spirits of heroes.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<p>&quot;The dead still play their part&quot;</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>sings the Canadian poet Sangster, and here the musing thought must for
+ever conjure up De Salaberry, McDonell, the 800 waiting behind their
+breastworks in the gloom of the woods, the touching scene of Captain
+Longtin and his Beauharnois men, and the stubborn onset of Daly
+against overwhelming odds. The meaning of it all is: that given a good
+cause, and the defence of our homes against wanton aggression, we can
+dare odds that otherwise would seem hopeless; that it is in the
+future, as in the past, the spirits of men, and not their material
+resources, which count for success; that we need only be brave and
+just, and ready to die, and our country can never be conquered; and
+that we shall always be able to preserve ourselves free in our course
+of development towards our own idea of a nation.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29"></a>[pg 29]</span>
+<br />
+<h2><a name="APPENDIX" id="APPENDIX"></a>
+APPENDIX.
+</h2>
+
+<h3>NOTES BY W. PATTERSON, M.A.</h3>
+
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+ Contents</a></p>
+
+<p>1. Mr. James Walsh, Sr., who still resides in Ormstown, Que., was
+informed by one Saint Charles Moreau, alias Legault, that the stone
+house, situated on the Ch&acirc;teauguay about two miles below the village
+of Ste. Martine, and known during the early years of the present
+century as &quot;The Stone Tavern,&quot; had just been built and finished the
+day before the battle, and the officers of the Canadian forces
+unceremoniously took possession of it on coming forward that evening.</p>
+
+<p>2. This same Legault or Moreau, shortly after the battle and before
+the dead were removed, visited the scene of the fight. There he saw
+several dead and several dying. He had a vivid recollection of the
+cruelty of the Indians. &quot;The cursed savages,&quot; said Legault, &quot;did
+nothing to secure the victory, and yet were foremost in plundering the
+dead and dying.&quot; He remembered in particular having seen an American
+officer, who was seriously wounded, lying on the field. The officer
+had a coin in his mouth which he was evidently anxious to save. An
+Indian, upon noticing this, bade him by making signs open his mouth
+and give up the piece. The command being apparently misunderstood, the
+Indian impatiently struck him with his tomahawk on the forehead. As
+his head was knocked back by the blow, the man opened his mouth, and
+his assailant taking out the coin passed on.</p>
+
+<p>3. Mr. David Monique, who lived at the &quot;Portage&quot; (modern Dewittville)
+at the time of the war, used to say, as Mr. Walsh many a time heard
+him relate, that his impression was that the Canadians did not hang
+upon the American rear after the fight, for had they done so, the
+American guns, which were all left behind, would have been captured. A
+division retreated up the Island of Jamestown by way of the &quot;Portage,&quot;
+on the South side of the Ch&acirc;teauguay, passing on their route Mr.
+Monique's farm. There they had their morning meal near his house, on
+October 27th, 1813. Their pork they fried on the ends of sticks before
+little fires. They were poorly clad. All were quite civil. They said
+that they had been &quot;badly licked the day before.&quot; Their retreat
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>[pg 30]</span>
+was
+witnessed by this man and his family, and certainly they were not
+pursued by the Canadians, nor, in his opinion, did the Canadians
+pursue the other division, which retired across the Outarde by way of
+the ford, made on their inward march, and since known as the &quot;American
+Ford,&quot; for in the following year, they returned for their guns and
+carried them off without molestation.</p>
+
+<p>4. Mr. Thomas Baird, merchant, of Ormstown, remembers well a Mr.
+Laberge, a very old man, who had been one of the soldiers on picquet
+duty at Ormstown, when the Americans invaded this country, in 1813.
+Laberge said that the Canadians stationed at this point were few in
+number, and were posted near the mouth of the Outarde, along the North
+bank of the Ch&acirc;teauguay, and also along the creek which now runs
+through the village of Ormstown. There the Canadians were taken by
+surprise. Those who escaped, retreated to De Salaberry's headquarters
+a few miles down the Ch&acirc;teauguay.</p>
+
+<p>Laberge also said that some of the Americans who were killed in the
+battle of the next day, October 26th, were buried on the bank of the
+creek, to which reference has been made. In this connection it is
+interesting to relate that while excavations were being made a few
+years ago for a roadway through this bank, the remains of five or six
+men were unearthed. The U.S.A. military buttons, the belt buckles and
+the bayonet found in their grave removed any doubt that these were the
+remains of American soldiers. This last item was kindly given the
+writer by Mr. Chas. Moe, who assisted in making the road.</p>
+
+<p>5. The ford over the Outarde, by which the Americans crossed, still
+remains and is known as the &quot;American Ford.&quot; It is about three miles
+west of Ormstown village. The annual Spring floods have undoubtedly
+changed it somewhat. Both banks of the river shew the place to be a
+coarse gravel bed. By the addition of more gravel they easily made a
+fine roadway.</p>
+
+<p>6. Mr. John Symons, who came to the Ch&acirc;teauguay River in 1828, and has
+lived in its vicinity ever since, and who at the time of writing
+resides in Ormstown, informed the writer that Alexander Williamson,
+one of the earliest settlers, used to say that what is spoken of as
+the battle of Ch&acirc;teauguay, is greatly magnified. Williamson regarded
+the Americans as a great lot of cowards who were glad to take
+advantage of the slightest opposition to return home.</p>
+
+<p>7. Mr. James Brodie, a retired farmer, residing in the village of
+Ormstown, and who also was well acquainted with Alexander
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page31" id="page31"></a>[pg 31]</span>
+ Williamson,
+states that Williamson was about twelve years of age when the battle
+was fought and was not present at the fight, but what he knew of it he
+had learned from others.</p>
+
+<p>8. Mr. William Allan who for years did business as a general
+storekeeper at Allans Corners, Que., informed the writer that he heard
+Alexander Williamson describe what is generally known as the battle,
+many times. &quot;Williamson,&quot; says Mr. Allan, &quot;could not repeat the same
+story twice.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>9. Mr. Brodie, in view of all the information he could gather from the
+early settlers, including Mr. Williamson, sincerely believes that the
+merits of De Salaberry have been much over-estimated. &quot;That officer
+has no claims,&quot; said he, &quot;to being a hero by what he did in that
+encounter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Yet the Canadians, so that gentleman gives the account, were most
+skilfully managed and made the best of their opportunity. Wearing the
+red coats, they were made to march in a circle for a time under the
+cover of the woods, and for a time exposed to the view of the
+Americans. To them, as they marched along, they gave the impression
+that they were a numerous force. These same Canadians, (Miss Anne
+Bryson, an aged lady, residing at Allans Corners, relates the story),
+still further exaggerated their strength by turning their coats whilst
+behind the trees, the white lining then giving them the appearance of
+being another regiment. The story is also told how the Indians, being
+well scattered, made the forests resound with their war cry.</p>
+
+<p>10. Where was the battle fought? The battlefield is situated about
+five or six acres west of the passenger bridge at Allans Corners,
+which is a small village on the Ch&acirc;teauguay River, thirteen miles
+below Huntingdon, three miles below Ormstown village, and about
+forty-three miles from Montreal. The site was a position on the North
+bank of the Ch&acirc;teauguay, where, almost at right angles to it, a deep
+and wide creek, then a large stream, emptied itself into the river. At
+that point was the foremost line of De Salaberry's breastworks,
+consisting of felled trees, stones and earth. There the main division
+of the Americans was repulsed. A sharp encounter in which the enemy
+were defeated by Captain Daly took place several acres below this on
+the opposite bank. Bullets are found every year on the scene.</p>
+
+<p>11. It is popularly believed that some of the American guns were sunk
+in the Ch&acirc;teauguay River at the point where the battle took place,
+although no trace of them has ever been found. The river is very deep
+there.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page32" id="page32"></a>[pg 32]</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>12. About 13 acres west of Allans Corners there was a settlement of
+American squatters who fled the country before the outbreak of the
+war. They had planted an orchard which was always afterwards known as
+the &quot;American Orchard.&quot; Traces of it were to be seen a few years ago.
+The early settlers, Mr. Williamson among others, have handed down the
+fact that some of these people were employed as guides by the American
+invaders.</p>
+
+<p>13. Mr. James Gilbert, who was the first settler on the land on the
+south bank opposite the point where De Salaberry was encamped, years
+ago, when ploughing, unearthed the remains of a man wrapped in the
+American military dress, and at various times, Mr. George Nussey
+informed the writer, ploughed up bones.</p>
+
+<p>14. Mr. Williamson remembered well, Mr. Brodie informed the writer,
+that the settlers on the Ch&acirc;teauguay at the time of the battle,
+excepting of course the militia, were prepared to flee towards
+Montreal, intending to take with them what household effects they
+conveniently could, should the Canadian forces suffer defeat.</p>
+
+<p>15. Near De Salaberry's first line, on the north bank of the river,
+stood the old block house. Miss Anne Bryson remembers it well.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<br />
+<h2><a name="FOOTNOTES" id="FOOTNOTES"></a>
+FOOTNOTES.
+</h2>
+
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+ Contents</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1" /><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Wm. James' Mil. Oc. of War of 1812.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2" /><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> History of the War of 1812.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3" /><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> James says at St. Regis.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4" /><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5" /><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Letter of Hampton to Armstrong.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6" /><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7" /><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> To the Secretary of War, Sept. 25th, 1813, in Palmer's
+Hist. Register of the U.S., I., for 1814.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8" /><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9" /><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Chiefly Appleton's Cycl. of Am. Biog.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10" /><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Supplement to same. It contains a portrait of Izard.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11" /><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> H. Sulte.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12" /><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Garneau, Hist. Can.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13" /><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Garneau.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14" /><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Garneau.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15" /><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Christie gives him credit for this point.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16" /><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> See letters of &quot;Veritas.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17" /><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Christie Hist. Can.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18" /><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Wilkinson's letters</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19" /><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> All full accounts of the battle from this stage on are
+chiefly founded on that remarkable letter of a participant signing
+&quot;Temoin Oculaire,&quot; published in Montreal, 29 Oct., 1813. It is open,
+however, to some corrections of detail.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20" /><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Garneau and Sellar; but Coffin says they were
+French-Canadian <i>voyageurs</i>, and Mr. John Fraser, from tradition, says
+<i>five-sixths</i> French-Canadians. I have been unable to obtain the
+necessary verifications from Ottawa or elsewhere.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21" /><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> W.F. Coffin, Hist. War of 1812.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22" /><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Jame's Military Occurrences, I., 306.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23" /><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Coffin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24" /><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25" /><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Coffin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26" /><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> James, I., p. 308.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27" /><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> Purdy gives an interesting and clear account (<i>Vide</i>
+Palmer's Hist. Register for 1814) of this march and some other
+matters, in his report to Wilkinson.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28" /><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29" /><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> James says sixty.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30" /><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31" /><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Temoin Oc.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32" /><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Garneau.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33" /><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> Tradition.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34" /><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35" /><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36" /><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Temoin Oculaire.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37" /><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38" /><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Tradition.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39" /><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40" /><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Coffin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41" /><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42" /><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> This was &quot;a fact known to many persons now alive,&quot;
+according to a petition for a medal by his family in 1849.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43" /><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44" /><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> See his despatch.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45" /><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Sulte.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46" /><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> Hampton's Report on the Battle: Palmer's Hist. Register,
+1814.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47" /><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48" /><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49" /><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> &quot;Officier actif et zel&eacute;.&quot; (Temoin Oculaire.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50" /><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> James.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51" /><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> Palmer's Hist. Register.</p></div>
+
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of An Account Of The Battle Of Chateauguay
+by William D. Lighthall
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of An Account Of The Battle Of Chateauguay
+by William D. Lighthall
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: An Account Of The Battle Of Chateauguay
+ Being A Lecture Delivered At Ormstown, March 8th, 1889
+
+Author: William D. Lighthall
+
+Release Date: January 6, 2005 [EBook #14619]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Wallace McLean, Richard J. Shiffer and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Chateauguay Literary and Historical Society
+
+
+ AN ACCOUNT
+
+ OF
+
+ THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY
+
+ BEING
+
+ A LECTURE DELIVERED AT ORMSTOWN,
+
+ MARCH 8TH, 1889
+
+ BY
+
+ W.D. LIGHTHALL, M.A.,
+
+ _Honorary Member of the Chateauguay Literary and Historical Society,
+ Secretary of the Antiquarian Society of Montreal, Life Corresponding
+ Member of the Scottish Society of Literature and Art, Author of "The
+ Young Seigneur," "Songs of the Great Dominion," etc._
+
+ WITH
+
+ SOME LOCAL AND PERSONAL NOTES
+
+ BY
+
+ W. PATTERSON, M.A.,
+
+ _Corresponding Secretary of the C.L.H.S._
+
+ "Raise high the Monumental Stone."
+ --_Charles Sangster_
+
+
+ MONTREAL
+
+ W. DRYSDALE & CO., PUBLISHERS, 232 ST. JAMES STREET.
+
+ 1889.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: LT.-COL CHARLES DE SALABERRY.]
+
+
+
+
+ LIST OF OFFICERS FOR 1888-89.
+
+
+ President.
+ Lt.-Col. Archibald McEachern, C.M.G,
+
+ Vice-Presidents.
+ J.E. Robidoux, Q.C., M.P.P.
+ Edward Holton, Esq., M.P.
+ Thomas Baird, Esq.
+
+ Recording Secretary.
+ Peter McLaren, B A., M.D.
+
+ Corresponding Secretary.
+ Wm. Patterson, M.A.
+
+ Treasurer.
+ Wm. McDougall, Esq.
+
+ Councillors.
+ Dr. McCormick.
+ Wm. J. Bryson, Esq.
+ Dugald Thomson. Esq.
+ Dr. Hall.
+ Rev. D.W. Morison, B.A.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LIST OF HONORARY MEMBERS
+
+ Edward Holton, M.P.
+ J.E. Robidoux, Q.C., M.P.P.
+ Dr. W. Geo. Beers.
+ James McGregor, Esq.
+ Watson Griffin, Esq.
+ J.R. Dougall, M.A.
+ W.D. Lighthall, M.A., B.C.L.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+On October 26th, 1888, the Chateauguay Literary and Historical Society
+was organized at Ormstown, Quebec, to foster Canadian patriotism by
+encouraging the study of Canadian history and Canadian literature. The
+Society began its labours at home, taking as its subject the battle
+whence it derives its name. Mr. W.D. Lighthall, M.A., B.C.L., an
+honorary member, was asked to prepare an account of that victory, and
+kindly responded by his lecture, which he delivered before the Society
+on March 8th, 1889. Pleasure is now felt in offering this lecture, in
+the interests of the Society, to the Canadian world, no apology being
+required at a time when patriotic literature is in great demand. Mr.
+Lighthall's researches have been discussed by the members, and the
+belief is prevalent that his work touching this important item of
+history, in so far as accuracy is concerned, stands unrivalled, the
+previous authorities having been carefully compared and their
+testimony put together.
+
+In the Appendix will be found a number of notes having a bearing on
+the battle and its times. The portrait frontispiece is from a line
+engraving kindly lent by Gerald E. Hart, Esq., President of the
+Society for Historical Studies. The drawing of the map, after the
+design of the author, is due to J.A.U. Beaudry, Esq., C.E., Curator of
+the Antiquarian Society of Montreal.
+
+The first part of the account is partly based upon R. Christie's
+History of Lower Canada; but William James' Military Occurrences of
+the War of 1812, was found the most accurate in statistical details,
+and is, therefore, frequently followed. Other authorities are referred
+to in their places.
+
+The battle of Chateauguay, in view of the important results that
+followed it, is an event which all Canadians will appreciate, and to
+which posterity will have reason to point the finger of admiration.
+All nationalities concerned in building up this country, when united
+by a common danger, bore in it an honorable part, as they fought side
+by side in defence of their homes and those that were dear to them,
+from the wanton aggression of an ungenerous foe.
+
+The Society hopes to continue its work and to offer other pamphlets in
+the near future, so that this effort on its part may be regarded as
+the first of a series. Another of its immediate objects is the
+erection of a monument on the battlefield, to accomplish which
+pecuniary assistance is required. The belief is held that no
+opportunity should be lost to educate the rising generation to form a
+true conception of the grandeur of the heritage that is ours,
+
+ W.P.
+
+ ORMSTOWN,
+ _October 29th, 1889._
+
+
+
+
+THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY.
+
+
+The War of 1812 has been called by an able historian "the afterclap of
+the Revolution." The Revolution was, indeed, true thunder--a
+courageous and, in the main, high-principled struggle. Its afterclap
+of 1812 displayed little but empty bombast and greed. In the one,
+brave leaders risked their lives in that defence of rights which has
+made their enterprise an epoch in man's history; in the other, a mean
+and braggart spirit actuated its promoters to strike in the back that
+nation which almost alone was carrying on, in the best spirit of the
+Revolution, the struggle for the liberties of Europe against the
+designs of Napoleon. The brave spirits of the War of Freedom led the
+affairs of the United States no longer. All the contemptible elements,
+all the boasters, all those who had done least in the real fighting,
+had long come out of their shells and united to establish the mighty
+rhetorical school of the Spread Eagle! It was the legions of Spread
+Eagleism who wore to have the glory to be got in taking advantage of
+harassed England. The Battle of Chateauguay was one of the answers to
+that illusion.
+
+The War was introduced by a Declaration, in which President Madison,
+in smooth and elaborate terms, pretended that his nation found cause
+for it in the tyrannical exercise by British warships of what was
+called _The Right of Search_--that is to say, a claim of ships of war
+to stop the ships of other nations and search them for deserters and
+contraband goods. That this was not, however, the true cause, was
+shown by the facts and cries of the war.
+
+Firstly, the right was one belonging to all nations by international
+law; secondly, though it was at once relinquished by Britain in a
+conciliatory spirit, the Americans persisted in their campaign;
+thirdly, at the close of the war they did not insist at all on the
+abrogation of the Right of Search, in the treaty of peace.
+
+It would be much easier to show what the real causes were:-(1), hatred
+of England, lasting over from the Revolution; (2), envy of her
+commerce and prestige; and especially (3) the scheme for the conquest
+of Canada.
+
+The course of the negotiations exhibit a thoroughly ungenerous course
+on the part of the American authorities, contrasted with a desire not
+to offend on the part of Britain. President Madison's Declaration of
+War was made on the 18th of June, 1812, and the British Government,
+after using every honorable overture for friendship, only issued
+theirs in October, couching it, besides, in terms of regret and
+reproach at the unfairness in which Madison's party persisted. Owing
+to that unfairness and other causes the enterprise also was by no
+means unanimously popular in the States. A convention of delegates
+from the counties of New York, held in the capitol at Albany, on the
+17th and 18th of September, and called the New York Convention,
+condemned Madison's party for declaring the war, on account of its
+injustice, and "as having been undertaken," they said, "from motives
+entirely distinct from those which have been hitherto avowed." The New
+England States treated it coldly. Maryland disapproved through her
+Legislature. Many persons everywhere looked on it as a mere political
+scheme, and when drafted for service in frequent cases bought
+themselves substitutes.
+
+It was soon found that a mistake had been made in attacking Canada.
+That happened which might be expected where bodies of men with
+inflated ideas of glory and no experience attack men fighting
+desperately for their homes, and officers and veterans who had seen
+such service as the Napoleonic wars. The British, with an astuteness
+which is oftener the character credited to their opponents, managed to
+get earliest word of the Declaration sent to their own forts on the
+Lakes, and promptly captured the American fort Michilimackinac. They
+then followed with the daring capture of the stronghold of Detroit,
+amply equipped and garrisoned, by a little handful of men under the
+heroic General Brock, who simply went before it and demanded its
+surrender, whereupon it was given up, together with the whole
+Territory of Michigan. The presence of such trained British officers
+as Brock and of army veterans in the ranks was a very great advantage.
+Poor Brock soon afterwards died in his memorable charge at the victory
+of Queenston Heights.
+
+That year--the first of the War--is known as a succession of fiascos
+for the Americans. The other conspicuous aspect of it is that the
+attacked points were, with the exception of a little skirmishing at
+St. Regis and Lacolle, all in the Province of Upper Canada.
+
+It was only towards the close of the campaign of the next
+year--1813--that Lower Canada was gravely threatened.
+
+The Americans, emboldened by several successes, and having put a great
+many men into the field, believed that the struggle might easily be
+terminated by capturing Montreal. The advance upon Lower Canada took
+place under General James Wilkinson in chief command, with 8,826 men
+and 58 guns and howitzers.[1] He had intended to attack Kingston. "At
+Montreal, however," wrote the Secretary of War, Armstrong, in phrases
+colored by the prevailing school of rhetoric, "you find the weaker
+place and the smallest force to encounter.... You hold a position
+which completely severs the enemy's line of operations, and which,
+while it restrains all below, withers and perishes all above itself."
+This great position--for it is so--Colonel Coffin[2] compares it to
+Vicksburg for natural strength--was to be approached by two routes: by
+Wilkinson himself in boats down the St Lawrence, and by Major-General
+Wade Hampton, his almost independent subordinate, from the Champlain
+border; and it was planned that the two armies should meet at the
+foot of Isle Perrot,[3] thence to strike together across the Lake to
+Lachine, and on to the city, which seems to have had not over, if as
+many as, a thousand regulars to defend it.
+
+Wade Hampton, with over 5,000 men (an effective regular force of 4,053
+rank and file, about 1,500 militia and ten cannon[4]), was at first on
+the Vermont side of Lake Champlain at Burlington[5]. He crossed to the
+New York side, directing his march for Caughnawaga on the St.
+Lawrence. His army[6], except the militia, was the same which, with a
+certain General Dearborn at its head, paraded irregularly across the
+lines and returned to Pittsburgh in the autumn of 1812. During the
+year since elapsed the men had been drilled by Major-General Izard,
+who had served in the French Army. They were all in uniform, well
+clothed and equipped--in short, Hampton commanded, if not the most
+numerous, certainly the most effective, regular army which the United
+States were able to send into the field during the War. Crossing the
+border on the 20th of September, 1813, he surprised a small picket of
+British at Odelltown, a Loyalist settlement afterwards celebrated for
+a battle in the Rebellion of 1837. He soon found himself met with what
+seemed to him great difficulties, for the army was plunged into an
+extensive swampy wood, the only road through which was rendered
+impracticable by fallen trees and barricades, behind which and in the
+gloomy forests surrounding were every here and there to be seen
+Indians and infantry crawling and flitting about, who fired upon them
+from unexpected ambushes. Hampton's men were not of a kind to face
+this. "The perfect rawness of the troops," writes he, "with the
+exception of not a single platoon, has been a source of much
+solicitude to the best-informed among us."[7] They were ignorant,
+insubordinate, and forever "falling off."[8]
+
+Urging on the scattered defenders was, no doubt, to be seen from time
+to time a stout-built, vigorous officer with stripes across the breast
+of his dark gray uniform, dashing about from point to point giving
+fierce orders. This was De Salaberry.
+
+Not reflecting--for he seems to have had the information--that the
+wood was only fifteen miles or so in depth, the Canadians few in
+number, and that a short press forward would have brought him into the
+open country of L'Acadie leading towards Montreal, the American
+General in two days withdrew along the border towards Chateauguay Four
+Corners, alleging the great drought of that year as a reason for
+wishing to descend by the River Chateauguay. At the Corners he rested
+his army for many days.
+
+Wade Hampton was a type of the large slaveholders of the South. Nearly
+sixty years of age, self-important, fiery and over-indulgent in drink,
+of large, imposing figure, of some reputed service in the Revolution,
+and with a record as Congressman and Presidential elector, he was one
+whose chief virtues were not patience and humility. In 1809 he had
+been made a brigadier-general and stationed at New Orleans; but in
+consequence of continual disagreements with his subordinates, was
+superseded in 1812 by Wilkinson, whom he consequently hated. In the
+spring of 1813 he received his Major-General's commission. He had
+acquired his large fortune by land speculations, and at his death some
+time later was supposed to be the wealthiest planter in the United
+States, owning 3,000 slaves. He is said to have ably administered his
+estate.[9]
+
+Hampton had another slave-holding South Carolinian by his side, young
+Brigadier-General George Izard, son and descendant of aristocrats and
+statesmen, well-educated in the soldier's profession, college-bred,
+travelled, and who had served in the French Army. Izard led the main
+column at the battle shortly to ensue.[10]
+
+Another officer of the circle--who seems to have been the ablest--was
+Colonel James Purdy, on whom the brunt of the American work and
+fighting were to fall, and who seems to have done his best in a
+struggle against natural difficulties and against the incompetency of
+both his commander and men.
+
+When Hampton moved to Four Corners, Lieut-Colonel De Salaberry, with
+the Canadian Voltigeurs, moved in like manner westward to the region
+of the Chateauguay and English Rivers. The Voltigeur troops were
+French-Canadians with a small sprinkling of British. Their
+organization was as follows:--Sir George Prevost, on the approach of
+war, May 28th, 1812, ordered the levy of four French volunteer
+battalions, to be made up of unmarried men from 18 to 25 years old.
+They were to be choice troops, and trained like regulars. Charles
+Michel d'Irumberry De Salaberry, then high in the regard of his people
+as a military hero, was chosen to rally the recruits, issued a
+stirring poster calling the French-Canadians to arms, and acted with
+such extraordinary energy that the troops were in hand in two days.
+
+De Salaberry was a perfect type of the old French-Canadian military
+gentry, a stock of men of whom very little remains, a breed of leaders
+of, on the whole, more vigorous forms, more active temperaments, than
+the average--descendants inheriting the qualities of the bravest and
+most adventurous individuals of former times. They were the natural
+result of the feudal _regime_, with which they have passed away.
+Though a gentry, they were a poor one, possessed of little else than
+quantities of forest lands. The officers of the Voltigeurs were
+selected out of the same class, united with a number of English of
+similar stamp. De Salaberry himself was born in the little cottage
+manor-house of Beauport, near Quebec, on the 19th of Nov., 1778.[11]
+Taking to soldiering like a duck to water when very young, he enrolled
+as volunteer in the 44th. At sixteen, the Duke of Kent, who was then
+in Canada, and delighted in friendly acts towards the seigneurs, got
+him a commission in the 60th, with which regiment he left at once for
+the West Indian Isle of Dominica. There he saw terrible service, for
+all the men of his battalion except three were killed or wounded
+during the seige of Fort Matilda. Nevertheless, the young fellow kept
+gay. "Our uniforms," he wrote to his father, "cost very dear; but I
+have received L40, and with that I am going to give myself what will
+make a fine figure." "This fine large boy of sixteen years," says
+Benjamin Sulte in his History of the French-Canadians, "strong as a
+Hercules ... with smiling face ... made a furore at parties.... As he
+was never sick, they employed him everywhere. Fevers reduced his
+battalion to 200 men, but touched not him." Though so young, he was
+charged with covering the evacuation of Fort Matilda.[12]
+
+The Duke of Kent, who was commanding at Halifax, kept a friendly eye
+upon him, and gave him much personal advice, on one occasion
+dissuading him from an inadvisable marriage. He now took him into his
+own regiment. De Salaberry still saw rough service, was shipwrecked,
+served in the West Indies again, and then fought in Europe and the
+disastrous expedition to Walcheren, where he was placed in the most
+advanced posts.[13] Returning to his 60th, he was made captain in
+1799. "I have often heard say," narrates De Gaspe, "that his company
+and that of Captain Chandler were the best drilled in the regiment."
+In the West Indies he was drawn into a duel which caused him sorrow
+until his dying day, for in it he was forced by the "code of honor" to
+kill a German fellow-officer, and bore a scar of the affair ever after
+on his forehead. It is related that by his great strength he cut the
+German in two.
+
+"The prodigious force with which he was endowed," says Sulte, "had
+made of him an exceptional being in the eyes of the soldiers," and
+when he returned to Canada after West Indian service of eleven
+years[14] a little before the war of 1812, he was already the hero of
+the French-Canadians. That the stories of his strength and vigor are
+true is corroborated by every circumstance which has been perpetuated
+about him. His ruddy, energetic face is preserved in portraits among
+his family, and his walking-stick, said to be an enormous article, is
+kept at Quebec in the collection of the Literary and Historical
+Society.
+
+De Salaberry's Voltigeurs were organized at a peculiar juncture. "The
+discords between French and English in Quebec had emboldened the
+United States," says Garneau, "and the English Governors harassed the
+French. An opposite conduct might bring back calm to men's spirits.
+The Governor of Nova Scotia, Sir George Provost, a former officer, of
+Swiss origin, offered all the conditions desirable.... Arriving at
+Quebec, Sir George Provost strove to introduce peace and to remove
+animosity. He showed the completest confidence in the fidelity of the
+French-Canadians, and studied how to prove at every opportunity that
+the accusations of treason which had been brought against them had
+left no trace in the soul of England nor in his own.... Soon the
+liveliest sympathy arose between Sir George Prevost and the
+people."[15] It was in pursuance of this policy that the order to
+raise the Voltigeur force was given by him.
+
+While Hampton was at Four Corners, Sir George, thus now
+Commander-in-Chief of all the forces in Canada, was at the camp which
+had just been formed at La Fourche, and of which a description is
+given by Mr. Sellar in his history of the district. Sir George was a
+man quite devoid of the decisiveness necessary to a soldier, and
+though, as we have seen, he was useful in reconciling the French, his
+errors in military matters several times brought disgrace on the
+British forces, and gave rise to storms of rage and disgust among
+them.[16] De Salaberry was now ordered by him on the Quixotic errand
+of attacking, with about 200 Voltigeurs and some Indians, the large
+camp of Hampton at Four Corners. De Salaberry promptly obeyed these
+impracticable orders, and it is probably at this juncture that a
+little anecdote comes in which I have heard as told by one of his men.
+De Salaberry was down the river dining at a tavern, when a despatch
+was brought to him.
+
+"D---- it!" he exclaimed, jumping up from his seat, "Hampton is at
+Four Corners, and I must go and fight him!" and mounting his fine
+white charger, he dashed away from the door.
+
+On the 1st of October he crept up with his force to the edge of the
+American camp. There they saw the assemblage spread out in all the
+array of war, with its host of tents, stacked guns, flags, moving men
+and sentries, and he prepared to strike it as ordered. One of his
+Indians indiscreetly discharged his musket. The camp was in alarm in
+an instant. De Salaberry, finding his approach discovered, immediately
+collected about fifty of his Voltigeurs, with whom and the Indians he
+pushed into the enemy's advanced camp, consisting of about 800 men,
+and, catching them in their confusion, drove them for a considerable
+distance, until, seeing the main body manoeuvring to cut off his
+little handful, he fell back and took up his position at the skirt of
+the woods. Once again he sallied out and charged, but with all the
+army now thoroughly aroused it was useless, and the Indians having
+retreated, most of his own men ran off, leaving him and Captains
+Chevalier Duchesnay and Gaucher, officers much like himself in stamp,
+with a few trusty Voltigeurs to skirmish with the enemy as long as
+daylight permitted it.[17] He then withdrew to Chateauguay, taking the
+precaution of breaking up the forest road in his rear, in pursuance of
+the general policy of the campaign, which was to destroy and obstruct
+as much as possible in the path of the enemy. Acquainting himself also
+with the ground over which Hampton was expected to make his way into
+the Province, he finally stopped, selected and took up the position
+where the battle afterwards took place, in a thick wood on the left
+bank of the Chateauguay River at the distance of two or three leagues
+above its _Fork_ with English River, where he threw up his works of
+defence, with the approval of General De Watteville. The plan of the
+British commanders, owing to the smallness and inefficiency of their
+forces, was the stern one of burning and destroying all houses and
+property, and retreating slowly to the St. Lawrence, harassing the
+enemy in his advance.[18] The position chosen was as strong as the
+nature of that flat and wooded country and the route of the American
+march would allow. Here his experience and quick eye came in.[19]
+
+Now as to the measures of fortification taken by De Salaberry. In his
+rear there was a small rapid where the river was fordable in two spots
+close to one another. He commanded this with a strong breastwork and a
+guard. There were four ravines which issued from the very thick woods,
+crossing the road, and distant from each other two hundred yards or
+so. On their banks he made his men fell trees and build them into
+breastworks--"a kind of parapet extending into the woods some
+distance." To prevent the American cannon from bearing on these
+breastworks, he felled trees and bush, covering a large stretch of
+ground with obstructions in the front. The breastwork on the
+front-line formed an obtuse angle at the right of the road, and
+extended along the curves of the ravine. The Colonel then sent forward
+to a spot some distance in advance of the front-line a party of
+Beauharnois' axemen, well accustomed to felling trees, who destroyed
+the bridges and obstructed the road with their fragments and fallen
+trees and brush. Lieut. Guy, with twenty Voltigeurs, guarded them in
+front, and Lieut. Johnson, with about the same number, in rear.
+Working incessantly, these axemen made a formidable series of such
+obstructions in front of the first line, extending from the river
+three or four acres into the woods, where they joined an almost
+impracticable marsh. On the opposite bank of the river De Salaberry
+also placed a picket of sixty Beauharnois militia under Captain
+Bruyere, so as to check any advance on the ford, which was his weak
+point in the rear.
+
+Part of De Salaberry's line at the abattis, was a small blockhouse on
+the river-bank (which, however, is not that which has since been
+reputed to be the one concerned), and the works there blocked the
+commencement of the wood and looked out on a broadening plain or level
+of clearings, across which the enemy would have to pass.
+
+The Glengarry men now came down, under McDonell of Ogdensburgh, famous
+for his adventurous capture of that place, and whose exploit the
+Salaberry was about to match. Lieut.-Colonel McDonell--"Red
+George"--was at Prescott drilling a new force of Canadian Fencibles,
+made up, some say, chiefly of Scotch and loyalists,[20] others chiefly
+of French boatmen, when Sir George Prevost asked him how soon he could
+have his men ready to go down to Chateauguay. "As soon as they have
+done their dinner!" he responded. Within a few hours he had provided
+them with _batteaux_, and they were off down the rapids. When Sir
+George himself, who was on the way, got there, he, to his great
+surprise found McDonell before him. "Where are your men?" said he.
+"There," said the Highland Colonel, pointing to his force resting on
+the ground--"not a man absent."[21]
+
+For nearly three weeks the parties of Canadian workers worked
+continually upon the plan of De Salaberry, while Hampton was
+considering, preparing, reviewing his troops, and arranging for a
+communication with Wilkinson so soon as the latter should have passed
+Ogdensburg on his way down the St. Lawrence.
+
+On the 21st of October the advance down the Chateauguay commenced. The
+first move was a rapid march by General Izard with the light-equipped
+troops and a regiment of the line, who surprised a party of about
+ten[22] Indians sitting late in the afternoon at their evening meal at
+the junction of the Outarde and Chateauguay Rivers, and killed one of
+them. There Izard encamped and proceeded to establish a road of
+communication with Hampton. Word was soon brought to Major Henry, of
+the Beauharnois' Militia, commanding on the English River. Henry sent
+word to General De Watteville at La Fourche, and had Captains Levesque
+and Debartzch advance immediately with the flank companies of the 5th
+Battalion of embodied militia and about 200 men of the Beauharnois'
+division. This was the preliminary move towards the battle.
+
+They advanced about six miles that night up the Chateauguay from La
+Fourche, when they came to a wood which it would not have been prudent
+to enter in the dark. Next morning early they were joined by De
+Salaberry with his Voltigeurs and the light company of Captain
+Ferguson, an officer who took a front place in the affair. De
+Salaberry brought all these companies about a league up the bank to
+the place he had fortified, and there stopped. An American patrol
+party being observed in front, General De Watteville came over
+himself, visited the outposts, approved of them, and the work
+proceeded.[23] That evening the main body of the Americans encamped at
+Sear's, about twenty-five miles above the Chateauguay's mouth. The
+engineers had cut a road for the ten cannon, and with great labor and
+difficulty had dragged them thus far.[24]
+
+Within two days more Hampton's men had opened and completed a large
+and practicable road, which is still traceable, from his position at
+Four Corners twenty-four miles through the woods and morasses, and
+brought up his guns and stores to his new position, about seven miles
+from De Salaberry's. (About Dewittville?)
+
+[Illustration: SKETCH OF THE BATTLE OF CHATEAUGUAY--OCT 26, 1813]
+
+From this point he despatched Colonel Purdy with about 1,500 men,
+composed of a light brigade (the 1st Brigade of the American Army[25])
+and a strong body of the infantry of the line, at an early hour in the
+night of the 25th, across the Chateauguay and down its right bank[26]
+at a bend adjoining what is now known as the Cross Farm, with orders
+to gain the ford and fall on the rear of Lieut.-Colonel De Salaberry's
+position, while the main body, under General Izard, were to commence
+the attack in front. Purdy's brigade crossed not far above De
+Salaberry, and proceeded into the woods of the opposite side. A cedar
+swamp, an unexpected stream in which they floundered, and the
+ignorance of their guides misled and bewildered them. This was the
+fault of Hampton, and due to his headstrongness, for the guides had
+protested that they did not know that side of the Chateauguay; but he
+had ordered them to proceed. Purdy's command became scattered, were
+forced to halt in confusion, and had to sleep in the open woods, cold,
+wet, exhausted, and apprehensive.[27] General Hampton, however, in the
+morning, fully expected to hear them attacking the ford, advanced, and
+at ten o'clock his troops appeared in sight of the party of busy
+woodchoppers, about 3,500 men, with three squadrons of cavalry,
+marching in column along the high road, commanded by General Izard.
+Lieut. Guy's picket fired, the workmen dropped work and ran, Guy
+retired upon Johnson, and both Lieutenants retreated with their men to
+the completed abattis, where they formed up again and began to fire
+smartly.
+
+De Salaberry, on hearing the firing, promptly advanced with the light
+company of the Canadian Fencibles, commanded by Captain Ferguson,
+"flanked by twenty-two Indians on the right and centre,"[28] and two
+companies of his Voltigeurs, commanded by Captains Chevalier and Louis
+Juchereau Duchesnay. Ferguson's companies he posted on the right, in
+front of the abattis, in extended order, its right skirting on the
+adjoining woods and abattis, among which were distributed a few
+Abenaquis Indians. The three officers, Ferguson and the two
+Duchesnays, executed the movements required of them with the coolness
+of a day of parade. The Voltigeur company of the oldest of the
+Duchesnays, known as "the Chevalier," occupied, in extended order, the
+ground from the left of Ferguson's Company to the Chateauguay, and the
+company under Captain Louis Juchereau Duchesnay, with about
+thirty-five[29] Sedentary Militia under Captain Longtin, were thrown
+back along the margin of the river, hidden among the trees and bushes,
+so as to flank Colonel Purdy's men, or prevent him from flanking the
+Canadian position. Between the abattis and the front line were a
+company of Voltigeurs, Captain Lecuyer commanding, and beyond them on
+the right a light company (that of the 5th Battalion) of embodied
+militia with their side pickets, under Captain Debartzch; then, to the
+right of them, in the woods, the Indians under Captain La Mothe. There
+were thus in the front only about 240 Canadians. The positions,
+however, occupied about a mile along the river, and the rest of the
+troops--some 600--were distributed among the other breastworks, under
+command of McDonell.[30]
+
+The battle was now on the point of commencing. In the centre of the
+front stood De Salaberry watching the enemy, whose characteristics he
+had noted twice before. All waited in suspense. A touching scene was
+taking place among the Beauharnois Militia further back, where Captain
+Longtin caused his men to kneel, went through a short prayer with
+them, and then rising, said: "that now they had fulfilled their duty
+to their God, they would fulfil that to their King."[31]
+
+Meanwhile, the enemy kept steadily moving along the road in column. A
+tall mounted American officer rode forward and began a harangue to the
+Canadians in French. "Brave Canadians," said he, "give yourselves
+over; we do not wish to do you any harm!"[32] De Salaberry, seeing
+that his moment was come, sprang upon a stump,[33] discharged his
+musket as a signal to begin, and brought the American officer off his
+horse by the shot. The enemy at the time were exposed to being taken
+on both front and side. The bugles blared, the front companies
+immediately opened fire, and the battle was begun. Izard's force were
+in the open plain, while their foes were hidden in a thick wood. The
+squadrons of cavalry and four cannon which they had brought thus far
+were found to be useless there. They, however, commenced a
+spirited[34] fire in battalion volley; but, from the position of the
+line, it was almost totally thrown to the right of the Canadians, and
+of no effect whatever. They soon faced to the right, and filing up
+with speed, changed their front parallel with the lines of
+breastworks, when the engagement became general, and their fire
+compelled the retreat, behind the front edge of the breastwork[35] of
+a few skirmishers near the left, who had been rather advanced in the
+centre of the line. This retreat being mistaken by the enemy for a
+flight, a universal shout ensued, which was re-echoed, to their
+surprise, by the Canadians and the Glengarry men in reserve under
+Lieut.-Colonel McDonell. Now was the supreme moment of the battle. De
+Salaberry ordered his bugleman to sound the advance. "This was heard
+by Lieut-Colonel McDonell, who, thinking the Colonel was in want of
+support, caused his own bugles to answer, and immediately advanced
+with two of his companies from the third and fourth lines to the first
+and second."[36] "All these movements were executed with great
+rapidity." De Salaberry, at the same time, as a _ruse de guerre_,
+ordered "ten or twelve buglemen into the adjoining woods with orders
+to separate and blow with all their might."[37] The enemy, as De
+Salaberry calculated, suspected that the Canadians were advancing in
+great numbers to circumvent them. The Colonel, while giving these
+orders, is said to have done so facing his men, with his back against
+a tree.[38] The noise of the engagement towards its end brought on
+Colonel Purdy's division on the opposite side of the river, which,
+having driven in the picquet of sixty Beauharnois Sedentary Militia
+under Captain Bruyere, were pressing on for the ford, whereupon De
+Salaberry ordered Lieut.-Colonel McDonell, who had returned to his
+position to check the enemy there, and Captain Daly was chosen, with
+the light company of the 3rd Battalion Embodied Militia, numbering
+seventy men,[39] to cross and take up the ground abandoned by the
+picket.
+
+De Salaberry, then seeing that the action was about to become serious
+on the right, left his position in the centre of the front and placed
+himself on the left with the troops along the bank, where, standing on
+a stump.[40] he could see, through his field-glass, Captain Daly with
+his men crossing the ford. The latter took with him such of the
+Beauharnois men as had rallied[41] up, and led by him, they advanced
+along the river-bank and made, in the words of Purdy afterwards, "a
+furious assault" upon the advanced guard of the Americans, whom they
+drove back upon themselves. "The bravery of Captain Daly," wrote the
+Temoin Oculaire--whose account, it is to be remembered, was published
+a few days afterwards--"who literally led his company into the midst
+of the enemy, could not be surpassed."
+
+Purdy's main body finally recovered, and charged forward, however,
+emerging in great force from the wood.
+
+Captain Daly's men, as they had been taught by Lieut.-Colonel
+McDonell, knelt and fired a volley kneeling. The return volley was
+fired by tenfold numbers, and but for that precaution would have
+destroyed nearly the whole of Captain Daly's command. As it was, he
+received a severe wound, and with his men, several of whom were
+wounded and himself a second time, was compelled to retreat, which the
+men did in very good order under Lieut. Benjamin Schiller. The latter
+distinguished himself greatly. He bore off his wounded captain to a
+safe place, and returning, took command at request of the men. At one
+juncture he was engaged, hand to hand, with a very formidable
+adversary, whose head he cut off with a single blow of his sabre.[42]
+
+Purdy's force eventually were moving on in overwhelming numbers, and
+for a moment their shouts of victory were heard by the little force
+lying in suspense behind the barricades on the opposite bank. In
+coming out of the wood they swarmed down along the bank of the river.
+Now was the time for Captains Louis Duchesnay and Longtin's companies
+concealed in the river-side bushes opposite. De Salaberry instantly
+appears upon the scene, gives the word of command, and the bushes
+flame out with a hidden and destructive fire. The American shouts of
+victory turn into cries of confusion. In the utmost disorder they make
+a tumultuous and precipitate retreat into the woods. Thus, at 2.30
+p.m., came the failure of Purdy's flanking movement.
+
+As one may easily imagine, this series of incidents took several
+hours.
+
+In the front, General Hampton for about an hour kept his soldiers
+ready in momentary expectation of attack by De Salaberry, and of
+hearing of Purdy's success. When he heard that the latter had failed,
+however, he sent him word to withdraw his column to a shoal four or
+five miles above and cross over, and ordered General Izard to retire
+his brigade to a position about three miles in the rear, to which
+place the baggage had been ordered forward. Hampton thus retired,
+leaving De Salaberry master of the field, with scarcely 300 men in
+actual action, and no British guns anywhere within seven miles.[43]
+
+Sir George Prevost, with Major-General De Watteville, arrived on the
+ground at the close of the engagement and overlooked De Salaberry's
+arrangements, thanked him with great praise, and then immediately
+wrote an inaccurate despatch to England, in which he claimed the
+principal credit for _himself_.[44] That evening De Salaberry wrote to
+his father; "I have won a victory mounted on a wooden horse!"[45]
+
+After the battle was over the American firing did not cease, for no
+sooner did darkness come on than Purdy's scattered command, moving up
+the right bank, commenced a most destructive fire on each other,
+mistaking them for the British, and they continued it the greater part
+of the night. The final incident took place just as day dawned on the
+27th, when about twenty Americans, mistaking some of the Canadian
+militia on the left bank for their own people, were compelled by them
+to surrender.
+
+That day at dawn McDonell came up in command of Captain Rouville's
+Company of Voltigeurs, Captain Levesque's Company of Grenadiers (of
+the 5th Battalion Incorporated Militia), and sixty men of the
+Beauharnois Division. De Salaberry turned over to McDonell the defence
+of the abatis or obstructions in front, and the hero of Ogdensburgh
+pushed on to two miles further than before. The day passed in
+expectation of a second attack, but no enemy appeared.
+
+Meanwhile, the straggling order which the nature of the swamp and
+forest imposed on Purdy's retreat exposed him to rear attacks from the
+Indians, which were repeated after dark and caused him loss.[46]
+
+A large quantity of muskets, drums, knapsacks, provisions and arms
+were found on Purdy's shore, especially indicating the confusion just
+previous to their retreat. Upwards of ninety bodies and graves were
+found on that bank,[47] among them two or three officers of
+distinction. On Hampton's field were two dead horses, and the enemy
+were there seen carrying off several of the wounded in carts.
+
+The Canadian loss was only two killed, sixteen wounded, and four
+missing. Three missing were by mistake at first included among the
+killed in the returns.[48]
+
+Time now wore on, another night was passed, and the morning of the
+28th arrived, when Captain La Mothe, with about 150 Indians,
+reconnoitred the enemy, who, according to the report of Captain
+Hughes, of the Engineers, had abandoned his camp the day before.
+
+A party of the Beauharnois Militia, supported by Captain Debartzch,
+burnt and destroyed the newly-erected bridges within a mile of the
+enemy's camp, which was now about one and a half leagues from Piper's
+Road, _i.e._, about two leagues from his former position. On the same
+evening the Indians, under Captain La Mothe,[49] proceeded through the
+woods and came up with the enemy's rear-guard. Here a slight skirmish
+ensued, in which the Americans lost one killed and seven wounded.
+
+Hampton, having re-occupied his late position, called a council of
+war, where it was determined to fall back and occupy the former
+position at Four Corners, to secure their communication with the
+United States; from thence either to retire to winter quarters or be
+ready to re-enter Lower Canada.
+
+"On that day or the day previous Captain Debartzch, of the Militia,
+was sent to the American headquarters with a flag. When he stated the
+number and description of troops by which General Hampton had been
+opposed, the latter, scarcely able to keep his temper, insisted that
+the British force amounted to 7,000 men. On being assured of the
+contrary, he asked: 'What, then, made the woods ring so with bugles?'
+Captain Debartzch explained this; but it was apparently to no
+purpose."[50]
+
+The Americans retired on the 29th. "On the 30th a party of Indian
+Chasseurs, under Captain Ducharme, reported that the enemy had
+abandoned his camp at Piper's Road in the greatest disorder, and was
+on the road to Four Corners." The Canadians followed up and hung upon
+the rear and embarrassed the retreat. Canada was saved!
+
+General Wilkinson was very severe on his fellow-general. "On the 4th
+of November," he complains, "the British garrison of Montreal
+consisted solely of 400 marines and 200 soldiers. What a golden,
+glorious opportunity has been lost by the caprice of Major-General
+Hampton!"[51] Poor man, he was to have pretty much the same luck
+himself just afterwards! Wilkinson's army proceeded on its own course
+down the river, but was almost as ignominiously defeated at Chrysler's
+Farm on the 10th of November, where his 3,000 or 4,000 men were
+matched, partly in open field and partly with the assistance of a ruse
+as at Chateauguay, against 800 British and thirty Indians, under
+Colonel Morison, a man equally brave and able with McDonell and De
+Salaberry.
+
+Mr. Dion, of Chambly, to whom the erection of a fine bronze statue of
+De Salaberry is due, has related to me a number of particulars from De
+Salaberry's letters held by his relatives. The hero complains bitterly
+of Prevost and De Watteville--"those two Swiss"--and that on account
+of his religion he could get no higher than a Lieut.-Colonel. From the
+same letters it appears that the "Temoin Oculaire" was a young lawyer
+named O'Sullivan, later, Judge O'Sullivan, a man partly of Irish
+family, in person large and handsome, and a great friend of De
+Salaberry, who ever remained grateful to him for preserving record of
+his deed in his celebrated letter. It is commonly attributed to D.B.
+Viger. Another little fact mentioned in the correspondence of De
+Salaberry is that his men in the battle were barefooted.
+
+The almost unique nature of the victory strikes one. Its keystone was
+De Salaberry's masterly use of illusion. Of it was the choice of a
+thick wood to conceal his small force, their entrenchment behind the
+abatis and in bush positions, the unexpected fire from the left bank
+upon Purdy, the Indians in the woods, and, more than everything, the
+ruse of the multiplied bugles. But besides illusion there was the
+ablest possible disposition, for there seems no doubt but that no
+spot could have keen chosen along his projected route greater in
+strength when fortified and guarded just as that was. The enemy could
+only reach it fatigued, and far from sources of supply, the wood was
+thick, the ravines occurred happily, the river was free from fords for
+a long distance, and a frightful swamp occupied the opposite bank. How
+would De Watteville's small and raw army have acted in the open
+country had this position not been tried?
+
+Next, how ought the credit of the affair to be apportioned, for it is
+clear that it is due to a number concerned? De Salaberry is, of
+course, in every way the leading figure. His courage and spirit were
+perfect, his intelligence rapid, his labor incessant, and the whole
+choice of the field and strategy of the battle were, by all the
+testimony, due to him. On the whole, it almost seems, in its broad
+lights, like a battle of this one man against the enemy. His task was
+the greater from the extent and obscurity of the battlefield. On these
+accounts, some of those holding the positions used afterwards to say
+there was no battle at all, and one--Lieut. Delisle, who received a
+pension--that the whole thing was a farce. Frankly--and it may seem at
+first sight like a discourtesy to say it--it is doubtful whether the
+Voltigeurs would have stood much real fighting had they been opposed
+to veterans. On reasonable consideration this objection must
+disappear. It is well known that recruits away from their homes are
+utterly unstable in their first battles. For instance, at Bull's Run,
+in the first two battles of the American Civil War, it was a toss-up
+which side would run away from the other, and they decided it by one
+side doing so the first day, and the other side the second. Many of
+the Upper Canadians were fearful and undecided at the beginning of the
+War of 1812. It is pretty probable that the promptitude of the few
+regulars in the country, including such officers as Brock, was its
+salvation at the outset. Most of De Salaberry's own men had withdrawn
+a month previous at the attack on the camp at Four Corners, though so
+disproportionate an enterprise was no fair test of recruits. The
+Sedentary Militia, when drafted, deserted in great numbers, and the
+duty assigned to the newly raised Voltigeurs by their commander at
+Chrysler's Farm just afterwards was that merely of making a temporary
+display in the woods. De Salaberry probably intended to do more with
+his division at Chateauguay, and might have succeeded if put to the
+test, for they were now probably superior to the American force in the
+very important respect of acquired confidence in a leader, who was
+even then the hero of the Province. Being of the same stock as
+Napoleon's men, a long course of fighting under a De Salaberry would
+have undoubtedly made them into a similar force; but in any case, too
+much cannot be said for the patriotism and willingness exhibited by
+these young men in defence of united Canada.
+
+Every man on the field, apparently, did the duty assigned to him.
+One--Jean Bte. Leclaire, was also one of the heroes of Fort Detroit
+and afterwards Chrysler's Farm. To the memory of such a man let his
+country do some honor. To the axemen's force also is due credit for
+cheerful and dangerous labor in chopping trees and working at the
+obstructions and defences. The Temoin Oculaire names "Vincent,
+Pelletier, Vervais, Dubois, Caron," who swam the river and took
+prisoners those who refused to surrender.
+
+Captain Daly is the name to be mentioned next to De Salaberry. His
+courageous onslaught is testified to by both Purdy and the Temoin, and
+twice wounded, he fought until he fell. It may be truthfully said that
+it was he who bore the brunt of the fight. Schiller also specially
+distinguished himself, and won his captaincy on the field. Of Ferguson
+and the two Captains Duchesnay we have spoken. The Temoin Oculaire
+praises the courage of Captain La Mothe, of Lieuts. Pinguet, Hebden,
+Guy, Johnson, Powell, and Captain L'Ecuyer (the latter two for
+captures of prisoners in the woods.) Captains Longtin and Huneau, of
+the Beauharnois Militia, are also mentioned by him for good conduct.
+Louis Langlade, Noel Annance, and Bartlet Lyons, of the Indian
+Department, were in the action of the 26th and the affair of the 28th.
+McDonell of Odgensburg, and no doubt many others, ought to be added.
+As to credit, in fact, every man in the region who did his duty and
+was ready to defend his country deserves it, and those named are but
+the examples who were put to the test. The brave Scotch settlers, few
+as they then were, were inspired with that spirit. The women stood
+literally ready to burn the roofs over their heads. The men, except
+those who had teams, who were drafted into an invaluable transport
+service, were formed into a company and drilled for the defence, under
+Lieut. Neil Morison and Captain James Wright, whose house was the
+headquarters of General De Watteville and a frequent scene of the
+council of officers. He was a tall and stern man, a Highlander, his
+name of "Wright" being a translation of his Gaelic one, "MacIntheoir."
+His Chateauguay sword is said to have long hung on the wall in the
+house of one of his descendants.
+
+We should not be so ungrateful also as to forget the services of those
+faithful Indians, to whom, as all through the war, a share of the
+success was due.
+
+In 1847 it was decided in England, after much agitation, to issue what
+was called "the War Medal," rewarding all those who had fought British
+battles during the years 1793 to 1814 and not received any special
+medal. Clasps were attached for each battle in which the recipient was
+engaged. A medal seems to have been given, as was meet, to almost
+every one on the field of Chateauguay, for 260 were distributed. It
+was, in fact, erroneously issued to some who were not present. One
+lieutenant, in particular, says Mr. Dion, is known from the De
+Salaberry letters to have himself lamented that he only came up the
+day after. The Indians and regulars also got medals. The simple record
+of what was done, however, is the best memorial of honor to those who
+were present on that memorable day.
+
+Mr. R.W. McLachlan relates his recollections of one of the veterans at
+Montreal. "Clad in an old artillery uniform, he was always seen
+marching out alongside of the troops on review days. He was ever ready
+to recount his adventures on the day of battle. Although we have heard
+it often from his lips, all that we can remember is that: 'De Yankee
+see me fore I see him, and he shoot me drough de neck.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is the privilege of the men of Chateauguay to remember that their
+region is haunted by the spirits of heroes.
+
+ "The dead still play their part"
+
+sings the Canadian poet Sangster, and here the musing thought must for
+ever conjure up De Salaberry, McDonell, the 800 waiting behind their
+breastworks in the gloom of the woods, the touching scene of Captain
+Longtin and his Beauharnois men, and the stubborn onset of Daly
+against overwhelming odds. The meaning of it all is: that given a good
+cause, and the defence of our homes against wanton aggression, we can
+dare odds that otherwise would seem hopeless; that it is in the
+future, as in the past, the spirits of men, and not their material
+resources, which count for success; that we need only be brave and
+just, and ready to die, and our country can never be conquered; and
+that we shall always be able to preserve ourselves free in our course
+of development towards our own idea of a nation.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+NOTES BY W. PATTERSON, M.A.
+
+
+1. Mr. James Walsh, Sr., who still resides in Ormstown, Que., was
+informed by one Saint Charles Moreau, alias Legault, that the stone
+house, situated on the Chateauguay about two miles below the village
+of Ste. Martine, and known during the early years of the present
+century as "The Stone Tavern," had just been built and finished the
+day before the battle, and the officers of the Canadian forces
+unceremoniously took possession of it on coming forward that evening.
+
+2. This same Legault or Moreau, shortly after the battle and before
+the dead were removed, visited the scene of the fight. There he saw
+several dead and several dying. He had a vivid recollection of the
+cruelty of the Indians. "The cursed savages," said Legault, "did
+nothing to secure the victory, and yet were foremost in plundering the
+dead and dying." He remembered in particular having seen an American
+officer, who was seriously wounded, lying on the field. The officer
+had a coin in his mouth which he was evidently anxious to save. An
+Indian, upon noticing this, bade him by making signs open his mouth
+and give up the piece. The command being apparently misunderstood, the
+Indian impatiently struck him with his tomahawk on the forehead. As
+his head was knocked back by the blow, the man opened his mouth, and
+his assailant taking out the coin passed on.
+
+3. Mr. David Monique, who lived at the "Portage" (modern Dewittville)
+at the time of the war, used to say, as Mr. Walsh many a time heard
+him relate, that his impression was that the Canadians did not hang
+upon the American rear after the fight, for had they done so, the
+American guns, which were all left behind, would have been captured. A
+division retreated up the Island of Jamestown by way of the "Portage,"
+on the South side of the Chateauguay, passing on their route Mr.
+Monique's farm. There they had their morning meal near his house, on
+October 27th, 1813. Their pork they fried on the ends of sticks before
+little fires. They were poorly clad. All were quite civil. They said
+that they had been "badly licked the day before." Their retreat was
+witnessed by this man and his family, and certainly they were not
+pursued by the Canadians, nor, in his opinion, did the Canadians
+pursue the other division, which retired across the Outarde by way of
+the ford, made on their inward march, and since known as the "American
+Ford," for in the following year, they returned for their guns and
+carried them off without molestation.
+
+4. Mr. Thomas Baird, merchant, of Ormstown, remembers well a Mr.
+Laberge, a very old man, who had been one of the soldiers on picquet
+duty at Ormstown, when the Americans invaded this country, in 1813.
+Laberge said that the Canadians stationed at this point were few in
+number, and were posted near the mouth of the Outarde, along the North
+bank of the Chateauguay, and also along the creek which now runs
+through the village of Ormstown. There the Canadians were taken by
+surprise. Those who escaped, retreated to De Salaberry's headquarters
+a few miles down the Chateauguay.
+
+Laberge also said that some of the Americans who were killed in the
+battle of the next day, October 26th, were buried on the bank of the
+creek, to which reference has been made. In this connection it is
+interesting to relate that while excavations were being made a few
+years ago for a roadway through this bank, the remains of five or six
+men were unearthed. The U.S.A. military buttons, the belt buckles and
+the bayonet found in their grave removed any doubt that these were the
+remains of American soldiers. This last item was kindly given the
+writer by Mr. Chas. Moe, who assisted in making the road.
+
+5. The ford over the Outarde, by which the Americans crossed, still
+remains and is known as the "American Ford." It is about three miles
+west of Ormstown village. The annual Spring floods have undoubtedly
+changed it somewhat. Both banks of the river shew the place to be a
+coarse gravel bed. By the addition of more gravel they easily made a
+fine roadway.
+
+6. Mr. John Symons, who came to the Chateauguay River in 1828, and has
+lived in its vicinity ever since, and who at the time of writing
+resides in Ormstown, informed the writer that Alexander Williamson,
+one of the earliest settlers, used to say that what is spoken of as
+the battle of Chateauguay, is greatly magnified. Williamson regarded
+the Americans as a great lot of cowards who were glad to take
+advantage of the slightest opposition to return home.
+
+7. Mr. James Brodie, a retired farmer, residing in the village of
+Ormstown, and who also was well acquainted with Alexander Williamson,
+states that Williamson was about twelve years of age when the battle
+was fought and was not present at the fight, but what he knew of it he
+had learned from others.
+
+8. Mr. William Allan who for years did business as a general
+storekeeper at Allans Corners, Que., informed the writer that he heard
+Alexander Williamson describe what is generally known as the battle,
+many times. "Williamson," says Mr. Allan, "could not repeat the same
+story twice."
+
+9. Mr. Brodie, in view of all the information he could gather from the
+early settlers, including Mr. Williamson, sincerely believes that the
+merits of De Salaberry have been much over-estimated. "That officer
+has no claims," said he, "to being a hero by what he did in that
+encounter."
+
+Yet the Canadians, so that gentleman gives the account, were most
+skilfully managed and made the best of their opportunity. Wearing the
+red coats, they were made to march in a circle for a time under the
+cover of the woods, and for a time exposed to the view of the
+Americans. To them, as they marched along, they gave the impression
+that they were a numerous force. These same Canadians, (Miss Anne
+Bryson, an aged lady, residing at Allans Corners, relates the story),
+still further exaggerated their strength by turning their coats whilst
+behind the trees, the white lining then giving them the appearance of
+being another regiment. The story is also told how the Indians, being
+well scattered, made the forests resound with their war cry.
+
+10. Where was the battle fought? The battlefield is situated about
+five or six acres west of the passenger bridge at Allans Corners,
+which is a small village on the Chateauguay River, thirteen miles
+below Huntingdon, three miles below Ormstown village, and about
+forty-three miles from Montreal. The site was a position on the North
+bank of the Chateauguay, where, almost at right angles to it, a deep
+and wide creek, then a large stream, emptied itself into the river. At
+that point was the foremost line of De Salaberry's breastworks,
+consisting of felled trees, stones and earth. There the main division
+of the Americans was repulsed. A sharp encounter in which the enemy
+were defeated by Captain Daly took place several acres below this on
+the opposite bank. Bullets are found every year on the scene.
+
+11. It is popularly believed that some of the American guns were sunk
+in the Chateauguay River at the point where the battle took place,
+although no trace of them has ever been found. The river is very deep
+there.
+
+12. About 13 acres west of Allans Corners there was a settlement of
+American squatters who fled the country before the outbreak of the
+war. They had planted an orchard which was always afterwards known as
+the "American Orchard." Traces of it were to be seen a few years ago.
+The early settlers, Mr. Williamson among others, have handed down the
+fact that some of these people were employed as guides by the American
+invaders.
+
+13. Mr. James Gilbert, who was the first settler on the land on the
+south bank opposite the point where De Salaberry was encamped, years
+ago, when ploughing, unearthed the remains of a man wrapped in the
+American military dress, and at various times, Mr. George Nussey
+informed the writer, ploughed up bones.
+
+14. Mr. Williamson remembered well, Mr. Brodie informed the writer,
+that the settlers on the Chateauguay at the time of the battle,
+excepting of course the militia, were prepared to flee towards
+Montreal, intending to take with them what household effects they
+conveniently could, should the Canadian forces suffer defeat.
+
+15. Near De Salaberry's first line, on the north bank of the river,
+stood the old block house. Miss Anne Bryson remembers it well.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+[1] Wm. James' Mil. Oc. of War of 1812.
+
+[2] History of the War of 1812.
+
+[3] James says at St. Regis.
+
+[4] James.
+
+[5] Letter of Hampton to Armstrong.
+
+[6] James.
+
+[7] To the Secretary of War, Sept. 25th, 1813, in Palmer's Hist.
+Register of the U.S., I., for 1814.
+
+[8] Ibid.
+
+[9] Chiefly Appleton's Cycl. of Am. Biog.
+
+[10] Supplement to same. It contains a portrait of Izard.
+
+[11] H. Sulte.
+
+[12] Garneau, Hist. Can.
+
+[13] Garneau.
+
+[14] Garneau.
+
+[15] Christie gives him credit for this point.
+
+[16] See letters of "Veritas."
+
+[17] Christie Hist. Can.
+
+[18] Wilkinson's letters
+
+[19] All full accounts of the battle from this stage on are chiefly
+founded on that remarkable letter of a participant signing "Temoin
+Oculaire," published in Montreal, 29 Oct., 1813. It is open, however,
+to some corrections of detail.
+
+[20] Garneau and Sellar; but Coffin says they were French-Canadian
+_voyageurs_, and Mr. John Fraser, from tradition, says _five-sixths_
+French-Canadians. I have been unable to obtain the necessary
+verifications from Ottawa or elsewhere.
+
+[21] W.F. Coffin, Hist. War of 1812.
+
+[22] Jame's Military Occurrences, I., 306.
+
+[23] Coffin.
+
+[24] James.
+
+[25] Coffin.
+
+[26] James, I., p. 308.
+
+[27] Purdy gives an interesting and clear account (_Vide_ Palmer's
+Hist. Register for 1814) of this march and some other matters, in his
+report to Wilkinson.
+
+[28] James.
+
+[29] James says sixty.
+
+[30] James.
+
+[31] Temoin Oc.
+
+[32] Garneau.
+
+[33] Tradition.
+
+[34] James.
+
+[35] James.
+
+[36] Temoin Oculaire.
+
+[37] James.
+
+[38] Tradition.
+
+[39] James.
+
+[40] Coffin.
+
+[41] James.
+
+[42] This was "a fact known to many persons now alive," according to a
+petition for a medal by his family in 1849.
+
+[43] James.
+
+[44] See his despatch.
+
+[45] Sulte.
+
+[46] Hampton's Report on the Battle: Palmer's Hist. Register, 1814.
+
+[47] James.
+
+[48] James.
+
+[49] "Officier actif et zele." (Temoin Oculaire.)
+
+[50] James.
+
+[51] Palmer's Hist. Register.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of An Account Of The Battle Of Chateauguay
+by William D. Lighthall
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