diff options
Diffstat (limited to '39368-h/39368-h.htm')
| -rw-r--r-- | 39368-h/39368-h.htm | 8401 |
1 files changed, 8401 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/39368-h/39368-h.htm b/39368-h/39368-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4fa4f22 --- /dev/null +++ b/39368-h/39368-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,8401 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<html lang="en"> + +<head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> +<title>The Project Gutenberg e-Book of The Second War with England, Vol. 1; Author: J. T. Headley.</title> + +<style type="text/css"> +<!-- + +body {font-size: 1em; text-align: justify; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;} + +h1 {font-size: 115%; text-align: center; margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 4em;} +h2 {font-size: 110%; text-align: center; margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 2em; line-height: 1.8em;} +h3 {font-size: 105%; text-align: center; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em;} + +a:focus, a:active {outline:#ffee66 solid 2px; background-color:#ffee66;} +a:focus img, a:active img {outline: #ffee66 solid 2px; } + +p {text-indent: 1em;} +p.tn {margin-left: 10%; width: 80%; font-size: 90%;} + +table {border-collapse: collapse; table-layout: fixed; + width: 90%; margin-left: 5%; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;} + +.p2 {margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em;} +.p4 {margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 1em;} + +.smcap {font-variant: small-caps; font-size: 85%;} +.smaller {font-size: smaller;} +.font105 {font-size: 105%;} +.font110 {font-size: 110%;} + +.center {text-align: center; text-indent: 0em;} +.right {text-align: right;} +.ralign10 {position: absolute; right: 10%; top: auto;} +.figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;} +.figcenter p {text-indent: 0em;} + +.toc {margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 15%;} +.toc_resume {margin-left: 5%; text-indent: -5%;} +.resume {margin-left: 5%; text-indent: -5%; font-size: 90%;} +.sidenote {float: left; clear: left; text-align: center; + padding: 5px; border-style: solid; border-width: 1px; + margin-right: 1em; text-indent: 0em;} +.poem10 {margin-left: 10%; font-size: 90%; text-indent: 0em;} +.poem10 p {text-indent: 0em;} +.advert p {margin-left: 1em; text-indent: -1em;} +.quote {margin-left: 5%; font-size: 90%;} +.quote p {text-indent: 0em;} +.footnote p {text-indent: 0em;} + +.min20em {margin-left: -0.20em;} +.min33em {margin-left: -0.33em;} +.add1em {margin-left: 1em;} +.add3em {margin-left: 3em;} +.add11em {margin-left: 11em;} +.wspaced2em {word-spacing: 2em;} +.noindent {text-indent: 0em;} + +.box {border-style: solid; border-width: 1px; + margin: 0.5em; margin-top: 4em; padding: 0.5em;} + +.pagenum {visibility: hidden; + position: absolute; right:0; text-align: right; + font-size: 10px; + font-weight: normal; font-variant: normal; + font-style: normal; letter-spacing: normal; + color: #C0C0C0; background-color: inherit;} + +--> +</style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Second War with England, Vol. 1 of 2, by +Joel Tyler Headley + +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/license + + +Title: The Second War with England, Vol. 1 of 2 + +Author: Joel Tyler Headley + +Release Date: April 4, 2012 [EBook #39368] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND *** + + + + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Lindy Walsh, Christine P. Travers +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<p class="p4 center">THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND.</p> + +<a id="img001" name="img001"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img001.jpg" width="500" height="288" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">THE CONSTITUTION AND JAVA.</p> +</div> + +<p class="p4 center font110">THE SECOND WAR<br> + WITH<br> + ENGLAND.</p> + +<p class="p2 center">BY <span class="font105">J. T. HEADLEY,</span></p> + +<p class="center smaller">AUTHOR OF "NAPOLEON AND HIS MARSHALS," "WASHINGTON AND HIS GENERALS," + "THE OLD GUARD," "SCOTT AND JACKSON," ETC. ETC.</p> + +<p class="p4 center">IN TWO VOLUMES.</p> + +<p class="p4 center">VOL. I.</p> + +<p class="p4 center smaller">NEW YORK:<br> + CHARLES SCRIBNER, 145 NASSAU STREET.<br> + 1853.</p> + +<p class="p4 center smaller">Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1853, by<br> + CHARLES SCRIBNER,<br> + In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern + District of New York.</p> + +<p class="p4 smaller">C. W. BENEDICT,<br> + <span class="smcap">Stereotyper and Printer</span>,<br> + 12 Spruce Street, N. Y.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagev" name="pagev"></a>(p. v)</span> PREFACE.</h2> + +<p>More books, probably, have been written on the War of 1812 than on any +other portion of our history. The great political leaders of that time +were so vindictive in their animosities, and took such strong and +decided ground on all political questions, that the success of one or +the other afterwards in public life depended very much on his conduct +during the war. Hence, much detached and personal history has been +written in order to clear up or illustrate some particular event. A +candidate for public office was often chosen for his services in the +war; hence, every portion of it in which he took part was thoroughly +investigated by both friends and foes. So if one had failed in that +trying period of the country, the world was sure to hear of it when he +came up for the suffrages of the people. The war proved very +unfortunate for some of the leaders, and court martials and disgrace +closed the career of many which had hitherto been bright and +prosperous. These men have written long pamphlets and books in +self-defence, or they have been written <span class="pagenum"><a id="pagevi" name="pagevi"></a>(p. vi)</span> by their descendants, +so that if hearing both sides would aid the reader in coming to a +correct conclusion, he was pretty sure to reach it. When so many +quarrels are to be settled the public will not fail to be informed all +about the origin of them. Another class of works have been written, +designed only to furnish a synopsis of the war, and scarcely reach to +the value of histories. Others have been confined solely to the +military and naval movements—others still are devoted almost +exclusively to political matters of that period; so that +notwithstanding the large supply of works on the War of 1812, I know +of none in which all these different topics are even attempted to be +combined in proper proportions. The present work is an effort to +accomplish that end without being too voluminous on the one hand, or +too general on the other. I have endeavored to give impressions as +well as facts—to trace the current and depict the phases of public +feeling, rather than inflict on the reader long documents and longer +debates, in which everything that gave them life and interest was +carefully excluded by the reporter.</p> + +<p>The effects of the fierce conflict waged between the Federalists and +Democrats during the war have not yet passed away, and many of the +actors in it are still living, who retain their old prejudices and +hatred. Their near descendants and relatives, though so many of them +are found in the ranks of democracy, still defend the memory of those +whose names they bear, and endeavor to throw discredit on the writer +who would rob them of reputation, and consign them to the obloquy they +deserve. In a war like the late one with Mexico, where almost every +officer was a hero, and in narrating the progress of which the +historian is called upon only to eulogize, <span class="pagenum"><a id="pagevii" name="pagevii"></a>(p. vii)</span> his task is an +easy one. But in one like that of 1812, in which the most conspicuous +leaders met with signal defeat and disgrace, and instead of winning +reputation, lost that which had illustrated them in the revolutionary +struggle, the historian necessarily recalls feuds and assails +character, which is sure to bring down on him the maledictions and +open condemnation of friends and relations. A noble man and true +patriot, like General Dearborn, will never want friends who will deny +his incompetency as commander-in-chief, while one who had won so brave +a name in the revolution, and was so estimable a man in social life as +General Hull, must always be defended by those in whose veins his +blood flows. The inefficiency and blunders of the government remain to +this day to many a sufficient apology for the conduct of Wilkinson, +Hampton and others.</p> + +<p>Having no animosities to gratify, and no prejudices to favor, I have +set down nought in malice, but have endeavored to ascertain, amid +conflicting testimony, the exact truth, without regarding the friendly +or hostile feelings the declaration of it might awaken. In many cases +I have withheld much that was personal, because it was not necessary +to my purpose, and useless only in self-defence. That I should +reconcile difficulties which have never yet been healed, and please +rivals who have ever hated each other, was not to be expected. I have +attempted also to give a clear impression of the political and social +feelings of the times, and make the reader, as far as lay in my power, +live amid the scenes I depict.</p> + +<p>Two new features have been introduced into the present work, which I +though necessary to a complete history of the war, viz., privateering +and the Dartmoor Prison.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="pageviii" name="pageviii"></a>(p. viii)</span> It would be impossible to give all the authorities to which +I am indebted. State papers, records, journals, Gazettes of the time +have been consulted, as well as histories, while I have earnestly +sought for information from the survivors of the war. In many cases I +have omitted references to books in which facts I state are found +recorded, because I came across them in old pamphlets, letters, and +newspaper paragraphs, where, probably, the original compiler also +obtained them. I cannot omit, however, acknowledging the vast aid I +have derived from Niles' Register. A more valuable periodical was +never published in this country. Ingersoll's History also, though very +deficient in arrangement, contains more valuable material than any +other work embracing the same period.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="pageix" name="pageix"></a>(p. ix)</span> CONTENTS OF VOL. I.</h2> + +<div class="toc"> +<p class="center">CHAPTER I.<br> + <span class="smcap">A REVIEW OF THE CAUSES LEADING TO THE SECOND WAR WITH + ENGLAND.</span></p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Duplicity and oppressive acts of the British Government contrasted with the + forbearance of the United States — Character of Madison — Debates in Congress + on War measures — Declaration of War, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page15">15</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER II.</p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Different feelings with which the Declaration of War was received — State of + the parties at the commencement — Federalists and Democrats — Their hostility — Absurd + doctrines of the Federalists — Hostility of New England — Unprepared + state of the country — Culpable neglect of the government — Comparative + strength of the two navies — Empty state of the Treasury — Inefficiency + of the Cabinet, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page58">58</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER III.</p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Plan of the Campaign — General Hull sent to Detroit — British officers first + receive news of the declaration of war — Capture of Hull's baggage, etc. — Enters + Canada and issues a proclamation, and sends out detachments — Colonels + McArthur and Cass advance on Maiden — Hull refuses to sustain + them — Recrosses to Detroit — Van Horne's defeat — Colonel Miller defeats the + enemy, and opens Hull's communications — Strange conduct of Hull — Advance + of the British — Surrender of Detroit — Indignation of the officers — Review + of the Campaign — Rising of the people — Harrison takes command — Advance + of the army, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page70">70</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center"><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagex" name="pagex"></a>(p. x)</span> CHAPTER IV.</p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Operations on the New York frontier — Battle of Queenstown — Death of Brock — Scott + a prisoner — General Smythe's Proclamation and abortive attempts — Cursed + by the army — Duel with General Porter — Retires in disgrace — Dearborn's + movements and failures — Review of the campaign on the New York + frontier — Character of the officers and soldiers, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page98">98</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER V.<br> + <span class="smcap">THE NAVY.</span></p> + +<p class="toc_resume">The Cabinet resolves to shut up our ships of war in port — Remonstrance of + Captains Bainbridge and Stuart — Rodgers ordered to sea — Feeling of the + crews — Chase of the Belvidere — Narrow escape of the Constitution from an + English fleet — Cruise of the Essex — Action between the Constitution and + Guerriere — Effect of the victory in England and the United States — United + States takes the Macedonian — Lieutenant Hamilton carries the captured + colors to Washington — Presented to Mrs Madison in a ball-room — The + Argus — Action between the Wasp and Frolic — Constitution captures the + Java — Hornet takes the Peacock — Effect of these Victories abroad, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page125">125</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER VII.</p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Harrison plans a winter campaign — Advance of the army — Battle and massacre + at the River Raisin — Baseness of Proctor — Promoted by his Government — Tecumseh, + his character and eloquence — He stirs up the Creeks to War — Massacre + at Fort Mimms — Investment of Fort Meigs — Advance of Clay's reinforcements + and their destruction — Successful sortie — Flight of the besiegers — Major + Croghan's gallant defence of Fort Stephenson, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page177">177</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center"><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexi" name="pagexi"></a>(p. xi)</span> CHAPTER VIII.</p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Chauncey ordered to Lake Erie to build a fleet — A plan of the campaign — Woolsey — Attack + on York — Death of General Pike — His character — Capture + of Fort George — Gallantry of Scott — Repulse of the British at Sackett's Harbor + by General Brown — Dearborn pursues Vincent — Night attack on the + American encampment — Generals Winder and Chandler taken prisoners — Retreat + of the army — Reinforced by General Lewis — Dearborn at Fort + George — Defeat of Colonel Bœstler at Beaver Dams — Attack on Black Rock — Dearborn + withdrawn from the command of the northern army, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page205">205</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER IX.<br> + <span class="smcap">SECOND SESSION OF THE TWELFTH CONGRESS.</span></p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Army bill — Quincy and Williams — Debate on the bonds of merchants given + for British goods imported in contravention of the non-importation act — Debate + on the bills increasing the army to 55,000 men — Williams' report — Quincy's + attack — Clay's rejoinder — Randolph, Calhoun, Quincy, Lowndes + and Clay — State of the Treasury, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page224">224</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER X.</p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Action between the Chesapeake and Shannon — Rejoicing in England over the + victory — The Enterprise captures the Boxer — Death of Lieutenant Burrows — Daring + cruise of the Argus in the English and Irish channels — Lieutenant + Allen's humanity — Action with the Pelican — Death of Allen — His character, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page244">244</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER XI.</p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Cost of transportation to the northern frontier — English fleet on our coast — Chesapeake + blockaded — Blockade of the whole coast — Cockburn attacks + Frenchtown — Burns Havre De Grace — Attacks Georgetown and Frederickstown — Arrival + of British reinforcements — Attack on Craney Island — Barbarities + committed in Hampton — Excitement caused by these outrages — Commodore + Hardy blockades the northern coast — Torpedoes — Hostile attitude + of Massachusetts — Remonstrances of its legislature — Feeling of the people, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page257">257</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center"><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexii" name="pagexii"></a>(p. xii)</span> CHAPTER XII.</p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Perry obtains and equips a fleet on Lake Erie — Puts to sea — Kentucky marines — Description + of the battle — Gallant bearing of Perry — Slaughter on the + Lawrence — Perry after the battle — Burial of the officers — Exultation of the + people — Harrison advances on Maiden — flight of Proctor — Battle of the + Thames, and death of Tecumseh, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page271">271</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER XIII.</p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Wilkinson takes command of the northern army — Plan of the campaign — Hampton + entrusted with the 5th military district and takes position at + Plattsburg — Quarrel between the two Generals — Hampton advances, against + orders, into Canada: is defeated — Concentration of Wilkinson's army — Moves + down the St. Lawrence — Its picturesque aspect — Harassed by the + enemy — Battle of Chrystler's field — Hampton refuses to join him — The expedition + abandoned and the armies retire to winter-quarters — Disappointment + and indignation of the war party, and gratification of the Federalists — Abandonment + of Fort George and burning of Newark — Loss of Fort Niagara and + burning of Buffalo and the settlements along the river — Retaliation — Gloomy + close of the campaign, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page291">291</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER XIV.<br> + <span class="smcap">1813—1814.</span></p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Winter operations — Decatur challenges Commodore Hardy to meet the United + States and Macedonian with two of his frigates — Wilkinson's second invasion, + of Canada — Battle of la Cole Mill — Holmes' expedition into Canada — Romantic + character of our border warfare — Inroad of the British marines to + Saybrook and Brockaway's Ferry, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page310">310</a></span></p> + +<p class="p2 center"><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexiii" name="pagexiii"></a>(p. xiii)</span> CHAPTER XV.<br> + <span class="smcap">THIRTEENTH CONGRESS. MAY 27, 1813.</span></p> + +<p class="toc_resume">Democratic gain in Congress — Spirit in which the two parties met — Russian + mediation offered and accepted, and commerce opened — State of the Treasury — Debate + respecting a reporter's seat — Direct Tax — Webster's resolutions — Governor + Chittenden — Strange conduct of parties in New Hampshire — The + embargo — England proposes peace — Commissioners appointed — Army bill — Webster's + speech upon it — Sketch of him — The loan bill — Defended by Mr. + Eppes — Sketch of Mr. Pickering, with his speech — Sketch of John Forsyth, + and his speech — Calhoun — Grosvenor — Bill for the support of military establishments — Speech + of Artemus Ward — Resolutions of Otis in the Massachusetts + Senate — Repeal of the embargo — Calhoun and Webster — Strange reversal + of their positions — Strength of our navy and army, +<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page319">319</a></span></p> +</div> + +<h1><span class="pagenum"><a id="page15" name="page15"></a>(p. 15)</span> HISTORY OF THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND.</h1> + +<h2>CHAPTER I.<br> +<span class="smcap">A REVIEW OF THE CAUSES LEADING TO THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND.</span></h2> + +<p class="resume">Duplicity and oppressive acts of the British Government + contrasted with the forbearance of the United States — + Character of Madison — Debates in Congress on War measures + — Declaration of War.</p> + +<p>The peace which closed our revolutionary struggle was like a wound +healed only at the surface, and which must be opened anew before a +permanent cure can be effected. The desire for territory had become +the ruling passion of the British Empire, and the loss of the most +promising part of her vast possessions could not, therefore, be borne +with equanimity. The comparatively barren and inhospitable tract lying +north of the St. Lawrence and the lakes, which still belonged to her, +was but a sorry substitute for the rich alluvial bottoms that +stretched along the western rivers, while the mouth of the St. +Lawrence furnished but a meagre outlet compared with the noble rivers +and capacious harbors that seamed the inland and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page16" name="page16"></a>(p. 16)</span> indented the +coasts of the Atlantic slope. Some have supposed that England had +never abandoned the design of recovering a part, if not the whole of +the possessions she had lost on this continent. If this be true, that +purpose was doubtless a very vague one, and it depended entirely on +circumstances whether it ever assumed a definite form. One thing, +however, is certain, she had determined to narrow down our limits +wherever it was practicable, and to the fullest extent of her power. +This is evident from the eagerness with which she urged us to +acknowledge the various Indian tribes on our frontier, as independent +nations. She wished to have them placed on a footing with other +sovereign States, so that they could form treaties and dispose of +territory to foreign governments. Numerous and powerful tribes then +roamed undisturbed over vast tracts which have since become populous +States. Could Great Britain have purchased these, or had them +colonized by other foreign powers, nearly the whole line of lakes and +the territory west of Lake Erie would have presented an impenetrable +barrier to our growth in the north-west. Not succeeding in this +policy, she determined that the Indians should retain possession of +the land as her allies. This is evident from the constant disturbance +kept up on our north-western frontiers—from Lord Dorchester's +speeches instigating the Indians to war, and from the fact that an +English fort was erected within the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page17" name="page17"></a>(p. 17)</span> territory of the +republic. So resolved was the British Government on this course that +it for a long time refused to carry out the stipulations of the treaty +of 1783, and still retained American posts captured by its forces +during the revolutionary war. The defeat of General Harmar, in 1790, +and of St. Clair, in 1791, were not wholly owing to our inefficiency +or to Indian prowess, but to British interference and encouragement.</p> + +<p>The victory of Wayne, which followed these disastrous expeditions, +proved this true. Canadian militia and volunteers were found in the +Indian armies, while the battle that completed their overthrow ended +under the walls of a British fort standing on American ground. These +violations of a sacred treaty, and undisguised encroachments upon our +territory on the frontier, were afterwards surpassed by still greater +outrages at sea.</p> + +<p>The French revolution exploding like a volcano in the heart of Europe, +followed by a republic whose foundation stones were laid in the +proudest blood of France—the extinction of the Bourbon dynasty, and +the loud declaration of rights which startled every despot from the +Archangel to the Mediterranean like a peal of thunder, had covered the +continent with hostile armies. The European powers who rejoiced in the +success of the revolutionary struggle on these distant shores, because +it inflicted a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page18" name="page18"></a>(p. 18)</span> blow on their proud rival, saw with +consternation the principle that sustained it at work in their midst. +Like the first crusade against the infidels, which at once healed all +the animosities of the princes of Europe, a second crusade, +harmonizing powers hitherto at variance, was formed against this +principle of human rights, and the allied armies moved down upon the +infant republic of France. The devastating flood of feudalism would +soon have swept everything under but for the appearance of that +strange embodiment of power, Napoleon Bonaparte. Rolling it back from +the French borders, he commenced that long and fearful struggle which +ended only at Waterloo. England rashly formed a coalition with the +continental powers, anticipating an easy overthrow to the plebeian +warrior, but soon found herself almost alone in the conflict; and +instead of treading down her ancient rival, began to tremble for her +own safety. The long and deadly strife that followed exhausted her +resources and crippled her strength. Her war ships stretched from +Copenhagen to the Nile, and to supply these with seamen, she resorted +to impressment not only on her own shores, amid her own subjects, but +on American ships, among American sailors. Our merchant vessels were +arrested on the high seas, and men, on the groundless charge of being +deserters, immediately coerced into the British service. To such an +extent was this carried, that in <i>nine months</i> <span class="pagenum"><a id="page19" name="page19"></a>(p. 19)</span> of the years +1796 and '97, Mr. King, the American minister at London, had made +application for the release of <i>two hundred and seventy-one +seamen</i>,<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1" title="Go to footnote 1"><span class="smaller">[1]</span></a> most of whom were American citizens.</p> + +<p>At first the British Government claimed only the right to seize +deserters; but its necessities demanding a broader application to +right of search, her vessels of war arrested American merchantmen to +seek for <i>British seamen</i>, and later still, for British +subjects—finally, every sailor was obliged to prove himself a citizen +of the United States on the spot, or he was liable to be forced into +British service. American merchants were thus injured while +prosecuting a lawful commerce, and worse than all, great distress was +visited on the friends and relatives of those who were illegally torn +from their country and pressed into the hated service of a hated +nation. Over six thousand were known to have been thus seized, while +the actual number was much greater.</p> + +<p>Not content with committing these outrages on the high seas, English +vessels boarded our merchantmen and impressed our seamen in our own +waters. That line which runs parallel to the sea coast of every +nation, and which is considered its legitimate boundary, presented no +obstacles to British cruisers.</p> + +<p>In 1804, the frigate Cambria boarded an American merchantman in the +harbor of New York, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page20" name="page20"></a>(p. 20)</span> in direct opposition to the port +officers, carried off several of her seamen. To complete the insult, +the commander declared, in an official letter to the British Minister, +that he "considered his ship, while lying in the harbor of New York, +as <i>having dominion around her within the distance of her buoys</i>." Not +long after a coasting vessel while going from one American port to +another, was hailed by a British cruiser, and, refusing to stop, was +fired into and one of her crew killed. Thus an American citizen was +murdered within a mile of shore, and while going from port to port of +his own country.<a id="footnotetag2" name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2" title="Go to footnote 2"><span class="smaller">[2]</span></a></p> + +<p>These aggressions on land and insults at sea continued, at intervals, +down to 1806, when our commerce received a more deadly blow from the +British orders in council, and Napoleon's famous Berlin and Milan +decrees. To annoy and cripple her adversary, England declared the +whole coast of France, from Brest to the Elbe, in a state of blockade. +Napoleon retaliated by the Berlin decree, in which he declared the +British Islands in a state of blockade. The next year the English +government issued other orders in council, blockading the whole +continent, which were met by Napoleon's Milan decree.</p> + +<p>These famous orders in council, so far as they affected us, declared +all American vessels going to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page21" name="page21"></a>(p. 21)</span> and from the harbors of France +and her allies, lawful prizes, except such as had first touched at, or +cleared from an English port. The Berlin and Milan decrees, on the +other hand, pronounced all vessels that had so touched at an English +port, or allowed themselves to be searched by a British cruiser, the +property of France, while British goods, wherever found, were subject +to confiscation. In short, if we did not confine our commerce to +England, the latter would seize our merchantmen, wherever found, as +lawful prizes, while if we did trade with her, or even touch at her +ports at all, France claimed them as her property.</p> + +<p>England, without the slightest provocation, had commenced a war +against France, and irritated at her want of success, declared her +coast in a state of blockade—thus violating an established law of +nations. The principle has long been admitted and acted upon by the +principal maritime nations of the world, that neutral flags have a +right to sail from port to port of the belligerent powers, to carry +any merchandise whatever, except those contraband of war, such as +arms, munitions of war, or provisions for the enemy. The only +exception to it is an actual blockade of a port where neutrals are +forbidden an entrance. This principle is founded in common justice; +otherwise two strong maritime nations might make a third neutral power +the greatest sufferer from <span class="pagenum"><a id="page22" name="page22"></a>(p. 22)</span> the war. Besides, if the right to +create paper blockades is allowed, no restrictions can be placed upon +it, and in case of another war with England, she could declare the +whole coast of America, from Maine to Mexico, and that portion of our +territory on the Pacific, in a state of blockade, while the naval +force of the world could not maintain an <i>actual</i> one.</p> + +<p>The injustice of these retaliatory measures was severely felt by our +government. They placed us, a neutral power, in a worse attitude than +if allied to one or the other we had been at open war with the third, +for in the latter case our war ships could have defended our commerce, +which would also have been under the protection of the cruisers of our +ally. But now our men-of-war were compelled to look silently on and +see American merchantmen seized, while two nations, instead of one, +claimed the right to plunder us. Our commerce for the last few years +had advanced with unparalleled strides—so that at this time our +canvass whitened almost every sea on the globe, and wealth was pouring +into the nation. Suddenly, as if the whole world, without any +forewarning, had declared war against us; the ocean was covered with +cruisers after American vessels, and the commerce of the country was +paralyzed by a single blow.</p> + +<p>But the most extraordinary part of the whole proceeding was, that +while England, by her orders in council, shut the Continent from us +and confiscated <span class="pagenum"><a id="page23" name="page23"></a>(p. 23)</span> as a smuggler every American vessel that +attempted to enter any of its ports, she herself, with <i>forged</i> +papers, under the American flag, carried on an extensive trade. The +<i>counterfeit</i> American vessel was allowed to pass unmolested by +British cruisers, while the real American was seized. It was estimated +that England made fifteen thousand voyages per annum in these +disguised vessels, thus appropriating to herself all the advantages to +be gained by a neutral nation in trading with the Continent, and using +our flag as a protection.</p> + +<p>These were the prominent causes of the war, sufficient, one would +think, to justify the American Government in declaring it. +One-hundredth part of the provocation which we then endured, would now +bring the two governments in immediate and fierce collision.</p> + +<p>But, notwithstanding England's desires and necessities, she would +never have committed these outrages, had she not entertained a supreme +contempt for our power, and cherished an inextinguishable hatred of +the nation, rendering her utterly indifferent to our rights. The +treaty of 1783, by which our independence was acknowledged, was wrung +from her by stern necessity. It was not an amicable settlement of the +quarrel—a final and satisfactory adjustment of all difficulties. On +the part of England it was a morose and reluctant abandonment of a +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page24" name="page24"></a>(p. 24)</span> strife which was costing her too dear—the unwilling +surrender of her best provinces under circumstances dishonorable to +her flag, and humbling to her national pride. This hatred of the rebel +colony was mingled with contempt for our institutions and national +character, exhibited in a proud assumption of superiority and +disregard of our rights and our demands. A nation sunk in helpless +weakness may submit to tyrannical treatment, but one rapidly growing +in strength and resources, is sure to have a day of reckoning, when it +will demand a swift and complete settlement of the long-endured +wrongs.</p> + +<p>Our wisest statesmen, aware of this state of feeling, foresaw an +approaching rupture. The elder Adams, as far back as 1785, says, in +writing from England: "Their present system (the English) as far as I +can penetrate it, is to maintain a determined peace with all Europe, +in order that they may war singly against America."<a id="footnotetag3" name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3" title="Go to footnote 3"><span class="smaller">[3]</span></a> In 1794, +Washington, in a letter to Mr. Jay, after speaking of the retention of +posts which the British Government had, by treaty, ceded to us, and of +the conduct of its agents in stirring up the Indians to hostilities, +says: "Can it be expected, I ask, so long as these things are known in +the United States, or at least firmly believed, and suffered with +impunity by Great Britain, that there <span class="pagenum"><a id="page25" name="page25"></a>(p. 25)</span> ever will or can be any +cordiality between the two countries? I answer, No. And I will +undertake, without the gift of prophecy, to predict, that it will be +impossible to keep this country in a state of amity with Great Britain +long, if those posts are not surrendered." Still later, Jefferson, +writing home from England, says: "In spite of treaties, England is our +enemy. Her hatred is deep-rooted and cordial, and nothing with her is +wanted but power, to wipe us and the land we live in out of +existence."</p> + +<p>Having scarcely recovered from the debility produced by the long +revolutionary struggle—just beginning to feel the invigorating +impulse of prosperity, the nation shrunk instinctively from a war +which would paralyze her commerce and prostrate all her rising hopes. +The Government hesitated to take a bold and decided stand on its +rights, and urge their immediate and complete acknowledgment. This +forbearance on our part, and apparent indifference to the honor of the +nation, only increased the contempt, and confirmed the determination +of the British Government. Still, remonstrances were made. Soon after +the arrival of the British Minister, Mr. Hammond, in 1791, Jefferson +stated the causes of complaint, followed up the next year by an able +paper on the charges made by the former against our Government. This +paper remained unanswered, and two years after Jefferson resigned his +secretaryship.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page26" name="page26"></a>(p. 26)</span> The next year, 1794, the British Government issued an order of +council, requiring her armed ships to arrest all vessels carrying +provisions to a French colony, or laden with its produce. The American +Government retaliated with an embargo, and began to make preparations +for immediate hostilities. In a few months the order was revoked, and +one less exceptionable issued, that calmed for awhile the waters of +agitation, and Mr. Jay was sent as Minister to England, to negotiate a +new treaty, which was to settle all past difficulties, establish some +principles of the law of nations, especially those affecting +belligerents and neutrals, and to regulate commerce. This treaty +removed many of the causes of complaint, but like all treaties between +a weak and strong government, it secured to England the lion's +portion. But with all its imperfections and want of reciprocity, it +was ratified in the spring of 1796, and became a law. Met at every +step by a determined opposition, its discussion inflamed party spirit +to the highest point, while its ratification was received with as many +hisses as plaudits. Still, it brought a partial, hollow pacification +between the two governments, which lasted till 1806, when the orders +in council before mentioned were issued. Great Britain, however, +hesitated not to impress our seamen and vex our commerce during the +whole period, with the exception of the short interval of the peace of +Amiens. In 1803, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page27" name="page27"></a>(p. 27)</span> with the renewal of the war between her and +France, impressment was again practiced, though met at all times by +remonstrance, which in turn was succeeded by negotiation.</p> + +<p>Those orders in Council seemed, at first, to preclude the possibility +of an amicable adjustment of difficulties. The country was on fire +from Portland to New Orleans. Cries of distress, in the shape of +memorials to Congress, came pouring in from every sea port in the +Union. Plundered merchants invoked the interposition of the strong arm +of power to protect their rights, and demanded indemnity for losses +that beggared their fortunes. Scorn and rage at this bold high-handed +robbery, filled every bosom, and the nation trembled on the verge of +war. Jefferson, however, sent Mr. Pinckney as envoy extraordinary to +cooperate with Mr. Monroe, our minister to England, in forming a +treaty which should recognize our maritime rights.</p> + +<p>In the spring of the next year Jefferson received the treaty from +London. It having arrived the day before the adjournment of Congress, +and containing so much that was inadmissible, he did not submit it to +that body.</p> + +<p>In the first place, there was no provision against the impressment of +seamen; and in the second place, a note from the British ministers +accompanied it, stating that the British government reserved to +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page28" name="page28"></a>(p. 28)</span> itself the right to violate all the stipulations it +contained, if we submitted to the Berlin decree, and other infractions +of our rights by France. This reservation on the part of England was +an assumption of power that required no discussion. To declare that +she would annul her own solemn treaty, the moment she disapproved of +our conduct towards other nations, was to assume the office of +dictator.</p> + +<p>In the mean time, the death of Fox, whose character and conduct the +short time he was in power had given encouragement that a permanent +peace could be established, and the election of the dashing and fiery +Canning to his place, involved the negotiations in still greater +embarrassments. To indicate his course, and reveal at the outset the +unscrupulous and treacherous policy England was henceforth determined +to carry out, he had ready for promulgation long before it could be +ascertained what action our government would take on that treaty, +those other orders in Council, blockading the continent to us. He +declared, also, that all further negotiations on the subject were +inadmissible; thus leaving us no other alternative, but to submit or +retaliate. Thus our earnest solicitations and fervent desire to +continue on terms of amity—our readiness to yield for the sake of +peace what now of itself would provoke a war, were met by deception +and insult. England not only prepared orders violating our rights +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page29" name="page29"></a>(p. 29)</span> as a neutral nation while submitting a treaty that protected +them, but plundered our vessels, impressed our seamen, and threatened +the towns along our coast with conflagration.</p> + +<p>We could not allow our flag to be thus dishonored, our seamen +impressed, and our commerce vexed with impunity, and declared common +plunder by the two chief maritime nations of Europe. Retaliation, +therefore, was resolved upon; and in December of 1807, an embargo was +laid upon all American vessels and merchandize. In the spirit of +conciliation, however, which marked all the acts of government, the +President was authorized to suspend it soon as the conduct of European +powers would sanction him in doing so. This embargo prohibited all +American vessels from sailing from foreign ports, all foreign ships +from carrying away cargoes; while by a supplementary act, all coasting +vessels were compelled to give bonds that they would land their +cargoes in the United States.</p> + +<p>This sudden suspension of commerce, threatening bankruptcy and ruin to +so many of our merchants, and checking at once the flow of produce +from the interior to the sea-board, was felt severely by the people, +and tried their patriotism to the utmost. Still the measure was +approved by the majority of the nation. New England denounced it, as +that section of the republic had denounced <span class="pagenum"><a id="page30" name="page30"></a>(p. 30)</span> nearly every +measure of the administration from its commencement. The effect of the +embargo was to depress the products of our own country one half, and +increase those of foreign countries in the same proportion. There +being no outlet to the former, they accumulated in the market, and +often would not bring sufficient to pay the cost of mere +transportation, while the supply of the latter being cut off, the +demand for them became proportionably great. Thus it fell as heavy on +the agricultural classes as on the merchant, for while a portion of +their expenses were doubled, the produce with which they were +accustomed to defray them became worthless. But ship owners and +sailors suffered still more, for the capital of the one was +profitless, and the occupation of the other gone. It is true it helped +manufacturers by increasing the demand for domestic goods; it also +saved a large amount of property, and a vast number of American ships, +which, if they had been afloat, would have fallen into the hands of +French and English cruisers.</p> + +<p>But, while the embargo pressed so heavily on us, it inflicted severe +damage also on France and England, especially the latter. The United +States was her best customer, and the sudden stoppage of all the +channels of trade was a heavy blow to her manufactures, and would, no +doubt, have compelled a repeal of the orders in council to us, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page31" name="page31"></a>(p. 31)</span> had not she known that we were equal, if not greater +sufferers. But while the two nations thus stood with their hands on +each other's throats, determined to see which could stand choking the +longest, it soon became evident that our antagonist had greatly the +advantage of us, for the embargo shut ourselves out from the trade of +the whole world, while it only cut England off from that of the United +States. Besides, being forced to seek elsewhere for the products she +had been accustomed to take from us, other channels of trade began to +be opened, which threatened to become permanent.</p> + +<p>A steady demand will always create a supply somewhere, and this was +soon discovered in the development of resources in the West Indies, +Spain, Spanish America, and Brazil, of which the British Government +had hitherto been ignorant.</p> + +<p>The loud outcries from the opponents of this measure, especially from +New England, also convinced her that our government must soon repeal +the obnoxious act.</p> + +<p>Under the tremendous pressure with which the embargo bore on the +people, New England openly threatened the government. John Quincy +Adams, who had sustained the administration in its course, finding his +conduct denounced by the Massachusetts Legislature, resigned his seat, +declaring to the President that there was a plan on foot to divide New +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page32" name="page32"></a>(p. 32)</span> England from the Union, and that a secret emissary from Great +Britain was then at work with the ruling federalists to accomplish it. +Whether this was true or false, one thing was certain, an ominous +cloud was gathering in that quarter that portended evil, the extent of +which no one could calculate.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">1809.</span> + +<p>Under these circumstances the embargo was repealed, and the +non-intercourse law, prohibiting all commercial intercourse with +France and Great Britain substituted.</p> + +<p>While these things were transpiring an event occurred which threatened +to arrest all negotiations.</p> + +<p>The Chesapeake, an American frigate, cruising in American waters, had +been fired into by the Leopard, a British 74, and several of her crew +killed. The commander of the latter claimed some British deserters, +whom he declared to be on board the American ship. Capt. Barron denied +his knowledge of any such being in the Chesapeake; moreover, he had +instructed, he said, his recruiting officer not to enlist any British +subjects. The captain of the Leopard then demanded permission to +search. This, of course, was refused, when a sudden broadside was +poured into the American frigate. Captain Barron not dreaming of an +encounter, had very culpably neglected to clear his vessel for action, +and at once struck his flag. An officer from the Leopard was +immediately sent on board, who demanded the muster-roll of the ship, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page33" name="page33"></a>(p. 33)</span> and selecting four of the crew, he retired. Three of these +were native Americans, the other was hung as a deserter. This daring +outrage threw the country into a tumult of excitement. Norfolk and +Portsmouth immediately forbade all communication with British ships of +war on the coast. <span class="sidenote">July 2.</span> The war spirit was aroused, and +soon after Jefferson issued a proclamation, prohibiting all vessels +bearing English commissions from entering any American harbor, or +having any intercourse with the shore.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">1808.</span> + +<p>The act of the Leopard was repudiated by the English Government; but +the rage that had been kindled was not so easily laid, especially, as +no reparation was made. Mr. Monroe, our Minister to England, and +Canning could not adjust the matter; neither could Mr. Rose, the +English Minister, afterwards sent over for that especial purpose. The +British Government would not consent to mingle it up with the subject +of impressment generally, and refused to take any steps whatever +towards reparation, until the President's hostile proclamation was +withdrawn. Jefferson replied that if the minister would disclose the +terms of reparation, and they were satisfactory, their offer and the +repeal of the proclamation should bear the same date. This was refused +and Mr. Rose returned home.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">March.</span> + +<p>In the midst of this general distress and clamor, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page34" name="page34"></a>(p. 34)</span> and strife +of political factions, Mr. Madison, who had been elected President, +began his administration.</p> + +<p>Jefferson had struggled in vain against the unjust insane policy of +England. Embargoes, non-intercourse acts, all efforts at commercial +retaliation, remonstrances, arguments and appeals were alike +disregarded. Proud in her superior strength, and blind to her own true +interests, she continued her high-handed violation of neutral rights +and the laws of nations. In the mean time, the republic itself was +torn by factions which swelled the evils that oppressed it. It was +evident that Madison's seat would not be an easy one, and it was +equally apparent that he lacked some most important qualities in a +chief magistrate who was to conduct the ship of State through the +storms and perils that were gathering thick about her. The commanding +mind overshadowing and moulding the entire cabinet, the prompt +decision, fearless bearing and great energy were wanting. His manifest +repugnance to a belligerent attitude encouraged opposition and invited +attack. Small in stature and of delicate health, with shy, distant, +reserved manners, and passionless countenance, he was not fitted to +awaken awe or impart fear. Still he was a thorough statesman. His +official correspondence, while Jefferson's Secretary of State, his +dissertation on the rights of neutral nations and the laws that should +govern neutral trade, are regarded to this day as the most <span class="pagenum"><a id="page35" name="page35"></a>(p. 35)</span> +able papers that ever issued from the American cabinet. His knowledge +of the Constitution was thorough and practical, and his adherence to +it inflexible. The exigencies of war, which always afford apologies, +and sometimes create demands for an illegal use of power, never forced +him beyond the precincts of law or provoked him to an improper use of +executive authority. His integrity was immovable, and though assailed +by envenomed tongues and pursued by slanders, his life at the last +shone out in all its purity, the only refutation he deigned to make.</p> + +<p>But Madison possessed one quality for which his enemies did not give +him credit, and which bore him safely through the perils that +encompassed his administration—a calm tenacity—a silent endurance +such as the deeply-bedded rock presents in the midst of the waves. Men +knew him to be in his very nature repugnant to war, and when they saw +him go meekly, nay, shrinkingly into it, they expected to laugh over +his sudden and disgraceful exit. But while he was not aggressive and +decided in his conduct, he boldly took the responsibilities which the +nation placed upon his shoulders, and bore them serenely, +unshrinkingly to the last. His hesitation in approaching a point +around which dangers and responsibilities clustered prepared the +beholder for weak and irresolute conduct, but he was amazed at his +steadiness of character. This apparent contradiction <span class="pagenum"><a id="page36" name="page36"></a>(p. 36)</span> arose +from two conflicting elements. Incapable of excitement and opposed to +strife, he naturally kept aloof from the place where one was demanded, +and the other to be met. Yet, at the same time, he had a knowledge of +the right, and an inflexible love for it which made him immovable when +assailed.</p> + +<p>On the whole, perhaps the character he possessed was better fitted to +secure the permanent good of the country than that of a more executive +man. A bold, decided chief magistrate, possessing genius, and calming +by his superior wisdom and strength, the disturbed elements about him, +and developing and employing the resources of the country at the +outset, would probably have ended the war in six months. But the +knowledge the country gained and communicated also to other +governments of its own weakness and power, was, perhaps, better than +the misplaced confidence which sudden success, obtained through a +great leader would have imparted. In the vicissitudes of the war, we +worked out a problem which needs no farther demonstration.</p> + +<p>Madison's administration was based on those principles which had +governed that of Jefferson, and the same restrictive measures were +persevered in to compel England to adopt a system more conformable to +our rights and the laws of neutrality. In the mean time Mr. Erskine +was appointed Minister on the part of Great Britain to adjust the +difficulties between the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page37" name="page37"></a>(p. 37)</span> two countries. <span class="sidenote">April 19, +1809.</span> At first this seemed an easy task, for he declared that his +government would revoke the orders in council on condition the +non-intercourse act was repealed. The proposal was at once +communicated to Congress when it assembled in May, and accepted by it. +The 10th of June was agreed upon as the day on which commercial +intercourse should recommence between the two countries, and the +President issued a proclamation to that effect. In July, however, it +was ascertained that the British Government repudiated the agreement +entered into by its Minister, declaring that he had exceeded his +instructions. A second proclamation reestablishing non intercourse was +instantly issued, and the two countries were farther than ever from a +reconciliation.</p> + +<p>The conduct of Great Britain, at this period, presents such a strong +contrast to her loud declarations before the world, or rather stamps +them as falsehoods so emphatically, that the historian is not +surprised at the utter perversion of facts with which she endeavored +to cover up her turpitude, and quiet her conscience. Without any +provocation, she had declared war against the infant republic of +France. In order to shield herself from the infamy which should follow +such a violation of the rights of nations, and waste of treasure and +of blood, she planted herself on the grand platform of principle, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page38" name="page38"></a>(p. 38)</span> and insisted that she went to war to preserve human liberty, +and the integrity of governments. In this violent assault on a people +with whom she was at peace, she made a great sacrifice for the common +interests of states, and hence deserved the gratitude, and not the +condemnation of men. With these declarations on her lips, she turned +and deliberately annulled her agreements with the United States, and +invaded her most sacred rights. She impressed our seamen, plundered +our commerce, held fortresses on our soil, and stirred up the savages +to merciless warfare against the innocent inhabitants on our frontier. +While with one hand she professed to strike for the rights of nations, +with the other she violated them in a hardihood of spirit never +witnessed, except in a government destitute alike of honor and of +truth. So, also, while sacrificing her soldiers and her wealth, to +prevent the aggressions of Napoleon; nay, sending a fleet and troops +to Egypt, for the noble purpose of saving that barbarous state from a +reckless invader; her armies were covering the plains of India with +its innocent inhabitants, and robbing independent sheikhs of their +lawful possessions, until, at last, she tyrannized over a territory +<i>four times</i> as large as that of all France, and six times greater +than her own island. Such unblushing falsehoods were never before +uttered by a civilized nation in the face of history. The most +unscrupulous government does not <span class="pagenum"><a id="page39" name="page39"></a>(p. 39)</span> usually cover up its tyranny +and aggressions by pharisaic mummeries. There are all shades of +hypocrisy, but to do the most damning acts under pretence of religious +principle, has generally been considered the sole prerogative of the +Spanish inquisition.</p> + +<p>The disavowal of Mr. Erskine's treaty by the English government, and +the consequent renewal of the non-intercourse act, threw the country +into the fiercest agitation. The conduct of Great Britain appeared +like mockery. Forcing us into conciliation by promises, and then +withdrawing those promises; proposing to settle all difficulties by +negotiation, and yet, in the progress of it, refusing to touch one of +them, she determined to try the patience of the American people to the +utmost. The disavowal of a treaty made by her own minister, which +buoyed up the nation with the hope of returning peace and prosperity, +well nigh exhausted that patience; and there is little doubt but that +an immediate declaration of war would have been sustained by a large +majority of the American people. In passing from town to town, the +traveller saw groups of angry men discussing and denouncing the +tyranny of England. The shout of "<i>Free trade and sailors' rights</i>," +shook the land, while flashing eyes and clenched fists told how +aroused the national feeling had become.</p> + +<p>Mr. Jackson was sent, in the place of Mr. Erskine, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page40" name="page40"></a>(p. 40)</span> to +negotiate a treaty; but his proposals were the same as those which the +administration had already rejected, while his insulting insinuation +that the President knew when he made the arrangement with Mr. Erskine, +that the latter was acting without authority, abruptly terminated all +intercourse, and he was recalled.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">1810.</span> + +<p>On the first of May, Congress passed an act which revoked the +restrictive system, yet excluded British and armed vessels from the +waters of the United States.<a id="footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4" title="Go to footnote 4"><span class="smaller">[4]</span></a> It provided, however, that it should +be renewed in March against the nation, which did not before that time +so revoke or modify its edicts, as to protect the neutral commerce of +the United States. This was regarded as the ultimatum, and beyond it, +war against which ever government refused our just demands, was the +only resort. Messrs. Pinckney and Armstrong, our ministers at the +courts of England and France, were urged to press the repeal of those +obnoxious orders in council and decrees, in order that such a +catastrophe might be prevented. France receded, and Mr. Armstrong was +notified that the decrees were to cease to have effect after the first +of November, provided England withdrew her orders in council; or, if +she refused, that the United States should force her to acknowledge +the rights that France had, in a spirit of kindness, conceded. +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page41" name="page41"></a>(p. 41)</span> This glad intelligence was made known by the President in a +proclamation, in which he also declared, that unless the British +government repealed her orders in council, within three months from +that date, the non-intercourse law should be revived against it.</p> + +<p>In the mean time Mr. Pinckney urged, with all the arguments in his +power, the English Cabinet to recede from its unjustifiable position. +The latter endeavored, by prevarication and duplicity, to avoid coming +to a definite understanding, but being closely pushed, it at length +gave our minister to understand that the United States must force +France to take the first step in revoking those odious acts against +which we complained. But as England had been the aggressor, this was +plainly unjust and impossible, and all hope of a peaceful settlement +was given up, and on the 1st of March, 1811, he took a formal leave of +the Prince Regent. At the same time Congress had passed an act, +authorizing the President to arrest the non-intercourse Act at any +moment that England should revoke her orders in council. +<span class="sidenote">April, 1811.</span> On the 38th of the next month, Napoleon definitely +revoked his Berlin and Milan decrees, so far as they related to +us—the repeal to be ante-dated November 1st, 1810. This decree was +forwarded by our minister, Mr. Barlow, who had succeeded Armstrong, to +the English Government, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page42" name="page42"></a>(p. 42)</span> but it still refused to repeal its +orders in council on the ground that the decree did not embrace the +continental states, and affected only the United States. It soon +became apparent, therefore, to every one, that war was inevitable. The +American Government had placed itself, where it could not recede +without disgrace, while England was evidently resolved not to change +her attitude.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">1811.</span> + +<p>Another collision at sea between two armed vessels inflamed still more +the war spirit that was pervading the land. On the 16th of May a +British sloop of war, the Little Belt, fired into the frigate +President, thinking doubtless to repeat the outrage committed on the +Chesapeake, but found her fire returned with such heavy broadsides +that in a few minutes thirty-two of her crew were killed or wounded. +The commander of the English ship declared that the American frigate +fired first. This Rodgers denied, and his denial was sustained by all +his officers.</p> + +<p>The election of members of Congress, which took place in 1810 and 11, +had given a majority to the administration, so that there could be +harmony of action between the Legislature and the Executive. Beset +with difficulties, treading on the brink of a war, whose issues could +not be foreseen, anxious and uncertain, the President, by +proclamation, called the Twelfth Congress together a month before the +appointed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page43" name="page43"></a>(p. 43)</span> time. It met Nov. 8th, and Henry Clay was chosen +speaker. From the outset he had been a warm supporter of the +Administration, and his eloquent voice had rung over the land, rousing +up its warlike spirit, and inspiring confidence in the ability of the +nation to maintain its rights. James Fisk, of Vermont, Peter B. +Porter, and Samuel L. Mitchell, of New York, Adam Leybert, of Penn., +Robert Wright, of Md., Hugh Nelson, of Va., Nathaniel Macon, of N. C., +Calhoun, Langdon, Cheeves, and Wm. Lowndes, of S. C., Wm. M. Bibb and +George M. Troup, of Ga., Felix Grundy, of Tenn., and Wm. P. Duval, of +Ky., rallied round the young speaker, and presented a noble phalanx to +the anxious President. On the other side were Josiah Quincy, of Mass, +and Timothy Pitkin and Benjamin Talmadge, of Conn.</p> + +<p>In the Senate the democratic leaders were Samuel Smith, of Md., Wm. B. +Giles, of Va., Wm. H. Crawford, of Ga., George W. Campbell, of Tenn., +and George M. Bibb, of Ky. Leading the opposition were James Lloyd, of +Mass., and James A. Bayard, of Del.<a id="footnotetag5" name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5" title="Go to footnote 5"><span class="smaller">[5]</span></a></p> + +<p>The great accession of strength which the democratic members had +received, showed clearly the state of public feeling, especially south +and west, and the doubtful, hesitating policy of the last four years +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page44" name="page44"></a>(p. 44)</span> was thrown aside. The tone of the President's Message was +also decidedly warlike, and no hope was held out of an amicable +adjustment of the difficulties with England. They were invoked as the +"Legislative guardians of the nation," to put the country "into an +armed attitude, demanded by the crisis." The halls of Congress +resounded with the cry of "to arms." The nightmare of fear and doubt +which had weighed down its councils was removed, and bold and fearless +speakers called aloud on the nation to defend its injured honor and +insulted rights. The might of England had ceased to be a bugbear—the +Rubicon of fear was passed. Mr. Madison, deprecating precipitate +measures, saw with alarm the sudden belligerent attitude which +Congress had assumed. The democratic leaders however told him the +nation was for war—that timidity would be his ruin—that those who +were resolved to make Mr. Clinton their candidate at the next +presidential election were taking advantage of his hesitation. In the +mean time bills providing for the enlistment of twenty-five thousand +men in the regular army; for repairing and equipping frigates and +building new vessels; authorizing the President to accept the services +of fifty thousand volunteers, and to require the Governors of the +several States and territories to hold their respective quotas of +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page45" name="page45"></a>(p. 45)</span> a hundred thousand men in readiness to march at a moment's +warning,<a id="footnotetag6" name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6" title="Go to footnote 6"><span class="smaller">[6]</span></a> were rapidly pushed through Congress. <span class="sidenote">Nov. 7, +1811.</span> The brilliant victory, gained three days after Congress met by +Harrison, over the Indians at Tippecanoe, helped also to kindle into +higher excitement the martial spirit of the West and South-west, and +for a while opposition seemed to be struck powerless before the rising +energy of the nation.</p> + +<p>The bill authorizing the President to accept and organize certain +military corps to the number of 50,000, reported by Mr. Porter, +Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, called forth a long and +exciting debate. Mr. Grundy, one of the committee, defended the +resolution in a bold and manly speech. Referring to the Indian +hostilities on our north-western frontier, he unhesitatingly declared +that they were urged forward by British influence, and war, therefore, +was already begun. Some of the richest blood of the country had +already been shed, and he pledged himself for the western country, +that its hardy sons only waited for permission to march and avenge +those who had fallen. He was answered by Randolph, who denied that +Great Britain had stimulated the Indians to their merciless border +warfare—stigmatized the war to which this resolution looked as a war +of conquest—declared it was <span class="pagenum"><a id="page46" name="page46"></a>(p. 46)</span> another mode of flinging +ourselves into the arms of Bonaparte and becoming "the instruments of +him who had effaced the title of Atilla 'the scourge of God.'"</p> + +<p>He ridiculed the idea which had been started of conquering Canada, as +an insane project, and useless if accomplished. "Suppose it is ours," +he exclaimed, "are we any nearer to our point? As his minister said to +the king of Epirus, "may we not as well take our bottle of wine before +as after the exploit? Go march to Canada—leave the broad bosom of the +Chesapeake and her hundred tributary rivers—the whole line of +sea-coast from Machias to St. Mary's unprotected. You have taken +Quebec—have you <i>conquered England</i>? Will you seek for the deep +foundations of her power in the frozen depths of Labrador?</p> + +<p class="poem10"> +<span class="min20em">'</span>Her march is on the mountain wave,<br> + Her home is on the deep.'</p> + +<p class="noindent">Will you call upon her to leave your ports and harbors untouched only +just till you can return from Canada to defend them? The coast is to +be left defenceless whilst men in the interior are revelling in +conquest and spoil." He pronounced the country to be in a state wholly +unfit for war.</p> + +<p>Mr. Clay answered him in an eloquent speech. He defended the character +of our troops, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page47" name="page47"></a>(p. 47)</span> expressed his full confidence in the +loyalty and bravery of the country. "Gentlemen," he said, "had +inquired what would be gained by the contemplated war? Sir, I ask in +turn, what will you not lose by your mongrel state of peace with Great +Britain? Do you expect to gain anything in a pecuniary view? No sir. +Look at your treasury reports. Yon now receive only $6,000,000 of +revenue annually, and this amount must be diminished in the same +proportion as the rigorous execution of the orders in council shall +increase. Before these orders existed you received <i>sixteen +millions</i>." He declared that war was inevitable unless we tamely +sacrificed our own interests, rights and honor. In answering the +objection that we ought only to go to war when we were invaded, he +exclaimed in thrilling tones, while the house gazed in breathless +silence on his excited features, "<i>How much better than invasion is +the blocking of your very ports and harbors, insulting your towns, +plundering your merchants and scouring your coasts? If your fields are +surrounded, are they in a better condition than if invaded? When the +murderer is at your door will you meanly skulk to your cells? or will +you boldly oppose him at his entrance?</i>"</p> + +<p>Every part of his speech told with tremendous effect. Many of the +members opposed the bill, which continued the subject of debate for +several <span class="pagenum"><a id="page48" name="page48"></a>(p. 48)</span> days. Mr. Williams of South Carolina, defended it in +a fearless speech. In reply to a remark made by one of the members, +that it was unjust to go to war with England, as she was fighting for +her existence, he exclaimed in a loud sonorous voice that pealed +through the chamber, "<i>If her existence, sir, depends upon our +destruction, then I say down let her go.</i> She is contending for the +liberties of the world too, it seems. I would as soon have expected to +hear that the devil had espoused the cause of Christianity. Sir, we +may trace her progress for years through blood. Did she raise the +standard of liberty in India? Was it for liberty she offered up so +many human hecatombs on the plains of Hindostan? Was it to plant the +standard of <i>liberty</i> in this country that she immolated even infant +innocence during the war of the Revolution? Is it to extend or secure +the blessings of freedom to us that the fireside and the cradle are +exposed to savage incursions in the west at this time?" This part of +his speech created a marked sensation.</p> + +<p>The bill finally passed by 44 to 34.<a id="footnotetag7" name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7" title="Go to footnote 7"><span class="smaller">[7]</span></a> The winter passed in exciting +debates, both in Congress and in the State Legislatures, while every +hamlet in the land was agitated with the notes of hostile +preparations. <span class="sidenote">March 9.</span> In the midst of this excitement, +the country was <span class="pagenum"><a id="page49" name="page49"></a>(p. 49)</span> startled by the transmission of documents to +Congress showing that a man by the name of Henry had been sent by the +Governor of Canada to sound the disaffected New England States and +endeavor to form some connection with the leading federalists.<a id="footnotetag8" name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8" title="Go to footnote 8"><span class="smaller">[8]</span></a></p> + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page50" name="page50"></a>(p. 50)</span> <span class="sidenote">Apr. 8.</span> + +<p>In the mean time, Jonathan Russell, of Rhode Island, who had been +appointed <i>chargé d'affaires</i> to the English Court on the return of +Mr. Pinckney, wrote home that there was no prospect that the British +government would revoke its orders in council; and the President, +therefore, on the first of April, recommended an embargo to be laid on +all vessels in port, or which should arrive, for the term of sixty +days. The message was received with closed doors, and the house felt +that this was preparatory to a declaration of war. When Mr. Porter, in +accordance with the recommendation of the message, brought in a bill +to lay this embargo, there was great sensation in the house. In reply +to the interrogation, whether this was a peace measure or preparatory +to war, Mr. Grundy, one of the committee, arose and said, "it is a +<i>war</i> measure, and it is meant that it shall lead directly to it." Mr. +Stow, of New York, said, "if it was a precursor to war, there were +some very serious questions to be asked. What is <span class="pagenum"><a id="page51" name="page51"></a>(p. 51)</span> the +situation of our fortresses? What is the situation of our country +generally?" Mr. Clay then left the chair, and, in a short speech, made +it apparent that after what had passed, to shrink from this because it +was a war measure, would cover the nation with disgrace. Randolph, in +reply, said, that he was so impressed with the importance of the +subject, and the solemnity of the occasion, that he could not keep +silent. "Sir," said he, "we are now in conclave—the eyes of the +surrounding world are not upon us. We are shut up here from the light +of Heaven, but the eyes of God are upon us. He knows the spirit of our +minds. Shall we deliberate on this subject with the spirit of sobriety +and candor, or with that spirit which has too often characterized our +discussions upon occasions like the present? We ought to realize that +we are in the presence of that God who knows our thoughts and motives, +and to whom we must hereafter render an account for the deeds done in +the body." He spoke at some length and earnestly. Clay seeing the +effect of his solemn adjurations on some members of the house, left +the speaker's chair and replied, that the gentleman from Virginia +need not have reminded them in the manner he had, of the presence of +that Being who watches and surrounds us. He thought that consciousness +should awaken different sentiments from those which had been uttered. +It ought to inspire <span class="pagenum"><a id="page52" name="page52"></a>(p. 52)</span> us to patriotism, to the display of those +qualities which ennobled man. God always was with the right, and +extended his protection to those who performed their duty fearlessly, +scorning the consequences. The discussion of the bill continued +through several days, and exhibited, in a striking manner, the +different effect of an event so momentous and fearful as war on +different characters. In one, the overwhelming responsibility and +direful results of adopting a measure leading to it, shut out all +other considerations. To another, its chances and calamities were a +matter of mere calculation to be taken and met by any nation that +expected to exist; while many hailed it with the delight of true +patriotism, feeling that the country had, at last, risen from its +humiliating attitude. Mr. Bleecker addressed the house more like a +clergyman than a statesman, warning the members to desist from the +perilous course. On the other hand, Mr. Mitchell, from New York, +declared, that the country was not to "be frightened by political +screech-owls;" and, alluding to the profligate character of the Prince +Regent, said, "he did not think any one should be afraid to face a +nation, at whose head stood such a man—one who was some years since +expelled a jockey club, and who was lately turned out of doors for his +unworthy conduct to his neighbor's wife. The power with which we are +to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page53" name="page53"></a>(p. 53)</span> contend is not so terrific and almighty as is imagined."</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Apr. 4.</span> + +<p>The bill finally passed, 69 to 36. In the senate, 17 to 11.<a id="footnotetag9" name="footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9" title="Go to footnote 9"><span class="smaller">[9]</span></a> About +the same time another dispatch was received from Mr. Russell, closing +with, "I no longer entertain a hope that we can honorably avoid war."</p> + +<p>This was the feeling of the majority of the nation. In establishing +certain fixed limits beyond which it would not go, and erecting +certain barriers over which it would not allow England to pass, the +American Government had taken a position from which there was no +receding, with honor. While every thing was thus rapidly tending to +war, and the public was eager with expectation, waiting for the next +movement that should precipitate it, with all its horrors, on the +land, a despatch, received by the British Minister, Mr. Foster,<a id="footnotetag10" name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10" title="Go to footnote 10"><span class="smaller">[10]</span></a> +from Castlereagh, closed at once every avenue towards a peaceful +adjustment of the existing difficulties. In it he declared "that the +decrees of Berlin and Milan must not be repealed singly and specially +in relation to the United States, but must be repealed, also, as to +all other neutral nations, and that in no less extent of a repeal of +the French decrees, had the British Government <span class="pagenum"><a id="page54" name="page54"></a>(p. 54)</span> ever pledged +itself to repeal the orders in council."<a id="footnotetag11" name="footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11" title="Go to footnote 11"><span class="smaller">[11]</span></a> This was saying, that +unless the United States instituted herself lawgiver between France +and all other European powers, and through her own unaided efforts +obtained that which England, with all her maritime strength could not +enforce, the latter would consider herself perfectly justified in +withholding from us our national rights. This awkward attempt to cover +up under the mask of diplomacy, duplicity and falsehood, from which an +honorable mind would have shrunk, was perfectly characteristic of the +man who carried the English and Irish Union by the most stupendous +frauds and bribery and corruption that can be found in the annals of +modern civilization.</p> + +<p>I know the quasi denial of Mr. Foster, that this construction was a +just one, yet the language used can convey no other. To place it +beyond dispute, Lord Castlereagh, as late as May 22d, 1812, declared +as British Minister, to the House of Commons, that as the Berlin and +Milan decrees "were not unconditionally repealed, as required by his +Majesty's declaration, but only repealed so far as they regarded +America, he had no objection to state it, as his own opinion, that +this French decree, so issued, made no <span class="pagenum"><a id="page55" name="page55"></a>(p. 55)</span> manner of alteration +in the question of the orders in council."<a id="footnotetag12" name="footnotetag12"></a><a href="#footnote12" title="Go to footnote 12"><span class="smaller">[12]</span></a></p> + +<p>It is rare to find such unscrupulous conduct on the part of a +Ministry, protected by so miserable a subterfuge. It could not be +supposed that the American Government would be deceived for a moment +by it, but the belief that we could not be <i>forced</i> into a war, +rendered ordinary care and cunning superfluous. Occupied with +continental affairs alone, England looked upon the American Republic +as only a means to accomplish her ends there. The administration, at +Washington, was thus <i>compelled</i> by the arbitrary conduct of its +enemy, to declare war, or forfeit all claim to the respect of the +nations of the earth, and all right to an independent existence.</p> + +<p>Under these circumstances, Mr. Madison no longer hesitated, but on the +1st day of June transmitted a warlike message to Congress. After +recapitulating, in a general way, the history of past negotiations and +past injuries, he says: "Whether the United States shall continue +passive under these progressive usurpations and accumulating wrongs, +or opposing force to force in defence of their natural rights shall +commit a just cause into the hands of the Almighty Disposer of events, +avoiding all connections which might entangle it in the contests or +views of other powers, and preserving a constant readiness to concur +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page56" name="page56"></a>(p. 56)</span> in an honorable reestablishment of peace and friendship, is a +solemn question, which the constitution wisely confides to the +legislative department of the Government. In recommending it to their +early deliberations, I am happy in the assurance that the decision +will be worthy the enlightened and patriotic councils of a virtuous, a +free and a powerful nation." This message was referred at once to the +Committee on Foreign Relations, who reported ten days after in favor +of an immediate appeal to arms. The deliberations on this report were +conducted with closed doors.</p> + +<p>A bill drawn up by Mr. Pinckney, and offered by Mr. Calhoun, declaring +war to exist between Great Britain and the United States, was rapidly +pushed through the House, passing by a vote of 79 to 49. In the +Senate, being met not only by the opposition of the Federalists, but +by the friends of De Witt Clinton, who voted with them, it passed by a +majority of only six.<a id="footnotetag13" name="footnotetag13"></a><a href="#footnote13" title="Go to footnote 13"><span class="smaller">[13]</span></a> Congress, after passing an act, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page57" name="page57"></a>(p. 57)</span> +granting letters of marque, and regulating prizes and prize goods, +authorizing the issue of Treasury notes to the amount of $5,000,000, +and placing a hundred per cent. additional duties on imports, +adjourned. <span class="sidenote">July 8.</span> In accordance with a resolution of +Congress, the President appointed a day of public humiliation and +prayer, in view of the conflict in which the nation had entered.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page58" name="page58"></a>(p. 58)</span> CHAPTER II.</h2> + +<p class="resume">Different feelings with which the Declaration of War was + received — State of the parties at the commencement — + Federalists and Democrats — Their hostility — Absurd + doctrines of the Federalists — Hostility of New England — + Unprepared state of the country — Culpable neglect of the + government — Comparative strength of the two navies — + Empty state of the Treasury — Inefficiency of the Cabinet.</p> + +<p>The proud and sensitive American of to-day can scarcely comprehend +how, under the heavy and protracted provocations which I have traced +in the preceding chapter, the country could have been kept for so long +a time from open hostilities. It would seem that the most arbitrary +exercise of executive and legislative power, could not have prevented +the people from rushing spontaneously to arms, and demanding their +rights at the bayonet's point. He is still more astounded, when he +remembers that this declaration of war was received with a storm of +indignation by a large party in the Union—that all New England, with +the exception of Vermont, anathematized it. The pulpit and the press +thundered forth their maledictions, and the wrath of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page59" name="page59"></a>(p. 59)</span> heaven +was invoked on the heads of its authors. The flags of the shipping in +Boston harbor were hoisted at half-mast, in token of mourning, and the +spot rendered immortal by the patriots of the revolution, became the +rallying place of the disaffected, and the hope of the enemy. A common +welfare and a common country, could not allay this hostility, which +strengthened instead of diminishing to the last, and which was so +fanatical and blind in its violence, that it exhibited itself in the +most monstrous forms. Our defeats were gloried in, and the triumphs of +our oppressors hailed as an evidence that God was on their side, while +downright insubordination, plots, and incipient rebellion, crippled +the efforts of an already weak government, and swelled the disasters +on which they fattened.</p> + +<p>But to one who knows to what a height the spirit of faction will +reach, nothing in all this unnatural hostility will seem strange. The +country, at this time, was divided into Federalists and Democrats, who +were scarcely less vindictive in their animosities, than the Whigs and +Tories of the revolution. New England was the furnace of Federalism, +and Boston the focal point from which issued incessant and bitter +assaults on Jefferson's, and afterwards on Madison's administration. +Thus, in the most trying period of our existence since the adoption of +the constitution, the country was divided and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page60" name="page60"></a>(p. 60)</span> torn by the +fiercest spirit of faction with which it has ever been cursed.</p> + +<p>I shall not enter into a history of the feuds of these two parties. +The principle which originally divided them was plain. One was for a +consolidated government, and more power in the executive; the other +for a larger distribution of power among the separate states of the +confederacy; one was strongly conservative, and the other tending to +radicalism; one was for putting the strictest construction on the +constitution, the other for giving it the greatest possible latitude. +These two parties had grown up with the republic. Their germs were +seen in the first convention that met after the achievement of our +independence, to settle the form of government. On one point all were +agreed—that our mutual safety and welfare depended on a confederacy, +but a difference of opinion arose on the amount of power the separate +states should confer on the Federal head. The constitution which was +finally adopted was not stringent enough to suit the Federalists; but +as a compromise, it was on the whole the best that could be secured. +Besides, by standing firmly with the general government in all +conflicts with the separate states, and with the executive when +brought in collision with Congress, and by the great patronage of the +President, that power which they preferred to see directly delegated +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page61" name="page61"></a>(p. 61)</span> might practically be obtained. This party numbered among its +leaders, the first statesmen of the land.</p> + +<p>Nor should these views be considered strange, nor the patriotism of +those who held them be assailed. Some of the noblest men who offered +their lives and fortunes to the cause of liberty, looked upon the +British Government as the best in the world, and stripped of some of +its peculiarities, and purged of its corruptions, would be the best +that human ingenuity could devise. They did not originally war against +a form of government, but to be free from its oppressive acts. They +did not hate, they admired the British constitution, and took up arms +not to destroy it, but to enjoy the rights it guaranteed to its +subjects. The government, in the principles of which they had been +educated, was the most prosperous and the strongest on the globe, and +common wisdom dictated that all its good points should be retained and +incorporated into our own. Why enter on an entirely new experiment +when we had so much to build upon in the experience of the mother +country? One of the grand features of that government was the central +power lodged in the throne; so ours should be characterized by a +strong executive. The very reason, the force of which was felt by all, +and that made a confederacy indispensable, viz., that a number of +independent states, separated <span class="pagenum"><a id="page62" name="page62"></a>(p. 62)</span> by only imaginary lines, would, +inevitably, lead to frequent collisions and final civil war, operated +they thought with equal force against a <i>loose</i> confederacy. The same +results would follow. The wisdom of these fears is seen at the present +day, in the separate power demanded by some of the states, and alas +was soon exhibited by the Federalists themselves in the spirit of +disobedience they instilled into the people against the general +government.</p> + +<p>The Democrats, on the other hand, saw in all this a decided leaning +towards a monarchy, and afterwards boldly accused their adversaries of +conspiring to erect a throne in the midst of this republic. They were +taunted with sycophancy to England, and a craving after English +distinctions and aristocratic preeminence. The <i>principles</i> on which +the two parties rested had their birth in true patriotism, and their +effect on the character of the Constitution was, doubtless, healthful. +Nor was there anything in their nature adapted to awaken such +vindictive hate. But like a strife between two individuals, the origin +of which is soon lost sight of in the passion engendered by the +conflict, so these two factions, in the heat of party rancor, forgot +in the main the theories on which they split. In the proposition of +every measure by either party for the welfare of the state, some +secret plot was supposed to be concealed.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page63" name="page63"></a>(p. 63)</span> The embarrassments in which this fierce hostile spirit placed +the administration, rendering it timid and cautious, was increased by +the form it took. The levelling and radical notions of the French +revolution, followed as they were by such atrocities, disgusted the +federalists, while the democrats, though they denounced the violence, +sympathized with the people, and saw in the commotion the working of +their own principles amid the oppressed masses of France. They not +only loved France, as their old ally, but they sympathized with her in +her efforts to hurl back the banded oppressors who sought to +reestablish a hated throne in her midst. So while the former party +stood charged with hating republics and wishing the domination of +England, the latter was accused of seeking an alliance with the +usurper Napoleon.</p> + +<p>Many of the reasons given by the Federalists for their opposition, +furnish another exhibition of the blinding power of party spirit. As +to the simple question between England and America, it would seem that +no sane man could doubt, that sufficient provocation had been given to +justify us in a resort to arms. The impressment of six or seven +thousand seamen, most of them American citizens, the destruction of +nearly a thousand merchantmen, and the insults every where heaped upon +our flag, were wrongs which could not be justified. They therefore +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page64" name="page64"></a>(p. 64)</span> endeavored to cover them up, by saying that the Democrats were +assisting Bonaparte, whom they regarded as a monster in human form, +and whose success would be the downfall of all liberty. The wrongs we +suffered were thus lost sight of, in the greater wrong of crippling +England in her desperate struggle with this modern Attila. Rather than +endanger the success of that conflict, they would suffer for a time +from the effect of her odious measures. They felt that England, in her +conduct, was not governed by hostile feelings towards this +country—that the evils she inflicted on us, were only incidental to +the war she was waging against a tyrant. Placed in imminent peril, as +the champion of freedom, she was compelled to resort to extraordinary +measures, which though they injured us, were intended only to crush a +common enemy. Hence the absurd interrogatory so incessantly urged by +wise statesmen: "Why do you not declare war against France as well as +England?"—as if the neglect to protect the interests and honor of the +country in one quarter, rendered it obligatory on the government to +neglect them in all quarters. The law which would redress one wrong, +is none the less right, because he who administers it refuses to apply +it to a second wrong. The injustice is in the person, not in the deed. +Besides, when a nation is insulted and outraged by two powers, it has +a perfect right to choose which it will <span class="pagenum"><a id="page65" name="page65"></a>(p. 65)</span> first assault and +chastise. And yet the false doctrine was constantly promulgated, that +we had no right to declare war with England, without including France, +because she was equally criminal. In other words, the nation was bound +to bear quietly the evils under which it groaned, or embrace in the +contest, France, which stood ready to do us justice the moment that +England would.</p> + +<p>It seems incredible that so absurd a dogma was soberly defended by +clear-headed statesmen. Strictly applied, it would require a nation, +for the sake of consistency, to submit to wrongs that degrade and ruin +her, or enter on a war equally ruinous, from its magnitude, when there +was a safe mode of procedure. Besides, all the circumstances pointed +out England as our antagonist. She harassed our frontiers—had taken +the first step against our commerce, and impressed our seamen. France +was guilty only of violating the laws of neutrality, while she always +stood pledged to recede from her position, if England would do the +same, and finally did recede, leaving no cause for war. The seizures +under the Rambouillet decree, were matters for negotiation before a +declaration of war could be justified.</p> + +<p>As Jefferson was the head of the Democratic party, the Federalists +bent all their energies against his administration, and on his +retirement transferred their hostility to that of Madison.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page66" name="page66"></a>(p. 66)</span> But the Federalists were not all opposed to the war. The elder +Adams, the noblest chief of Federalism, was too clear-headed and +high-minded a statesman to let party spirit come between him and his +country's good, and he firmly advocated it, which brought down on him +the condemnation of many of his friends. Said he—"It is utterly +incomprehensible to me that a rational, social, or moral creature can +say the war is unjust; how it can be said to be unnecessary is very +mysterious. I have thought it both just and necessary for five or six +years." His son, John Quincy, deserted the party to uphold the war. On +the other hand, many friends of the administration and several members +of the cabinet were wholly opposed to it. There seemed to be an awe of +England oppressing our older statesmen that rendered them insensible +to insult, and willing to see the country the scorn and contempt of +the world, for its base submission under the unparalleled indignities +heaped upon it, rather than risk a conflict with that strong power. +Many of the merchants, also, who saw that their own ruin would +inevitably follow hostilities, were averse to it—indeed, the learning +and intelligence of the land was against it—but the people of the +South and West, between whom and their country's honor and rights +selfish interests and bitter party hate did not come, nobly sustained +it.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page67" name="page67"></a>(p. 67)</span> The gloomy prospect with which a nation always enters on an +unequal war, was in our case saddened by these divided feelings of the +people, and by the open animosity of several of the States. In order +to paralyze us still more, and render our complete humiliation +certain, provided England would strike a bold and decided blow, no +preparation had been made for the struggle. Although we had been for +many years on the verge of war, we had done comparatively nothing to +meet its exigences, but stood and stupidly gazed into its fearful +abyss.</p> + +<p>The income from the customs, in 1811, was $13,000,000. This, of +course, the Government knew would decrease in time of war, as it did, +to $9,500,000. Our debt at this period was $45,000,000. Yet a loan of +$11,000,000, five millions of Treasury Notes, and the revenue from the +imposts, which were doubled, was all the money furnished to carry on a +war, which was to cost over thirty millions a year. Congress, however, +did, as a last act of wisdom, appropriate $100,000 to the support, +expense, exchange, &c., of prisoners of war. The utter blindness which +had fallen on the Government was exhibited more fully in its neglect +of the Navy. Under the "peace establishment" of 1801, our navy had +been reduced, and from that time to 1812, "a period of eleven eventful +years, during which the nation was scarcely a day without suffering a +violation <span class="pagenum"><a id="page68" name="page68"></a>(p. 68)</span> of its neutral rights, <i>not a single frigate</i> had +been added to the navy." Gun-boats had been built for the protection +of our harbors, and the marine corps increased by seven hundred men, +and $200,000 per annum was appropriated to rebuild three frigates that +had been suffered to decay. Beyond this, nothing was done, and with +but nine frigates and a few other cruising vessels of less rate, while +seven thousand of our merchant ships were scattered over the ocean +claiming our protection, we plunged into a war with a nation that had +a hundred ships of the line in commission, and more than a thousand +vessels of war which bore her flag of defiance over the deep.</p> + +<p>Superadded to all, the President, commander-in-chief of the army, was +utterly ignorant of war, and by nature and in principle wholly +repugnant to it. Conscious of his high and responsible position, he +resolved to press it with vigor. But he was unfortunate in his +Cabinet. Mr. Monroe, Secretary of State, had seen a little military +service, but only in a subordinate capacity. Mr. Gallatin, Secretary +of the Treasury, first opposed the declaration of war, and afterwards +insisted that the only hope of the country lay in a speedy peace. +Hamilton, Secretary of the Navy, and Eustis, Secretary of War, were +both ignorant of the duties of their respective departments. Pinckney, +the Attorney-General, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page69" name="page69"></a>(p. 69)</span> shook his head at our prospects, while +Gideon Granger, Postmaster-General,<a id="footnotetag14" name="footnotetag14"></a><a href="#footnote14" title="Go to footnote 14"><span class="smaller">[14]</span></a> openly declared that the war +could not but end in failure, while Madison conducted its operations. +To complete the climax, a General wholly unfit for his position, was +to open the campaign. At this critical juncture, too, we had scarcely +any representatives abroad to enlist sympathy with us in our struggle. +Mr. Adams had been sent to Russia, and Joel Barlow was our Minister to +France. The latter, however, died in Poland a few months after he +received the news of our declaration of war, leaving us with scarcely +a representative in Europe.</p> + +<p>It is not a matter of surprise that such a commencement to the war was +disastrous; the wonder is, that five, instead of two years of defeat, +were not meted out to us, as a just punishment for such stupidity and +neglect. Nothing but the momentous events transpiring in Europe, +distracting the attention of England, and rendering the presence of +her armies necessary at home, prevented her from striking us a blow, +from which it would have taken years to recover. May our Government +never be left to try such an experiment again!</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page70" name="page70"></a>(p. 70)</span> CHAPTER III.</h2> + +<p class="resume">Plan of the Campaign — General Hull sent to Detroit — + British officers first receive news of the declaration of + war — Capture of Hull's baggage, etc. — Enters Canada and + issues a proclamation, and sends out detachments — Colonels + McArthur and Cass advance on Malden — Hull refuses to + sustain them — Recrosses to Detroit — Van Horne's defeat + — Colonel Miller defeats the enemy, and opens Hull's + communications — Strange conduct of Hull — Advance of the + British — Surrender of Detroit — Indignation of the + officers — Review of the Campaign — Rising of the people + — Harrison takes command — Advance of the army.</p> + +<p>In determining the course to be pursued in carrying on hostilities the +administration selected Canada as the only field of operations +promising any success. The navy was to be shut up in port, leaving our +seven thousand merchantmen to slip through the hands of British +cruisers, and reach home as they best could. It was to be a war on +land and not on the sea, and the conquest of Canada would undoubtedly +be the result of the first campaign. General Dearborn, who had served +in the revolution, was appointed commander-in-chief of the northern +forces, and soon repaired to Plattsburgh, while General <span class="pagenum"><a id="page71" name="page71"></a>(p. 71)</span> Van +Rensalaer, of the New York militia, and General Smith were stationed +on the Niagara frontier.</p> + +<p>In anticipation of the war, General Hull, Governor of Michigan, had +been ordered to occupy his territory with an army of two thousand men, +for the purpose of defending the north-western frontier from the +Indians, and in case of war to obtain the command of Lake Erie, and +thus be able to cooperate with Dearborn and Van Rensalaer in the +invasion of Canada. The command naturally descended on him as Governor +of Michigan. Having, also, been an officer of merit under Washington, +the appointment was considered a very judicious one.</p> + +<p>With part of the first regiments of United States infantry, and three +companies of the first regiment of artillery, the balance made up of +Ohio volunteers and Michigan militia, and one company of rangers, he +left Dayton, in Ohio, the first of June, just eighteen days before the +declaration of war. On the tenth, he was joined at Urbana by Colonel +Miller, with the fourth regiment of infantry, composed of three +hundred men. Here the little army entered the untrodden wilderness, +and slowly cut its way through the primeval forest, two hundred miles +in extent, to Detroit. It reached Maumee the latter part of June, +where, on the second of July, Hull received the news of the +declaration of war. The letter of the Secretary of War had been +<i>fourteen days</i> <span class="pagenum"><a id="page72" name="page72"></a>(p. 72)</span> reaching him. The British officer, at Maiden, +had been officially notified of it <i>two days before</i>. "On this +occasion, the British were better served. Prevost received notice of +it, on the 24th of June, at Quebec. Brock on the 26th, at Newark. St. +George on the 30th, at Malden; and Roberts on the 8th of July, at St. +Joseph's. But, a fact still more extraordinary than the celerity of +these transmissions, is, that the information thus rapidly forwarded +to the British commanders, at Malden and St. Joseph, was received +under envelopes, franked by the Secretary of the American +Treasury."<a id="footnotetag15" name="footnotetag15"></a><a href="#footnote15" title="Go to footnote 15"><span class="smaller">[15]</span></a> But, if the Secretary of the Treasury had been the +victim of a shrewd trick, the Secretary of War had commenced his +career by a most egregious blunder. On the day of the declaration of +war, he wrote two letters to General Hull, one announcing the fact, +and the other making no mention of it. The latter despatched by a +special messenger, reached the General on the 24th of June. The former +being intrusted to the public mail as far as Cleveland, thence to be +forwarded as it best could, did not arrive at head quarters till the +2nd of July, or two days after the news which it contained had been +received by the British officer at Malden.<a id="footnotetag16" name="footnotetag16"></a><a href="#footnote16" title="Go to footnote 16"><span class="smaller">[16]</span></a> By this unpardonable +carelessness of the Secretary of War, General Hull not only lost all +the advantage <span class="pagenum"><a id="page73" name="page73"></a>(p. 73)</span> to be derived from having the knowledge of the +declaration of hostilities six days before the enemy, but he had to +suffer from the preparations which this previous information gave the +latter time to make.</p> + +<p>The first disaster that resulted from this culpability of the +Secretary of War, was the loss of General Hull's baggage, "hospital +stores, intrenching tools, and sixty men," together with the +instructions of the government, and the returns of the army. Having +received a letter from the Secretary of War, dated as late as the 18th +of June, in which he was urged to march with all possible despatch to +Detroit, and containing no announcement of a rupture, he naturally +supposed that the two governments were still at peace, and so to carry +out the instructions of the secretary, and expedite matters, he +shipped his baggage, stores, &c., to go by water to Detroit, while he +took his army by land. But the day previous the British commander, at +Malden, had received official notice of the declaration of war, and +when the packet containing the stores, &c., attempted to pass the +fort, it was stopped by a boat containing a British officer and six +men, and its cargo seized.</p> + +<p>This first advantage gained over him so unexpectedly, by the enemy, +had a most depressing effect on the General. Instead of rousing him to +greater exertion, it filled him with doubt and uncertainty. He +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page74" name="page74"></a>(p. 74)</span> had a dozen subordinates, either of whom, with that army, +would in a few days have seized Malden, and recovered all he had lost, +and inflicted a heavy blow on the enemy.</p> + +<p>At length, however, he seemed to awake to the propriety of doing +something to carry out the objects of the campaign, and on the 12th +crossed the Detroit River and marched to Sandwich, only eighteen miles +from Malden. But here, with an unobstructed road leading to the enemy +before him, he paused and issued a proclamation to the Canadians, and +sent out detachments which penetrated sixty miles into the province. +The friendly disposition of the inhabitants was apparent, while the +Indians were overawed into a neutral position.</p> + +<p>Four days after crossing the river, General Hull sent Colonels Cass +and Miller, with a detachment of two hundred and eighty men, towards +Malden. These gallant officers pushed to the river Canards, within +four miles of the fort, and driving the British pickets who held the +bridge from their position, took possession of it, and immediately +dispatched a messenger to General Hull, announcing their success. They +described the occupation of the post as of the utmost importance in +carrying out the plan of the campaign, and begged that if the army +could not be moved there, that they might be allowed to hold it +themselves—the General sending reinforcements as <span class="pagenum"><a id="page75" name="page75"></a>(p. 75)</span> occasion +demanded. Instead of being gratified at this advantage gained over the +enemy, General Hull seemed irritated, condemned the attack as a breach +of orders, and directed the immediate return of the detachment. These +brave officers persisting in their request, he gave them permission to +retain the position, provided they were willing to do so on their own +responsibility, and without any aid from him.</p> + +<p>This he knew they would not do. Such a proposition, from the +commanding officer, indicated a weakness of judgment, and a +willingness to resort to the most transparent trickery to escape +responsibility, that no apology can excuse. From the statements of the +British afterwards, it appeared that the approach of this detachment +filled the garrison with alarm; the shipping was brought up to the +wharves, and the loading of baggage commenced, preparatory to flight. +On two sides the fort was in a dilapidated state, while seven hundred +men, of whom only one hundred were regular troops, constituted the +entire garrison. From the panic which the approach of Cass and Miller +created, there is no doubt that the appearance of the whole army, of +two thousand men before the place, would have been followed by an +immediate surrender. One thing is certain, if General Hull supposed +that a garrison of seven hundred men behind such works, could make a +successful defence against nearly three <span class="pagenum"><a id="page76" name="page76"></a>(p. 76)</span> times their number, +he had no right to regard his strong position at Detroit, when +assailed by only an equal force, untenable. Either Malden could have +been taken, or Detroit was impregnable. The troops felt certain of +success, and were impatient to be led to the attack, but he pronounced +it unsafe to advance without heavy artillery; besides, he wished to +wait the effect of his proclamation on the enemy. The Indians and +Canadian militia, he said, had begun to desert, and in a short time +the force at Malden might be "materially weakened." Two thousand men +sat quietly down to wait for this miserable garrison of seven hundred, +six hundred of whom were Canadian militia and Indians, to dwindle to +less force, before they dared even to approach within shot. The army +was kept here three weeks, till two twenty-four pounders and three +howitzers could be mounted on wheels strong enough to carry them, and +yet a few weeks after, behind better works than those of Malden, and +with a force fully equal to that of his adversary, he felt authorized +to surrender, though the largest guns brought forward to break down +his defences, were six pounders.</p> + +<p>The cannon at length, being mounted, were with the ammunition placed +on floating batteries, ready to move on Malden, when the order to +march was countermanded, and the army, instead of advancing against +the enemy, recrossed the river to Detroit, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page77" name="page77"></a>(p. 77)</span> over which it had +passed a few weeks before to the conquest of Canada. General Hull had +issued a proclamation, sent out two detachments, mounted two heavy +cannon and three howitzers, and then marched back again. Such were the +astonishing results accomplished by the first grand army of invasion.</p> + +<p>The gathering of the Indian clans, and reinforcements pouring into the +British garrison, had alarmed him. The news seemed to take him by +surprise, as though it for the first time occurred to him that during +these three or four weeks in which he remained idle, the enemy might +possibly be active.</p> + +<p>The surrender, at this time, of Fort Mackinaw, situated on the island +of the same name in the straits between Lakes Huron and Michigan, was +a severe blow to him, for it opened the flood-gates to all the +Indians, Canadians and British in the north-west. This fort was the +key to that section of the country, and the grand depôt of the fur +companies. By its position it shielded General Hull from all attack in +that direction. Lieutenant Hanks commanded it, with a garrison of +sixty men. As soon as the British commander of St. Joseph's, just +above it, received news of the declaration of war, he took with him +some two hundred Canadians and British, and four hundred Indians, and +suddenly appearing before the fort demanded its surrender. This was +the first intimation <span class="pagenum"><a id="page78" name="page78"></a>(p. 78)</span> to Lieutenant Hanks of the commencement +of hostilities. He capitulated without offering any resistance, and +the Indians at once rallied around the British standard. Here was +another blunder, a double one. In the first place, private enterprise +had outstripped the action of Government. The British officer at St. +Joseph's, though more remote than Mackinaw, received the declaration +of war <i>nine</i> days before it reached the American commander at the +latter place, or rather, Lieutenant Hanks did not receive it at all, +either from the Government or General Hull. Colonel Roberts, of St. +Joseph's, with his band of Canadians and Indians, was kind enough to +convey the information.</p> + +<p>It is surprising that General Hull, after his experience, did not at +once provide that a post so vital to him, should not become the victim +of the same criminal negligence which had paralyzed his efforts. +<i>Fifteen days</i> intervened between his receiving the notification of +war, and the taking of Fort Mackinaw, and yet no messenger from him, +the Governor of the Territory, and commander-in-chief of the forces in +that section, reached the garrison. Were it not for the calamitous +results which followed, the whole campaign might be called a "comedy +of errors."</p> + +<p>Three days previous, however, to the retreat of Hull from Canada, he +committed another error which increased his embarrassments. Proctor, +who had <span class="pagenum"><a id="page79" name="page79"></a>(p. 79)</span> arrived at Malden with reinforcements, threw a small +detachment across the river to Brownstown, to intercept any provisions +that might be advancing from Ohio to the army. Captain Brush, who was +on the way with the mail, flour and cattle, was thus stopped at the +River Raisin. To open the communication and bring up the provisions, +Major Van Horne was dispatched with two hundred volunteers and +militia. But the detachment, marching without sufficient caution, was +led into ambush, and utterly defeated. Only about one-half returned to +the army. Both Gen. Hull and Major Van Horne were to blame in this +affair—the former for not sending a larger detachment, when he knew +the enemy must be on the march, while at the same time he was ignorant +of his force. This error is the more culpable, because he did not +expect an immediate attack; for, after the detachment was despatched, +he remained quietly in Canada, and then crossed at his leisure to +Detroit. He therefore could, without danger, have spared a larger +force, and should have done so, especially when the want of provisions +was one of the evils he would be called upon to encounter. On the +other hand, Major Van Horne should have heeded the information he +received, that the enemy were in advance, in position, and not allowed +his little army to rush into an ambuscade.</p> + +<p>General Hull's position had now become sufficiently <span class="pagenum"><a id="page80" name="page80"></a>(p. 80)</span> +embarrassing. "The whole northern hive was in motion." Reinforcements +were hastening to the support of Malden; his communications on the +lake were cut off by British vessels, while the defeat of Van Horne +announced that his communications by land were also closed. The latter +he knew must be opened at all hazards, and Colonel Miller was +dispatched on the route which Van Horne had taken with four hundred +men to clear the road to the river Raisin. Leaving Detroit on the 8th +of August, he next day in the afternoon, as he was approaching +Brownstown, came upon the enemy covered with a breast work of logs and +branches of trees, and protected on one side by the Detroit river, and +on the other by swamps and thickets. The British and Canadians were +commanded by Muir, and the Indians by Tecumseh. Captain Snelling +leading the advance guard approached to within half musket shot, +before he discovered the enemy. A fierce and deadly fire was suddenly +opened on him, which he sustained without flinching, till Colonel +Miller converting his order of march into order of battle, advanced to +his support. Seeing, however, how destructive the fire of the enemy +was, while the bullets of his own men buried themselves for the most +part in the logs of the breastwork; perceiving, also, some symptoms of +wavering, Miller determined to carry the works by the bayonet. The +order to charge was received <span class="pagenum"><a id="page81" name="page81"></a>(p. 81)</span> with loud cheers; and the next +moment the troops poured fiercely over the breastwork, and routing the +British and Canadians pressed swiftly on their retiring footsteps. +Tecumseh, however, maintained his post, and Van Horne, who commanded +the right flank of the American line, supposing from his stubborn +resistance that it would require more force than he possessed to +dislodge him, sent to Colonel Miller for reinforcements. The latter +immediately ordered a halt, and with a reluctant heart turned from the +fugitives now almost within his grasp, and hastened to the relief of +his subordinate. On arriving at the breastwork, he found the Indian +chief in full flight. He then started again in pursuit, but arrived in +view of the enemy only to see him on the water floating away beyond +his grasp.</p> + +<p>He, however, had established the communication between the army and +the river Raisin, and dispatched Captain Snelling to Detroit with the +account of the victory, and a request for boats to remove the wounded, +and bring provisions for the living, and reinforcements to supply the +place of the dead and disabled. General Hull immediately sent Colonel +McArthur with a hundred men and boats, but with provisions sufficient +only for a single meal.<a id="footnotetag17" name="footnotetag17"></a><a href="#footnote17" title="Go to footnote 17"><span class="smaller">[17]</span></a></p> + +<p>Colonel Miller was some twenty miles from the supplies, but not +deeming it prudent with the slender <span class="pagenum"><a id="page82" name="page82"></a>(p. 82)</span> reinforcements he had +received, and the still scantier provisions, to proceed, remained on +the battle field, and sent another messenger declaring that the +communication was open, and it required only a few more men and a +supply of provisions, to keep it so. The next evening, the messenger +returned, bringing instead of provisions a peremptory order to return +to Detroit. It is doubtful whether Colonel Miller ought not to have +advanced without waiting for further reinforcements, and formed a +junction with Captain Brush, who had an abundance of provisions, and a +detachment of a hundred and fifty men. But, after the communications +were established, he did not probably see so much necessity for +dispatch as for security. But General Hull seemed to be laboring under +a species of insanity. After sending forth two detachments to open his +communications, and finally succeeding, he deliberately closed them +again, and shut from his army all those provisions, the want of which +he a few days after gave as a reason for surrendering. The rapid +concentration of the enemy's forces, in front of him, might have been +given as a sufficient cause for suddenly calling in all his troops to +defend Detroit, had he not two days after sent Colonel McArthur, +accompanied by Cass, with a detachment of four hundred men, to obtain +by a back, circuitous and almost wholly unknown route through <span class="pagenum"><a id="page83" name="page83"></a>(p. 83)</span> +the woods that which Colonel Miller had secured, and then been +compelled to relinquish.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Aug. 7.</span> + +<p>When General Hull recrossed the river to Detroit, he left some hundred +and fifty, convalescents and all, "to hold possession of that part of +Canada," which he had so gallantly won, "to defend the post to the +last extremity against musketry, but if overpowered by artillery to +retreat."<a id="footnotetag18" name="footnotetag18"></a><a href="#footnote18" title="Go to footnote 18"><span class="smaller">[18]</span></a> In the mean time, General Brock, the commander of the +British forces, approached, and began to erect a battery opposite +Detroit to protect his army, and cover it in crossing the river. Not a +shot was fired to interrupt his proceedings, no attempt made to +destroy his shipping which had arrived. Daliba offered "to clear the +enemy from the opposite shores from the lower batteries," to which +General Hull replied, "I will make an agreement with the enemy, that +if they will not fire on me I will not fire on them." Major Jessup +asked permission to cross the river and spike the guns, but this was +considered a too desperate undertaking. In short, every project that +was proposed was rejected, and the twenty-four pounders and the +howitzers slept dumb on their carriages, in the midst of these hostile +preparations of the enemy.</p> + +<p>At length, on the morning of the 15th, a messenger arrived from +General Brock demanding an immediate surrender of the town and fort. +To this summons <span class="pagenum"><a id="page84" name="page84"></a>(p. 84)</span> Hull replied in a decided and spirited +manner; but this did not seem to daunt the British commander. He +immediately opened his fire from a newly erected battery, which, after +knocking down some chimneys, and disabling a few soldiers, finally +ceased at ten o'clock in the evening. The next morning it +re-commenced, and under cover of its harmless thunder the British, in +broad daylight, commenced crossing a river more than three thousand +feet wide. This presumptuous attempt succeeded without the loss of a +man. The troops then formed in column twelve deep, and marching along +the shore, soon emerged into view, about five hundred yards from the +fort. The opposing forces were nearly equal, but the position of the +Americans gave them vastly the advantage. The fort proper was of great +strength, surrounded by a deep, wide ditch, and strongly palisaded +with an exterior battery of two twenty-four pounders. It was occupied +by four hundred men, while four hundred more lay behind a high picket +fence, which flanked the approach to it. Three hundred more held the +town. Against this formidable array, General Brock, preceded by five +light pieces of artillery, boldly advanced. He did not even have a +vanguard, and rode alone in front of his column. To the most common +observer, they were marching on certain and swift destruction. The +militia who had never been under fire, were eager for <span class="pagenum"><a id="page85" name="page85"></a>(p. 85)</span> the +conflict, so confident were they of victory. On swept the apparently +doomed column upon which every eye was sternly bent, while every heart +beat with intense anxiety to hear the command to fire. In this moment +of thrilling excitement, a white flag was lifted above the works, and +an order came for all the troops to withdraw from the outer posts and +stack their arms. Such a cry of indignation as followed, probably +never before assailed the ears of a commander. Lieutenant Anderson in +a paroxysm of rage, broke his sword over one of his guns and burst +into tears. The shameful deed was done, and so anxious was General +Hull that all should receive the benefit of this capitulation, that he +included in it Colonels McArthur and Cass, and their detachment whom +he had sent to the river Raisin, together with that entrusted with the +supplies.</p> + +<p>To enhance the regret and shame of this sudden surrender, it was soon +discovered that McArthur and Cass, having heard the cannonading +twenty-four hours before, had returned, and at the moment the white +flag was raised were only a mile and a half from the fort, and +advancing so as to take the enemy in rear. The result of a defence +would have been the entire destruction of the British army. Ah! what a +different scene was occurring on this same day, in another hemisphere. +On this very morning Napoleon crossed the Dnieper, on his way to +Moscow, and Murat <span class="pagenum"><a id="page86" name="page86"></a>(p. 86)</span> and Ney, at the head of eighteen thousand +splendid cavalry, fell on the Russian rear guard, only six thousand +strong. Yet this comparatively small band, composed like most of the +troops under Hull, of new levies, never thought of surrendering. First +in two squares, and then in one solid square they continued their +retreat all day—sometimes broken, yet always re-forming and +presenting the same fringe of glittering steel, and the same +adamantine front. Forty times were the apparently resistless squadrons +hurled upon them, yet they still maintained their firm formation, and +at night effected a junction with the main army, though with the loss +of more than one-sixth of their number. It was to be left to Scott and +Brown and Miller and Jessup and Jackson, to show that Russian serfs +were not braver troops than American freemen.</p> + +<p>It sometimes happens that events widely different in their character, +and presenting still wider contrast in the magnitude and grandeur of +the circumstances that attend them, are in their remote results alike, +both in character and in their effect on the destiny of the world. +Thus, six days after our declaration of war, Napoleon crossed the +Niemen, on his march to Moscow. This first step on Russian territory +was the signal for a long train of events to arise, which in the end +should dash to earth the colossal power of Napoleon, while our +movement was to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page87" name="page87"></a>(p. 87)</span> break the spell which made Great Britain +mistress of the seas; and two nations, one an unmixed despotism and +the other a pure republic, from that moment began to assume a +prominence they never before held, and from that time on, have been +the only powers which have rapidly increased in resources and +strength, till each threatens, in time, to swallow up its own +hemisphere.</p> + +<p>Much has been written of this campaign of Hull, and in the +controversy, statistics differ as widely as opinions. He was tried by +Court Martial, of which Martin Van Buren was Judge Advocate, acquitted +of treason, but found guilty of cowardice and sentenced to be shot. +Being pardoned by the President, his life was saved, but he went forth +a blighted and ruined man.</p> + +<p>On many points there is room for a diversity of judgment, but one +thing is certain, General Hull was unfit for the station to which he +was assigned. He had been a gallant subordinate officer in the +revolution, but a man may be a good major, or even colonel, but a bad +commander-in-chief. There are many officers who are fit only to act +under orders, whom personal danger never agitates, but who are +unnerved by responsibility. Let the latter rest on some other person +and they will cheerfully encounter the peril. Hull may have been one +of these, at least it seems more rational to attribute a portion of +his <span class="pagenum"><a id="page88" name="page88"></a>(p. 88)</span> conduct to some mental defect rather than to cowardice. +It is hard to affix such a stain on a man who moved beside Washington +in the perilous march on Trenton—stood firmly amid the hottest fire +at Princeton—gallantly led his men to the charge at Bemis' Heights, +and faced without flinching the fiery sleet that swept the column +pressing up the rugged heights of Stony Point. Gray hairs do not make +a coward of such a man, though they should render him imbecile.</p> + +<p>It is not easy at this remote period to appreciate the difficulties of +the position in which Hull eventually found himself. At first he +refused to take command of the expedition, but being urged by the +government, accepted, though with the express understanding that in +case of hostilities, he was to be sustained both by a fleet on Lake +Erie, and an army operating on the northern and western frontier of +New York. He knew that the conquest of Canadian territory would be of +slight importance, if the lake and river communication was controlled +by the enemy, for they could pass their troops from one point to +another with great rapidity, cut off his supplies and reinforcements, +and hem him in till a force sufficient to overwhelm him was +concentrated.</p> + +<p>On arriving near Malden, he was astounded to hear that the enemy had +received notice of the war before him, and hence had time to make more +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page89" name="page89"></a>(p. 89)</span> or less preparations. The second blow was the loss of +hospital stores, intrenching tools, army baggage, private papers, &c. +The third came in the fall of Mackinaw, thus removing the only barrier +that kept back the northern hordes. He knew the enemy had possession +of the water communication, and were therefore able to threaten his +retreat. Dearborn, who ought to have been pressing the British on the +Niagara frontier, and thus attracted their forces from Malden, had +entered into an armistice with the Governor of Canada, leaving the +latter at full liberty to reinforce the troops opposed to Hull, a +privilege of which he was not slow to avail himself. There was not a +gleam of sunshine in the whole gloomy prospect that spread out before +the American commander. His own army diminishing, while that of his +adversary was rapidly increasing—behind him a wilderness two hundred +miles in extent, his situation was disheartening enough to make a +strong man sad. The difficulties in which he found himself environed +must always produce one of two effects on every man—either rouse him +to tenfold diligence and effort and daring, or sink him in +corresponding inactivity and despondency. There can be no middle +state. That the latter was the effect produced on General Hull, there +can be no doubt. He proved plainly that he was not one of those whom +great emergencies develope into an extraordinary character worthy to +command <span class="pagenum"><a id="page90" name="page90"></a>(p. 90)</span> and worthy to be obeyed. The very first misfortune +unmanned him, and from that hour to the sad close of the campaign, +when he acted at all he did nothing but heap blunder on blunder. His +mind having once got into a morbid state, his position and his +prospects appeared to his diseased imagination ten times more +desperate than they really were.</p> + +<p>With the failure of General Dearborn to invade Canada from the New +York frontier, and more especially with the lakes entirely under the +control of the enemy, his campaign, according to all human +calculations, must prove a failure. Detroit must fall, and Michigan be +given up to the enemy. The only chance by which this catastrophe could +have been prevented, was offered by General Brock when he crossed the +river to storm Detroit. If Hull had possessed a spark of genius or +military knowledge, he would have seen in this rash movement of his +enemy, the avenue opened for his release, and the sure precursor of +his fortunes. With that broad river cutting off its retreat, the +British army would have been overthrown; provisions and arms obtained, +and the enemy received a check which in all probability would have +enabled Hull to sustain himself till reinforcements arrived. But he +had made up his mind to surrender, and thus save Detroit from the +cruelties of the savage, and the enemy could not commit a blunder of +sufficient magnitude to arouse <span class="pagenum"><a id="page91" name="page91"></a>(p. 91)</span> his hopes and spur him into +resistance; and having scarcely heard the report of his guns from +first to last, he veiled the banner of his country in the dust.</p> + +<p>This explanation of his conduct would correspond more with his former +life, than to admit the charge of either treason or cowardice, and be +perfectly satisfactory, but for the <i>mode</i> of his surrender. There is +a mystery here, that neither General Hull nor his friends have ever +cleared up. After having shown the imbecility of government, by which +failure became inevitable, they stop as though their task was done. +But the criminality of government being conceded, and the fall of +Detroit acknowledged to be an inevitable consequence, it does not +follow that the surrender of the army was necessary. Why, after +Colonel Miller opened the communications with supplies and +reinforcements, did not General Hull retreat at once? The enemy would +not have attempted a pursuit through that wilderness. With a rear +guard left to man the works, he could have gained two days' march, +while Detroit was able to make as good terms without him as with him. +He could have had no reason for staying, except the determination to +hold his position and defend Detroit to the last. If he had not fully +resolved to do so, the way of retreat was open, and he was bound to +occupy it; if he <i>had</i>, why did he not keep to that determination? No +new <span class="pagenum"><a id="page92" name="page92"></a>(p. 92)</span> elements had entered into the struggle—no unforeseen +events occurred to affect the conclusions he had adopted. The enemy +was not in greater force than he imagined, but on the contrary, in +less. He understood the strength of his own position; his troops were +never in greater spirits; why then did he so suddenly and totally +change his purpose? It is impossible to reconcile this grievous +inconsistency in his conduct. Nor is this all that is dark and +mysterious; supposing new conditions had occurred to alter his +determination, and affect the relative position of the armies—an +entirely new order of things had taken place, requiring another mode +of procedure than the one adopted by himself and the army; why did he +not call a council of war, and submit those new features to its +consideration? When his troops wished to attack Malden, he considered +the question so momentous as to require a council of his officers. +When a simple repulse was the only misfortune that could happen, he +regarded it his duty to take advice from his subordinates; but when it +came to an absolute surrender of his whole army, no such obligation +was felt. This man, who was so afraid to compromise his force, lest it +should meet with a repulse, did not in the end hesitate to surrender +it entire, and cover it with dishonor on his own responsibility. +Military history rarely records such an event as this, and never +unless either treason or cowardice was apparent <span class="pagenum"><a id="page93" name="page93"></a>(p. 93)</span> as noonday. +Not a faltering word—not a doubtful movement—not a sign of +flinching, till the white flag was seen flaunting its cowardly folds +before the banner of his country. No general has a right to assume +such a responsibility, at least, until the question has been submitted +to his officers. He may peril his troops in an unsuccessful attack, +but never <i>dishonor</i> them without consulting their wishes. The act was +that of a timorous commander, or of a bold and unscrupulous man, like +Gorgey. The rash and unmilitary advance of Brock, which +notwithstanding its success, met the disapproval of his superior, +seems wholly unaccountable, except some one, in the confidence of +Hull, had whispered in his ears, that the latter intended no defence.</p> + +<p>The <i>manner</i> of surrender, conflicts with the explanation of the act +itself, and involves the conduct of Hull in a mystery. To tell us he +was neither a traitor nor a coward, and yet leave those violations of +military rules and contradictions of character unexplained and +unreconciled, is to leave the same painful doubt on the mind as though +no defence had been attempted. A morbid state of mind equivalent to +insanity, thus changing for a time the whole character of the man, is +the only charitable construction.</p> + +<p>The blame, however, was not distributed impartially. The Secretary of +War should have been immediately <span class="pagenum"><a id="page94" name="page94"></a>(p. 94)</span> removed from office, +Dearborn withdrawn as commander-in-chief, and the whole administration +thoroughly overhauled, and its policy changed. As it was, the swelling +curses of the land smote the single head of General Hull. The news of +his surrender fell on the country like a thunderbolt at noonday. The +march of his army had been watched with intense interest, but with +scarcely any misgivings. So large a force appearing with the +declaration of war in their hands on the weak and unprepared posts of +the north-western frontier was expected to sweep everything before it. +Its defeat was considered impossible, its entire, shameful surrender, +therefore, could hardly be credited. The nation was stunned, but with +surprise, not fear, at least that portion west of the Alleghanies. +Indignation and a spirit of fierce retaliation swelled every bosom. +But eastward, where party spirit and divided feelings and views, had +rendered the war party cautious and timid, the effect was for a time +paralyzing. If defeated at the outset, while England could bring into +the field scarcely any but her colonial force, what would be our +prospects of success when her veterans drilled in the wars of the +continent should appear? The government, however, awoke to the +vastness of the undertaking, but still remained ignorant of the means +by which it was to be accomplished.</p> + +<p>To save the north-western frontier, now laid <span class="pagenum"><a id="page95" name="page95"></a>(p. 95)</span> open to the +incursions of savages, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Virginia, sent +forth crowds of volunteers, eager to redeem the tarnished reputation +of the country. Several members of Congress from Kentucky enlisted as +private soldiers—the young and ardent Clay was seen at the musters, +thrilling the young men who surrounded him, as though he wielded the +fiery cross in his hands. Ten thousand men were raised in an +incredible short space of time, and placed under General Harrison, the +hero of Tippecanoe. To these were added portions of the 17th and 19th +regiments of regular infantry and two regiments from Kentucky and +Ohio, for government was apparently determined to make up for the +insufficient, niggardly expenditures of the first campaign by its +useless prodigality in preparing for the second.</p> + +<p>Four thousand men raised by order of Gov. Shelby, of Kentucky, all +mounted on horseback, were put under Major General Hopkins, of the +militia, who, jointly with three regiments already sent to Vincennes +by Harrison, were to defend the frontiers of Indiana and Illinois.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Oct. 10.</span> + +<p>Reaching Fort Harrison, which Captain, afterwards General Taylor, with +scarcely thirty efficient men, had gallantly defended against the +attacks of four or five hundred Indians, this motley crowd of horsemen +started on the 14th for the Indian villages which lay along the +Illinois and Wabash <span class="pagenum"><a id="page96" name="page96"></a>(p. 96)</span> rivers. But the long and tedious march +and the uncomfortable bivouacs by night, obscured the visions of glory +that had dazzled them, and the fourth day, the enthusiasm which from +the first had been rapidly subsiding, reached zero, and open mutiny +seized the entire body of the troops. A major rode up to General +Hopkins and peremptorily ordered him to wheel about. The General +refusing to obey, he was compelled next day to constitute the rear +guard of this splendid corps of cavalry, whose horses' tails were +towards the enemy and their heads towards Fort Harrison.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Sept. 12.</span> + +<p>In the mean time, Harrison, with about 2,500 men reached Fort Deposit, +and relieved the garrison composed of seventy men who had gallantly +withstood the attacks of hordes of Indians. Here he paused till the +arrival of other troops, and occupied the time in sending out various +detachments against the Indian villages, all of which were successful.</p> + +<p>On the 18th, Harrison returned to Fort Wayne, where he met General +Winchester, with reinforcements from Ohio and Kentucky, in all about +two thousand men. Winchester ranked Harrison, and the latter finding +himself superseded, was about to retire. The President, however, +restored him to his original command, and he continued his march +northward. <span class="sidenote">Sept.</span> In the latter part of this month he was +at Fort Defiance. Leaving his troops there, he returned to the +settlements to organize and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page97" name="page97"></a>(p. 97)</span> hasten up the forces designed to +constitute the centre and right wing of his army. Abandoning his +original plan of boldly marching on Detroit and recapturing it at +once, he determined to advance in three different columns, by as many +different routes, to the Miami Rapids, thence move suddenly to +Brownstown, cross the river and seize Malden, which had so annoyed +Hull. All along the highways and rude half-trodden paths, and skirting +the banks of rivers that rolled through nothing but primeval forests +from their sources to the lakes, squads of men, some mounted, some in +uniform, but the most part in the rough frontiersman costume, were +seen toiling northward, to avenge the disgrace of Hull. Their +camp-fires lit up the wilderness by night, and their boisterous mirth +filled it with echoes by day. A more motley band of soldiers were +never seen swarming to battle.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page98" name="page98"></a>(p. 98)</span> CHAPTER IV.</h2> + +<p class="resume">Operations on the New York frontier — Battle of Queenstown + — Death of Brock — Scott a prisoner — General Smythe's + Proclamation and abortive attempts — Cursed by the army — + Duel with General Porter — Retires in disgrace — + Dearborn's movements and failures — Review of the campaign + on the New York frontier — Character of the officers and + soldiers.</p> + +<p>While Harrison's forces were thus scattered amid the forests and +settlements of Ohio and Indiana, the army along the Niagara frontier +had begun to move. At this time every eye in the land was turned +northward. That long chain of Mediterraneans, whose shores were +fringed with hostile armies, from Sackett's Harbor to where they lost +themselves in the forests of the north-west, became an object of the +deepest interest. Every rumor that the wind bore across the +wilderness, or that, following the chains of settlements along the +rivers reached the haunts of civilization, was caught up with avidity. +The discomfiture of Hull had filled every heart with trembling +solicitude for the fate of our other armies. Defeat in the west, and +incomprehensible delays in the east, had changed the Canadas from a +weak province, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page99" name="page99"></a>(p. 99)</span> to be overrun by the first invader, into a +Gibraltar against which the entire strength of the nation must be +hurled.</p> + +<p>I have stated before that Dearborn, commanding the forces on the +Niagara and northern frontier, instead of making a diversion in favor +of Hull, by crossing the Niagara and drawing attention to himself, had +been coaxed into an armistice with Provost, the English Governor, in +which Hull had been left out. This armistice was asked and granted, on +the ground that dispatches had been received, announcing the +revocation of the orders in council. One great cause of the war being +thus removed, it was hoped that peace might be restored. The result +was as we have seen; the British commander immediately dispatched +Brock to Malden, to capture Hull, from which successful expedition he +was able to return before the armistice was broken off. General +Dearborn clung to this absurd armistice, as if it were the grandest +stroke of diplomacy conceivable. He carried his attachment so far as +to disobey the express command of his Government, to break it off. +<span class="sidenote">August 24.</span> At length, however, this nightmare ended, and +preparations were made for a vigorous autumnal campaign.</p> + +<p>The northern army, numbering between eight and ten thousand soldiers, +was principally concentrated at two points. One portion was encamped +near <span class="pagenum"><a id="page100" name="page100"></a>(p. 100)</span> Plattsburg and Greenbush, commanded by General +Dearborn, in person, the other at Lewistown, was under the direction +of General Stephen Van Rensalaer, of the New York militia, while 1,500 +regulars, under General Smythe, lay at Buffalo, a few miles distant. +There were a few troops stationed also at Ogdensburg, Sackett's +Harbor, and Black Rock.</p> + +<p>The discontent produced by Hull's surrender, and the loud complaints +against the inaction of the northern army, together with the +consciousness that something must be done to prevent the first year of +war from closing in unmixed gloom, induced General Van Rensalaer to +make a bold push into Canada, and by a sudden blow attempt to wrest +Jamestown from the enemy, and there establish his winter quarters.</p> + +<p>The cutting out of two English brigs<a id="footnotetag19" name="footnotetag19"></a><a href="#footnote19" title="Go to footnote 19"><span class="smaller">[19]</span></a> from under the guns of Fort +Erie, by Lieutenant Elliot with some fifty volunteers, created an +enthusiasm in the American camp of which General Van Rensalaer +determined to avail himself.</p> + +<p>The command of the expedition was given to his cousin, Col. Solomon +Van Rensalaer, a brave and chivalric officer, who on the 13th of +October, at the head of three hundred militia, accompanied <span class="pagenum"><a id="page101" name="page101"></a>(p. 101)</span> +by Col. Chrystie with three hundred regular troops, prepared to cross +the river. It wanted still an hour to daylight when the two columns +stood in battle array on the shore. Through carelessness, or inability +to obtain them, there were not sufficient boats to take all over at +once, and they were compelled to cross in detachments. The boat which +carried Col. Chrystie being badly managed, was swept away by the +current, and finally compelled to re-land on the American shore. This +gallant officer was wounded while thus drifting in the stream, yet +soon after he made another attempt to cross, and succeeding, led his +troops nobly until the close of the action.</p> + +<p>Col. Van Rensalaer having effected a landing, formed on the shore and +marched forward. The whole force at this time did not exceed one +hundred men. These, however, were led up the bank where they halted to +wait the junction of the other troops that kept arriving, a few boat +loads at a time. But daylight now having dawned, the exposed position +of this detachment rendered it a fair mark for the enemy, who +immediately opened their fire upon it. In a few minutes every +commissioned officer was either killed or wounded. Col. Van Rensalaer +finding that the bank of the river afforded very little shelter, +determined with the handful under him to storm the heights. But he had +now received four wounds, and was compelled to surrender the command +to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page102" name="page102"></a>(p. 102)</span> Captains Ogilvie and Wool,<a id="footnotetag20" name="footnotetag20"></a><a href="#footnote20" title="Go to footnote 20"><span class="smaller">[20]</span></a> who gallantly moved +forward, and carried the fort and heights. The enemy were driven into +a strong stone house, from which they made two unsuccessful attempts +to recover the ground they had lost. Brock, flushed with the easy +victory he had gained over Hull, rallied them by his presence, and +while attempting to lead on the grenadiers of the 49th, fell mortally +wounded. This for a time gave the Americans undisturbed possession of +the heights, and great efforts were made to bring over the other +troops. General Van Rensalaer, after the fall of his cousin, crossed +and took the command, but hastening back to urge on the embarkation of +the militia, it devolved on General Wadsworth.</p> + +<p>Daylight had seen this brave little band form on the shores of the +river under a galling fire—the morning sun glittered on their +bayonets from the heights of Queenstown, and the victory seemed won. +The day so gloriously begun would have closed in brighter effulgence, +had not the militia on the farther side refused to cross over to the +assistance of their hard-pressed comrades. A stone house near the bank +defended by two light pieces of artillery, still played on the boats +that attempted to cross, and the Americans on the Canada side, having +no heavy artillery, were unable to take it. The firing from this, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page103" name="page103"></a>(p. 103)</span> and soon after the appearance of a large body of Indians on +the field of battle, so frightened the militia, that neither +entreaties nor threats could induce them to embark. Through utter want +of orderly management, half of the twenty boats had been destroyed or +lost; still it was not the lack of means of transportation that held +them back, but <i>conscientious scruples about invading an enemy's +territory</i>. Attempting to mask their cowardice under this ridiculous +plea, they stood and saw the dangers thicken around their comrades who +had relied on their support, without making a single effort to save +them from destruction.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant-colonel Scott by a forced march through mud and rain, had +arrived at Lewistown with his regiment at four o'clock in the morning, +just as the troops were embarking. He begged permission to take part +in the expedition, but the arrangements having all been made, his +request was denied. He therefore planted his guns on the shore and +opened his fire on the enemy. But seeing how small a proportion of the +troops were got across, and perceiving also the peril of Van +Rensalaer's detachment, his young and gallant heart could not allow +him to remain an idle spectator, and taking one piece of artillery he +jumped into a boat with his adjutant Roach, and pushed for the +opposite shore. Wadsworth immediately gave the command of the troops +to him, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page104" name="page104"></a>(p. 104)</span> his chivalric bearing and enthusiastic language +soon animated every heart with new courage. Six feet five inches in +height and in full uniform, he presented a conspicuous mark for the +enemy and a rallying point to the troops. Had his regiment been with +him, Queenstown would have been a second Chippewa.</p> + +<p>Considerable reinforcements, however, had arrived, swelling the number +to six hundred, of whom three hundred and fifty were regular troops. +These, Scott, assisted by the cool and skillful Capt. Zitten, soon +placed in the most commanding positions, and waited for further +reinforcements. Just before, a body of five hundred Indians, whom the +firing had suddenly collected, joined the beaten light troops of the +English. Encouraged by this accession of strength, the latter moved +again to the assault, but were driven back in confusion. Still the +enemy kept up a desultory engagement. On one occasion, the Indians, +issuing suddenly from the forest, surprised a picket of militia, and +following hard on their flying traces, carried consternation into that +part of the line. Scott, who was in the rear, showing the men how to +unspike a gun, hearing the tumult, hastened to the front, and rallying +a few platoons, scattered those wild warriors with a single blow. But +while the day was wearing away in this doubtful manner, a more +formidable foe appeared on <span class="pagenum"><a id="page105" name="page105"></a>(p. 105)</span> the field. General Sheaffe, +commanding at Fort George, had heard the firing in the morning; and a +little later the news of the death of Brock was brought him. His +forces were immediately put in motion, and soon after midday the +little band that had from day dawn bravely breasted the storm, saw +from the heights they had so bravely won, a column eight hundred and +fifty strong, approaching the scene of combat—not in haste or +confusion, but with the slow and measured tread of disciplined troops. +These few hundred Americans watched its progress with undaunted +hearts, and turned to catch the outlines of their own advancing +regiments, but not a bayonet was moving to their help. At this +critical moment news arrived of the shameful mutiny that had broken +out on the opposite shore. The entreaties of Van Rensalaer, and the +noble example of Wadsworth, and the increasing peril of their +comrades, were wholly unavailing—not a soul would stir. This sealed +the fate of the American detachment. A few hundred, sustained by only +one piece of artillery against the thirteen hundred of the +enemy—their number when the junction of the advancing column with the +remaining troops and the Indian allies should be effected—constituted +hopeless odds. General Van Rensalaer, from the opposite shore, saw +this, and sent word to Wadsworth to retreat at once, and he would send +every boat he <span class="pagenum"><a id="page106" name="page106"></a>(p. 106)</span> could lay hands on to receive the fugitives. +He, however, left everything to the judgment of the latter. Colonels +Chrystie and Scott, of the regulars, and Mead, Strahan, and Allen of +the militia, and officers Ogilvie, Wool, Totten, and Gibson McChesney, +and others, presented a noble yet sorrowful group, as they took +council over this message of the commander-in-chief. Their case was +evidently a hopeless one, yet they could not make up their minds to +retreat. Col. Scott, mounting a log in front of his troops, harangued +them in a strain worthy of the days of chivalry. He told them their +condition was desperate, but that Hull's surrender must be redeemed. +"Let us then die," he exclaimed, "arms in hand. Our country demands +the sacrifice. The example will not be lost. The blood of the slain +will make heroes of the living. Those who follow will avenge our fall, +and our country's wrongs. Who dare to stand?" A loud "<span class="smcap">All!</span>" rang +sternly along the line.<a id="footnotetag21" name="footnotetag21"></a><a href="#footnote21" title="Go to footnote 21"><span class="smaller">[21]</span></a> In the mean time Gen. Sheaffe had arrived, +but instead of advancing immediately to the attack, slowly marched his +column the whole length of the American line, then countermarched it, +as if to make sure that the little band in front of him was the only +force he had to overcome. All saw at a glance that resistance was +useless, and retreat almost hopeless. The latter, however, was +resolved <span class="pagenum"><a id="page107" name="page107"></a>(p. 107)</span> upon, but the moment the order was given to retire, +the whole broke in disorderly flight towards the river. To their +dismay, no boats were there to receive them, and a flag of truce was +therefore sent to the enemy. The messenger, however, never returned; +another and another shared the same fate. At last Scott tied a white +handkerchief to his sword, and accompanied by Captains Totten and +Gibson, crept under one of the precipices, down the river, till he +arrived where a gentle slope gave an easy ascent, when the three made +a push for the road, which led from the valley to the heights. On the +way they were met by Indians, who firing on them, rushed forward with +their tomahawks, to kill them. They would soon have shared the fate of +the other messengers, but for the timely arrival of a British officer, +with some soldiers who took them to Gen. Sheaffe, to whom Scott +surrendered his whole force. Two hundred and ninety-three were all +that survived of the brave band who had struggled so long and so nobly +for victory. Several hundred militia, however, were found concealed +along the shore, who had crossed over, but skulked away in the +confusion.</p> + +<p>The entire loss of the Americans in this unfortunate expedition, +killed and captured, was about one thousand men.</p> + +<p>General Van Rensalaer, disgusted with the conduct of the militia, soon +after sent in his resignation.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page108" name="page108"></a>(p. 108)</span> Brock was buried the following day "under one of the bastions +of Fort George," and at the request of Scott, then a prisoner, minute +guns were fired from Fort Niagara during the funeral ceremonies. Above +the dull distant roar of the cataract, the minute guns of friends and +foes pealed over the dead, as with shrouded banners the slowly +marching column bore him to his last resting place. Cannon that but a +few hours before had been exploding in angry strife on each other, now +joined their peaceful echoes over his grave. Such an act was +characteristic of Scott, who fierce and fearless in battle, was +chivalrous and kind in all his feelings.</p> + +<p>While a prisoner in an inn at Niagara, Scott was told that some one +wished to see the "tall American." He immediately passed through into +the entry, when to his astonishment he saw standing before him two +savage Indian chiefs, the same who had attempted to kill him when he +surrendered himself a prisoner of war. They wished to look on the man +at whom they had so often fired with a deliberate aim. In broken +English, and by gestures, they inquired where he was hit, for they +believed it impossible that out of fifteen or twenty shots not one had +taken effect. The elder chief, named Jacobs, a tall, powerful savage, +became furious at Scott's asserting that not a ball had touched him, +and seizing his shoulders rudely, turned him round to examine his +back. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page109" name="page109"></a>(p. 109)</span> The young and fiery Colonel did not like to have such +freedom taken with his person by a savage, and hurling him fiercely +aside, exclaimed, "Off, villain, you fired like a squaw." "We kill you +now," was the quick and startling reply, as knives and tomahawks +gleamed in their hands. Scott was not a man to beg or run, though +either would have been preferable to taking his chances against these +armed savages. Luckily for him, the swords of the American officers +who had been taken prisoners, were stacked under the staircase beside +which he was standing. Quick as thought he snatched up the largest, a +long sabre, and the next moment it glittered unsheathed above his +head. One leap backward, to get scope for play, and he stood towering +even above the gigantic chieftain, who glared in savage hate upon him. +The Indians were in the wider part of the hall, between the foot of +the stairs and the door, while Scott stood farther in where it was +narrower. The former, therefore, could not get in the rear, and were +compelled to face their enemy. They manœuvred to close, but at +every turn that sabre flashed in their eyes. The moment they should +come to blows, one, they knew, was sure to die, and although it was +equally certain that Scott would fall under the knife of the survivor +before he could regain his position, yet neither Indian seemed anxious +to be the sacrifice. While they thus stood <span class="pagenum"><a id="page110" name="page110"></a>(p. 110)</span> watching each +other, a British officer chanced to enter, and on beholding the +terrific tableau, cried out, "The guard," and at the same instant +seized the tallest chief by the arm and presented a cocked pistol to +his head. The next moment the blade of Scott quivered over the head of +the other savage, to protect his deliverer. In a few seconds the +guards entered with levelled bayonets, and the two chieftains were +secured. One of them was the son of Brant, of revolutionary notoriety.</p> + +<p>The prisoners were all taken to Quebec, whence they were sent in a +cartel to Boston. As they were about to sail, Scott, who was in the +cabin of the transport, hearing a noise on deck, went up to ascertain +the cause, and found that the British officers were separating the +Irishmen, to exclude them from mercy due to the other prisoners, and +have them taken to England and tried for treason. Twenty-three had +thus been set apart when he arrived. Indignant at this outrage, he +peremptorily ordered the rest of the men to keep silent and not answer +a question of any kind, so that neither by their replies or voice they +could give any evidence of the place of their birth. He then turned to +the doomed twenty-three, and denounced the act of the officers, and +swore most solemnly that if a hair of their heads was touched, he +would avenge it, even if he was compelled to refuse quarter in battle.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page111" name="page111"></a>(p. 111)</span> Soon after he reached Boston, he was sent to Washington, and +in a short time was exchanged. He then drew up a report of the whole +affair to the Secretary of War, and it was presented the same day to +Congress. The result was the passage of an act of retaliation (March +3d, 1813.)</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Nov. 10.</span> + +<p>General Van Rensalaer having resigned his commission, making the +second general disposed of since the commencement of hostilities, the +command on the Niagara frontier devolved on General Smythe, who issued +a proclamation to the "men of New York," which was of itself a +sufficient guarantee that he would soon follow Hull into worse than +oblivion. In it, after speaking of the failure of the former +expedition, he said, "Valor had been conspicuous, but the nation +unfortunate in the selection of some of those directing it"——"the +commanders were popular men, destitute alike of theory and experience +in the art of war." "In a few days," said he, "the troops under my +command will plant the American standard in Canada to conquer or die." +He called on all those desirous of honor or fame, to rally to his +standard. He was not one of the incompetent generals whose plans +failed through ignorance. Portions of his proclamations, however, were +well adapted to rouse the military spirit of the state, and in less +than three weeks he had nearly five thousand men under his command. +His orders from the Secretary <span class="pagenum"><a id="page112" name="page112"></a>(p. 112)</span> of War, were, not to attempt +an invasion with "less than three thousand combatants," and with +sufficient boats to carry the whole over together.</p> + +<p>Seventy boats and a large number of scows having been collected at +Black Rock, he issued his orders for the troops to be in readiness +early on the morning of the 28th of November, to cross over and attack +the enemy.</p> + +<p>Previous to the main movement, however, he sent over two detachments, +one under Colonel Bœstler, and the other under Captain King—the +former to destroy a bridge five miles below Fort Erie, in order to cut +off the communication between it and Chippewa, while the latter, with +a hundred and fifty regular troops and seventy seamen, was to carry +the "Red House," and storm the British batteries on the shore.</p> + +<p>The boats pushed off at midnight, and were soon struggling in the +centre of the stream. Of Colonel Bœstler's seven boats, containing +two hundred men, only three reached the Canada shore. With less than +half his force he advanced and easily routed the guard, but hearing +that a British reinforcement was marching up, he retreated without +destroying the bridge, and re-embarked his men. Captain King started +with ten boats, but six of them were scattered in the darkness, and +only four reached the point of attack. Among these, however, were the +seventy seamen. The advance of the boats having <span class="pagenum"><a id="page113" name="page113"></a>(p. 113)</span> been seen by +the sentinels on watch, the little detachment was compelled to land +under a shower of grape shot and musketry.</p> + +<p>The sailors without waiting the order of a regular march, rushed up +the bank with their boarding pikes and cutlasses, stormed the +position, and carried it with loud huzzas. After securing some +prisoners and tumbling two cannon and their caissons into the river, +Lieutenant Angus began to look around for Captain King. The latter +directing his force on the exterior batteries, carried the first by +the bayonet, when the other was abandoned. The position and all the +batteries being taken, the firing had ceased, and Lieutenant Angus +marched his sailors, with the wounded and prisoners, to the shore to +wait for Captain King, and recross the river. Finding only four boats +there, and ignorant that no more had landed, he concluded that the +former had already re-embarked his troops; he therefore launched these +and made good his retreat to the American shore. In a short time +Captain King arrived, and to his amazement found all the boats gone. +After a short search, however, he discovered two belonging to the +enemy, in which he despatched the prisoners he had taken, and as many +of his men as they would hold. He remained behind with the remainder +of his detachment, and was soon after compelled to surrender himself +prisoner of war.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page114" name="page114"></a>(p. 114)</span> On the return of Bœstler and Angus without Captain King +and the rest of the detachment, Colonel Winder volunteered to go in +search of them.</p> + +<p>But, as he approached the opposite shore, he found all the batteries +re-established, which opened their fire upon him, compelling him to +return with the loss of six killed and twenty-six wounded. In fact his +own boat was the only one that touched land at all—the others being +carried down by the force of the stream.</p> + +<p>Through some unaccountable delay, the main body, to which the two +detachments sent off at midnight were designed as an advance guard, +did not embark till twelve o'clock next day. But at length two +thousand men under General Porter, were got on board, while General +Tannehill's volunteers and M'Clure's regiment were drawn up on the +shore ready to follow. As if on purpose to give his adversary time for +ample preparation, thus imitating the fatal examples of Dearborn and +Hull, Smythe kept his men paraded on the beach in full view of the +Canada shore, till late in the afternoon. He then, instead of giving +the anxiously expected order to advance, commanded the whole to +debark. Indignation and rage at this vacillating, pusillanimous +conduct seized the entire army, and curses and loud denunciations were +heard on every side. General Porter boldly and openly accused his +commander of cowardice. The latter, frightened at the storm he had +raised, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page115" name="page115"></a>(p. 115)</span> promised that another attempt should be made the +next day. It was resolved to cross at a place five miles below the +navy yard, and the following day, at four o'clock, nearly the entire +army was embarked. General Porter with the American colors floating +from the stern of his boat, was in advance, to show that he asked no +man to go where he would not lead. But when all was ready, and at the +moment when every one expected to hear the signal to move forward, an +order was passed along the line directing the troops to be relanded, +accompanied with the announcement that the invasion of Canada was for +that season abandoned. A shout of wrath burst from the whole army. +Many of the militia threw away their arms and started for their homes, +while fierce threats against the General's life were publicly made by +the remaining troops. He was branded as a coward, shot at in the +streets, and without even the form of a trial, was driven in scorn and +rage from the army, and chased and mobbed by an indignant people from +the state he had dishonored. Before he retired, however, he made an +absurd attempt to retrieve his honor by challenging General Porter to +mortal combat. They met on Grand Island and exchanged shots without +effect. The seconds having published the transaction in a Buffalo +paper, "congratulated the public on the happy issue." In commenting on +this, Ingersoll very <span class="pagenum"><a id="page116" name="page116"></a>(p. 116)</span> pithily remarks, "The public would have +preferred a battle in Canada."</p> + +<p>Beginning at the extreme north-west, and continuing along the lakes to +Niagara, we had met with nothing but defeat. Only one more army was +left to lift the nation out of the depths of gloom by its +achievements, or deepen the night in which the year 1812 was closing. +General Dearborn, the commander-in-chief, had an army of three +thousand regulars and as many more militia, with the power to swell +his force to ten thousand if he thought proper. The plan of government +to conquer Canada through Hull's invasion from Detroit, Van +Rensalaer's and Smythe's from Niagara, both to be supported and their +triumph secured by the advance of Dearborn, had fallen to the ground, +and the latter was passing the autumn in idleness.</p> + +<p>General Brown, who commanded the militia appointed for the defence of +the eastern shore of Lake Ontario and southern shore of St. Lawrence, +exhibited, at Ogdensburg, the first indications of those qualities of +a great commander which afterwards developed themselves on the scene +of Van Rensalaer's and Smythe's defeats and failures. Colonel Forsyth +having made a successful incursion into Canada with a noble body of +riflemen, twice defeating double his numbers and burning a block house +with stores; the British, in retaliation, attacked Ogdensburg. +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page117" name="page117"></a>(p. 117)</span> On the 2d of October they commenced a cannonade from their +batteries at Prescott, on the opposite side of the river. This +harmless waste of ammunition was continued for two days, when it was +resolved to storm the town. Six hundred men were embarked in forty +boats, and under cover of the batteries, pulled steadily across the +river. General Brown could collect but four hundred militia to oppose +them, but having posted these judiciously, they were able to keep up +such a deadly fire on the enemy that every attempt to land proved +abortive, and the whole detachment was compelled to withdraw to the +Canada shore.</p> + +<p>There was, during the summer, a good deal of skirmishing along the +frontier, forming interludes to the more important movements. Colonel +Pike on the 19th of the same month made an incursion into Canada, +surprised a body of British and Indians, and burnt a block-house. +Three days after, Captain Lyon captured forty English at St. Regis, +together with a stand of colors and despatches from the Governor +General to an Indian tribe. The colors were taken by William M. Marcy.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Nov. 20.</span> + +<p>Thus the autumn wore away, till at last, Dearborn seemed to awake from +his torpor. Moving his army from the little town of Champlain, he +forded the La Cole, and attacked and captured an English block-house. +The grand movement had <span class="pagenum"><a id="page118" name="page118"></a>(p. 118)</span> now commenced, and the British +Governor-General prepared to meet the most serious invasion that had +yet been attempted. But to his astonishment he discovered that all +this display of force was to obtain possession of a guard-house, and +retain it for half an hour. This feat being accomplished, General +Dearborn, amid much confusion, marched his six thousand men back +again, and resting on his honors soon after retired into winter +quarters. After protracted delays and unaccountable inaction, he +seemed at last to feel the necessity of obeying the urgent orders of +the government, "<i>not to lose a moment in attacking the British posts +in his front</i>." These he had now obeyed to the letter—he had +<i>attacked</i> a block-house and fled. The great tragedy had begun and +ended in a farce. The surrender of Hull was an unmitigated disgrace, +and the nation turned towards Niagara for relief. The failure of Van +Rensalaer was not unmixed with consolation. He and the officers and +men who bore the brunt of that day's battle, had shown what American +troops could do. Van Rensalaer has been charged with acting rashly, +and exposing himself to discomfiture, when success would have been of +no advantage. But those who suppose that a victory is fruitless, +because no important position is gained, or territory is wrested from +the enemy, commit a vital error. They forget that <i>moral</i> power is +half, even when every <span class="pagenum"><a id="page119" name="page119"></a>(p. 119)</span> thing depends on hard blows. When +confidence is lost, and despondency has taken the place of courage and +hope, a battle that should restore these would be a victory, at almost +any sacrifice. So Van Rensalaer thought, and justly. His preparations +and mode of procedure were not careful and prudent, as they should +have been, exhibiting a want of thoroughness which a longer experience +would have rectified; still, his plan might have succeeded but for the +dastardly conduct of the militia, and a new impulse been given to the +movements along the northern frontier. This cowardly behavior of his +troops he could not anticipate, for they had hitherto shown no +disinclination to fight. At Hull's surrender there were no indications +of a craven spirit—on the contrary, the soldiers cursed their +commander, and the general feeling was, that give the men a gallant +leader and they would fight bravely. Van Rensalaer knew that his +troops would not fail through reluctance on his part to lead them to +battle, and it was enough to break his noble heart, as he stood +bleeding from four wounds, to see them refuse to come to his rescue.</p> + +<p>General Smythe's conduct admits of no apology. His excuse for +countermanding his last order, after the troops had embarked, is +groundless. He says that his orders were strict, not to attempt an +invasion of Canada with less than three thousand men, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page120" name="page120"></a>(p. 120)</span> +that he but fifteen hundred. Yet in his last attempt all but some two +hundred of his troops were actually embarked, when he commanded them +to re-land. He was either not aware how many soldiers composed his +army until he counted them as they lay off in their boats, ready to +pull for the opposite shore, or he knew it before. If the latter be +true, why all this display, designed to eventuate in nothing? On the +other hand, the confession of ignorance is still worse. This much is +clear, all these difficulties and objections could not have occurred +to him for the first time when he saw the army drawn up on shore or +afloat. The excuse, if honest, is worse than the act itself.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Aug. 1.</span> + +<p>Dearborn's inactivity furnished less salient points of criticism, but +it was fully as culpable as Smythe's failure. In the first place, he +received orders from the Secretary of War to make a diversion in favor +of <i>Hull at Niagara and Kingston, as soon as possible</i>. His position +might have been such that no blame could attach to him for not making +such diversion, but nothing could warrant him in entering into an +armistice with the enemy, in which Hull was excluded. If he assumed +such a responsibility in the hope that peace would be secured, he was +bound to make as one of the first conditions, that no reinforcements +should be sent to Malden and Detroit. One such act is sufficient +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page121" name="page121"></a>(p. 121)</span> to cause the removal of a commander, for he can never be an +equal match against a shrewd and energetic enemy. Prevost wrote to +Gen. Brock: "<i>I consider it</i> most fortunate that I have been able to +prosecute this object of Government, (the armistice,) <i>without +interfering with your operations on the Detroit. I have sent you men, +money, and stores of all kinds.</i>"<a id="footnotetag22" name="footnotetag22"></a><a href="#footnote22" title="Go to footnote 22"><span class="smaller">[22]</span></a></p> + +<p>One cannot read this letter without feeling chagrin that the Senior +Major-General of the American army could be so easily overreached.</p> + +<p>In the second place, his delay in breaking off this armistice when +peremptorily ordered by government, was clearly reprehensible, while +the fact that with an army of six thousand men under his immediate +command, he accomplished absolutely nothing, is incontrovertible proof +of his inefficiency as a commander. The isle of Aux Noix was +considered the key of Central Canada, and this he could have taken at +any moment and held for future operations; yet he went into winter +quarters without having struck a blow.</p> + +<p>The troops, regular and militia, under his general direction, amounted +in the latter part of September to thirteen thousand men. Six thousand +three hundred were stationed along the Niagara, two thousand two +hundred at Sackett's Harbor, and five thousand on Lake Champlain. To +oppose this <span class="pagenum"><a id="page122" name="page122"></a>(p. 122)</span> formidable force, Sir George Provost had not +more than three thousand troops,<a id="footnotetag23" name="footnotetag23"></a><a href="#footnote23" title="Go to footnote 23"><span class="smaller">[23]</span></a> and yet not even a battle had +been fought, if we except that of Van Rensalaer's detachment, while +instead of gaining we had lost both fortresses and territory.</p> + +<p>One naturally inquires what could be the cause of such a complete +failure where success was deemed certain. In the first place, there +was not a man in the cabinet fit to carry out a campaign, however well +planned. The sudden concentration of so large a force on our northern +frontier, before reinforcements could arrive from England, was a wise +movement, and ought to have accomplished its purpose. But there the +wisdom ended, and vacillation and doubt took the place of promptness, +energy and daring.</p> + +<p>In the second place, inefficient commanders were placed at the head of +our armies. Both Dearborn and Hull had been gallant officers in the +Revolution, but they were wholly unaccustomed to a separate command, +and while imitating the caution of their great exemplar, exhibited +none of his energy and daring. They remembered his Fabian inactivity, +but they forgot the overwhelming reasons that produced it, and forgot, +also, Trenton, Princeton and Monmouth.</p> + +<p>In the third place, the militia were undisciplined <span class="pagenum"><a id="page123" name="page123"></a>(p. 123)</span> and could +not be relied upon. The insubordination, unmilitary conduct, and +recklessness of rules which force a commander into extreme caution, +lest his semblance of an army should be annihilated, are not known to +the persons who coolly criticise him at a distance. These things are +doubtless an ample excuse for much that is unsparingly condemned. +Hence it is unjust to pronounce judgment on this or that action, +because it might apparently have been avoided, unless those actions +and the declarations of their author contradict each other, or stand +condemned by every interpretation of military rules.</p> + +<p>In the commencement of the war we had neither an army nor generals +that could be trusted. The troops lacked confidence in their leaders, +and the latter had no confidence in their troops. Such mutual distrust +can result in nothing but failure. Our commanders were in an +embarrassing position, but they ought to have been aware that to +<i>fight</i> their way out was the only mode of escape left them. Battles +make soldiers and develop generals. In the tumult and dangers of a +fierce fight, the cool yet daring officers, fertile in resources, +fierce in the onset, and stubborn and unconquered in retreat, are +revealed, and soon men are found who will follow where they lead, even +into hopeless combat. A spirit of emulation and valor succeeds +timidity and distrust.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page124" name="page124"></a>(p. 124)</span> The administration at this period was surrounded with great +and perplexing difficulties. With but the germ of a military academy, +efficient officers were scarce. The establishment of the school at +West Point was one of the wisest acts ever performed by this +government, and the attempt, a few years since, to destroy it, one of +the most unscrupulous, reckless and dangerous ever put forth by +ignorant demagogues. Our volunteers and militia have confidence in men +bred to the profession of arms. They yield them ready +obedience—submit to rigid discipline—while the method and skill with +which everything is conducted, impart confidence and steadiness. A +country like ours will never submit to the expense and danger of a +large standing army, nor do we need it if we can keep well supplied +with military schools. A few West Point officers on the Canada +frontier would have brought the campaign of 1812 to a different close.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page125" name="page125"></a>(p. 125)</span> CHAPTER V.<br> +<span class="smcap">THE NAVY.</span></h2> + +<p class="resume">The Cabinet resolves to shut up our ships of war in port — + Remonstrance of Captains Bainbridge and Stuart — Rodgers + ordered to sea — Feeling of the crews — Chase of the + Belvidere — Narrow escape of the Constitution from an + English fleet — Cruise of the Essex — Action between the + Constitution and Guerriere — Effect of the Victory in + England and the United States — United States takes the + Macedonian — Lieutenant Hamilton carries the captured + colors to Washington — Presented to Mrs. Madison in a + ball-room — The Argus — Action between the Wasp and Frolic + — Constitution captures the Java — Hornet takes the + Peacock — Effect of these Victories abroad.</p> + +<p>Having gone through the first campaigns on the Canadian frontier, I +leave for awhile the army of Harrison, swallowed up in the forests of +Ohio and surrounded by the gloom of a northern winter, toiling its way +towards Malden, and turn with a feeling of relief to the conduct of +our little navy during the summer that had passed.</p> + +<p>As I stated before, our naval force amounted to but nine frigates and +a few sloops of war, while Great Britain had a hundred ships of the +line in commission, and more than a thousand vessels in all, bearing +the royal flag. Added to this stupendous <span class="pagenum"><a id="page126" name="page126"></a>(p. 126)</span> difference in the +number of ships, was the moral power attached to the universally +acknowledged superiority of the British navy. England was recognized +mistress of the seas. The fleets of Spain, France and Holland had one +after another submitted to her sway, and fresh with still greater +laurels won under Nelson, her navy was looked upon as irresistible. A +naval contest on our part, therefore, was not dreamed of, and hence +arose the determination on the part of the Administration at +Washington, to convert our frigates into mere floating batteries for +the protection of harbors. But it must be remembered, weak as our navy +appeared, it was stronger at the declaration of war than the whole +British force on our coast. We had ships enough to blockade Halifax +and Bermuda, and bear undisputed sway until reinforcements could be +sent across the Atlantic. Our privateers in the revolution—the +conduct of our ships in the Bay of Tripoli had given evidence of what +could be done, and the determination of the Cabinet, therefore, to lay +up the ships of war before their metal had been tested—to leave the +waters around our coast vexed with British cruisers, when at least for +six weeks we could have kept them clear of the enemy, and in all +probability captured their entire squadron on the American station, is +another painful evidence of the utter incapacity of the administration +to carry on the war. If, in anticipation <span class="pagenum"><a id="page127" name="page127"></a>(p. 127)</span> of hostilities, our +whole fleet had been collected and put in such order that it could +have sailed at an hour's notice, results would have been accomplished +far greater than those which followed.</p> + +<p>Against our nine frigates, the President, United States, and +Constellation, of the first class, the Congress, Constitution, and the +Chesapeake of the second, the Essex, Adams, Boston and New York,<a id="footnotetag24" name="footnotetag24"></a><a href="#footnote24" title="Go to footnote 24"><span class="smaller">[24]</span></a> +together with several smaller vessels, there were on the Halifax +station but five frigates and some smaller vessels. The Africa, +sixty-four, was the only two decker on our coast, in active service. +The Halifax station could have been reinforced by the other two +stations, the Jamaica and Leeward Island, but not within a month, +which would have given us an opportunity of cutting them up in detail. +England, at this time, was so occupied with the momentous affairs in +Europe, that she kept her fleets on the eastern board of the Atlantic, +and ignorant of our naval strength, supposed the ships on the Halifax +station more than a match for the whole American navy. Had the British +fleet on this coast been captured, and an alliance offensive and +defensive formed with France, we should have struck the maritime power +of England a blow from which she never <span class="pagenum"><a id="page128" name="page128"></a>(p. 128)</span> would have recovered. +But the outcries of the Federalists filled the administration with as +much dread of French alliance, as it entertained of the naval power of +England.</p> + +<p>Not only was the American Government innocent of all such plans for +the navy, but it did not even provide for the merchantmen which might +be approaching the American coast, and liable to be captured by the +most contemptible cruiser that sailed unmolested along our shores. No +nation ever before had the opportunity of doing so much with small +means, as circumstances placed in the hands of the American Government +at the commencement of the war, and threw it away so foolishly, so +unpardonably.</p> + +<p>The insane project to lay up the American ships in harbor, was +defeated by two naval officers, to whom the nation owes perpetual +gratitude. Captains Bainbridge and Stewart were at Washington when the +subject was under discussion, and being shown the written orders to +Commodore Rodgers, to keep his fleet in the harbor of New York, as a +part of its defence, they sought an interview with the Secretary of +the Navy, and boldly remonstrated against this death-blow to the navy. +"If laid up in war, who would support it in peace?" Although told that +the thing was settled, so far as regarded the fleet in New York Bay, +they appealed with still greater urgency, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page129" name="page129"></a>(p. 129)</span> and in the true +spirit of their profession, declared that the American commanders were +capable of taking care of their own ships; nay, in noble enthusiasm +asserted, that eight times out of ten, an American frigate would +capture an antagonist of equal metal.</p> + +<p>The secretary was moved by their appeal, backed as it was with solid +argument, and took them to see the President. They made to him the +same statements which had so deeply impressed the Secretary of the +Navy. Moreover, they promised <i>victories</i>, a dream which had never +visited the brain of a member of the cabinet. "Eight times out of +ten," said they, "with equal force we can hardly fail—our men are +better men, and better disciplined; our midshipmen are not mere boys, +only fit to carry orders, but young men capable of reflection and +action. Our guns are sighted, which is an improvement of our own the +English know nothing of. While we can fire cannon with as sure an aim +as musketry, or almost rifles, striking twice out of every three +shots, they must fire at random, without sight of their object or +regard to the undulations of the sea, shooting over our heads, seldom +hulling us or even hitting our decks. We may be captured, and probably +shall be, even after taking prizes from them, because their numbers +are so much greater than ours. But the American flag will never be +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page130" name="page130"></a>(p. 130)</span> dishonored, seldom if ever struck to equal force."<a id="footnotetag25" name="footnotetag25"></a><a href="#footnote25" title="Go to footnote 25"><span class="smaller">[25]</span></a> The +President, as well as the Secretary of the Navy, was swept away by the +arguments and gallant spirit of those officers, and suddenly +remembered the daring and success of the few ships of war and the +privateersmen during the Revolution.</p> + +<p>Seeing their advantage, these officers pressed it with redoubled +energy, until the President called a meeting of the cabinet to consult +on the matter. But Mr. Gallatin, to whose sagacity and foresight all +paid the most profound deference, treated the project as absurd. He +had studied European affairs too much, and the rising genius of this +country too little. Like many other wise statesmen, he could not +introduce into the elements from which he drew his conclusions, the +gallant spirit, lofty enthusiasm and indomitable courage, which then +pervaded our little navy. He saw only the tremendous maritime +preponderance against us, and hence, with all his patriotism and +wisdom, acted as a perpetual clog to the government till he was sent +abroad, and his counsels could no longer influence the cabinet.</p> + +<p>But his advice that all maritime efforts should be confined to +privateers, prevailed, and Bainbridge and Stewart were told that the +decision which had been made respecting the national ships, could not +be changed. Undaunted by their repulse, they <span class="pagenum"><a id="page131" name="page131"></a>(p. 131)</span> spent nearly +the whole night after this resolve had been made known to them, in +drawing up a remonstrance to the President. Having witnessed the +effect of their personal appeal to him, they determined to address him +once more by letter.</p> + +<p>The language of that address was not softened by well rounded periods, +but plain and direct, placed the subject in its true aspect before Mr. +Madison, and put on him as Chief Magistrate of the Union, the +responsibility of keeping the navy from its legitimate field of +action. When this joint communication was laid before the Secretary of +the Navy, he objected to it as too strong and stern to present to the +President, and advised them to modify its language. They refused to do +so, and Mr. Madison instead of being offended at their plainness of +speech, took upon himself the responsibility of acting independent of +his cabinet, and assured them the vessels should be ordered to sea. No +one can tell the joy of these brave men, when they found the navy they +loved so well, was not to be dishonored, and elate with pride, +determined that the flag they had so long carried over the sea, should +never be struck but with honor.</p> + +<p>The naval officers knew that the country reposed no confidence in its +marine force, and Captains Bainbridge and Stewart, anticipating the +doom they had struggled so noble to avert, had determined to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page132" name="page132"></a>(p. 132)</span> +go to sea in a privateer which the latter had purchased.<a id="footnotetag26" name="footnotetag26"></a><a href="#footnote26" title="Go to footnote 26"><span class="smaller">[26]</span></a> With a +band of hardy seamen about them, and each serving in rotation as +captain and first officer, they resolved to claim the right of the +American flag to the high seas.<a id="footnotetag27" name="footnotetag27"></a><a href="#footnote27" title="Go to footnote 27"><span class="smaller">[27]</span></a></p> + +<p>At this time there were in the port of New York, the President, +forty-four; Essex, thirty-two; and Hornet, eighteen; to which, on the +21st of June, were added the United States, forty-four; Congress, +thirty-eight; and Argus, sixteen, all ready to sail in an hour's +notice, with the exception of the Essex, which was repairing her +rigging and restowing her hold. As soon as the President had +determined to send the vessels to sea, this squadron was put under the +command of Commodore Rogers, and he ordered to get under way at once, +and intercept a large fleet of Jamaica men which were reported to have +sailed, and by this time should be off the American coast. An hour +after Commodore Rogers received his orders, he was leading his +squadron down the Bay, and soon his canvas disappeared in the +distance.</p> + +<p>From the joy that pervaded this little squadron, as the sails were +given to the wind, one would have <span class="pagenum"><a id="page133" name="page133"></a>(p. 133)</span> supposed it was going to +witness a grand regatta, instead of to unequal and deadly strife with +an enemy. In the gallant hearts that trod those decks, existed none of +the timidity and distrust that weighed down the government. There was +not merely the determination of brave men entering on a desperate +conflict, but the buoyancy of confidence, the joy of those who were to +wipe out with their heavy broadsides the imputations cast on them by +their own countrymen, and hush forever, with their shouts of victory, +the boasting and mockery of their foe. The sailors partook of the +excitement, for it was a common enemy against which they were +going—the oppressor of seamen as well as the invader of national +rights. Says a midshipman on board the Hornet, in his Diary: "This +morning the declaration of war by the United States against Great +Britain was read. *** At ten o'clock, A. M., Commodore Rodgers hove +out the signal to weigh; never was anchor to the cathead sooner, nor +topsail sheeted home<a id="footnotetag28" name="footnotetag28"></a><a href="#footnote28" title="Go to footnote 28"><span class="smaller">[28]</span></a> to the masthead with more dispatch, than upon +the present occasion; the smallest boy on board seems anxious to meet +what is now looked upon as the common tyrant of the ocean, for they +had heard the woeful tales of the older tars. ** When the ship was +under way, Captain Lawrence had the crew called <span class="pagenum"><a id="page134" name="page134"></a>(p. 134)</span> to their +quarters, and told them that if there were any amongst them who were +disaffected, or one that had not rather sink than surrender to the +enemy, with gun for gun, that he should be immediately and uninjured, +landed and sent back in the pilot boat. The reply fore and aft +was—not one." Not one hesitating voice, but instead, three hearty +cheers, that made the vessel ring. With such a spirit did the first +squadron put to sea, and make its first claim, at the cannon's mouth, +to equal rights.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">June 23.</span> + +<p>Two days after, Rodgers discovered, at six o'clock in the morning, an +English frigate to the north-east, and instantly crowded sail in +pursuit. The chase led down the wind, and the President being a fast +sailer when going free, soon gained on the stranger, leaving the +squadron far astern. At four o'clock she got within gunshot, but the +wind falling, gave the enemy the advantage, and Rodgers seeing that he +no longer gained on the chase, attempted to cripple it. The first gun +was pointed by the commodore himself, the shot of which struck the +English frigate in the stern, and passed on into the gun-room. This +was the first hostile gun fired on the sea after war was declared. The +second was pointed by Lieutenant Gamble, which also struck the enemy. +The third shot, directed by Rodgers himself, killed two men and +wounded five others. At the fourth shot, fired by Lieutenant Gamble, +the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page135" name="page135"></a>(p. 135)</span> gun bursted, killing and wounding sixteen men. The +Commodore was flung into the air by the explosion, and fell back on +deck with such violence that his leg was broken. The enemy took heart +at this unexpected accident, and opened his fire. The President, +however, soon began to heave her shot again with such precision, that +the British frigate was compelled to cut away her anchors, throw +overboard her boats, and spring fourteen tons of water in order to +lighten her. She was by these means enabled to gain on her pursuers. +Commodore Rodgers finding the distance between them increasing, fired +three broadsides, which falling short, he abandoned the chase. The +loss of the President, in killed and wounded, was twenty-two, only six +of whom were damaged by the shot of the enemy. The Belvidera, for such +she was afterwards ascertained to be, reported seven killed and +wounded. After repairing damages Rodgers again cruised for the Jamaica +men, and at length supposing he had got in their wake, kept on until +near the mouth of the English Channel, when seeing nothing of them, he +returned by way of Maderia and the Western Islands to Boston. It was a +barren cruise, only seven merchantmen being taken during the whole +seventy days the squadron was absent.</p> + +<p>In the mean time the report of the Belvidera, which had put into +Halifax, caused the enemy to collect a fleet, which early in July was +off New York, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page136" name="page136"></a>(p. 136)</span> where it captured a great many American +merchantmen. Among the prizes was the schooner Nautilus, the first +vessel of war taken on either side. <span class="sidenote">July 12.</span> While the +squadron was thus cruising off the coast, in the hope of meeting the +American fleet under Rodgers, the Constitution, a forty-four, sailed +from Annapolis on her way to New York. Her crew was newly shipped, a +hundred men having joined her on the night before she sailed. The +orders which Captain Hull, the commander, received from the Secretary +of the Navy, exhibit the timidity and weakness of the Government. In +the first place, after giving directions respecting the destination of +the ship, he said: "I am informed that the Belvidera is in our waters, +but you are not to understand me as impelling you to battle previously +to your having confidence in your crew, unless attacked, or with a +reasonable prospect of success, of which you are to be at your +discretion the judge." In a later order he says: "If on your way +thither (<i>i. e.</i> from Annapolis to New York) you should fall in with +the enemy's vessel, you will be guided in your proceeding by your own +judgment, bearing in mind, however, that you are not voluntarily to +encounter a force superior to your own." One can imagine the smile of +contempt that curled the lip of the stern commander of the +Constitution, when he received this pitiful order, so well adapted in +its tone and language <span class="pagenum"><a id="page137" name="page137"></a>(p. 137)</span> to make timorous officers, and hence +ensure defeat. The Secretary had witnessed the confidence and daring +spirit of Bainbridge and Stewart, and he was afraid such men would +fight, when prudence would dictate flight. But he might have known +that when officers like them were once fairly out to sea, on the decks +of their own ships, beneath their own flag streaming aloft, they would +pay no more attention to orders like the above, than to the sighing of +the wind through their cordage.</p> + +<p>On the 17th the Constitution was out of sight of land, though still +within soundings and going under easy canvas, when at two o'clock she +discovered four sail in the north. At four she discovered another a +little to the eastward of the first. Towards evening, the wind blowing +light from the southward, the Constitution beat to quarters and +cleared for action. At ten o'clock she showed the private signal, +which remained unanswered; and concluding she had fallen in with a +squadron of the enemy, made all sail. Just before daybreak the +Guerriere, one of the fleet, sent up a rocket and fired two guns. As +the light broadened over the deep, Capt. Hull, who was anxiously on +the look-out, discerned seven ships closing steadily upon him. This +was the squadron of Commodore Broke, consisting of the Africa 64, +Guerriere 38, Shannon 38, Belvidera 36, Eolus 32, together with the +captured Nautilus and a schooner. As the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page138" name="page138"></a>(p. 138)</span> sun rose over the +ocean and lifted the mist that lay on the water, Capt. Hull had a full +view of his position. Two frigates were beating down from the north +upon him, while the Africa, two frigates, a brig and schooner were +following in his wake, and all with English colors flying. To increase +the painful uncertainty that now hung over the fate of his vessel, the +breeze which had been light all night entirely died away, and the +sails flapped idly against the masts. Hull, however, resolved that his +ship should not be lost, if human energy and skill could save her, and +immediately sent all his boats forward to tow. But he soon found that +the enemy, by putting the boats of two ships on one, were slowly +closing on him. He then took all the rope he could spare and run a +kedge out nearly a half a mile ahead and dropped it. The crew seized +the rope, and springing to it with a will, soon made the ship walk +through the water. As she came up with the kedge she overran it, and +while still moving on under the headway she had obtained, another +kedge was carried ahead, and the noble vessel glided away, as if by +magic, from her pursuers. It was not long, however, before the enemy +discovered the trick the Yankee was playing, and began also to kedge. +A little air was felt at half-past seven, but at eight it fell calm +again, when the vessels resorted to boats, long sweeps and the kedge. +The Shannon, which was astern, having, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page139" name="page139"></a>(p. 139)</span> at last, got most of +the boats of the squadron on her, slowly gained on the Constitution, +while the Guerriere was walking down on her larboard quarter. The +prospect for the American was now gloomy enough—there was scarcely a +ray of hope. The unruffled sea seemed to heave in mockery of the +anguish of those whose every thought was a prayer for wind, and +slowly, like the unpitying approach of death, the hostile fleet kept +closing on that helpless ship. One more hour like the last, would +bring her under the guns of two frigates. Still, there was not a +craven heart within those ribs of oak. Each man, as he looked sternly +on his comrade, read in his face the determination to fight while a +gun was left. Hull, chafing at his desperate position, resolved to +close fiercely with the first vessel that approached; and judging from +his after conduct, he would have made wild work with his antagonist. +The men in the boats strove nobly, but it was a contest of mere +physical strength, in which there was not the least hope of success. +But adverse fate seemed at last to relent, and a light breeze sprung +up from the southward. Hull no sooner saw it approaching on the water +than he ordered the sails to be trimmed, and the moment the vessel +felt its gentle pressure, she was brought up into the wind—the boats +fell alongside and were hoisted to their davits or swung, just clear +of the water—the men working coolly at their <span class="pagenum"><a id="page140" name="page140"></a>(p. 140)</span> posts, +although the shot of the Guerriere were dashing the sea into spray +around them.</p> + +<p>But in an hour it again fell nearly calm, and the boats were once more +put on. The crew strove to make up by effort what they lacked in +force, but the Shannon steadily gained. With the exception of a little +rest obtained when slight breezes struck the vessel, the men were kept +incessantly at work all the day. At two o'clock, the Belvidera opened +with her bow guns, to which the Constitution responded with her stern +chasers. In half-an-hour, however, Captain Hull ordered the firing to +cease, and the men were again ordered to the boats, and rowing and +kedging were kept up till eleven at night. They were fast becoming +exhausted under the tremendous strain that had been put upon them +since early in the morning, when to their great relief a breeze sprung +up, and every sail that would draw was set. It lasted, however, only +for an hour. At midnight, it was calm again; but the crews of both +vessels had been overtasked, and no boats were sent out. In the +morning, Captain Hull discovered that some of the vessels had gained +on him, and four frigates were within long gun shot. It was now +apparent that the least unfavorable change would settle the fate of +the Constitution. The officers had snatched a little sleep at their +posts, and were ready to defend their flag to the last. It was a +lovely summer <span class="pagenum"><a id="page141" name="page141"></a>(p. 141)</span> morning, and as the orb of day slowly rolled +into view, it lighted up a scene of thrilling interest and +transcendant beauty. The ocean lay slumbering in majestic repose, +reflecting from its unruffled bosom the cloudless sky. A light breeze +was fanning the sea, and every stitch of canvas that would draw was +set. All the vessels had now got on the same tack, the gallant +American leading the van. "The five frigates were clouds of canvas +from their trucks to the water," as slowly and proudly they swept +along the deep. The Constitution looked back on her eager pursuers, +each eye on her decks watching the relative speed of the vessels, and +each heart praying for wind. But, at noon, it again fell calm, when +the Belvidera was found to be two miles and a half astern, the next +frigate three miles distant, and the others still farther to leeward. +This was a great gain on the position of the day before, and with a +steady breeze, there would be no doubt of the issue. About half-past +twelve, a light wind sprung up, and although it kept unsteady during +the afternoon, it was evident the Constitution was walking away from +her pursuers. Every sail was tended, and every rope watched with +scrupulous care, that showed the American frigate to be a thorough man +of war. The day which had been so beautiful threatened a stormy close, +for a heavy squall was rising out of the southern sea. Captain Hull +narrowly <span class="pagenum"><a id="page142" name="page142"></a>(p. 142)</span> watched its approach, with every man at the clew +lines. Just before it struck the ship, the order was given, and the +vessel was stripped of her canvas as by a single blow. The British +vessels began to take in sail without waiting for the near approach of +the squall. As soon as the strength of the gale had been felt, the +Constitution was again put under a press of canvas, and bowing +gracefully, as if in gratitude to the rising sea, she flung the foam +joyfully from her bows, and was soon rushing through the water at the +rate of eleven knots an hour. When the rain cloud had passed, and an +observation of the enemy's ships could be obtained, they were far +astern, and with the last rays of the setting sun, the Constitution +bade farewell to her pursuers. It was gallantly and gloriously done.</p> + +<p>Cool and steady action on the part of the commander, met by +corresponding conduct on the part of the officers and crew, thorough +seamanship exhibited in every manœuvre she attempted, saved the +noble vessel from capture. What a contrast does this conduct of the +nephew, thus surrounded by a superior force and beset with apparently +insurmountable difficulties, present to that of the uncle at Detroit. +In the one, desperate circumstances produced great effort, in the +other none at all. One with no thought of surrendering, while a spar +was left standing, the other meekly laying down his arms without +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page143" name="page143"></a>(p. 143)</span> firing a shot. Shortly after, the Constitution arrived in +Boston.</p> + +<p>Previous to the sailing of this vessel from Annapolis, the Essex, +under Capt. Porter, having been got ready for sea at New York, started +on a cruise to the southward. Making several prizes of merchantmen, +she again stood to the southward, when she fell in with a fleet of +British transports, convoyed by a frigate and bomb vessel. She +endeavored to get along side of the former, but one of the transports +which Capt. Porter had spoken, threatening to make signal to the other +vessels, he was obliged to take possession of her. To accomplish this, +as the prize had a hundred and fifty soldiers aboard, consumed so much +time that the rest of the fleet escaped.</p> + +<p>The Essex having disguised herself as a merchant man continued her +cruise, and in a few days discovered a strange sail, which, deceived +by her appearance, boldly attacked her. The latter having got the +enemy in close range, knocked out her ports, which had been closed, +and poured in her broadsides. This sudden metamorphosis and tremendous +firing completely stunned the stranger, and he immediately hauled down +his colors. The prize proved to be the ship Alert, mounting twenty-two +eighteen-pound carronades. This was <span class="pagenum"><a id="page144" name="page144"></a>(p. 144)</span> the first British war +vessel taken by an American cruiser.</p> + +<p>Captain Porter having converted the Alert into a cartel, sent her with +the prisoners into St. John's. The English Admiral, at Newfoundland, +remonstrated against this course, as it deprived the British of the +chances of recapture before entering an American port. He however +could not well refuse to carry out the arrangements which the Captain +of the Alert had entered into.</p> + +<p>The Essex, after an unsuccessful cruise and some narrow escapes, +finally reached the Delaware, where she replenished her stores.</p> + +<a id="img002" name="img002"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img002.jpg" width="500" height="348" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">THE CONSTITUTION AND GUERRIERE.</p> +</div> + +<p>On the 28th of July an order was sent from the Secretary of the Navy, +to Capt. Hull, at Boston, to deliver up the Constitution to Commodore +Bainbridge, and take charge of the frigate Constellation. +<span class="sidenote">Aug. 2.</span> But fortunately for him and the navy, just before this order +reached him he had again set sail, and was out on the deep, where the +anxieties of the department could not disturb him. Cruising eastward +along the coast, he captured ten small prizes near the mouth of the +St. Lawrence and burned them. In the middle of the month he recaptured +an American merchantman and sent her in, and then stood to the +southward. On the 19th he made a strange sail, one of the vessels that +a few weeks before had pressed him so hard in the chase. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page145" name="page145"></a>(p. 145)</span> +When the Constitution had run down to within three miles of him, the +Englishman laid his maintop sail aback, and hung out three flags, to +show his willingness to engage. Capt. Dacres, the commander, surprised +at the daring manner in which the stranger came down, turned to the +captain of an American merchantman whom he had captured a few days +before, and asked him what vessel he took that to be. The latter +replied, as he handed back the glass to Dacres, that he thought from +her sails she was an American. It cannot be possible, said Dacres, or +he would not stand on so boldly. It was soon evident, whoever the +stranger might be, he was bent on mischief. Hull prepared his vessel +for action deliberately, and after putting her under close fighting +canvas and sending down her royal yards, ordered the drums to beat to +quarters. It was now five o'clock, and as the Constitution bore +steadily down towards her antagonist, the crew gave three cheers. The +English vessel was well known, for she had at one of her mast-heads a +flag proudly flying, with the "Guerriere" written in large characters +upon it. When the Constitution arrived within long gun shot, the +Guerriere opened her fire, now waring to bring her broadside to bear, +and again to prevent being raked by the American, which slowly but +steadily approached. The Englishman kept up a steady fire, for nearly +an hour, to which the Constitution <span class="pagenum"><a id="page146" name="page146"></a>(p. 146)</span> replied with only an +occasional gun. The crew at length became excited under this inaction. +The officer below had twice come on deck to report that men had been +killed standing idly at their guns, and begged permission to fire; but +Hull still continued to receive the enemy's broadsides in silence. The +Guerriere failing to cripple the Constitution, filled and moved off +with the wind free, showing that she was willing to receive her and +finish the conflict in a yard-arm to yard-arm combat. The Constitution +then drew slowly ahead, and the moment her bows began to lap the +quarters of the Guerriere, her forward guns opened, and in a few +minutes after, the welcome orders were received to pour in broadside +after broadside as rapidly as possible. When she was fairly abeam, the +broadsides were fired with a rapidity and power that astounded the +enemy. As the old ship forged slowly ahead with her greater way, she +seemed moving in flame. The mizen mast of the enemy soon fell with a +crash, while her hull was riddled with shot, and her decks slippery +with gore. The carnage was so awful that the blood from the wounded +and mangled victims, as they were hurried into the cockpit, poured +over the ladder as if it had been dashed from a bucket. As Hull passed +his antagonist he wheeled short round her bows to prevent a raking +fire. But in doing this he came dead into the wind—his sails were +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page147" name="page147"></a>(p. 147)</span> taken aback—the vessel stopped—then getting sternway, +the Guerriere came up, her bows striking the former abeam. While in +this position, the forward guns of the enemy exploded almost against +the sides of the Constitution, setting the cabin on fire. This would +have proved a serious event but for the presence of mind of the fourth +lieutenant, Beekman Verplanck Hoffman, who extinguished it. As soon as +the vessels got foul both crews prepared to board. The first +lieutenant, Morris,<a id="footnotetag29" name="footnotetag29"></a><a href="#footnote29" title="Go to footnote 29"><span class="smaller">[29]</span></a> in the midst of a terrific fire of musketry, +attempted to lash the ships together, which were thumping and grinding +against each other with the heavy sea, but fell, shot through the +body. M. Alwyn, the master, and Lieut. Bush of the marines, mounting +the taffrail to leap on the enemy's decks were both shot down, the +latter killed instantly with a bullet through the head. Finding it +impossible to board under such a tremendous fire, the sails of the +Constitution were filled, when the vessels slowly and reluctantly +parted. As the Constitution rolled away on the heavy swell, the +foremast of the Guerriere fell back against the mainmast, carrying +that down in its descent, leaving the frigate a helpless wreck, +"wallowing in the trough of the sea." Hull seeing that his enemy was +now completely in his power, ran off a little way to secure his own +masts and repair his rigging which <span class="pagenum"><a id="page148" name="page148"></a>(p. 148)</span> was badly cut up. In a +short time he returned, and taking up a position where he could rake +the wreck of the Guerriere at every discharge, prepared to finish her. +Capt. Dacres had fought his ship well, and when every spar in her was +down, gallantly nailed the jack to the stump of the mizen-mast. But +further resistance was impossible, and to have gone down with his flag +flying, as one of the English journals declared he ought to have done, +would have been a foolish and criminal act. A few more broadsides +would have carried the brave crew to the bottom, and to allow his +vessel to roll idly in the trough of the sea, a mere target for the +guns of the American, would neither have added to his fame nor +lessened the moral effect of the defeat. He therefore reluctantly +struck her flag, and Lieutenant Read was sent on board to take +possession.</p> + +<p>As he stepped over the vessel's side, a disgusting scene presented +itself. When the vessel struck, Captain Dacres told the crew they +might go and get some refreshments, which was another mode of giving +them liberty to drink. In a short time, all the petty officers and +their wives, together with the sailors, were wallowing together in +filth. The vessel being dismasted lay in the trough of the sea, and as +she rolled backwards and forwards the water came in the ports on one +side, and poured out of those on <span class="pagenum"><a id="page149" name="page149"></a>(p. 149)</span> the other, mingling in a +loathsome mass the motley multitude.</p> + +<p>This vessel, as well as all the English ships, presented another +striking contrast to the American. Impressment was so abhorred, that +British officers were afraid of being shot down by their topmen during +an engagement; and hence dared not wear their uniforms, while ours +went into action with their epaulettes on, knowing that it added to +their security, for every sailor would fight for his commander as he +would for a comrade.</p> + +<p>Captain Hull kept hovering around his prize during the night; and at +two o'clock, "sail ho," was sent aft by the watch, when the +Constitution immediately beat to quarters. The weary sailors tumbled +up cheerfully at the summons, the vessel was cleared for action, and +there is no doubt that if another Guerriere had closed with the +Constitution, she would have been roughly handled, crippled as the +latter was from her recent conflict.</p> + +<p>After deliberating for an hour, the stranger stood off. In the +morning, the Guerriere was reported to have four feet water in the +hold, and was so cut up that it would be difficult to keep her afloat. +The prisoners were, therefore, all removed, and the vessel set on +fire. The flames leaped up the broken masts, ran along the bulwarks, +and wrapped the noble wreck in a sheet of fire. As the guns became +heated, they <span class="pagenum"><a id="page150" name="page150"></a>(p. 150)</span> went off one after another, firing their last +salute to the dying ship. At length, the fire reached the magazine, +when she blew up with a tremendous explosion. A huge column of smoke +arose and stood for a long time, as if petrified in the calm +atmosphere, and then slowly crumbled to pieces, revealing only a few +shattered planks to tell where that proud vessel had sunk. The first +English frigate that ever struck its flag to an American ship of war, +had gone down to the bottom of the ocean, a gloomy omen of England's +future. The sea never rolled over a vessel whose fate so startled the +world. It disappeared for ever, but it left its outline on the deep, +never to be effaced till England and America are no more.</p> + +<p>The loss of the Constitution was seven killed and seven wounded, while +that of Guerriere was fifteen killed and sixty-four wounded, a +disparity that shows with how much more precision the American had +fired. It is impossible, at this period, to give an adequate idea of +the excitement this victory produced. In the first place, it was +fought three days after the surrender of General Hull, the uncle of +the gallant captain. The mortifying, stunning news of the disaster of +the North-western army met on the sea-board, the thundering shout that +went up from a people delirious with delight over this naval victory. +From one direction the name of Hull came loaded with execrations—from +the other overwhelmed with <span class="pagenum"><a id="page151" name="page151"></a>(p. 151)</span> blessings. But not only was the +joy greater, arriving as the news did on the top of a disaster, but it +took the nation by surprise. An American frigate had fearlessly stood +up in single combat on the deep with her proud foe, and giving gun for +gun, torn the crown from the "mistress of the sea." The fact that the +Constitution had four guns more and a larger crew, could not prevent +it from being practically an even-handed fight. The disparity of the +crews was of no consequence, for it was an affair of broadsides, while +the vast difference in the execution done, proved that had the +relative weight of metal and the muster roll been reversed, the issue +would have been the same.</p> + +<p>Captain Hull on his return to Boston, surrendered the frigate to +Bainbridge, who soon after hoisted his broad pennant on board, but did +not put to sea till the 26th of October.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Oct. 12.</span> + +<p>In the mean time, Commodore Rodgers having refitted again, started on +a cruise, having the United States, forty-four, commanded by Commodore +Decatur, and the Argus, sixteen, Captain Sinclair, in company. +Commodore Rodgers having captured on the 17th, the British packet +Swallow, with two hundred thousand dollars on board, continued his +cruise to the eastward. Just before, in a heavy gale, the United +States and Argus had parted company with him. The former directed her +course so as to fall <span class="pagenum"><a id="page152" name="page152"></a>(p. 152)</span> in the track of East Indiamen, but on +Sunday morning, the 25th, she saw a large sail to the southward, which +proved to be the English frigate Macedonian. After some +manœuvering, the two vessels approached within a mile of each +other, when the firing commenced. After the United States delivered +her second broadside, she ceased manœuvering and took the same tack +with her enemy, both steering free. The Macedonian, however, was to +windward, and hence could make it a yard-arm-to-yard-arm combat +whenever she chose. But she preferred a longer range, and the two +vessels swept on, delivering their rapid broadsides within musket +shot. The distance at which they kept, together with the heavy sea +that was rolling, rendered the aim imperfect and protracted the +conflict, so that it continued for an hour after the guns of both +vessels began to bear, before any material effect was visible. The +broadsides of the United States were delivered so rapidly that she was +constantly enveloped in flame and smoke, and the crew of the +Macedonian several times thought her on fire and cheered. Decatur, +with his fine face lit up with that chivalric valor that was wont to +illumine it in battle, moved amid his men with words of encouragement +and praise. As the mizen-mast of the enemy went by the board, hearing +a sailor say to his comrade, "Jack, we've made a brig of her;" he +replied, "Take good aim, Jack, and she <span class="pagenum"><a id="page153" name="page153"></a>(p. 153)</span> will soon be a +sloop." Turning to a captain of the gun, he said, "Aim at the yellow +streak, her spars and rigging are going fast enough, she must have a +little more hulling." Soon after her fore and main top mast went over. +At length, the mizen mast was cut in two by a shot, about ten feet +from the deck, while with every roll of the ship the weakened foremast +threatened to swell the wreck. The Englishman, perceiving that his +vessel would soon become unmanageable, made an effort to close, for +the purpose of boarding. But Decatur saw his advantage too plainly, to +risk it in a desperate encounter, and putting on sail shot ahead. The +enemy mistaking this movement for a rapid flight gave three cheers, +and all the flags having come down with the spars, set a union Jack in +the main rigging in token of triumph. But when the United States was +seen to tack and approach, as if about to close, it was hauled down.</p> + +<p>On this same Sabbath, while the cheers of the United States' crew rang +over the deep, Napoleon was traversing in gloom the fatal, bloody +field of Malo-Jaraslowitz, and with two kings and three marshals by +his side, was deliberating on that retreat which was to change the +face of the world.</p> + +<p>The superiority of American gunnery, in this combat, was placed beyond +dispute. It was a simple cannonade on a very rough sea. Yet the United +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page154" name="page154"></a>(p. 154)</span> States had but five killed and seven wounded, while out of +three hundred men, the Macedonian had one hundred and four killed or +wounded. So, also, the former lost her top-gallant masts, and had been +hulled but a few times. It is true her rigging suffered severely, but +the English frigate had almost every spar in her more or less +shattered, while her hull was pierced with a hundred shot. In this, as +in the former engagement between the Constitution and Guerriere, the +United States carried <i>four more guns</i> than her antagonist. She was a +heavier ship, but therefore a better mark, and yet the enemy's shot +rarely hulled her. The decks of the latter presented a revolting +spectacle. "Fragments of the dead were distributed in every +direction—the decks covered with blood—one continued agonizing yell +of the unhappy wounded,"<a id="footnotetag30" name="footnotetag30"></a><a href="#footnote30" title="Go to footnote 30"><span class="smaller">[30]</span></a> filled the ship.</p> + +<p>Decatur having arrived with his prize in New London, dispatched Lieut. +Hamilton, son of the Secretary of the Navy, to Washington, with an +account of the victory, and the captured colors. <span class="sidenote">Dec. 8.</span> +Hurrying on, greeted with the acclamations of the multitude as he +passed, he arrived at the capital in the evening. On that very night a +ball had been given to the officers of the navy, at which Hull and +Stewart and the Secretary of the Navy were present. Young Hamilton +walked into the gay assemblage <span class="pagenum"><a id="page155" name="page155"></a>(p. 155)</span> and delivered his message to +his overjoyed father, who immediately announced it to the company. +Shout after shout shook the hall—all crowded around the young +lieutenant, eager to hear the incidents of the action. As he narrated +how they fought and how they conquered, tears of joy and gratitude +streamed from the eyes of his mother, who stood fondly gazing on him. +Captured colors of the enemy decorated the room, and a delegation was +sent to bring those of the Macedonia and add them to the number. +Captains Stewart and Hull bore them in, and presented them, amid the +loud acclamations of the throng, to the wife of the President—the +band struck up an inspiring air, and intense excitement and exultation +filled every bosom.</p> + +<p>The Argus met with but little success. The seamanship of her officers +was, however, tested during the cruise. She was chased three days and +nights by an English squadron, and yet not only managed to escape, but +having come upon an English merchantman during the chase, actually +captured it in sight of the fleet, though by the time she had manned +it the enemy had opened on her with his guns. Having made five prizes +in all, she returned to port.</p> + +<p>In the meanwhile the Wasp, Captain Jones, which was returning from +Europe with dispatches, the time war was declared, had refitted and +started on a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page156" name="page156"></a>(p. 156)</span> cruise. Sailing northward to the latitude of +Boston, she made a single capture and returned to the Delaware. On the +13th of October, the very day of Van Rensalaer's defeat at Queenstown, +she again put to sea, and after being four days out, on the night of +the 17th, made five strange sail. Not knowing their strength or +character, Captain Jones deemed it prudent to keep off till daylight, +when he would have a better opportunity for observing them. In the +morning he discovered there were six ships under the convoy of a brig +of war. Two of them were armed, but the brig deeming herself alone a +match for the American, sent them all forward, and waited for the +latter to approach. The sea was rough from the effects of a storm that +had swept those latitudes the day before, in which Captain Jones had +lost his jib boom and two of his crew. There was no manœuvering +attempted in this tumultuous sea, and the Wasp surged on in dead +silence, the only sound heard on her decks being the roar of the waves +as they burst along her sides. She closed on her antagonist with a +deadliness of purpose seldom witnessed in naval combats. She never +delivered her broadside till within a hundred and eighty feet, and +then with fearful effect. At first this heroism seemed doomed to a +poor reward. The fire of the Frolic was incessant. Seldom had an +Englishman been known to deliver such rapid broadsides. In five +minutes the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page157" name="page157"></a>(p. 157)</span> main topmast of the Wasp fell amid the +rigging—in two minutes more the gaft and mizen top-gallant mast +followed. Thus, in eight minutes from the time the vessels closed, the +Wasp was so disabled that her destruction seemed almost certain. But +while cut up herself so terribly aloft, she had struck with every +broadside the heart of her antagonist. As she rolled on the heavy seas +her guns were frequently under water, and the sailors staggered around +their pieces like drunken men. Delivering her broadsides as she sunk, +she hulled her antagonist at every discharge; while the latter, firing +as she rose, made sad work with the rigging of the former. Jones +seeing his spars and rigging so dreadfully cut up, was afraid that his +vessel would become unmanageable, and therefore determined to run foul +of his adversary and board. But when the vessels closed, the bows of +the Frolic struck abaft the midships of the Wasp, which so swung the +head of the latter around that she was enabled to throw a raking fire +into the former. The order, therefore, to board was countermanded, and +a fresh broadside directed to sweep her decks. In loading some of the +guns, the rammers struck against the bows of the Frolic. The shot went +crashing the whole length of the ship, and the crew, excited by this +hand-to-hand fight, could no longer be restrained from boarding. Mr. +Biddle, the first lieutenant, leaped into the rigging, followed by +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page158" name="page158"></a>(p. 158)</span> Lieut. Rodgers and other men, and soon gained the decks of +the Frolic—but, in looking round for the enemy, they saw but three or +four officers standing aft, and bleeding. None but the dead and +wounded cumbered the decks. Not one was left to haul down the colors. +The officers threw down their swords in token of submission, and +Lieutenant Biddle, springing into the rigging, lowered the English +flag with his own hand. The carnage was horrible for so small a +vessel—nearly a hundred of the officers and crew being killed or +wounded. The decks were literally covered with the mangled forms of +men and officers. The corpses presented a ghastly appearance as they +rolled from side to side with the tossing vessel, while shivered spars +and masts covered the wreck, and still hanging by the ropes, swung +with every lurch against its shattered hull. There can scarcely be a +more mournful sight than a noble ship dismantled in mid ocean, her +decks crimsoned with blood, while on every side, amid broken and rent +timbers, her gallant crew dismembered and torn, are stretched in +death.</p> + +<p>The Frolic was a brig carrying in all twenty-two guns, while the Wasp, +though a ship, carried but eighteen, thus making a difference in favor +of the former of four guns.</p> + +<p>The Wasp had, therefore, captured a superior force in single combat. +But in this, as in the two <span class="pagenum"><a id="page159" name="page159"></a>(p. 159)</span> former engagements I have +detailed, the same extraordinary disparity in the respective losses of +the two vessels was exhibited. While near a hundred were killed or +wounded in the Frolic, there were only five killed and as many wounded +in the American ship. It is not a matter of surprise that the belief +became prevalent in England that our vessels were filled with Kentucky +riflemen. These men had become famous for their accuracy of aim; and +it was supposed we had introduced them into our navy. In no other way +could they account for the awful carnage that followed every single +combat of ship with ship. In all her naval history, such destructive +work had never been witnessed in so short a space of time. The moment +an American vessel opened her broadsides, death began to traverse the +decks of her antagonist with such a rapid footstep, that men were +appalled.</p> + +<p>This was doubtless owing in a great measure to our guns being sighted, +an improvement introduced by American officers, rendering the aim +infinitely more accurate.</p> + +<p>The Wasp in this engagement had been fought nobly, but her victory +proved worse than a barren one to her gallant commander and crew. +Scarcely had the English Jack been lowered to the Stars and Stripes, +before the latter were struck to the English flag. The Poictiers an +English seventy-four, soon <span class="pagenum"><a id="page160" name="page160"></a>(p. 160)</span> hoved in sight and bore down on +the two vessels lying to and clearing away the wreck. The Wasp +endeavored to make use of her heels, but on turning out her sails, +they were found completely riddled. Flight was out of the question, +and both vessels surrendered. They were taken into Bermuda, where the +Americans were parolled and allowed to return home.</p> + +<p>On the 26th of October, Commodore Bainbridge left Boston, accompanied +by the Hornet, with the intention of joining Captain Porter, in the +Essex, and passing into the Pacific Ocean, where the British fisheries +and commerce could be easily struck. Captain Lawrence, cruising +southward, at length arrived at St. Salvador, where he found a British +sloop of war, the Bonne Citoyenne. The latter being in a neutral port, +was safe. She was superior to the Hornet, but Lawrence, determined to +provoke her out to single combat, sent a challenge to her +commander—Commodore Bainbridge, in the meanwhile, promising to keep +out of the way. The challenge was declined, and if the fact that she +had a large amount of specie on board, had been given as the reason of +her refusal, the conduct of Captain Green, the commander would have +been unobjectionable. But to intimate, as he did, that the frigate +would interfere, after Bainbridge had pledged his word, and the +American Consul offered guarantees, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page161" name="page161"></a>(p. 161)</span> evinced a contemptible +spirit, almost as degrading as cowardice.</p> + +<p>Captain Lawrence determined, however, not to let the vessel go to sea +without him, and he therefore blockaded the port.</p> + +<p>The Constitution left the Hornet blockading the Bonne Citoyenne, and +steered south, keeping along the coast, and on the 29th discovered two +sail between her and the land, which was about thirty miles distant +and in full view. One of the vessels being small, kept standing in +towards the shore, while the larger one, a British frigate, the Java, +of thirty-eight guns, directed her course towards the American. +Bainbridge, wishing to get farther from the land, tacked and steered +to the south-east for two hours, the Englishman following after. About +half-past one, finding himself clear of the land, Bainbridge tacked +and stood towards the stranger. At 2 o'clock the two vessels were only +half a mile apart, the Englishman to windward, and showing no colors. +The order to fire a shot to make the latter set his ensign being +misunderstood, a whole broadside was delivered, and the battle +commenced. A tremendous cannonade followed. The wind was light and the +sea smooth, so that full scope was given for manœuvering and accurate +aim. Bainbridge, who at the commencement of the war, had urged the +President to send the national ships to sea, and was now in his +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page162" name="page162"></a>(p. 162)</span> first fight, felt not only the promise he had given the +Secretary of the Navy weighing on him, but his responsibility as +commander of the Constitution, fresh with laurels from the capture of +the Guerriere.</p> + +<p>He managed his ship with consummate skill, and not only foiled every +attempt of the enemy to get a raking position, but soon obtained one +himself, and delivered a broadside that swept the decks of the Java. +The vessels had at length approached within pistol shot, and the +effect of the rapid broadsides of the Constitution delivered so +closely and on that smooth sea, could be heard in the rending timbers +of the enemy's ship. Bainbridge, in the mean time, received a musket +ball in his thigh. He however still walked the quarter deck, watching +every movement of his antagonist, and the effect of every broadside. +In a few minutes later, a cannon shot plunged into the wheel, +shattering it in fragments, and sending a copper bolt into his leg. +Crippled and bleeding—refusing even to sit down—he continued to limp +over the quarter deck, watching the progress of the combat, and +directing the movements, apparently unconscious of pain. The +destruction of the wheel he felt to be a more serious affair than his +wounded leg, for he was no longer able to give verbal orders to the +helmsman. The tiller was of course worked below the second deck by +ropes and tackles, where the helmsman unable to see the sails and +steer accordingly, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page163" name="page163"></a>(p. 163)</span> depended entirely on orders transmitted +to him. This would have been of minor consequence in a steady yard to +yard-arm fight, but in the constant manœuvering of the two vessels, +either to get or prevent a raking fire, it was a serious +inconvenience. Still, the Constitution managed to secure this +advantage in almost every evolution. The tremendous fire she kept up, +so staggered the Englishman, that he resolved to run his vessel aboard +at all hazards. He came stern on, and his bowsprit passed through the +mizen rigging of the Constitution. The next moment, however, it was +cut in two by a cannon shot, when the two vessels parted. At length +the Constitution, after wearing twice to get the right position, threw +herself fairly alongside her antagonist, and they moved on together, +yard-arm and yard-arm, pouring in incessant broadsides. In a few +minutes the mizen mast of the Java went over, and as her foremast had +gone long before, nothing but the main mast was left standing. Her +fire had now ceased, and Bainbridge, under the impression she had +struck, set his sails and passed off to windward to repair damages, +make his masts secure, and be ready for any new combat that might be +forced on him, in a sea filled with the enemy's cruisers. After an +hour spent in overhauling his ship he returned, and finding the +enemy's ensign still flying, he passed directly across her bows, and +was about to deliver a raking <span class="pagenum"><a id="page164" name="page164"></a>(p. 164)</span> fire, when she struck. The +combat lasted for more than two hours, and from the number of +evolutions on both sides, was brought to a termination several miles +from where it commenced. The Java was completely dismantled. Her mizen +mast had been cut away close to the deck—the mainmast fell soon after +the firing ceased, while nothing but a stump of the foremast, some +twenty or thirty feet long, was left standing. Her bowsprit, too, was +gone; in fact, every spar had been shot out of her. The Constitution, +on the contrary, at the close of the long severe conflict, had every +spar standing. An eighteen pound shot had made an ugly hole through +her mizen mast, and another had cut a deep gash in the foremast, and a +quantity of ropes swinging loose in the wind, showed that she had been +in the midst of cannon balls, but she came out of the conflict as she +went in, every spar erect and her royal yards across. The outward +appearance of the ships did not present a more striking contrast than +their decks. Those of the Java were rent and torn, and strewed with +the dead. A hundred and sixty-one had been killed or wounded, while +nine killed and twenty-five wounded covered the entire loss of the +Constitution.</p> + +<p>Among the prisoners taken was Lieutenant-General Hislop, with his +staff, on his way to Bombay, as Governor. They were all treated with +that kindness and generosity which ever characterizes a truly +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page165" name="page165"></a>(p. 165)</span> brave man—conduct which the English, in the very very few +opportunities offered them, did not generally reciprocate.</p> + +<p>The severe wounds of Commodore Bainbridge could not force him to leave +the deck, even after the action was over. In his anxiety for his ship +and the prize, and care of the wounded and prisoners, he forgot his +sufferings, keeping his feet till eleven o'clock at night. These eight +hours of constant exertion increased the inflammation to an alarming +degree, and well nigh cost him his life.</p> + +<p>It was a proud day for him; he had redeemed his pledge to the +government, and added another wreath to the laurels that already +crowned the American navy.</p> + +<p>The Constitution lay by the Java for two or three days, in order that +the wounded might be removed with care and safety. When this was +accomplished, the latter vessel being so completely riddled that it +would be impossible to get her into an American port, was blown up. +Our gunners fired with too accurate an aim; they so destroyed the +vessels of the enemy, that they could not be secured as prizes.</p> + +<p>The Constitution was carried into St. Salvador, where her arrival did +not improve the prospect before the Bonne Citoyenne, should she +venture to break a lance with the Hornet. She was apparently preparing +to go to sea that night, with the intention <span class="pagenum"><a id="page166" name="page166"></a>(p. 166)</span> of avoiding her +antagonist if convenient, and fighting her if necessary. The capture +of the Java, however, produced a change in her plans, and she took +eighteen days longer to reflect on the subject.</p> + +<p>Commodore Bainbridge dismissed the private passengers found on board +the Java, without regarding them as prisoners of war, while all the +others were released on their parol. Governor Hislop presented him +with an elegant sword, as a token of his esteem and an acknowledgment +of the kindness with which he had been treated. Captain Lambert, +commander of the Java, was mortally wounded, and just before his +removal to the shore, Bainbridge, leaning on the shoulders of two +officers, hobbled into his room to restore to him his sword. It was a +touching spectacle, the wounded victor presenting to his dying +antagonist, the sword he never would wield again, accompanying it with +expressions of esteem and kindly hopes. Captain Lambert received it +with emotion, and returned his thanks. Two days after, it was laid +across his breast. It was not dishonored in its owner's hand, for his +ship had been gallantly fought to the last, and surrendered only when +not a sail could be set.</p> + +<p>Bainbridge, at this time, was not quite forty years of age. Six feet +in height, of commanding person, and an eye that burned like fire in +battle, he moved over his quarter deck the impersonation of a hero. +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page167" name="page167"></a>(p. 167)</span> His noble conduct to the prisoners, won him the praise even +of his enemies. An English Admiral, when told of it, shook his head, +remarking, that it had an ominous look when a young commander, in a +navy unaccustomed to victory, could treat his foes so like an old +Spanish cavalier.<a id="footnotetag31" name="footnotetag31"></a><a href="#footnote31" title="Go to footnote 31"><span class="smaller">[31]</span></a></p> + +<p>The Constitution, in this engagement, carried fifty-four guns, and the +Java forty-nine. On this difference of five guns, the English +attempted to erect a prop to support their naval pride. The effort to +prove a superiority in weight of metal and number of men, in every +victorious American vessel, and the changes rung on the difference of +a single gun, exhibited a sensitiveness that enhanced instead of +lessened the defeats. If a battle is never to be considered equal, +until both ships have the same tonnage to a pound, the same number of +cannon, and the muster roll be equal to a man, it is to be feared +there never will be one fought. Not only did the English allege that +the Constitution was greatly <span class="pagenum"><a id="page168" name="page168"></a>(p. 168)</span> superior in weight of metal, +but declared that her success was owing, in a large measure, to her +musketry; and yet the Java had not a spar standing at the close of the +battle. Muskets do not dismantle vessels, and leave them mere hulks at +the mercy of their foe.<a id="footnotetag32" name="footnotetag32"></a><a href="#footnote32" title="Go to footnote 32"><span class="smaller">[32]</span></a> The English court of enquiry appointed to +investigate the subject, asked the boatswain, "if they had suffered +much on the forecastle from musketry." "Yes," he very frankly replied, +"<i>and, likewise, from round and grape</i>." The latter was, no doubt, +true, and very probably the former.</p> + +<p>Bainbridge returned to Boston, and resigned the command of the +Constitution, which stood greatly in need of repairs.</p> + +<p>Lawrence continued, as before stated, to blockade the Bonne Citoyenne, +until the latter part of January, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page169" name="page169"></a>(p. 169)</span> when a British +seventy-four heaving in sight, he was compelled to run in beside his +adversary. The tables were now turned upon him, and he had the +prospect of seeing the man-of-war playing the part of keeper at the +mouth of the port, while his own prisoner making use of this +protection could pass out, and continue his voyage. This was a +predicament he did not relish, and taking advantage of the night, +quietly slipped out to sea, and continued his cruise. He made a few +prizes, and among them a brig of ten guns, with $12,500 in specie on +board. Arriving, at length, at the mouth of the Demarara river, he +discovered an English brig of war, and gave chase to her. The latter +running in shore, led him into such shoal water, that he deemed it +prudent to haul off. He, however, did not abandon the hope of forcing +the ship into an engagement, and while beating down on a different +tack to get within reach of her, he discovered another brig apparently +seeking to close. He immediately put the head of his vessel toward +that of the stranger. Both were close on the wind, and as they +continued to approach, it was evident from their course they must pass +each other with their yard-arms almost touching. It was now nearly +half-past five, and the lurid rays of the sun, just sinking behind the +hills of the main land, flooded the two vessels as they silently +closed. The moment they began to draw abeam, so that the guns bore, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page170" name="page170"></a>(p. 170)</span> the firing began. When fairly abreast, the vessels were not +more than fifty feet apart. The words of command and the shrieks of +the wounded could be distinctly heard in either vessel, as broadside +crashed against broadside. It was a stern meeting and parting. As soon +as the guns ceased to bear, the Englishman wore, in order to get a +raking fire on the Hornet. The latter, however, was too quick for him; +he was first about, and coming down on his quarter in "a perfect blaze +of fire," poured in his broadsides with such close range and +destructive effect, that in ten minutes more the enemy not only +struck, but hoisted a signal of distress. Mr. Shubrick being sent on +board to take possession, reported that the vessel was the sloop of +war, Peacock, and that she had six feet water in the hold. Every +effort was made to save the prize, and to get out the wounded. Both +vessels were anchored; the pumps were rigged on board the Peacock, and +bailing was resorted to. The vessel, however, continued to sink, and +at last went down, carrying nine of her own crew and three of the +Hornet with her. Two American officers, and many more seamen came near +losing their lives, in their gallant effort to save the prisoners.</p> + +<p>The foremast of the ill-fated vessel protruded from the sea, where she +went down, remaining for some time to mark the place of the battle and +the victory.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page171" name="page171"></a>(p. 171)</span> The superiority of American gunnery and American seamanship +was again established beyond dispute. The Hornet was slightly superior +in weight of metal,<a id="footnotetag33" name="footnotetag33"></a><a href="#footnote33" title="Go to footnote 33"><span class="smaller">[33]</span></a> but she not only out-maneuvered her +antagonist, but surpassed her incomparably in the effective use of her +guns. The former had but one man killed and two wounded, while of the +latter there were thirty-eight killed and wounded, and among them the +commander. The Hornet had but a single shot in her hull, while the +Peacock was so riddled that she sunk in a few minutes after the +action.</p> + +<p>The thrill of exultation that passed over the land at the announcement +of the first naval victory, was alloyed by the reflection that it was +but an isolated instance, and hence could hardly justify a belief in +our naval superiority. But as frigate after frigate and ship after +ship struck, all doubt vanished, and the nation was intoxicated with +delight. The successive disasters that befel our land forces along +the Canada line, could not check the outburst of enthusiasm on every +side. As the news of one victory succeeding another was borne along +the great channels of communication, long shouts of triumph rolled +after it, and the navy from being unknown and uncared for, rose at +once to be the bulwark and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page172" name="page172"></a>(p. 172)</span> pride of the nation. All faces +were turned to the ocean to catch the first echo of those resistless +broadsides, that proudly asserted and made good the claim to "free +trade and sailor's rights." Where we had been insulted and wronged the +most, there we were chastising the offender with blows that astounded +the world. If the American Government had been amazed at the failure +of its deep laid schemes against Canada, it was no less so at the +unexpected triumphs at sea. Saved from the deepest condemnation by the +navy, which it had neglected—forced to fall back on its very blunders +for encouragement, it could say with Hamlet—</p> + +<p class="poem10"> +<span class="add11em">"Let us know,</span><br> + Our indiscretion sometimes serves us well<br> + When our deep plots do pall."</p> + +<p>But our astonishment at these successive and brilliant victories could +scarcely exceed that of the old world. The British navy had been so +long accustomed to victory, that a single-handed contest of an English +frigate with that of any other nation, had ceased to be a matter of +solicitude to her. The maritime nations of Europe had, one after +another, yielded to her sway, till her flag in every sea on the globe +extorted the respect and fear which the declaration, "I am a Roman +citizen" did, in the proudest days of the Empire. Her invincibility on +the ocean <span class="pagenum"><a id="page173" name="page173"></a>(p. 173)</span> was a foregone conclusion. The victories of +Napoleon stopped with the shore—even his "star" paled on the deep. +His extraordinary efforts and energies could not tear from the British +navy the proud title it had worn so long. His fleets, one after +another, had gone down before the might of British broadsides, and the +sublime sea fights of Aboukir and Trafalgar, were only corroborations +of what had long been established. If this was the common feeling of +the Continent it is no wonder that "the English were stunned as by the +shock of an earthquake."<a id="footnotetag34" name="footnotetag34"></a><a href="#footnote34" title="Go to footnote 34"><span class="smaller">[34]</span></a> The first victory surprised them, but did +not disturb their confidence. They began to discuss the causes of the +unlooked for event with becoming dignity, but before the argument was +concluded, another and another defeat came like successive thunder +claps, till discussion gave way to alarm. The thoughtful men of +England were too wise to pretend that disasters occurring in such +numbers and wonderful regularity, could be the result of accident, and +feared they beheld the little black cloud which the prophet saw rising +over the sea, portending an approaching storm. If, in so short a time, +a maritime force of only a few frigates and sloops of war could strike +such deadly blows and destroy the prestige of English invincibility, +what could not be done when that navy should approximate her own in +strength. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page174" name="page174"></a>(p. 174)</span> Some of the leading journals indulged in foolish +boasting and detraction of American valor, and held up to derision +those who saw portents of evil in the recent defeats. But the Times +spoke the sentiments of those whose opinions were of any weight. Said +the latter: "We witnessed the gloom which the event (the capture of +the Guerriere) cast over high and honorable minds. We participated in +the vexation and regret, and it is the first time we ever heard that +the striking of the flag on the high seas to any thing like an equal +force, should be regarded by Englishmen with complacency or +satisfaction." *** "It is not merely that an English frigate has been +taken, after what we are free to confess, may be called a brave +resistance, but that it has been taken by a <i>new enemy</i>, an enemy +unaccustomed to such triumphs, and likely to be rendered insolent and +confident by them." Another declared: "Our maritime superiority is in +fact a part of the nation's right. It has been the right of the +conqueror, since men associated together in civilization, to give laws +to the conquered, and is Great Britain to be driven from the proud +eminence which the blood and treasures of her sons have attained for +her among nations, by a piece of striped bunting flying at the +masthead of a few <i>fir-built frigates</i>, manned by a handful of +bastards and outlaws?"</p> + +<p>Such were the different sentiments entertained <span class="pagenum"><a id="page175" name="page175"></a>(p. 175)</span> and expressed +in England at the outset, but as the war progressed, anxiety and alarm +took the place of boasting.</p> + +<p>The war vessels at length grew timorous, and lost all their desire to +meet an American ship of equal rank. It was declared that our frigates +were built like seventy-fours, and therefore English frigates were +justified in declining a battle when offered. The awful havoc made by +our fire affected the seamen also, and whenever they saw the stars and +stripes flaunting from the masthead of an approaching vessel, they +felt that no ordinary battle was before them. English crews had never +been so cut up since the existence of her navy. In the terrific battle +of the Nile, Nelson lost less than three out of one hundred, and in +his attack on Copenhagen, less than four out of every hundred. In +Admiral Duncan's famous action off Camperdown, the proportion was +about the same as that of the Nile. In 1793, the French navy was in +its glory, and the victories obtained over its single ships by English +vessels were considered unparalleled. Yet in fourteen single +engagements, considered the most remarkable, and in which the ships, +with one exception, ranged from thirty-six guns to fifty-two, the +average of killed and wounded was only seventeen per ship, while in +four encounters with American vessels, the Constitution, United States +and Wasp, the average was a hundred and eleven to each vessel.</p> + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page176" name="page176"></a>(p. 176)</span> <span class="sidenote">Jan. 2.</span> + +<p>This success of the navy at length roused Congress to do something in +its aid, and an act was passed on the 2d of January, authorizing the +President to build four seventy-fours, and six ships of forty-four +guns, thus increasing the force of the navy tenfold. On the 3d of +March, by another act, it authorized the building of such vessels on +the lakes as was deemed necessary to their protection. Sums were also +voted to the officers and crews as prize money.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page177" name="page177"></a>(p. 177)</span> CHAPTER VII.</h2> + +<p class="resume">Harrison plans a winter campaign — Advance of the army — + Battle and massacre at the River Raisin — Baseness of + Proctor — Promoted by his Government — Tecumseh, his + character and eloquence — He stirs up the Creeks to war — + Massacre at Fort Mimms — Investment of Fort Meigs — + Advance of Clay's reinforcements and their destruction — + Successful sortie — Flight of the besiegers — Major + Croghan's gallant defence of Fort Stephenson.</p> + +<p>The army of General Harrison, which in October was slowly pushing its +way towards Malden to Detroit, soon became involved in difficulties +that compelled him to abandon his original design of an autumnal +campaign. The lakes being in possession of the enemy, provisions, +ammunition and cannon had to be transported by land, through swamps +and along forest paths which could be traced only by blazed trees, and +traversed only when the ground was frozen. He therefore occupied his +time in sending out detachments and hurrying up his forces, in order +to be ready to advance when the frozen ground, and especially the ice +along the margin of the lake would facilitate the transportation of +his guns and munitions of war.</p> + +<p>General Tupper made two attempts, first from Fort <span class="pagenum"><a id="page178" name="page178"></a>(p. 178)</span> Defiance +and afterwards from Fort McArthur, to dislodge the Indians at the +Rapids, but failed in both. Another detachment under Col. Campbell +left Franklintown in December, to attack the Indian villages on the +Missisineway, which were reached on the 18th, and four out of five +destroyed.</p> + +<p>At length the column which formed the right of this army, nominally of +ten thousand men, having arrived at Sandusky with the park of +artillery, Gen. Harrison gave the order for the whole to move forward. +In three divisions, one from Sandusky, one from Fort McArthur, and the +third under General Winchester, from Fort Defiance, were to advance to +the Rapids of the Maumee, there take in their supply of ordnance and +provisions, and proceed at once to invest Malden. Harrison, commanding +the central division, started on the 31st of December. Gen. +Winchester, who had moved six miles from Fort Defiance, to Camp No. 3, +did not commence his march till the 8th of January. It was a cold +bitter day and the snow lay over two feet deep in the forest when that +doomed column, one thousand strong, set out for the Rapids, +twenty-seven miles distant. The troops, most of whom were Kentuckians, +were brave and hardy, and cheerfully harnessing themselves to sledges +dragged their baggage through the deep snow. Gen. Winchester was +ordered to fortify himself at the Rapids and wait the arrival of the +other <span class="pagenum"><a id="page179" name="page179"></a>(p. 179)</span> troops. But three days after he reached the place, +while constructing huts to receive the supplies on the way, and sleds +for their transportation to Malden, he received an urgent request from +the inhabitants of Frenchtown, a small settlement nearly forty miles +distant, on the River Raisin, to come to their rescue. Feeling, +however, the importance of fulfilling his orders, he gave the +messengers no encouragement. But another express on the next day, and +a third the day after, telling him that the whole settlement was +threatened with massacre by the Indians—that only a small force of +the enemy held possession of the place, and by a prompt answer to +their prayer the ruin of all would be prevented, he called a council +of war. Col. Allen, and other gallant officers, pleaded the cause of +the helpless settlers with all the eloquence of true sympathy. They +declared that the chief object of the expedition was to protect the +frontiers from the merciless Indians, and that brave men spurned +danger when the prayers of women and children were sounding in their +ears. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 20.</span> Such appeals prevailed over the cooler and +safer arguments drawn from the necessity of not damaging the success +of the whole campaign by perilling one of the wings of the advancing +army, and a detachment of five hundred men, under Colonel Lewis was +sent forward to Presque Isle, there to await the arrival of the main +column. But this <span class="pagenum"><a id="page180" name="page180"></a>(p. 180)</span> officer hearing at the latter place that an +advance party of French and Indians were already in possession of +Frenchtown, hurried forward, and the next day in the afternoon arrived +on the banks of the stream opposite the village. The river being +frozen, he immediately ordered the charge to be sounded. The column +advanced steadily across on the ice, and entering the village under a +heavy fire of the British, forced them from their position and soon +drove them to the woods, when darkness closed the combat. Two days +after, General Winchester arrived with a reinforcement of two hundred +and fifty men. He had sent a dispatch to Gen. Harrison, then on the +Lower Sandusky, announcing his departure from his orders, and asking +for reinforcements. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 23.</span> The latter sent forward a +detachment of three hundred, and followed himself the same day with a +corps of three hundred and sixty men. The assistance, however, came +too late, for on the day before they started, the fate of Gen. +Winchester's army was sealed. Gen. Proctor, at Malden, only eighteen +miles distant, hearing of Col. Lewis' advance on Frenchtown, hurried +down with about 1500 men and six pieces of artillery to attack him. +The latter had stationed the main force behind pickets, in the form of +a half circle, but the two hundred and fifty men who had arrived with +Gen. Winchester were, through some strange fatuity, placed outside, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page181" name="page181"></a>(p. 181)</span> four hundred yards distant, and wholly uncovered. Just as +the drums beat the morning reveillé, Proctor advanced to the assault. +The troops came on steadily till within range of the Kentucky rifles, +when they were met by such a fierce and deadly fire that they wheeled +and fled in confusion.</p> + +<p>But, while the attack in front was thus repulsed, that on the +unprotected left wing of two hundred and fifty men was, in a few +minutes, completely successful. Such a preposterous position, as that +to to which it was assigned, no sane man could dream of holding. +Outflanked, and almost surrounded by yelling Indians, its danger was +perceived when too late to remedy it. General Winchester and Colonel +Lewis, however, each with a detachment of fifty men, rushed forward to +the rescue, but they only swelled the disaster. Their followers were +cut down and tomahawked, and they themselves captured, and taken to +Proctor. The latter had paused after his attack on the pickets, for +nearly one-fourth of the regular troops had fallen in that one +assault, and he hesitated about exposing himself again to the deadly +fire of Kentucky rifles. It is very doubtful whether he would have +ventured on a second attack. He, however, represented to General +Winchester, that he could easily set the town on fire, and reduce the +garrison; but, in that case, he would not guarantee the lives of the +soldiers, or the inhabitants <span class="pagenum"><a id="page182" name="page182"></a>(p. 182)</span> from the barbarity of the +Indians. General Winchester fully believing that the five hundred men, +who still gazed undauntedly on the foe, must be sacrificed, agreed to +a capitulation; and an officer was sent with a flag to Major Madison, +on whom the command had devolved, informing him of the unconditional +surrender of all the troops by his superior officer. The brave major, +who did not at all look upon himself and gallant band as vanquished +men, indignantly refused to obey so unworthy a summons, even from his +rightful commander, and coolly told the officer, "he should do no such +thing; nay, would not surrender at all, unless the side arms of the +officers would be restored to them at Amhertsburg, the wounded +promptly and securely transported to that post, and a guard sufficient +for their safety assigned them."<a id="footnotetag35" name="footnotetag35"></a><a href="#footnote35" title="Go to footnote 35"><span class="smaller">[35]</span></a> If the British commander refused +to grant these terms, he and his men would fight to the last, and, if +necessary, die with their arms in their hands. This proposition, to +which any officer fit to wear a sword would have cheerfully accepted, +Proctor at first rejected, and yielded at last only because no other +terms would be listened to. But no sooner did the garrison surrender, +than in direct violation of the conditions, he gave unbridled license +to the soldiers and Indians. The latter were allowed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page183" name="page183"></a>(p. 183)</span> to +scalp and mutilate the dead and wounded, whose bleeding corpses +crimsoned the snow on every side. Proctor, fearing the approach of +Harrison, made all haste to depart, and the next night reached +Amhertsburg with the prisoners, who were there crowded into a "small +and muddy wood yard, and exposed throughout the night to a cold and +constant rain, without tents or blankets, and with only fire enough to +keep them from freezing." He had brutally left the dead at French town +unburied, and sixty of the wounded, who were too feeble to march, +unprotected. By a great stretch of kindness, he allowed two American +surgeons to remain and take care of them. He had promised to send +sleds the next day, to convey them to Malden. These never arrived; +but, instead, there came a party of his Indian allies, who tomahawked +a portion of the wounded, and then set fire to the houses, consuming +the dead and dying together, and responding to the shrieks of the +suffering victims with yells and savage laughter. Captain Hart, a +relative of Henry Clay, was among the number, as was also a member of +Congress. Hart, and indeed a large majority of them, belonged to the +most respectable families of Kentucky. One officer was scalped in +presence of his friends, and with the blood streaming down his pallid +features, rose on his knees, and silently and most piteously gazed on +their faces. While in this position, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page184" name="page184"></a>(p. 184)</span> an Indian boy was told +by his father to tomahawk him. The unskilful stripling struck again +and again, only producing faint groans from the sufferer, till at +length the father, in showing how a blow should be planted, ended the +tragedy. The secretary of General Winchester was shot while on +horseback, and scalped, and his body stripped and cast into the road. +The dead, to the number of two hundred, were left unburied; and, for a +long time after, hogs and dogs were seen devouring the bodies, and +running about crunching human skulls and arms in their teeth. Most of +these facts were sworn to before a justice of the peace, and forwarded +by Judge Woodward, of the supreme court of Michigan, to Colonel +Proctor, with the remark, "The truth will undoubtedly eventually +appear, and that unfortunate day must meet the steady and impartial +eye of history." General Harrison was at the Rapids, hurrying on the +reinforcements, when he heard of the catastrophe. A few days after, he +dispatched Dr. M'Kechen with a flag of truce to the river Raisin, to +pass thence, if possible, to Malden. Seized by the Indians and stript, +he was at length taken to Captain Elliot, who kindly forwarded him to +Colonel Proctor. The latter denied his mission, declaring he was a +spy, and would not recognize him, in his official character, till the +fifth of February. Three weeks after, he was accused of carrying on a +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page185" name="page185"></a>(p. 185)</span> secret correspondence with the Americans, and without the +form of a trial thrown into a filthy dungeon below the surface of the +ground, where he lay for a whole month, and was finally liberated, +only to carry the seeds of disease, implanted by this brutal +treatment, to his grave.</p> + +<p>When the news of this horrid massacre reached Kentucky, the State was +filled with mourning, for many of her noblest sons had fallen victims +to the savage. The Governor and his suite were in the theatre at the +time the disastrous tidings arrived in Frankfort. The play was +immediately stopped, the building deserted, and the next morning a +funereal sadness rested on the town, and the voice of +lamentation—like that which went up from Egypt when the first born of +every house was slain—arose from almost every dwelling. But amid it +all there was a smothered cry for vengeance, which never ceased +ringing over the State, until it was hushed in the shout of victory +that rose from the battle-field of the Thames.</p> + +<p>Language has no epithets sufficiently opprobrious with which to stamp +this atrocious deed of Colonel Proctor. It combines all the inhuman +elements necessary to form a perfect monster—deceit, treachery, +falsehood, murder, and that refinement of cruelty which looks with +derision on slow torture, and the brutality which can insult the dead. +The <span class="pagenum"><a id="page186" name="page186"></a>(p. 186)</span> very apologies which his countrymen made for him only +blackened his character. It was said that the prisoners surrendered at +discretion, and he never pledged his word for their protection—a +falsehood as afterwards fully proved by the prisoners, and a +statement, whether true or false, utterly useless, only to make the +whole transaction complete and perfect in every part. No man who was +sufficiently acquainted with honor to simulate it successfully, would +have attempted to cover an act so damning with such an excuse. The +annals of civilized warfare present no instance of the massacre and +torture of troops who have surrendered themselves prisoners of war on +a fair battle-field. An act like this, committed by a British officer +on the plains of Europe, sustained only by such an apology, would cost +him his head. Absolute inability, on the part of a commander to +protect his captives, is the only excuse a <i>man</i> would ever offer. +This Proctor had not, for his allies were under his control and he +knew it. At all events he never attempted to save the prisoners. No +guard was left over the wounded, as he had stipulated to do—no +sleighs were sent back the next morning to fetch them to Fort Malden, +as promised—no effort whatever made in their behalf. He never +designed to keep his promises or fulfil his engagements—he had +abandoned the dead and wounded at Frenchtown to his savage allies, as +their <span class="pagenum"><a id="page187" name="page187"></a>(p. 187)</span> part of the reward. Our troops frequently employed +Indian tribes, but no such atrocities were ever suffered to sully the +American flag. The whole transaction, from first to last, is black as +night. His deceit, treachery, cruelty to officers and men, neglect of +the dead and abandonment of the wounded to worse than death—his after +falsehood, meanness and cupidity are all natural and necessary parts +to the formation of a thoroughly base and brutal man. He was a +disgrace to his profession, a disgrace to the army and to the nation +which rewarded him for this act with promotion. His memory shall be +kept fresh while the western hemisphere endures, and the transaction +hold a prominent place in the list of dark deeds that stand recorded +against the English name. Just a month from this date three American +seamen went down in the Peacock, while nobly struggling to save the +prisoners. A few years before, some Turkish captives, in Egypt, being +paroled by Napoleon, were afterwards retaken in a desperate battle and +sentenced by a council of war to be shot. Although they had forfeited +their lives by the laws of all civilized nations, in thus breaking +their parole, and proved by their conduct that a second pardon would +simply be sending them as a reinforcement to the enemy, and though +Bonaparte only carried into execution the decision of a council of +war, yet for this act of his, English historians to this day heap +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page188" name="page188"></a>(p. 188)</span> upon him the epithets of murderer and monster; while not the +mere murder, which would have been comparative kindness, but the +abandonment of American prisoners to slow torture by fire and the +scalping knife, was rewarded with promotion in the army.</p> + +<p>The difficulties which our volunteers and new levies unaccustomed to +such hardships, had to contend with on the western frontier, may be +gathered from the march of the three hundred men dispatched to the aid +of Winchester, but who did not arrive till after the massacre. +Starting with twenty pieces of artillery, in a heavy snow storm, they +boldly pierced the wilderness, but made the first day only a short +march. The next day, a courier arrived toiling through snow and mud, +ordering the artillery to advance with all speed. But under the weight +of the heavy guns, the wheels sunk to their axles with every slow +revolution, and it was only by dint of great effort, they were got on +at all. After a weary day's march, they encamped around a blazing +fire, and were just making their scanty meal, when a messenger entered +the camp, stating, that Harrison had retreated from the Rapids. A +portion immediately resolved to push on to his help, and snatching a +few hours of repose, they, at two o'clock in the morning, tumbled up +from their couch of snow, and falling into marching order, hurried +forward through the gloom. To add to their discomfort and sufferings, +a January <span class="pagenum"><a id="page189" name="page189"></a>(p. 189)</span> rain-storm had set in, making the whole surface +one yielding mass, into which they sunk sometimes to their waists. +Drenched to the skin with the pelting rain, stumbling and falling at +almost every step in the dissolving snow, they kept on, and at length +reached the black swamp, near Portage river. This was four miles +across, and was covered with a broad sheet of water as far as the eye +could reach. Out of the untroubled surface rose the trunks of sickly +looking and decayed trees, presenting amid the black and driving rain, +a spectacle sufficient to chill and benumb the most manly heart. Ice +was beneath, but of its strength, or of the depth below, no one could +tell. The soldiers, however, hurried forward into the water, and +though the rotten, treacherous ice under their feet would often give +way, letting them down, till their farther descent was arrested by +their arms; they kept intrepidly on, till, at length, the last mile +was won, and weary and staggering they emerged on the farther side. +Although on the whole route, there were but eight miles where they did +not sink below the knee, and often to the middle, this gallant band +accomplished thirty miles by night fall. Weary, dispirited and +benumbed, they then encamped, and without an axe, cooking utensils, or +a tent to cover them, sat down on logs, and having kindled a feeble +fire made their meagre repast. They then placed two <span class="pagenum"><a id="page190" name="page190"></a>(p. 190)</span> logs +together to keep them from the melting snow, and lay in rows across +them, exposed to the pitiless storm. Next morning, they continued +their march, and effected a junction with the army.</p> + +<p>To such hardships and exposures were the sons of gentlemen and farmers +subjected, in those disheartening northern campaigns which ended only +in failure.</p> + +<p>While such scenes were transpiring in the north, there occurred one of +those events which form the romance and poetry of the American +wilderness. At this time, Michigan was an unbroken forest, with the +exception of Detroit, and a few settlements along the line of the +lakes, containing in all, but five or six thousand inhabitants. Ohio +had but 300,000, while 2,000 Indians still held their lands within its +limits. Thirteen thousand constituted the entire white population of +Illinois. These states, which now number by millions, were then almost +wholly unknown, except on the borders of the lakes and the Ohio river. +All through the interior, numerous tribes of Indians roamed +undisturbed, and hung, in black and threatening war clouds, around the +borders of civilization. The English had succeeded in exciting many of +these to hostilities against the settlers. Their efforts were aided in +a masterly manner by Tecumseh, a Shawnee warrior, who had imbibed a +bitter, undying hostility to the Americans. Brave, temperate, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page191" name="page191"></a>(p. 191)</span> scorning a lie, and despising the spoils of war, he fought +to restore his race to their ancient rights and power. Unable to cope +with the Americans alone, he gladly availed himself of our declaration +of war to form an alliance with the British. Lifted by native genius +above the vices of savages, he also exhibited a greatness of +intellect, and loftiness of character, which, in civilized life, would +have led to the highest renown. Despising the petty rivalries of +tribes and chiefs, he became absorbed in the grand idea of uniting all +the Indian clans in one great and desperate struggle for mastery with +the whites. He had succeeded in carrying out his scheme, to a great +extent, throughout the North and West. Of erect, athletic frame, +noble, commanding appearance, with the air of a king, and the +eloquence of a Demosthenes when rousing the Greeks to arms against +Philip, he went from tribe to tribe electrifying them with his +appeals, and rousing them to madness by his fiery denunciations +against their oppressors. His brother, the prophet, accompanied +him,—a dark, subtle, cunning impostor, to whose tricks Tecumseh +submitted for awhile, because they foiled the hatred and deceit of +rival chiefs. As he arose before his savage audiences, his imposing +manner created a feeling of awe; but when he kindled with his great +subject, he seemed like one inspired. His eye flashed fire, his +swarthy bosom heaved and swelled <span class="pagenum"><a id="page192" name="page192"></a>(p. 192)</span> with imprisoned passion, +his whole form dilated with excitement, and his strong untutored soul +poured itself forth in eloquence, wild, headlong, and resistless, as +the mountain torrent. Thoughts, imagery leaped from his lips in such +life and vividness that the stoicism of the Indian vanished before +them, and his statue-like face gleamed with passion. The people he +always carried with him; but the chiefs, who feared his power over +their followers, often thwarted his plans. When not addressing the +clans, he was reserved, cold, and haughty. His withering sarcasm, when +Proctor proposed to retreat from Malden; his reply to the interpreter, +who offering him a chair in the presence of Harrison, said, "Your +father wishes you to be seated;" "My father! the sun is my father, and +the earth my mother," as he stretched himself proudly on the ground, +reveal a nature conscious of its greatness, and scorning the +distinctions which the white man arrogated to himself.</p> + +<p>After passing through the northern tribes, he took his brother, and +went south to the Creeks, to complete the plan of a general alliance. +The journey of nearly a thousand miles through the wilderness, of +these two brothers,—the discussion of their deep-laid scheme at night +around their camp-fire,—the day-dreams of Tecumseh, as gorgeous as +ever flitted before the imagination of a Cæsar,—the savage empire +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page193" name="page193"></a>(p. 193)</span> destined to rise under his hand, and the greatness he would +restore to his despised race, would make a grand epic. Pathless +mountains and gloomy swamps were traversed; deep rivers swam, and +weariness and toil endured, not for spoils or revenge, but to carry +out a great idea. There is a rude, Tuscan grandeur about him, as he +thus moves through the western wilderness impelled by a high +purpose,—a barbaric splendor thrown about even the merciless measures +he means to adopt, by the great moral scheme to which they are to be +subject. His combinations exhibited the consummate general. While +England occupied us along the sea-coast, he determined to sweep in one +vast semi-circle from Michilimackinac to Florida upon the scattered +settlements. Fires were to be kindled North and South, and West, to +burn towards the centre, while civilized warfare should desolate the +eastern slope of the Alleghanies. Tecumseh had seen Hull surrender, +and knew that the British had been victorious all along the frontier. +His prospects were brightening, and with this glorious news to back +his burning eloquence, he had no doubt of exciting the Southern tribes +to war. The Chickasaws and Choctaws in Mississippi, numbered over +thirty thousand; the Creeks twenty-five thousand, while south of them +dwelt the large and warlike tribe of the Seminoles. His chief mission +was to the Creeks, from whom, on <span class="pagenum"><a id="page194" name="page194"></a>(p. 194)</span> his mother's side, he was +descended. This powerful clan stretched from the southern borders of +Tennessee nearly to Florida. The sun in his course looked on no +fairer, richer land than the country they held. Some of them had +learned the arts of civilization, and, hitherto, had evinced a +friendly disposition towards the whites. But British influence working +through the Spanish authorities in Florida, had already prepared them +for Tecumseh's visit. An alliance, offensive and defensive, had been +formed between England and Spain; and the armies of the former were +then in the Peninsula, endeavoring to wrest the throne from Bonaparte. +The latter, therefore, was bound to assist her ally on this continent, +and so lent her aid in exciting the Southern Indians to hostility.</p> + +<p>The year before, General Wilkinson had been dispatched to take +possession of a corner of Louisiana, still claimed by the Spanish. He +advanced on Mobile, and seized without opposition the old fort of +Condé, built in the time of Louis the XIV. He here found abundant +evidence of the machinations of the Spanish and English. Runners had +been sent to the Seminoles and Creeks offering arms and bribes, if +they would attack the frontier settlements. But for this, Tecumseh, +with all his eloquence, might have failed. Co-operating with the +British agents in Florida, as he had done with Brock and Proctor +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page195" name="page195"></a>(p. 195)</span> in Canada, he at length saw his cherished scheme about to be +fulfilled. The old and more peaceful,—those who had settled in +well-built towns, with schools, and flocks, and farms about +them,—opposed the war which would devastate their land, and drive +them back to barbarism. But the eloquence of Tecumseh, as he spoke of +the multiplied wrongs of the Indians, and their humiliation, described +the glories to be won, and painted in glowing colors the victories he +had gained in the North, kindled into a blaze the warlike feelings of +the young; and soon ominous tidings came from the bosom of the +wilderness that stretched along the Coosa and Talapoosa rivers. Having +kindled the flames, he again turned his footsteps northward.</p> + +<p>Anxiety and alarm soon spread among the white settlers, and the +scattered families sought shelter in the nearest forts. Twenty-four +had thus congregated at Fort Mimms, a mere block-house, situated on +the Alabama, near the junction of the Tombigbee. It was garrisoned by +a hundred and forty men, commanded by Major Beasely, and, with proper +care, could have resisted the attacks of the savages. But the rumors +of a rising among the Indians were discredited. A negro who stated he +had seen them in the vicinity, was chastised for spreading a false +alarm. The night preceding the massacre, the dogs growled and barked, +showing that they scented Indians in the air. But all these warnings +were unheeded, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page196" name="page196"></a>(p. 196)</span> when suddenly, in broad midday, the savages, +some seven hundred strong, made their appearance before the fort, and +within thirty feet of it, before they were discovered. The gate was +open, and with one terrific yell they dashed through into the outer +enclosure, driving the panic-stricken soldiers into the houses within. +Mounting these they set them on fire, and shot down every soul that +attempted to escape. Seeing, at once, their inevitable doom, the +soldiers fought with the energy of despair. Rushing madly on their +destroyers, they gave blow for blow, and laid sixty of them around the +burning buildings before they were completely overpowered. At last, a +yell of savage triumph rose over the crackling of flames, and cries +and shrieks of terrified women and children. Then followed a scene +which may not be described. The wholesale butchery,—the ghastly +spectacle of nearly three hundred mutilated bodies, hewed and hacked +into fragments, were nothing to the inhuman indignities perpetrated on +the women. Children were ripped from the maternal womb, and swung as +war-clubs against the heads of the mothers, and all those horrible +excesses committed, which seem the offspring of demons.</p> + +<p>When Tecumseh reached again the British camp in Canada, he found the +American army at fort Meigs. Harrison, after Winchester's defeat, +instead of boldly pushing on in pursuit, had retreated. He was a brave +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page197" name="page197"></a>(p. 197)</span> general, but lacked the energy and promptness necessary to +an efficient commander. Thus far these qualities seemed confined +solely to the English officers, leaving to ours the single one of +caution.</p> + +<p>Fort Meigs was erected on the Maumee, just above where it debouches +into Lake Erie. Here the army remained inactive, serving only as a +barrier to the Indians, who otherwise would have fallen on the Ohio +settlements, till the latter part of April. General Harrison employed +the winter in getting reinforcements from Ohio and Kentucky, and did +not reach the fort till the first of the month.</p> + +<p>In the mean time, Proctor and Tecumseh had organized a large force for +its reduction. On the twenty-third, the sentinel on watch reported +that the boats of the enemy, in great numbers, were entering the mouth +of the river. The fort, at this time, contained about a thousand men, +and was well supplied with every thing necessary for a long and stout +defence, while twelve hundred Kentuckians, under General Clay, were +marching to its relief.</p> + +<p>Finding the fortifications too strong to be carried by assault, +Proctor sat down before them in regular siege. The light troops and +Indians were thrown across the river, and heavy batteries erected on +the left bank. A well-directed cannonade from the fort so annoyed the +besiegers, that they were compelled to perform most of their work by +night. The garrison, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page198" name="page198"></a>(p. 198)</span> at first, suffered very little, except +from scarcity of water. The well in the fort having dried up, they +were compelled to draw their supply from the river. But the men +detailed for this purpose, were constantly picked off by skulking +Indians, who becoming emboldened by success gradually drew closer +around the besieged; and climbing into tall trees, and concealing +themselves in the thick foliage, rained their balls into the works. On +the first of May, Proctor having completed his batteries, opened his +fire. He sent, also, a summons to surrender, which was scornfully +rejected by Harrison, who maintained a brisk cannonade for four days, +when the welcome intelligence was received, that Clay with his twelve +hundred Kentuckians was close at hand. Harrison determined, at once, +to raise the siege, and dispatched a messenger to him, to land eight +hundred men on the left bank of the river, and carry the batteries +erected there by storm, and spike the guns; while the remaining four +hundred should keep down the right bank towards the batteries, against +which he would make a sortie from the fort. The eight hundred were +placed under Colonel Dudley, who crossing the river in good order, +advanced fiercely on the batteries and swept them. Flushed with the +easy victory, and burning to revenge their comrades massacred at river +Raisin, the men refused to halt and spike the guns, but drove +furiously on <span class="pagenum"><a id="page199" name="page199"></a>(p. 199)</span> after the flying troops, or turned aside to +fight the Indians, who clung to the forest. In the mean time, Proctor, +aroused by this unexpected onset, hastened up from his camp a mile and +a half below with reinforcements, and rallied the fugitives. At this +critical moment, Tecumseh also joined him, with a large body of +Indians. These advancing against the disordered Kentuckians, drove +them back on the river. The latter fought bravely, but discipline and +numbers told too heavily against them, and but one hundred and fifty +of these gallant, but imprudent men reached the farther bank in +safety. Colonel Dudley while struggling nobly to repair the error they +had committed in refusing to obey his orders, fell mortally wounded. +The small, but disciplined band of three hundred and fifty, led by +Colonel Miller, of the nineteenth infantry, against the batteries on +the right bank, carried them with the bayonet, and spiking the guns +returned with forty-two prisoners.</p> + +<p>The two succeeding days, the armies remained inactive. In the mean +time, the Indians began to return home in large numbers; and Proctor +deserted by his savage allies, resolved to abandon the siege. +Embarking his heavy ordnance and stores under a galling fire from the +fort, he made a hasty and disorderly retreat down the river. The loss +of the Americans during the siege, was two hundred and seventy +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page200" name="page200"></a>(p. 200)</span> men killed and wounded, exclusive of the destruction of a +large portion of Clay's command. That of the British was much less, so +that although the attack on the fort had failed, the Americans were by +far the heaviest sufferers.</p> + +<p>Harrison leaving the fort in command of Colonel Clay, repaired to +Franklinton, the place appointed for the rendezvous of the regiments +newly raised in Ohio and Kentucky. In the mean time, a deputation of +all the friendly Indian tribes in Ohio waited on him, offering their +services in the approaching conflict on the borders. They were +accepted on the conditions, they should not massacre their prisoners, +or wage war against women and children.</p> + +<p>After Harrison's departure, Proctor again appeared before Fort Meigs. +But finding it well garrisoned, he did not attempt another attack; but +taking five hundred regulars and a horde of Indians, seven hundred in +number, suddenly appeared before Fort Stephenson in Lower Sandusky. +<span class="sidenote">Aug. 1.</span> Major Croghan, a young man only twenty-one years +of age, held the post, with but a hundred and sixty men. He had only +one cannon, a six pounder, while the fortifications having been +hastily constructed, were not strong enough to resist artillery. +Knowing this, and the smallness of Croghan's force, Harrison had +previously ordered him to destroy the works, and retire on the +approach of the enemy. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page201" name="page201"></a>(p. 201)</span> But this was impossible, for Proctor +took measures at once to cut off his retreat. When this was +accomplished, he sent a flag demanding the immediate surrender of the +place, saying, if the garrison resisted, they would be given up to +massacre. This mere stripling, not old enough to be frightened, like +Hull and Wilkinson, coolly replied, that when he got possession of the +fort, there would be none left to massacre. River Raisin was fresh in +his memory, and lay not far off; but neither the fear of Indian +barbarities, nor the dark array, ten times his number, closing +steadily upon him, could shake his gallant young heart. He was such +stuff as heroes are made of.</p> + +<p>This was on Sunday evening, and immediately after receiving the bold +answer of Croghan, Proctor opened on the fort from his gun boats, and +a howitzer on shore. The cannonading was kept up all night, lighting +up the forest scenery with its fire, and knocking loudly on that +feeble fort for admission. At day break, Croghan saw that the enemy +had planted three sixes within two hundred and fifty yards of the +fort. Against this battery, he could reply with only his single gun, +whose lonely report seemed a burlesque on the whole affair. Finding +that Proctor concentrated his fire against the north-western angle, he +strengthened it with bags of flour and sand. The firing was kept up +till late in the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page202" name="page202"></a>(p. 202)</span> afternoon, when seeing that but little +impression was made on the works, Proctor resolved to carry them by +storm, and a column, five hundred strong, was sent against them. With +undaunted heart, young Croghan saw it approach, while his little band, +proud of their heroic leader, closed firmly around him, swearing to +stand by him to the last. Some time previously, a ditch six feet deep +and nine feet wide had been dug in front of the works, and the six +pounder, loaded with slugs and grape, was now placed, so as to rake +that part of it where it was conjectured the enemy would cross. +Colonel Short commanded the storming column, which he led swiftly +forward to the assault. As it came within range, a well directed +volley of musketry staggered it for a moment, but Colonel Short +rallying them, leaped first into the ditch, crying out, "Give the d—d +Yankees no quarter." In a moment, the ditch was red with scarlet +uniforms. At that instant, the six pounder was fired. A wild shriek +followed, and when the smoke cleared away, that section of the column +which had entered the ditch lay stretched on the bottom, with their +leader among them. The remainder started back aghast at such sudden +and swift destruction, but being rallied they again advanced, only to +be swept away. All efforts to rally them the third time, were +fruitless; they fled first to the woods, and then to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page203" name="page203"></a>(p. 203)</span> their +boats, and next morning before daybreak disappeared altogether. This +garrison of striplings had behaved nobly, and notwithstanding the +brutal order of the British commander to give no quarter, exhibited +that humanity without which bravery is not a virtue. Moved with pity +at the groans and prayers for help from those who lay wounded in the +ditch, they, not daring to expose themselves outside in presence of +the enemy, handed over the pickets during the night, jugs, and pails +of water to allay the fever of thirst; and made a hole through which +they pulled with kindly tenderness many of the wounded, and carried +them to the surgeon. These men knew that, if the attack had proved +successful, not one would have been left to tell how they fought, or +how they fell, yet this consciousness did not deaden, for a moment, +the emotions of pity. This generosity and kindness have always +characterized the American soldier, from the commencement of our +national existence. The merciless warfare inflicted by England through +the savages during the revolution, could not make him forget his +humanity; nor the haughty, insulting conduct of English officers in +this second war, force him to throw aside his kind and generous +feelings.</p> + +<p>This attack closed, for the time, the efforts of Proctor to get +possession of our forts, and he retired with his savage allies to +Detroit. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page204" name="page204"></a>(p. 204)</span> Our whole western frontier was now in a most +deplorable condition. Instead of carrying the war into the enemy's +country, we had been unable to protect our own borders. +Notwithstanding the repulse at Fort Meigs, the savages still hung +around our settlements, making frequent and successful dashes upon +them; while the powerful tribe of the Osages lying west of the +Mississippi, threatened to come into Tecumseh's grand scheme, for the +extermination of the whites. Forts Madison and Mason were evacuated, +leaving Fort Howard, only forty miles above St. Louis, our most +northern post on the Mississippi.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page205" name="page205"></a>(p. 205)</span> CHAPTER VIII.</h2> + +<p class="resume">Chauncey ordered to Lake Erie to build a fleet — A plan of + the campaign — Woolsey — Attack on York — Death of + General Pike — His character — Capture of Fort George — + Gallantry of Scott — Repulse of the British at Sackett's + Harbor by General Brown — Dearborn pursues Vincent — Night + attack on the American encampment — Generals Winder and + Chandler taken prisoners — Retreat of the army — + Reinforced by General Lewis — Dearborn at Fort George — + Defeat of Colonel Bœstler at Beaver Dams — Attack on + Black Rock — Dearborn withdrawn from the command of the + northern army.</p> + +<p>While Harrison was pushing forward his winter campaign, Dearborn +remained quietly in winter quarters, but soon as he saw the river St. +Lawrence clear of ice, he prepared to renew his invasion of Canada. +Armstrong having resigned the post of minister to France, was +appointed Secretary of War in place of Eustis. Being an officer of +distinction, it was thought he would throw more energy into the war +department, than his predecessor. His plan of the campaign was simple, +and if prosecuted with energy, promised success. Dearborn was to +concentrate his forces at the mouth of the Niagara river, and fall +successively on Kingston, York, and Fort George, thus cutting off all +communication between Montreal and Upper Canada. To carry this out +successfully, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page206" name="page206"></a>(p. 206)</span> naval superiority on the lake, for the safe +transmission of troops and ordnance, was indispensable. From the +commencement of the war, the only vessel of any pretension which the +United States had on lake Ontario was the Oneida, of sixteen guns, +commanded by Lieutenant, afterwards Commodore Woolsey. This gallant +officer managed to preserve his ship, notwithstanding the great +efforts of the enemy to get possession of it, beating off, in one +instance, while lying in Sackett's Harbor, six British armed vessels. +At this time, a vast forest fringed the southern shore of Ontario. +With the exception of here and there a clearing, Sackett's Harbor +containing some half a dozen miserable houses, and Oswego not much +larger, were the only settlements on the American side, while strong +forts and old towns lined the Canada shore. This large body of water, +the control of which was of such vast consequence to the protection of +New York state, could be reached from the Hudson, two hundred miles +distant, only by highways nearly impassable, except in midsummer and +winter. But, whatever difficulties might attend the attempt to build +and man vessels of war on those remote waters, it was evident that +until it was made, all movements against Canada must prove abortive. +Captain Isaac Chauncey was, therefore, ordered thither the summer +previous, to take command, and build and equip <span class="pagenum"><a id="page207" name="page207"></a>(p. 207)</span> vessels. +<span class="sidenote">1812.</span> He arrived in Sackett's Harbor in October, with +forty carpenters, and a hundred officers and seamen. To control the +lake in the mean time, he purchased and armed several American +schooners. With these, he on the eighth of November set sail, and soon +after chased the Royal George under the guns of the fort at Kingston, +and there maintained a spirited contest for half an hour. After +various skirmishes with the enemy, he at length returned to Sackett's +Harbor, and spent the winter in building vessels. <span class="sidenote">Nov. 26.</span> +In the mean time, the Madison, of twenty-four guns, had been completed +and launched. Nine weeks before, her hull and spars were growing in +the forest. By spring, when Dearborn was ready to commence operations, +Chauncey had a snug little fleet under his command, composed of the +Madison, Oneida, and eleven armed schooners.</p> + +<p>It having been ascertained that three British vessels were getting +ready for sea at York, it was resolved to destroy them. The original +plan, therefore, of commencing the campaign by an attack on Kingston, +was by the recommendation of Chauncey changed, and the former place +designated as the first point of attack.</p> + +<p>This fleet of thirteen sail could carry but 1700 men. With these +Chauncey, at length, set sail, and on the twenty-fifth of April, +anchored off York. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page208" name="page208"></a>(p. 208)</span> Although it blew a gale from the +eastward, the boats were hoisted out, and the landing of the troops +under General Pike was commenced. The wind carried the boats west of +the place designated, which was an open field, to a thickly wooded +shore, filled with Indians and sharp shooters. Major Forsythe with a +corps of rifles, in two batteaux, first approached the shore. Assailed +by a shower of balls, he commanded the rowers to rest on their oars +and return the fire. General Pike, who was standing on the deck of his +vessel, no sooner saw this pause, than he exclaimed to his staff with +an oath, "I can't stand here any longer; come, jump into the boat." +Ordering the infantry to follow at once, he leaped into a boat, and +with his staff was quickly rowed into the hottest of the fire. Moving +steadily forward amid the enemy's balls, he landed a little distance +from Forsythe. The advance boats containing the infantry reaching the +shore at the same time, he put himself at the head of the first +platoon he met, and ordered the whole to mount the bank and charge. +Breasting the volleys that met them, the Americans with loud cheers +scaled the bank, and routed the enemy. At that moment, the sound of +Forsythe's bugles was heard ringing through the forest. This completed +the panic, and the frightened savages, with a loud yell, fled in all +directions. The landing of the remaining troops, under cover of +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page209" name="page209"></a>(p. 209)</span> the well directed fire of Chauncey's vessels, was +successfully made. Captains Scott and Young led the van, and with the +fifteenth regiment, under command of Major King, covered themselves +with honor. The troops were then formed in sections, and passing +through the woods, advanced towards the fort. The bridges having been +destroyed over the streams that intersected the road, only one field +piece and a howitzer could be carried forward to protect the head of +the column, which at length came under the fire of a battery of +twenty-four pounders. Captain Walworth, of the sixteenth, was ordered +to advance with trailed bayonets at the charge step, and storm this +battery. Moving rapidly across the intervening space, this gallant +company approached to within a short distance of the guns, when at the +word, "recover charge," the enemy deserted their pieces and fled. The +column then continued to move on up a gentle ascent, and soon silenced +the remaining battery, and took possession of the works. But just at +this moment, when a flag of surrender was momentarily expected, a +magazine containing five hundred barrels of powder, exploded with +terrific violence. Huge stones, fragments of shivered timber, and +blackened corpses were hurled heavenward together, and came back in a +murderous shower on the victorious column. Forty of the enemy, and +more than two hundred Americans were killed or wounded by <span class="pagenum"><a id="page210" name="page210"></a>(p. 210)</span> +the explosion. The army was stunned for a moment, but the band +striking up Yankee Doodle, the rent column closed up with a shout, and +in five minutes was ready to charge. General Pike at the time of the +explosion was sitting on the stump of a tree, whither he had just +removed a wounded British soldier. Crushed by the falling fragments, +he together with a British sergeant, who had been taken prisoner, and +Captain Nicholson, was mortally wounded. Turning to his aid, he +exclaimed, "I am mortally wounded." As the surgeons and aid were +bearing him from the field, he heard the loud huzzas of his troops. +Turning to one of his sergeants, he with an anxious look mutely +inquired what it meant. The officer replied, "<i>The British Union Jack +is coming down and the stars are going up.</i>" The dying hero heaved a +sigh, and smiled even amid his agony. He was carried on board the +commodore's ship, and the last act of his life was to make a sign, +that the British flag which had been brought to him should be placed +under his head.</p> + +<a id="img003" name="img003"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img003.jpg" width="500" height="296" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">DEATH OF PIKE.</p> +</div> + +<p>Thus fell one of the noblest officers in the army. Kind, humane, the +soul of honor and of bravery, he was made after the model of the +knights of old. His father had fought in the war of the Revolution, +and though too old to serve, was still an officer in the army. In a +letter to his father, dated the day before the expedition, he, after +stating its character, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page211" name="page211"></a>(p. 211)</span> said: "Should I be the happy mortal +destined to turn the scale of war—will you not rejoice, O, my father? +May heaven be propitious, and smile on the cause of my country. But if +we are destined to fall, may my fall be like Wolfe's—to sleep in the +arms of victory." His prayer was answered, and the country mourned the +loss of a gallant officer, a pure patriot, and a noble man.</p> + +<p>Colonel Pearce, on whom the command devolved after the fall of Pike, +took possession of the barracks and then advanced on the town. As he +approached he was met by the officers of the Canadian militia, +proposing a capitulation. This was done to produce a delay, so that +the English commander, General Sheaffe, with the regulars could +escape, and the vessels and military stores be destroyed. The plan was +successful, the regular troops made good their retreat, one magazine +of naval and military stores was burned, together with two of the +vessels undergoing repairs. The third had sailed for Kingston a short +time before the attack.</p> + +<p>Owing to the explosion of the magazine the loss of the Americans was +severe, amounting to three hundred killed and wounded. Notwithstanding +the exasperation of the victors at the wanton, and as they supposed +premeditated destruction of life, they treated the inhabitants with +kindness and courtesy. Such had been the strict orders of their +commander <span class="pagenum"><a id="page212" name="page212"></a>(p. 212)</span> before his death. The only violence committed was +the burning of the house of Parliament, and this was owing, doubtless, +to the fact that a scalp was found suspended over the speaker's mace. +The sight of an American scalp, hanging as a trophy in a public +building, would naturally exasperate soldiers, whose friends and +relatives had fallen beneath the knife of the savage.<a id="footnotetag36" name="footnotetag36"></a><a href="#footnote36" title="Go to footnote 36"><span class="smaller">[36]</span></a></p> + +<p>The troops were at once re-embarked, for the purpose of proceeding +immediately to Niagara, but owing to foul weather they were a week on +the way. At length, being reinforced by troops from Sackett's Harbor +and Buffalo, Dearborn, with some five thousand men, sailed for Fort +George. This fort was situated on a peninsula, which it commanded. +Dearborn resolved to make the landing in six divisions of boats, under +cover of the fire of the armed schooners. The first division, +containing five hundred men, was commanded by Winfield Scott, who +volunteered for the service, followed by Colonel Porter with the field +train. The gallant Perry offered to superintend the landing of the +boats, which had to be effected under a heavy fire and through an ugly +surf. The 27th of May, early in the morning, the debarkation began, +and soon the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page213" name="page213"></a>(p. 213)</span> boats, in separate divisions, were moving +towards the shore. Fifteen hundred British lined the bank, which rose +eight or ten feet from the water. Scott rapidly forming his men under +the plunging fire of these, shouted, "Forward!" and began to scale the +ascent. But, pressed by greatly superior numbers, they were at length +borne struggling back. Dearborn, who was standing on the deck of +Chauncey's vessel, watching the conflict through his glass, suddenly +saw Scott, while waving his men on, fall heavily back down the steep. +Dropping his glass he burst into tears, exclaiming: "<i>He is lost!—He +is killed!</i>" The next moment, however, Scott sprang to his feet again, +and shouting to his men, he with a rapid and determined step remounted +the bank, and, unscathed by the volley that met him, knocked up with +his sword the bayonets leveled at his breast, and stepped on the top. +Crowding furiously after, the little band sent up their shout around +him, on the summit. Dressing his line under the concentrated fire of +the enemy, Scott then gave the signal to charge. The conflict was +fierce but short; the British line was rent in twain, and the +disordered ranks were driven over the field. Scott, seizing a +prisoner's horse, mounted and led the pursuit.</p> + +<p>Fort George was abandoned, and the garrison streamed after the +defeated army. They, however, set fire to the train of the magazines +before they left. This <span class="pagenum"><a id="page214" name="page214"></a>(p. 214)</span> was told to Scott, and he instantly +returned with two companies to save them. Before he could arrive, one +magazine exploded, sending the fragments in every direction. A piece +of timber struck him on the breast, and hurled him from his horse. +Springing to his feet he shouted, "To the gate!" Rushing on the gate, +they tore it from its hinges and poured in—Scott was the first to +enter, and ordering the brave Captains Hindman and Stockton to +extinguish the matches, he ran forward and pulled down the flag. +Quickly re-mounting his horse he put himself at the head of his column +and pressed fiercely after the enemy, chasing the fugitives for five +miles, and halted, only because commanded to do so by Colonel Boyd, in +person. He had already disobeyed two orders to stop the pursuit, and +had he not been arrested by his superior officer in person, would soon +have been up with the main body of the British.</p> + +<p>The loss of the enemy in this short but spirited combat was two +hundred and fifty killed and wounded and one hundred prisoners, while +that of the Americans was only seventy-two.</p> + +<p>The British army, under Gen. Vincent, retreated towards Burlington +Heights, followed soon after by General Winder, with eight hundred +men.</p> + +<p>But while Chauncey and Dearborn were thus destroying the forts on the +Niagara, Sir George Provost made a sudden descent on Sackett's Harbor. +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page215" name="page215"></a>(p. 215)</span> The protection of this place was of vital importance to us. +Here was our naval depôt—here our ship yard with vessels on the +stocks, and in fact, this was the only available port on the lake for +the construction and rendezvous of a fleet. Yet the garrison left to +protect it consisted of only two hundred and fifty dragoons under +Lieutenant Colonel Backus, Lieutenant Fanning's artillery, two hundred +invalid soldiers and a few seamen, making in all some five hundred +men. Two days after the capture of Fort George, the fleet of Sir James +Yeo, carrying a thousand men, commanded by Provost, appeared off the +harbor. Alarm guns were instantly fired and messengers dispatched to +General Brown, who resided eight miles distant at Brownville, to +collect the militia and hasten to the defence of the place. The year +before Brown had joined the army and been appointed brigadier-general +in the militia, but at the close of the campaign, being disgusted with +its management and disgraceful termination, he retired to his farm. +His heart, however, was in the struggle, and the courier sent from +Sackett's Harbor had scarcely finished his message, before he was on +his horse and galloping over the country. Rallying five or six hundred +militia he hastened to the post of danger. He was one of those whom +great exigences develop. Brave, prudent, resolute, and rock fast in +his resolution, he was admirably fitted for a military <span class="pagenum"><a id="page216" name="page216"></a>(p. 216)</span> +leader, while by his daring and gallant behavior, he acquired great +influence over raw troops. Acquainted with all the localities and +resources of the place, he at the request of Lieutenant Backus readily +assumed the command. A breastwork was hastily erected on the only spot +where a landing could be effected, and the militia placed behind it. +The regulars formed a second line near the barracks and public +buildings, while Fanning, with the artillerists, held the fort proper, +and Lieutenant Chauncey, with his men, defended the stores at Navy +Point.</p> + +<p>The night of the 28th passed in gloomy forebodings. The troops slept +on their arms, and Brown and his officers passed the hours in silently +and cautiously reconnoitering the shores of the lake. That little +hamlet embosomed in the vast primeval forest that stretched away on +either side along the water's edge and closed darkly over the solitary +highway that led to the borders of civilization, presented a lonely +aspect. As hour after hour dragged heavily by, every ear was bent to +catch the muffled sound of the enemy's sweeps, but only the wind +soughing through the tree-tops and the monotonous dash of waves on the +beach disturbed the stillness of the scene. But as the long looked for +dawn began to streak the water, the fleet of British boats were +observed rapidly pulling towards the breastwork. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page217" name="page217"></a>(p. 217)</span> Brown bade +the militia reserve their fire till the enemy were within pistol shot, +and then deliver it coolly and accurately. They did so, and the first +volley checked the advance of the boats. After the second volley, +however, the militia were seized with a sudden panic, and broke and +fled. Colonel Mills, who commanded the volunteers, was shot while +bravely attempting to arrest the disorder. Brown succeeded in stopping +some ninety of them, whom he posted on a line with the regulars. The +British having landed, formed in good order, and moved steadily +forward on this little band of regulars. The latter never wavered, but +maintained their ground with stubborn resolution, and as they were +gradually forced back by superior numbers, took possession of the +barracks, behind which they maintained a rapid and galling fire. +Backus had fallen, mortally wounded, and Lieutenant Fanning was also +severely wounded, but he still clung to his gun and directed its fire +with wonderful accuracy. Finding the troops able to maintain their +position for some time yet, Brown exhorted them to hold firm while he +endeavored to rally the fugitive militia. Riding up to them, he +rebuked and entreated them by turns, until, at last, when he told them +how courageously and nobly the strangers were defending the homes they +had basely abandoned to pillage, they promised to return and do their +duty. Not daring, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page218" name="page218"></a>(p. 218)</span> however, to trust men in an open attack +who had just fled from a breastwork, although he solemnly swore he +would cut down the first that faltered, he led them by a circuitous +route along the edge of the forest, as if he designed to seize the +boats and cut off the enemy's retreat. The stratagem succeeded, and +the British made a rush for their boats, leaving their killed and +wounded behind. Having lost, in all, between four and five hundred +men, they dared not venture on a second attack, and withdrew, humbled +and mortified, to the Canada shore. The American loss was about one +hundred.</p> + +<p>The successful defence of Sackett's Harbor following so quickly the +capture of Forts York and George, promised well for the summer +campaign. But disasters soon checked the rising hopes of the nation. +General Winder, who had started in pursuit of Vincent, found, on his +arrival at Forty Mile Creek, that the enemy had been reinforced. +Halting here, therefore, he dispatched a messenger to Dearborn for +more troops. General Chandler, with another brigade, was sent, when +the whole force was put in motion, and crossing Stony Creek, arrived +at night-fall, within a short distance of the British encampment. Here +the army halted, preparatory to an attack the next morning. General +Vincent, although greatly inferior in numbers, felt that his <span class="pagenum"><a id="page219" name="page219"></a>(p. 219)</span> +future success depended entirely on his retaining his present +position, and, therefore, resolved to hazard a second battle. But, +having, by a careful reconnoissance, discovered that the American camp +guards were scattered and careless, while the whole encampment was +loose and straggling, he immediately changed his plan, and determined +to make a bold and furious night onset, and endeavor by one +well-directed blow to break the American army in pieces. Following up +this determination, he, with seven hundred men, set out at midnight, +and arriving at three o'clock in the morning at the American pickets +silently and adroitly captured every man before he could give the +alarm. Pressing with the main column directly for the centre of the +encampment, he burst with the appalling war-cry of the savage on the +astonished soldiers. The artillery was surrounded, and several pieces, +with one hundred men, were taken prisoners, and among them the two +generals, Winder and Chandler. General Vincent having lost his column +in the darkness, the second in command ignorant what course to pursue, +or what to do, concluded to retreat with his trophies. The attack had +been well planned and boldly carried out, and but for the blunder made +by Vincent would no doubt have been completely successful. As it was +the loss was nearly equal; so that the American army was still in a +good <span class="pagenum"><a id="page220" name="page220"></a>(p. 220)</span> condition to take the initial and advance. But the +command devolving on Colonel Burns, a cavalry officer, who declared he +was incompetent to direct infantry movements, a retreat was resolved +upon. The army arriving at Forty Mile Creek, a messenger was +despatched to Dearborn, asking for orders. General Lewis, with the +sixth regiment, was immediately sent forward, with directions to +engage the enemy at once. An hour after his arrival at camp the +British fleet was seen slowly beating up abreast of it. A schooner was +towed near the shore and opened its fire, but Lieutenant Eldridge, +heaving a few hot shot into her, compelled her to withdraw. In the +mean time, some vessels appearing off Fort George, Dearborn +conjectured that an attack upon him was meditated, and recalled this +division of the army. The boats, however, sent to bring them, were +overtaken by an armed schooner, and many of them captured.</p> + +<p>After these catastrophes Dearborn remained at Fort George an entire +fortnight, wholly inactive. The British, on the other hand, made +diligent use of this interval, in taking possession of mountain +passes, and thus accomplished the double purpose of securing their own +position and narrowing the limits of Dearborn's possessions, and +destroying his communication. The latter, at length, being aroused to +the danger in which these posts placed him, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page221" name="page221"></a>(p. 221)</span> despatched Col. +Bœstler, with six hundred men, to break up one of them, seventeen +miles distant. Acting under wrong information, this small detachment +arrived without molestation at Beaverdams, within two miles of the +"Stone House" where the enemy had fortified themselves. But here they +were suddenly surrounded by a body of British and Indians, and a +conflict ensued. Believing it impossible to effect a safe retreat +through the forest, pressed by such a force, Colonel Bœstler +surrendered his whole detachment prisoners of war. This ended +Dearborn's campaign, and his military services. Colonel Bishop, who +showed great activity in carrying out the plan of the British +commander, finding Fort Erie ungarrisoned, took possession of it, and +crossing suddenly to Black Rock, with 250 men, drove out the militia +and destroyed the guns and stores. But the news reaching Buffalo, a +few regulars, together with some militia and friendly Indians hastened +to the fort and expelled the invaders, killing their commander.</p> + +<p>The successful attacks on York and Fort George had removed much of the +odium with which the disasters of the previous years had covered +Dearborn, and great results were expected from so brilliant an opening +of the campaign. But his after inaction and efforts ending only in +failure, disgusted the people and Congress. Broken down by disease and +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page222" name="page222"></a>(p. 222)</span> demoralized by their long camp life, the soldiers but poorly +represented the vigor and energy of the republic. Dearborn, like the +other generals, received all the blame that properly attached to him, +together with that which belonged to the Government, and when the news +of Bœstler's defeat arrived in Washington, the House of +Representatives was thrown into a state of indignant excitement. Mr. +Ingersoll was deputed to wait on the President and demand Dearborn's +removal, as Commander-in-Chief of the Western army. The request was +granted, and on the 15th of July he resigned his command. He had +accomplished, literally nothing, in two campaigns, and though he was +surrounded with difficulties, crippled, and rendered cautious by the +indifferent and unsuitable troops under his command, yet, after making +a large allowance for all, there is margin wide enough to secure his +condemnation. His materials became worse instead of better under his +management, and the prospects on our northern border grew gloomier the +longer he held command. The energy and vigor of his younger days were +gone, and the enfeebled commander of 1812 was a very different man +from the daring and gallant officer of the Revolution. He had stood on +the deck of his vessel and seen Pike carry York, and young Scott Fort +George with mere detachments. He had witnessed the bravery of his +troops under gallant officers, and it needed only <span class="pagenum"><a id="page223" name="page223"></a>(p. 223)</span> energy and +activity in himself to have made the army the pride of the nation.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">1813.</span> + +<p>Colonel Boyd assumed the command till the arrival of Wilkinson in +September, but with the exception of some skirmishing, the summer +passed away in inactivity.</p> + +<p>The British, by capturing two American sloops that ventured into a +narrow part of the lake, near the garrison of Aux Noix, obtained +command of this water communication, which they held the remainder of +the season.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page224" name="page224"></a>(p. 224)</span> CHAPTER IX.<br> +<span class="smcap">SECOND SESSION OF THE TWELFTH CONGRESS.</span></h2> + +<p class="resume">Army bill — Quincy and Williams — Debate on the bonds of + merchants given for British goods imported in contravention + of the non-importation act — Debate on the bills increasing + the army to 55,000 men — Williams' report — Quincy's + attack — Clay's rejoinder — Randolph, Calhoun, Quincy, + Lowndes and Clay — State of the Treasury.</p> + +<p>The members of Congress, when they assembled in October, did not +exchange those congratulations they promised each other at their +adjournment, after declaring war. Every plan had proved abortive, +every expectation been disappointed. True, the gallant little navy was +left to fall back on. Its successes, however, did not reflect much +credit on their sagacity, but rather by returning good for evil, had +administered a severe rebuke to their neglect. The Federalists could +claim the chief honor there, and make both the victories on the sea +and defeats on land the grounds of attack. They had always said leave +Canada alone and go to the sea, there is the proper theatre for your +exploits. Results had shown the wisdom of their counsels. The army had +accomplished nothing, still its skeleton ranks must be <span class="pagenum"><a id="page225" name="page225"></a>(p. 225)</span> +filled. A bill was therefore introduced, increasing the pay of the +soldiers from six to eight dollars per month, and making their persons +secure from arrest for debt, in order to tempt recruits into the +service. They were allowed also to enlist either for five years or for +the war. <span class="sidenote">Nov. 20.</span> A clause inserted in this bill, giving +minors and apprentices, over eighteen, permission to enlist without +the consent of their parents and masters, fell like a bomb-shell in +the House. This was striking at the very foundation of social and +domestic life—viz., parental authority—and putting a premium on +disobedience and rebellion. <span class="sidenote">1812.</span> It furnished a new +outlet for Mr. Quincy's wrath, who declared that if Congress dared +apply it in New England the people would resist it, with the laws +against kidnapping and stealing. He said it was odious and atrocious, +unequalled, absurd, and immoral. Mr. Williams replied, that Great +Britain allowed enlistments over sixteen, as did our Government in the +Revolutionary War—nay, that this very clause passed in 1798, which +became a law. <span class="sidenote">Dec. 3.</span> Another exciting debate sprung up +relative to the bonds of the merchants for British goods lately +imported in contravention of the non-importation law. This law, it +will be remembered, was passed in March, 1811, in retaliation for the +orders in council, and was to cease with the revocation of those +orders. Before the news of the declaration of war <span class="pagenum"><a id="page226" name="page226"></a>(p. 226)</span> arrived in +England they were revoked, and American owners supposing the +non-importation act would fall with it, immediately took in cargoes of +British goods. These were allowed to depart, as well as others in +process of landing, and provided with licenses to protect them against +British cruisers. Thus a vast amount of merchandise arrived in the +various ports of the United States during the first two or three +months of the war. The non-importation act being still in force, these +goods were seized as forfeited to the Government. Still many of the +district judges surrendered them to the claimants on their giving +bonds to the amount of their value. As under the non-importation law +half the value of the forfeited goods belonged to the informer, +Gallatin proposed that, as in this case there was no informer, that +portion should be given to the owners, and the Government put the +other half, amounting to nine millions, in the public treasury. This +proposal was advocated by some and strenuously opposed by others. +<span class="sidenote">Dec. 30.</span> After a vehement debate, extending through +several sittings, all the penalties of the merchants were finally +remitted.</p> + +<p>Another debate, still more exciting, followed on the army bill. This +bill contained provisions for raising twenty thousand men for one +year, increased bounty enlistments to sixteen dollars, and appointed +an officer to do all the recruiting. <span class="sidenote">Dec. 27.</span> Mr. +Williams, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page227" name="page227"></a>(p. 227)</span> chairman of the committee on military affairs, +introduced it with an able speech. After showing that the country +demanded such an augmentation of the army, making the entire regular +force 55,000, and defending the increased bounty and appointment of a +special officer for the recruiting service, he alluded to the +disastrous issue of Hull's campaign. Said he, "there are those, +perhaps, who can sneer at the disasters and misfortunes of the late +campaign, and will object to this bill, saying there is no +encouragement to vote additional forces, seeing that those which have +been already raised have been so idly employed. It becomes us all to +be equally faithful to our country, whether victorious or not; it is +in times of discomfiture that the patriot's resolution and virtues are +most needed. It is no matter by what party names we are distinguished, +this is our country—we are children of the same family, and ought to +be brothers in a common cause. The misfortune which befalls one +portion should sink deep into the breasts of the others also."</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Jan. 5, 1813.</span> + +<p>Mr. Clay congratulated the committee and the nation on the report that +had been made. Mr. Quincy, who saw in every proposition for +replenishing the army, a project for conquering Canada, opposed the +bill. Assuming that to be the object in view, he assailed it with all +that sarcasm and abuse for which he was distinguished. In the first +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page228" name="page228"></a>(p. 228)</span> place, he said, we could not conquer Canada; in the second +place, if we could, it would be a barren triumph. It would not bring +peace nor be of any advantage to the country. He denounced it as cruel +and barbarous, declaring it was not owing to the Government, that at +that moment the bones of the Canadians were not mixed with the ashes +of their habitations. Said he, "Since the invasion of the buccaneers, +there is nothing like this war. We have heard great lamentations about +the disgrace of our arms on the frontier. Why, sir, the disgrace of +our arms on the frontier is terrestrial glory in comparison with the +disgrace of the attempt! The whole atmosphere rings with the +utterance, from the other side of the house, of this word, glory! +glory! What glory? The glory of the tiger which lifts its jaws all +foul and bloody from the bowels of his victim, and roars for his +companions of the forest to come and witness his prowess and his +spoils—the glory of Zenghis Khan, without his greatness—the glory of +Bonaparte." He asked the members if they supposed the vagabonds who +should conquer Canada would, when their aim was accomplished, heed the +orders of Government. No! they would obey the "choice spirits" placed +over them, who in turn would not consult spinsters and weavers, but +take counsel from their leader what next they shall do. "Remember," +said he, "remember, I warn you, he who plants the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page229" name="page229"></a>(p. 229)</span> American +standard on the walls of Quebec, plants it for himself, and will +parcel it out into dukedoms, and seignorities, and counties for his +followers." It was a solace to him amid all his regrets, that New +England was guiltless of this war, and that she had done her utmost to +hurl the wicked authors of it from their seats. That way of thinking, +he said, was not peculiar to him, but was "the opinion of all the +moral sense and nine-tenths of the intelligence of the section from +which he came. Some of those who are here from that quarter—some of +<i>the household troops</i> who lounge for what they can pick up about the +Government-house will say differently—those who come here and with +their families live and suck upon the heart of the +treasury—toad-eaters who live on eleemosynary, ill-purchased courtesy +of the palace, swallow great men's spittles, get judgships, and wonder +at the fine sights, fine rooms, fine company, and most of all wonder +how they themselves got here—these creatures will tell you, No—that +such as I describe are not the sentiments of the people of New +England. Sir, I have conversed upon the question with men of all +ranks, conditions and parties in Massachusetts, men hanging over the +plough and holding the spade—the twenty, thirty and fifty acre men, +and their answers have uniformly been to the same effect. They have +asked simply, What is the invasion for? Is it for land? We have +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page230" name="page230"></a>(p. 230)</span> enough. Is it for plunder? There is none there. New States? +We have more than is good for us. Territory? If territory, there must +be a standing army to keep it, and there must be another standing army +here to watch that. These are judicious, honest, patriotic, sober men, +who when their country calls, at any wise or real exigency, will start +from their native soils and throw their shields over their liberties, +like the soldiers of Cadmus, yet who have heard the winding of your +horn for the Canadian campaign, with the same indifference they would +have listened to a jews harp or the twanging of a banjo. He declared +that Mr. Madison and his cabinet had been bent on war from the outset, +and their eagerness to come to blows with England evinced the +disposition ascribed to the giant in the children's old play:—</p> + +<p class="poem10"> +<span class="add3em"><span class="min20em">'</span>Fe, faw, fum,</span><br> + I smell the blood of an Englishman,<br> + Be he dead or be he alive<br> +<span class="add3em">I will have some.'</span> +</p> + +<p class="noindent">He knew there were those who were ready to open on him with the old +stale cry of British connection. It was not egotism to speak of what +belonged to his country. It would ill become a man whose family had +been two centuries settled in the State, and whose interest and +connections were exclusively American, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page231" name="page231"></a>(p. 231)</span> to shrink from his +duty for the yelpings of those bloodhound mongrels who were kept in +pay to hunt down all who opposed the court—a pack of mangy hounds, of +recent importation, their backs still sore with the stripes of +European castigation, and their necks marked with the check collar." +Fierce and vehement, now rising into eloquence, and now descending to +the coarse language of the bar-room, Mr. Quincy dealt his blows on +every side—at one moment coming down on the administration with +sweeping charges of dishonesty and villany, and again rushing fiercely +on the solid phalanx of the war party, assailing them with scoffs and +jeers and taunts, till scorn and rage gathered on their countenances.</p> + +<p>Mr. Clay, in his urbane and gentle manner, rose to reply. He took a +review of the two parties. While the administration was endeavoring to +prevent war by negotiations and restrictive measures, the opposition, +he said, was disgusted with the timorous policy pursued, and called +for open, manly war. They declared the administration "could not be +kicked into a war." "War and no restrictions, is their motto, when an +embargo is laid, but the moment war is declared, the cry is +restrictions but no war. They tack with every gale, displaying the +colors of every party and of all nations, steady in only one +unalterable purpose, to steer, if possible, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page232" name="page232"></a>(p. 232)</span> into the haven +of power. The charge of French influence had again and again been +made, which should be met in only one manner—by giving it the lie +direct. The opposition had also amused themselves by heaping every +vile epithet which the English language afforded on Bonaparte. He had +been compared to every monster and beast, from that of the Revelations +to the most insignificant quadruped. He said it reminded him of an +obscure lady who took it into her head to converse on European affairs +with an accomplished French gentleman, and railed on Napoleon, calling +him the curse of mankind, a murderer and monster. The Frenchman +listened to her with patience to the end, and then, in the most +affable manner, replied, 'Madame, it would give my master, the +Emperor, infinite pain if he knew how hardly you thought of him.' +Expressing his regret that he was compelled to take some notice of Mr. +Quincy in his remarks, he defended Jefferson against his attacks, and +showed how absurd were all his statements and scruples respecting the +invasion of Canada, by referring to the part New England took in the +capture of Louisburg. He then alluded to the treasonable attitude +assumed by the Federalists, denounced their hypocrisy in endeavoring +to gain the adhesion of the people to their views by promising peace +and commerce. But, said Mr. Clay, I will quit this unpleasant subject, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page233" name="page233"></a>(p. 233)</span> I will turn from one whom no sense of decency or propriety +could restrain from soiling the carpet on which he treads, to +gentlemen who have not forgotten what is due to themselves, the place +in which we are assembled, nor to those by whom they are opposed." He +then went into a review of the causes that led to the war, to show +that the government had acted with forbearance and moderation, and at +length took up the subject of impressment. After proving the +illegality and oppression of this right, as claimed and exercised by +the English, he said, "there is no safety to us but in the rule that +all who sail under the flag (not being enemies) are protected by the +flag. It is impossible the country should ever forget the gallant tars +who have won for us such splendid trophies. Let me suppose that the +genius of Columbia should visit one of them in his oppressor's prison, +and attempt to reconcile him to his wretched condition. She would say +to him in the language of the gentlemen on the other side, 'Great +Britain intends you no harm; she did not mean to impress you, but one +of her own subjects, having taken you by mistake; I will remonstrate +and try to prevail on her, by peaceable means, to release you, but I +cannot, my son, fight for you.' If he did not consider this mockery he +would address her judgment and say, 'You owe me my country's +protection; I owe you in return, obedience; <span class="pagenum"><a id="page234" name="page234"></a>(p. 234)</span> I am no British +subject, I am a native of old Massachusetts, where live my aged +father, my wife, my children; I have faithfully discharged my duty, +will you refuse to do yours?' Appealing to her passions, he would +continue, 'I lost this eye in fighting under Truxton with the +Insurgente; I got this scar before Tripoli; I broke this leg on board +the Constitution when the Guerriere struck.' If she remained still +unmoved he would break out in the accents of mingled distress and +despair,</p> + +<p class="poem10"> +<span class="min20em">'</span>Hard, hard is my fate! once I freedom enjoyed,<br> +<span class="add1em">Was as happy as happy could be!</span><br> + Oh! how hard is my fate, how galling these chains!'</p> + +<p class="noindent">I will not imagine the dreadful catastrophe to which he would be +driven by an abandonment of him to his oppressor. It will not be, it +cannot be, that his country will refuse him protection." This +description of a poor sailor, maimed in his country's service, +appealing to that country he had served so well, for protection, and +rejected, cast off, abandoning himself to despair, sketched as it was +with vividness and feeling, and uttered in that touching pathos for +which Clay's rich and flexible voice was remarkable, went home with +thrilling power to each patriotic heart, and tears were seen on the +faces of members in every part of the house.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page235" name="page235"></a>(p. 235)</span> After reviewing the progress of the war, and the present +attitude of England, and declaring that propositions for peace offered +by the other party were futile, he drew himself to his full height, +and casting his eye around the house, and pitching his voice to the +note of lofty determination, closed with, "An honorable peace can be +attained only by an efficient war. My plan would be to call out the +ample resources of the country, give them a judicious direction, +prosecute the war with the utmost vigor, strike wherever we can reach +the enemy at sea or on land, and negotiate the terms of peace at +Quebec or Halifax. We are told that England is a proud and lofty +nation, that, disdaining to wait for danger meets it half way. Haughty +as she is, we once triumphed over her, and if we do not listen to the +counsels of timidity and despair, we shall again prevail. In such a +cause, with the aid of Providence, we must come out crowned with +success, "<i>but if we fail, let us fail like men, lash ourselves to our +gallant tars, and expire together in one common struggle, fighting for +'Seaman's rights and Free trade</i>.'" Before this patriotic burst of +eloquence the harsh and irritating charges and selfish objections of +the opposition disappeared, like the unhealthy vapors of a morass +before the fresh breath of the cool west wind.</p> + +<p>The declaration of war consummated a revolution <span class="pagenum"><a id="page236" name="page236"></a>(p. 236)</span> begun long +before in Congress. The affairs of the nation were taken out of the +hands of old and experienced statesmen, and placed in those of young +and ardent men. Henry Clay was but thirty-five; Calhoun, thirty, and +Randolph thirty-nine. Many of less note were also young men, full of +hope and confidence, and jealous of their country's honor. In their +first conflict with the older and more conservative members, they +revealed the dawning genius and statesmanship that afterwards raised +them to such high renown. The Federalists were represented also by men +of great strength of intellect and forcible speakers. Quincy possessed +the elements of a powerful leader, but he at times allowed his +passions to override all propriety and suggestions of prudence. +Vehement and fearless, he moved down on the enemy in gallant style, +but, like Jackson in battle, his hostility for the time lost all +magnanimity, and assumed the character of ferocity. He made the whole +party opposed to him a person, and attacked it with all the malignity, +scorn, invective, and jeers he would one who had grossly abused his +person and assailed his honor. But there was no secresy or trickery in +his movements—his followers and his foes knew where to find him, and +though he often, in his intemperance, violated the rules of courtesy, +and thus exposed himself to retorts that always tell against a +speaker, he still was an ugly opponent to contend <span class="pagenum"><a id="page237" name="page237"></a>(p. 237)</span> with. Full +of energy, inflexible of purpose—aggressive, bold, and untiring—in a +popular cause he would have been resistless. There were men in the +Federalist party at this time capable of carrying even a bad cause if +relieved from external pressure. But the impressment of American +citizens, massacres in the north, and outrages along the sea coast, so +aroused the national indignation, that both words and efforts became +powerless before it. Like the resistless tide, which bears away both +strong and weak, it hushed argument, drowned explanations, and +silenced warnings, as it surged on, breaking down barriers, and +sweeping away defences that seemed impregnable.</p> + +<p>One of the most remarkable men in this Congress was John Randolph, of +Roanoke, as he always wrote himself. Possessed of rare endowments, and +of ample wealth, fortune had lavished on him every gift but that of +sex. He was at this time exceedingly fair. Conflicts and rude +jostlings with the world had not yet wrinkled and blackened his +visage, soured his sensitive temper, or driven him into that +misanthropy and those eccentricities which afterwards disfigured his +life. He was six feet high and frail in person, but his brilliant +black eye fairly dazzled the beholder, as he rose to speak, and made +him forget the fragile form before him. His voice was too thin for +public speaking, and when pitched high was shrill and piercing. But +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page238" name="page238"></a>(p. 238)</span> in common conversation it was like an exquisite instrument, +on which the cunning player discoursed strange and bewitching music, +and no one could escape its fascination. His first glance round the +hall attracted silence, and all bent to catch the tones of that +musical feminine voice. As he became excited in his harangue, his eye +burned with increased lustre, while his changing countenance revealed +every thought and feeling before it was uttered. So expressive was it +in transmitting the transitions that passed over the soul and heart of +the speaker, that they scarcely needed the assistance of language. +Sometimes fearfully solemn and again highly excited; he at this time +rarely indulged in that withering sarcasm which afterwards so often +drew blood from his antagonist. With the delicate organization and +sensibilities of a woman, joined to the thought and ambition of a man, +his destiny had led him into scenes that spoiled his temper and erased +some of the most beautiful features of his character. Chivalrous and +fearless, he at first lent his genius to Jefferson's administration, +but shrunk from the awful consequences of war when it approached.</p> + +<p>Calhoun, one of the firmest props of the government, was his antipode +in almost every particular. Though young, his face evinced no +enthusiasm—his glistening eye no chivalry. With thin lips, high cheek +bones, rigid, yet not strong lines in his face, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page239" name="page239"></a>(p. 239)</span> an immense +head of hair, his personal appearance would never have arrested the +curiosity of the beholder but for his eye. This was not brilliant and +radiant like Randolph's. It did not light up with valor, nor burn with +indignation, nor melt with pity, but changeless as a piece of +burnished steel, it had a steady, cold glitter, that fascinated for +the time whomsoever it fell upon. Fixed and precise in his attitude, +and moveless in his person, he poured forth his thoughts and views +with a rapidity, yet distinctness, that startled one. Untrammeled at +this time with those abstractions and theories which afterwards +confused his reasoning faculties and gave an irrecoverable twist to +his logic; he brought his cool, clear intellect to the aid of the +administration, and indicated by the power and influence he soon +acquired, his future greatness. No sophistry could escape him—the +stroke of his cimeter cut through all complexity—and when he had done +with his opponent's argument it could not have been recognized as that +which, just before, looked so plausible and consistent.</p> + +<p>Two other representatives from the same state were able friends of the +administration. William Lowndes, a young man, and though not a good +speaker, nor prepossessing in his appearance, carried great influence +by mere weight of character, and the consistency and firmness of his +political opinions. He was six feet six inches high, and slender +withal; <span class="pagenum"><a id="page240" name="page240"></a>(p. 240)</span> and when he rose to address the house, his +unassuming and respectful manner commanded attention. Of great +integrity, clear headed and consistent, a proud, bright career seemed +opening before him, but death soon closed it for ever.</p> + +<p>Mr. Cheves was chairman of committee of Ways and Means, and exhibited +great ability in that station.</p> + +<p>But the pride of the house was the young and graceful speaker, Henry +Clay. Tall, and straight as a young forest tree, he was the embodiment +of the finest qualities of Western character. Possessing none of the +graces and learning of the schools, nor restrained in the freedom of +thought and opinion by the systems and rules, with which they often +fetter the most gifted genius, he poured his whole ardent soul and +gallant heart into the war. The true genius, and final destiny of this +republic, lie west of the Alleghanies. So there, also, will spring up +our noblest American literature. Not shackled by too great reverence +for the old world, educated in a freer life, and growing up under the +true influences of American institutions, man there becomes a freer, a +more unselfish being; his purposes are nobler, and all his instincts +better.</p> + +<p>Impelled by pure patriotism, and excited by the wrongs and insults +heaped upon his country, Clay entered into those measures designed to +redeem her <span class="pagenum"><a id="page241" name="page241"></a>(p. 241)</span> honor, and maintain her integrity with a zeal and +solicitude, that soon identified him with them. He thus unconsciously +became a leader; and whether electrifying the house with his appeals, +or in the intervals of the sessions of Congress traversing his state, +and arousing the young men to action, exhibited the highest qualities +of an orator. His stirring call to the sons of Kentucky was like the +winding horn of the huntsman, to which they rallied with ardent +courage and dauntless hearts. We now always associate with Clay, the +scattered white locks and furrowed face, and slow, majestic movements. +But, at this time, not a wrinkle seamed his youthful countenance; and +lithe and active, he moved amid his companions with an elastic tread, +and animated features. His rich and sonorous voice was so flexible, +that it gave him great power in appealing to the passions of men. When +moving to pity, it was soft and pleading as a woman's; but when +rousing to indignation, or to noble and gallant deeds, it rang like +the blast of a bugle. In moments of excitement, his manner became +highly impassioned, his blue eye gleamed with the fire of genius, and +his whole countenance beamed with emotion. Thoughts, images, +illustrations leaped to his lips, and were poured forth with a +prodigality and eloquence, that charmed and led captive all within +reach of his voice. He loved his country well, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page242" name="page242"></a>(p. 242)</span> sung her +wrongs with a pathos, that even his enemies could not withstand. When +he was disheartened by our first reverses on the northern frontier, he +turned to our gallant navy with a pride and affection, he maintained +till his death. Madison leaned on him throughout this trying struggle, +as his chief prop and stay.</p> + +<p>Though the House, rent by the fierce spirit of faction, would often +break through the bounds of decorum and order, he as speaker held the +reins of power with a firm and just hand. With an easy and affable +manner, that attracted every one to him, he yet had a will of iron. +Under all that frankness and familiarity, there was a rock-fast heart, +that never swerved from its purpose. His manner of carrying out his +plans, often misled men respecting the strength of his will. He was +strictly <i>suaviter in modo fortiter in re</i>. Clay, Calhoun, Randolph, +and in the next Congress Webster, were striking representatives of the +young country rising rapidly to greatness. Truly, "there were giants +in those days."</p> + +<p>It was estimated that the entire revenue for the ensuing year would be +$12,000,000, while the expenses were calculated at $36,000,000. To +make up the $24,000,000 deficit, the President was authorized to sell +$16,000,000 six per cent. stock, continue outstanding the former +$5,000,000 treasury notes, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page243" name="page243"></a>(p. 243)</span> raise $5,000,000 towards a +new loan. But the more important business was transferred to the next +Congress, which was to meet early in the spring. The two other +principal acts passed this session, was one authorizing the government +to occupy Mobile, and all that part of Florida ceded to the United +States, with Louisiana, and the other giving it power to retaliate for +the twenty-three Irishmen taken from Scott at Quebec, and sent to +England to be tried for treason.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page244" name="page244"></a>(p. 244)</span> CHAPTER X.</h2> + +<p class="resume">Action between the Chesapeake and Shannon — Rejoicing in + England over the victory — The Enterprise captures the + Boxer — Death of Lieutenant Burrows — Daring cruise of the + Argus in the English and Irish channels — Lieutenant + Allen's humanity — Action with the Pelican — Death of + Allen — His character.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">1813.</span> + +<p>Defeats on land had thus far been compensated by victories at sea, and +to that element we ever turned with pride and confidence. Our +exultation, however, was for a moment checked by the loss of the +Chesapeake, within sight of our shores. This vessel had started on a +cruise in February, under the command of Captain Evans. Unsuccessful +in her attempts to find the enemy, and having captured but four +merchantmen during the whole time of her absence, she returned to +Boston with the character of an "unlucky ship," which she had borne +from the outset, still more confirmed. Captain Lawrence succeeded +Captain Evans in the command of her, and began to prepare for a second +cruise. An English frigate, the Shannon, was lying off the harbor at +the time, and her commander, Captain <span class="pagenum"><a id="page245" name="page245"></a>(p. 245)</span> Broke, sent a challenge +to Lawrence, to meet him in any latitude or longitude. The Chesapeake +was just getting under way when this challenge arrived, and Lawrence +resolved at once to accept it, though reluctantly, from the +disaffected state in which he found his crew. He had joined his vessel +but a few days before; the proper 1st lieutenant lay sick on shore, +and the acting lieutenant was a young man unaccustomed to his +position, while "there was but one other commissioned sea officer in +the ship," two midshipmen acting as third and fourth lieutenants. +Under these circumstances, and with a discontented, complaining crew, +it was evidently unwise to hasten a combat with a ship that had long +been preparing herself for such an encounter, and was, in every way, +in the best possible condition. But Lawrence, brave and ambitious of +renown, knowing, also, that the motives which would prompt him to +avoid a combat would be misconstrued, and having but a short time +before challenged an English vessel in vain, determined to run the +hazard, and on the morning of the 1st of June, stood boldly out to +sea. At four o'clock he overhauled the Shannon, and fired a gun, which +made her heave to. The Chesapeake, now about thirty miles from land, +came down under easy sail, receiving the fire of the enemy as she +approached. Captain Lawrence having determined to lay the vessel +alongside and make a yard-arm <span class="pagenum"><a id="page246" name="page246"></a>(p. 246)</span> to yard-arm fight of it, +reserved his fire until every gun bore, when he delivered a +destructive broadside. The clouds of smoke as they puffed out upon the +sea and rolled upward, thrilled the hearts of the hundreds of +spectators that crowned the dim highlands around Boston harbor. For a +few minutes the cannonading was terrific, but some of the rigging of +the Chesapeake being cut to pieces one of the sails got loose and blew +out, which brought the ship into the wind. Then taking sternway she +backed on her enemy, and the rigging and an anchor becoming entangled, +she could not get off. This, of course, exposed her to a raking fire, +which swept her decks. Captain Lawrence, during the conflict, had +received a wound in the leg, while several of his officers were +killed. When he found that his vessel would inevitably fall aboard +that of the enemy, he ordered the drums to summon the boarders. But a +negro bugleman attempting to perform this duty was so frightened that +he could not blow a note, and verbal orders were distributed. In the +mean time, Lawrence fell mortally wounded. Carried below, his last +words were "Don't give up the ship," a motto which Perry soon after +carried emblazoned on his flag as he passed from his helpless, +dismantled ship, through the enemy's fire, to the Niagara. With his +fall ceased all efforts to carry the Shannon by boarding. The +commander of the latter finding <span class="pagenum"><a id="page247" name="page247"></a>(p. 247)</span> the quarter-deck guns of the +Chesapeake abandoned, gave the orders to board, and the flag which had +never yet been struck to anything like an equal foe, was hauled down. +The destruction on board the American ship after she fell foul of the +enemy was frightful. The entire battle lasted but twelve minutes, and +yet in that short time a hundred and forty-six of her officers and +crew were killed or wounded. The loss of the Shannon was twenty-three +killed and fifty-six wounded. This victory of the British was +tarnished by the brutal conduct of Lieutenant Faulkener, who took +command of the prize. The testimony of the surviving officers proved +him unworthy to serve under the gallant commander who had so nobly +fought his ship.</p> + +<p>The Americans had become so accustomed to naval victories that they +felt great chagrin at this defeat, while the unexpected triumph, +coming as it did on the top of such successive disasters, was received +with the most extravagant delight in England: the Tower bells were +rung, salvos of artillery fired, and praises innumerable and honors +were lavished on Captain Broke. Our navy never received a greater +compliment than these unwonted demonstrations of joy uttered. The +state of the crew—the accidental blowing out of the sail—the neglect +of officers to board—and a variety of excuses were offered to solace +the American people for this <span class="pagenum"><a id="page248" name="page248"></a>(p. 248)</span> defeat. There was, doubtless, +much force in what was said, but the falling of a mast, or the loss of +the wheel, or any casualty which renders a vessel unmanageable, and +gives one or the other a decided advantage, is always liable to occur; +hence, unbroken success is impossible. Occasional misfortune is a law +of chance.</p> + +<p>But during the summer and autumn our other vessels at sea continued to +give a good account of themselves. The three little cruisers, Siren, +Enterprise, and Vixen, were great favorites, for their gallant conduct +in the bay of Tripoli. The latter was captured early in the war by an +English frigate. The Siren did not go to sea till next year, when she +too, after giving a British 74 a chase of eleven hours, was taken. The +Enterprise was kept between Cape Ann and the Bay of Fundy, to chase +off the privateers that vexed our commerce in those waters. She was a +successful cruiser against these smaller vessels, capturing several +and sending them into port. <span class="sidenote">Sept. 4.</span> A few days before +Perry's victory, this vessel left the harbor of Portland, and while +sweeping out to sea discovered a strange sail close in shore. The +latter immediately hoisted four British ensigns and stood on after the +Enterprise. Lieutenant Burrows, the commander, kept away, and ordered +a long gun forward to be brought aft and run out of one of the +windows. He had but <span class="pagenum"><a id="page249" name="page249"></a>(p. 249)</span> lately joined the ship, and hence was +but little known by the under officers and men. The latter did not +like the looks of this preparation, especially as he kept carrying on +sail. They feared he had made up his mind to run, and this gun was to +be used as a stern-chaser. From the moment they had seen the British +ensign they were eager to close with the enemy, and the disappointment +irritated them. The seamen on the forecastle stood grouped together, +discussing this strange conduct on the part of their commander for +awhile, and then went to their officer and begged him to go and see +about it—to tell the captain they wanted to fight the British vessel, +and they believed they could whip her. The latter finally went forward +and spoke to the first lieutenant, who told him they need not be +troubled, Mr. Burrows would soon give them fighting enough to do. This +was satisfactory, and they looked cheerful again. The preparations all +being made, and the land sufficiently cleared, Burrows shortened sail +and bore down on the enemy. As the two vessels, approaching +diagonally, came within pistol shot of each other, they delivered +their broadsides, and bore away together. The Enterprise, however, +drew ahead, and Burrows finding himself forward of the enemy's bows, +ordered the helm down, and passing directly across his track, raked +him with his long gun from the cabin window. He then waited for him to +come <span class="pagenum"><a id="page250" name="page250"></a>(p. 250)</span> up on the other quarter, when they again moved off +alongside of each other, firing their broadsides, till at length the +main-top-mast of the English vessel came down. Raking her again with +his long gun, Burrows took up his station on her bows, and poured in a +rapid and destructive fire.</p> + +<p>The men serving one of the carronades being sadly reduced in numbers, +and unable to manage their piece, Burrows stepped forward, and seized +hold of the tackle to help them run it out. Placing his feet against +the bulwark to pull with greater force, he was struck in the thigh by +a shot which glanced from the bone and entered his body, inflicting a +mortal, and exceedingly painful wound. He refused, however, to be +carried below, and laid down on deck, resolved, though writhing in +excruciating agony, to encourage his officers and men by his presence +so long as life lasted.</p> + +<p>In forty minutes from the commencement of the action the enemy ceased +firing, and hailed to say he had struck. The commanding officer +ordered him to haul down his flag. The latter replied they were nailed +to the mast, and could not be lowered till the firing ceased. It was +then stopped, when an English officer sprang on a gun, and shaking +both fists at the Americans, cried, "No—no," and swore and raved, +gesticulating, in the most ludicrous manner <span class="pagenum"><a id="page251" name="page251"></a>(p. 251)</span> till he was +ordered below. This, together with the awkward manner of lowering +colors with levers and hatchets, drew peals of laughter from the +American sailors.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Burrows lived till the sword of the English commander was +placed under his head, when he murmured, "I die contented." This +vessel, which proved to be the Boxer, was terribly cut up, but the +number of killed was never ascertained, as they were thrown overboard +fast as they fell. She had fourteen wounded, while the loss of the +Americans was one killed and thirteen wounded.</p> + +<p>After this the Enterprise, under Lieutenant Renshaw, cruised south, in +company with the Rattlesnake, both having many narrow escapes from +British men of war. The former captured, off the coast of Florida, the +British privateer, Mars, of fourteen guns. Soon after she was chased +by a frigate for three days, the latter often being within gunshot.</p> + +<p>So hard was the brig pressed, that Lieutenant Renshaw was compelled to +throw his anchors, cables, and all but one of his guns overboard. At +length it fell calm, and the frigate began to hoist out her boats. The +capture of the brig then seemed inevitable, but a light breeze +springing up, bringing her fortunately to windward, her sails filled, +and she swept joyfully away from her formidable antagonist.</p> + +<p>Soon after Renshaw was transferred to the Rattlesnake, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page252" name="page252"></a>(p. 252)</span> in +which vessel he was again so hard pressed by a man of war, that he had +to throw over all his guns but two. Afterwards, near the same spot, +being wedged in between a British frigate and the land, he was +compelled to strike his flag.</p> + +<p>The Argus, another brig, was launched this year, and dispatched in +June to France, to carry out Mr. Crawford, our newly appointed +Minister to that country. Having accomplished this mission, Lieutenant +Allen, the commander, steered for the coast of England, and cruised +boldly in the chops of the English channel. Here and in the Irish +channel, this daring commander pounced upon British merchantmen while +almost entering their own ports. He was in the midst of the enemy's +cruisers, and the most untiring watchfulness was demanded to avoid +capture. Unable to man his prizes he set them on fire, making the +Irish Channel lurid with the flames of burning vessels, and lighting +up such beacon fires as England never before saw along her coast. +Great astonishment was felt in Great Britain at the daring and success +of this bold marauder, and vessels were sent out to capture him. But +for a long time he eluded their search, leaving only smouldering ships +to tell where he had been. This service was distasteful to Allen, who +was ambitious of distinction, and wished for an antagonist more worthy +of his attention. Determined to combine as much kindness <span class="pagenum"><a id="page253" name="page253"></a>(p. 253)</span> and +humanity with his duty as he could, he allowed no plundering of +private property. All passengers of captured vessels were permitted to +go below, and unwatched, pack up whatever they wished, and to pass +unchallenged. The slightest deviation from this rule, on the part of +his crew, was instantly and severely punished. This humanity, joined +to his daring acts, brought back to the English the days of Robin Hood +and Captain Kidd.</p> + +<p>A cruise like this of a single brig in the Irish Channel, could not, +of course, continue long. Even if she could avoid capture, the crew +must in time sink under their constant and fatiguing efforts.</p> + +<p>On the thirteenth of August, Allen captured a vessel from Oporto, +loaded with wine. Towards morning he set her on fire, and by the light +of her blazing spars stood away under easy sail. Soon after daylight +he saw a large brig of war bearing down upon him, perfectly covered +with canvas. He immediately took in sail to allow her to close, and +when she came within close range gave her a broadside. As the vessels +continued to approach the firing became more rapid and destructive. In +four minutes Captain Allen was mortally wounded by a round shot, +carrying off his leg. His officers immediately caught him up to carry +him below, but he ordered them back to their posts. In a short time, +however, he fainted from loss of blood and was <span class="pagenum"><a id="page254" name="page254"></a>(p. 254)</span> taken away. +Four minutes after, the first lieutenant, Watson, was struck in the +head by a grape shot, and he too was taken below. There was then but +one lieutenant left, Lieut. H. Allen, who though alone, fought his +ship gallantly. But the rigging was soon so cut up that the vessel +became unmanageable, and the enemy chose his own position. In about a +quarter of an hour Mr. Watson was able to return on deck, when he +found the brig rolling helplessly on the water, a target for the +Englishman's guns. He however determined to get alongside and board, +but all his efforts to do so were abortive, and he was compelled to +strike his colors. His victorious adversary was the Pelican, a brig of +war a fourth larger than the Argus.</p> + +<p>Unwilling to believe that this great disparity of force was a +sufficient reason for the defeat, the Americans endeavored to account +for it in other ways. It was said that the sailors succeeded in +smuggling wine from the brig burned a few hours before, and were not +in a condition to fight—others that they were so overcome with +fatigue that they nodded at their guns. Her fire was certainly much +less destructive than that of other American vessels, which one of the +officers on board said was owing to the powder used. Getting short of +ammunition, they had taken some powder from an English vessel bound to +South America. This being placed uppermost <span class="pagenum"><a id="page255" name="page255"></a>(p. 255)</span> in the magazine, +was used in this engagement. It was afterwards ascertained to be +condemned powder, going as usual to supply South American and Mexican +armies. In proof of this, it was said that the Pelican's hull was +dented with shot, that had not force enough to pierce the timbers. The +superiority of the English vessel in size, however, is a sufficient +reason, without resorting to these explanations.<a id="footnotetag37" name="footnotetag37"></a><a href="#footnote37" title="Go to footnote 37"><span class="smaller">[37]</span></a> If any other was +wanted, it would be found in the early loss of the superior officers. +Such a calamity, at the outset of an engagement, will almost +invariably turn an even scale. One officer cannot manage a ship, and +sailors without leaders never fight well.</p> + +<p>Captain Allen was taken ashore and placed in a hospital. As he was +carried from the ship, he turned his languid eyes on the comrades of +his perils and murmured, "God bless you, my lads; we shall never meet +again." His conduct on the English coast furnishes a striking contrast +to that of Cockburn, along our shores.<a id="footnotetag38" name="footnotetag38"></a><a href="#footnote38" title="Go to footnote 38"><span class="smaller">[38]</span></a></p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page257" name="page257"></a>(p. 257)</span> CHAPTER XI.</h2> + +<p class="resume">Cost of transportation to the northern frontier — English + fleet on our coast — Chesapeake blockaded — Blockade of + the whole coast — Cockburn attacks Frenchtown — Burns + Havre De Grace — Attacks Georgetown and Frederickstown — + Arrival of British reinforcements — Attack on Craney Island + — Barbarities committed in Hampton — Excitement caused by + these outrages — Commodore Hardy blockades the northern + coast — Torpedoes — Hostile attitude of Massachusetts — + Remonstrances of its legislature — Feeling of the people.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">1813.</span> + +<p>With such a large extent of ocean and lake coast, and so vast and +unprotected western and southern frontiers occupied by hostile +savages, our troops were necessarily distributed over a wide surface. +The northern army alone acted on the offensive—in all other sections +of the country the Republic strove only to preserve its territory +intact. The summer in which Dearborn's army lay inactive at Fort +George, looked gloomy for the nation. Great exertions were being made +to retrieve our errors, and the war in the north was carried on at an +enormous expense. The conveying of provisions and arms for such a +distance on pack-horses, increased immensely the price of every +article. It was said that each cannon, by the time it reached +Sackett's <span class="pagenum"><a id="page258" name="page258"></a>(p. 258)</span> Harbor, cost a thousand dollars, while the +transportation of provisions to the army of Harrison swelled them to +such an exorbitant price, that the amount expended on a small +detachment would now feed a whole army. The cost of building the +indifferent vessels we had on Lake Ontario, was nearly two millions of +dollars.</p> + +<p>But while these vast expenditures were made for the northern army, and +Harrison was gradually concentrating his troops at Fort Meigs, and +Perry building his little fleet on Lake Erie, soon to send up a shout +that should shake the land, and while the murmuring of the savage +hordes, that stretched from Mackinaw to the Gulf of Mexico, foretold a +bloody day approaching, an ominous cloud was gathering over the +Atlantic sea-coast. English fleets were hovering around our harbors +and threatening our cities and towns with conflagration. The year +before, England could spare but few vessels or troops to carry on the +war. Absorbed in the vast designs of Napoleon, who having wrested from +her nearly all her allies and banded them together under his +standard—Austria, Prussia, Poland, all Germany pressing after his +victorious eagles as they flashed above the waters of the Niemen—was +at that time advancing with a half million of men on the great +northern power. If he should prove successful, England would be +compelled to succumb, or with a still more overwhelming <span class="pagenum"><a id="page259" name="page259"></a>(p. 259)</span> +force he would next precipitate himself upon her shores. But the +snow-drifts of Russia had closed over that vast and gallant host—his +allies had abandoned him, and the rising of the nations around him, in +his weak, exhausted condition, foretold the overthrow that soon sent +him forth an exile from his throne and kingdom. Released from the +anxiety that had hitherto rendered her comparatively indifferent to +the war on this continent, she resolved to mete out to us a +chastisement the more severe since it had been so long withheld. +Irritated, too, because we had endeavored to rob her of her provinces +at a moment when she was the least able to extend protection to them, +she did not regard us as a common enemy, but as one who by his conduct +had ceased to merit the treatment accorded in civilized warfare. The +first squadron appeared in the Chesapeake in February and blockaded +it. Soon after another, entered the Delaware under the command of +Beresford, who attempted to land at Lewistown, but was gallantly +repulsed by the militia, commanded by Colonel Davis. The town was +bombarded, and though the firing was kept up for twenty hours, no +impression was made upon it. In March the whole coast of the United +States was declared in a state of blockade, with the exception of +Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. It is not known why +Connecticut was not also omitted, but <span class="pagenum"><a id="page260" name="page260"></a>(p. 260)</span> the invidious +distinction made between the eastern and the other states grew out of +the well known hostility of the former to the war. It was intended not +only as a reward for their good behavior in the past, but a guerdon of +better things should that hostility assume a more definite form. This +intended compliment to New England was the greatest insult she ever +received. It was a charge of disloyalty—the offer of a bribe for +treason—the proffer of the hand of friendship, while that same hand +was applying the torch to American dwellings and carrying the horrors +of war to the hearth-stone and fireside.</p> + +<p>Admiral Cockburn, especially, made his name infamous by his wanton +attacks on farm houses and peaceful citizens, and the license he +allowed to the brutal soldiery, who were guilty of deeds of shame and +violence like those which disgraced the troops of Wellington at +Badajos and St. Sebastian. After amusing himself by these predatory +exercises on peasants, hen roosts, barns, and cattle, he planned the +more important attack on Frenchtown, a village consisting of six +dwellings and two store houses. Taking with him about five hundred +marines, he set out at night, and rousing the terrified inhabitants by +his cannon, landed his imposing force, burned the two store houses, +after taking such of their contents as he needed—committed some petty +depredations, and retired.</p> + +<p>The American frigate, Constellation, was blockaded <span class="pagenum"><a id="page261" name="page261"></a>(p. 261)</span> in the +bay by this fleet, but all efforts to take her were repulsed by her +brave crew.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">May 3.</span> + +<p>The scene of his next exploits was Havre de Grace, a thriving town, +situated on the Susquehanna, about two miles from the head of the bay. +He set out with his barges by night, and at daylight next morning +awakened the inhabitants with the thunder of cannon and explosion of +rockets in their midst. A scene of consternation and brutality +followed. Frightened women and children ran shrieking through the +streets, pursued by the insults and shouts of the soldiers. The houses +were sacked and then set on fire. The ascending smoke and flames of +the burning dwellings increased the ferocity of the men, and acts were +committed, from mere wantonness, disgraceful both to the soldiers and +their commanders. The work of destruction being completed, the British +force was divided into three bodies—one of which was ordered to +remain as guard, while the other two pierced inland, spoiling and +insulting the farmers, and robbing peaceful travellers. For three days +this gallant corps remained the terror and pest of the surrounding +country, and then re-embarked with their booty, leaving the +inhabitants to return to the ashes of their dwellings. Georgetown and +Frederictown became, in turn, the prey of these marauders, and the +light of burning habitations, and tears of women and children, fleeing +in every direction, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page262" name="page262"></a>(p. 262)</span> kindled into tenfold fury the rage of +the inhabitants. A sympathetic feeling pervaded Congress, and no +sooner did it assemble than Clay, the speaker, descended from the +chair, and demanded an investigation of the charges brought against +British soldiers and officers. These excesses, however, were but the +prelude to greater and more revolting ones. Admiral Warren having +arrived in the bay with reinforcements, and land troops under the +command of General Beckwith, more serious movements were resolved +upon. Norfolk was selected as the first point of attack. This +important town was protected by two forts on either side of the +Elizabeth river, between which the frigate Constellation lay at +anchor. Soon after the fleet moved to the mouth of James river, and +began to prepare for an attack on Craney Island, the first obstacle +between it and Norfolk. Penetrating their design, Captain Tarbell +landed a hundred seamen on the island, to man a fort on the north-west +side, while he moved his gun boats so as to command the other channel. +At day dawn on the 22d, fifty barges loaded with troops were seen +pulling swiftly towards the island, to a point out of reach of the gun +boats, but within range of the batteries on shore. These immediately +opened their fire with such precision, that many of the boats were cut +in two and sunk, and the remainder compelled to retire. An attempt +from the mainland was also <span class="pagenum"><a id="page263" name="page263"></a>(p. 263)</span> repulsed by the Virginia militia, +under Colonel Beatty. The enemy lost in this attack between two and +three hundred men, while the Americans suffered but little. Three days +after the repulse at Craney Island, Admiral Cockburn, assisted by +General Beckwith, made a descent on Hampton, a small fishing town by +Hampton roads. The riflemen stationed there, and the militia, bravely +resisted the landing, but were finally driven back by superior +numbers. The place was then entered and plundered, not merely of its +public stores, but private property. This little fishing town was +literally sacked by the British army of twenty-five hundred men. +Private houses were rifled, even the communion service of the church +was carried away, while the women were subjected to the most degrading +insults, and <i>ravished in open day</i>! The American army marched into +Mexico over the bodies of their slain comrades, and were fired upon +for a whole day from the roofs of houses after the city had +surrendered, yet no such acts of violence were ever charged on them as +were committed under the sanction of the British flag in this little +peaceful, solitary, and defenceless village. The authorities of the +different towns took up the matter—witnesses were examined, +affidavits made, and the proceedings forwarded to the British +Commander. The charges were denied, but they stand proved to this day, +a lasting stigma <span class="pagenum"><a id="page264" name="page264"></a>(p. 264)</span> on the name of Cockburn. This rear admiral +in the British navy not only allowed such outrages in one instance, +but repeatedly. There was a harmony in his proceedings refuting the +apology of unintentional baseness. His expeditions were those of a +brigand, and he changed civilized warfare into marauding, robbery, and +pillage. The news of these enormities, aggravated as they passed from +mouth to month, spread like wildfire amid the people. Stirring appeals +were heard in every village and town. Calm reflection and reason were +indignantly spurned; woman, manhood, patriotism, all cried aloud for +vengeance, and the war-cry of an aroused and indignant people swelled +like thunder over the land. The leaders of the anti-war faction saw +with consternation this rising sympathy of the masses. It threatened, +for the time, to sweep away their influence entirely. The British +committed a vital error in allowing these excesses, for they +harmonized the hitherto divided feelings of the people, and furnished +the upholders of the war with a new and powerful argument for unity +and energy. The public ear had become accustomed to the tales of +impressment and charges of the invasion of neutral rights. The +atrocities on the north-western frontier affected the west more than +the east, where they were charged rather to the Indians than to the +British Government, and were inflicted on an invading force. But a +system <span class="pagenum"><a id="page265" name="page265"></a>(p. 265)</span> of warfare so abhorrent to humanity, aroused into +activity a spirit which gave tenfold strength to the administration.</p> + +<p>While the Chesapeake remained blockaded, Admiral Cockburn, with a +portion of the fleet, moved southward, preceded by the history of his +deeds. The coasts of the Carolinas and Georgia were thrown into a +state of agitation bordering on frenzy. Mrs. Gaston, wife of a member +of Congress, died in convulsions from the terror inspired by this +British Admiral. He, however, effected but little. Landing at +Portsmouth he seized some booty and a few slaves. From the outset he +had attempted to persuade the slaves to rise against their masters, +and actually organized a company of blacks to aid him in his marauding +expeditions.</p> + +<p>The squadron blockading the coast north of the Chesapeake was +commanded by Commodore Hardy, the reverse of Cockburn in every quality +that distinguished the latter. He waged no warfare on defenceless +towns, and villages, and women and children. Humane and generous, he +had more cause to complain of the conduct of the excited inhabitants, +than they of his. Although he landed at various places he allowed his +troops to commit no violence.</p> + +<p>The American coast, south of Cape Cod, was at length thoroughly +blockaded, so that not only were our ships at home shut in port, but +those endeavoring <span class="pagenum"><a id="page266" name="page266"></a>(p. 266)</span> to enter from without captured, and our +whole coasting trade was cut off, causing the country to feel severely +the miseries of war. The Constellation remained blockaded in the +Chesapeake, while the Macedonian, United States, and sloop Hornet, in +endeavoring to escape from New York by the way of the Sound, were +chased into New London, where they were compelled to lay inactive. In +the mean time, in accordance with an act of Congress, passed in the +winter, allowing half of the value of war ships to those who should +destroy them by other means than armed or commissioned vessels of the +United States, great ingenuity was exhibited in the construction of +torpedoes. Several attempts were made to blow up the British frigates, +but without success. The Plantagenet, however, riding in Lynn Haven +bay, came near falling a victim to one of these missiles, which spread +terror through the British fleet. After several unsuccessful efforts, +Mr. Mix, to whom the torpedo was entrusted, at length succeeded in +getting it near the bows of the vessel, unperceived. <span class="sidenote">July +24.</span> The "all's well" of the watch on deck had scarcely pealed over +the water, when it exploded with terrific violence. A red and purple +column suddenly rose fifty feet in the air, and bursting, fell like a +water-spout on deck. The ship rolled heavily in the chasm, and a +general rush was made for the boats, one of which was <span class="pagenum"><a id="page267" name="page267"></a>(p. 267)</span> blown +into the air. Commodore Hardy remonstrated against this mode of +warfare, as contrary to the usages of civilized nations, and it was +soon abandoned. The terror it inspired, however, made him more wary in +approaching the coast. A boat-guard was kept rowing around the ships +all night, and the most extraordinary precautions taken to protect +them from these mysterious engines of destruction.</p> + +<p>While our blockaded coast was thus filling Congress with alarm, and +the whole land with gloom and dread, the bold and hostile attitude +which Massachusetts was assuming, both deepened the general +indignation and added to the embarrassments under which the +administration struggled. Owing, doubtless, to the failures which +marked the close of the previous year, the elections in the New +England states during the early spring had terminated very +satisfactorily to the Federalists. Strong was elected Governor of +Massachusetts by a large majority, while both branches of the +Legislature were under the control of the Federalists. In Connecticut +and New Hampshire they had also triumphed, and Vermont, although her +state government and delegation to Congress were Democratic, was still +claimed as Federalist in the popular majority.</p> + +<p>On the other side, New York and Pennsylvania spoke loudly for the +Administration, the latter by <span class="pagenum"><a id="page268" name="page268"></a>(p. 268)</span> offering to loan a million of +dollars to the government, as an offset to the efforts of the +Federalists to prevent the loan proposed by government being taken.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">May 20.</span> + +<p>During the summer, acting under a hostile message received from the +governor, the Massachusetts Legislature drew up a remonstrance, +denouncing the war as wrong and unwise, prompted by desire of conquest +and love of France, rather than the wish to maintain the rights of the +people. The report of a committee against the incorporation into the +Union of Louisiana, as the commencement of western annexation, +destined, if not arrested, to destroy the preponderance of the Eastern +states, was also sustained in this remonstrance, which closed with a +solemn appeal to the Searcher of all hearts for the purity of the +motives which prompted it. Quincy in the House, and Otis and Loyd in +the Senate, were the Federalist leaders. Not content with taking this +hostile attitude to the General Government, the Legislature soon after +refused to pass resolutions complimentary to Captain Lawrence for his +gallant conduct in capturing the Peacock, and passed instead, the +following resolution introduced by a preamble, declaring that such +commendations encouraged the continuance of the war. "<i>Resolved</i>, as +the sense of the Senate of Massachusetts, that in a war like the +present, waged without justifiable <span class="pagenum"><a id="page269" name="page269"></a>(p. 269)</span> cause, and prosecuted in +a manner showing that conquest and ambition are its real motives, it +is not becoming a moral people to express any approbation of military +or naval exploits, which are not immediately connected with the +defence of our sea-coast and soil." This was not a mere expression of +feeling, but the utterance of a principle acted on from that time to +the end of the war. This proud assumption of state rights and +denunciation of the war when our coasts were blockaded by British +cruisers and our frontiers drenched in blood, met the stern +condemnation of the people throughout the land, and raised a clamor +that frightened the authors of it. Party spirit had made Massachusetts +mad, and blinded by her own narrow views, she wished to wrap herself +up in her isolated dignity and keep forever from the great brotherhood +of the Union those western territories where the hardy settler had to +contend not only with the asperities of nature but a treacherous foe. +That West which she then abjured has since repaid the wrong by pouring +into her lap countless treasures, and furnishing homes for tens of +thousands of her sons and daughters. Allowing the spirit of faction to +override the feelings of nationality, she refused to rejoice in the +victories of her country or sympathize in her defeats. South Carolina +has since assumed a similar hostile attitude to the Union, but it yet +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page270" name="page270"></a>(p. 270)</span> remains to be seen whether she would not sink her private +quarrels when the national rights were struck down and the country +wasted by a common foe. As a state, not only repudiating the authority +of the general government and the sacredness of the Union, but also +refusing to stand by the republic in the hour of adversity and +darkness, Massachusetts occupied at that time a preeminence in our +history which it is to be hoped no other state will ever covet.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page271" name="page271"></a>(p. 271)</span> CHAPTER XII.</h2> + +<p class="resume">Perry obtains and equips a fleet on Lake Erie — Puts to sea + — Kentucky marines — Description of the battle — Gallant + bearing of Perry — Slaughter on the Lawrence — Perry after + the battle — Burial of the officers — Exultation of the + people — Harrison advances on Malden — Flight of Proctor + — Battle of the Thames, and death of Tecumseh.</p> + +<p>But while the country, torn with internal strife and wasted by +external foes, looked with sad forebodings on the prospect before it, +there suddenly shot forth over the western wilderness a gleam of +light, like the bright hues of sunset, betokening a fairer to-morrow. +Perry's brilliant victory, followed by the overthrow of Proctor a few +weeks after, thrilled the land from limit to limit. On the frontier, +where we had met with nothing but disgrace, and towards which the +common eye turned with chagrin, we had cancelled a portion of our +shame, and relieved the national bosom of a part of the load that +oppressed it.</p> + +<p>After the capture of Forts York and George, by which the river of +Niagara was opened to American navigation, Captain Perry was able to +take some <span class="pagenum"><a id="page272" name="page272"></a>(p. 272)</span> vessels bought for the service from Black Rock +into Lake Erie. The Lake at the time was in the possession of the +British fleet, commanded by Captain Barclay, and Perry ran great +hazard in encountering it before he could reach Presque Isle, now +Erie, where the other vessels to compose his squadron had been built. +He, however, reached this spacious harbor just as the English hove in +sight. Having now collected his whole force he made vigorous +preparations to get to sea. By the first of August he was ready to set +sail, but the enemy lay off the harbor, across the mouth of which +extended a bar, that he was afraid to cross under a heavy fire. To his +great delight, however, the British fleet suddenly +disappeared—Captain Barclay not dreaming that his adversary was ready +to go to sea, having gone to the Canada shore.</p> + +<p>Perry was at this time a mere youth, of twenty-seven years of age, but +ardent, chivalrous, and full of energy and resource. From the time he +arrived on the frontier, the winter previous, he had been unceasing in +his efforts to obtain and equip a fleet. Materials had to be brought +from Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, dragged hundreds of miles over bad +roads and across unbridged streams. But after his vessels were ready +for sea, he was destitute of crews. To his repeated and urgent calls +for men, only promises were returned, nor did they <span class="pagenum"><a id="page273" name="page273"></a>(p. 273)</span> arrive +till the English had been able to finish and equip a large vessel, the +Detroit, which gave them a decided preponderance. Perry was +exceedingly anxious to attack the hostile fleet before it received +this accession of strength, but prevented from doing this through want +of men, he was at last compelled to abandon all his efforts, or take +his chance with his motley, untrained crew, in an action where the +superiority was manifest. He boldly resolved on the latter course, and +taking advantage of Barclay's sudden departure, gave orders for the +men to repair immediately on board ship, and dropped with eight of his +squadron down the harbor to the bar. It was Sabbath morning, and young +Perry, impressed with the great issues to himself and his country from +the step he was about to take, sent his boat ashore for a clergyman, +requesting him to hold religious services on board his ship. All the +officers of the squadron were assembled on the deck of the Lawrence, +and listened to an impressive address on the duty they owed their +country. Prayer was then offered for the success of their cause. Young +Perry reverently listening to the voice of prayer, as he is going +forth to battle, and young Macdonough lifting his own in supplication +to God, after his decks are cleared for action, furnish striking and +beautiful examples to naval men.</p> + +<p>Next morning the water being smooth, the guns <span class="pagenum"><a id="page274" name="page274"></a>(p. 274)</span> of the +Lawrence, the largest vessel, were taken out, and two scows placed +alongside and filled till they sunk to the water's edge. Pieces of +timber were then run through the forward and after ports of the +vessel, and made fast by blocks to the scows. All being ready, the +water was pumped out of them, and the vessel slowly rose over the bar. +She stuck fast, however, on the top, and the scows had to be sunk +again before she finally floated clear and moved off into deep water. +The men worked all night to get this one brig over. The schooners +passed easily and moored outside. The Lawrence was scarcely once more +afloat before the returning fleet hove in sight. Perry immediately +prepared for action. But Barclay after reconnoitering for half an hour +crowded all sail and disappeared again up the lake.<a id="footnotetag39" name="footnotetag39"></a><a href="#footnote39" title="Go to footnote 39"><span class="smaller">[39]</span></a> The next day +Perry sailed in pursuit, but after cruising a whole day without +finding the enemy, returned to take in supplies. <span class="sidenote">Aug. 12.</span> +He was about to start again, when he received information of the +expected approach of a party of seamen under the command of Captain +Elliot. Waiting a day or two to receive this welcome aid, he set sail +for Sandusky, to put himself in communication with Gen. Harrison and +the north-western army. He then <span class="pagenum"><a id="page275" name="page275"></a>(p. 275)</span> returned to Malden, where +the British fleet lay, and going into Put-in Bay, a haven in its +vicinity, waited for the enemy to come out. <span class="sidenote">Aug. 25.</span> Here +many of his crew were taken sick with fever, which at last seized him, +together with the three surgeons of the squadron. He was not able to +leave his cabin till the early part of September, when he received an +additional reinforcement of a hundred volunteers. These troops came +from Harrison's army, and were mostly Kentucky militia and soldiers +from the 28th regiment of infantry, and all volunteers for the +approaching battle. The Kentuckians, most of them, had never seen a +square rigged vessel before, and wandered up and down examining every +room and part of the ship without scruple. Dressed in their fringed +linsey-woolsey hunting-shirts, with their muskets in their hands, they +made a novel marine corps as ever trod the deck of a battle-ship.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Sept. 10.</span> + +<p>On the morning of the 10th of September, it was announced that the +British fleet was coming out of Malden, and Perry immediately set sail +to meet it. His squadron consisted of three brigs, the Lawrence, +Niagara and Caledonia, the Trippe, a sloop, and five schooners, +carrying in all fifty-four guns. That of the British was composed of +six vessels, mounting sixty-three guns. It was a beautiful morning, +and the light breeze scarcely ruffled <span class="pagenum"><a id="page276" name="page276"></a>(p. 276)</span> the surface of the +water as the two squadrons, with all sails set, slowly approached each +other. The weather-gauge, at first, was with the enemy, but Perry +impatient to close, resolved to waive this advantage, and kept +standing on, when the wind unexpectedly shifted in his favor. Captain +Barclay observing this, immediately hove to, and lying with his +topsails aback, waited the approach of his adversary. With all his +canvass out, Perry bore slowly and steadily down before the wind. The +breeze was so light that he could scarcely make two miles an hour. The +shore was lined with spectators, gazing on the exciting spectacle, and +watching with intense anxiety the movements of the American squadron. +Not a cloud dimmed the clear blue sky over head, and the lake lay like +a mirror, reflecting its beauty and its purity. Perry, in the +Lawrence, led the line.</p> + +<p>Taking out the flag which had been previously prepared, and mounting a +gun-slide, he called the crew about him, and said, "My brave lads, +this flag contains the last words of Captain Lawrence. Shall I hoist +it?" "Aye, aye, sir," was the cheerful response. Up went the flag with +a will, and as it swayed to the breeze it was greeted with loud cheers +from the deck. As the rest of the squadron beheld that flag floating +from the mainmast of their commander's vessel, and saw "Don't give up +the ship!" was to be the signal <span class="pagenum"><a id="page277" name="page277"></a>(p. 277)</span> for action, a long, loud +cheer rolled down the line. The excitement spread below, and all the +sick that could move, tumbled up to aid in the approaching combat. +Perry then visited every gun, having a word of encouragement for each +captain. Seeing some of the gallant tars who had served on board the +Constitution, and many of whom now stood with handkerchiefs tied round +their heads, all cleared for action, he said, "Well, boys, are you +ready?" "All ready, your honor," was the quick response. "I need not +say anything to you. <i>You</i> know how to beat those fellows," he added +smilingly, as he passed on.</p> + +<p>The wind was so light that it took an hour and a half, after all the +preparations had been made, to reach the hostile squadron. This long +interval of idleness and suspense was harder to bear than the battle +itself. Every man stood silently watching the enemy's vessels, or in +low and earnest tones conversed with each other, leaving requests and +messages to friends in case they fell. Perry gave his last direction, +in the event of his death, to Hambleton—tied weights to his public +papers in order to have them ready to cast overboard if he should be +defeated—read over his wife's letters for the last time, and then +tore them up, so that the enemy should not see those records of the +heart, and turned away, remarking, "<i>This is the most important day of +my life.</i>" The <span class="pagenum"><a id="page278" name="page278"></a>(p. 278)</span> deep seriousness and silence that had fallen +on the ship, was at last broken by the blast of a bugle that came +ringing over the water from the Detroit, followed by cheers from the +whole British squadron. A single gun, whose shot went skipping past +the Lawrence, first uttered its stern challenge, and in a few minutes +all the long guns of the enemy began to play on the American fleet. +Being a mile and a half distant, Perry could not use his carronades, +and he was exposed to this fire for a half an hour before he could get +within range. Steering straight for the Detroit, a vessel a fourth +larger than his own, he gave orders to have the schooners that lagged +behind close up within half cable's length. Those orders, the last he +gave during the battle, were passed by trumpet from vessel to vessel. +The light wind having nearly died away, the Lawrence suffered severely +before she could get near enough to open with her carronades and she +had scarcely taken her position before the fire of three vessels was +directed upon her. Enveloped in flame and smoke, Perry strove +desperately to maintain his ground till the rest of the fleet could +close, and for two hours sustained without flinching this unequal +contest. The balls crashed incessantly through the sides of the ship, +dismounting the guns and strewing the deck with the dead, until at +length, with "every brace and bow-line shot away," she lay an +unmanageable <span class="pagenum"><a id="page279" name="page279"></a>(p. 279)</span> wreck on the water. But still through the +smoke, as it rent before the heavy broadsides, her colors were seen +flying, and still gleamed forth in the sunlight that glorious +motto—"<i>Don't give up the ship!</i>" Calm and unmoved at the slaughter +around him and his own desperate position, Perry gave his orders +tranquilly, as though executing a manœuvre. Although in his first +battle, and unaccustomed to scenes of carnage, his face gave no token +of the emotions that mastered him. Advancing to assist a sailor whose +gun had got out of order, he saw the poor fellow struck from his side +by a twenty-four pound shot and expire without a groan. His second +lieutenant fell at his feet. Lieutenant Brooks, a gay, dashing +officer, of extraordinary personal beauty, while speaking cheerfully +to him, was dashed by a cannon-ball to the other side of the deck and +mangled in the most frightful manner. His shrieks and imploring cries +to Perry to kill him and end his misery, were heard even above the +roar of the guns in every part of the ship. The dying who strewed the +deck would turn their eyes in mute inquiry upon their youthful +commander, as if to be told they had done their duty. The living, as a +sweeping shot rent huge gaps in the ranks of their companions, looked +a moment into his face to read its expression, and then stepped +quietly into the places left vacant.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Yarnall, with a red handkerchief tied <span class="pagenum"><a id="page280" name="page280"></a>(p. 280)</span> round his +head, and another round his neck, to staunch the blood flowing from +two wounds, his nose swelled to a monstrous size, from a splinter +having passed through it, disfigured and covered with gore, moved amid +this terrific scene the very genius of havoc and carnage. Approaching +Perry, he told him every officer in his division was killed. Others +were given him, but he soon returned with the same dismal tidings. +Perry then told him he must get along by himself, as he had no more to +furnish him, and the gallant man went back alone to his guns. Once +only did the shadow of any emotion pass over the countenance of this +intrepid commander. He had a brother on board, only twelve years old. +The little fellow who had had two balls pass through his hat, and been +struck with splinters, was still standing by the side of his brother, +stunned by the awful cannonading and carnage around him, when he +suddenly fell. For a moment Perry thought he too was gone, but he had +only been knocked down by a hammock, which a cannon ball had hurled +against him.</p> + +<a id="img004" name="img004"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img004.jpg" width="500" height="285" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">BATTLE ON LAKE ERIE.</p> +</div> + +<p>At length every gun was dismounted but one, still Perry fought with +that till at last it also was knocked from the carriage. Out of the +one hundred men with whom a few hours before he had gone into battle, +only eighteen stood up unwounded. Looking through the smoke he saw the +Niagara, apparently <span class="pagenum"><a id="page281" name="page281"></a>(p. 281)</span> uncrippled, drifting out of the +battle. Leaping into a boat with his young brother, he said to his +remaining officer, "If a victory is to be gained, I will gain it," and +standing erect, told the sailors to give way with a will. The enemy +observed the movement, and immediately directed their fire upon the +boat. Oars were splintered in the rowers' hands by musket balls, and +the men themselves covered with spray from the round shot and grape, +that smote the water on every side. Passing swiftly through the iron +storm he reached the Niagara in safety, and as the survivors of the +Lawrence saw him go up the vessel's side, they gave a hearty cheer. +Finding her sound and whole, Perry backed his maintop sail, and flung +out his signal for close action. From vessel to vessel the answering +signals went up in the sunlight, and three cheers rang over the water. +He then gave his sails to the wind and bore steadily down on the +centre of the enemy's line. Reserving his fire as he advanced, he +passed alone through the hostile fleet, within close pistol range, +wrapt in flame as he swept on. Delivering his broadsides right and +left, he spread horror and death through the decks of the Detroit and +Lady Prevost. Rounding to as he passed the line, he laid his vessel +close to two of the enemy's ships, and poured in his rapid fire. The +shrieks that rung out from the Detroit were heard even above the +deafening cannonade, while the crew of the Lady Prevost, unable +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page282" name="page282"></a>(p. 282)</span> to stand the fire, ran below, leaving their wounded, +stunned, and bewildered commander alone on deck, leaning his face on +his hand, and gazing vacantly on the passing ship. The other American +vessels having come up, the action at once became general. To the +spectators from the shore the scene at this moment was indescribably +thrilling. Far out on the calm water lay a white cloud, from out whose +tortured bosom broke incessant flashes and thunder claps—the loud +echoes rolling heavily away over the deep, and dying amid the silence +and solitude of the forest.</p> + +<p>An action so close and murderous could not last long, and it was soon +apparent that victory inclined to the Americans, for while the enemy's +fire sensibly slackened, the signal for close action was still flying +from the Niagara, and from every American vessel the answering signal +floated proudly in the wind. In fifteen minutes from the time the +first signal was made the battle was over. A white handkerchief waved +from the taffrail of the Queen Charlotte announced the surrender. The +firing ceased; the smoke slowly cleared away, revealing the two fleets +commingled, shattered, and torn, and strewed with dead. The loss on +each side was a hundred and thirty-five killed and wounded.</p> + +<p>Perry having secured the prisoners, returned to the Lawrence, lying a +wreck in the distance, whither she <span class="pagenum"><a id="page283" name="page283"></a>(p. 283)</span> had helplessly drifted. +She had struck her flag before he closed with the Niagara, but it was +now flying again. Not a word was spoken as he went over the vessel's +side; a silent grasp of the hand was the only sign of recognition, for +the deck around was covered with dismembered limbs, and brains, while +the bodies of twenty officers and men lay in ghastly groups before +him.</p> + +<p>As the sun went down over the still lake his last beams looked on a +mournful spectacle. Those ships stripped of their spars and canvass, +looked as if they had been swept by a hurricane, while desolation +covered their decks. At twilight the seamen who had fallen on board +the American fleet were committed to the deep, and the solemn burial +service of the Episcopal Church read over them.</p> + +<p>The uproar of the day had ceased and deep silence rested on the two +squadrons, riding quietly at anchor, broken only by the stifled groans +of the wounded, that were echoed from ship to ship. As Perry sat that +night on the quarter-deck of the Lawrence, conversing with his few +remaining officers, while ever and anon the moans of his brave +comrades below were borne to his ear, he was solemn and subdued. The +exciting scene through which he had safely passed—the heavy load +taken from his heart—the reflection that his own life had been +spared, and the consciousness that his little brother was slumbering +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page284" name="page284"></a>(p. 284)</span> sweetly and unhurt in his hammock beside him, awakened +emotions of gratitude to God, and he gravely remarked, "I believe that +my wife's prayers have saved me."<a id="footnotetag40" name="footnotetag40"></a><a href="#footnote40" title="Go to footnote 40"><span class="smaller">[40]</span></a></p> + +<p>It had been a proud day for him, and as he lay that night and thought +what a change a few hours had wrought in his fortunes, feelings of +exultation might well swell his bosom. Such unshaken composure—such +gallant bearing—stern resolution, and steadiness and tenacity of +purpose in a young man of twenty-seven, in his first battle, exhibit a +marvellous strength of character, and one wonders more at him than his +success.</p> + +<p>It was a great victory, and as the news spread, bonfires, +illuminations, the firing of cannon and shouts of excited multitudes +announced the joy and exultation of the nation. The gallant bearing of +Perry—his daring passage in an open boat through the enemy's fire to +the Niagara—the motto on his flag—the manner in which he carried his +vessel alone through the enemy's line, and then closed in half pistol +shot—his laconic account of the victory in a letter to the Secretary +of the Navy, "<span class="smcap">We have met the enemy and they are ours</span>"—furnished +endless themes for discussion and eulogy, and he suddenly found +himself in the front rank of heroes.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page285" name="page285"></a>(p. 285)</span> The day after the battle the funeral of the officers of the +two fleets took place. A little opening on the margin of the bay, a +wild and solitary spot, was selected as the place of interment. It was +a beautiful autumn day, not a breath of air ruffled the surface of the +lake or moved the still forest that fringed that lonely clearing. The +sun shone brightly down on the new-made graves, and not a sound +disturbed the sabbath stillness that rested on forest and lake. The +fallen officers, each in his appropriate uniform, were laid on +platforms made to receive them, and placed with their hands across +their breasts, in the barges. As these were rowed gently away the +boats fell in behind in long procession, and the whole swept slowly +and sadly towards the place of burial. The flags drooped mournfully in +the still air, the dirge to which the oars kept time rose and fell in +solemn strains over the water, while minute guns from the various +vessels blended their impressive harmony with the scene. The day +before had been one of strife and carnage, but those who had closed in +mortal hate, now mourned like a band of brothers for their fallen +leaders, and gathering together around the place of burial, gazed a +last farewell, and firing one volley over the nameless graves, turned +sadly away. There, in that wild spot, with the sullen waves to sing +their perpetual dirge, they slept the sleep of the brave. They had +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page286" name="page286"></a>(p. 286)</span> fought gallantly, and it mattered not to them the victory or +defeat, for they had gone to that still land where human strifes are +forgotten, and the clangor of battle never comes.</p> + +<p>This impressive scene occurred off the shore where the massacre of +Raisin was committed, and what a striking contrast does it present to +the day that succeeded the victory of Proctor. By his noble and +generous conduct Perry won the esteem and love of his enemies, while +Proctor by his unfeeling neglect and barbarity received the curse of +all honorable men. The name of one is linked to the spot where he +conquered, with blessings; that of the other with everlasting infamy +and disgrace.</p> + +<p>Harrison, after this victory, collected his army of seven thousand +men, and concentrated them at Put-in Bay. Perry's fleet rode +triumphant on the lake, and he offered its service to Harrison. The +latter ordered the regiment of horse, one thousand strong, to proceed +by land to Detroit, while the rest of the army was embarked on board +the vessels and set sail for Malden. <span class="sidenote">Sept. 13.</span> Proctor +commanded at the latter place, and hearing of Barclay's defeat and +Harrison's advance, was seized with alarm, and dismantling and blowing +up the fort, and setting on fire the navy yard, barracks and store +houses, and taking with him all the horses and cattle, fled towards +the Thames. The Americans followed in <span class="pagenum"><a id="page287" name="page287"></a>(p. 287)</span> swift and eager +pursuit. Governor Shelby, of Kentucky, though sixty-two years of age, +was there with his brave Kentuckians, a volunteer, shaking his white +locks with the merriest. Perry and Cass also accompanied the army, +sharing in the animation and eagerness of the men. Sending a +detachment across the river to drive out the hostile Indians from +Detroit, Harrison, on the 30th, saw with relief the mounted column of +Colonel Johnson winding along the opposite bank, announcing its +approach with the stirring notes of the bugle. Resting one day to +complete his preparations, he, on the 2d of October, resumed the +pursuit, and soon, abandoned guns and shells, destroyed bridges, and +houses and vessels on fire, revealed the haste and rage of the enemy. +Proctor, after reaching the Thames, kept up the river, with the +intention of striking the British posts near the head of Lake Ontario. +But Harrison pressed him so closely, it soon became evident that a +battle could not be avoided. On the 5th, Colonel Johnson, with his +mounted Kentuckians, marching two or three miles in advance, came upon +the retreating army drawn up in order of battle, on the bank of the +Thames near the Moravian settlement. Proctor had taken an admirable +position upon a dry strip of land, flanked by the river on the left +and a swamp on the right. Here he placed his regulars, eight hundred +strong, while Tecumseh with his two <span class="pagenum"><a id="page288" name="page288"></a>(p. 288)</span> thousand Indian allies +occupied the eastern margin of the swamp. Harrison, with his troops +jaded out, encamped that night in front of the enemy. <span class="sidenote">Oct. +4.</span> After dark Proctor and Tecumseh reconnoitred together the American +camp, when the latter advised a night attack. This, Proctor objected +to, and strongly urged a retreat. The haughty savage spurned the +proposition, and in the morning the British general finding he could +not escape an engagement, resolved to give battle where he was. +Thinking only of retreat he had neglected to erect a breastwork or cut +a ditch in front of his position, which would have effectually +prevented a cavalry attack. To ensure the complete success of this +blunder, he formed his troops in open order, thus provoking a charge +of horse. <span class="sidenote">Oct. 5.</span> Colonel Johnson, at his earnest request, +was allowed to open the battle with his thousand mounted riflemen. But +just as he was about to order the charge, he discovered that the +ground was too cramped to admit of a rapid and orderly movement of the +entire force, and he therefore divided it into two columns, and +putting his brother, Lieutenant Colonel James Johnson, at the head of +the one that was to advance on the British, he led the other against +the Indians. These two battalions moved slowly forward for a short +time parallel to each other, the infantry following. The column +advancing on the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page289" name="page289"></a>(p. 289)</span> British was checked at the first fire—the +horses at the head of it recoiling. Their riders, however, quickly +recovered them, and sending the rowels home, plunged with a yell of +frenzy full on the British line. A few saddles were emptied, but +nothing could stop that astonishing charge. Those fiery horsemen swept +like a whirlwind through the panic-stricken ranks, and then wheeling, +delivered their fire. Nearly five hundred rifles cracked at once, +strewing the ground with men. It was a single blow, and the battle was +over in that part of the field. Scarcely a minute had elapsed, and +almost the entire British force was begging for quarter. A charge of +cavalry with rifles only, was probably a new thing to those soldiers. +Proctor, with forty men and some mounted Indians, fled at the first +onset. His carriage, private papers, even his sword, were left behind, +and goaded by terror he was soon lost in the distance. He remembered +the massacre at Raisin, and knew if those enraged Kentuckians, whose +brothers, fathers and sons he had given up to the savage, once laid +hands on him they would grant him short shrift. Cruelty and cowardice +are often joined together.</p> + +<p>The other battalion not finding firm footing for the horses could not +charge, and Johnson seeing that his men were being rapidly picked off, +ordered them to dismount and take to the cover. Tecumseh <span class="pagenum"><a id="page290" name="page290"></a>(p. 290)</span> led +his men gallantly forward, and for a few minutes the conflict was +sharp and bloody. Johnson was wounded in three places, yet stubbornly +maintained his ground. At length Tecumseh fell, when the savages with +a loud whoop, the "death halloo" of their leader, turned and fled. The +death of this remarkable chieftain was worth more than a whole hostile +tribe destroyed, and broke up forever the grand alliance of the +Indians with the British. Not more than twenty-five hundred American +troops mingled in the battle at all; of these but fifty were killed +and wounded. Among the latter was Colonel Johnson, who was borne from +the field in a blanket, with the blood running out at either end. Six +hundred prisoners were taken, a large quantity of stores, ammunition, +etc., and six pieces of artillery, among which were three captured +from the British during the Revolution, and surrendered by General +Hull at Detroit. The news of this important victory coming so quick on +that of Perry's, filled the nation with increased confidence, and +placed a cheerful countenance once more on the war party. The cloud +that had hung so darkly over the land seemed lifting, and if Chauncey +on Lake Ontario, and Wilkinson on the St. Lawrence, would give equally +good accounts of themselves, the season would close with Canada within +our grasp.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page291" name="page291"></a>(p. 291)</span> CHAPTER XIII.</h2> + +<p class="resume">Wilkinson takes command of the northern army — Plan of the + campaign — Hampton entrusted with the 5th military district + and takes position at Plattsburg — Quarrel between the two + Generals — Hampton advances, against orders, into Canada; + is defeated — Concentration of Wilkinson's army — Moves + down the St. Lawrence — Its picturesque aspect — Harassed + by the enemy — Battle of Chrystler's field — Hampton + refuses to join him — The expedition abandoned and the + armies retire to winter quarters — Disappointment and + indignation of the war party, and gratification of the + Federalists — Abandonment of Fort George and burning of + Newark — Loss of Fort Niagara and burning of Buffalo and + the settlements along the river — Retaliation — Gloomy + close of the campaign.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">1813.</span> + +<p>While Perry and Harrison were thus reclaiming our lost ground on Lake +Erie and in the north-west, Armstrong was preparing to carry out his +favorite plan of a descent on Kingston and Montreal. When he accepted +the post of Secretary of War, he transferred his department from +Washington to Sackett's Harbor, so that he might superintend in person +the progress of the campaign. In April previous, the United States had +been divided into nine military districts, that portion of New York +State north of the Highlands and Vermont, constituting the ninth.<a id="footnotetag41" name="footnotetag41"></a><a href="#footnote41" title="Go to footnote 41"><span class="smaller">[41]</span></a> +Although Wilkinson had superseded <span class="pagenum"><a id="page292" name="page292"></a>(p. 292)</span> Dearborn, as +commander-in-chief of this district in July, he did not issue his +first orders to the army till the 23d of August. Three days after a +council of war was held at Sackett's Harbor, in which it was estimated +that by the 20th of September the army would consist of nine thousand +men, exclusive of militia. The garrisons at Forts George, Niagara, +Oswego and Burlington, were therefore ordered to rendezvous at +Grenadier Island, near Sackett's Harbor. General Wade Hampton, who had +been recalled from the fifth military district to the northern +frontier, encamped with his army, four thousand strong, at Plattsburg, +on Lake Champlain. The plan finally adopted by the Secretary was, to +have Wilkinson drop down the St. Lawrence, and without stopping to +attack the English posts on the river, form a junction with General +Hampton, when the two armies should march at once on Montreal. These +two Generals were both Revolutionary officers, and consequently too +advanced in years to carry such an <span class="pagenum"><a id="page293" name="page293"></a>(p. 293)</span> expedition through with +vigor and activity. Besides, a hostile feeling separated them, +rendering each jealous of the other's command, which threatened to +work the most serious mischief. Armstrong, however, being the friend +of both, thought by acting himself as commander-in-chief, he could +reconcile their differences, sufficiently to insure harmony of action. +Chauncey, in the mean time, after an action with Yeo, in which both +parties claimed the victory, forced his adversary to take refuge in +Burlington Bay. <span class="sidenote">Sept. 28.</span> He then wrote to Wilkinson that +the lake was clear of the enemy, and reported himself ready to +transport the troops down the St. Lawrence.</p> + +<p>The greatest expectations were formed of this expedition. The people +knew nothing of the quarrel between Wilkinson and Hampton, and thought +only of the strength of their united force. The victories of Perry and +Harrison had restored confidence—the tide of misfortune had turned, +and when the junction of the two armies should take place, making in +all nearly twelve thousand men, the fate of Canada, they fondly +believed, would be sealed. No large British force was concentrated on +the frontier, while a garrison of but six hundred held Montreal. The +press, deeming Canada already won, had begun to defend its conquest. +The question was no longer, <i>how</i> to take it, but to reconcile the +nation to its possession.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Sept. 19.</span> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page294" name="page294"></a>(p. 294)</span> While Wilkinson was preparing to fulfill his part of the +campaign, Hampton made a bold push into Canada on his own +responsibility. Advancing from Plattsburg, he marched directly for St. +John, but finding water scarce for his draft cattle, owing to a severe +drought, he moved to the left, and next day arrived at Chateaugay Four +Corners, a few miles from the Canada line. Here he was overtaken by an +order from Armstrong, commanding him to remain where was, until the +arrival of Wilkinson. But jealous of his rival, and wishing to achieve +a victory in which the honor would not be divided, he resolved to take +upon himself the responsibility of advancing alone. Several +detachments of militia had augmented his force of four thousand, and +he deemed himself sufficiently strong to attack Prevost, who he was +told had only about two thousand ill assorted troops under him. +<span class="sidenote">Oct. 21.</span> He therefore gave orders to march, and cutting a +road for twenty-four miles through the wilderness, after five days +great toil, reached the British position. Ignorant of its weakness, he +dispatched Colonel Purdy at night by a circuitous route to gain the +enemy's flank and rear and assail his works, while he attacked them in +front. Bewildered by the darkness, and led astray by his guide, +Colonel Purdy wandered through the forest, entirely ignorant of the +whereabouts of the enemy or of his own. General Hampton, however, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page295" name="page295"></a>(p. 295)</span> supposing that he had succeeded in his attempt, ordered +General Izard to advance with the main body of the army, and as soon +as firing was heard in the rear to commence the attack in front. Izard +marched up his men and a skirmish ensued, when Colonel De Salaberry, +the British commander, who had but a handful of regulars under him, +ordered the bugles, which had been placed at some distance apart on +purpose to represent a large force, to sound the charge. The ruse +succeeded admirably, and a halt was ordered. The bugles brought up the +lost detachment of Purdy, but suddenly assailed by a concealed body of +militia, his command was thrown into disorder and broke and fled. +Disconcerted by the defeat of Purdy, Hampton ordered a retreat, +without making any attempt to carry the British intrenchments. A few +hundred Canadian militia, with a handful of regulars, stopped this +army of more than four thousand men with ten pieces of artillery, so +that it was forced, with a loss of but thirty men killed, wounded and +missing, to retreat twenty-four miles along the road it had cut with +so much labor through the forest. Hampton, defeated by the blasts of a +few bugles, took up his position again at the Four Corners, to wait +further news from Wilkinson's division.</p> + +<a id="img005" name="img005"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img005.jpg" width="500" height="312" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">WILKINSON FLOTILLA AMID THE THOUSAND ISLES.</p> +</div> + +<p>The latter having concentrated his troops at Grenadier Island, +embarked them again the same day that <span class="pagenum"><a id="page296" name="page296"></a>(p. 296)</span> Hampton advanced, +against orders, towards Montreal. Three hundred boats covering the +river for miles, carried the infantry and artillery, while the +cavalry, five hundred strong, marched along the bank. Beaten about by +storms, drenched with rain, stranded on deceitful shoals, this grand +fleet of batteaux crept so slowly towards the entrance of the St. +Lawrence, that the army, dispirited and disgusted, railed on its +commander and the government alike. They were two weeks in reaching +the river. Wilkinson, who had been recalled from New Orleans, to take +charge of this expedition, was prostrated by the lake fever, which, +added to the infirmities of age, rendered him wholly unfit for the +position he occupied. General Lewis, his second in command, was also +sick. The season was already far advanced—the autumnal storms had set +in earlier than usual—everything conspired to ensure defeat; and +around this wreck of a commander, tossed an army, dispirited, +disgusted, and doomed to disgrace. General Brown led the advance of +this army of invasion, as it started for Montreal, a hundred and +eighty miles distant. Approaching French Creek, eighteen miles below +Grenadier Island, it was attacked by a fleet of boats from Kingston, +but repulsed them with little loss. The news of the invasion, however, +spreading, the British detachment at Kingston, reinforced by the +militia, followed the descending flotilla, harassing <span class="pagenum"><a id="page297" name="page297"></a>(p. 297)</span> it +whenever an opportunity occurred. To a beholder the force seemed +adequate to secure the object contemplated, for the spectacle it +presented was grand and imposing. As the head of that vast fleet came +winding around the bend of the stream and swept out of view below, the +long procession of boats that streamed after seemed to be endless. +Scattered in picturesque groups amid the Thousand Isles, or assailed +with artillery from British forts—now swallowed up in the silent +forest that clothed the banks, and again slowly drifting past the +scattered settlements, or shooting the long and dangerous rapids, it +presented a strange and picturesque appearance. When it reached the +head of the long rapids at Hamilton, twenty miles below Ogdensburg, +Wilkinson ordered General Brown to advance by land and cover the +passage of the boats through the narrow defiles, where the enemy had +established block houses. In the mean time the cavalry had crossed +over to the Canadian side and with fifteen hundred men under General +Boyd, been despatched against the enemy, which was constantly +harassing his rear.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Nov. 11.</span> + +<p>General Boyd, accompanied by Generals Swartwout and Covington as +volunteers, moved forward in three columns. Colonel Ripley advancing +with the 21st Regiment, drove the enemy's sharp shooters from the +woods, and emerged on an open <span class="pagenum"><a id="page298" name="page298"></a>(p. 298)</span> space, called Chrystler's +Field, and directly in front of two English regiments. Notwithstanding +the disparity of numbers this gallant officer ordered a charge, which +was executed with such firmness that the two regiments retired. +Rallying and making a stand, they were again charged and driven back. +General Covington falling fiercely on the left flank, where the +artillery was posted, forced it to recoil. But at this critical +moment, while bravely leading on his men, he was shot through the +body. His fall disconcerted the brigade, and a shower of grape shot at +the same moment scourging it severely, it retired in confusion. This +restored the combat, and for more than two hours that open field was +the scene of successive and most gallant charges. The front of battle +wavered to and fro, and deeds of personal courage and daring were done +that showed that the troops and younger officers only needed a proper +commander, and they would soon give a report of themselves which would +change the aspect of affairs.</p> + +<p>At length the British retired to their camp and the Americans +maintained their position on the shore, so that the flotilla passed +the Saut in safety. This action has never received the praise it +deserves—the disgraceful failure of the campaign having cast a shadow +upon it. The British, though inferior in numbers, had greatly the +advantage in having possession of a stone house in the midst of the +field, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page299" name="page299"></a>(p. 299)</span> from which, as from a citadel, they could keep up a +constant fire, without being injured in return. The conflict was close +and murderous, and the American troops gave there a foretaste of +Chippewa and Lundy's Lane. Nearly one-fifth of the entire force +engaged were killed or wounded; a mortality never exhibited in a drawn +battle without most desperate fighting.</p> + +<p>General Wilkinson, who lay sick in his boat, knew nothing of what was +transpiring, except by report. Brown's cannon thundering amid the +rapids below—the dropping fire in the rear of his flotilla, and the +incessant crash of artillery and rattle of musketry in the forest, +blended their echoes around him, augmenting the power of disease, and +increasing that nervous anxiety, which made him long to be away from +such turbulent scenes, amid occupations more befitting his age and +infirmities.</p> + +<p>The army, however, still held its course for Montreal. Young Scott, +who had joined the expedition at Ogdensburg, was fifteen miles ahead, +clearing, with a detachment of less than eight hundred men, the river +banks as he went. Montreal was known to be feebly garrisoned, and +Wilkinson had no doubt it would fall an easy conquest. He therefore +sent forward to Hampton to join him at St. Regis, with provisions. +Hampton, in reply, said, that his men could bring no more provisions +than they wanted for <span class="pagenum"><a id="page300" name="page300"></a>(p. 300)</span> their own use, and informed him, in +short, that he should not cooperate with him at all, but make the best +of his way back to Lake Champlain.</p> + +<p>On receiving this astounding news, Wilkinson called a council of war, +which reprobated in strong terms the conduct of Hampton, and decided +that in consideration of his failure, and the lateness of the season, +the march should be suspended, and the army retire to winter quarters. +This was carried into effect, and Wilkinson repaired to French Mills, +on Salmon river, for the winter, and Hampton to Plattsburgh. Thus, for +months, an army of twelve thousand men had marched and manœuvred on +the Canadian frontier without striking a single blow. Confidence in +the success of this campaign had been so great, that its disgraceful +issue fell like a sudden paralysis on the war party, and on the nation +generally. Like Hull's defeat, it was unredeemed by a single glimmer +of light. The mind had nothing to rest upon for momentary relief. The +failure was so complete and total, that the advocates of the war were +struck dumb, and Washington was wrapped in gloom. The Federalists, on +the contrary, were strengthened. Their prognostications had proved +true. The nation had concentrated its strength on Canada for two +years, and yet been unable to make the least impression. A Boston +paper that from the first had denounced the war, said, "Democracy has +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page301" name="page301"></a>(p. 301)</span> rolled herself up in weeds, and laid down for its last +wallowing in the slough of disgrace."</p> + +<p class="poem10"> + Now lift ye saints your heads on high,<br> + And shout, for your redemption's nigh.<a id="footnotetag42" name="footnotetag42"></a><a href="#footnote42" title="Go to footnote 42"><span class="smaller">[42]</span></a></p> + +<p>The Federalists knew their advantage and prepared to use it, for this +was not a lost battle that might in a few days be retrieved; it was a +lost campaign, and a whole winter must intervene before an opportunity +to redeem it could occur. In that time they hoped to make the +administration a hissing and a bye-word in the land. The war party +looked glum and sullen in view of the long and merciless scourging +which awaited it. Armstrong was loudly censured, while on Wilkinson +and Hampton it poured the whole vials of its wrath. Armstrong was +doubtless too much of a martinet, and could carry through a campaign +on paper much better than practically; still, the one he had proposed +was feasible, and ought to have succeeded. He could not be held +responsible for the insubordination of officers. He however committed +one great error. Aware of the hostile feeling that existed between +Wilkinson and Hampton, he should have remained on the spot and acted +as commander-in-chief, or else if his duties rendered his absence +imperative, accepted the resignation of Wilkinson. Old and sick as the +latter was, no commander could have been more inefficient than +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page302" name="page302"></a>(p. 302)</span> he, while the enmity between him and Hampton was certain to +end in mischief. The junction of the two armies would not have +prevented, but on the contrary increased it. He knew, or ought to have +known, they would not act harmoniously together, and it required no +prophet's vision to foretell the fate of a divided army acting on the +enemy's territory. If he had remained to urge forward the expedition, +and sent home Hampton for disobeying his orders, and compelled the +army to form a junction with that of Wilkinson, no doubt Montreal +would have fallen. But knowing, as he did from the outset, that +Hampton would never harmonize with his enemy—to allow the success of +the campaign to depend on their concerted action, was committing a +blunder for which no apology can be made.</p> + +<p>Wilkinson came in for more than his share of public abuse. Sickness +must always cover a multitude of sins. There are very few men whose +will is stronger than disease. The firmest are unstrung by it. Even +Cesar, when prostrated by fever, could say:</p> + +<p class="poem10"> +<span class="min33em">"</span>Give me some drink, Titinius,<br> + As a sick girl."</p> + +<p class="noindent">This is especially true of men advanced in years. Age tells heavily +enough on both physical and mental powers in an arduous campaign, +without the additional aid of fever. Wilkinson was perfectly <span class="pagenum"><a id="page303" name="page303"></a>(p. 303)</span> +aware of this, and requested twice to be released from the command. +Forced to retain a position he felt unequal to, his conduct was +necessarily characterized by no vigor; and insubordination, +disgraceful quarrels, and duels, combined to make a sorry chapter in +the history of the expedition. It must be confessed, however, that for +some of his conduct, age and disease are but sorry excuses, and it is +pretty apparent he was in character wholly unfit for the enterprise he +had undertaken. For Hampton there is no apology. His disobedience of +orders in the first place should have been followed by his immediate +withdrawal from the army, while his refusal to do the very thing he +had been sent north to perform, was a crime next to treason. All the +forts we occupied on the frontier had been emptied of their garrisons, +and great expense incurred by the government to carry forward an +expedition, the chief feature in which was the junction and united +advance of the two armies. His resignation saved him from public +disgrace. The withdrawal of our troops from Lake Ontario and Niagara, +together with the suspension of hostilities on the St. Lawrence, was +followed by the capture of all the posts we had been two years in +taking.</p> + +<p>When Scott obtained permission to join Wilkinson's army, he left Fort +George in the command of General McClure of the New York militia. The +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page304" name="page304"></a>(p. 304)</span> fort had been put in a complete state of defence by Scott, +and was supposed able to repel any force that would be brought against +it. Vincent, who had abandoned its investment after Proctor's +overthrow, returned when he heard of Wilkinson's retreat. McClure, +under the plea that his militia had left him, and that those +volunteers promised could not be obtained, resolved to abandon the +fort without risking a battle.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Dec. 10.</span> + +<p>He therefore dismantled it, and then in order to deprive the enemy of +shelter, set fire to the neighboring village of Newark and drove four +hundred women and children forth to the fierce blasts of a northern +winter. The English, who during this war rarely waited for an excuse +to resort to the barbarities of savage warfare, of course retaliated +with tenfold violence.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">Dec. 19.</span> + +<p>Nine days after, Fort Niagara was surprised by a party of British and +Indians, under the command of Colonel Murray, and sixty of the +garrison murdered in cold blood. The manner in which it was taken +created a strong suspicion of treachery somewhere. The British made no +secret of the premeditated attack, and the day before, General McClure +issued a proclamation to the inhabitants of Niagara, Genesee and +Chatauque counties, calling on them to rally to the defence of their +homes and country. To this was appended a postscript, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page305" name="page305"></a>(p. 305)</span> +stating, "since the above was prepared, I have received intelligence +from a credible inhabitant from Canada (who has just escaped from +thence) that the enemy are concentrating all their forces and boats at +Fort George, and have fixed <i>upon to-morrow night for attacking Fort +Niagara</i>—and should they succeed they will lay waste our whole +frontier." On that very "morrow night" the attack <i>did</i> take place, +and yet the Commandant, Captain Leonard, was absent, having left +during the evening, without entrusting the command of the post to +another. The picquets were taken by surprise, and the enemy entered by +the main gate, which, it is said, was found open.</p> + +<p>It seemed at this time as if the government had carefully selected the +most inefficient men in the nation to command on our frontier, in +order to show what a large stock we had on hand, before those more +capable and deserving could be given a place. General McClure not only +fixed the <i>time</i> of the attack, but declared that the fall of the fort +would be followed by the desolation of the whole frontier, (in both of +which prognostications he proved an admirable prophet,) yet not a man +was sent to reinforce it, no orders were issued to its commander, and +no precautions taken. Had Scott been in his place, fort Niagara would +have enclosed him that night—every door would have been bolted and +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page306" name="page306"></a>(p. 306)</span> barred, and the 27 guns it contained rained death on the +assailants as they approached. McClure was right, the enemy did "lay +waste the frontier." Marching on Lewistown, they burned it to the +ground. Setting fire to every farm-house as they advanced, massacring +many of the inhabitants, and mutilating the corpses, they burned +Youngstown, the Tuscarora Indian village, and Manchester, kindling the +whole frontier into a glow from the light of blazing dwellings. Eleven +days after another party crossed at Grand Island, and burned Black +Rock and Buffalo, leaving scarcely a house standing in the latter +place. <span class="sidenote">Dec. 30.</span> At Black Rock they burned three of the +schooners belonging to Perry's gallant fleet. Cruel and merciless as +was this raid, it had a justification, at least in the burning of +houses, on the principles of war. The destruction of Newark was a +barbarous act, and in no way borne out by the orders of government, +which authorized it only on the ground that the defence of the fort +rendered it necessary. To fire a town, turning forth houseless and +homeless women and children, because an attacking enemy might employ +it as a shelter from which to make their approaches: and destroy it on +the plea that it affords merely the shelter of a bivouack, after the +position is abandoned, are totally different acts, nor can they be +made similar by any sophistry. These outrages inflamed the passions of +the inhabitants <span class="pagenum"><a id="page307" name="page307"></a>(p. 307)</span> occupying the frontier to the highest +degree. No epithets were too harsh when speaking of each other, and no +retaliation seemed too severe. This feeling of hostility was still +farther exasperated by the treatment of prisoners of war. The +imprisoning of twenty Irishmen, taken at Queenstown the year before, +to be tried as traitors, was no doubt a stroke of policy on the part +of England, and designed to deter adopted citizens from enlisting in +the army. It was announcing beforehand, that all English, Scotch and +Irish taken in battle would not be regarded as ordinary prisoners of +war, but as her own subjects caught in the act of revolt. Our +government could not in any way recognize this arrogant claim, and +twenty-three English prisoners were placed in close confinement, with +the distinct pledge of the government that they should meet the fate +pronounced on the Irishmen. Prevost, acting under orders, immediately +shut up twice the number of American officers. Madison retorted by +imprisoning an equal number of English officers. Prevost then placed +in confinement all the prisoners of war; Madison did the same. The +treatment of these prisoners was alike only in form, for while we +showed all the leniency consistent with obedience to orders, the +English, for the most part, were haughty, contemptuous, and insulting.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page308" name="page308"></a>(p. 308)</span> The Creek war commenced this year, and though the Indians +were not subdued, no defeat had sullied the American arms. This, +together with the capture of Detroit, summed up the amount of our +successes on land for the year. York and Fort George were lost to us, +while Fort Niagara, standing on our soil, was in the hands of the +enemy. Such, the administration was compelled to exhibit as the +results accomplished by a regular army of thirty-four thousand men, +<i>six thousand volunteers</i>, and the occasional employment of <i>thirty +thousand militia</i>. This report following on the heels of the disasters +of the previous year, would have completely broken down the government +but for the exasperated state of the nation, produced by the cruelties +and atrocities of the English. Tenacity of purpose has ever been +characteristic of the nation, and ever will be; disasters make us +sullen and gloomy, but never incline us to submission. Armies may be +beaten, but the nation, never, is a sentiment so grounded and fixed in +the national heart that to question its truth excites only amazement. +To deepen still more the shadows that had closed upon us, Bonaparte, +at this time, was evidently in his last struggle. Although battling +bravely for his throne, and exhibiting in more brilliant light than +ever the splendor of his marvellous genius, yet the "star" that had +led him on was already touching the horizon; and soon as his vast +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page309" name="page309"></a>(p. 309)</span> power should yield and fall, England would give us her +undivided attention, and then our little navy, our pride and solace, +would be swept from the seas.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page310" name="page310"></a>(p. 310)</span> CHAPTER XIV.<br> +<span class="smcap">1813—1814.</span></h2> + +<p class="resume">Winter operations — Decatur challenges Commodore Hardy to + meet the United States and Macedonian with two of his + frigates — Wilkinson's second invasion of Canada — Battle + of la Cole Mill — Holmes' expedition into Canada — + Romantic character of our border warfare — Inroad of the + British marines to Saybrook and Brockaway's Ferry.</p> + +<p>During the autumn and winter of this year, while Congress was shaken +with conflicting parties, and deeper gloom and embarrassments were +gathering round the administration, reports of conflicts ever and anon +came from the bosom of our northern and southern wildernesses. +Wilkinson was endeavoring to redeem his failures along the St. +Lawrence, and Jackson was leading his gallant little band into the +fastnesses of the Creek nation. Most of the national vessels were +blockaded in our harbors and rivers, but still our bold little +privateers were scouring the ocean in every direction. At this time, +too, a single war vessel might be seen struggling in tempestuous seas +off the stormy cape, on her way to the Pacific ocean to finish in +disaster the most remarkable cruise found in our naval annals. +Decatur, with his <span class="pagenum"><a id="page311" name="page311"></a>(p. 311)</span> squadron, lay blockaded at New London, and +it was said that every attempt to get to sea was thwarted by some +disaffected persons, who burned blue lights at the mouth of the river +to give information of his movements to the enemy. He wrote a letter +to Mr. Jones, the Secretary of the Navy, on the subject, and a +proposition was made in Congress to have it investigated, but it was +dismissed as of trivial importance. Irritated at his inactivity, he +challenged the Endymion and Statira to meet the United States and +Macedonian in single combat, offering to reduce his force till they +said it equalled their own. To this Commodore Hardy at first gave his +consent, but afterwards withdrew it. If the challenge had been +accepted, there is little doubt but that the Chesapeake would have +been signally avenged. At one time Decatur was so confident of a +fight, that he addressed his crew on the subject.</p> + +<p>Wilkinson soon after his retirement to winter quarters at French +Mills, on Salmon river, resigned his command to General Izard, and +proceeded to Washington to recruit his health. He here planned a +winter campaign which for hardihood and boldness exceeded all his +previous demonstrations. He proposed to pierce by different routes +with two columns, each two thousand strong, to the St. Pierre, and +sweeping the defenceless cantonments as he advanced, stop and occupy +them or turn with sudden and resistless <span class="pagenum"><a id="page312" name="page312"></a>(p. 312)</span> energy against the +Isle Aux Noix, or go quietly back to his winter quarters again. At the +same time, four thousand men were to cross the St. Lawrence, take +Cornwall, fortify and hold it so as to destroy the communication +between the two provinces. Nay, he proposed at one time to barrack in +Kingston. The secretary, however, distrusting the feasibility of these +plans, ordered him to fall back to Plattsburgh with his troops. Brown, +in the mean time, was directed to take two thousand men and proceed to +Sackett's Harbor, for the defence of our flotilla there, while young +Scott was stationed at Buffalo.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">1813.</span> + +<p>Matters remained in this state till March, when Wilkinson resolved to +erect a battery at Rouse's Point, and thus keep the enemy from Lake +Champlain. The latter, penetrating the design, concentrated a force +two thousand strong at La Cole Mill, three miles below the point. The +early breaking up of the ice, however, had rendered the project +impracticable. Still, Wilkinson resolved to attack La Cole Mill, +though it does not appear what use he designed to make of the victory +when gained. With four thousand men, and artillery sufficiently heavy, +it was supposed, to demolish the walls of the mill, he set forth. The +main road was blockaded for miles with trees that had been felled +across it. He therefore, after arriving at Odletown, was compelled to +take a narrow <span class="pagenum"><a id="page313" name="page313"></a>(p. 313)</span> winding path only wide enough for a single +sleigh, and which for three miles crept through a dense wood. With a +guide who had been forced into the service to show the way, and who +marched on foot between two dragoons, the advance, led by Major +Forsyth and Colonel Clarke, slowly entered the wintry forest. An +eighteen pounder broke down before it reached the woods, a twelve +pounder lagged on the way, so as to be useless. A twelve pounder and a +howitzer were got forward with great labor, for the wheels sunk into +the yielding snow and mud, and thumped at almost every revolution +against the trees that hemmed in the narrow path. The column was +necessarily closely packed, and as it waded through the snow the fire +of the concealed enemy soon opened upon it. But the two guns, what +with lifting and pushing, lumbered slowly forward, and at length were +placed in a position in a clearing in sight of the mill, which proved +to be garrisoned by only two hundred men. The snow was a foot deep, +and the panting troops, though full of courage and confidence, were +brought with difficulty forward. The woods were so thick that the mill +was hidden till directly upon it, and the only open space where the +cannon could play unobstructed on the walls was so near, that the +sharp shooters within the building could pick off the gunners with +fatal rapidity. The first shots told heavily on the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page314" name="page314"></a>(p. 314)</span> +building, but in a short time, of the three officers who commanded the +guns, two were severely wounded, and of the twenty men who served +them, fourteen were dead or disabled. The troops as they came up were +posted so as to prevent the escape of the garrison. Sortie after +sortie was made to take the guns, but always repulsed by the American +troops, who fought gallantly under their intrepid leaders. Larribee +who commanded the howitzer was shot through the heart, and Macpherson +who had charge of the twelve pounder, though cut by a bullet under the +chin, maintained his ground till prostrated by a frightful wound in +the hip. The infantry was of no avail, except to repel sorties, and +stood grouped in the forest waiting till the enemy, forced by the +cannonade to retreat, should uncover themselves. But it was impossible +to serve the guns under the concentrated fire of two hundred muskets +and rifles in such close range. Men dropped in the act of loading; in +one case, after the piece was charged, but a single man remained to +fire it. A portion of the garrison seeing it so unprotected, rushed +forth to seize it. The single man, however, stood his ground, and as +the enemy came, fired his piece. At the same time the troops in the +wood poured in a volley. When the smoke cleared away but a single man +was left standing. The whole column had been shot down. At length a +hundred and forty or fifty <span class="pagenum"><a id="page315" name="page315"></a>(p. 315)</span> having fallen and night coming on +the troops were withdrawn. It was resolved to renew the attack next +morning, but a rain storm set in during the night, turning the snow +into a half fluid mass, and rendering a second approach impracticable. +The chilled and tired army was therefore withdrawn, and Wilkinson +ended at once his invasion of Canada and his military career. He +retired from the army, and younger and more energetic men were +appointed over it, who should lead it to victory. <span class="sidenote">1814.</span> On +the 24th of January, Brigadier-Generals Brown and Izard were promoted +to the rank of Major-Generals, and later in the spring took command on +our northern frontier.</p> + +<p>While these unsuccessful plans were maturing on the St. Lawrence, +Colonel Butler, commanding at Detroit, dispatched Captain Holmes with +a small detachment into Canada to destroy Fort Talbot, a hundred miles +inland, and what ever other "military establishments might fall in his +way." <span class="sidenote">Feb. 24.</span> He had less than two hundred men and but +two cannon. Pushing his way through the forests he found the road when +he reached Point Au Plat, so filled with fallen trees and brushwood +that his guns could not be carried forward. Leaving them therefore +behind, he kept on until he ascertained that his approach was +expected. Seeing that all hopes of a surprise must be abandoned, he +changed his course <span class="pagenum"><a id="page316" name="page316"></a>(p. 316)</span> and marched rapidly against Fort +Delaware, on the Thames, occupied by the British. But when he arrived +within fifteen miles of the place he was informed that his attack was +expected, and that ample preparations had been made to meet it. He +immediately fell back behind Twenty Mile Creek, where he had scarcely +taken position, before the rangers left to protect his rear emerged on +a run from the woods that covered the opposite bank, pushed fiercely +by the head of the enemy's column. He immediately strengthened his +position by every means in his power, and on the following morning was +ready for an attack. Only a small body of the enemy, however, appeared +at day break, and soon after retreated. Holmes at first suspected this +to be a ruse to draw him from his position, but ascertaining from a +reconnaissance that not more than sixty or seventy men composed the +force, he started in pursuit. His first conjecture, however, proved +true, for after marching a few miles he came upon his adversary, well +posted, and expecting him. His great anxiety was now to get back to +his position, and at the same time practice the very deception which +had beguiled him from it. He succeeded admirably, and the British +imagining his retreat to be a hasty and disorderly flight pressed +after, and on coming to the creek resolved at once to attack him. +Crossing the stream they ascended the opposite bank boldly, and +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page317" name="page317"></a>(p. 317)</span> without opposition, till within twenty yards of the top, +when they were met by such a sudden and destructive volley that they +broke and fled. Hiding behind trees they then kept up a harmless fire +till night, when under cover of darkness they effected their retreat +with the loss of nearly a hundred men, or one-third of their force, +while some half dozen killed and wounded covered the loss of the +Americans. This half partisan, half regular warfare, in the midst of +our vast forests, combined much of the picturesque and marvellous. +There was not the pomp of vast armies, nor the splendor of a great +battle, but courage, skill and endurance were required, sufficient to +make able commanders and veteran soldiers. The long and tedious march +of a hundred miles through the snow-filled forest—the solitary +block-house with its small garrison, situated in a lonely clearing, +around which the leafless trees creaked and groaned in the northern +blasts—the bivouack fire gleaming red through the driving storm—the +paths of wild beasts crossing the wilderness in every direction, their +cries of hunger mingling with the muffled sound of half frozen +torrents—the war-cry of the savage and the crack of his rifle at +still midnight, waking up the chilled sleepers to battle and to +death—the sudden onset and the bloody hand-to-hand fight, made up the +experience and history of our border warfare. Far away from the haunts +of civilization, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page318" name="page318"></a>(p. 318)</span> men struggled for the control of an +imaginary line, and many gallant and able officers, fell ingloriously +by some Indian marksman. At far intervals, stretching from the St. +Lawrence to Mackinaw, the faintly heard thunder of cannon amid those +vast solitudes, announced that two nations were battling for untrodden +forest tracts and undisturbed sheets of water. Those tracts are now +covered with towns and cities, and those sheets of water freighted +with commerce. Then it was announced as a great miracle of speed, that +a steamboat made four miles an hour in passing up the Ohio—now the +northern lakes are ploughed with steamers, going at the rate of +eighteen or twenty miles an hour, and wrapped round with railroads, +over which cars are thundering with a velocity that annihilates +distance, and brings into one neighborhood the remotest States.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">April 8.</span> + +<p>An unsuccessful attempt on the part of the British to destroy the +American vessels just launched at Vergennes, and which were to compose +Macdonough's fleet, and a bold inroad of the English marines from the +blockading squadron off New London, in which twenty American vessels +were burned, the men pitching quoits, drinking and playing ball during +the conflagration, till night, when they quietly floated down the +river, constituted the other chief movements that terminated in the +early spring.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page319" name="page319"></a>(p. 319)</span> CHAPTER XIV.<br> +<span class="smcap">THIRTEENTH CONGRESS. MAY 27, 1813.</span></h2> + +<p class="resume">Democratic gain in Congress — Spirit in which the two + parties met — Russian mediation offered and accepted, and + commerce opened — State of the Treasury — Debate + respecting a reporter's seat — Direct tax — Webster's + resolutions — Governor Chittenden — Strange conduct of + parties in New Hampshire — The embargo — England proposes + peace — Commissioners appointed — Army bill — Webster's + speech upon it — Sketch of him — The loan bill — Defended + by Mr. Eppes — Sketch of Mr. Pickering, with his speech — + Sketch of John Forsyth, and his speech — Calhoun — + Grosvenor — Bill for the support of military establishments + — Speech of Artemus Ward — Resolutions of Otis in the + Massachusetts Senate — Repeal of the embargo — Calhoun and + Webster — Strange reversal of their positions — Strength + of our navy and army.</p> + +<p>Soon after the capture of York the Thirteenth Congress assembled. By +the new apportionment made the year previous, a hundred and eighty-two +members had been added to the House of Representatives. One remarkable +man, Randolph, had disappeared from the arena, having been defeated by +Mr. Eppes, son-in-law of Jefferson. As the two great parties came +together they surveyed each other's strength—prepared to close in +combat with the same determination and hostile feeling that had marked +the proceedings of the last session of the Twelfth <span class="pagenum"><a id="page320" name="page320"></a>(p. 320)</span> Congress. +In the accession of members the Federalists had made important gains, +chiefly from New York, so that the House stood one hundred and twelve +for the war and sixty-eight against it, and the Senate twenty-seven to +nine. In the latter, however, the party lines were not so strongly +drawn, and on many questions the Democrats had much less majorities +than their nominal superiority would indicate. Among the new members +were Pickering, who had succeeded Quincey, and Cyrus King, from +Massachusetts, and Daniel Webster, from New Hampshire, Federalists. +Forsyth, of Georgia, M'Lean, of Ohio, Taylor, of New York, and +Findley, of Pennsylvania, were Democrats. Mr. Clay was elected speaker +on the first ballot. The President's message was short, and related +wholly to the war. He informed Congress that an offer of mediation had +been made by the Emperor Alexander, of Russia, on the 8th of March +previous—and accepted, and that Mr. Gallatin, Mr. Bayard, and Mr. +Adams, had been appointed Commissioners under it, to negotiate a peace +with England, and also a treaty with Russia. He expressed the belief +that England would accept the mediation, whether it resulted in any +settlement of difficulties or not.</p> + +<p>The receipts into the Treasury during the six months, ending the last +day of March, including sums received on account of Treasury notes and +loans, amounted to $15,412,000, the expenditures to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page321" name="page321"></a>(p. 321)</span> +$15,920,000. A balance, however, was in the Treasury previously, so +that there remained $1,857,000 unexpended. Of the loan of sixteen +millions, authorized in February, one million had been paid in, and +formed <span class="sidenote">Feb. 18.</span> part of the receipts mentioned, so that +the remaining $15,000,000, together with $5,000,000 of Treasury notes, +and $9,700,000, the sum expected from customs, sales of public lands, +making in all $29,000,000, constituted the provision for the remaining +nine months of the current year. To avoid the necessity of loans, +which were made at rates injurious to the government, and to give a +more permanent basis to the revenue, additional taxes were +recommended.</p> + +<p>The first act of Congress was the passage of a resolution, introduced +by Clay, to refer that part of the message which related to the +barbarous manner in which the enemy waged war to a select committee, +of which Mr. Macon, of Georgia, was chairman. Mr. Eppes was made +chairman of that of Ways and Means, and Calhoun of that on Foreign +Affairs. The gentlemen constituting the latter were Calhoun, Grundy, +Desha, Jackson of Virginia, Ingersoll, Fisk of New York, and Webster.</p> + +<p>The extreme sensitiveness of the two parties, and the readiness with +which they seized upon the most trifling matter as a bone of +contention, were strikingly exhibited in some of the earliest +proceedings of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page322" name="page322"></a>(p. 322)</span> Congress. The reporter of the Federal +Republican, the paper which had been mobbed by the Democrats at +Baltimore, and was now published in Georgetown, presented a petition, +asking a place to be assigned him, like that of the other reporters, +and stating that the Speaker had refused to give him one. The +implication was, that Mr. Clay had denied him a place on account of +his politics. Mr. Clay said this was not so, that the true reason was, +he had no place to give; all of those furnished by the House being +pre-occupied. This statement, however, could not satisfy the members, +and it was proposed to make an extra provision for the gentleman. +Calhoun was opposed to the admission of any reporters. Almost the +entire day was occupied in discussing this trifling affair, when such +momentous questions asked the attention of Congress. It even adjourned +without coming to a decision, and not until next day was it disposed +of, by rejecting the prayer of the petitioner.</p> + +<span class="sidenote">June 14.</span> + +<p>Mr. Eppes, from the Committee of Ways and Means, made a report, in +which, after showing that the expenditures for the next year, 1814, +would exceed the revenue by $5,600,000, twelve bills were offered, one +for direct taxation, another establishing the office of Commissioner +of the Revenue, and others laying duties on imported salt, on licenses +to retailers of liquors, on foreign merchandise, carriages, distillers +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page323" name="page323"></a>(p. 323)</span> of liquors, on auction sales of foreign goods and vessels, +on sugars refined in the United States, on bank notes, notes of hand +and certain foreign bills of exchange, and on foreign tonnage.</p> + +<p>Mr. Webster then rose and delivered his first speech in the House, +introduced by four resolutions, the purport of which were to inquire +into the time, manner, &c., with the attending circumstances, in which +the document, asserted to be a repeal of the Berlin and Milan decrees, +was communicated to this government. Although these resolutions had +their origin in Federal hostility, and were designed to sustain the +old charge against the administration, of being under French +influence, because it was well aware those decrees had not been +repealed when it declared war against England, yet Webster carefully +avoided implying it in his speech. He felt bound to offer these +resolutions in justice to his constituents. A heated discussion +followed their introduction, but young Webster conducted himself with +great prudence and caution. At home he had made inflammable speeches +against the war, but after he got out of the atmosphere of +Massachusetts, and came in contact with such ardent young patriots as +Clay and Calhoun, his sympathies, doubtless, were moved, and his +patriotism received an impulse which went far to neutralize the views +of Federalism, with which he had been inoculated. The political +opponents of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page324" name="page324"></a>(p. 324)</span> that war having been successively thrown +overboard by the nation since its termination, much effort seems to +have been made by the friends of Webster to omit entirely this portion +of his life, but I have no doubt were it truly and honorably written, +it would exalt his character and enhance his fame. Coming from the +very furnace of Federalism—educated under the influence of men whose +opinions he had been taught to venerate, and who, throwing aside their +party hate, were the wisest statesmen of the land, sent to Washington +on purpose to represent their views, it seems unaccountable that he, a +young aspirant for fame, did not at once plunge into the arena and win +reputation by crossing swords with such men as Clay and Calhoun. +Standing for the first time on the field where political fame was to +be won, and goaded on by attacks upon principles he had been taught to +venerate, he nevertheless carefully stood aloof, and shortly after +retired entirely on leave of absence. How is this strange conduct to +be accounted for in one who ever after never refused to close like a +lion with his foes? With his powers he would soon have been a leader +of the opposition, and yet this soul, full of deep thought and +slumbering fire, looked apparently cold and indifferent on the strife +that was rending the nation asunder. Did not this conduct grow out of +a sense of duty and of patriotism? He could not do less, as a +representative <span class="pagenum"><a id="page325" name="page325"></a>(p. 325)</span> of Federalism, than offer resolutions of +inquiry, and without turning traitor to his constituents, he could not +do more for the administration. Did not that judgment, on whose +decisions the nation afterwards so implicitly relied, tell him even +then that his country was right and his teachers wrong on the great +question of war or no war, and did not that grand heart, which heaved +like the swelling sea when he spoke of the glorious Union, even then +revolt at the disloyal attitude of New England? If this be not true, +then his conduct is wholly inexplicable and contradictory to his after +life.</p> + +<p>The first session of the Thirteenth Congress continued till August 2d, +when it adjourned to December. In the mean time, a direct tax, +amounting to $3,000,000, apportioned to the eighteen different states, +was laid. A bounty of $25 was voted to privateers for every prisoner +taken, and heavy penalties were placed on the use of British licenses, +and provisions made to raise ten companies for the defence of the sea +coast. The disasters of our northern army, during this autumn, +increased the boldness of the Federalists, and a paper of Boston +openly advocated the proposition for each state to take care of +itself, fight its own battles, and make its own terms. Governor +Chittenden of Vermont, attempted to recall a brigade of militia, +appointed to garrison Burlington, during Hampton's march into +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page326" name="page326"></a>(p. 326)</span> Canada, on the ground it had been unconstitutionally ordered +out. The commander and a part of the brigade refused, when the former +was put under arrest. The Legislature of New Hampshire, in order to +get rid of the democratic judges, appointed by Langdon and Plumer, +abolished all the courts in the state, and constructed an entirely new +system, with new judges. To this high-handed measure the democratic +judges refused to submit, and held court sessions as formerly, side by +side with the new judges. In those counties where the sheriff was +democratic, their decision was sustained by this functionary, +confusing and confounding every thing. By such measures, party spirit +was inflamed to the highest pitch, dividing friends and families and +societies. It became a frenzy, a madness, obliterating, in many parts +of New England, all traces of former urbanity, justice, affection and +courtesy. The appellation of Democrat and Federalist, applied to one +or the other, converted him, in his opponent's eye, into a monster. +The charge of highway robbery, rape or murder would not have been more +instantaneous and direful in its effect. The Boston papers advocated +the most monstrous doctrines, creating great anxiety and solicitude at +Washington. But soon as the New England line was crossed, passing west +and south, the feeling changed. To go from these fierce, debasing +broils, into the harmonious <span class="pagenum"><a id="page327" name="page327"></a>(p. 327)</span> feeling in favor of the war, was +like passing from the mad struggles of a vessel amid the breakers to a +quiet ship moving steadily on her way. The governors of the several +states in their proclamations and messages firmly upheld the +administration, and the legislatures pledged their support.</p> + +<p>In the midst of such excitements, oppressed by the failure of +Wilkinson's campaign, and dreading the use which the Federalists would +make of it, Congress, according to adjournment, reassembled. +<span class="sidenote">Dec. 6.</span> Mr. Eppes was still continued chairman of the +Committee of Ways and Means. Among the first measures was the +introduction of an embargo act. Madison, in a special message, +strongly recommended it, on the ground that under the present +non-importation act the enemy on our shores and at a distance were +constantly furnished with the supplies they needed. An illegal traffic +was also carried on with foreign ports, not only exporting forbidden +articles, but importing British manufactures. To stop this illicit +trade in future, an act was passed in secret session, laying an +embargo on all the ports of the Union. To prevent evasion, it was +guarded by the most stringent provisions and heavy penalties, so that +the coasting trade suffered severely. Fishermen were compelled to give +bonds that they would not violate it, before they were allowed to +leave port. That portion of it, however, which <span class="pagenum"><a id="page328" name="page328"></a>(p. 328)</span> related to +the importation of woolen, cotton, and spirits, was rejected by the +House, as that prohibiting the release of goods on bonds was rejected +by the Senate.</p> + +<p>Soon after, a great excitement was caused in the country by a rumor +that a British schooner, the Bramble, had arrived in Annapolis, +bearing a flag of truce, and despatches of a peaceful nature to our +government. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 7.</span> Seven days after, the President +transmitted a message to Congress, informing it of a proposition on +the part of the English government, to have commissioners appointed to +negotiate a peace. This announcement was the signal for the Federalist +papers to indulge in laudations of Great Britain's generosity and +magnanimity. She had taken the first amicable steps, and that, too, +when she was in a condition, owing to Napoleon's sinking fortunes, to +direct her entire power against us. The same vessel brought the news +of the disasters of Leipsic. There was, on the other hand, much +distrust among the Democrats, because the offer of the Russian +mediation had been coldly rejected three several times.</p> + +<p>John Quincy Adams, and Henry Clay, and Jonathan Russel and Bayard who +were already abroad, were appointed Commissioners, to whom Gallatin +was soon after added, to proceed to Gottenberg. Russel, after the +negotiations closed, was to remain as minister to Sweden. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 19.</span> +Mr. Clay, in an eloquent address, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page329" name="page329"></a>(p. 329)</span> resigned his +station as Speaker of the House, and Mr. Cheves was elected in his +place. <span class="sidenote">Dec.</span> One of the most exciting debates during this +session of Congress arose on the introduction of resolutions by the +editor of the Federal Republican, demanding an inquiry respecting a +letter written by Turreau, in 1809, then Minister from France, to the +Secretary of State, said to be withdrawn from the files. The +disappearance of the letter was proof positive that its contents +committed, in some way, the administration. A vehement debate of three +days duration followed. Endless changes were rung on the old charge of +French influence. At length the question was taken, and the +resolutions voted down, and a simple call on the President for +information substituted. This shell which had been so suddenly thrown +into the House, threatening in its explosion to shatter the war party +to fragments, proved a very harmless thing. Turreau, it eventually +turned out, had written a letter of complaint to the Secretary of +State, so overbearing in its tone, so absurd in its complaints, and so +undiplomatic in every respect, that he was requested to withdraw it, +which was done. In such a sensitive and excited state was party +feeling at this time, that the most trivial matters became distorted +and magnified into extraordinary proportions.</p> + +<p>The army bill, providing for the filling of the ranks, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page330" name="page330"></a>(p. 330)</span> the +enlistment of men to serve for five years instead of twelve months, +and the re-enlistment of those whose term of service had expired; and +another bill authorizing a new loan of $25,000,000, was the bugle +blast summoning the combatants to battle. Mr. Webster was for the +first time roused. The army bill was evidently designed to provide for +a third campaign against Canada. From the first, almost the entire +military force of the nation had been employed in these futile +invasions. The successive failures, especially the last, gave the +opposition great vantage ground in declaring against the scheme +altogether. They condemned it not only as an aggressive war, and +therefore indefensible, but declared the acquisition of that country +worse than worthless if obtained. The whole project was not only wrong +in principle, but would be evil in its results, if successful.</p> + +<p>The clause extending the term of enlistment, and authorizing the +raising of new regiments, making the money bounty $124—fifty of it to +be paid on an enrollment, fifty on mustering, and the remainder at the +close of the war, if living, and if not to go to his heirs, was +assailed with vehement opposition. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 3, 1814.</span> Mr. +Webster, who had been cut short in an attack on the administration by +the Speaker, on the ground that no question was before the house, now +rose to speak. Carefully avoiding <span class="pagenum"><a id="page331" name="page331"></a>(p. 331)</span> the asperity which +distinguished his colleagues, he levelled all his force against the +embargo act, and the conquest of Canada. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 10.</span> The +former he denounced unjust and unequal in its bearing, and ruinous in +its consequences. He called on the administration to remove it at +once, as the first step towards the acquirement of a just position. He +then denounced the Canadian war, to prosecute which this extraordinary +bill was introduced, whose provisions if carried out would swell the +regular army to sixty-six thousand troops, to say nothing of the power +conferred on the President for calling out the militia for six months +instead of three. Let us, he said, have only force enough on our +frontier to protect it from invasion—let the slaughter of our +yeomanry cease, and the fires along our northern boundary be +extinguished. Already the war had cost nearly half as much as the +entire struggle for independence; and said he, in conclusion, if war +must be, "apply your revenue to the augmentation of your navy. That +navy, in turn, may protect your commerce. Let it no longer be said +that not one ship of force built by your hands since the war, floats +on the ocean. Turn the current of your efforts into the channel which +national sentiment has already worn broad and deep to receive it. A +naval force competent to defend your coast against considerable +armaments, to convoy your trade, and perhaps raise <span class="pagenum"><a id="page332" name="page332"></a>(p. 332)</span> the +blockade of your rivers, is not a chimera. It may be realized. If, +then, the war must continue, go to the ocean. If you are seriously +contending for maritime rights, go to the theatre where alone those +rights can be defended. Thither every indication of your fortune +points you. There the united wishes and exertions of the nation will +go with you. Even our party divisions, acrimonious as they are, cease +at the water's edge. They are lost in attachment to national +character, on that element where that character is made respectable. +In protecting naval interests by naval means, you will arm yourselves +with the whole power of national sentiment, and may command the whole +abundance of national resources. In time you may enable yourselves to +redress injuries in the place where they may be offered, and if need +be, to accompany your own flag throughout the world with the +protection of your own cannon." This speech produced a marked +impression on the house. Succeeding as it did, the resolutions of the +Legislature of Massachusetts, refusing to compliment our naval +commanders for their victories, on the ground that encouragement would +be given to the war, it looked like a change in that quarter. The war +was not denounced as it had ever been by the Federalist leaders—he +quarrelled only with the mode of carrying it on. Nay, it implied that +we had wrongs to redress at sea, and thither our force <span class="pagenum"><a id="page333" name="page333"></a>(p. 333)</span> +should be directed. The policy proposed in this speech should +doubtless have been adopted at the commencement of the war, and might +have been wise as late as 1814, but Webster did not propose it for the +purpose of having it acted upon. This fine peroration was simply a +safety-valve to his patriotism. He dared not—he could not uphold the +war, or put his shoulders to any measures designed to carry it on with +vigor. He represented a State opposed to it in principle, not in mode. +Still, the language he used was so different from the other leading +Federalists, that the Democrats, on the whole, did not wish to +complain. Webster at this time was but thirty-one years of age, and +little known except in his own vicinity. This speech, however, +delivered with the fervor and eloquence which distinguished him, gave +clear indications of his future greatness. Though a young man, he +exhibited none of the excitement and eagerness of youth. Calm, +composed, he uttered his thoughts in those ponderous sentences which +ever after characterized his public addresses. Large, well made, his +jet black hair parted from a forehead that lay like a marble slab +above the deep and cavernous eyes; there was a solemnity, and at times +almost a gloom in that extraordinary face, that awakened the interest +of the beholder. There was power in his very glance, and the close +compressed lip revealed a stern and unyielding <span class="pagenum"><a id="page334" name="page334"></a>(p. 334)</span> character. +Even at this age he looked like one apart from his fellows, with +inward communings to which no one was admitted. When excited in +debate, that sombre and solemn face absolutely blazed with fire, and +his voice, which before had sounded sharp and unpleasant, rung like a +clarion through the house. His sentences fell with the weight of +Thor's hammer—indeed, every thing about him was Titanic, giving +irresistible weight to his arguments.</p> + +<p>The bill having passed the house, the other authorizing a loan of +$25,000,000 and a reissue of treasury notes to the amount of +$10,000,000, came up. The expenditures for the coming year were +estimated at $45,000,000, to meet which the ordinary means of revenue +were wholly insufficient. A violent and bitter debate arose on its +presentation, which lasted three weeks. Regarded as so much money +appropriated to the conquest of Canada, it met with the determined +hostility of the opponents of the war. Mr. Eppes defended his bill, +and went into a long and statistical account of the revenue and +expenditures of the nation—showed how she could easily, in time of +peace, pay off every dollar she might owe—estimated the value of the +land and produce and capital of the country, and proved, as he deemed +satisfactorily, that the loan combined "all the advantages of safety, +profit, and a command at <span class="pagenum"><a id="page335" name="page335"></a>(p. 335)</span> will of the capital invested." The +long debate upon it had little to do with the bill itself, but swept +the whole range of politics for the last four or five years. The +history of the war was gone over—orders in council, and Berlin and +Milan decrees revived with fresh vigor—the influence of Bonaparte in +our councils, though now struggling for life, was charged anew on the +administration. Personalities were indulged in, and the most absurd +accusations made by men, who on other subjects, exhibited sound +judgment and able statesmanship. Mr. Pitkin spoke a part of two days, +making a frightful exhibit of expenses, and denounced the war in +Canada. Pickering, with his large, powerful frame and Roman features, +not belying the fearless character of the man, came down on the +administration with all the power, backed by the most unquenchable +hatred he was master of. A distinguished man in the Revolution, he had +from that time occupied a prominent place in the political history of +his country. A "Pharisee of the Pharisees" in the Essex Junto, he +cherished all the intense hatred of that branch of the Federalists for +the war and its supporters. Built on a grand scale, yet with a heart +hard as iron towards a foe, fierce and bold, denouncing his old friend +and patron, John Adams, because he did not hate France as cordially as +he thought every good Christian should, having no sympathy with +Washington's <span class="pagenum"><a id="page336" name="page336"></a>(p. 336)</span> quiet and non-committal character, he looked +upon Bonaparte and our war and its supporters, as the most monstrous +births of the age. His indignation at their existence was only +exceeded by his wonder that heaven, in its just wrath, did not quench +all together. Probably the administration had not such a sincere and +honest hater in the whole Federalist ranks. He was an honest man and +possessed of most noble traits, but his feelings obscured his judgment +when speaking of the war, and he gave utterance to the most +extraordinary and absurd assertions. In this speech he wandered over +the whole field—took bold and decided ground—advocated openly the +doctrine of the right of search, as defended by our enemy—declared +that our complaints were unjust—denied the statement respecting the +number of impressed seamen, saying that many Americans served +voluntarily on board of British cruisers—glorified England for her +efforts to overthrow Napoleon, calling her the "world's last hope." +Having thus defined his position so clearly, that there could be no +doubt where he stood, he turned to the Speaker and looking him sternly +in the face through his spectacles, and "swinging his long arm aloft," +exclaimed, "I stand on a <i>rock</i> from which all Democracy—no, <i>not all +Democracy and hell to boot</i> can move me—the rock of integrity and +truth." Mr. Shelby and Mr. Miller followed in a similar strain, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page337" name="page337"></a>(p. 337)</span> and Canada, with its disastrous campaigns, was flung so +incessantly in the face of the war party, that it hated the very name. +Grundy defended the bill, and Gaston, of North Carolina, opposed it. +Grosvenor launched forth into a violent harangue, and was so personal +and unparliamentary in his language that he was often called to order. +Very little, however, was said on the merits of the bill. This served +only to open the flood-gates of eloquence, which embracing every topic +of the past and present, deluged for twenty days the floor of +Congress. Langdon Cheves, the Speaker, though opposed to the +restrictive measures of the administration, upheld the war, and +defended the bill in a long and temperate speech. One of the best +speeches elicited by it, was made by John Forsyth. Hitherto he had +taken but little part in the debates of the House, and hence his +brilliant effort took the members by surprise and arrested their +attention. Handsome, graceful, fluent, with a fine voice and +captivating elocution, he came down on the Federalists with sudden and +unexpected power. Their unfounded assertions, unpatriotic sentiments +and personal attacks had at length roused him, and as they had +wandered from the question in their blind warfare, so he passed from +it to repay the blows that had been so unsparingly given. Turning to +the New England delegation, he charged boldly on Massachusetts the +crime of fomenting <span class="pagenum"><a id="page338" name="page338"></a>(p. 338)</span> treason to the State, if not +intentionally, yet practically, by her legislative acts, inflammatory +resolutions and violent complaints of injustice, which were the first +steps towards more open hostility. "I mention them," said he, "not +from fear, but to express my profound contempt for their impotent +madness. Fear and interest hinder the factious spirits from executing +their wishes. <i>If a leader</i> should be found bad and bold enough to +try, one consolation for virtue is left, that those who raise the +tempest will be the first victims of its fury." Calhoun, with his +clear logic, demolished the objections that had been raised. He said +they could all be reduced to two. One was, that the loan could not be +had—the other, that the war was inexpedient. He declared both false, +going over the ground he had been compelled so often to traverse since +the commencement of the war. He took up the question of +impressment—declared our war a defensive one—bore hard upon those +who voted against supplies—showed that the war had liberated us from +that slavish fear of England which had rested like a nightmare on the +nation—and started into vigorous growth home manufactures, destined +in the end to render us independent of foreign products, and +furnishing us with ampler means to carry on any war that might occur +in the future.</p> + +<p>This debate might have lasted much longer but for <span class="pagenum"><a id="page339" name="page339"></a>(p. 339)</span> a violent +harangue of Grosvenor, full of gross personalities, discreditable to +himself and insulting to the House. It was resolved to put an end to +such disgraceful scenes, and the previous question was moved and +carried by a majority of forty. A similar fierce conflict, however, +took place soon after on the bill for the support of military +establishments, in the ensuing year, and on the motion to repeal the +Embargo Act. In a speech against the former, Artemus Ward opposed not +only the invasion of Canada, and reiterated the old charge of +subserviency to France, but openly and boldly defended England in the +course she had taken; declared that impressment was in accordance with +the law of nations, and that the doctrine "the flag protects all that +sails under it" was untenable and false. He then went gravely into the +reasons of the war, and laid down the following propositions, which he +proceeded soberly to defend:—</p> + +<p>"1st. Napoleon had an ascendancy in our councils through the fear or +hopes he inspired.</p> + +<p>"2d. The administration wished to destroy commerce, and make an +agricultural and manufacturing people.</p> + +<p>"3d. It wished to change the form of our government."</p> + +<p>These extraordinary propositions were severally defended, and declared +by himself fully proved. In <span class="pagenum"><a id="page340" name="page340"></a>(p. 340)</span> reply to the charge that the +Federalists were nullifiers, he pronounced it unjust and unfounded, +and said that the Federalists of Massachusetts would "cling to the +Union as the rock of their salvation, and will die in defence of it, +<i>provided they have an equality of benefits</i>. But everything has its +'hitherto.' <i>There is a point beyond which submission is a crime.</i> God +grant that we may never arrive at that point." Such language, though +guarded, was significant, and justified the very charges it was +designed to rebut. Coupled with the action of Massachusetts, it +furnished ground for the gravest fears. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 6.</span> A motion +having been introduced during the session to the effect that the +Attorney-General of the United States should prosecute Governor +Chittenden, of Vermont, for recalling the militia of the state from +Burlington, Otis presented a resolution to the Massachusetts Senate, +declaring that the State was prepared to sustain, with her whole +power, the Governor of Vermont in support of his constitutional +rights. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 44.</span> In the mean time the +Legislature voted an address, denouncing the war altogether, ascribing +it to hatred of the friends of Washington's policy, to the influence +of foreigners, to envy and jealousy of the growing commercial states, +and desire for more territory. The Pennsylvania Legislature, on the +other hand, censured the conduct of both Chittenden and the +Massachusetts <span class="pagenum"><a id="page341" name="page341"></a>(p. 341)</span> Legislature, declaring that the State would +support the General Government in meting out justice to all violators +of the Constitution. <span class="sidenote">Feb. 12.</span> New Jersey was still more +enraged, and after giving utterance to her contempt and abhorrence of +the "ravings of an infuriated faction, whether issuing from a +legislative body, a maniac governor, or discontented and ambitious +demagogues," "Resolved, that the State was ready to resist internal +insurrection with the same readiness as the invasion of a foreign +foe." Thus the storm of political hate raged both within and without +the halls of Congress, threatening in its fury to send the waves of +civil strife over the already distracted and suffering land. But there +was a large party, composed of the middling classes of New England, in +favor of the war. This, together with the outward pressure of the +entire Union, combined to make the Federalist leaders extremely +cautious in their movements. The farmer was benefitted by the war, for +his produce commanded a higher price in the market, while the +manufacturing interests, which the restrictive acts had forced into +importance, were also advanced, thus creating a new antagonist to the +Federalists. The embargo, however, pressed heavily on a large portion +of the country, calling forth loud denunciations and petitions from +the whole New England coast.</p> + +<p>Fortunately for the administration, circumstances <span class="pagenum"><a id="page342" name="page342"></a>(p. 342)</span> soon +rendered it useless. After struggling with almost superhuman courage +and endurance to repel the allies from the soil of France, Napoleon +saw them at last enter Paris in triumph, and demolish with a blow the +splendid structure he had reared with so much skill and labor. With +the overthrow of the French Empire ended the Continental War, and of +course the Orders in Council, the Berlin and Milan Decrees fell at +once to the ground. The grand cause of the restrictive system having +been removed, Madison sent a message to the House of Representatives, +advising a repeal of the Embargo and Non-Importation Act. A bill to +this effect was reported by Mr. Calhoun from the Committee on Foreign +Relations. <span class="sidenote">Apr. 4.</span> He spoke at some length on the first +section, embracing the embargo, supported it on the ground of the +recent changes in Europe, resulting from Bonaparte's downfall. Russia, +Sweden, Germany, Denmark, Prussia, and Spain, might now be considered +neutral nations, and by opening our commerce to them, we should in +time, in all probability, attach them to us in common hostility to +England, should she continue her maritime usurpations. This country +had from the first contended for free trade, and consistency required +we should allow it to neutral powers, just as we had claimed it for +ourselves. In short, there was no reason for its continuance, except +the plea of consistency. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page343" name="page343"></a>(p. 343)</span> But he contended that a change of +policy growing out of a change in the circumstances that had +originated it, could not be called inconsistent. Mr. Webster replied +to him, saying that he rejoiced it had fallen to his lot to be present +at the funeral obsequies of the restrictive system. He felt a +temperate exultation that this system, so injurious to the country and +powerless in its effect on foreign nations, was about to be consigned +to the tomb of the Capulets. After ridiculing the whole restrictive +system, saying it was of like faith, to be acted—not deliberated on, +and that no saint in the calendar had been more blindly followed than +it had been by its friends, he went on to show that it was designed, +originally, to cooperate with France. He denounced any system, the +continuance of which depended on the condition of things in Europe. +Such policy was dangerous, exposing us to all the fluctuations and +changes that occurred there. If this universal application of a +principle was unsound and extraordinary in a statesman, what followed +was still more surprising. Speaking of the effect of the system to +stimulate manufactories, he said he wished none reared in a hot-bed. +Those compatible with the interests of the country should be fostered, +but he wished to see no Sheffield or Birmingham in this country. He +descanted largely on the evils of extensive manufactories and populous +towns, and intimated strongly that any <span class="pagenum"><a id="page344" name="page344"></a>(p. 344)</span> protective +legislation in reference to them would be unwise. What complete +summersets those two great men, Webster and Calhoun, and the sections +of country they represented, have made since 1814. Then South Carolina +firmly supported the union against the doctrine of state rights, and +Calhoun reasoned eloquently for manufactories, against Webster, +opposed to them. Years passed by, and Massachusetts, through her +Webster, pleaded nobly, sublimely, for the union, against the +nullifying doctrines of South Carolina, and those two men, standing on +the floor of Congress, fought for the systems they had formerly +opposed, and in fierce and close combat crossed swords each for the +cause of the other. Webster in 1814 condemning measures that forced +manufactories into existence, and afterwards pleading earnestly for a +high tariff, and Calhoun at the same time defending even the embargo +on the ground that it encouraged them, and afterwards fighting sternly +against that tariff, are striking illustrations of the changes and +fluctuations of political life. And yet there may be no inconsistency +in all this. "<i>Tempora mutantur, et nos mutamur in illis</i>," is a sound +maxim. Webster, when he charged inconsistency on the administration +for advising the repeal of the embargo act, after the great change in +European affairs, little thought how soon he would be compelled to +shelter himself behind <span class="pagenum"><a id="page345" name="page345"></a>(p. 345)</span> this Latin maxim. In 1814 the +interests of New England were closely allied with free commerce, and +her destiny pointed towards the sea. In a few years her capital was +largely invested in manufactures, and could the tariff have been made +a permanent policy, all her crystal streams and dashing torrents +hurrying from the mountains to the sea, would have been mines of +almost exhaustless wealth. The times being changed, the dictates of +true wisdom required a change of policy. There is no inconsistency so +glaring and injurious as a stubborn adherence to old dogmas or +systems, when events in their progress have exploded both.</p> + +<p>Added to the acts of Congress already mentioned, the most important +were those making appropriations for the support of the navy—for the +building and equipment of floating batteries for the defence of the +harbors and rivers of our country. The Yazoo claim was also disposed +of during this session. <span class="sidenote">April 18, 1814.</span> After an +ineffectual attempt to introduce a bill for the establishment of a +national bank, and the transaction of some minor business, Congress +adjourned to the last Monday in October.</p> + +<p>Our naval force in service in January of this year, independent of the +lake squadrons, gun-boats, etc., for harbor defences, was but seven +frigates, seven sloops-of-war, four brigs, three schooners, and four +other small vessels. The secretary, however, reported in <span class="pagenum"><a id="page346" name="page346"></a>(p. 346)</span> +February three seventy-fours and three forty-fours on the stocks, +besides smaller vessels, which would make thirty-three vessels, large +and small, in actual service or soon to be afloat, while thirty-one +were on the lakes. The army, by law, was increased at this session to +64,759 men, while the militia of the union amounted to 719,449 men. +Added to this, the president was authorized to accept the service of +volunteers to the number of 10,000, their term of service not to +exceed one year.</p> + +<p>With such an imposing array of force on paper, with the increased +revenue from the direct tax laid the year before, with a loan of +$25,000,000, and treasury notes amounting to $10,000,000, the +government prepared to enter on a third campaign.</p> + +<p class="p2 center">END OF VOL. I.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page347" name="page347"></a>(p. 347)</span> J. T. HEADLEY'S WORKS.</h2> + +<div class="advert"> +<p><b>NAPOLEON AND HIS MARSHALS.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. T. Headley</span>, 2 vols. 12mo., cloth, +gilt. Illustrated with 12 Portraits, $2.50. 25th Thousand.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>WASHINGTON AND HIS GENERALS.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. T. Headley</span>, 2 vols. 12mo., cloth, +gilt. Illustrated with 16 Portraits, $2.50. 22d Thousand.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>THE SACRED MOUNTAINS.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. T. Headley</span>, Illustrated with 12 +engravings, by Burt, with designs by Lossing, 20th Thousand.</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="wspaced2em">Do. do. do., 12mo.,</span> cloth, gilt, $1.25.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>SACRED SCENES AND CHARACTERS.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. T. Headley</span>, with 12 Illustrations. +Designed by Darley, 4th Thousand.</p> + +<p style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="wspaced2em">Do. do. do., 1</span> vol. 12mo., cloth, gilt, $1.25.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>LETTERS FROM ITALY AND ALPS AND THE RHINE.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. T Headley</span>, 1 vol. +12mo, cloth. A New Edition. Revised and Enlarged. With a Portrait of +the Author, $1.13. 8th Thousand.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>LIFE OF OLIVER CROMWELL.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. T. Headley</span>, 1 vol. 12mo., cloth, gilt, +with Portrait, $1.25. 6th Thousand.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>HEADLEY'S MISCELLANIES.</b> Authorized Edition, 1 vol. 12mo., cloth, $1. +2d Thousand.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>ADIRONDACK; OR LIFE IN THE WOODS.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. T. Headley</span>, with Original +Designs from Gignoux, Ingham, Durand, etc., 1 vol. 12mo., cloth, $1.25. 4th Thousand.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>SKETCHES AND RAMBLES.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. T. Headley</span>, 1 vol. 12mo., cloth, 75c. 2d +Thousand.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>THE IMPERIAL GUARD OF NAPOLEON.</b> From Marengo to Waterloo. By <span class="smcap">J. T. +Headley</span>, 1 vol. 12mo., with Illustrations, cloth, $1.25. Just +Published.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>J. T. HEADLEY'S WORKS</b>—Uniform Edition, 12 vols., in sheep, for +Libraries and District Schools.</p> +<div class="quote"> + <p>"Mr. Headley's peculiarities as an author are universally + known. He is one of the most vigorous and spirit-stirring + writers of the day, especially graphic and powerful in + narratives of exciting events. No one can fail to get from + his descriptions most graphic, vivid, and lasting + impressions of the scenes of which he speaks."—<i>N. Y. + Courier and Enquirer.</i></p> + + <p>"His descriptions are graphic, his history correct, and his + summing up character scarcely suffers by a comparison with + similar pages in Tacitus."—<i>N. Y. Evening Post.</i></p> + + <p>"He speaks heartily, earnestly, truthfully; and the warm + heart answers to his voice."—<i>N. Y. Observer.</i></p> + + <p>"Each one of his Biographies is a grand historical picture, + conveying in a most impressive way, a true idea of the + events of the time."—<i>Cincinnati Herald.</i></p> + + <p>"Mr. Headley is truly eloquent in his description of + character. He presents to you the strong points of the man + with a clearness that seems to place him before you as an + old acquaintance."—<i>Cleveland Herald.</i></p> + + <p>"Whatever critics may choose to say, Mr. H. will never lack + readers. The stir and fire of his descriptions will touch a + popular chord. In describing the battle field and the + tumultuous stirring life of the camp, Mr. H. is what Cooper + was upon the Sea."—<i>N. Y. Evangelist.</i></p> +</div> + +<p class="p2"><b>LIVING ORATORS OF AMERICA.</b> By Rev. <span class="smcap">E. L. Magoon</span> 1 vol. 12mo., with +portraits. Price, $1.25.</p> + +<p class="p2"><b>THE ORATORS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.</b> By Rev. <span class="smcap">E. L. Magoon</span>. 1 vol. +12mo., with portraits. Price, $1.25.</p> + +<div class="quote"> + <p>Mr. Magoon is a decided original. Both his thoughts and his + manner of expressing them, are peculiar and striking.—<i>N. + Y. Evangelist.</i></p> + + <p>Mr. Magoon, who is a vivid, nervous writer, has thrown a + charm around the character of the men whose history he has + delineated, that will cause the book to be read with unusual + interest.—<i>Christian Secretary.</i></p> + + <p>These volumes contain exceedingly clear sketches of our + greatest orators; so arranged, contrasted and compared, that + the peculiar powers and excellencies of each are set before + the mind in a strong light.—<i>Springfield Republican.</i></p> + + <p>Every American will read these works with national pride, + and have his better feelings and sentiments enkindled and + strengthened.—<i>Western Literary Messenger.</i></p> +</div> + +<p class="p2"><b>THE WOMEN OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">E. F. Ellet</span>. 3 vols. +12mo., with portraits. Price, $3.50.</p> + +<div class="quote"> + <p>The work fills a place in our Revolutionary history that + would scarcely be complete without it; indeed, we consider + it as one of the most valuable contributions that have been + made to the history of our country in a long time.—<i>Hunt's + Magazine.</i></p> + + <p>We counsel especially the young women of our country to lay + aside their novels, at least until they shall have read "The + Women of the Revolution." Those of them who have souls will + find it replete with interest and instruction.—<i>N. Y. + Tribune.</i></p> + + <p>The narratives are brief, spirited, and profoundly + interesting; especially as showing how the toils, the + privations and dangers of the war, made themselves felt, + perhaps even more keenly, in the homes than on the + battle-fields of the Revolutionary champions.—<i>N. Y. + Commercial.</i></p> + + <p>The authoress has succeeded in collecting a large amount of + new and important facts, illustrative of the heroism evinced + in action and suffering, by the women who bore their part in + the Revolution, which have no place in the political + histories of the time, and have been derived almost entirely + from private sources.—<i>N. Y. Journal of Commerce.</i></p> + + <p>The rich store of information contained in these volumes, + has been procured at the cost of much and laborious + research, from the surviving relatives of the heroines, + scattered through various parts of the Union. Personal + recollections have been recorded, family papers and letters + examined, and the work thus made a faithful and vivid + exhibition of the domestic scenes of the war.—<i>Charleston + Inquirer.</i></p> + + <p>The conception of the book is at once beautiful and + patriotic, and its execution is worthy of its subject, and + worthy of the reputation of its gifted authoress.—<i>Albany + Atlas.</i></p> + + <p>These sketches are of thrilling interest, as we gather from + a hasty glance at their pages. The narrative is clear, + concise, and very agreeably written.—<i>N. B. Mercury.</i></p> +</div> +</div> + +<h2>Notes</h2> +<div class="footnote"> + +<p><a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag1">1</a></b>: Vide letter of Mr. King to the Secretary of State.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag2">2</a></b>: Vide Letter of Madison to Mr. Rose, the British Minister, +dated March 5th, 1808.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote3" name="footnote3"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag3">3</a></b>: Letter of Adams to the Secretary of Foreign Affairs, 19th +of July, 1785.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote4" name="footnote4"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag4">4</a></b>: Act of Congress, passed 1st of May, 1810.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote5" name="footnote5"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag5">5</a></b>: Vide Madison's Administration, by John Quincy Adams.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote6" name="footnote6"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag6">6</a></b>: Vide Madison's Administration, by John Quincy Adams.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote7" name="footnote7"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag7">7</a></b>: Vide Report of proceedings in the House of +Representatives, Dec. 1811.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote8" name="footnote8"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag8">8</a></b>: This adventurer after staying some months in Boston, in +constant communication with the Secretary of Sir James Craig, Governor +of Canada, to whom he asserted that Massachusetts, in case of war, +would separate from the Union and ally herself, probably, with +England, visited the latter country to obtain remuneration for his +services. The Home Government, however, sent him back to Sir James +Craig as better able to appreciate the value of his labors. Indignant +at this neglectful treatment, he returned to Boston and obtained a +letter of introduction from Governor Gerry to Madison, to whom he +offered to divulge the whole conspiracy, of which he had been the head +and soul, for a certain sum of money. Madison gave him $50,000, and +the swindler embarked for France. There is but little doubt that Henry +made a fool of the Governor of Canada, and completely overreached the +President. The publication of the correspondence, however, increased +the hatred both against the federalists and the English nation.</p> + +<p>He was an Irish adventurer of commanding person and most engaging +address. At one time he was editor of a paper and afterwards wine +dealer in Philadelphia. In 1798 he was appointed captain in the army, +and stationed at Fort Adams in Newport. Thence he was transferred to +Boston where he mingled freely in the best society of the city. +Becoming tired of a military life, he bought land in Vermont, and +settled down as a farmer. Finding agricultural pursuits unsuited to +his taste, he removed to Montreal and studied law for several years. +Being an aspiring man he made strenuous efforts to obtain the office +of Attorney General. Indignant at his failure, he turned his attention +to politics, in which he was more successful, for in a few months he +acquired the snug little sum of $50,000, paid over to him out of the +public treasury. He however did not enjoy the fruits of his labors. A +Frenchman styling himself Count, and who had accompanied him in his +last voyage from England, wheedled him into the purchase of large +estates held by the former in France. Relieved of most of his money, +and well supplied with deeds, etc., Henry sailed for France. But +failing to find the locality of these large possessions of which he +had become the purchaser, he was again compelled to fall back on his +genius for the means of subsistence, and became a distinguished +correspondent of a London Journal.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote9" name="footnote9"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag9">9</a></b>: Vide Journal of Secret Session of Congress, of April, +1812.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote10" name="footnote10"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag10">10</a></b>: Mr. Foster had succeeded Mr. Jackson as British Minister +at Washington, in the summer of 1811.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote11" name="footnote11"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag11">11</a></b>: Correspondence between the Secretary of State and Mr. +Foster, British Minister, 1812.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote12" name="footnote12"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag12">12</a></b>: Vide Niles' Register, vol. ii. page 332.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote13" name="footnote13"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag13">13</a></b>: 19 to 13. Mr. Clinton's friends professed not to <i>oppose +the war</i>, but the declaration of it as premature.</p> + +<p>The members from New Hampshire, most of those from Massachusetts, then +including Maine, those of Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Jersey, and +Delaware, with several from New York, some from Virginia and North +Carolina, one from Pennsylvania, and three from Maryland, opposed the +war. The members from Vermont, some from New York, all but one from +Pennsylvania, most from Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina, all +from South Carolina, Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, and +Louisiana, supported it.—<i>Ingersoll's History of the War.</i></p> + +<p><a id="footnote14" name="footnote14"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag14">14</a></b>: The Postmaster-General was not at that time a member of +the Cabinet.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote15" name="footnote15"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag15">15</a></b>: Vide Armstrong's Notices of the War of 1812.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote16" name="footnote16"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag16">16</a></b>: Vide Hull's Memoirs, and Armstrong's Notices of the +War.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote17" name="footnote17"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag17">17</a></b>: Miller's testimony on the trial of Hull.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote18" name="footnote18"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag18">18</a></b>: McAfee's History.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote19" name="footnote19"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag19">19</a></b>: One of those, the Caledonia, afterwards did good service +as a part of the fleet of Perry on Lake Erie. The other having gone +aground, was burnt, to prevent recapture.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote20" name="footnote20"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag20">20</a></b>: Now General Wool.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote21" name="footnote21"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag21">21</a></b>: Mansfield's Life of Scott.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote22" name="footnote22"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag22">22</a></b>: Vide Life and Services of Sir George Provost.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote23" name="footnote23"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag23">23</a></b>: Vide Armstrong's Notices of the War of 1812.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote24" name="footnote24"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag24">24</a></b>: The Boston and New York were not ready for sea, but +could and would have been, had there been a determination on the part +of the Government to use the navy.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote25" name="footnote25"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag25">25</a></b>: Vide Ingersoll's History of the War of 1812.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote26" name="footnote26"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag26">26</a></b>: The Snapper, which, under Peregrine Green, was soon +after captured off the Capes of the Delaware.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote27" name="footnote27"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag27">27</a></b>: Vide Cooper's Naval History; Harris' Life of Bainbridge; +Memoir of Commodore Stewart; Naval Chronicle; and Ingersoll's History +of the War of 1812.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote28" name="footnote28"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag28">28</a></b>: Vide Ingersoll's History of the War.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote29" name="footnote29"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag29">29</a></b>: Afterwards Commodore Morris.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote30" name="footnote30"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag30">30</a></b>: Statement of an American officer.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote31" name="footnote31"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag31">31</a></b>: There is a curious incident connected with this battle. +A few nights before it occurred, Bainbridge dreamed, that he had a +long encounter with a British vessel, and finally captured her. On +board were several officers, and among them a general. It made such an +impression on him, that he entered the facts in his journal, and spoke +of them to his officers. After the engagement, as he was standing on +deck surrounded by his officers, waiting to receive the commander of +the Java, he saw the boats carrying General Hislop approach. Turning +to lieutenant Parker, he said, "that is the man I saw in my dream."</p> + +<p><a id="footnote32" name="footnote32"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag32">32</a></b>: Some time after the peace of 1815, a distinguished +officer of the English navy, visited the Constitution, then just +fitted anew at Boston, for a Mediterranean cruise. He went through the +ship, accompanied by Captain —— of our service. "Well, what do you +think of her?" asked the latter, after the two had gone through the +vessel, and reached the quarter deck again. "She is one of the finest +frigates, if not the finest frigate I ever put my foot on board of," +returned the Englishman; "but, as I must find some fault, I'll just +say, that your wheel is one of the clumsiest things I ever saw, and is +unworthy of the vessel." Captain —— laughed, and then explained the +appearance of the wheel, saying, "When the Constitution took the Java, +the former's wheel was shot out of her. The Java's wheel was fitted on +the Constitution to steer with, and although we think it ugly, as you +do, we keep it as a trophy."</p> + +<p><a id="footnote33" name="footnote33"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag33">33</a></b>: + +<table style="margin-left: 10%; width: 50%;" border="0" cellpadding="0" summary="Boats."> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">Peacock.</td> +<td class="right">Hornet.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Broadside guns,</td> +<td class="right">9</td> +<td class="right">10</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Crew,</td> +<td class="right">130</td> +<td class="right">135</td> +</tr> +</table> + +<p><a id="footnote34" name="footnote34"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag34">34</a></b>: Vide Alison.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote35" name="footnote35"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag35">35</a></b>: Vide Armstrong's Notices of the War of 1812.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote36" name="footnote36"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag36">36</a></b>: Major Eustis, Captains Scott, Walworth, M'Glarpin, Young +and Moore, and Lieutenants Irvine, Fanning and Riddle, behaved with +great gallantry in the engagement.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote37" name="footnote37"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag37">37</a></b>: The Pelican was 485 tons, the Argus 298. The former +threw nearly two hundred pounds more metal than the latter at every +discharge.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote38" name="footnote38"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag38">38</a></b>: Capt. Allen was born in Providence in 1784, and entered +the navy as a midshipman when sixteen years of age. His father was an +officer in the Revolution, and served with distinction. Young Allen, +seven years after his appointment, was lieutenant on board the +Chesapeake, when Barron shamefully struck his flag to the Leopard. He +fired the only gun that replied to the British broadside, touching it +off with a coal that he plucked from the fire in the galley. The shot +passed directly through the ward-room of the Leopard. His indignation +at the conduct of Barron overleaped all bounds, and he told him +bluntly, "<i>Sir, you have disgraced us.</i>" He drew up a letter to the +Secretary of the Navy, demanding a court martial. "Oh," said he, in +writing home, "when I act like this, may I die unpitied and forgotten, +and no tear be shed to my memory." He was a brave and gallant officer, +and distinguished himself in the action between the United States and +Macedonian, and took command of the latter after her surrender. His +death was a great loss to the navy.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote39" name="footnote39"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag39">39</a></b>: It was said he had accepted an invitation to dine in a +Canadian town, and expected to be back before the departure of his +enemy.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote40" name="footnote40"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag40">40</a></b>: See Mackenzie's Life of Perry.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote41" name="footnote41"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag41">41</a></b>: Massachusetts and New Hampshire constituted the first; +Rhode Island and Connecticut the second; New York, south of the +Highlands, and a part of New Jersey, the third; the remaining section +of New Jersey, with Pennsylvania and Delaware, the fourth; Virginia, +south of the Rappahannock, the fifth; Georgia and the two Carolinas, +the sixth; Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee, the seventh; +Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois and Missouri, the eighth. +A tenth was erected during the summer, including Maryland, the +District of Columbia, and that portion of Virginia lying between the +Potomac and Rappahannock rivers.</p> + +<p><a id="footnote42" name="footnote42"></a> +<b><a href="#footnotetag42">42</a></b>: Vide Ingersoll.</p> +</div> + +<div class="box tn"><p>Transcriber's notes:</p> + +<p>Obvious printer's errors have been corrected. +Hyphenation and accentuation have been standardised, all +other inconsistencies are as in the original. The author's spelling +has been maintained.</p> + +<p>Some dates were misprinted in the original (e.g. Jan. 44), they have +been left as it is.</p> +</div> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Second War with England, Vol. 1 of +2, by Joel Tyler Headley + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND *** + +***** This file should be named 39368-h.htm or 39368-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/3/6/39368/ + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Lindy Walsh, Christine P. Travers +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you +do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the +rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose +such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and +research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do +practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is +subject to the trademark license, especially commercial +redistribution. + + + +*** START: FULL LICENSE *** + +THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE +PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK + +To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free +distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work +(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project +Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project +Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at +http://gutenberg.org/license). + + +Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic works + +1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to +and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property +(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all +the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy +all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession. +If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the +terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or +entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. + +1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be +used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who +agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few +things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works +even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See +paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement +and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. See paragraph 1.E below. + +1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" +or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the +collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an +individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are +located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from +copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative +works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg +are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project +Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by +freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of +this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with +the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by +keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project +Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others. + +1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern +what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in +a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check +the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement +before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or +creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project +Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning +the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United +States. + +1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: + +1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate +access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently +whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the +phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project +Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, +copied or distributed: + +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/license + +1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived +from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is +posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied +and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees +or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work +with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the +work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 +through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the +Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or +1.E.9. + +1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted +with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution +must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional +terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked +to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the +permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. + +1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this +work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. + +1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this +electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without +prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with +active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project +Gutenberg-tm License. + +1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, +compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any +word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or +distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than +"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version +posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org), +you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a +copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon +request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other +form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. + +1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, +performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works +unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + +1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing +access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided +that + +- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from + the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method + you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is + owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he + has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the + Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments + must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you + prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax + returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and + sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the + address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to + the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." + +- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies + you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he + does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm + License. You must require such a user to return or + destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium + and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of + Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any + money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the + electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days + of receipt of the work. + +- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free + distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set +forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from +both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael +Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the +Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. + +1.F. + +1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable +effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread +public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm +collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain +"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual +property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a +computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by +your equipment. + +1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right +of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project +Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all +liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal +fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT +LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE +PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE +TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE +LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR +INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH +DAMAGE. + +1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a +defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can +receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a +written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you +received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with +your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with +the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a +refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity +providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to +receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy +is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further +opportunities to fix the problem. + +1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth +in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. + +1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied +warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. +If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the +law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be +interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by +the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any +provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. + +1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the +trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone +providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance +with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, +promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, +harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, +that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do +or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm +work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any +Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause. + + +Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm + +Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of +electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers +including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists +because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from +people in all walks of life. + +Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the +assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's +goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will +remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure +and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations. +To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation +and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 +and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org. + + +Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive +Foundation + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit +501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the +state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal +Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification +number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at +http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent +permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. + +The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S. +Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered +throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at +809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email +business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact +information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official +page at http://pglaf.org + +For additional contact information: + Dr. Gregory B. Newby + Chief Executive and Director + gbnewby@pglaf.org + + +Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation + +Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide +spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of +increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be +freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest +array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations +($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt +status with the IRS. + +The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating +charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United +States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a +considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up +with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations +where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To +SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any +particular state visit http://pglaf.org + +While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we +have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition +against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who +approach us with offers to donate. + +International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make +any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from +outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. + +Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation +methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other +ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. +To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate + + +Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. + +Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared +with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project +Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + + +Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + http://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. + + +</pre> + +</body> +</html> |
