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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Second War with England, Vol. 2 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. 2 of 2
+
+Author: Joel Tyler Headley
+
+Release Date: April 4, 2012 [EBook #39369]
+
+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
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Com. Porter in the Bay of Novaheevah.]
+
+
+
+
+ THE SECOND WAR
+
+ WITH
+
+ ENGLAND.
+
+
+ BY J. T. HEADLEY,
+
+ AUTHOR OF "NAPOLEON AND HIS MARSHALS," "WASHINGTON AND HIS GENERALS,"
+ "THE OLD GUARD," "SCOTT AND JACKSON," ETC. ETC.
+
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES.
+
+
+ VOL. II.
+
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ CHARLES SCRIBNER, 145 NASSAU STREET.
+ 1853.
+
+
+
+
+ Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1853, by
+
+ CHARLES SCRIBNER,
+
+ In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for
+ the Southern District of New York.
+
+
+ C. W. BENEDICT,
+ STEREOTYPER AND PRINTER,
+ 12 Spruce Street, N. Y.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE CREEK WAR.
+
+ Jackson's first service -- Is appointed commander-in-chief
+ of the Tennessee forces -- Co-operation of other states --
+ Jackson enters the Creek nation -- Difficulties of his
+ position -- General Coffee's expedition -- Relieves Fort
+ Talladega -- Battle of -- Stormy condition of his army --
+ Quells a mutiny -- Abandoned by his troops -- Quells a
+ second mutiny -- His boldness -- A third mutiny suppressed
+ -- Left with but a hundred followers -- Clairborne's
+ movements -- Arrival of reinforcements -- Makes a diversion
+ in favor of General Floyd -- Battle of Nutessee -- Battle of
+ Emuckfaw -- Ambuscade of the Indians -- Gallantry of General
+ Coffee -- Battle of the "Horse Shoe" -- The war ended --
+ Jackson's character, 11
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ Cruise of Commodore Porter in the Essex -- Arrival at
+ Valparaiso -- Capture of British whalers and letters of
+ marque -- Essex Junior -- Marquesas Islands -- Description
+ of the natives -- Madison Island -- War with the Happahs --
+ Invades the Typee territory -- Tedious march -- Beautiful
+ prospect -- Fights the natives and burns down their towns --
+ Sails for Valparaiso -- Blockaded by two English ships --
+ Attempts to escape -- Is attacked by both vessels -- His
+ gallant defence -- His surrender -- Returns home on parole
+ -- Insolence of an English Officer -- Porter escapes in an
+ open boat and lands on Long Island -- Enthusiastic reception
+ in New York, 45
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ Plan of the third Campaign -- Attack on Sackett's Harbor --
+ Attack on Oswego -- Woolsey transports guns to Sackett's
+ Harbor -- Capture of the detachment sent against him --
+ Expedition against Mackinaw -- Death of Captain Holmes --
+ Complete failure of the expedition, 67
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ Brown takes command of the army at Niagara -- Crosses the
+ river into Canada -- Battle of Chippewa -- Brilliant charge
+ of the Americans -- Desperate battle of Niagara -- Conduct
+ of Ripley -- The army ordered to Fort Erie -- General Gaines
+ takes command, 74
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ Siege of Fort Erie -- Assault and repulse of the British --
+ Brown takes command -- Resolves to destroy the enemy's works
+ by a sortie -- Opposed by his officers -- The sortie --
+ Anecdote of General Porter -- Retreat of Drummond -- Conduct
+ of Izard, 101
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ British plan of invading our sea ports -- Arrival of
+ reinforcements -- Barney's flotilla -- Landing of the enemy
+ under Ross -- Doubt and alarm of the inhabitants -- Advance
+ of the British -- Destruction of the Navy Yard -- Battle of
+ Bladensburg -- Flight of the President and his Cabinet --
+ Burning and sacking of Washington -- Mrs. Madison's conduct
+ during the day and night -- Cockburn's brutality -- Sudden
+ explosion -- A hurricane -- Flight of the British -- State
+ of the army -- Character of this outrage -- Rejoicings in
+ England -- Mortification of our ambassadors at Ghent --
+ Mistake of the English -- Parker's expedition -- Colonel
+ Reed's defence -- The English army advance on Baltimore --
+ Death of Ross -- Bombardment of Fort McHenry -- "The star
+ spangled banner" -- Retreat of the British, and joy of the
+ citizens of Baltimore, 114
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Macomb at Plattsburg -- American and English fleets on Lake
+ Champlain -- Advance of Prevost -- Indifference of Governor
+ Chittenden -- Rev. Mr. Wooster -- Macdonough -- The two
+ battles -- Funeral of the officers -- British invasion of
+ Maine -- McArthur's expedition, 147
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ The Navy in 1814 -- Cruise of Captain Morris in the Adams --
+ Narrow escapes -- The Wasp and Reindeer -- Cruise of the
+ Wasp -- Sinks the Avon -- Mysterious fate of the Wasp -- The
+ Peacock captures the Epervier -- Lieutenant Nicholson, 165
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ Third Session of the XIIIth Congress -- State of the
+ Treasury -- The President's Message -- Dallas appointed
+ Secretary of the Treasury -- His scheme and that of Eppes
+ for the relief of the country -- Our Commissioners at Ghent
+ -- Progress of the negotiations -- English protocol -- Its
+ effect on Congress and the nation -- Effect of its
+ publication on the English Parliament, 174
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+HARTFORD CONVENTION.
+
+ Attitude of New England -- Governor Strong -- Views and
+ purposes of the Federalists -- Anxiety of Madison --
+ Prudence of Colonel Jesup -- Result of the Convention --
+ Fears of the People -- Fate of the Federalists, 191
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+ General Jackson appointed Major-General -- Hostility of
+ Spain -- Gallant defence of Fort Bowyer -- Seizure of
+ Pensacola -- Jackson at New Orleans -- Approach and landing
+ of the British -- Jackson proclaims martial law -- Night
+ attack on the British -- Jackson entrenches himself -- First
+ attack of the British -- Second attack -- Final assault --
+ The battle and the victory -- Jackson fined by Judge Hall --
+ Arrival of the Treaty of Peace -- Great rejoicings --
+ Delegates of the Hartford Convention -- Remarks on the
+ treaty, 199
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ Cruise of the Constitution -- Action with the Cyane and
+ Levant -- Chased by a British fleet -- England's views of
+ neutral rights and the law of nations -- Her honor and
+ integrity at a discount -- Singular escape of the
+ Constitution -- Recapture of the Levant under the guns of a
+ neutral port -- Lampoons on the English squadron for its
+ contemptible conduct -- Decatur -- Capture of the President
+ -- The Hornet captures the Penguin -- Chased by a ship of
+ the line -- Narrow escape -- Cruise of the Peacock -- Review
+ of the American Navy -- Its future destiny, 236
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+PRIVATEERS.
+
+ Character and daring of our privateers -- Skill of American
+ seamen -- Acts of Congress relative to privateering -- Names
+ of ships -- Gallant action of the Nonsuch -- Success of the
+ Dolphin -- Cruise of the Comet -- Narrow escape of the
+ Governor Tompkins -- Desperate action of the Globe with two
+ brigs -- The Decatur takes a British sloop of war -- Action
+ of the Neufchatel with the crew of the Endymion -- Desperate
+ defence of Captain Reed against the crews of British
+ squadron -- The Chasseur captures a British schooner of war
+ -- Character of the commanders of privateers -- Anecdote, 258
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+DARTMOOR PRISON.
+
+ Impressed Americans made prisoners of war -- Treatment of
+ prisoners -- Prison Ships -- Dartmoor prison -- Neglect of
+ American prisoners -- Their sufferings -- Fourth of July in
+ Dartmoor -- Brutal attack of the French prisoners -- Fresh
+ arrivals -- Joy at the news of our naval victories --
+ Sufferings of the prisoners in winter -- American Government
+ allows them three cents per diem -- Moral effect of this
+ notice of Government -- Napoleon's downfall -- Increased
+ allowance of Government -- Industry of prisoners -- Attempts
+ to escape -- Extraordinary adventure of a lieutenant of a
+ privateer -- Number of prisoners increased -- A riot to
+ obtain bread -- Dartmoor massacre -- Messrs. King and
+ L'Arpent appointed commissioners to investigate it --
+ Decision -- The end, 279
+
+
+ Tax-tables, 301
+
+
+ Index, 313
+
+
+
+
+HISTORY OF THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE CREEK WAR.
+
+ Jackson's first service -- Is appointed commander in-chief
+ of the Tennessee forces -- Co-operation of other states --
+ Jackson enters the Creek nation -- Difficulties of his
+ position -- General Coffee's expedition -- Relieves Fort
+ Talladega -- Battle of -- Stormy condition of his army --
+ Quells a mutiny -- Abandoned by his troops -- Quells a
+ second mutiny -- His boldness -- A third mutiny suppressed
+ -- Left with but a hundred followers -- Clairborne's
+ movements -- Arrival of reinforcements -- Makes a diversion
+ in favor of General Floyd -- Battle of Nutessee -- Battle of
+ Emuckfaw -- Ambuscade of the Indians -- Gallantry of General
+ Coffee -- Battle of the "Horse Shoe" -- The war ended --
+ Jackson's character.
+
+
+Allusion has been made to Jackson's campaign against the Creeks, but I
+purposely omitted an account of its progress, preferring to go back
+and make a continuous narrative. Although embracing a portion of two
+years, it composed a single expedition, and forms a whole which loses
+much of its interest by being contemplated in parts. After the
+cowardly surrender of General Hull, at Detroit, in the commencement of
+the war, Jackson offered his services to the government, and
+solicited the post which was assigned to Winchester. Disappointed in
+this, he repaired, at the order of the Secretary of War, to Natchez,
+to assist Wilkinson, then stationed there, to repel the attacks of the
+enemy should they advance up the Mississippi. But no danger from an
+attack in that quarter appearing, he was directed to disband his
+troops. Refusing to do this, on account of the number of sick in camp,
+many of them sons of his neighbors and friends, he became involved in
+a quarrel both with Wilkinson and his own officers. He, however,
+carried out his measures and led his men back in safety to their
+homes.
+
+[Sidenote: 1813.]
+
+Here he remained idle till the massacre at Fort Mimms, the news of
+which, together with the rising of the Indians all along our southern
+frontier, burst like a sudden thunder-clap on the neighboring States.
+Georgia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina, flew at once to arms. On
+the 17th of September a mass meeting assembled at Nashville, which
+with one voice nominated Jackson commander-in-chief of the troops of
+the State. Ten days after, the nomination was confirmed by the
+Legislature, and 200,000 dollars voted to carry on the war. Jackson
+immediately issued a stirring appeal to the people, in which, after
+describing the state of things, he urged them to assemble to his
+standard with all speed, saying, "Already are large bodies of the
+hostile Creeks marching to your borders, with their scalping-knives
+unsheathed to butcher your women and children: time is not to be lost.
+We must hasten to the frontier, or we shall find it drenched in the
+blood of our citizens." At this time he was suffering from a disabled
+arm which had been mutilated in an encounter with Benton, and was
+unable to be present at Fayetteville, the rendezvous, on the 4th of
+October; but he sent an address to be read to the troops, and rules
+regulating the police of the camp. Although too feeble to take the
+field, he, three days after, with his arm in a sling, put himself at
+the head of the army. The next evening, a dispatch arrived from
+Colonel Coffee, who had been previously sent forward with a large
+detachment to Huntsville, thirty-two miles distant, stating that a
+body of nearly a thousand Indians were on their way to ravage the
+frontiers of Georgia, and another party approaching Tennessee. The day
+after came a second express confirming the report. By nine o'clock the
+following morning, Jackson put his army of twenty-five hundred men in
+motion, and at eight in the evening reached Huntsville, making the
+thirty-two miles in eleven hours. Finding that the rumor was without
+foundation, he proceeded leisurely to Ditto's Landing, where Col.
+Coffee with his regiment was encamped. Here he paused to wait for
+supplies, and survey his position.
+
+With promptness on the part of those co-operating with him, he saw
+that the hostile Creeks could be crushed with one blow; for on the
+west of their settlements were six hundred Mississippi volunteers and
+the 3d regiment of regular infantry, six hundred strong, under Colonel
+Russel; on the east were twenty-five hundred Georgia militia,
+commanded by General Floyd; while from the north, five thousand
+volunteers and militia--twenty-five hundred from East Tennessee, under
+Generals Cocke and White, and the same number from the western section
+of the State--were moving down on the devoted tribes. This army of
+five thousand Tennesseans was under his own command, the western half
+of which he led in person. There were, besides this formidable array,
+a few posts held by small detachments, and a few hundred friendly
+Indians, most of them Cherokees. When these separate armies should
+close around the hostile settlements, encircling them in a girdle of
+fire, it was universally believed that the war would be over.
+
+While Jackson remained at Ditto's Landing, waiting anxiously for the
+supplies which Generals Cocke and White had promised to forward, he
+dispatched General Coffee, with six hundred picked men, to destroy
+Blackwarrior town, a hundred miles south.
+
+At length, being urged by the earnest appeals of friendly Indians, who
+were in daily danger of being cut off by the Creeks, he, on the 19th,
+started for Thompson's Creek, where he had ordered the provisions,
+which he supposed were near at hand, to be stopped. Cutting his way
+through the heavy forests, and dragging his artillery over steep
+mountains, he at length, after a painful march of two days, reached
+the place of depôt but no provisions had arrived. Instead of supplies,
+came a letter from General White, who was at Lookout Mountain in the
+Cherokee country, stating that no flour could be spared from that
+post. His position was now becoming painful and critical. Standing in
+the centre of the wilderness, on the borders of the enemy's country,
+with his little band around him, he saw no alternative but to retreat,
+unless he ran the risk of starving in the forest. But to abandon his
+design, would leave the friendly Indians at the mercy of their
+enemies, an act not only cruel in the extreme, and utterly repugnant
+to his nature, but which would furnish a fatal example to the other
+friendly tribes, whose alliance it was of the highest importance to
+secure. Prudence would have dictated a retreat, but Jackson had never
+yet turned his back voluntarily on a foe, and he resolved, at all
+hazards, to proceed. Sending off expresses to Generals Cocke and
+White, and to the Governors of Tennessee and Georgia, and the American
+agents in the Choctaw and Cherokee nations, he issued a stirring
+address to his troops, in which he promised them that the "order to
+charge would be the signal for victory." In urging on them the
+importance of coolness, and presence of mind, in every emergency, even
+in "retreat," he adds,
+
+"Your general laments that he has been compelled, even incidentally,
+to _hint_ at a retreat, when speaking to freemen and to soldiers.
+Never, until you forget all that is due to yourselves and your
+country, will you have any practical understanding of that word. Shall
+an enemy, wholly unacquainted with military evolutions, and who rely
+more for victory on their grim visages, and hideous yells, than upon
+their bravery or their weapons--shall such an enemy ever drive before
+them, the well-trained youths of our country, whose bosoms pant for
+glory, and a desire to avenge the wrongs they have received? Your
+general will not live to behold such a spectacle; rather would he rush
+into the thickest of the enemy, and submit himself to their
+scalping-knives; but he has no fear of such a result. He knows the
+valor of the men he commands, and how certainly that valor, regulated
+as it will be, will lead to victory."
+
+Cut off from supplies, locked up in the wilderness, through which
+swarmed thousands of savages eagerly watching his advance, with only
+six days' rations of meat and two of flour, he issued this bold and
+confident address, and then gave orders for the army to march.
+Arriving at Ten Islands, he erected Fort Strother, to serve as a
+depôt, and to cover his retreat. In a letter to Governor Blount, from
+this place, he says,--
+
+"Indeed, sir, we have been wretchedly supplied,--scarcely two rations
+in succession have been regularly drawn, yet we are not despondent.
+While we can procure an ear of corn apiece, or anything that will
+answer as a substitute for it, we shall continue our exertions to
+accomplish the object for which we were sent."
+
+Here, being informed that General White was only twenty-five miles
+distant up the river, he sent him a despatch to hasten, at once, to
+the fort. In the mean time, General Coffee, who had returned
+successful from his southern expedition, was sent to attack a large
+body of Indians at Tallushatchee, some thirty miles distant. With nine
+hundred men, this gallant officer advanced, and succeeded in
+completely surrounding them; and though the savages fought desperately
+to the last, but few escaped. A hundred and eighty warriors lay
+stretched around the ashes of their dwellings. Among the slain, was a
+mother, on whose bosom her infant boy was found, struggling in vain to
+draw nourishment from the lifeless breast. When he was brought to
+camp, Jackson endeavored to persuade some of the female captives to
+take care of him, but they all refused, saying, "His relations are
+all dead, kill him too." He then ordered some sugar to be given him,
+and sent him to Huntsville, where he could be properly cared for. He
+afterwards adopted him, gave him a good education, and placed him at a
+saddler's to learn a trade. The latter was accustomed to spend every
+Sunday at the Hermitage, with his adopted father, who was strongly
+attached to him. But he always pined for the free, wild life of his
+race. The close air of the shop and the drudgery of an apprentice did
+not agree with him, and he soon after sickened. He was then taken home
+to the Hermitage, where he lingered some time, and died.
+
+At length, on the 7th of November, an Indian runner arrived in camp,
+stating that Fort Talladega, about thirty miles distant, was
+surrounded by the hostile Red-sticks, and if he did not hurry to its
+relief, the friendly Indians, who had taken refuge in it must be
+massacred. The runner had scarcely finished his message when the order
+to march was issued, and in a few minutes the columns were in motion.
+It was midnight, and through the dim cathedrals of nature, lighted
+only by the stars of heaven, Jackson led his two thousand men towards
+the Talladega. Eight hundred of these were mounted riflemen, who
+presented a picturesque appearance, as they wound slowly along the
+rough forest path underneath the autumnal woods, each with unceasing
+watchfulness, piercing the surrounding gloom, and every hand grasping
+a trusty rifle. Their heavy tramp frightened the wild beasts from
+their lairs, and awoke strange echoes in the solitude. Now straining
+up steep ascents, and now swimming deep rivers, the fearless and
+gallant band pressed forward. In three columns, so as to prevent the
+confusion that might arise from a sudden surprise, it forced its
+difficult way through the forest, and at night arrived within six
+miles of the besieged fort. Here Jackson halted, and sent forward two
+friendly Indians and a white man, to reconnoitre. About eleven o'clock
+they returned, and reported the enemy in great force, and within a
+quarter of a mile of the fort. No time was to be lost, and though the
+troops had been without sleep, and constantly on the strain for
+twenty-four hours, another night, and a battle, lay between them and
+repose.
+
+It was four o'clock of a cool November morning, when the three columns
+again moved forward. Advancing with the utmost caution and quietness
+to within a mile of the Indian encampment, they halted, and formed in
+order of battle. Two hundred and fifty of the cavalry, under
+Lieut.-Col. Dyer, were left in the rear of the centre to act as a
+reserve, while the remaining four hundred and fifty were ordered to
+push forward to the right and left on either side, until the heads of
+their columns met beyond the hostile encampment, and thus completely
+encircle it. The two brigades of Hall and Roberts, occupying the right
+and left, were directed to advance, while the ring of cavalry was
+steadily to contract, so as to shut in every savage and prevent
+escape. At eight o'clock, Colonel Carroll boldly charged the position
+in front of him, and carried it; he then retreated, in order to draw
+the Indians in pursuit. They charged after him with such terrific
+whoops and screams, that a portion of General Roberts' brigade, on
+whom they were rushing with uplifted tomahawks, broke and fled. This
+made a chasm in the line, which Jackson immediately ordered Colonel
+Bradley to fill with his regiment, that for some reason, known only to
+the latter, had lagged behind, to the great detriment of the order of
+battle. But not only had he proved a laggard in the approach, but he
+refused to fill the chasm, as ordered by his commander, and the latter
+was compelled to dismount his reserve and hurry them forward. As these
+steadily and firmly advanced, and poured in their volleys, the
+panic-stricken militia recovered their courage and resumed their
+places in the line. In the mean time, the encircling cavalry came
+galloping, with loud hurrahs, towards the centre. The next moment the
+forest rang with the sharp reports of their rifles. In fifteen minutes
+the battle was over, and the terrified savages were wildly skirting
+the inner edge of this circle of fire, seeking, in vain, an avenue to
+the open forest beyond. Turned back at every step, they fell like the
+autumn leaves which the wind shook around them. At length they
+discovered a gap, made by the neglect of Colonel Bradley and the delay
+of a portion of the cavalry, which had taken too wide a circuit, and
+poured like a torrent that has suddenly found vent, through it. The
+mounted riflemen wheeled and streamed after; and the quick, sharp
+reports of their pieces, and the receding yells rising from the
+forest, told how fiercely they pressed on the flying traces of the
+foe. The savages made straight for the mountains, three miles distant,
+fighting as they went. The moment they bounded up the steep acclivity
+they were safe, and the wearied horsemen turned again to the camp.
+Their way back was easily tracked by the swarthy forms that lay
+stretched on the leaves, showing where the flight and pursuit had
+swept. Of the thousand and more who had composed the force of the
+enemy, more than half were killed or wounded. Three hundred were left
+dead on the spot where they had first fought. The loss of the
+Americans in killed and wounded, was ninety-five.
+
+The friendly Indians, who had been so long shut up without a drop of
+water, in momentary expectation of being massacred, listened to the
+uproar without, with beating hearts; but when the battle was over,
+they rushed forth with the most frantic cries of joy, and leaped and
+shouted around their deliverers in all the wildness of savage delight.
+They crowded around Jackson as if he had been their deity, toward whom
+they could not show too much reverence.
+
+The refusal of General White to march to Fort Strother, left the
+feeble garrison of the latter in a perilous state. If it should fall,
+Jackson's whole line of retreat would be cut off; and he, therefore,
+with deep pain, was compelled to stop in his victorious progress, and
+return to the fort. On his arrival, he found that no supplies had
+reached it, and that the soldiers, half-starved, were bordering on
+mutiny. General Cocke, from the first, seemed resolved to withhold all
+aid from Jackson, lest he himself should be eclipsed in the campaign.
+[Sidenote: Nov. 11.] This officer directed his movements against the
+Hillabee towns. General White, with the mounted men, succeeded in
+destroying the place, killing and capturing three hundred and sixteen
+warriors.
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 18.]
+
+Jackson, however, endeavored to keep alive the spirits and courage of
+his troops, and distributed all his private stores to the feeble and
+wounded. Having nothing left for himself and staff, he repaired to the
+bullock-pen, and from the offals cut tripe, on which he and they lived
+for days, in the vain hope of receiving the long-promised supplies.
+One day, as he sat at the foot of a tree, thinking of the hard
+condition of his men, and planning how he might find some relief from
+the increasing difficulties that pressed so hard upon him, one of the
+soldiers, observing that he was eating something, approached, and
+asked for a portion. Jackson looked up with a pleasant smile, and
+said, "I will, most cheerfully, divide with you what I have;" and
+taking some acorns from his pocket, he handed them to the astonished
+and mortified soldier. His solicitude for the army did not expend
+itself in words, for he shared with the meanest soldier his privations
+and his wants, while many of his subordinate officers possessed
+abundance. He let the latter enjoy the rations to which they were
+legally entitled, but himself scorned to sit down to a well-supplied
+table, while the army was perishing with want.
+
+This state of things, of course, could not last long. The soldiers
+believed themselves neglected by the State for whose safety they were
+fighting; else why this protracted refusal to send them provisions?
+The incipient discontent was fed and aggravated by several of the
+officers, who were getting tired of the campaign, and wished to return
+home, till at last it broke out into open revolt. The militia
+regiments, _en masse_, had resolved to leave. Jackson received the
+communication with grief and indignation. He felt for his poor,
+half-starved men, but all his passionate nature was roused at this
+deliberate defiance of his authority. The militia, however, did not
+regard his expostulations or threats, and they fixed on a morning to
+commence their march. But as they drew out to take their departure,
+they found, to their astonishment, the volunteers paraded across the
+path, with Jackson at their head. He ordered them to return to their
+position, or they should answer for their disobedience with their
+lives. They obeyed; but the volunteers, indignant that they had been
+made the instrument of quelling the revolt, and anxious as the others
+were to get away, resolved next morning to depart themselves. To their
+surprise, however, they saw the militia drawn up in the same position
+they had occupied the day before, to arrest the first forward movement
+that was made. This was a dangerous game to play with armed men, and
+would not bear a second trial.
+
+The cavalry, on the ground that the country yielded no forage for
+their horses, were permitted to retire to the neighborhood of
+Huntsville, where they promised to wait the orders of their commander.
+
+In the mean time, Jackson hearing that provisions were on the way,
+made an effort to allay the excited, angry feelings that existed in
+the army, and so, on the 14th of November, invited all the field and
+platoon officers to his quarters, and after informing them that
+abundant supplies were close at hand, addressed them in a kind and
+sympathizing manner, told them how deeply he felt for their
+sufferings, and concluded by promising, if provisions did not arrive
+within two days, to lead them back himself to Tennessee. But this kind
+and conciliatory speech produced no effect on a portion of the army,
+and the first regiment of volunteers insisted on abandoning the fort.
+Permission to leave was granted, and Jackson, with chagrin and
+anguish, saw the men whom he refused to abandon at Natchez, forsake
+him in the heart of the forest, surrounded by hostile savages.
+
+The two days expiring without the arrival of provisions, he was
+compelled to fulfill his promise to the army, and preparations were
+made for departure. In the midst of the breaking up of the camp, he
+sat down and wrote a letter to Colonel Pope, the contractor, which
+exhibits how deeply he felt, not merely this abandonment of him, but
+the failure of the expedition. He says in conclusion:
+
+"I cannot express the torture of my feelings, when I reflect that a
+campaign so auspiciously begun, and which might be so soon and so
+gloriously terminated, is likely to be rendered abortive for the want
+of supplies. For God's sake, prevent so great an evil."
+
+As the baggage-wagons were loaded up, and the men fell into marching
+order, the palpable evidence of the failure of the project on which
+he had so deeply set his heart, and the disgrace that awaited his
+army, became so painful, that he could not endure the sight, and he
+exclaimed in mingled grief and shame,
+
+"If only two men will remain with me, I will never abandon the post."
+
+"You have one, General!" exclaimed Captain Gordon, of the spies, who
+stood beside him.
+
+The gallant captain immediately began to beat up for volunteers, and
+it was not long before a hundred and nine brave fellows surrounded
+their general, swearing to stand by him to the last.
+
+The latter then put himself at the head of the militia, telling them
+he should order them back, if they met provisions near by. They had
+gone but ten or twelve miles, when they met a hundred and fifty beeves
+on their way to the fort. The men fell to, and in a short time were
+gorging themselves with half roasted meat. Invigorated by their
+gluttonous repast, most of them consented to return. One company,
+however, quietly resumed its journey homeward. When Jackson was
+informed of it, he sprang into his saddle, and galloping a quarter of
+a mile ahead, where General Coffee with his staff and a few soldiers
+had halted, ordered them to form across the road, and fire on the
+first man that attempted to pass. As the mutineers came up and saw
+that living barrier before them, and in front of it the stern and
+decided face of their commander, they wheeled about, and retraced
+their steps. Jackson then dismounted and began to mingle among the
+men, to allay their excitement, and conciliate their feelings. While
+he was thus endeavoring to reduce to cheerful obedience this
+refractory company, he was told, to his utter amazement, that the
+other portion of the army had changed their mind, and the whole
+brigade was drawn up in column, and on the point of marching homeward.
+He immediately walked up in front of it, snatched a musket from the
+hands of a soldier, and resting it across the neck of his horse, swore
+he would shoot the first man who attempted to move. The soldiers stood
+and looked in sullen silence at that resolute face, undecided whether
+to advance or not, when General Coffee and his staff galloped up.
+These, together with the faithful companies, Jackson ordered to form
+behind him, and fire when he did. Not a word was uttered for some
+time, as the two parties thus stood face to face, and gazed on each
+other. At length a murmur rang along the column--rebellion was
+crushed, and the mutineers consented to return. Discontent, however,
+prevailed, and the volunteers looked anxiously forward to the 10th of
+December, the time when they supposed the term of their enlistment
+expired. They had originally enlisted for twelve months, and counting
+in the time they had been disbanded, after their return from Natchez,
+the year would be completed on that date. But Jackson refused to allow
+the time they were not in actual service. Letters passed between the
+officers and himself, and every effort was made on his part to allay
+the excitement, and convince the troops of the justice of his demands.
+He appealed to their patriotism, their courage, and honor, and finally
+told them if the General Government gave permission for their
+discharge, he would discharge them, otherwise they should walk over
+his dead body before they stirred a foot, until the twelve months'
+actual service was accomplished. [Sidenote: Dec.] Anticipating
+trouble, he wrote home for reinforcements, and sent off officers for
+recruits.
+
+In the mean time, the 10th of December drew near, and every heart was
+filled with anxiety for the result. A portion of the army was resolved
+to _take_ their discharge, whether granted or not. It was not a sudden
+impulse, created by want and suffering, but a well-considered and
+settled determination, grounded on what they considered their rights.
+The thing had been long discussed, and many of the officers had given
+their decided opinion that the time of the men actually expired on the
+10th. Jackson knew that his troops were brave, and when backed by the
+consciousness of right, would be resolute and firm. But he had made up
+his mind to prevent mutiny, though he was compelled to sacrifice a
+whole regiment in doing it.
+
+At length, on the evening of the 9th, Gen. Hall entered the tent of
+Jackson, and informed him that his whole brigade was in a state of
+revolt. The latter immediately issued an order stating the fact, and
+calling on all the officers to aid in quelling it. He then directed
+the two guns he had with him, to be placed, one in front and the other
+in the rear, and the militia on the rising ground in advance, to check
+any movement in that direction, and waited the result. The brigade
+assembled, and were soon in marching order. Jackson then rode slowly
+along the line, and addressed the soldiers. He reminded them of their
+former good conduct, spoke of the love and esteem he had always borne
+them, of the reinforcements on the way, saying, also, that he expected
+every day, the decision of the government, on the question of their
+discharge, and wound up by telling them emphatically, that he had done
+with entreaty,--go they should not, and if they persisted, he would
+settle the matter in a very few minutes. He demanded an immediate and
+explicit answer. They persisted. He repeated his demand, and still
+receiving no answer, he ordered the artillerists to prepare their
+matches, and at the word "Fire!" to pour their volleys of grape-shot
+into the closely crowded ranks. There he sat, gazing sternly down the
+line, while the few moments of grace allowed them, were passing
+rapidly away. The men knew it was no idle threat. He had never been
+known to break his word, and that sooner than swerve one hair from his
+purpose, he would drench that field in blood. Alarmed, they began to
+whisper one to another, "Let us go back." The contagion of fear
+spread, and soon the officers advanced, and promised, on behalf of the
+men, that they would return to their quarters.
+
+As if to try this resolute man to the utmost, and drive him to
+despair, no sooner was one evil averted than another overtook him. He
+had, by his boldness, quelled the mutiny; but he now began again to
+feel the horrors of famine. Supplies did not arrive; or in such scanty
+proportion, that he was compelled, at last, to discharge the troops,
+and, notwithstanding all the distressing scenes through which he had
+passed to retain them, see them take up their line of march for home,
+leaving him, with only a hundred devoted followers, shut up in the
+forest.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 23.]
+
+While these things were passing, General Clairborne, with his
+volunteers, passed up the east side of the Alabama, and piercing to
+the towns above the Cahawba, gave battle to the Indians under their
+great leader, Weathersford, and defeated them, with the loss of but
+one man killed and seven wounded. Destroying their villages, he
+returned to Fort Clairborne. [Sidenote: 1814.] Jackson remained idle
+till the middle of January, when he was gladdened by the arrival of
+eight hundred recruits. Not deeming these, however, sufficient to
+penetrate into the heart of the Creek country, he resolved to make a
+diversion in favor of General Floyd, who was advancing from the east.
+[Sidenote: Dec. 29.] This officer, leaving his encampment on the
+Chattahouche, and advancing into the Indian territory along the
+southern bank of the Talapoosa River, came on the morning of the 29th
+upon the town of Autossee, where a large number of Indians were
+assembled. Having marched since one o'clock in the morning, he took
+the savages by surprise. They however rallied and fought desperately,
+retreating only before the fire of the artillery. Two towns, within
+sight of each other, were soon in flames. Several hundred of the enemy
+were killed and wounded, while the loss of the Americans was but
+sixty-five. Among the wounded was General Floyd, who was struck by a
+shot while gallantly leading on his command. Hearing that a large
+number of Indians were encamped on the Emuckfaw Creek, where it
+empties into the Tallapoosa River, Jackson marched thither, and on the
+evening of the 21st of January, arrived within a short distance of
+their encampment. The Indians were aware of his approach, and resolved
+to anticipate his attack. To prevent a surprise, however, Jackson had
+ordered a circle of watch-fires to be built around his little band.
+The men stood to their arms all night; and just before daylight a wild
+yell, which always precedes an attack, went up from the forest, and
+the next moment the savages charged down on the camp. But, the instant
+the light of the watch-fires fell on their tawny bodies they were
+swept with such a destructive volley, that they again took shelter in
+the darkness. At length, daylight appeared, when General Coffee
+ordered a charge, which cleared the field. He was then directed to
+advance on the encampment with four hundred men, and carry it by
+storm. On his approach, however, he found it too strong for his force,
+and retired. Jackson, attacked in return, was compelled to charge
+repeatedly, before the savages finally took to flight. Many of their
+bravest warriors fell in this short conflict; while, on the American
+side, several valuable officers were badly wounded, among them General
+Coffee, who, from the commencement to the close, was in the thickest
+of the fight.
+
+Notwithstanding his victory, Jackson prudently determined to retreat.
+He had gained his object; for in drawing the attention of the Indians
+to his own force, he had diverted it from that under Gen. Floyd.
+Besides, his horses had been without forage for two days, and would
+soon break down. He, therefore, buried the dead on the field where
+they had fallen; and, on the 23d, began to retrace his footsteps.
+Judging from the quietness of the Indians since the battle, he
+suspected they were lurking in ambush ahead. Remembering also what an
+excellent place there was for a surprise at the ford of Enotochopeo,
+he sent men in advance to reconnoitre, who discovered another ford
+some six hundred yards farther down the stream. Reaching this just at
+evening, he encamped there all night, and the next morning commenced
+crossing. He expected an attack while in the middle of the stream,
+and, therefore, had his rear formed in order of battle. His
+anticipations proved correct; for no sooner had a part of the army
+reached the opposite bank, than an alarm-gun was heard in the rear. In
+an instant, all was in commotion. The next moment, the forest
+resounded with the war-whoop and yells of the savages, as they came
+rushing on in great numbers. As they crowded on the militia, the
+latter, with their officers, gave way in affright, and poured
+pell-mell down the bank. Jackson was standing on the shore
+superintending the crossing of his two pieces of artillery, when his
+broken ranks came tumbling about him. Foremost among the fugitives was
+Captain Stump; and, Jackson, enraged at the shameful disorder, aimed a
+desperate blow at him with his sword, fully intending to cut him down.
+One glance of his eye revealed the whole extent of the danger. But
+for Gen. Carroll, who, with Capt. Quarles and twenty-five men, stood
+nobly at bay, beating back with their deliberate volleys the hordes of
+savages, the entire rear of the army would have been massacred. But,
+over the din and tumult, Jackson's voice rang clear and steady as a
+bugle-note, as he rapidly issued his orders. The gallant and intrepid
+Coffee, roused by the tumult, raised himself from the litter on which
+he lay wounded, and casting one glance on the panic, and another upon
+the little band that stood like a rock embedded in the farther bank,
+leaped to the ground, and with one bound landed in his saddle. The
+next moment, his shout of encouragement broke on the ears of his
+companions as he dashed forward to the conflict. Jackson looked up in
+surprise as that pale face galloped up the bank, and then his rage at
+the cowardice of the men gave way to the joy of the true hero when
+another hero moves to his side, and he shouted, "We shall whip them
+yet, my men! _the dead have risen, and come to aid us_." The company
+of artillery followed, leaving Lieutenant Armstrong and a few men to
+drag up the cannon. When one of the guns, at length, reached the top
+of the bank, the rammer and picker were nowhere to be found. A man
+instantly wrenched the bayonet from his musket, and rammed home the
+cartridge with the stock, and picked it with his ramrod. Lieutenant
+Armstrong fell beside his piece; but as he lay upon the ground, he
+cried out, "My brave fellows, some of you must fall; but save the
+cannon." Such heroism is always contagious; and the men soon rallied,
+and charging home on the savages, turned them in flight on every side.
+
+After burying his dead and caring for the wounded, Jackson resumed his
+march; and, four days after, reached Fort Strother in safety. Nearly
+one-eighth of his little army had been killed or wounded since he left
+the post, and he now dismissed the remainder, who claimed that the
+time of their enlistment was expired; and quietly waited till
+sufficient reinforcements should arrive for him to undertake a
+thorough campaign into the Creek country.
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 27.]
+
+Four days after this, General Floyd again advancing into the Creek
+country, was attacked just before daylight by a large body of Indians,
+who rushed on him with terrible impetuosity. Determined on victory,
+they advanced within thirty steps of the artillery, and would have
+taken it but for the uncommon coolness and bravery of the subordinate
+officers. At length a charge of bayonet sent them flying in all
+directions. The cavalry then charged, and the horses rushing furiously
+forward, to the sound of bugles, completed the terror of the savages,
+who disappeared like frightened deer in the surrounding forests,
+leaving thirty-seven dead on the field.
+
+Reinforcements soon began to come in to Jackson; for his bravery and
+success awakened confidence, and stimulated the ambition of thousands,
+who were sure to win distinction under such a leader; and, by March,
+he found himself at the head of four thousand militia and volunteers,
+and a regiment of regular troops, together with several hundred
+friendly Indians. While preparing to advance, mutiny again broke out
+in the camp. He determined this time to make an example which should
+deter others in future; and a private, being tried and convicted, was
+shot. The spectacle was not lost on the soldiers, and nothing more was
+heard of a revolt.
+
+Having completed all his arrangements, Jackson, with four thousand
+men, advanced, on the 16th of March, into the Creek country. At the
+junction of the Cedar Creek with the Coosa River, he established Fort
+Williams, and left a garrison. He then continued his march, with some
+two thousand five hundred men, towards his previous battle-ground at
+Emuckfaw. About five miles below it, in the bend of the Tallapoosa,
+the Indians, a thousand strong, had entrenched themselves, determined
+to give battle. They were on sacred ground; for all that tract between
+the Coosa and Tallapoosa Rivers, known as the "hickory ground," their
+prophets had told them the white man could never conquer. This bend
+contained about a hundred acres, around which the river wrapped
+itself in the form of a horse-shoe, from whence it derived its name.
+Across the neck leading to this open plain, the Indians had erected a
+breastwork of logs, seven or eight feet high, and pierced it with a
+double row of port-holes. Behind it, the ground rose into an
+elevation; while still farther back, along the shore, lay the village,
+in which were the women and children. Early in the morning of the
+25th, Jackson ordered General Coffee to take the mounted riflemen
+together with the friendly Indians and cross the river at a ford
+below, and stretch around the bend, on the opposite bank from the
+village, so as to prevent the fugitives from escaping. He then
+advanced in front, and took up his position, and opened on the
+breastwork with his light artillery. The cannonade was kept up for two
+hours without producing any effect. In the mean time, the friendly
+Indians attached to General Coffee's command had swam the river and
+loosened a large number of canoes, which they brought back. Captain
+Russell's company of spies immediately leaped into them, and, with the
+friendly Indians, crossed over and set the village on fire, and with
+loud shouts pressed towards the rear of the encampment. The Indians
+returned the shout of defiance, and, with a courage and steadiness
+they seldom exhibited, repelled every effort to advance.
+
+The troops under Jackson heard the din of the conflict within, and
+clamored loudly to be led to the assault. He, however, held them back,
+and stood and listened. Discovering, at length, by the incessant
+firing in a single place, that the Americans were making no progress,
+he ordered the drums to beat the charge. A loud and thrilling shout
+rolled along the American line, and, with levelled bayonets, the
+excited ranks precipitated themselves on the breastwork. A withering
+fire received them, the rifle-balls sweeping like a sudden gust of
+sleet, in their very faces. Not an Indian flinched, and many were
+pierced through the port-holes; while, in several instances, the
+enemy's bullets were welded to the American bayonets. The swarthy
+warriors looked grimly through the openings, as though impervious to
+death. This, however, was of short duration, and soon the breastwork
+was black with men, as they streamed up the sides. Major Montgomery
+was the first who planted his foot on the top, but he had scarcely
+waved his sword in triumph above his head, when he fell back upon his
+companions, dead. A cry of vengeance swelled up from his followers,
+and the next moment the troops rolled like a sudden inundation over
+the barrier. It then became a hand-to-hand fight. The Indians refused
+to yield, and with gleaming knives and tomahawks, and clubbed rifles
+and muskets, closed in a death grapple with their foes. Civilization
+gave the bold frontiersmen no advantage here--it was a personal
+struggle with his swarthy rival for the mastery, where they both
+claimed the right of possession. The wild yell of the savage blended
+in with the stem curse of the Anglo-Saxon, while high and shrill over
+the clangor and clash of arms, arose the shouts of the prophets, as
+dancing frantically around their blazing dwellings, they continued
+their strange incantations, still crying victory.
+
+At length one was shot in the mouth, as if to give the lie to his
+declarations. Pressed in front and rear, many at last turned and fled.
+But the unerring rifle dropped them along the shore; while those who
+endeavored to save themselves by swimming, sunk in mid-stream under
+the deadly fire of Coffee's mounted men. The greater part, however,
+fought and fell, face to face, with their foes. It was a long and
+desperate struggle; not a soul asked for quarter, but turned, with a
+last look of hate and defiance, on his conqueror. As the ranks grew
+thin, it ceased to be a fight, and became a butchery. Driven at last
+from the breastwork, the few surviving warriors took refuge in the
+brush and timber on the hill. Wishing to spare their lives, Jackson
+sent an interpreter to them, offering them pardon; but they proudly
+refused it, and fired on the messenger. He then turned his cannon on
+the spot, but failing to dislodge them, ordered the grass and brush to
+be fired. Driven out by the flames, they ran for the river, but most
+of them fell before they reached the water. On every side the crack of
+the rifle told how many eyes were on the fugitives. Darkness at last
+closed the scene, and still night, broken only by the cries of the
+wounded, fell on the forest and river. Nearly eight hundred of the
+Indians had fallen, five hundred and fifty-seven of whom lay stark and
+stiff around and in that encampment. The loss of the Americans, in
+killed and wounded, was about two hundred.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: An incident occurred after the battle, which presented in
+striking contrast the two opposite natures of Jackson. An Indian
+warrior, severely wounded, was brought to him, whom he placed at once
+in the hands of the surgeon. While under the operation, the bold,
+athletic warrior looked up, and asked Jackson in broken English, "Cure
+'im, kill 'im again?" The latter replied, "No; on the contrary, he
+should be well taken care of." He recovered, and Jackson pleased with
+his noble bearing, sent him to his own house in Tennessee, and
+afterwards had him taught a trade in Nashville, where he eventually
+married and settled down in business. When that terrible ferocity,
+which took entire possession of this strange, indomitable man in
+battle, subsided away, the most gentle and tender emotions usurped its
+place. The tiger and the lamb united in his single person.]
+
+The tired soldier slept on the field of slaughter, around the
+smouldering fires of the Indian dwellings. The next morning they sunk
+the dead bodies of their companions in the river, to save them from
+the scalping-knives of the savages, and then took up their backward
+march to Fort William.
+
+The original design of having the three armies from Tennessee,
+Georgia, and Mississippi, meet in the centre of the Creek nation, and
+thus crush it with one united effort, had never been carried out, and
+Jackson now resolved alone to overrun and subdue the country. Issuing
+a noble address to his troops, he, on the 7th of April, set out for
+the Indian village of Hoithlowalle. But he met with no opposition; the
+battle of Tohopeka had completely prostrated the tribe, and the war
+was virtually at an end. He, however, scoured the country, the Indians
+everywhere fleeing before the terror of his name. On his march, he
+sent orders to Colonel Milton, who, with a strong force, was also
+advancing into the Creek country, to send him provisions. The latter
+returned a cavalier refusal. Jackson then sent a peremptory order, not
+only to forward provisions, but to join him at once with his troops.
+Colonel Milton, after reading the order, asked the bearer what sort of
+a man Jackson was. "One," he replied, "who intends, when he gives an
+order, to have it obeyed." The colonel concluded to obey, and soon
+effected a junction with his troops. Jackson then resumed his march
+along the banks of the Tallapoosa; but he had hardly set the leading
+column in motion, when word was brought him that Colonel Milton's
+brigade was unable to follow, as the wagon-horses had strayed away
+during the night, and could not be found. Jackson immediately sent
+him word to detail twenty men to each wagon. The astonished colonel
+soon found horses sufficient to draw the wagons.
+
+The enemy, however, did not make a stand, and either fled, or came in
+voluntarily to tender their submission. The latter part of April,
+General Pinckney arrived at Fort Jackson, and assumed the command, and
+General Jackson returned to Tennessee, greeted with acclamations, and
+covered with honors. In a few months peace was restored with all the
+Southern tribes, and the machinations of England in that quarter
+completely frustrated.
+
+There is nothing in the history of our country more remarkable than
+this campaign, and nothing illustrates the genius of this nation more
+than it and the man who carried it triumphantly through. Rising from a
+sick couch, he called the young men of every profession to rally to
+the defence of their country. Placing himself at the head of the brave
+but undisciplined bands that gathered at his bidding, he boldly
+plunged into the untrodden wilderness. Unskilled in the art of war,
+never having witnessed a battle since he was a boy, he did not
+hesitate to assume the command of an army without discipline, and
+without knowledge of the toils and difficulties before it. Yet with it
+he crossed broad rivers, climbed pathless mountains, and penetrated
+almost impassable swamps filled with crafty savages. More subtle and
+more tireless than his foes, he thwarted all their schemes. With
+famine on one side and an army in open mutiny on the other, he scorned
+to yield to discouragement, and would not be forced by the apparently
+insurmountable obstacles that opposed his progress, from his purpose.
+By his constancy and more than Roman fortitude, compelling adversity
+at length to relent, and quelling his rebellious troops by the terror
+of his presence and his indomitable will, he at last, with a smile of
+triumph, saw his columns winding over the consecrated grounds of the
+savages. Soon his battle-shout was heard rising over the crackling of
+burning villages. Kings, prophets, and chieftains fell before him; and
+crushing towns, villages, and fortresses under his feet, he at last,
+with one terrible blow, paralyzed the nation for ever.
+
+Indian warfare, though exhibiting none of the grand movements of a
+well-appointed battle, often calls out equally striking qualities, and
+requires more promptness and self-possession, and greater mental
+resources in a commander. Especially with such an army as Jackson had
+under him, the task he accomplished was Herculean, and reveals a
+character of vast strength and executiveness. That single man,
+standing up alone in the heart of the wilderness, and boldly facing
+his famine-struck and rebellious army, presents a scene partaking far
+more of the moral sublime than Cromwell seizing a rebel from the very
+midst of his murmuring band.
+
+His gloomy isolation for a whole winter, with only a few devoted
+followers, reveals a fixedness of purpose and grandeur of character
+that no circumstances can affect. Inferior to the contagion of fear,
+unaffected by general discouragement, equal in himself to every
+emergency, he moves before us in this campaign the embodiment of the
+noblest qualities that distinguish the American race.
+
+Jackson, with his undisciplined, mutinous, and starving army in the
+southern wilderness, does not seem to belong to the same race as Hull,
+Dearborn, Wilkinson and Izard on the northern frontier. Contrast the
+difficulties that surrounded him with those that embarrassed them, and
+how pitiful do their apologies and excuses sound. Had he been in
+Dearborn's place, the first campaign would have placed Canada in our
+possession.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ Cruise of Commodore Porter in the Essex -- Arrival at
+ Valparaiso -- Capture of British whalers and letters of
+ marque -- Essex Junior -- Marquesas Islands -- Description
+ of the natives -- Madison Island -- War with the Happahs --
+ Invades the Typee territory -- Tedious march -- Beautiful
+ prospect -- Fights the natives and burns down their towns --
+ Sails for Valparaiso -- Blockaded by two English ships --
+ Attempts to escape -- Is attacked by both vessels -- His
+ gallant defence -- His surrender -- Returns home on parole
+ -- Insolence of an English Officer -- Porter escapes in an
+ open boat and lands on Long Island -- Enthusiastic reception
+ in New York.
+
+
+An expedition similar in its unity to that of Jackson's, and hence
+requiring a connected narrative, was carried forward by Captain Porter
+during the year 1813 in the Pacific Ocean. When Commodore Bainbridge
+sailed from Boston with the Constitution and Hornet, Porter, then
+lying in the Delaware with the Essex, was ordered to join him at Port
+Praya in St. Jago, or at Fernando Noronha. [Sidenote: Oct. 26, 1812.]
+The capture of the Java by the Constitution, and of the Peacock by the
+Hornet, caused a change in the plans of Bainbridge, and Captain
+Porter, not finding him or the Hornet at either of the two places
+mentioned, or off Frio, a rendezvous afterwards designated by the
+Commodore, he was left to cruise where he thought best. [Sidenote:
+Dec. 12.] While searching for these vessels, he captured an English
+government packet with $55,000 in specie on board, and sent her home.
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 1813.]
+
+At length, after revolving various schemes in his mind, he took the
+bold resolution to go alone into the Pacific, where we had not a depôt
+of any kind, or a place in which a disabled vessel could be refitted,
+while all the neutral ports were under the influence of our enemy, and
+make a dash at the British fishermen. The vessels employed in these
+fisheries he knew were invariably supplied with naval stores, etc.,
+and he resolved to live on them. This original and daring cruise was
+no sooner decided upon than he turned his prow southward, and was soon
+wrapt in the storms that sweep Cape Horn. [Sidenote: Jan. 28.] Again
+and again beaten back, as if to deter him from his hazardous course,
+he still held on, and at length, after a most tempestuous and toilsome
+passage, took the breezes of the Pacific and stretched northward.
+[Sidenote: March 5.] His provisions getting short, and being in want
+of some new rigging, he determined to run into Valparaiso. On his
+arrival at that port he found, to his astonishment and delight, that
+Chili had declared herself free of Spain, and his reception was kind
+and courteous. Here he learned, also, that Peru had sent out cruisers
+against American shipping, which, together with British letters of
+marque, threatened to make destructive work with our whalers. He
+therefore remained only a week in port, and then steered northward. On
+the 25th he captured one of the Peruvian cruisers, which, with an
+English vessel, had seized two American whalers a few days before.[2]
+Four days after, he recaptured the Barclay, one of the American
+vessels taken by the Peruvians, and the British letter of marque.
+Looking into Callao to see if any thing had arrived from Valparaiso
+since he left, he cruised from island to island till the latter part
+of April without making any prizes. At length, on the morning of the
+29th, three sail were discerned and chase was immediately made for the
+nearest, which soon struck. She was a British whaler with fourteen
+hundred barrels of oil on board. It having fallen calm when the Essex
+was yet eight miles distant from the other vessels, he was compelled
+to resort to his boats to effect their capture. One of these, the
+Georgiana, Captain Porter equipped as a cruiser, with sixteen guns,
+and put her under the command of Lieutenant Downes, who soon started
+on a cruise of his own.
+
+[Footnote 2: The Peruvian Government supposed that Spain, as the ally
+of England, would make common cause with her on this continent, and so
+to be beforehand, fitted out cruisers against our commerce in the
+Pacific.]
+
+[Sidenote: June 24.]
+
+These two vessels joined company again at Tumbez, the Essex in the
+mean time having captured two large British vessels, and the Georgiana
+three. The Atlantic, one of those taken by Porter, being a much larger
+and faster ship than the Georgiana, Lieutenant Downes was transferred
+to her, and she was christened Essex Junior. On the last day of June
+this little fleet of nine sail put to sea, and on the 4th of July
+fired a general salute with the enemy's powder. A few days after, the
+Essex Junior parted company, steering for Valparaiso with all the
+prizes but two in company. Porter continued his cruise with the
+Georgiana and Greenwich, and on the 13th captured three more vessels.
+The Greenwich behaved gallantly in the action, closing courageously
+with the largest vessel, a cruiser, while the Essex was led away in
+chase of the first. Porter soon after captured another whaler, when,
+being joined by the Essex Junior, bringing information that the
+Chilian government was assuming a more unfriendly attitude towards the
+Americans, he resolved to proceed to the Marquesas to refit, and
+return home. Having made the vessels of the enemy answer for a naval
+depôt, he now sought the bay of an island inhabited by savages, where
+unseen he could prepare to retrace his voyage of ten thousand miles.
+
+He made the Marquesas Islands on the 23d of October. Winding among
+them to find a hiding-place secure as possible against English war
+vessels that he heard had been sent out to capture him, he at length
+dropped anchor in the sequestered bay of Novaheevah and took
+possession of it in the name of the United States, naming it Madison
+Island. In a short time the native women came swimming off naked to
+the ship in crowds, and as they climbed up the vessel's sides, the
+sailors, astonished at the novel spectacle, threw them their
+handkerchiefs to cover their persons. Though swarthy, many of them
+possessed beautiful forms and handsome features. Apparently wholly
+unconscious of those feelings of modesty which seem innate in the sex,
+they received with pride the advances of the men, and in a short time
+every petty officer had chosen his wife, and the long and tedious
+confinement on ship-board was exchanged for unbridled license.
+
+A year before, Porter had sailed from the United States alone, with
+only a few months' provisions on board, and in the mean time had taken
+thirteen vessels and four hundred prisoners. With but a single
+imperfect chart to direct him, he had boldly threaded the islands of
+the Pacific, and swept it of nearly all the enemy's ships. His journal
+of this long cruise reads more like a romance than a logbook, and
+seems to belong to that class of literature in which Robinson Crusoe
+and Captain Kidd figure as heroes. That frigate dropping down the
+Delaware in October, the autumn previous, and now riding at anchor,
+with a large fleet about her, in a deserted bay amid the Marquesas
+Islands, presents a striking contrast, and shows what a single brave,
+energetic, and skillful officer can accomplish.
+
+In a short time those quiet waters resounded with the hammer of the
+workmen, and were filled with the stir and activity of a civilized
+port.
+
+The nations were at first friendly, but those occupying the valley
+where Porter had landed being at war with another tribe, the Happahs,
+they insisted that he should make common cause with them against their
+enemies. This, at last, for the sake of peace, he was compelled to do,
+and sent a party of sailors, under Lieutenant Downes, to assist them
+in their invasion of the enemy's territory. The hostile tribe had
+assembled to the number of three or four thousand, but Downes soon
+scattered them and returned with five dead bodies, which his allies
+brought back in triumph, slung on poles.
+
+In the mean time Captain Porter built a small village, consisting of
+several houses, a bakery, and rope-walk, and erected a fort which he
+mounted with four guns.
+
+At length the Typees, a warlike tribe, succeeded in exciting the
+friendly tribes to hostilities, and a plan was rapidly maturing to
+murder the American crews. Presents and requests to induce them to
+maintain a peaceful attitude, only increased their arrogance, and
+Porter at last resolved to make them feel his power. Accompanied by
+thirty-five sailors he advanced into their country, but the natives
+avoided a combat and retired into the mountain fastnesses. The next
+day he took nearly his whole crew and boldly entered the mountains,
+whose bald tops swarmed with thousands of savages. But to his
+surprise, he suddenly came to a wall seven feet high flanked with
+impenetrable thickets. Behind this the Typees made a bold stand, and
+hurled stones and arrows against their assailants. The volleys of the
+Americans produced but little effect, and Porter discovering at length
+that his ammunition was nearly exhausted, sent Lieutenant Gamble to
+the boats for more, while he, with only nineteen sailors, maintained
+his position. On the return of Gamble it was thought best to retreat,
+and the whole took up their backward march. The savages, elated with
+their victory, pressed forward in pursuit, when Porter gave them a
+volley which killed two and wounded several more. Coming to a river,
+the Americans heard the snapping of slings in the thickets on the
+bank, and immediately after, a shower of stones fell among them, one
+of which fractured the leg of Lieutenant Downes. Weary and
+disappointed, they at length reached the boats. Here they rested till
+night, when they were again ordered forward. The moon shone bright as
+this little column slowly and painfully climbed the heights, from
+whose summits arose the yells and songs of the savages. As the party
+advanced, the sterile region grew more dreary and broken, and the
+prospect ahead more disheartening. Now wading foaming torrents, and
+again creeping along dizzy precipices, the astonished sailors,
+unaccustomed to such labors, became exhausted, and many dropped down
+amid the rocks unable to proceed further. At length the summit, from
+which the valley of the Typees could be seen, was reached. But in the
+mean time the sky had become overcast, the moon was obscured, and the
+guide declared it would be impossible to descend in the darkness. They
+therefore laid down, where they were, to wait for morning.
+
+Those American sailors reposing on the top of the Typee mountain, in
+that remote and almost unknown region, presented a novel spectacle. An
+impenetrable gloom hung over the valley beneath, the sky spread like a
+pall above them, while the dull, heavy roar of the Pacific, as its
+billows broke in the darkness far below them, added to the strangeness
+and romance of the scene. At length the gathering storm burst, and the
+rain fell in torrents. It was a tropical shower--one of those deluges
+of the skies, and in a few moments the little band was flooded with
+water. Porter, fearing the ammunition would all be spoiled, bade
+every man protect it with the utmost care. The Typees, assembled in
+the valley below to the number of four or five thousand, appeared to
+entertain the same expectations, for they began to shout and beat
+their drums in exultation.
+
+At length the long wished for day dawned--the storm had ceased, and as
+the light crept down the sides of the mountain, a scene of surpassing
+beauty presented itself. A valley nine miles long and three broad, lay
+spread out before them, inclosed on every side by high mountains. At
+the farther extremity arose a lofty precipice, over whose brink a
+torrent rushed in a flying leap, and falling in foam at the base,
+formed a stream, which, after winding tranquilly through the green and
+lovely valley, passed, by an opening in the mountains, into the
+Pacific, that, far away, rolled and glittered in the early dawn. All
+over this sequestered plain were scattered the breadfruit and cocoa
+trees, while picturesque villages of bamboo dotted it in every
+direction. Amid these, immense crowds of swarthy men were moving, and
+animals grazing, giving life and animation to the strange and
+beautiful panorama.
+
+Firing a volley, to let the enemy know his powder was not destroyed,
+Porter began the difficult descent. The tortuous course he was
+compelled to pursue made the journey long and tedious, and that night
+he encamped in a village of friendly natives. The next morning he
+moved on the Typee towns. The natives at first closed bravely with
+him, but frightened by the musketry they soon retreated, followed by
+the sailors. Retiring from village to village, they at last took
+refuge in a strong fortress, against which small arms could have no
+effect. Porter then began the work of destruction, and soon nine
+villages were wrapt in fire. As the flames and smoke rolled up from
+the plain, he began his backward march to the ships. At sunset he
+stood again on the mountain where he had reposed the night before, and
+looked down on the valley, but it was now a scene of desolation. The
+smoke curling slowly up from the ruins revealed where the Typee towns
+had stood, while around the smouldering ashes the inhabitants were
+gathered in consternation and despair.
+
+Porter reached his boats in safety, having marched sixty miles in all.
+The sailors, unaccustomed to such land duty, were completely broken
+down with the fatigue and exposure.
+
+This novel expedition succeeded in humbling the hostile tribes, and
+Porter had no further trouble with them while he remained.
+
+The burning of these villages furnished the English papers a subject
+for the exercise of their philanthropy. An act of self-preservation by
+which a few empty wigwams were destroyed, aroused the humanity of
+those who could see no cause of complaint in the conflagration that
+lighted up the Niagara river from Buffalo to the falls, and kept the
+Chesapeake in a glow from burning farm-houses and villages.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 12, 1813.]
+
+Leaving behind him three prizes under the protection of the fort he
+had erected, Porter set sail for Valparaiso, where he arrived the 12th
+of January. Although it was evident that the sympathies of the Chilian
+government had changed, and were now entirely with the English, he
+determined to wait at that port for the Phoebe, an English ship, which
+he understood had been sent out on purpose to capture him. She at
+length arrived, but not alone--the Cherub, a sloop of war bearing her
+company. These vessels bore flags with the mottoes on them "God and
+our country--British sailors' best rights--traitors offend them."
+Porter immediately hoisted at his mizen, "God, our country and
+liberty; tyrants offend them." The Essex could doubtless have made
+good her voyage home, but Porter in capturing merchantmen and whalers
+had done nothing in his own view to distinguish himself, and he longed
+to grapple with this English ship of war. But the vast superiority of
+these two vessels to his own and the Essex Junior, forbade a combat
+unless he was forced into it.
+
+When the Phoebe, commanded by Captain Hillyar, came into port she
+passed close to the Essex with her men at quarters. Porter hailed
+her, saying the vessels would get foul, and requesting the officers in
+command to keep off. The English captain declared he had no intention
+of provoking an action, but his conduct arousing the suspicion of
+Porter he summoned the boarders. In the mean time the English vessel
+being taken aback, passed her bows directly over the decks of the
+Essex, and she lay exposed to a raking broadside from the latter, and
+was for the time completely at her mercy. There is scarcely a doubt
+that Captain Hillyar had orders to attack the Essex wherever he found
+her, even if in a neutral port, and if the positions of the two
+vessels had been reversed he would not have hesitated to demolish the
+American frigate. The whole proceeding justified Porter in such a
+construction, and his broadsides should have anticipated those of the
+enemy, which soon after left him a wreck.
+
+The English ships having taken in supplies, cruised outside for six
+weeks, completely blockading the Essex. Porter saw that his vessel
+could outsail the enemy, but he was not anxious to escape. He wished
+if possible, notwithstanding his inferiority in men and weight of
+metal, to engage the Phoebe alone. In this Captain Hillyar would not
+gratify him. Once Porter got within range and opened his fire on the
+Phoebe, but her gallant commander, though his vessel was a thirty-six,
+while the Essex was a thirty-two, and his crew mustered one hundred
+more men, refused the challenge and dropped nearly three miles astern
+to close with her consort, the Cherub. This enraged Porter, for
+Hillyar had hove to off port, and fired a gun to windward, which could
+be interpreted in no other way than as a challenge.
+
+The former so understood it, and immediately got under way, when his
+adversary retired. Hillyar afterwards declared that the gun to
+windward was a signal to the Cherub. It was doubtless a ruse practiced
+to decoy the Essex into a chase till she could be assailed by both
+vessels at once. There can be only one of two explanations to
+Hillyar's conduct in this affair; he either was afraid to meet the
+American frigate, though the latter was inferior in force, or his
+instructions were not to hazard a single engagement.
+
+Finding that his adversary was determined to avoid him, unless he
+could close with both his vessels at the same time, and hearing that
+other British cruisers were on the way, Porter resolved to put to sea,
+and by tempting Captain Hillyar in pursuit, give the Essex Junior, a
+slow sailer, an opportunity to follow. So on the 28th of March the
+wind blowing fresh, he stood out of port. For awhile every thing
+promised a safe exit, and an open sea, where he would have defied the
+enemy. But in doubling the Point of Angels to clear the harbor, a
+squall struck the vessel, carrying away her main-top-mast, and with
+it several men, who were drowned. Unable to go to sea in this crippled
+condition, and unable also to beat back to his former anchorage, he
+passed to the north-eastern side of the harbor and dropped his anchor
+within three miles of the town, a mile and a half from the Castello
+Viego, and close in shore. He was on neutral ground, as much so by the
+law of nations, as if under the guns of the castle, and where, in the
+same circumstances, at the present day, no nation on the globe would
+dare fire into an American frigate; and yet Captain Hillyar moved down
+on her with both his vessels, chose his position, and opened his
+broadsides. Only one of two measures was therefore left to the
+American commander--strike his flag at once, or fight his ship to the
+last. To conquer he knew was impossible, still he could not give up
+his vessel without an effort, and he sternly ordered the decks cleared
+for action.
+
+The two English vessels, although they had chosen their own position,
+were in a short time so cut up by the deadly aim of the gunners of the
+Essex that they hauled off for repairs.
+
+The state of affairs having got wind, thousands of spectators
+assembled on the surrounding heights to witness the combat. Porter's
+situation was well nigh hopeless, but he was one of those few men whom
+desperate circumstances only stimulate to greater exertions. Fortune,
+as if envious of his long success, seemed determined to crush him. Yet
+he resolved that what adverse fate got out of him, should be on terms
+that would cover him with more glory than ordinary success could
+possibly do.
+
+Captain Hillyar having completed his repairs, again took his position
+where the Essex could not bring a gun to bear. Porter finding himself
+a mere target on the water, determined if possible to board the
+Phoebe. But his sheets and halyards had been so shot away that not a
+sail could be set, except the flying jib. Giving this to wind and
+cutting his cable, he drove slowly down on his foes, and when he got
+them within range of his carronades, opened a terrible fire. The
+cannonade on both sides was incessant and awful. The Essex on fire,
+almost a wreck, and swept by the broadsides of two vessels, still bore
+steadily down to close, but the Cherub hauled off, while the Phoebe,
+seeing the advantage she possessed with her long guns, when out of the
+reach of carronades, kept edging away. It was a painful spectacle to
+behold, that crippled, dismantled ship, bravely limping up to grapple
+with her powerful adversary, and that adversary as slowly moving off
+and pouring in the while a ceaseless, murderous fire. Hulled at almost
+every shot, her decks ripped up and strewed with the dead, her guns
+torn from their carriages and rendered useless, it was evident that
+noble frigate could not be fought much longer. Still Porter would not
+strike his flag, and he resolved to run his vessel ashore and blow her
+up. Her head was turned towards the beach, and he had got within
+musket-shot of it, when the wind suddenly veered and blew him back on
+the Phoebe and under her raking broadsides. Foiled in his first
+effort, he now for a moment hoped to get foul and board the enemy, but
+she kept away, raking the Essex as she retired. The scene on board the
+frigate at this time was horrible. The cock-pit was crowded with the
+wounded--men by the dozens were mowed down at every discharge--fifteen
+had successively fallen at one gun, and scarcely a quarter deck
+officer was left standing. Amid this scene of carnage and desolation,
+Porter moved with a knit brow and gloomy heart. As he looked at his
+crippled condition and slaughtered crew, he felt that he must submit,
+but when he turned his eye to the flag of his country, still
+fluttering at the mizen, he could not give the order to strike it. The
+sympathies of the thousands of spectators that covered the hill-top
+were with him--as they ever are with the brave. The American consul
+hastened to the governor of the city and claimed the protection of the
+batteries for the Essex, but in vain. It had, no doubt, been all
+arranged beforehand between the authorities and the British commander.
+Every thing, even the elements of nature, seemed combined against
+this single ship. As a last resort, Porter let go his sheet anchor,
+which brought the head of his vessel round so that his broadsides
+again bore. A gleam of hope lighted up for a moment the gloom that
+hung over his prospects, and walking amid his bleeding crew, he
+encouraged the few survivors to hold on. The broadsides of the two
+vessels again thundered over the bay, telling with frightful effect on
+both vessels. But this last forlorn hope was snatched from the fated
+frigate--the hawser parted in the strain, and she drifted an
+unmanageable wreck on the water--while, to complete the horror of the
+scene, the flames burst from the hatchways and rolled away towards the
+magazine. Finding that his doom was now inevitably sealed, for his
+boats had all been shot away, Porter ordered those of his crew who
+could swim to jump overboard and make for the shore, three-quarters of
+a mile distant. Some reached it, while the remainder who made the
+attempt were either drowned or picked up by the enemy's boats. He
+then, with the few who preferred to share his fate, extinguished the
+fire, and again worked the guns that could be brought to bear. It was,
+however, the last feeble effort of a dying giant. The enemy could now
+fire more leisurely, and the water being smooth, he soon made a
+perfect riddle of the Essex. The crew at last entreated their
+commander to surrender--the contest was hopeless--the cock-pit,
+ward-room, steerage, and berth-deck could contain no more wounded, who
+were constantly killed while under the surgeon's hand. Of the
+carpenter's crew not one remained to stop the shot-holes, through
+which the water was pouring in streams, and the entire vessel was a
+wreck. Porter would have sunk with his flag flying, but for the number
+of wounded who would thus perish with him. For their sakes he finally
+consented to surrender, and ordered the officers of the different
+divisions to be sent for, but to his amazement only one was left to
+answer his call,[3] while out of two hundred and fifty-five men only
+seventy-five were left fit for duty. This unexampled and murderous
+combat had lasted nearly two hours and a half, and he gave the
+melancholy order to lower the flag. The enemy not at first observing
+it, kept up his fire. Porter, thinking it was his intention to give no
+quarter, was about to hoist his flag again, and go down with it
+flying, when the firing ceased.
+
+[Footnote 3: This was Stephen Decatur M'Knight. Lieut. Wilmer, after
+fighting gallantly, was knocked overboard and drowned. The other
+officers were badly wounded, and one, Lieut. Cowell, died soon after.]
+
+A ship was never fought more bravely or skilfully, and Porter, though
+compelled to surrender, earned imperishable renown, and set an example
+to our navy, which if followed, will ensure its success, and cover it
+with glory.
+
+Captain Hillyar's conduct after the victory, was distinguished by a
+courtesy and delicacy rarely witnessed in English commanders at that
+time. But he was blameworthy in attacking a ship in a neutral port,
+and it would not take many such victories to ruin his reputation. The
+whole transaction shows what little respect England paid to the laws
+of neutrality. The national heart was exceedingly shocked at the
+violation of those laws by Napoleon when he seized the Duke D'Enghien,
+but she could give orders, the execution of which did not cause the
+death of merely one man, but more than one hundred brave spirits, on
+neutral territory. The authorities of Valparaiso were also guilty of a
+base act in not defending the rights of their own port, and extending
+the protection required by the laws of nations to the American vessel.
+
+[Sidenote: 1814.]
+
+The Essex Junior was transformed into a cartel, and the prisoners sent
+in her to the United States, on parole. She arrived off Sandy Hook the
+5th of July, and though provided with passports from Captain Hillyar,
+to prevent a recapture, she was overhauled and detained by the British
+ship Saturn. Captain Nash, the commander, at first treated Porter very
+civilly, endorsed his passports, and allowed the vessel to proceed.
+Standing on the same tack with the Essex, he kept her company for two
+hours, when he ordered the former to heave to again, and her papers
+brought on board for re-examination. Porter was indignant at this
+proceeding, but he was told that his passport must not only go on
+board the Saturn, but the vessel itself be detained. He remonstrated,
+declaring that it was in direct violation of the contract entered into
+with Captain Hillyar, and he should consider himself a prisoner of
+Captain Nash's, and no longer on parole, and at the same time offered
+to deliver up his sword. On being told that the vessel must remain
+under the lee of the Saturn all night, he said, "then I am your
+prisoner, and do not feel myself bound any longer by my agreement with
+Captain Hillyar." He withdrew his parole at once, declaring he should
+act as he saw fit. The English captain evidently suspected some Yankee
+trick was at the bottom of the whole proceeding, and as it usually
+happened during the war, suspicion was aroused at precisely the wrong
+times. English vessels had been so often duped by Yankee shrewdness
+that they were constantly on the alert, and hence to be safe, often
+committed blunders of a grave character. Porter, whether treading the
+quarter-deck of his own vessel or a prisoner of war, was not a man to
+be trifled with, and as a British officer had treated him basely, he
+determined to be free of the obligations that galled him, at all
+hazards, and the next morning finding that he was off Long Island, and
+that Captain Nash had no idea of releasing him, he ordered a boat
+lowered, into which he jumped with an armed crew, and pushed off. As
+he went down the vessel's side, he told Lieutenant Downs to say to
+Captain Nash, "that he was now satisfied that _most British naval
+officers were not only destitute of honor, but regardless of the honor
+of each other_; that he was armed and should fight any force sent
+against him, to the last, and if he met him again, it would be as an
+enemy." Keeping the Essex Junior between him and the British vessel,
+he got nearly out of gun-shot before he was discovered. The Saturn
+immediately gave chase, but a fog suddenly rising, concealed the boat,
+when Porter changed his course and eluded his pursuers. Lieutenant
+Downs, taking advantage of the same fog endeavored to escape with his
+vessel, but the Saturn suspecting his movements, opened her guns,
+which brought him to. Porter heard the firing, and kept off in an
+opposite direction, and by rowing and sailing, alternately, for nearly
+sixty miles, in an open boat, at length reached Babylon, on Long
+Island. The people there discredited his story. Suspecting he was an
+English officer in disguise, they began to question him, and he was
+compelled to show his commission before they would let him go. When
+their doubts were at length removed, every attention was lavished upon
+him, and he started for New York. His arrival was soon spread abroad,
+and as the carriage that contained him entered the city the horses
+were snatched away, and the people seizing it, dragged him through the
+streets with huzzas and shouts of welcome.
+
+Porter had lost his ship, but not his place in the heart of the
+nation, nay he was deeply and forever fixed there. His cruise had been
+a great triumph, notwithstanding its disastrous close. The boldness
+and originality of its conception--the daring and gallant manner in
+which he had carried it out--the spirit and desperation with which he
+had fought his ship against a superior force, were themes of universal
+eulogy, and endeared him to the American people.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ Plan of the third Campaign -- Attack on Sackett's Harbor --
+ Attack on Oswego -- Woolsey transports guns to Sackett's
+ Harbor -- Capture of the detachment sent against him --
+ Expedition against Mackinaw -- Death of Captain Holmes --
+ Complete failure of the expedition.
+
+
+While Porter was slowly approaching our coast, on his return from the
+Pacific, events on our northern frontier were assuming an entirely
+different aspect from that which they had worn for the last two years.
+In the spring, just before and after Congress adjourned, small
+expeditions on both sides were set on foot; one, on our part, to
+Mackinaw, to aid in carrying out Armstrong's plan for the summer
+campaign. This, like all the previous plans looked to the same result,
+the details being varied apparently for the sole purpose of appeasing
+the people, who it was thought, would not allow a repetition of those
+manoeuvres which had ended in such signal disgrace. It was therefore
+proposed, first to humble the Indians in the north-west, by capturing
+Mackinaw, and thus hold the key of that whole region, so valuable for
+its fur trade, and then march an army from the east of Lake Erie to
+Burlington Heights, and seize and fortify that position till the
+co-operation of the Ontario fleet and the troops at Sackett's harbor
+could be secured, when a rapid advance might be made on Kingston, and
+after its reduction, on Montreal. The Secretary clung to the conquest
+of Canada with a tenacity that deserved success, but this plan also
+utterly failed, and the progress of the campaign brought about results
+widely different from those anticipated. That part of it looking to
+the seizure of Mackinaw, was placed under the direction of Colonel
+Croghan and Major Holmes, with whom Captain Sinclair, recently
+appointed to the command of the upper lakes, was to co-operate with a
+portion of his fleet--the other portion to aid in the expedition
+against Burlington Heights. Major Holmes had at first been appointed
+by the Secretary to command the land forces, but Colonel Croghan,
+stationed at Detroit, and senior officer during Colonel Butler's
+absence, denied the right thus directly to appoint him, insisting that
+the commission should go through his hands. A correspondence followed,
+which delayed the expedition till the third of July. In the mean time,
+a British force, under Colonel McDowell, had visited and reinforced
+all the posts on the northern lakes, penetrating even beyond Mackinaw.
+While Holmes and Sinclair were detained till Colonel Croghan and the
+Secretary could settle a question of etiquette, the English, who had
+again acquired the ascendancy on Lake Ontario, by building more ships,
+made an attack on Sackett's Harbor. Being repulsed, Sir James Yeo then
+sailed for Oswego, to destroy materials for ship building, etc., which
+he supposed to be assembled there. He arrived on the 5th of May, and
+began to bombard the place. The American garrison at the fort,
+consisted of three hundred men under Colonel Mitchell, with five guns,
+three of which were almost useless. The place contained at that time,
+but five hundred inhabitants. The schooner Growler being in the river,
+and exposed to certain capture, was sunk, and her cannon transferred
+to the fort, situated on a high bank east of the town.
+
+Finding that the bombardment produced no effect, a large body of
+troops, under General Drummond, was sent forward to carry the fort by
+storm. The fifteen barges that contained them were led on by
+gun-boats, destined to cover the landing. These no sooner came within
+range of the artillery on shore, than a spirited fire was opened on
+them, repulsing them twice, and finally compelling the whole flotilla
+to seek the shelter of the ships. The next day the fleet approached
+nearer shore, and commenced a heavy cannonade which lasted three
+hours. Under cover of it, General De Watteville landed two thousand
+troops, and advanced in perfect order over the ground that intervened
+between the water and the fort. The soldiers and marines of the
+Growler fought bravely, but Colonel Mitchell seeing that resistance
+was hopeless, retired, scourging the enemy as he withdrew, with
+well-directed volleys, and strewing the ground with more than two
+hundred dead and wounded. He fell back to Oswego Falls, where the
+naval stores had all been removed, destroying the bridges as he
+retired. Foiled in their attempt to get possession of the stores, the
+British, after having raised the Growler, retired to Sackett's Harbor,
+and blockaded it, resolving to intercept the supplies, guns, etc.,
+that were ready to be sent forward. Lighter materials could be
+transported by land, but the guns, cables, and anchors, &c., destined
+for two vessels recently built at Sackett's Harbor, could reach there
+only by water, from Oswego, whither they had been carried by way of
+the Mohawk river, Woods' creek, Oneida lake, and the Oswego river.
+Captain Woolsey, a brave, skillful and energetic officer, who had been
+appointed to take charge of their transportation, caused a rumor to be
+spread that he designed to effect it through Oneida lake. [Sidenote:
+May 28.] But soon as the British fleet left Oswego, he dropped down
+the river with fifteen boats, loaded with thirty-four cannon and ten
+cables. Halting at Oswego till dark, he then pulled out into the
+lake. A detachment of a hundred and thirty riflemen accompanied him,
+while a body of Oneida Indians marched along the shore. The night was
+dark and gloomy--the rain fell in torrents, drenching sailors and
+soldiers to the skin, while the waves dashed over the boats, adding to
+the discomforts and labors of the voyage. It was a long and tedious
+pull along the scarcely visible shores, on which swayed and moaned an
+unbroken forest.
+
+The next day at sunrise the fleet of boats reached Big Salmon river,
+with the exception of one, which kept on, under the pretence of going
+direct to Sackett's Harbor, and fell into the hands of the blockading
+squadron, giving it information of the approach of the others.
+Woolsey, knowing that he could not run the blockade, had resolved to
+land his guns at Big Sandy creek and transport them by land eight
+miles distant, to Sackett's Harbor. Having reached the mouth of the
+creek in safety, he ascended two miles and landed. In the mean time
+Sir James Yeo had dispatched two gun-boats, with three cutters and a
+gig, in search of him. Finding the fleet had ascended Big Sandy creek,
+Captains Popham and Spilsbury, who commanded the expedition, followed
+after. The soldiers and marines were landed a mile or more below where
+Woolsey was unloading, and moved forward, keeping parallel with the
+gun-boats, which incessantly probed the thickets, as they advanced,
+with grape shot. Major Appling, who commanded the American riflemen,
+placed them and his Indian allies in ambush about half a mile below
+the American barges. Allowing the enemy to approach within close
+range, he suddenly poured in a destructive volley, which so paralyzed
+them that they threw down their arms and begged for quarter. All the
+boats, officers, and men were taken, making a total loss of a hundred
+and eighty-six men.
+
+The guns were then carried across to Sackett's Harbor, and the new
+ship Superior armed, which so strengthened Chauncey's force that Sir
+James Yeo raised the blockade and sailed for the Canada shore.
+
+[Sidenote: July 3.]
+
+At last the expedition against Mackinaw got under way. Two war brigs,
+the Lawrence and Niagara, together with several smaller vessels,
+carrying in all nine hundred men, began slowly to traverse the inland
+seas from Detroit to Mackinaw. Nothing but canoes and batteaux had
+hitherto floated on those scarcely known waters, with the exception of
+a single schooner or sloop, which made an annual solitary trip to the
+extreme north-western posts to carry supplies. More than a thousand
+miles from the ocean, and lifted nearly six hundred feet above it,
+those vast seas rolled their waves through unbroken forests. This was
+the first fleet that ever penetrated those solitudes, through which
+roamed unscared beasts of prey, and from whose further margin
+stretched away those immense prairies that go rolling up to the base
+of the Rocky Mountains. Amid unknown rocks and shoals--feeling its way
+along narrow channels--at one moment almost grazing the sand-bars with
+its keels, and the next moment floating over water nearly a thousand
+feet deep--now traversing groups of beautiful islands, and anon
+skirting the bases of precipices, on whose summit waved forests that
+had stood undisturbed since the birth of time--that little fleet crept
+on towards its destination. Its progress was so slow that Colonel
+McDowell, commanding at Mackinaw, had ample time to make preparations
+for defence.
+
+Captain Sinclair, on his arrival, refused to advance against the fort,
+for its batteries looked down on his decks from a hundred feet in the
+air. A land attack was therefore resolved upon and carried into
+execution. [Sidenote: Aug. 4.] But the dense woods, filled with sharp
+shooters, through which the troops were compelled to force their way,
+rendered the movement a complete failure. Captain Holmes, a gallant
+officer, was shot by an Indian boy. A black servant of Colonel Croghan
+immediately covered the body with leaves, to prevent mutilation by the
+Indians, and the next day it was recovered. The troops were
+re-embarked, and the discomfitted fleet turned homeward. Overtaken by
+a storm in Lake Huron, all their boats were destroyed, and the vessels
+themselves narrowly escaped being wrecked. A detachment having
+destroyed six months' supplies at the mouth of the Natewasaga river
+destined for Mackinaw, two schooners were left to blockade the place.
+[Sidenote: Sept. 13.] Mackinaw, thus cut off from all communication
+with the provinces, would be starved out and compelled to surrender.
+But to complete the disaster of this unfortunate enterprise, four
+batteaux, with a fleet of small boats from Mackinaw, surprised and
+captured one of the schooners, the Tigress. Lieutenant Woolsey then
+took command of her, and the next morning, with American colors
+flying, stood steadily down on the Scorpion until he ranged alongside,
+when he fired all his guns at once, and running aboard, took the
+unsuspecting vessel without a struggle.
+
+Thus ended an expedition, romantic from the scenery through which it
+passed, but comparatively useless in its results, and costing more
+than it was worth, even if it had been successful.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ Brown takes command of the army at Niagara -- Crosses the
+ river into Canada -- Battle of Chippewa -- Brilliant charge
+ of the Americans -- Desperate battle of Niagara -- Conduct
+ of Ripley -- The army ordered to Fort Erie -- General Gaines
+ takes command.
+
+
+[Sidenote: July 3.]
+
+On the same day the expedition to Mackinaw sailed from Detroit, the
+army which had been concentrated at Buffalo during the winter, crossed
+the Niagara, in its third campaign against Canada. Brown, who had been
+made Brigadier-General for his gallant conduct at Sackett's Harbor,
+was afterward promoted to the rank of Major-General and given the
+command of the army destined to act on the Niagara frontier. Two
+regular brigades, commanded by Scott and Ripley, and a brigade of
+volunteers and militia, with a few Indians, under General Porter,
+composed his force. He was directed to carry out that portion of the
+Secretary's plan which looked to the possession and fortification of
+Burlington Heights, previous to a descent on Kingston and Montreal.
+First, he was to seize Fort Erie, risk a combat with the enemy at
+Chippewa, menace Fort George, and then, if Chauncey's fleet could
+co-operate with him, advance rapidly on Burlington.
+
+The two regular brigades had been subjected for three months to a new
+and most rigid discipline. The system of tactics hitherto in use, had
+been handed down from the Revolution, and was not, therefore, adapted
+to the improved mode of warfare. Scott, here, for the first time,
+introduced the French system. He drilled the officers, and they, in
+turn, the men. So severe and constant was this discipline, that, in
+the short space of three months, these brigades became intelligent,
+steady, and invincible as veterans.
+
+[Sidenote: July 3.]
+
+The preparations being completed, the army crossed the Niagara river,
+and took Fort Erie without a struggle. The main British army, under
+General Riall, lay at Chippewa, towards which Scott pressed, heading
+the advance, with his brigade, chasing before him for sixteen miles, a
+detachment commanded by the Marquis of Tweesdale, who said he could
+not account for the ardor of the pursuit until he remembered it was
+the 4th of July, our great anniversary. At dark the Marquis crossed
+the Chippewa, behind which lay the British army. This river enters the
+Niagara nearly at right angles. Two miles farther up, Street's Creek
+joins the Niagara also, and behind it Gen. Brown drew up the American
+forces. Those two miles of interval between the streams was an open
+plain, skirted on one side by the Niagara river and on the other by a
+forest.
+
+In the morning Gen. Brown resolved to advance and attack the British
+in their position. The latter had determined on a similar movement
+against the Americans, and unbeknown to each other, the one prepared
+to cross the bridge of Chippewa, and the other that of Street's Creek.
+
+The battle commenced in the woods on the left, and an irregular fight
+was kept up for a long time between Porter's brigade and the Canadian
+militia stationed there. The latter were at length driven back to the
+Chippewa, when General Riall advanced to their support. Before this
+formidable array, the American militia, notwithstanding the noble
+efforts of General Porter to steady their courage, broke and fled.
+General Brown immediately hastened to the scene, merely saying to
+Scott as he passed on, "The enemy is advancing, you will have a
+fight." The latter, ignorant of the forward movement of Riall, had
+just put his brigade in marching order to cross the creek for a drill
+on the level plain beyond. But as the head of the column reached the
+bank, he saw the British army drawn up in beautiful array in the open
+field, on the farther side, while a battery of nine pieces stood in
+point blank range of the bridge over which he was to cross. Swiftly
+yet beautifully the corps of Scott swept over the bridge and deployed
+under the steady fire of the battery. The first and second battalions
+under Majors Leavenworth and McNeil, took position in front of the
+left and centre of the enemy, while the third, under Jessup, obliqued
+to the left to attack their right, stationed in the woods, and which
+threatened to outflank the American line. It was a bright, hot July
+afternoon, the dusty plain presented no obstacle behind which either
+party could find shelter, and the march of the steady battalions over
+its surface led on by bands of music, playing national airs, presented
+one of those stirring scenes which make man forget the carnage that is
+to follow. The heavy monotonous thunder of Niagara rolled on over the
+discharges of artillery, while its clouds of spray rising from the
+strife of waters, and glittering in the sunbeams, contrasted strangely
+with the sulphurous clouds that heaved heavenward from the conflict of
+men beneath.
+
+Both armies halting, firing, and advancing in turn, continued to
+approach until they stood within eighty yards of each other. Scott who
+had been manoeuvering to get the two battalions of Leavenworth and
+M'Neil in an oblique position to the British line, at length
+succeeded, the two farther extremities being nearest the enemy. Thus
+the American army stood like an obtuse triangle of which the British
+line formed the base. While in this position, Scott, wishing to pass
+from one extremity to the other and being in too great a hurry to go
+back of the lines _around_ the triangle, cut directly across, taking
+the cross fire of both armies, as he spurred in a fierce gallop
+through the smoke. A loud cheer rolled along the American line as they
+saw this daring act of their commander. Riding up to Towson's battery,
+he cried out, "a little more to the left, captain, the enemy is
+there." This gallant officer was standing amid his guns, enveloped in
+smoke, and had not observed that the British had advanced so far that
+his fire fell behind them. Instantly discovering his mistake, he
+changed the direction of his two remaining pieces and poured a raking,
+destructive fire through the enemy's ranks, blowing up an ammunition
+wagon, which spread destruction on every side. At this critical
+moment, Scott rode up to M'Neil's battalion, his face blazing with
+excitement, and shouted, "The enemy say that we are good at long shot
+but cannot stand the cold iron. I call upon the Eleventh _instantly to
+give the lie to that slander--Charge_."
+
+Just as the order "charge," escaped his lips, came that destructive
+fire from Towson's battery. The thunder of those guns at that critical
+moment, was to Scott's young and excited heart like the shout of
+victory, and rising in his stirrups and swinging his sword aloft, he
+cried, "CHARGE, CHARGE THE RASCALS." With a high and ringing cheer,
+that gallant battalion moved with leveled bayonets on the foe. Taking
+the close and deadly volleys without shrinking--never for a moment
+losing its firm formation, it struck the British line obliquely,
+crumbling it to pieces, as it swept on and making awful havoc in its
+passage.
+
+Leavenworth did the same on the right with like success, while Jessup
+in the woods, ignorant how the battle was going in the plain, but
+finding himself outflanked, ordered his troops "to support arms and
+advance." They cheerfully obeyed and in the face of a most deadly fire
+charged home on the enemy, and obtaining a better position poured in
+their volleys with tremendous effect. From the moment these charges
+commenced, till the enemy fled, the field presented a frightful
+spectacle. The two armies were in such close proximity, and the
+volleys were so incessant and destructive, and the uproar so terrific
+that orders could no longer be heard. But through his two aids
+Lieutenants Worth and Watts, who galloped to and fro, and by their
+presence and gestures transmitted his orders in the midst of the
+hottest fire, Scott caused every movement to be executed with
+precision, and not an error was committed from first to last.
+
+The enemy fled over the Chippewa, tore up the bridge and retired to
+his encampment.
+
+The sun went down in blood and the loud voice of Niagara which had
+been drowned in the roar of battle, sounded on as before, chaunting a
+requiem for the gallant dead, while the moans of the wounded loaded
+the air of the calm summer evening.
+
+Nearly eight hundred killed and wounded, had been stretched on the
+earth in that short battle, out of some four thousand, or one-fifth of
+all engaged.[4] A bloodier battle, considering the numbers, was scarce
+ever fought. The British having been taught to believe that the
+American troops would give way in an open fight, and that the resort
+to the bayonet was always the signal of victory to them, could not be
+made to yield, until they were literally crushed under the headlong
+charge of the Americans.
+
+[Footnote 4: The British were 2100 strong. American troops actually
+engaged, 1900.
+
+British killed 138. Wounded and missing 365. Americans killed 68.
+Wounded and missing 267.]
+
+Gen. Brown, when he found that Scott had the whole British army on his
+hands, hurried back to bring up Ripley's brigade; but Scott's
+evolutions and advance had been so rapid, and his blow so sudden and
+deadly, that the field was swept before he could arrive.
+
+M'Neil's battalion had not a recruit in it, and Scott knew when he
+called on them to give the lie to the slander, that American troops
+could not stand the cold steel, that they would do it though every man
+perished in his footsteps.
+
+Maj. Leavenworth's battalion, however, embraced a few volunteers, and
+among them a company of backwoodsmen, who joined the army at Buffalo a
+few days before it was to cross the Niagara.
+
+An incident illustrating their character, was told the writer's father
+by Maj. Gen. Leavenworth himself. Although a battle was expected in a
+few days, the Major resolved in the mean time to drill these men.
+Having ordered them out for that purpose, he endeavored to apply the
+manual; but to his surprise, found that they were ignorant of the most
+common terms familiar even to untrained militia. While thus puzzled
+with their awkwardness, Scott rode on the field, and in a sharp voice
+asked Maj. Leavenworth if he could not manage those soldiers better.
+The Major lifting his chapeau to the General, replied, that he wished
+the General would try them himself. The latter rode forward and issued
+his commands--but the backwoodsmen instead of obeying him, were
+ignorant even of the military terms he used. After a few moments'
+trial, he saw it was a hopeless task, and touching his chapeau in
+return to Leavenworth, said, "Major, I leave you your men," and rode
+off the field. The latter, finding that all attempts at drill during
+the short interval that must elapse before a battle occurred, would
+be useless, ordered them to their quarters. On the day of the battle
+he placed them at one extremity of the line, where he thought they
+would interfere the least with the manoeuvres of the rest of the
+battalion. He said that during the engagement, this company occurred
+to him, and he rode the whole length of his line to see what they were
+about. They were where he had placed them, captain and all, obeying no
+orders, except those to advance. Their ranks were open and out of all
+line; but the soldiers were cool and collected as veterans. They had
+thrown away their hats and coats, and besmeared with powder and smoke
+were loading and firing, each for himself. They paid no attention to
+the order to fire, for the idea of "shooting" till they had good aim
+was preposterous. The thought of running had evidently never crossed
+their minds. Fearless of danger, and accustomed to pick off squirrels
+from the tops of the loftiest trees with their rifle-balls, they were
+quietly doing what they were put there to perform, viz., kill men, and
+Maj. Leavenworth said there was the most deadly work in the whole
+line. Men fell like grass before the scythe. Not a shot was thrown
+away--ten men were equal to a hundred firing in the ordinary way.
+
+The American army rested but two days after the battle, and then
+advanced over the Chippewa, Scott's brigade leading. The British
+retreated to Burlington Heights, near the head of Lake Ontario.
+Thither Brown resolved to follow them. But on the 25th, while the army
+was resting, preparatory to the next day's battle, word was brought
+that a thousand English troops had crossed the river to Lewistown, for
+the purpose, evidently, of seizing our magazines at Fort Schlosser,
+and the supplies, on the way to the American camp, from Buffalo. In
+order to force them to return, Brown resolved immediately to threaten
+the forts at the mouth of the Niagara river, and in twenty minutes,
+Scott, with a detachment of twelve hundred men, was on the march. He
+had proceeded but two miles, when he came in sight of a group of
+British officers on horseback, evidently reconnoitering. The force to
+which they belonged lay behind a strip of wood, which prevented him
+from seeing it. Supposing it, however, to be the fragments of the army
+he had so terribly shattered at Chippewa, he ordered the march to be
+resumed. But as he cleared the road he saw before him an army of two
+thousand men drawn up in order of battle. He paused a moment at this
+unexpected sight, and his eye had an anxious look as it ran along his
+little band. To retreat would endanger the reserve marching to his
+relief, and destroy the confidence of the troops. Besides, Scott never
+had, and never has since, learned _practically_, what the word
+"retreat" meant. He determined, therefore, hazardous as it was, to
+maintain the unequal contest till the other portion of the army
+arrived. Despatching officers to General Brown with directions to ride
+as for life, he gave the orders to advance. The sun, at this time, was
+but half an hour high, and unobscured by a cloud, was going to his
+lordly repose behind the forest that stood bathed in his departing
+splendor. Near by, in full view, rolled the cataract, sending up its
+incense towards heaven, and filling that summer evening with its voice
+of thunder. The spray, as it floated inland, hovered over the American
+army, and as the departing sunbeams struck it, a rainbow was formed,
+which encircled the head of Scott's column like a halo--a symbol of
+the wreath of glory that should adorn it forever.
+
+The British, two thousand strong, were posted just below the Falls, on
+a ridge at the head of Lundy's Lane. Their left was in the highway,
+and separated from the main body by an interval of two hundred yards,
+covered with brushwood, etc. General Drummond had landed a short time
+before with reinforcements, which were rapidly marching up to the aid
+of Riall. Scott, however, would not turn his back on the enemy, and
+gallantly led in person his little army into the fire. His bearing and
+words inspired confidence, and officers and men forgot the odds that
+were against them. Major Jessup was ordered to fling himself in the
+interval, between the British centre and left, and turn the latter.
+In the mean time the enemy discovering that he outflanked the
+Americans on the left, advanced a battalion to take them in rear. The
+brave McNeil stopped, with one terrible blow, its progress, though his
+own battalion was dreadfully shattered by it. Jessup had succeeded in
+his movement, and having gained the enemy's rear, charged back through
+his line, captured the commanding general, Riall, with his whole
+staff. When this was told to Scott, he announced it to the army, and
+three loud cheers rang over the field. A destructive discharge from
+the English battery of seven pieces, replied.
+
+It was night now, and a serene moon rose over the scene, but its light
+struggled in vain to pierce the smoke that curtained in the
+combatants. The flashes from the battery that crowned the heights, and
+from the infantry below, alone revealed where they were struggling.
+Scott's regiments were soon all reduced to skeletons--a fourth of the
+whole brigade had fallen in the unequal conflict. The English battery
+of twenty-four-pounders and howitzers, sent destruction through his
+ranks. He, however, refused to yield a foot of ground, and heading
+almost every charge in person, moved with such gay spirits and
+reckless courage through the deadliest fire, that the troops caught
+the infection. But the British batteries, now augmented to nine guns,
+made frightful havoc in his uncovered brigade. Towson's few pieces
+being necessarily placed so much lower, could produce but little
+effect, while the enemy's twenty-four-pounders, loaded with grape,
+swept the entire field. The eleventh and twenty-second regiments,
+deprived of their commanders, and destitute of ammunition were
+withdrawn, and Leavenworth, with the gallant ninth, was compelled to
+withstand the whole shock of battle. With such energy and superior
+numbers did the British press upon this single regiment, that it
+appeared amid the darkness to be enveloped in fire. Its destruction
+seemed inevitable, and in a short time one-half of its number lay
+stretched on the field. Leavenworth sent to Scott, informing him of
+his desperate condition. The latter soon came up on a gallop, when
+Leavenworth pointing to the bleeding fragment of his regiment, said,
+"Your rule for retreating is fulfilled," referring to Scott's maxim
+that a regiment might retreat when every third man was killed. Scott,
+however, answered buoyantly, cheered up the men and officers by
+promising victory, and spurring where the balls fell thickest,
+animated them by his daring courage and chivalric bearing to still
+greater efforts. Still he could not but see that his case was getting
+desperate, and unless aid arrived soon, he must retreat. Only five or
+six hundred of the twelve hundred he at sunset had led into battle,
+remained to him.
+
+General Brown, however, was hurrying to the rescue. The incessant
+cannonading convinced him that Scott had a heavy force on his hands;
+and without waiting the arrival of a messenger, he directed Ripley to
+move forward with the second brigade. Meeting Scott's dispatch on the
+way, he learned how desperate the battle was, and immediately directed
+Porter with the volunteers to hurry on after Ripley, while he, in
+advance of all, hastened to the field of action. The constant and
+heavy explosions of artillery, rising over the roar of the cataract,
+announced to the excited soldiers the danger of their comrades; and no
+sooner were they wheeled into marching order than they started on a
+trot along the road. Lieut. Riddle, who was off on a scouring
+expedition in the country, paused as he heard the thunder of cannon,
+and waiting for no dispatch, gave orders to march, and his men moving
+at the _charge de pas_, soon came with shouts on the field. At length
+the head of Ripley's column emerged into view, sending joy through
+those gallant regiments, and a loud huzza rolled along their line.
+Brown, seeing that Scott's brigade was exhausted, ordered Ripley to
+form in advance of it. In the mean time, Drummond had arrived on the
+field with reinforcements, swelling the English army to four thousand
+men. At this moment there was a lull in the battle, and both armies
+prepared for a decisive blow. It was evident the deadly battery on
+the heights must be carried, or the field be lost, and Brown, turning
+to Colonel Miller, asked him if he could take it. "I WILL TRY, sir,"
+was the brief reply of the fearless soldier, as he coolly scanned the
+frowning heights. Placing himself at the head of the 21st regiment, he
+prepared to ascend the hill. Major M'Farland with the 23d was to
+support him. Not having arrived on the field till after dark, he was
+ignorant of the formation of the ground or the best point from which
+to commence the ascent. Scott, who had fought over almost every foot
+of it since sunset, offered to pilot him. Passing by an old church and
+grave-yard, that showed dimly in the moonlight, he took the column to
+the proper place, and then returned to his post. In close order and
+dead silence the two regiments then moved straight for the battery. It
+was by their heavy muffled tread that General Drummond first detected
+their approach. But the moment he caught the dark outlines of the
+swiftly advancing columns he turned his battery upon them with
+terrific effect. The twenty-third staggered under the discharge, but
+soon rallied and pressed forward. Smitten again, it reeled backward
+down the hill; but the twenty-first never faltered. "Close up, steady,
+men!" rung from the lips of their leader, and taking the loads of
+grape-shot unshrinkingly into their bosoms, they marched sternly on,
+their bayonets gleaming red in the fire that rolled in streams down
+the slope. Every explosion revealed the whole hill and that dark
+column winding through flame and smoke up its sides. At length it came
+within range of musketry, when the carnage became awful; but still on
+through the sheets of flame, over their dead comrades, this invincible
+regiment held its stubborn course towards the very vortex of the
+battle. The English gazed with amazement on its steady advance. No
+hesitation marked its movement; closing up its ranks after every
+discharge, it kept on its terrible way, till at last it stood face to
+face with the murderous battery, and within a few steps of the
+gunners. A sudden flash, a deafening explosion, and then "_Close up,
+steady, charge_," rung out from the sulphurous cloud that rolled over
+the shattered regiment, and the next instant it swept with a thrilling
+shout over guns, gunners, and all. The struggle became at once close
+and fierce,--bayonet crossed bayonet,--weapon clashed against
+weapon,--but nothing could resist that determined onset. The British
+were driven down the hill, and the remnants of that gallant regiment,
+together with M'Farland's, which had again rallied, formed between the
+guns and the foe. Ripley then moved his brigade to the top of the
+hill, in order to keep what had been so heroically won.
+
+Stung with rage and mortification at this unexpected defeat, Drummond
+resolved to retake that height and his guns, cost what it might; and
+soon the tread of his advancing columns was heard ascending the slope.
+With their uniforms glittering in the bright moonlight, the excited
+troops came on at the charge step, until within twenty yards of the
+American line, when they halted and delivered their fire. "Charge"
+then ran along the line, but the order had scarcely pealed on the
+night air before they were shattered and torn into fragments by the
+sudden and destructive volley of the Americans. Rallying, however,
+they returned to the attack, and for twenty minutes the conflict
+around those guns was indescribably awful and murderous. No sounds of
+music drowned the death-cry; the struggle was too close and fatal.
+There were only the fierce tramp and the clash of steel,--the stifled
+cry and wavering to and fro of men in a death-grapple. At length the
+British broke, and disappeared in the darkness. General Ripley again
+formed his line, while Scott, who had succeeded in getting a single
+battalion out of the fragments of his whole brigade, was ordered to
+the top of the hill.
+
+In about half an hour the sound of the returning enemy was again
+heard. Smote by the same fierce fire, Drummond with a desperate effort
+threw his entire strength on the centre of the American line. But
+there stood the gallant twenty-first, whose resistless charge had
+first swept the hill; and where they had conquered they could not
+yield. Scott in the mean time led his column so as to take the enemy
+in flank and rear, and but for a sudden volley from a concealed body
+of the enemy, cutting his command in two, would have finished the
+battle with a blow. As it was, he charged again and again, with
+resistless energy, and the disordered ranks of the British for the
+second time rolled back and were lost in the gloom. Here Scott's last
+horse fell under him, and he moved on foot amid his battalion. Jessup
+was also severely wounded, yet there he stood amid the darkness and
+carnage, cheering on his men. The soldiers vied with the officers in
+heroic daring and patient suffering. Many would call out for muskets
+as they had none, or for cartridges as theirs were all gone. On every
+side from pallid lips and prostrate bleeding forms came the reply,
+"take mine, and mine, my gun is in good order, and my cartridge box is
+full." There was scarcely an officer at this time unwounded; yet, one
+and all refused to yield the command while they could keep their feet.
+
+Jessup's flag was riddled with balls, and as a sergeant waved it amid
+a storm of bullets, the staff was severed in three places in his hand.
+Turning to his commander he exclaimed as he took up the fragments,
+"Look, colonel, how they have cut us." The next moment a ball passed
+through his body. But he still kept his feet, and still waved his
+mutilated standard, until faint with loss of blood he sunk on the
+field.
+
+After being driven the second time down the hill, the enemy for a
+while ceased their efforts, and sudden silence fell on the two armies,
+broken only by the groans of the wounded and dying. The scene, and the
+hour, combined to render that hill-top a strange and fearful object in
+the darkness. On one side lay a wilderness, on the other rolled the
+cataract, whose solemn anthem could again be heard pealing on through
+the night. Leaning on their heated guns, that gallant band stood
+bleeding amid the wreck it had made. It was midnight--the stars looked
+quietly down from the sky--the summer wind swept softly by, and nature
+was breathing long and peacefully. But all over that hill lay the
+brave dead, and adown its sides in every direction the blood of men
+was rippling. Nothing but skeletons of regiments remained, yet calm
+and stern were the words spoken there in the darkness. "_Close up the
+ranks_," were the heroic orders that still fell on the shattered
+battalions, and they closed with the same firm presence and dauntless
+hearts as before.
+
+It was thought that the British would make no further attempts to
+recover their guns, but reinforcements having arrived from Fort
+George, they, after an hour's repose and refreshment, prepared for a
+final assault. Our troops had all this time stood to their arms, and
+faint with hunger, thirst, and fatigue, seemed unequal to a third
+conflict against a fresh force. But as they heard the enemy advancing,
+they forgot their weariness and met the onset firmly as before. But
+this time the ranks of the enemy did not yield under the fire that
+smote them--they pressed steadily forward, and delivering their
+volleys as they advanced, at length stood on the summit of the hill,
+and breast to breast with the American line. The conflict now became
+fearful and more like the murderous hand-to-hand fights of old than a
+modern battle. Battalions on both sides were forced back till the
+ranks became mingled. Bayonet crossed bayonet and men lay transfixed
+side by side. Hindman, whose artillery had been from the first served
+with surpassing skill, found the enemy amid his guns, across which he
+was compelled to fight them.
+
+The firing gave way to the clash of steel, the blazing hill-top
+subsided into gloom, out of which the sound of this nocturnal combat
+arose in strange and wild confusion.
+
+Scott, charging like fire at the head of his exhausted battalion,
+received another severe wound which prostrated him--but his last words
+to Leavenworth were, "_Charge again!_" "Charge again, Leavenworth!" he
+cried, as they bore him, apparently dying, from that fierce foughten
+field. General Brown, supported on his horse, and suffering from a
+severe wound, was slowly led away. Jesup was bleeding from several
+wounds; every regimental officer in Scott's brigade was killed or
+wounded. _Only one soldier out of every four stood up unhurt._ The
+annals of war rarely reveal such a slaughter in a single brigade, but
+it is rarer still a brigade has such a leader. The ghosts of regiments
+alone remained, yet before these the veterans of England were at last
+compelled to flee, and betake themselves to the darkness for safety.
+Sullen, mortified, and badly wounded, Drummond was carried from the
+field, and all farther attempts to take the hill were abandoned. The
+Americans, however, kept watch and ward, around the cannon that had
+cost them so great a sacrifice, till near daybreak, when orders were
+received to retire to camp. No water could be obtained on the heights,
+and the troops wanted repose. Through the want of drag-ropes and
+horses, the cannon were left behind. This was a sad drawback to the
+victory, and Major Ripley should have detailed some men to have taken
+at least the lightest ones away. Trophies won with the blood of so
+many brave men were worth more effort than he put forth to secure
+them.
+
+A bloodier battle, in proportion to the numbers engaged, was never
+fought than this. Nearly eight hundred Americans, and as many English,
+had fallen on and around that single hill. It was literally loaded
+with the slain. Seventy-six officers were either killed or wounded
+out of our army of some three thousand men, and not a general on
+either side remained unwounded.
+
+Among the slain was young Captain Hull, son of the General who had so
+shamefully capitulated at Detroit. This young officer, who had fought
+one duel in defence of his father's honor, and struggled in vain to
+shake off the sense of disgrace that clung to him, told a friend at
+the opening of the battle, that he had resolved to fling away a life
+which had become insupportable. When the conflict was done, he was
+found stark and stiff where the dead lay thickest.
+
+It would be impossible to relate all the deeds of daring and gallantry
+which distinguished this bloody engagement. Almost every man was a
+hero, and from that hour England felt a respect for our arms she had
+never before entertained. The navy had established its reputation
+forever, and now the army challenged the respect of the world. The
+timorous and the ignorant had been swept away with the old martinets,
+and the true genius of the country was shining forth in her young men,
+who, while they did not despise the past, took lessons of the present.
+Scott at this time, but twenty-eight years of age, had shown to the
+country what a single youth, fired with patriotism, confident in his
+resources, and daring in spirit, could accomplish. His brigade, it is
+true, had been almost annihilated, and nothing apparently been
+gained; but those err much who graduate the results of a battle by the
+number taken prisoners or the territory acquired. Moral power is
+always more valuable than physical, and though we are forever
+demanding something tangible to show as the reward of such a great
+effort and sacrifice, yet to gain a national position is more
+important than to take an army. Thus while many think that the battle
+of Niagara, though gallantly fought, was a barren one, and furnished
+no compensation for the great slaughter that characterized it, yet
+there has been none since that of Bunker Hill, more important to this
+country, and which, directly and indirectly, has more affected its
+interests. It probably saved more battles than if, by stratagem or
+superior force, General Brown had succeeded in capturing Drummond's
+entire army.
+
+Brown and Scott both being disabled, the command devolved on Major
+Ripley, who retired behind the Chippewa, and the defences recently
+erected by the British. Scott's last wound was a severe one. A musket
+ball had shattered his shoulder dreadfully, and for a long time it was
+extremely doubtful whether he ever recovered. He suffered excruciating
+pain from it, and it was September before he ventured to travel, and
+then slowly and with great care. His progress was a constant ovation.
+The young and wounded chieftain was hailed on his passage with salvos
+of artillery, and shouts of freemen. He arrived at Princeton on
+commencement day of Nassau Hall. The professors immediately sent a
+delegation requesting his attendance at the church. Leaning on the arm
+of his gallant aid-de-camp, Worth--his arm in a sling, and his
+countenance haggard and worn from his long suffering and confinement,
+the tall young warrior slowly moved up the aisle, and with great
+difficulty ascended the steps to the stage. At first sight of the
+invalid, looking so unlike the dashing, fearless commander, a murmur
+of sympathy ran through the house, the next moment there went up a
+shout that shook the building to its foundations.
+
+Passing on to Baltimore, then threatened with an attack by the
+British, he finally so far recovered as to take command in the middle
+of October of the tenth military district, and established his
+headquarters at Washington City.
+
+General Brown was indignant with General Ripley for leaving the cannon
+behind, and peremptorily ordered him to reoccupy the heights of
+Lundy's Lane at daybreak, and remain there till the dead were buried
+and the guns removed. He however did not commence his march till after
+sunrise, and then being told that the enemy were in possession of the
+heights, he halted, and finally retired to Chippewa.
+
+This officer, on whom the command had devolved since the battle,
+seemed from the first opposed to all the movements. When the army was
+about to cross the river against Riall, he not only strongly condemned
+the proceeding, but even offered his resignation, which was not
+accepted. By his neglect to remove, or attempt to remove the captured
+guns, which had cost such a heroic struggle, and his after delay to
+return and take them, it would seem as if he were offended that such
+brilliant results had followed a course which had met with his strong
+disapprobation. He was an able officer and a brave man, yet his heart
+was not in this movement of Brown's, consequently he did not go into
+combat with the enthusiasm of Scott, Miller, and Jesup, nor feel so
+elated by the victory.
+
+Soon after, a rumor was spread that Drummond was marching on the
+American camp. Although occupying a strong position, Ripley
+immediately ordered a retreat to the ferry opposite Black Rock, with
+the intention of recrossing the river into the limits of the United
+States. This sudden determination, founded on a mere rumor, can hardly
+be accounted for, except on the supposition that he could not be
+contented till the army was back to the place it started from, and
+whence it never would have moved had he been commander-in-chief. He
+was prevented from carrying out this purpose by the earnest
+remonstrances of McCrea and Wood, who scorned to flee so ignominiously
+from the field of their fame. Ripley then left the army and hastened
+to Buffalo, to obtain Brown's consent to the measure. The wounded hero
+was enraged that the commanding officer should contemplate such a
+virtual confession of defeat--rebuked him, and ordered the division to
+remain at Fort Erie, and fortify and defend it to the last extremity.
+He also sent a dispatch to General Gaines, commanding at Sackett's
+Harbor, to repair at once to the army at Fort Erie, and take command
+of both.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ Siege of Fort Erie -- Assault and repulse of the British --
+ Brown takes command -- Resolves to destroy the enemy's works
+ by a sortie -- Opposed by his officers -- The sortie --
+ Anecdote of General Porter -- Retreat of Drummond -- Conduct
+ of Izard.
+
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 3.]
+
+Gaines, immediately on his arrival at Fort Erie, set about
+strengthening the works, so that when Drummond actually invested it,
+he found it in a good state of defence.
+
+In the mean time, the English commander hearing that Brown's magazine
+had been removed from Schlosser to Buffalo, dispatched Colonel Tucker
+to the latter place, with twelve hundred men, to seize them. But Brown
+anticipating such a movement, had stationed Major Morgan, with a
+battalion of riflemen, at Black Rock, to meet and repel it. This
+vigilant and gallant officer thwarted every attempt of the British to
+advance, and compelled them reluctantly to return.
+
+A night expedition sent to cut out three small American vessels at
+anchor in the river, succeeded better--two of them being surprised and
+captured.
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 13.]
+
+Having completed his trenches and erected his batteries, Drummond, on
+the 13th, opened his fire. Shot and shells were incessantly hurled all
+that and the succeeding day against the fort without materially
+weakening its strength. The British commander then resolved to carry
+it by assault. The garrison was composed of about 2500 men, while the
+force under Drummond was estimated at four thousand. As night
+approached, and the cannonading ceased, General Gaines observed a
+commotion in the British camp, and suspecting that preparations were
+making for an assault, ordered one third of the garrison to stand to
+their arms all night.
+
+Drummond had resolved to assail the works in three separate strong
+columns, of from twelve to fifteen hundred men each, moving
+simultaneously against three separate points. One against Towson's
+battery, occupying the extreme north-east angle of the fortifications;
+a second against the right, and the third full on the fort itself. The
+day had been stormy, with torrents of rain deluging the earth, and the
+night set in dark and dismal. The watch fires of the enemy's camp
+could scarcely be discerned through the gloom, and dead silence
+reigned over both encampments. Hour after hour wore slowly away, till
+midnight came, and yet no sound but the moaning of the wind as it
+swept over the water and the woods, broke the stillness.
+
+At length about two o'clock in the morning, the muffled tread of the
+advancing columns was distinctly heard in the darkness. The one
+directed against Towson's batteries near the water, came first within
+range, when a tremendous fire opened upon it. In an instant, the whole
+scenery was lit up by the blaze of the guns, which threw also a red
+and baleful light over the serried ranks, pressing with fixed bayonets
+to the assault. Although Towson kept his batteries in fierce play, and
+sheets of flame went rolling on the doomed column, it kept resolutely
+on till it approached within ten feet of the infantry. But its
+strength was exhausted; it could stagger on no farther; and first
+wavering, it then halted, and finally recoiled. Rallied to a second
+attack, it advanced with loud shouts, only to be smitten with the same
+overwhelming fire. Encouraged to a third effort, it swerved from the
+direct assault, and endeavored to wade around an abattis of loose
+brushwood, that stretched from the batteries to the shore. Pressing
+forward, up to their arm-pits in the water, some few reached the
+enclosure within, but only to perish, and the remainder retreated. The
+column advancing against the right battery, commanded by Douglas, was
+allowed to approach within fifty yards, when such a rapid and wasting
+fire was poured upon it, that it recoiled in confusion. The central
+column, led on by Lieutenant-Colonel Drummond, pressed firmly and
+rapidly through the fire of Hindman's guns, applied their ladders to
+the walls, and began to mount. Repulsed, they made a second and third
+desperate effort to reach the parapets, but without success. Stubborn
+and brave, this officer was resolved not to abandon the attempt, and
+favored by the darkness, led his troops quietly along the ditch to a
+point where no assault was expected, and applying his ladders, mounted
+to the top of one of the bastions. Enraged by his successive repulses,
+and maddened by the slaughter of his troops, this intrepid but brutal
+leader no sooner gained the parapet than he cried out "give the damned
+Yankees no quarter." The latter instantly closed on him with a
+sternness and ferocity that made that single bastion swim in blood.
+Carrying out his own inhuman orders, Drummond shot Lieutenant
+Macdonough as he lay prostrate and wounded, bravely beating off the
+soldiers who refused his cry for quarter. The next instant the
+barbarous act was avenged by a soldier, who shot him dead in his
+footsteps. The troops, however, courageously maintained the advantage
+they had gained, till daylight, when some cartridges in a stone
+building near by, catching fire by accident, exploded with a
+tremendous concussion, lifting the platform of the bastion from its
+bed, and hurling the shattered and affrighted occupants of it to the
+ground. A disorderly flight followed, and the British troops withdrew
+to their encampment.
+
+General Drummond, however, did not abandon the siege, but sat down
+before the fort with a stronger determination than ever to reduce it.
+
+General Gaines being wounded by a shell, now retired to Buffalo,
+leaving Ripley in command. When the state of affairs was reported to
+General Brown, he saw at once that another and heavier assault would
+soon be made, and though his wounds were yet unhealed, repaired to the
+fort, and assumed the command. [Sidenote: Sept. 2.] The brave Jessup
+with his arm in a sling, and still suffering from his wounds,
+volunteered his services, and every preparation was made for a
+desperate resistance.
+
+Owing to the sickness of Commodore Chauncey the co-operation expected
+from the fleet had entirely failed, so that the brilliant victories of
+the summer, on the Niagara frontier, had not advanced the original
+plan of the campaign, and the American army instead of marching to
+Burlington Heights, and thence on Kingston, was compelled to stand on
+the defensive. Commodore Chauncey was a gallant and skillful
+commander, and had reduced his crews to a state of discipline rarely
+equaled. But he lay sick in Sackett's Harbor till the 2d of July, and
+then was carried on board his ship. His arrival near [Sidenote: Aug.
+5.] Niagara was too late to be of any service to the army shut up in
+Fort Erie, and he cruised in the lake, blockading Yeo in Kingston, and
+striving in vain to bring him to an engagement. It was no fault of his
+that Ontario was not signalized by a victory equal to that on Lake
+Erie.
+
+General Izard, after sitting on the court-martial of Wilkinson, was
+appointed to take command of the northern army at Plattsburg.
+[Sidenote: May 4.] He was an accomplished officer, but like his
+predecessors, too much of a martinet to effect any thing with
+irregular troops. He fell a victim to military rules, which, in the
+changing, disorderly army under his command, could not be applied. Cut
+adrift from them he knew not what to do. A thoroughly-educated
+officer, he became a slave to his knowledge, and without the genius to
+create resources, or skill to mould and apply the materials that
+surrounded him, he made matters worse by grumbling. Quarrels, duels
+among the officers, desertion, the mixture of black and white
+recruits, misrule, and bad appointments, discouraged and disgusted him
+with the army he commanded. In the mean time, the arrival of fresh
+troops from England rendered some movement necessary, and Izard, at
+the head of seven thousand men, such as they were, was ordered to
+Sackett's Harbor, to plan an attack on Kingston, if circumstances
+rendered it prudent, or succor General Brown. Leaving three thousand
+under Macomb, at Plattsburgh, he with the remainder took up his sulky
+and discontented march for Sackett's Harbor, where he arrived on the
+13th of September. Three days previously, Brown wrote him from Fort
+Erie, imploring his assistance, saying unless it was rendered
+speedily, the fate of his army was doubtful. The accounts, however,
+which he received of the dilatory manner in which Izard marched, and
+of the feelings he entertained, left him no hope from that quarter,
+and he said, "We must, if saved, do the business ourselves." He fell
+back on himself, and his little band resolved to defend the fort to
+the last, against whatever force might be brought against it. Weak
+from his wounds, he yet toiled day and night to strengthen his
+defences. Neither his sickness, nor the torrents of rain that fell
+almost daily, could deter him from exertion, and by his energy and
+bearing he diffused an air of cheerfulness and confidence amid and
+around those entrenchments, which are always the forerunner of great
+deeds. Having ascertained what formidable preparations were making to
+press the siege, he resolved not to wait their completion, but with
+one bold sortie overwhelm the batteries of the enemy and destroy their
+works. A council of officers was called, to whom he submitted his
+plans. Their decision was adverse, which chagrined him much; he was
+also annoyed to find himself opposed by his next in command. He,
+nevertheless, was determined to carry out his purpose, and said to
+Jesup, "We must keep our own counsels; the impression must be made
+that we are done with the affair; _but as sure as there is a God in
+heaven the enemy shall be attacked in his works, and beaten, too, as
+soon as all the volunteers shall have passed over_." These were
+rapidly coming in at the call and efforts of General Porter, who was
+worthy to command them, and with whom they knew no disgrace could
+occur.
+
+General Brown having made himself perfectly acquainted with the
+position and designs of the enemy, quietly matured his own plans.
+Drummond's army, four thousand strong, was encamped in an open field
+surrounded by a forest, two miles distant from his entrenchments in
+order to be out of reach of the American cannon. One-third of this
+force protected the artillerists in completing their batteries and the
+workmen in digging trenches and erecting blockhouses.
+
+Two batteries were at length completed and a third nearly
+finished--all mounted with heavy cannon, one being a sixty-eight
+pounder--before the sortie was made. For four days previous Brown
+tried the effect of his artillery upon these works, and during the
+whole of the thirteenth and fourteenth a tremendous cannonading was
+kept up in the midst of a pelting storm. The two succeeding days the
+firing continued at intervals, interspersed with conflicts between the
+pickets. [Sidenote: Sept. 17.] The next day at noon, an hour when such
+an attempt would be least expected, Brown resolved to make a sortie
+with nearly the whole of his disposable force, capture the batteries,
+spike the cannon, and overwhelm the brigade in attendance before the
+other two brigades, two miles distant, could arrive. The assault was
+to be made in two columns. The left composed of Porter's volunteers,
+Gibson's riflemen, a portion of the 1st and 23rd regiments of regulars
+and some Indians was directed to march along a road which had been cut
+through the woods, while the gallant Miller with the first brigade was
+to move swiftly along a deep ravine that run between the first and
+second batteries of the enemy, and the moment he heard the crack of
+Porter's rifles, mount the ravine and storm the batteries. It was a
+dark and sombre day--the clouds flew low, sending down at intervals
+torrents of rain and giving to the whole scenery a sour and gloomy
+aspect. But everything being ready, Brown, about ten o'clock, opened
+with his artillery, and for two hours it was an incessant blaze and
+roar all along the line of the entrenchments. Its cessation was the
+signal for the two columns to advance. General Ripley commanded the
+reserve, while Jesup with a hundred and fifty men held the fort
+itself. Porter with his column surprised and overthrew the enemy's
+pickets, and began to pour in rapid volleys on his flank. Miller no
+sooner heard the welcome sound than he gave the order to charge. In an
+instant the brigade was on the top of the bank, and without giving the
+enemy time to recover from their surprise the troops dashed forward on
+the entrenchments in front of them. Though assailed so unexpectedly
+and suddenly the enemy fought gallantly to save the works which had
+cost them so much labor. The contest was fierce but short. Carrying
+battery after battery at the point of the bayonet, the victorious
+Americans pressed fiercely on till all the batteries and the labor of
+nearly fifty days were completely in their possession. Ripley then
+hastened up with the reserve to form a line for the protection of the
+troops while the work of destruction went on; while executing the
+movement he was wounded in the neck and carried back to the fort.
+
+In the mean time, Drummond aroused by the first volleys, had hurried
+off reinforcements on a run. Pressing forward through the rain, urged
+to their utmost speed by the officers pointing forward with their
+swords to the scene of action, they, nevertheless, arrived too late to
+prevent the disaster. In an hour the conflict was over; yet in that
+short space of time the work of demolition had been completed. In the
+midst of incessant volleys and shouts and the rallying beat of the
+drum, heavy explosions shook the field and magazines and block houses
+one after another blew up, spreading ruin and desolation around.
+
+In that short combat more than four hundred of the enemy had fallen,
+and nearly as many more been taken prisoners. The American loss was
+three hundred killed and wounded; among the slain, however, were the
+gallant Wood and Gibson. The bayonet and sabre were wielded with
+terrible effect in the strife.
+
+General Porter in passing with a few men from one detachment to
+another, during the engagement, suddenly found himself in the presence
+of sixty or eighty British soldiers drawn up in the woods, and
+apparently not knowing what to do. Thinking it better to put a bold
+face on the matter, he ran up to them, exclaiming, "That's right, my
+good fellows, surrender and we will take care of you!" and taking the
+musket out of the hands of the first and flinging it on the ground he
+pushed him towards the fort. In this way he went nearly through the
+first line, the men advancing unarmed in front. At length a soldier
+stepped back and presented the point of his bayonet to General
+Porter's breast, and demanded _his_ surrender. A scuffle ensued, and
+some officers coming to the rescue of the soldier Porter was flung
+upon the ground and his hand cut with a sword. On recovering his feet
+he saw himself surrounded by twenty or thirty men, shouting to him to
+surrender. He very coolly told _them_ to surrender, and declared if
+they fired a gun he would have the whole put to the sword. In the mean
+time a company of American riflemen coming up, fired upon the English.
+After a short fight the whole were killed or taken prisoners.
+
+Having accomplished his work, Brown retired in good order within the
+fort. Drummond, weakened by nearly one-fourth of his force, and the
+labors of so long a time being destroyed, raised the siege and retired
+behind the Chippewa.
+
+General Izard, who was to fall on his rear, did not reach Lewistown
+till the 5th of October. [Sidenote: Oct. 14.] At length, forming a
+junction with Brown's troops, he moved forward, and sat down before
+Drummond encamped, behind the Chippewa. His army, six thousand strong,
+was deemed sufficiently large to capture the enemy, and this event was
+confidently expected to crown the Canadian campaign. [Sidenote: Oct.
+21.] But after some faint demonstrations, not worth recording, he
+seven days after retired to Black Rock, preparatory to winter
+quarters. Although pressed by the Secretary of War to attack the
+enemy, he declined, and having spent the summer in grumbling, went
+sullenly into winter quarters, thus closing the list of inefficient
+commanders, which threatened for awhile never to become complete.
+
+While Izard was thus ending a military career in which he had gathered
+no laurels, Macomb, whom he had left at Plattsburgh, doomed as he said
+to destruction, had crowned himself with honor, and shed lustre on the
+American arms.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ British plan of invading our sea ports -- Arrival of
+ reinforcements -- Barney's flotilla -- Landing of the enemy
+ under Ross -- Doubt and alarm of the inhabitants -- Advance
+ of the British -- Destruction of the Navy Yard -- Battle of
+ Bladensburg -- Flight of the President and his Cabinet --
+ Burning and sacking of Washington -- Mrs. Madison's conduct
+ during the day and night -- Cockburn's brutality -- Sudden
+ explosion -- A hurricane -- Flight of the British -- State
+ of the army -- Character of this outrage -- Rejoicings in
+ England -- Mortification of our ambassadors at Ghent --
+ Mistake of the English -- Parker's expedition -- Colonel
+ Reed's defence -- The English army advance on Baltimore --
+ Death of Ross -- Bombardment of Fort McHenry -- "The star
+ spangled banner" -- Retreat of the British, and joy of the
+ citizens of Baltimore.
+
+
+But while these events were passing around Niagara--in the interval
+between the assault on Fort Erie by Drummond and the successful sortie
+of Brown--a calamity overtook the country, which fortunately resulted
+in producing more harmony of feeling among the people, and
+strengthened materially the administration. Washington was taken and
+sacked by the enemy. The overthrow of Napoleon and his banishment to
+Elba, enabled England to send over more than 30,000 troops, which were
+soon on our sea-board or in the British Provinces. New England no
+longer remained excluded from the blockade, and the whole Atlantic
+sea-board was locked up by British cruisers. The Constitution, the
+year previous, after a cruise in which she captured but a single war
+schooner and a few merchantmen, was chased into Marble Head, from
+whence she escaped to Boston. The blockading of our other large ships,
+and the destruction of the Essex about the same time in the Bay of
+Valparaiso, had left us without a frigate at sea. The Adams, a sloop
+of twenty-eight guns, was the largest cruiser we had afloat.
+
+Hitherto the enemy had been content with blockading our seaports, and
+making descents on small towns in their neighborhood, but as the
+summer advanced, rumors arrived of the preparation of a large force,
+destined to strike a heavy blow at some of our most important cities.
+To meet this new danger the President addressed a circular letter to
+the States, calling on them to hold in readiness 93,500 militia.
+Fearing that Washington or Baltimore might be the points at which the
+enemy would first strike, the tenth military district was erected, as
+mentioned before, and General Winder, recently released by exchange,
+given the command of it.
+
+The whole sea-board was in a state of alarm--even Massachusetts caught
+the infection, and preparations were immediately made to defend her
+seaports and protect her coast. The militia of the different States
+were called out--Governor Barbour, of Virginia, garrisoned Norfolk,
+the intrenching tools were busy night and day around Baltimore,
+Providence voted money for fortifications, Portland shipmasters formed
+themselves into a company of sea fencibles, and gun-boats were
+collected in New York and all the great northern ports. The notes of
+alarm and preparation rang along the coast from Maine to Louisiana,
+and before the mysterious shadow of the gigantic coming evil, party
+animosities sunk into insignificance. Released from her Continental
+struggle, England, with her fleets that had conquered at Aboukir,
+Trafalgar, and Copenhagen, and her troops fresh from the fields of
+Spain, had resolved to fall upon us in her power, and crushing city
+after city, leave us at length without a seaport, from the Merrimack
+to the Mississippi. Even the brilliant victories of Chippewa and
+Lundy's Lane could not dispel the terror inspired by this gathering of
+her energies.
+
+But the first serious demonstration was made in the Chesapeake. To act
+against the fleet a flotilla was placed there under the charge of
+Captain Barney, a bold and skillful officer. Constantly on the alert,
+he would dash suddenly out of the Patuxent River, and roughly handling
+the light vessels of the enemy that approached the shallow waters,
+compel them to take refuge under the guns of the frigates. But the
+river at length became blockaded, and the flotilla was compelled to
+run up into Leonard's Creek. From the 1st to the 26th of June,
+frequent skirmishes took place, in which Captain Barney exhibited a
+daring, skill and prudence combined, which proved him to be an able
+commander. On the 26th he attacked the British vessels in the river,
+and after a sharp cannonade of two hours, drove them into the bay, and
+broke up the blockade.
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 14.]
+
+At length Admiral Cochrane arrived from Bermuda, in an eighty gun
+ship, bringing with him three thousand troops, commanded by General
+Ross. Entering the Chesapeake he joined Rear Admiral Cockburn, who by
+this timely reinforcement found himself in command of twenty-three
+vessels of war. This imposing fleet stood slowly up the waters of the
+Chesapeake, sending consternation among the inhabitants of Washington
+and Baltimore. [Sidenote: Aug. 21.] Cockburn, designed by nature for a
+freebooter, was admirably fitted for the work he had designed to do.
+Landing four thousand five hundred troops at Benedict, he began to
+advance up the Potomac. Barney, acting under instructions he had
+received, immediately took four hundred men and fell back to the Wood
+Yard, where he joined what was called the army. He had left five or
+six men in each boat, to blow them up, should the enemy advance. That
+night, about one o'clock, the President, with the Secretaries of War
+and Navy, visited Winder's camp, and next morning reviewed the troops.
+The camp was in confusion. Citizens and soldiers intermingled--each
+giving his opinion of the course to be pursued--disordered ranks and
+loud and fierce talking--the utter absence of the quiet demeanor and
+military precision characteristic of a regular army, gave to the one
+assembled there the appearance of a motley crowd on a gala day.
+General Smith and Barney, however, seemed to understand themselves,
+and were anxious to advance and attack the enemy.
+
+At the first appearance of the fleet Winder had sent off for the
+militia, but none had yet arrived. Six hundred from Virginia were
+reported close at hand--fourteen hundred from near Baltimore had
+reached Bladensburg, whither, also, was marching a picked regiment
+from the city itself, led by Pinckney, recently our Embassador to
+England. The whole country was filled with excited men, hurrying on
+foot or on horseback from one army and place to another--some without
+arms and others in citizens' dress, with only swords or pistols. The
+President and Cabinet were also in the saddle, riding by night and
+day, yet all without definite object. Rumor had swelled the invading
+force to twelve thousand men, but whether its destination was
+Washington, Baltimore, or Annapolis, no one could tell.
+
+While affairs were in this excited, disorderly state around
+Washington, great uncertainty reigned in the British camp. It was a
+hot day when the troops landed, and the sight of neat farm-houses,
+rich fields, and green pastures, seemed to increase the lassitude
+occasioned by their long confinement on ship-board, rather than
+invigorate them, and it required the exercise of rigid authority and
+unceasing care to keep them from straggling away to the cool shelter
+of trees. Weighed down with their knapsacks and three days'
+provisions, and sixty rounds of ball cartridge--without cavalry, and
+with only one six-pounder and two three-pounders drawn by a hundred
+seamen, this army of invasion took up its slow and cautious march
+inland on Sunday afternoon, and reached Nottingham that night.
+[Sidenote: Aug. 21.] They found the village wholly deserted--not a
+soul was left behind, while the bread remaining in the ovens, the
+furniture standing just as it had last been used, showed that the
+flight had been sudden and the panic complete.
+
+At this time the object of the expedition was the destruction of
+Barney's flotilla, which had so harassed and injured the lighter
+vessels of the fleet.
+
+Next morning at eight o'clock the army took up its line of March, and
+soon entered a cool, refreshing forest. But they had traversed scarce
+half its extent, when Ross was filled with anxiety and alarm by
+frequent and loud explosions, like the booming of heavy artillery, in
+the distance. Officers were immediately hurried off to ascertain the
+cause, who soon returned with the welcome and unexpected intelligence
+that the Americans were blowing up their own flotilla.
+
+The first and chief object of the invasion being secured, Ross halted
+his column at Marlborough, only ten miles from Nottingham, and sent
+for Cockburn, who, with a flotilla, was advancing up the river "_pari
+passu_," to advise with him what course to pursue. The admiral
+proposed to march on Washington. To this Ross at first objected, for
+to pierce a country of which he was ignorant fifty miles, with no
+cavalry or heavy artillery, seemed a rash undertaking, especially
+when, in a military point of view, success would accomplish
+comparatively nothing. Cockburn, however, who had been on the coast
+longer, and through informants residing in the city, had become
+acquainted with its defenceless state, persuaded him that its capture
+would be easy, and the results glorious. The taking of a nation's
+capital certainly seemed no mean exploit, while the heavy ransom the
+government would doubtless pay to save its public buildings, would
+compensate Cockburn for lack of prize money at sea.
+
+It was not, however, till next noon that the army, preceded by a
+company of a hundred blacks, composed of fugitive slaves, began to
+advance. After making a few miles, it halted for the night.
+
+The Secretary of War had insisted from the first that Washington was
+not the point threatened, and still adhered to that opinion. He could
+not conceive that an experienced commander would select as the first
+object of attack a town of some nine hundred houses, scattered over a
+surface of three miles, and destitute of wealth, while the opulent
+cities of Baltimore and Annapolis lay so near. This, too, was the
+opinion of many others, creating great confusion, and preventing the
+selection of strong positions, where successful stands could have been
+made.
+
+While the British were thus slowly advancing, General Winder was
+riding hither and thither, now making a reconnoissance in person, now
+posting to Washington to rouse the Secretary of War out of his
+lethargy, or hurrying on foot back again to his army, doing every
+thing but restoring tranquillity and order. Confusion in the
+camp--disorder in the ranks--consternation among the inhabitants, and
+gloom and doubt in the cabinet, combined to render the three days the
+British were marching on Washington, a scene of extraordinary
+excitement and misdirected efforts.
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 24.]
+
+At length, videttes and scouts, coming in quick succession, announced
+that the British army was approaching Bladensburg, where General
+Stansbury, with the Baltimore militia, was encamped. There was not a
+breath of air, and the column staggered on through a cloud of dust,
+and under a sweltering August sun. The soldiers, exhausted, reeled
+from the ranks and fell by the road side, while many others could
+scarcely drag their weary limbs along. The American troops were busy
+cooking their dinner when the drums beat to arms, announcing the
+approach of this much dreaded army.
+
+When the news reached Winder, he immediately transmitted an order to
+Stansbury to give battle where he was, and hastened thither with the
+main army, arriving just before the action commenced. Barney, who had
+been stationed with five hundred men at the bridge over the eastern
+branch of the Potomac, with directions to blow it up should the enemy
+approach by that route, no sooner heard of his advance on Bladensburg,
+than he earnestly requested to repair thither with his brave seamen.
+He chafed under the inaction to which he was doomed, talking in a
+boisterous manner, half to himself and half to others, lashing the
+generals with the bluntness and truth of a sailor, saying, loud
+enough to be heard by the President and his cabinet standing near, it
+was absurd to leave him there with five hundred men to blow up a
+bridge which any "d----d corporal could better do with five." At
+length permission was given him to join the army, when he leaped on a
+horse, and ordering his seamen to follow, galloped to Bladensburg. The
+advance was already engaged, and he immediately sent back to his men
+to hurry up, and soon the brave and panting fellows appeared on a trot
+and took their stand beside their commander. The President and his
+cabinet galloped thither also, but retired at the commencement of the
+action, not before, however, Monroe, Secretary of State, had tried his
+hand at military evolutions, and altered the order of battle.
+
+Instead of taking advantage of patches of woods, thickets, etc., where
+inexperienced militia would have fought well, this heterogeneous army
+of five or six thousand men was arranged in the form of a semi-circle
+on the slope that makes up westward from the eastern branch of the
+Potomac, here a shallow stream and crossed by a wooden bridge. The
+British, supposing of course, that the position was chosen because it
+commanded a narrow bridge, the passage of which is always so difficult
+in the face of batteries, never dreamed the river could be forded, and
+therefore never attempted it. Ross, who from the top of the highest
+house in the neighborhood surveyed the American army, was disconcerted
+at the formidable appearance it presented--posted on such a commanding
+eminence with heavy artillery,--and would doubtless have retreated but
+for the greater danger of a retrogade movement with his exhausted
+troops.
+
+The American army was arranged in three lines like regiments on a
+parade, connected by the guns that could pour no cross fire on the
+assailing column. The latter advancing steadily, throwing Congreve
+rockets as they approached, so shook the courage of the militia that
+it required but the levelled gleaming bayonet to scatter them like
+sheep over the field. Many of the officers were brave men and strove
+to arrest the panic, but in vain. Pinckney with a broken arm rode
+leisurely out of the battle, his heart filled with rage and
+mortification at the poltroonry of those under his command.
+
+The details of the engagement are useless--there was a show of
+resistance and some well sustained firing for awhile; but the whole
+battle, so far as it can be called one, was fought by Barney. He had
+planted four guns, among them an eighteen pounder, so as to sweep the
+main road, and quietly sat beside them on his bay horse, allowing the
+column to come within close range before he gave orders to fire. The
+first terrible discharge cleared the road. Three times the British
+endeavored to advance in front, and as often were swept to destruction
+by that battery. At length they were compelled to abandon the attempt,
+and taking shelter under a ravine filed off to the right and left and
+assailed Barney in flank and rear. Driving easily before them the
+regiments whose duty it was to protect the artillery, they moved
+swiftly forward. Barney's horse had been shot under him and he
+himself, prostrated by a wound, lay stretched in the road. Seeing that
+the battle was lost, he bade his seamen cut their way through the
+enemy and escape. Reluctant at first to obey him, they at last fled,
+and their gallant commander was taken prisoner. A few such determined
+men would have saved Washington from the flames.
+
+The six hundred Virginians who had hastened to the rescue never joined
+the army at all. Having arrived without arms, they slept in the House
+of Representatives all night and were not equipped next day till the
+battle was over.
+
+The _retreat_ became a wild and shameful flight. No other stand was
+made, and the fugitive army fled unpursued in squads hither and
+thither. It was a regular stampede. The fields and roads were covered
+with a broken and flying multitude. President, secretaries of war and
+navy, attorney-general and all were borne away in the headlong
+torrent; and though the enemy had no cavalry to pursue, and the
+infantry were too tired to follow up their success, the panic was so
+complete and ridiculous that our troops never stopped their flight
+except when compelled to pause from sheer exhaustion. Fatigue, not the
+interval they had put between themselves and the enemy, arrested their
+footsteps. Only fifty or sixty had been killed on our side, while the
+British had lost several hundred, a large portion of whom fell under
+the murderous discharges of Barney's battery.
+
+After the shouts and derision of the enemy had subsided with the
+disappearance of the last fugitive over the hills, the tired army
+instead of advancing to Washington reposed on the field of battle.
+
+Winder endeavored to rally the troops at the capital for another
+defence, but not a sufficient number could be found to make a stand,
+and with curses and oaths the rabble rout streamed along the road to
+Georgetown, presenting a picture of demoralization and insubordination
+that formed a fit counterpart to their poltroonry.
+
+The first arrival of the fugitives, officers and citizens, riding
+pell-mell through the streets, carried consternation into the city,
+and the inhabitants, some on foot, some in carts or carriages, rushed
+forth, and streaming on after the frightened militia completed the
+turbulence of the scene.
+
+Cockburn and Ross leaving the main army to repose itself, took a
+body-guard and rode into Washington. No resistance was offered--a
+single shot only was fired, which killed the horse of General Ross.
+The house from which it issued was formerly occupied by Mr. Gallatin.
+In a few moments it was in flames. Halting in front of the capitol,
+they fired a volley at the edifice and took possession of it in the
+name of the king.
+
+The troops were then marched in, and entering the Hall of
+Representatives, piled together chairs, desks and whatever was
+combustible, and applied the torch. The flames passing from room to
+room, soon wrapped the noble library, and bursting forth from the
+windows leaped to the roof, enveloping the whole edifice in fire and
+illuminating the country for miles around. The house of Washington and
+other buildings were also set on fire. The remaining British force,
+lighted by the ruddy glow that illumined the landscape and the road
+along which they were marching, entered the city to assist in the work
+of destruction. In the mean time, the navy-yard was set on fire by
+order of the secretary of war, mingling its flames and explosions with
+the light and roar of the burning capitol. The gallant officer in
+command of it had offered to defend it, but was refused permission.
+Whether the refusal was discreet or not, one thing is certain, the
+enemy could have accomplished no more than the destruction of the
+materials collected there, and it was not worth while to save them the
+labor.
+
+The capitol being in flames, Ross and Cockburn led their troops along
+Pennsylvania Avenue to the President's house, a mile distant, and soon
+the blazing pile beaconed back to the burning capitol. The Treasury
+building swelled the conflagration, and by the light of the flames
+Cockburn and Ross sat down to supper at the house of Mrs. Suter, whom
+they had compelled to furnish it. Pillage and devastation moved side
+by side through the streets, while to give still greater terror and
+sublimity to the scene, a heavy thunder storm burst over the city.
+From the lurid bosom of the cloud leaped flashes brighter than the
+flames below, followed by crashes that drowned the roar and tumult
+which swelled up from the thronged streets, making the night wild and
+appalling as the last day of time.
+
+To bring the day's work to a fitting close, Cockburn, while the
+heavens and surrounding country were still ruddy with the flames,
+entered a brothel and spent in lust and riot a night begun in
+incendiarism and pillage.
+
+[Illustration: Burning of Washington.]
+
+While these things were transpiring in the city, the President and his
+Cabinet were fleeing into Virginia. During the battle of
+Bladensburg, Mrs. Madison had sat in the Presidential mansion,
+listening to the roar of cannon in the distance, and anxiously
+sweeping the road, with her spy-glass, to catch the first approach of
+her husband, but saw instead, "groups of military, wandering in all
+directions, as if there was a lack of arms or of spirit, to fight for
+their own firesides." A carriage stood waiting at the door, filled
+with plate and other valuables, ready to leave at a moment's warning.
+The Mayor of the city waited on her, urging her to depart, but she
+bravely refused, saying she would not stir till she heard from her
+husband. At length a note from him, in pencil-marks, arrived, bidding
+her flee. Still delaying, till she could detach a portrait of
+Washington, by Stuart, from the wall, her friends remonstrated with
+her. Finding it would take too long to unscrew the painting from the
+walls, she seized a carving-knife, and cutting the canvas out, hurried
+away. At Georgetown she met her husband, who, with his Cabinet, in
+trepidation and alarm, was en route for Virginia. Just as the flames
+were kindling in the capitol, the President, Mr. Monroe, Mr. Rush, Mr.
+Mason, and Carroll, were assembled on the shores of the Potomac, where
+but one little boat could be found to transport them over. Desponding
+and sad, they were rowed across in the gloom, a part at a time, and
+mounting their horses, rode hurriedly and sadly away. Mrs. Madison
+returned towards Georgetown, accompanied by nine troopers, and stopped
+ten miles and a half from the town. Trembling from the anxiety and
+fright of the day--separated from her husband, now a fugitive in the
+darkness--oppressed with fears and gloomy forebodings, she sat down by
+an open window, and through the tears that streamed from her eyes,
+gazed forth on the flames of the burning city, and listened with
+palpitating heart to the muffled shouts and tumult that rose in the
+distance.
+
+Before daylight, she, with her lady companions, started for a place of
+rendezvous appointed by her husband, sixteen miles from Georgetown.
+
+The 25th of August dawned gloomily over the smouldering city, and the
+red sun, as he rolled into view, looked on a scene of devastation and
+ruin. From their drunken orgies, negroes and soldiers crawled forth to
+the light of day, roused by the reveille from the hill of the capitol,
+and the morning gun that sent its echoes through the sultry air.
+
+Rising from his debauch, Cockburn sallied forth to new deeds of shame.
+The War office, and other public offices, among them the building of
+the National Intelligencer, were set on fire, and the pillage and riot
+of the preceding day again sent terror through the city. The gallant
+admiral seemed refreshed rather than enervated by the plunder,
+conflagration and debauch of the night that had passed, and brilliant
+and witty as the day before, "was merry in his grotesque rambles about
+Washington, mounted on a white, uncurried, long switch-tail brood
+mare, followed by a black foal, neighing after its dam, in which
+caricature of horsemanship that harlequin of havoc, paraded the
+streets, and laughed at the terrified women imploring him not to
+destroy their homes. "Never fear," said he, "you shall be much safer
+under my administration than Madison's." "Be sure," said he to those
+who were destroying the types of the National Intelligencer, "that all
+the C's are demolished, so that the rascals can no longer abuse my
+name as they have done."[5]
+
+[Footnote 5: Vide Ingersoll, vol. II, page 189.]
+
+In the midst of this wanton destruction and barbarian licentiousness,
+two events occurred calculated to sober even a more brutal man than
+he. A detachment had been sent to destroy two rope-walks, at a place
+called Greenleaf's point, a short distance from the city. After they
+were burned, an officer threw the torch with which the buildings had
+been lighted, into a dry well near by. But this well had been made for
+a long time the repository of useless shells, cartridges and
+gunpowder. The unextinguished torch ignited this subterranean
+magazine, which exploded with a violence that shook the earth, and
+sent dismembered bodies and limbs, mingled with fragments of iron,
+and dust and smoke, heavenward together. When it cleared away, nearly
+a hundred officers and men were seen strewed around, some killed,
+others presenting torn, misshapen masses of human flesh. The sad
+procession, carrying the mutilated and dead back to the city, had
+scarcely reached it before the heavens became dark as twilight, and
+that ominous silence which always betokens some dreadful convulsion of
+nature fell on the earth. The air was still, and the burning dwellings
+around shed a baleful light over the faces of men, on which sat terror
+and perplexity. This portentous silence was broken by the rush and
+roar of a hurricane, that swept with the voice and strength of the
+sea, over the devastated city. Flashes of lightning rent the gloom,
+and the thunder rolled and broke in deafening crashes over head. The
+flames leaped up into fiercer glow, under the strong breath of the
+tempest; private dwellings that had escaped the incendiary's torch
+were stripped of their roofs, and the crash of falling, walls and
+shrieks of terrified men and women fleeing through the streets,
+imparted still greater terror to the appalling spectacle. The British
+army, on the Capitol hill, was rent into fragments before it, and
+scattered as though a magazine had exploded in its midst. Thirty
+soldiers, besides many of the inhabitants, were overwhelmed in the
+ruins.
+
+Fleeing before this same hurricane, Mrs. Madison approached the tavern
+designated by the President as the place where he would meet her, but
+was refused admittance by the terrified women within, who had also
+fled thither, because she was the wife of the man who had involved
+them in those horrors of war, made still more terrible by the
+visitation of God. He, in thus turning day into night, had evinced his
+displeasure, and foretold his judgments; and not until an entrance was
+forced by the men, would they allow her a shelter from the storm.
+There her husband, the fugitive President of the republic, drenched
+with rain, hungry and exhausted, joined her in the evening. Provided
+with nothing but a cold lunch, he retired to his miserable couch, not
+knowing what tidings the morning would bring him.
+
+In the mean time General Ross, chagrined at the part he had been
+compelled to play--filled with self-reproaches at the wanton
+destruction of a public library, was anxious and unquiet at the
+non-arrival of the boats that had accompanied him to Alexandria. In
+constant fear of an uprising of the people of the country, he was
+eager to get back to the ships. As soon therefore as night set in, he
+resolved to commence his retreat. To prevent pursuit, an order was
+issued prohibiting the appearance of a single inhabitant in the street
+after eight o'clock. At nine, in dead silence, and with quick step,
+as though stealing on a sleeping foe, the advance column took up its
+march and passed unnoticed out of the city. The camp fires on the hill
+of the capitol were kept blazing, and piled with fuel sufficient to
+preserve them bright till near morning, in order to convey the
+impression that the army was still there, and at a late hour the rear
+column followed after, and silently and rapidly traversed the road to
+Bladensburg. Not a word was spoken, not a man allowed to step out of
+his place. Arriving on the ground which had been occupied by other
+brigades, they found it deserted, but the fires were still blazing as
+though the encampment had not been broken up. Approaching the field of
+Bladensburg, they saw in the white moonbeams the whiter corpses of the
+unburied dead, who had been stripped of their clothing and now lay
+scattered around on the green slope and banks of the stream where they
+had fallen. The hot August rain and sun had already begun to act on
+the mutilated flesh, and a horrible stench loaded the midnight air.
+Stopping there for an hour, to enable the soldiers to hunt up their
+knapsacks thrown aside the day before, Ross again hurried them
+forward, and kept them at the top of their speed all night. If the
+column paused for a moment, the road was instantly filled with
+soldiers fast asleep. Men were constantly straggling away, or falling
+into slumbers, from which even the sword could with difficulty prick
+them, and the army threatened to be disorganized. It therefore became
+necessary to halt, and the order to do so had scarcely passed down the
+line before every man was sound asleep, and the entire army in five
+minutes resembled a heap of dead bodies on a field of battle. Resting
+here under the burning sun until midday, Ross then resumed his march
+and reached Marlborough at night, and the next day proceeded leisurely
+back to the ships.
+
+The raid had been successful--Washington was sacked. Two millions of
+property had been destroyed--the capitol, with its library--the
+President's house--the Treasury and War, Post offices, and other
+public edifices, burned to the ground, together with five private
+dwellings, thirteen more being pillaged. These, with the destruction
+of the office of the National Intelligencer, two rope-walks, and a
+bridge over the Potomac, constituted the achievements of this
+redoubtable army of invasion.
+
+The English press, which had teemed with accounts of Napoleon's
+barbarity, and the English heart, which had heaved with noble
+indignation against the man who could rob the galleries of conquered
+provinces to adorn those of Paris, had no word of condemnation or
+expression of anger for this wanton outrage, but on the contrary,
+laudations innumerable. Napoleon had marched into almost every capital
+of Europe without destroying a library or work of art, or firing a
+dwelling. With his victorious armies he had entered city after city,
+and yet no Vandalism marred his conquest. The palaces of kings, who
+had perjured themselves again and again to secure his downfall, had
+never been touched, and yet he was denounced as a robber and
+proclaimed to the world a modern Attila. But an English army, warring
+against a nation that spoke the same language, and was descended from
+the same ancestors, could enter a city that had made no defence--had
+not exasperated the conquerors by forcing them to a long siege or
+desperate assault, and, without provocation, burn down a public
+library, the unoffending capitol and presidential mansion, state
+offices, and even private dwellings. Incredible as this act appears,
+the greater marvel is how the English nation could exult over it. An
+American victory tarnished by such barbarity and meanness, would
+overwhelm the authors of it in eternal disgrace. And yet, a popular
+so-called historian of England, in narrating this transaction, says it
+was "one of the most brilliant expeditions ever carried into execution
+by any nation." An army of some four thousand regulars put to flight
+five or six thousand raw militia, and, with the loss of a few hundred
+men, marched into a small unfortified town, occupied as the capital of
+the United States, and like a band of robbers, set fire to the public
+Library, Arsenal, Treasury, War office, President's house, two
+rope-walks and a bridge; and such an affair the historian of Lodi,
+Marengo, Austerlitz, and Waterloo,--of the terrible conflicts of the
+peninsular, and the sublime sea-fights of Aboukir and Trafalgar, calls
+"one of the most brilliant expeditions carried into execution by any
+nation."
+
+ "Ille crucem, scelenis pretium tulit, hic diadema."
+
+The news was received in England with the liveliest demonstrations of
+joy. The Lord Mayor of London ordered the Park and Tower guns to be
+fired at noon, in honor of a victory, which he pompously declared was
+"worth an illumination." The official account was translated into
+French, German and Italian, and scattered over the continent. Mr. Clay
+and Mr. Russell were in the theatre at Brussels when the news arrived.
+The secretary of the legation, Mr. Hughes, had overheard an English
+officer in the lobby saying--"We have taken and burned the Yankee
+capital, and thrown those rebels back half a century"--and going to
+their box told them there were reasons why they should leave the
+theatre, which he would disclose at their hotel. He had observed some
+of the British legation present, and the announcement of such tidings
+would be embarrassing to the American embassy. They were exceedingly
+annoyed by the news, especially next morning, when the English
+embassadors sent them a paper giving an account of the act; and they
+returned, mortified, to Ghent. It was received on the continent,
+however, with marked disapprobation. Even a Bourbon paper, in Paris,
+declared that notwithstanding the atrocities charged on Napoleon, he
+had never committed an act so degrading to civilized warfare as this.
+
+The vessels designed to coöperate with the movement on Washington,
+reached Alexandria the same evening the British army left the former
+place, and after levying a contribution on the inhabitants, seizing
+twenty-one merchant vessels, sixteen thousand barrels of flour, a
+thousand hogsheads of tobacco, and whatever else was valuable,
+departed. In their descent, they were harassed by Porter and Perry
+from the shore, but the guns of the latter were too light to effect
+much damage. Commodore Rodgers also hovered with fire ships around
+their flight, but it was too rapid to allow the concentration of a
+sufficient force to arrest them.
+
+Armstrong, the Secretary of War, following the example of President,
+Cabinet, Generals and army, galloped away from the disastrous field of
+Bladensburg, and took refuge in a farm-house. The fugitive President
+and the fugitive Secretary at length met, and returned together to
+Washington. The entrance of the latter to the capital was the signal
+for the indignant outburst of the entire population. The militia
+officers of the District refused to obey his orders in the future,
+and a committee of the citizens waited on the President, demanding his
+dismissal from the post of Secretary of War. It was suddenly
+discovered that he was wholly to blame for the conduct of the troops
+at Bladensburg. Borne away by the popular current, which he was
+thankful was not directed against himself, Madison requested Armstrong
+to retire for awhile to Baltimore. [Sidenote: Sept. 3.] The latter
+obeyed, but immediately sent in his resignation, in which he paid the
+President the compliment of having, as he declared, shamefully yielded
+to the "humors of a village mob." Monroe, Secretary of State, was
+appointed to discharge his duties, and a proclamation was issued
+calling an early meeting of Congress.
+
+The British government never committed a greater blunder than when it
+sanctioned the sack and burning of Washington. Estimating its
+importance by that which the capitals of Europe held in their
+respective kingdoms, her misguided statesmen supposed its overthrow
+would paralyze the nation and humble the government into submission.
+But there was scarcely a seaport on our coast, whose destruction would
+not have been a greater public calamity. Besides, the greater its
+value in the eyes of the people, the more egregious the mistake.
+Judging us by the effeminate races of India, or the ignorant
+population of central Europe, who are accustomed to be governed by
+blows, they imagined the heavier the scourging, the more prostrated by
+fear, and more eager for peace we should become. But resistance and
+boldness rise with us in exact proportion to the indignities offered
+and injuries inflicted. With a country, whose vital part is no where
+fixed, but consisting in the unity of the people, can shift with
+changing fortunes from the sea-coast even to the Rocky Mountains, its
+heart can never be reached by the combined forces of the world. This
+republic can never die but by its own hand. In a foreign war, our
+strength can be weakened only by sowing dissensions. Outrages which
+inflame the national heart, or local sufferings that awaken national
+sympathy serve only to heal all these, and hence render us
+impregnable. Thus, when Mr. Alison, in closing up his account of this
+war and speaking of the probabilities of another, advises the sudden
+precipitation of vast armies on our shore as the only way to insure
+success, he exhibits a lamentable ignorance of our character. An
+outrage or calamity at the outset, sufficiently great to break down
+party opposition, and drown all personal and political contests in one
+shout for vengeance, rolling from limit to limit of our vast
+possessions, would endow us with resistless energy and strength. The
+attacks on Baltimore and New Orleans teach an instructive lesson on
+this point. In the latter place, where a veteran army of nine
+thousand men were repulsed by scarcely one-third of its force, now an
+army of two hundred thousand would make no impression.
+
+The sack of Washington furnishes a striking illustration of the effect
+of a great public calamity on this nation. One feeling of wrath and
+cry for vengeance swept the land. A high national impulse hushed the
+bickerings and frightened into silence the quarrels of factions, and
+the President and his Cabinet never gained strength so fast as when
+the capitol was in flames, and they were fleeing through the storm and
+darkness, weighed down with sorrow and despondency.
+
+At the same time this expedition against Washington was moving to its
+termination, Sir Peter Parker ascended the Chesapeake to Rockhall,
+from whence he sent out detachments in various quarters, burning
+dwellings, grain, stacks, outhouses, etc. On the 30th, he landed at
+midnight, to surprise Colonel Reed, encamped in an open plain with a
+hundred and seventy militia. It was bright moonlight, and as the
+column advanced it was received with a steady and well-directed fire.
+At length the ammunition failing, this brave band was compelled to
+fall back. The enemy at the same time retreated, carrying with them
+Sir Peter Parker, mortally wounded with buck shot.
+
+On the return of these several expeditions, it was resolved to make a
+grand and united attack on Baltimore, that nest of privateers. On the
+6th of September, the whole fleet, consisting of more than forty sail,
+moved slowly up the Chesapeake, carrying a mixed, heterogeneous land
+force of five thousand men. Six days after, it reached the Patapsco,
+and landed the troops at North Point. The first object of attack was
+fort M'Henry, situated about two miles from Baltimore. The capture of
+this, it was thought, would open a passage to the city. Having put
+their forces in marching order, General Ross and Cochrane moved
+forward towards the intrenchments erected for the defence of
+Baltimore, while the vessels of war advanced against the fort.
+
+After marching four miles, the leading column of the army was checked
+by General Stricker, who with three thousand men had taken post near
+the head of Bear Creek. A sharp skirmish ensued, in which the two
+companies of Levering and Howard under Major Heath and Captain
+Aisquith's rifle company, fought gallantly. General Ross, hearing the
+firing rode forward, and mingled with the skirmishers, to ascertain
+the cause of it, when he was pierced by the unerring ball of a
+rifleman, and fell in the road. His riderless horse went plunging back
+towards the main army, his "saddle and housings stained with blood,
+carrying the melancholy news of his master's fate to the astonished
+troops." Stretched by the road side, the dying general lay writhing in
+the agonies of death. He had only time to speak of his wife and
+children, before he expired. He was a gallant, skillful and humane
+officer, and his part in the burning of Washington, must be laid to
+his instructions rather than to his character.
+
+The command devolved on Colonel Brooke, who gave the orders to
+advance. General Stricker defended his position firmly, but at length
+was compelled to fall back on his reserve, and finally took post
+within half a mile of the intrenchments of the city. This ended the
+combat for the day. The next morning Colonel Brooke recommenced his
+march, and advanced to within two miles of the intrenchments, where he
+encamped till the following morning, to wait the movements of the
+fleet.
+
+In the mean time, Cochrane had moved up to within two miles and a half
+of the fort, and forming his vessels in a semi-circle, began to
+bombard it. These works, under the command of Major Armstead, had no
+guns sufficiently heavy to reach the vessels, which all that day threw
+shells and rockets, making a grand commotion but doing little damage.
+At night, Cochrane moved his fleet farther up, and opened again. The
+scene then became grand and terrific. It was dark and rainy, and amid
+the gloom, rockets and shells, weighing, some of them, two hundred
+and fifty pounds, rose heavenward, followed by a long train of light,
+and stooping over the fort burst with detonations that shook the
+shore. Singly, and in groups, these fiery messengers traversed the
+sky, lighting up the fort and surrounding scenery in a sudden glow,
+and then with their sullen thunder, sinking all again in darkness. The
+deafening explosions broke over the American army and the city of
+Baltimore like heavy thunder-claps, calling forth soldiers and
+inhabitants to gaze on the illumined sky. The city was in a state of
+intense excitement. The streets were thronged with the sleepless
+inhabitants, and the tearful eyes and pallid cheeks of women, attested
+the anguish and fear that wild night created. As soon as Armstead
+discovered that the vessels had come within range, he opened his fire
+with such precision that they were compelled to withdraw again,
+content with their distant bombardment. At length a sudden and heavy
+cannonade was heard above the fort, carrying consternation into the
+city, for the inhabitants believed that it had fallen. It soon ceased,
+however. Several barges, loaded with troops, had passed the fort
+unobserved, and attempted to land and take it in rear. Pulling to the
+shore with loud shouts, they were met by a well-directed fire from a
+battery, and compelled to seek shelter under their ships.
+
+During this tremendous bombardment Francis Key lay in a little vessel
+under the Admiral's frigate. He had visited him for the purpose of
+obtaining an exchange of some prisoners of war, especially of one who
+was a personal friend, and was directed to remain till after the
+action. During the day his eye had rested eagerly on that low
+fortification, over which the flag of his country was flying, and he
+watched with the intensest anxiety the progress of each shell in its
+flight, rejoicing when it fell short of its aim, and filled with fear
+as he saw it stooping without exploding, within those silent
+enclosures. At night, when darkness shut out that object of so much
+and intense interest, around which every hope and desire of his life
+seemed to cling, he still stood straining his eyes through the gloom,
+to catch, if he could, by the light of the blazing shells, a glimpse
+of his country's flag, waving proudly in the storm. The early dawn
+found him still a watcher, and there, to the music of bursting shells,
+and the roar of cannon, he composed "The Star-Spangled Banner."[6]
+
+[Footnote 6: The scene and the occasion which called forth this
+beautiful ode, have helped to make it a national one. It requires but
+little imagination to conceive the intense and thrilling anxiety with
+which a true patriot would look for the first gray streak of morning,
+to see if the flag of his country was still flying, while the heart
+involuntarily asks the question--
+
+ "O, say, can you see by the dawn's early light,
+ What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming?
+ Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight
+ O'er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming--
+ And the rocket's red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
+ Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there.
+
+ O, say, does that star-spangled banner yet wave,
+ O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
+
+ On that shore, dimly seen through the mists of the deep,
+ Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence reposes,
+ What is that which the breeze o'er the towering steep,
+ As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses;
+ Now it catches the gleam of the morning's first beam,
+ In full glory reflected, now shines in the stream?
+ 'Tis the star-spangled banner, O, long may it wave
+ O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave."]
+
+In the morning, Broke not deeming it prudent to assail those
+intrenchments, manned by brave and determined men,[7] while the
+heights around bristled with artillery, resolved to retreat. Waiting
+till night to take advantage of the darkness, he retraced his steps to
+the shipping.
+
+From the extreme apprehensions that had oppressed it, Baltimore passed
+to the most extravagant joy. Beaming faces once more filled the
+streets, and the military bands, as they marched through, playing
+triumphant strains, were saluted with shouts. The officers were feted
+and exultation and confidence filled every bosom.
+
+[Footnote 7: Senator Smith, who had been appointed general, commanded
+the 10,000 militia who manned the works.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Macomb at Plattsburg -- American and English fleets on Lake
+ Champlain -- Advance of Prevost -- Indifference of Governor
+ Chittenden -- Rev. Mr. Wooster -- Macdonough -- The two
+ battles -- Funeral of the officers -- British invasion of
+ Maine -- McArthur's expedition.
+
+
+The gallant defence of Baltimore was still the theme of every tongue,
+when tidings from our northern borders swelled the enthusiasm to the
+highest pitch, and extinguished for a moment the remembrance of the
+barbarities committed at Washington.
+
+The day before the British landed at North Point and received their
+first shock in the death of General Ross, the double battle of
+Plattsburg was fought.
+
+Izard, when he started on his tortoise-like march, to the relief of
+Brown, left Colonel Macomb in command of three thousand men, not more
+than half of whom were fit for service. Their defeat he considered
+certain, and the result would have justified his prognostications,
+had Macomb, like him, sat down to brood over his troubles and gaze
+only on the difficulties that beset the army, till his confidence was
+gone and his energies paralyzed. But he was made of sterner
+stuff--difficulties only roused and developed him. Were the well men
+under his command few? then his defences must be the stronger, and the
+labor of those able to work, the more constant and exhausting.
+
+Calling on New York and Vermont for militia, he toiled night and day
+at the works, and soon found himself strongly intrenched.
+
+In the mean time, Prevost, at the head of a disciplined army of twelve
+thousand men, began to advance on Plattsburg. The ulterior design of
+this invasion of the States has never been disclosed. It is hardly
+possible that the British General meditated a movement similar to
+Burgoyne's, hoping to reach Albany. The object may have been to get
+entire command of Lake Champlain; and, pushing his land forces as far
+as Ticonderoga, there wait the development of events on the sea-coast,
+or by conquests along the northern boundary, create a claim to the
+lakes, to be enforced in the negotiations for peace.
+
+Prevost marched slowly, cumbering the road with his heavy baggage and
+artillery trains as he advanced, and did not arrive at Plattsburg
+till the 7th of September.
+
+This town is situated on the Saranac River, a deep and rapid stream,
+crossed at the time by several bridges. Abandoning that portion of it
+on the north shore, as untenable, Macomb withdrew his forces to the
+southern bank. Prevost, after a sharp action with the advance of the
+American army, was allowed to erect his batteries at his leisure. It
+took him four days to complete his works, or rather that time elapsed
+before the arrival of the British fleet.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept. 1.]
+
+In the mean time Macomb had sent an express to Governor Chittenden, of
+Vermont, telling him that Prevost had commenced his march on
+Plattsburg, and beseeching him to call out the militia to his aid. But
+this Federalist Governor, acting on the rebellious doctrine of
+Massachusetts, coldly replied that he had no authority to send militia
+out of the State. On the 4th, Macomb sent another express saying the
+army was approaching, that his force was too small to resist it, and
+begging for assistance. General Newell, more patriotic than the
+Governor, offered to take his brigade over to the help of Macomb, but
+the former would not sanction the movement by his authority, though he
+advised him to beat up for volunteers. With every feeling of
+patriotism deadened by the poison of the spirit of faction--every
+generous sentiment and sympathy apparently extinguished--deaf to the
+piteous plea rising from a neighboring town, he coldly entrenched
+himself behind a party dogma, and let the ruin and devastation sweep
+onward. The cannonading on the 6th, by Majors Appling and Wool, who
+gallantly attacked the enemy's advance, did not rouse him from his
+apathy.
+
+One can hardly imagine that the call he issued for volunteers before
+the battle, and the stirring proclamation he made afterwards under the
+pressure of popular enthusiasm, emanated from the same person.
+
+The people, however, did not require to be stimulated into patriotism
+by their executive. As that sullen thunder came booming over the lake,
+it stirred with fiery ardor the gallant sons of that noble State, who
+never yet turned a deaf ear to the calls of their country, and before
+whose stern and valorous onset the enemy's ranks have never stood
+unbroken. Spurning the indifference of their Governor, and trampling
+under foot his constitutional scruples, they flew to their homes, and
+snatching down their muskets and rifles, and giving a short adieu to
+their families, rushed to the shore, and soon the lake was covered
+with boats, urged fiercely forward by strong arms and willing hearts
+towards the spot where the heavy explosions told that their brave
+countrymen were struggling in unequal combat. The face of young Macomb
+lighted with joy as his eye fell on those bold men, and a heavy load
+was taken from his heart.
+
+Among those who had previously volunteered, was the Rev. Benjamin
+Wooster, of Fairfield, Vermont. Responding to the call of Governor
+Tompkins, he put himself at the head of his parishioners and repaired
+to the American camp, where he endured all the privations of a common
+soldier. The aged members of his church and the women, when they saw
+him draw up his little flock on the village green, prior to their
+departure for the scene of conflict, assembled in the church and sent
+for him, saying, "We shall see you no more--come, go to the house of
+God and preach us a last sermon, and administer to us the holy
+sacrament for the last time." But fearing the effect of so touching an
+interview on his own decisions, he refused. Sending them an
+affectionate farewell, he embraced his weeping family, kissed his
+babes, and gently untwining their arms from his neck, turned away. On
+the day of battle this brave old shepherd led his fearless flock into
+the fire, with the serenity of a good man doing his duty.
+
+During the summer the English at the northern, and the Americans at
+the southern portion of the lake, had been busy in building ships to
+contest the supremacy of this sheet of water, whose head pierces so
+deep into the bosom of New York. The latter had at length assembled a
+flotilla consisting of four vessels--the largest carrying twenty-six
+guns--and ten galleys, the whole under the command of Macdonough.
+After some skirmishing, this little fleet, which early in the season
+lay in Otter Creek, was got into the lake and steered for Plattsburg
+Bay, to assist Macomb in his defence of the town. This bay opens to
+the southward, and instead of piercing the main land at right angles,
+runs north, nearly parallel with the lake itself. A narrow tongue of
+land divides it from the main water, the extreme point of which is
+called Cumberland Head. Just within its mouth, and nearly opposite
+where the turbulent Saranac empties into it, Macdonough anchored his
+vessels. [Sidenote: Sept 20.] Between him and the main land was a
+large shoal and an island which effectually blocked the approach of
+vessels on that side.
+
+The English fleet sent to attack him, consisted, also, of four
+vessels--the largest mounting 32 guns--and 13 galleys. The American
+force, all told, was 14 vessels, mounting 86 guns and carrying 850
+men, while that of the English was 17 vessels, mounting 96 guns and
+carrying 1000 men. The largest, the Confiance, "had the gun deck of a
+frigate," and by her superior size and strength, and her 30 long
+twenty-fours, was considered a match for any two vessels in
+Macdonough's squadron. Captain Downie, who commanded the British
+fleet, joined his gun boats at the Isle au Motte on the 8th of
+September, where he lay at anchor till the 11th. In the mean time,
+Prevost, whose batteries were all erected, remained silent behind his
+works waiting the arrival of the fleet before he should commence his
+fire.
+
+During those sleepless nights, and days of agitation, young Macdonough
+lay calmly watching the approach of his superior foe, while Macomb
+strained every nerve to complete his defences. Fearless, frank and
+social, the young General moved among his soldiers with such animation
+and confidence, that they caught his spirit, and like the Green
+Mountain boys and yeomanry of New York at Saratoga, resolved to defend
+their homes to the last.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept. 11.]
+
+At length, on Sunday morning, just as the sun rose over the eastern
+mountains, the American guard boat, on the watch, was seen rowing
+swiftly into the harbor. It reported the enemy in sight. The drums
+immediately beat to quarters, and every vessel was cleared for action.
+The preparations being completed, young Macdonough summoned his
+officers around him, and there, on the deck of the Saratoga, read the
+prayers of the ritual before entering into battle, and that voice,
+which soon after rung like a clarion amid the carnage, sent
+heavenward, in earnest tones, "Stir up thy strength, O Lord, and come
+and help us, for thou givest not always the battle to the strong, but
+canst save by many or by few." It was a solemn and thrilling
+spectacle, and one never before witnessed on a vessel of war cleared
+for action. A young commander who had the courage thus to brave the
+derision and sneers which such an act was sure to provoke, would fight
+his vessel while there was a plank left to stand on. Of the deeds of
+daring done on that day of great achievements, none evinced so bold
+and firm a heart as this act of religious worship.
+
+At eight o'clock the crews of the different vessels could see, over
+the tongue of land that divided the bay from the lake, the topsails of
+the enemy moving steadily down. These had also been seen from shore,
+and every eminence around was covered with anxious spectators. The
+house of God was deserted, and the light of that bright Sabbath
+morning, with its early stillness, flooded a scene at once picturesque
+and terrible. On one side was the hostile squadron, coming down to the
+sound of music--on the other, stood the armies on shore in order of
+battle, with their banners flying--between, lay Macdonough's silent
+little fleet at anchor, while the hills around were black with
+spectators, gazing on the strange and fearful panorama.
+
+As the British approached, Macdonough showed his signal, "_Impressed
+seamen call on every man to do his duty_." As vessel after vessel
+traced the letters, loud cheers rent the air.
+
+The English vessels, under easy sail, swept one after another round
+Cumberland Head, and hauling up in the wind, waited the approach of
+the galleys.
+
+[Illustration: Battle of Lake Champlain.
+
+Position of the two squadrons.]
+
+As Macdonough lay anchored with his vessels in line north and
+south--his galleys on their sweeps forming a second line in rear--the
+English fleet, as it doubled the head, was compelled to approach with
+bows on. The Eagle was farthest up the bay, the Saratoga second,
+Ticonderoga third, and Preble fourth. The impressive silence which
+rested on the American fleet was at last broken by the Eagle, which
+opened her broadsides. Startled by the sound, a cock on board the
+Saratoga, which had escaped from the coop, flew upon a gun slide and
+crowed. A loud laugh and three hearty cheers acknowledged the
+favorable omen, and spread confidence through the ship. Macdonough,
+seeing the enemy were at too great distance to be reached by his guns,
+reserved his fire, and watched the Confiance standing boldly on till
+she came within range. He then sighted a long twenty-four himself and
+fired her. The heavy shot passed the entire length of the deck of the
+Confiance, killing many of her men and shivering her wheel into
+fragments. This was the signal for every vessel to open its fire, and
+in a moment that quiet bay was in an uproar. The Confiance, however,
+though suffering severely, did not return a shot, but kept on till she
+got within a quarter of a mile, when she let go her anchors and swung
+broadside to the Saratoga. Sixteen long twenty-fours then opened at
+once with a terrific crash. The Saratoga shook from kelson to cross
+trees under the tremendous discharge. Nearly half of her crew were
+knocked down by it, while fifty men were either killed or wounded, and
+among them Lieutenant Gamble. He was in the act of sighting a gun,
+when a shot entered the port and struck him dead. The effect of this
+first broadside was awful, and the Saratoga was for a moment
+completely stunned. The next, however, she opened her fire with a
+precision and accuracy that told fatally on the English ship. But the
+latter soon commenced pouring in her broadsides so rapidly that she
+seemed enveloped in flame. The Eagle could not withstand it, and
+changed her position, falling in nearer shore, leaving the Saratoga to
+sustain almost alone the whole weight of the unequal contest. She gave
+broadside for broadside, but the weight of metal was against her, and
+she was fast becoming a wreck. Her deck soon presented a scene of the
+most frightful carnage. The living could hardly tumble the wounded
+down the hatchway as fast as they fell. At length, as a full broadside
+burst on the staggering ship, a cry of despair rang from stem to
+stern, "the Commodore is killed!--the Commodore is killed!" and there
+he lay on the blood-stained deck amid the dead, senseless, and
+apparently lifeless. A spar, cut in two by a cannon shot, had
+fallen on his back and stunned him. But after two or three minutes he
+recovered, and cheering on his men, took his place again beside his
+favorite gun that he had sighted from the commencement of the action.
+As the men saw him once more at his post, they took new courage.
+
+But a few minutes after, the cry of "the Commodore is killed," again
+passed through the ship. Every eye was instantly turned to a group of
+officers gathered around Macdonough, who lay in the scuppers, between
+two guns, covered with blood. He had been knocked clean across the
+ship, with a force sufficient to have killed him. Again he revived,
+and limping to a gun, was soon coolly hulling his antagonist. Maimed
+and suffering, he fought on, showing an example that always makes
+heroes of subordinates.
+
+At length every gun on the side of his vessel towards the enemy was
+silenced, but one, and this, on firing it again, bounded from its
+fastenings, and tumbled down the hatchway. Not a gun was left with
+which to continue the contest, while the ship was on fire. A
+surrender, therefore, seemed inevitable. Macdonough, however, resolved
+to wind his ship, so as to get the other broadside to bear. Failing in
+the first attempt, the sailing-master, Brum, bethought him of an
+expedient, which proved successful, and the crippled vessel slowly
+swung her stern around, until the uninjured guns bore. The Confiance,
+seeing the manoeuvre, imitated it, but she could not succeed, and lay
+with her crippled side exposed to the fire of the Saratoga.
+
+In a short time not a gun could be brought to bear. Further resistance
+was therefore useless, and she surrendered. She had been hulled a
+_hundred and five times_, while half of her men were killed and
+wounded. Captain Downie had fallen some time before, and hence was
+spared the mortification of seeing her flag lowered.
+
+The Eagle, commanded by Capt. Henley, behaved gallantly in the
+engagement, while the Ticonderoga, under Lieutenant Cassin, was
+handled in a manner that astonished those who beheld her. This
+fearless officer walked backward and forward over his deck,
+encouraging his men, and directing the fire, apparently unconscious of
+the balls that smote and crashed around him. His broadsides were so
+incessant, that several times the vessel was thought to be on fire.
+
+The surrender of the Confiance virtually terminated the contest, which
+had lasted two hours and a quarter; and as flag after flag struck the
+galleys took to their sweeps and escaped.
+
+In the midst of this tremendous cannonade, came, at intervals, the
+explosions on shore. The first gun in the bay, was the signal for
+Prevost on land, and as the thunder of his heavy batteries mingled in
+with the incessant broadsides of the contending squadrons, the very
+shores trembled, and far over the lake, amid the quiet farm-houses of
+Vermont, the echoes rolled away, carrying anxiety and fear into
+hundreds of families. Its shore was lined with men, gazing intently in
+the direction of Plattsburgh, as though from the smoke that rolled
+heavenward, some tidings might be got of how the battle was going.
+
+To the spectators on the commanding heights around Plattsburgh, the
+scene was indescribably fearful and thrilling. It was as if two
+volcanoes were raging below--turning that quiet Sabbath morning into a
+scene wild and awful as the strife of fiends. But when the firing in
+the bay ceased, and the American flag was seen still flying, and the
+Union Jack down, there went up a shout that shook the hills. From the
+water to the shore, and back again, the deafening huzzas echoed and
+re-echoed. The American army took up the shout, and sending it high
+and clear over the thunder of cannon, spread dismay and astonishment
+into the heart of the enemy's camp.
+
+The American loss in killed and wounded, was one hundred and ten, of
+whom all but twenty fell on board the Saratoga and Eagle--that of the
+English was never fully known, though it was supposed to be nearly
+double.
+
+The force of Macomb was so inferior, and the most of the volunteers
+were so recently arrived, that from the first he was advised to
+retreat, a course that Wilkinson and Dearborn and Izard would
+doubtless have taken, and defended it by rules laid down in books on
+military tactics. But Macomb had resolved to fight where he stood. The
+two forts of Brown and Scott, which he had erected and named, he
+designed should be symbolical of the defence he would make, and the
+battle he would fight.
+
+After the British batteries had been in fierce operation for some
+time, throwing shells, hot shot and rockets in a perfect shower upon
+the American ranks, three columns of attack were formed--two pressing
+straight for the bridges, the planks of which had been taken up, and
+the third for a ford farther up the river. The last was repulsed by
+the volunteers and militia. The other two steadily approached the
+bridges, but the artillery rained such a tempest of grape shot on the
+uncovered ranks of one, and the pickets and rifles so scourged the
+other, that they were driven back to their intrenchments for shelter.
+After Macdonough's victory, their fire slackened, not only from
+discouragement, but from the destructive effect of the American
+gunnery on their batteries, and at nightfall ceased entirely. As soon
+as it became dark, Prevost ordered a retreat. So rapidly and silently
+was it conducted, that the army had advanced eight miles before Macomb
+knew of it. He immediately ordered a pursuit, but this day of strife
+had ended in a storm of wind and rain, and it was soon abandoned.
+
+Prevost lost two hundred and fifty in killed and wounded, many of whom
+were left on the ground, drenched and beat upon by the storm. These he
+commended to the humanity of Macomb, and continued his rapid flight to
+the St. Lawrence. That British fleet, shattered and torn, lying at
+anchor under the guns of Macdonough, in the bay, and the army of
+twelve thousand men streaming through the gloom and rain, panic
+stricken, lest the feeble force behind should overtake it, present a
+striking contrast to their prospects in the morning, and show how
+changeful is fortune. Downie heard not the shout of victory, for he
+lay stiff and cold in the vessel he had carried so gallantly into
+action, and Prevost did not long survive his defeat.
+
+So large a hostile force had never before crossed the Canada line,
+while no such sudden and terrible reverse of fortune had befallen the
+feeblest expedition. Two such victories on one day, were enough to
+intoxicate the nation. The news spread like wildfire, and shouts and
+salvos of artillery, and bonfires, hailed the messengers, as they sped
+the glad tidings on. The campaign was closing gloriously. Instead of
+the defeats and failures of the last year, there were Chippewa and
+Lundy's Lane and Fort Erie, crowned by the victories of Baltimore and
+Plattsburgh. The news of the two last, approaching from different
+directions, set the land in a glow of transport, and lifted it from
+despondency and gloom to confidence and bright expectations.
+
+The Thursday following the battle of Champlain was devoted to the
+burial of the officers killed in the naval action. As the procession
+of boats left the Confiance, minute guns were fired from the vessels
+in the harbor. The artillery and infantry on shore received the dead
+and bore them to the place of burial, while the cannon of the forts
+responded to those from the fleet, blending their mournful echoes over
+the fallen in their prime and manhood. The clouds hung low and gloomy
+over lake and land, and the rain fell in a gentle shower, imparting
+still greater loneliness to the scene. On this very day, while friends
+and foes were thus paying the last tribute of respect to the fallen,
+Baltimore was shaking to the huzzas of the inhabitants, at the news
+that the British fleet was sailing down the bay, baffled and
+disappointed.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept 1.]
+
+Simultaneous with these two invasions of our territory, a British
+force was sent against Machias. The misfortune which befel the Adams,
+sloop-of-war, compelling her to take refuge at Hampden, in the
+Penobscot river, caused a change in the movements of the expedition,
+and it did not stop to take Machias, but seized Castine and Belfast,
+on the Penobscot bay, then pushed on with a sloop of war and small
+craft carrying in all 700 men, to capture this vessel. [Sidenote:
+Sept 9.] Machias was then seized, and all the country east of
+Penobscot taken possession of. [Sidenote: July 14.] The islands in
+Passamaquoddy bay had been seized and occupied two months previous.
+
+Our whole maritime coast was still threatened, and every seaport of
+any magnitude, was fortifying itself when Congress assembled again.
+
+The only other military movement of note during this fall, was an
+expedition which set out from Detroit, under the command of General
+McArthur. It consisted of 700 mounted men, seventy of whom were
+Indians, and for secresy, daring and skill was not surpassed during
+the war. Its object was to prevent the enemy from molesting Michigan
+during the winter, and if successful in its operations, eventually
+attack Burlington Heights, and form a junction with Generals Brown and
+Izard. This body of seven hundred bold and well-mounted borderers,
+left Detroit the 22d of October, and plunged at once into the
+wilderness. [Sidenote: Oct 22.] The long and straggling column would
+now be seen wading along the shallow shores of the lake, and then be
+lost in the primeval forest, to reappear on the bank of deep rivers,
+from whose farther shore the wilderness again spread away. The bivouac
+by night in the autumnal woods, or on the bank of a stream, presented
+a fine subject for a painter. Their seven hundred horses tied to the
+trees around, only half relieved by the ruddy fire that strove in
+vain to pierce the limitless gloom--the lofty trunks of trees receding
+away like the columns in some old dimly-lighted cathedral--the hardy
+and rough-looking frontiersmen, stretched with the half-clad savages
+around the fire--the sentinels scarcely discernible in the distance,
+all combined to form a picture which has a charm even for the most
+civilized and refined.
+
+It was, however, no holiday march--expedition was necessary to
+success, and the horses were kept to the top of their endurance.
+Straining up acclivities, floundering through swamps, struggling with
+the rapid currents of rivers, this detachment succeeded in penetrating
+more than two hundred miles into the enemy's country, and to within
+twenty-five miles of Burlington Heights. It marched more than four
+hundred miles, one hundred and eighty of it through an unbroken
+wilderness, defeated five hundred militia strongly posted, killed and
+wounded twenty-seven men, and took a hundred and eleven prisoners, and
+returned with the loss of but one man. [Sidenote: Oct 17.] In the
+discipline he maintained, the health of the troops, and their safe
+return, McArthur showed himself a skillful and able commander, while
+his subordinates deserve the highest commendation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ The Navy in 1814 -- Cruise of Captain Morris in the Adams --
+ Narrow escapes -- The Wasp and Reindeer -- Cruise of the
+ Wasp -- Sinks the Avon -- Mysterious fate of the Wasp -- The
+ Peacock captures the Epervier -- Lieutenant Nicholson.
+
+
+During the season of almost uninterrupted success on land and on our
+inland waters, we had but few vessels at sea, the greater part being
+blockaded, but those few nobly sustained the reputation won by the
+navy in the two previous years. The Guerriere 44, the Independence 74,
+and the Java 44, were launched during the summer, but remained in
+their docks till the close of the war. In the January previous Captain
+Morris, commanding the Adams, which had been cut down to a sloop of
+war, got to sea and took a few prizes. In the spring he captured an
+East Indiaman, but while taking possession of her an English fleet
+hove in sight, which compelled him to abandon the prize and crowd all
+sail to escape. Succeeding in throwing off his pursuers he gave chase
+to the Jamaica fleet which had passed him in the night, but failed in
+every attempt to cut out a vessel. [Sidenote: July 3.] Continuing
+eastward he at length made the Irish coast, but was soon after chased
+by an English frigate and pressed so closely that he found it
+necessary to throw overboard his anchors and two guns. This sacrifice,
+however, did not increase materially the distance between him and his
+adversary, and after dark, it falling a dead calm, Capt. Morris and
+his first Lieutenant Wadsworth, both of whom were on board the
+Constitution when first chased by the English fleet, got out their
+boats and by towing all night, succeeded in gaining two leagues by
+daylight. As soon as the commander of the English frigate discovered
+the trick that had been played him, he crowded all sail and kept in
+the wake of the Adams till ten at night, when the latter altering her
+course, escaped.
+
+But the ocean being filled with the enemy's cruisers, this persecuted
+solitary vessel was soon chased again by two frigates, for twenty-four
+hours, and only got off at last by the aid of a friendly fog. In
+August, however, she went ashore off the coast of Maine, while
+attempting to run the English blockade, as mentioned in the preceding
+chapter, and was so injured that Morris run her into the Penobscot
+River, where he was compelled to burn her to prevent her capture by
+the British.
+
+The Wasp put to sea, from Portsmouth, the first of May, and giving her
+canvass to the wind steered boldly for the English Channel. Leaving
+the British fleet blockading our ships at home, her commander, Captain
+Blakely, sought the English coast, resolved to strike at the enemy's
+commerce assembling there from every sea. It required constant
+watchfulness and great prudence to cruise on such dangerous ground as
+this, and had not all suspicion of an enemy in that quarter been
+removed, she would doubtless have been captured. The unexampled daring
+of the act alone saved her.
+
+On the 28th of June Blakely gave chase to a sail, which proved to be
+the English brig of war Reindeer, commanded by Captain Manners. The
+latter, though inferior in strength, showed no disinclination to
+close, and came down in gallant style. As they approached, the
+Reindeer by using a shifting twelve-pound carronade, was able to fire
+it five times before Blakely could get a gun to bear. At first within
+sixty, and afterwards within thirty yards, the crew stood for twelve
+minutes this galling fire without flinching. But when at length a
+favorable position was obtained, the broadsides of the American was
+delivered with such awful effect, that Captain Manners saw at once his
+vessel would be a wreck unless he run her aboard; and setting his
+sails he drove full on the Wasp. As the vessels fell foul he called
+to his men to follow him, and endeavored to leap on the deck of his
+antagonist. But coolly, as on a parade, the crew of the latter
+steadily repulsed every attempt to board.
+
+Captain Manners had been wounded early in the action, but still kept
+his feet, and just before boarding was struck by a shot which carried
+away the calves of both his legs. In this mangled condition he gave
+the orders to board, and leaping into the rigging of his own vessel in
+order to swing himself on that of his adversary, he was struck by two
+musket balls which entered the top of his head and passed out through
+his chin. Waving his sword above his head he exclaimed, "Oh, God!" and
+fell lifeless on the deck.
+
+After the enemy had been repulsed three times, the Wasp boarded in
+turn, and in one minute the conflict was over. The English vessel was
+literally a wreck, and had lost in killed and wounded sixty-seven out
+of one hundred and fifteen, constituting her crew, or more than half
+of her entire number. The Wasp had but five men killed and twenty-two
+wounded. [Sidenote: July 8.] Captain Blakely took his prize into
+L'Orient, where he burned her to prevent recapture. Up to this time he
+had taken eight merchantmen. [Sidenote: Aug. 27.] Remaining here till
+the latter part of August, he again set sail, and on the 1st of
+September cut out a vessel loaded with guns and military stores from
+a fleet of ten sail, convoyed by a seventy-four. Endeavoring to repeat
+the saucy experiment he was chased away by a man-of-war. The same
+evening, however, making four sail, he in turn gave chase to one,
+which immediately threw up rockets and fired signal guns to attract
+the attention of the other vessels. But Captain Blakely held steadily
+on, crashing along under a ten knot breeze, and as he approached the
+stranger fired a gun and hailed. His fire being returned he poured in
+a destructive broadside. Notwithstanding the swell was heavy and the
+night dark, his fire was terribly effective. For a night action it was
+remarkably short, and in forty minutes the enemy struck. But as the
+boat was about being lowered to take possession of her, Blakely saw
+beneath the lifting smoke a brig of war within musket-shot, and two
+more vessels rapidly closing. Ordering the boat to be run up again
+quickly, and the men to hasten to their posts, he filled away and
+catching the wind dead astern was soon out of sight. [Sidenote: Sept.
+1.] The enemy gave him one broadside and then turned to the captured
+vessel, whose guns of distress were echoing loudly over the sea. She
+soon sunk. This vessel was afterwards ascertained to be the Avon, of
+eighteen guns.
+
+Continuing his cruise, Blakely took three more vessels, among them a
+valuable prize, the Atalanta, of eight guns, which was immediately
+dispatched to the states.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept. 22.]
+
+This was the last direct tidings ever received from the gallant Wasp.
+Various rumors were afloat concerning her fate, but nothing certain of
+her after cruise, or the manner in which she was lost, was ever known.
+One report stated that an English frigate had put into Cadiz badly cut
+up by an American corvette, which had sunk in the night time, and so
+suddenly, that her name could not be ascertained. This was thought at
+first to be the Wasp, but no confirmation of this report being
+received, it was discredited. The spirited conduct of this little
+vessel had made her a great favorite with the nation, and a deep
+sympathy was universally felt for her mysterious fate.[8] Years passed
+by, when an incident occurred which awakened a fresh interest in her.
+Two officers on board the Essex, when she was captured at Valparaiso,
+had gone to Rio Janeiro, but were never after heard from. Inquiries
+were made by friends in every direction, but in vain. At last it was
+ascertained that they had taken passage in a Swedish brig for England,
+from which they had been transferred to the Wasp. The commander stated
+that on the 9th of October he was chased by a strange sail, which
+fired several guns, when he hove to and was boarded. The boarding
+officer, ascertaining there were two American officers on board, took
+them with him to his own ship. On their return, they told the Swedish
+captain that the strange sail was the Wasp, and they had determined to
+accept a passage in her. They did so, and nothing more was ever heard
+of them.
+
+[Footnote 8: She had been built to take the place of the vessel
+captured by the Poictiers, after she had taken the Frolic. She did not
+disgrace the name and character she bore.]
+
+This was sixteen days after the prize left her, and, according to the
+Swedish brig's reckoning, she was at the time nearly a thousand miles
+farther south, and where she very naturally might be. Added to this
+was another rumor, which seemed to throw still more light on her fate.
+Soon after her rencontre with the Swedish vessel, it was said that two
+English frigates chased off the southern coast an American
+sloop-of-war, and while in pursuit were struck with a heavy squall.
+After the squall was over, the sloop was no where to be seen. If the
+rumor be true, that vessel was no doubt the Wasp, for we had no other
+sloop-of-war in those seas at that time. Besides, when met by the
+Swedish brig, she was evidently bound in that direction, and should
+have arrived off the coast about the time mentioned in the rumor.
+Nothing is more probable than that she capsized and went down, while
+carrying a press of sail to escape her pursuers.
+
+At all events, whatever was her fate, the sea never rolled over a
+more gallant commander and crew. Watchful, full of resources,
+indefatigable and fearless, Captain Blakely was the model of a naval
+commander, and had he lived would no doubt have reached the highest
+rank in his profession.
+
+[Sidenote: March, 1814.]
+
+The Peacock, Captain Harrington, also started on a cruise in the
+spring, steering southward. On the 29th of April she made three sail,
+which proved to be merchantmen under convoy of the Epervier, a large
+brig-of-war. The former took to flight, while the latter bore up to
+engage. At the first fire the forward sails of the American were so
+cut up that they became nearly useless. There was, consequently, but
+little manoeuvering; the vessels moved off together, and a steady
+discharge of broadsides settled the contest. The force and weight of
+metal in this case were nearly equal, but the superior gunnery of the
+American was soon manifest, for in forty-two minutes the Epervier was
+so riddled that she had five feet of water in the hold. In this
+condition she struck, and with great difficulty was kept from sinking.
+Twenty-two of her crew were killed and wounded, while not a man in the
+Peacock was killed, and only two wounded. A hundred and eighteen
+thousand dollars in specie were found on board of her.
+
+Lieutenant Nicholson was sent home with the prize. He reached the
+American sea board in safety, but while running along the coast,
+steering for Savannah, was chased by an English frigate, and escaped
+capture only by one of those artifices so common among Yankee sailors.
+The wind being light, he crept close along shore, and kept in shoal
+water where the frigate dared not approach. The commander of the
+latter observing this, manned his boats and sent them forward in
+pursuit. The prize had but seventeen officers and men all told, and
+hence could make no serious resistance if boarded. As the boats came
+steadily on under sweeps, the fate of the Epervier appeared to be
+sealed, but Nicholson, putting the best face on the matter, took down
+his trumpet and thundered out his orders to yaw and pour in a
+broadside. The boats hesitated on hearing this dangerous command, and
+finally withdrew, leaving the prize a safe passage to the Savannah.
+
+[Sidenote: May 1.]
+
+Three days after, the Peacock also came in. The latter, however,
+remained in port but a short time, and again set sail, sweeping the
+seas to the bay of Biscay.
+
+Her cruise was conducted with great prudence and sagacity, and she
+returned in October, having captured fourteen merchantmen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ Third Session of the XIIIth Congress -- State of the
+ Treasury -- The President's Message -- Dallas appointed
+ Secretary of the Treasury -- His scheme and that of Eppes
+ for the relief of the country -- Our Commissioners at Ghent
+ -- Progress of the negotiations -- English protocol -- Its
+ effect on Congress and the nation -- Effect of its
+ publication on the English Parliament.
+
+
+[Sidenote: Sept. 19.]
+
+During the agitation and excitement preceding the bombardment of Fort
+McHenry, and the battles of Champlain and Plattsburg, the members of
+Congress were slowly gathering to the ruined Capital, and two days
+after Brown's gallant sortie from Fort Erie, assembled in the Patent
+Office, the only public building left standing by the enemy.
+
+Notwithstanding the glorious victories that had marked the summer
+campaign, a gloom rested on Congress. The Government, indeed,
+presented a melancholy spectacle, sitting amid the ashes of the
+Capital, while the fact could not be disguised that the Commissioners
+at Ghent gave no hope of peace. The war seemed far as ever from a
+termination, while England, released from the drains on her troops,
+navy and treasury, by the Continental war, was evidently making
+preparations for grander and more terrible exhibitions of her power.
+Her forces were gathering and her fleets accumulating upon our coast
+for the avowed purpose of demolishing our seaports, burning up our
+shipping, destroying our cities, and carrying a wide-spread desolation
+along our shores. To meet the expenses required to resist these
+attacks, a vast accession of funds was necessary, and yet the Treasury
+was worse than empty. The effort to borrow, in August, the paltry sum
+of six millions, a part of the $25,000,000 voted, had proved
+unsuccessful, not half the amount being taken and that at less than 80
+per cent. In May previous over nine millions and a half had been
+obtained at from 85 to 88 per cent, and yet while victories were
+illustrating our arms, not $3,000,000 would now be taken, and the
+offers for that all below 80 per cent.
+
+As the Treasury accounts stood at the close of the second quarter of
+the year 1814, Mr. Campbell, the Secretary, estimated that nearly
+twenty-five millions of dollars would be necessary to meet the
+expenditures of the remaining two quarters. The public revenue during
+that time would be nearly five millions, which the two loans and four
+millions of Treasury notes would swell to a little over thirteen
+millions, leaving about eleven millions to be obtained by some process
+or other. A foreign loan of six millions was recommended.
+
+Added to this the currency was thoroughly deranged. New banks had set
+a vast amount of paper afloat, while the specie was all drained off to
+pay for British goods, which surreptitiously got into the country. The
+banks of the District of Columbia suspended payment with the British
+invasion, and the panic spreading northward, there commenced a run
+upon the banks which in turn stopped payment, until out of New
+England, a large bank could scarcely be found that had not suspended.
+
+The expense of maintaining such a vast army of militia as was kept on
+foot, called for enormous disbursements, and many saw national
+bankruptcy in the future should the war continue.
+
+The burning of Washington furnished the President, in his message, an
+excellent occasion for making an appeal to the people. He was not
+constrained to fall back on the justice of the war, and persuade the
+nation that the invasion of Canada was both right and politic. The war
+had become defensive--men must now fight, not for maritime rights, not
+march to distant and questionable ground, but standing on their own
+hearth-stones, strike for their firesides and their homes. The Indian
+barbarities at the west, which inflamed to such a pitch of rage the
+Kentuckians, had been repeated by a civilized nation, and in speaking
+of them and the enemy, the President said: "He has avowed his purpose
+of trampling on the usages of civilized warfare, and given earnest of
+it in the plunder and wanton destruction of private property. *** His
+barbarous policy has not even spared those monuments of the arts and
+models of taste with which our country had enriched and embellished
+its infant metropolis. From such an adversary, hostility in its
+greatest force and worst forms may be looked for. The American people
+will face it with the undaunted spirit, which in our Revolutionary
+struggle, defeated his unrighteous projects. His threats and
+barbarities instead of dismay, will kindle in every bosom an
+indignation not to be extinguished but in the disaster and expulsion
+of such cruel invaders."
+
+The ardor and indignation of the people were easily roused, but these
+did not bring what just then was most needed, _money_.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept.]
+
+Campbell having resigned his place as Secretary of the Treasury,
+immediately after sending in his report, Alexander Dallas was
+appointed in his place, who brought forward a scheme for relieving the
+Government. Eppes, from the Committee of Ways and Means, also offered
+a project. He proposed to lay new taxes to the amount of eleven and a
+half millions, and make a new issue of Treasury Notes, redeemable
+after six months. Dallas agreed with him in the amount of taxes, but
+recommended also the creation of a National Bank with a capital of
+fifty millions, five of it in specie and the residue in government
+stock. This would regulate the currency by furnishing a circulating
+medium, and constitute a basis on which loans could be obtained.
+
+Bills were also brought in regulating the army.
+
+In the mean time unfavorable news arrived from our embassy at Ghent.
+They had been compelled to wait some time for the English
+Commissioners, spending the interval in a round of amusements and
+entertainments furnished by the people of Ghent and General Lyons,
+commanding the British troops in that place. At length, on the 7th of
+August, the Secretary of the English legation called at the American
+hotel, to arrange the place and day for commencing negotiations. No
+one but Mr. Bayard was in at the time, and he seeing no breach of
+diplomatic etiquette in the proposal of the English Secretary to meet
+next day at the hotel of the English legation, assented. But the other
+members when they returned and were told of the arrangements that had
+been made, were indignant. "What!" said Mr. Adams, "meet the English
+Ministers who have kept us here so long waiting the condescension of
+their coming, in the face of all Ghent--meet them at their bidding at
+their own hotel, to be the laughing stock of the city, of London, and
+of Europe?" "Never!" added Mr. Gallatin, "never!" Mr. Bayard replied,
+that the promise had been made, and they stood pledged. "No," said Mr.
+Adams, "_you_ may be, but we are not."
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 8.]
+
+Another place was therefore agreed upon, and the negotiations
+commenced. The city was filled with men, watching their progress, not
+only statesmen, but speculators eager to take advantage of the change
+in the price of stocks, which rose and fell with the wavering
+character of the proceedings.
+
+After expressing the pacific feelings of their government, the English
+ministers stated the three points which would probably arise, and on
+which they were instructed:
+
+1. The right of search to obtain seamen, and the claim of his
+Britannic Majesty to the perpetual allegiance of his subjects, whether
+naturalized in America or not.
+
+2. The Indian allies were to have a definite boundary fixed for their
+territory.
+
+3. There must be a revision of the boundary line between the United
+States and the adjacent British colonies.
+
+The question of the fisheries, it was intimated, would also come up.
+
+The American legation replied, that they had instructions upon the
+first and third propositions, but not on the second, nor on the
+subject of the fisheries. They also were instructed to obtain a
+definition of blockade, and to consider claims for indemnity in
+certain cases of seizure. After some discussion, the American embassy
+inquired if the pacification and settlement of a boundary for the
+Indians was a _sine qua non_. The reply was, yes. It was then asked if
+it was intended to preclude the United States from purchasing lands of
+the Indians, whose possessions clearly lay within the limits of their
+territory. An affirmative answer was given. The native tribes were to
+be kept simply as a barrier between the possessions of the two
+countries. On being told that no instructions had been given on this
+point, the English embassy expressed great surprise, and declared that
+they could do nothing until farther advices from their government. A
+messenger was therefore despatched to England that night, and the two
+embassies, after meeting next day to arrange a protocol, adjourned
+till the decision of the English cabinet could be received.
+
+Nine days after, Lord Castlereagh, elated with his success as English
+minister to the headquarters of the allied armies, on their way to
+Paris,--exulting over the downfall of Napoleon, and representing in
+himself the intoxication of the English people at the overthrow of
+their rival--haughty, unscrupulous, and overbearing, swept into Ghent
+with a train of twenty carriages, on his way to the great Congress of
+Vienna, where European diplomacy, in all its monstrous deformity and
+rottenness, was to be exhibited to the world.
+
+The next day the embassies met, and the reply of the English
+government was rendered. In the first place, the Indian boundary
+question was declared a _sine qua non_. The question then arose, what
+would become of the hundreds of American citizens residing at that
+time within the limits thus to be drawn. The reply was, they must
+shift for themselves.
+
+In the second place, the entire jurisdiction of the northern lakes,
+extending from Lake Ontario to Lake Superior, where our squadrons were
+riding victorious, must be surrendered to the British government, the
+United States not being permitted to erect even a military post on the
+southern shore, on their own soil, nor keep those already established
+there. As a backer to this insolent demand, the legation affirmed that
+the United States ought to consider it moderate, since England might
+justly have claimed a cession of territory within the States. Beyond
+Lake Superior, the question of boundary was open to discussion.
+Another item in this protocol required the surrender of that part of
+Maine over which a direct route from Halifax to Canada would
+necessarily pass. When asked what they proposed to do with those
+islands in the Passamaquoddy Bay, recently captured by the English,
+they replied, these were not subjects of discussion, belonging, of
+course, to Great Britain. They farther informed the American Legation
+that this extraordinary and magnanimous offer, on the part of his
+majesty, was not to remain open for any length of time--that if delay
+was demanded till instructions could be received from across the ocean
+on the one single question of Indian boundary, it would be considered
+withdrawn, and the English government feel itself at liberty to make
+other and less generous demands, as circumstances might indicate.
+
+To such arrogant claims but one answer could be given, and Gallatin,
+in sending them home, wrote that all negotiations might be considered
+at an end, and that no course was left for the United States but "in
+union and a vigorous prosecution of the war." Mr. Clay accepted an
+invitation to visit Paris, and Mr. Adams prepared to return to St.
+Petersburgh.
+
+While this news was slowly traversing the Atlantic in the cartel John
+Adams, the victories of Brown, Macomb, and Macdonough, were
+electrifying the nation.
+
+[Sidenote: Oct. 10.]
+
+On the 10th of October the President transmitted a message to
+Congress, with the despatches received from Ghent, and the protocol of
+the English legation. Their reading was listened to with breathless
+silence, and as the extraordinary claims set forth by England became
+one after another clearly revealed, the astonishment of the members
+exceeded all bounds, and they gazed at each other incredulously. The
+Federalists were paralyzed with disappointment. The party had never
+received such a blow since the commencement of the war. Their
+arguments were prostrated. They had always represented England as
+desirous of peace, fighting only because she was forced to by a
+reckless, unprincipled administration and party. Towards the nation at
+large she cherished no hostile feelings, and entertained no ultimate
+sinister designs. But the mask was now snatched away, and she stood
+revealed in all her arrogance and injustice. If any thing more than
+the ravages on our coast was needed to bind the nation together in one
+determined effort, it was furnished in these despatches. As the news
+spread on every side, the passions of men were kindled into rage.
+What, burn up our victorious war-ships on those great mediterraneans,
+the command of which had been gained by such vast expenditures and
+such heroic conduct--abandon forts standing on our own soil, around
+which such valiant blood had been shed? "Never, never," responded from
+every lip.
+
+Scarcely less excitement was produced by the discussion of the Indian
+boundary question. Stripped of its false pretences, it looked solely
+to the prevention of all settlement on our part, of the North-western
+territory, and designed to bar us forever from acquiring possessions
+in that quarter. To give some show of fairness to the transaction, it
+was proposed that both countries should be restricted from purchasing
+the land of the Indians, but leave the market open to the whole world
+beside. In short, that vast territory, including a large portion of
+Ohio, all of Michigan, Illinois and Indiana, must not only be
+surrendered by us, but placed under the complete control of the
+British government, whose ships of war were alone to sail the waters
+that washed its northern limits, and whose fortifications were to awe
+the inhabitants that occupied it. Never before had the cry of war rung
+so loudly over the land, and the nation began to prepare for the
+approaching conflict with an earnestness and determination that
+promised results worthy of itself and the cause for which it
+struggled. The Federalist journals came at last to the rescue,
+declaring that the terms offered were too humiliating and degrading to
+be entertained for a moment. Only one paper in Boston was besotted
+enough to assert that they were honorable and ought to be accepted.
+
+Congress, after the reception of this protocol and the accompanying
+despatches, took a different tone, and when the question of ways and
+means for the coming year was taken up, a spirit was exhibited, that
+since the declaration of war, had never been witnessed in its
+deliberations. The fear and hesitation which were weighing it down,
+vanished, and it began to assume the character and exhibit the
+qualities belonging to it, but which the spirit of faction had kept in
+abeyance. The Legislatures of the different states responded to the
+sentiments of the commissioners--declaring that the terms proposed
+were insulting and disgraceful, and called for a vigorous prosecution
+of the war. New York voted a local force of 12,000 men, and Virginia
+followed her example.
+
+It was a grand stroke of policy, on the part of the administration, to
+fling those despatches at once into Congress and thus before the
+nation. Their sudden publication took the British Ministry by
+surprise, for it exposed their extraordinary demands to the whole
+realm, and they remonstrated against such undiplomatic conduct.
+
+Before the Convention of Ghent the English press ridiculed
+concessions, declaring that punishment must be inflicted on the
+Americans, and they be chastised into humility and supplication. The
+war with us was a Lilliputian affair compared to the struggles out of
+which England had come victorious, and the Convention was not looked
+upon so much as the meeting of Commissioners to adjust things
+amicably, as furnishing the opportunity for the American government to
+make a request to have hostilities cease. But the disasters to
+Drummond, at Fort Erie, to Prevost at Plattsburgh, and the utter
+demolition of the British fleet on Champlain, together with the
+repulse from Baltimore, acted as a condenser on much of this vapor.
+[Sidenote: Nov. 4.] The vast expenditures wasted on the Canadian
+frontier were now all to be renewed, newer and stronger armies were to
+be transported to our shores, and when the Prince Regent opened
+Parliament he plainly hinted that it would be well to avoid all this,
+if possible. The arrival of the despatches which the President had
+laid before Congress, containing the protocol of the English Embassy,
+created a deep sensation in both houses of Parliament. The claims set
+up by the English government were loudly denounced by many of the
+members, and it was soon apparent that if the war was pressed to make
+them good, a large opposition party would be formed, not only in
+Parliament but in the country. Sixty manufacturing towns sent in
+petitions for peace. Cobbett, who had all along defended the conduct
+of the United States, was unsparing in his flagellations of the
+British government, and of those papers that advocated the war.
+
+While the war question was passing through these phases in England,
+and on the continent, Congress was preparing to call out the whole
+resources of the country. But a second despatch received from Ghent,
+stating that negotiations were resumed and that the British
+government had receded from the Indian boundary question, awakened
+lively hopes that peace would be secured.
+
+But the energy with which Congress had entered on the question of ways
+and means, began to expend itself in party strife. Monroe's plan for
+raising a standing force of 80,000 men to serve for two years; a bill
+authorizing the enlistment of minors; and Dallas' National Bank
+scheme, to relieve the finances of the country, after fierce
+discussions and many modifications, one after another fell to the
+ground. In the mean time, the treasury was compelled to subsist on the
+issue of Treasury notes, which as business paper were worth only 78
+per cent.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 15.]
+
+New tax bills were soon after passed--laying taxes on carriages
+according to their value; 20 cts. per gallon on distilled spirits;
+increasing a hundred per cent. the tax on auction duties, and 50 per
+cent. on postage. Heavy duties were also placed on most goods of
+domestic manufacture, with the exception of cotton, and a direct tax
+of six millions was levied on the nation.
+
+As time passed on, and no farther tidings was received from Ghent,
+Congress again took up and finally passed the bill for the enlistment
+of minors. The Legislatures of Connecticut and Massachusetts
+immediately passed acts requiring the judges of these respective
+states to discharge on habeas corpus all enlistments made under the
+provisions of the bill, and to punish with fine and imprisonment all
+who engaged in it, and removed minors out of the state to prevent
+their discharge.
+
+These acts of Congress, however, did not avail to help the government
+out of the troubles that were once more gathering thick about it.
+Everything was at a stand still for lack of funds--even the recruiting
+service got on slowly. In the mean time, negotiations for peace did
+not wear a very encouraging aspect, while the gain of the Federalists
+in some of the states, in the recent elections, and the Hartford
+Convention, helped to swell the evils under which the administration
+labored.
+
+The conscription scheme would not work in many of the states, and
+resort was had to the old system of raising 40,000 volunteers for
+twelve months, and the acceptance of as many more for local defence.
+
+[Illustration: Painful March of Volunteers.]
+
+The administration then turned its attention to the navy, the pride
+and glory of the country, and a bill was passed Congress authorizing
+the equipment of twenty small cruisers. Under its provisions two small
+squadrons of five vessels each, one to be commanded by Porter and the
+other by Perry, had been set on foot, whose object was to inflict on
+the British West Indies the havoc and destruction with which the enemy
+had visited our coast. But it was difficult to obtain seamen, as most
+of those who had enlisted during the last year had been sent to the
+northern lakes to serve on fresh water--a duty always unpalatable to a
+sailor. Our vessels of war being blockaded, we had no occasion for
+seamen on the coast, and could find employment for them on the lakes
+alone. Crowningshield, who had succeeded Jones as Secretary of the
+Navy, actually recommended a conscription of seamen.
+
+In the mean time, Great Britain had concentrated in Canada a larger
+force than she had ever before assembled there, ready to march on
+the states, while Cockburn, in possession of Cumberland island,
+threatened the coasts of Georgia and South Carolina with the same
+ravages that marked his course in the Chesapeake. Added to all this,
+a heavy force was known to be on its way to New Orleans, which the
+government had neglected to defend, and hence expected to see fall
+into the hands of the enemy. The prospect was black as night around
+the administration--not a ray of light visited it from any quarter
+of the heavens. Funds and troops and ships had never been so scarce,
+while overpowering fleets and armies were assembling on our coasts
+and frontiers. [Sidenote: Jan. 17, 1815.] In the midst of all this,
+as if on purpose to drive the government to despair, Dallas came out
+with a new report on the state of the Treasury, in which he informed
+it that the year had closed with $19,000,000 of unpaid debts, to
+meet which there was less than $2,000,000 on hand, and $4,500,000
+of taxes not yet collected. The revenue was estimated at
+$11,000,000, of which only one million was from imports, the rest
+from taxes. While he thus exhibited the beggared condition of the
+Treasury, he informed the administration that fifty millions would
+be needed to meet the expenditures of the coming year, and gravely
+asked where it all was to come from. The government looked on in
+dismay, and to what measures it would have been compelled to resort
+for relief it is impossible to say; but in reviewing that period one
+shudders to contemplate the probable results of another year of war,
+and another Hartford Convention. But like the sun suddenly bursting
+through a dark and ominous thundercloud, just before he sinks
+beneath the horizon, came at length the news of the great victory at
+New Orleans, and the conclusion of peace at Ghent. Never before was
+an administration so loudly called upon to ask that public thanks
+might be offered for deliverance from great perils.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+HARTFORD CONVENTION.
+
+1814.
+
+ Attitude of New England -- Governor Strong -- Views and
+ purposes of the Federalists -- Anxiety of Madison --
+ Prudence of Colonel Jesup -- Result of the Convention --
+ Fears of the people -- Fate of the Federalists.
+
+
+While Government was thus struggling to avert the perils that every
+day grew darker around it, and the negotiations at Ghent were drawing
+to a conclusion, serious events were occurring in the New England
+States.
+
+Although the ravages of the enemy along our coast during the summer,
+and our victories at the north in autumn, together with the insulting
+demands of England, had seriously weakened the Federalist power, and
+brought it into still greater disrepute with the mass of the people,
+and passing events admonished delay, still they resolved to carry out
+a favorite plan of calling a Convention of the disaffected States, to
+consult on the best mode of defending themselves, and of forcing the
+administration into the adoption of their measures, and to take steps
+towards amending the Constitution. New England had all along denied
+the right of the General Government to call out the militia, except
+for the defence of the States in which they resided, and demanded the
+control of her own troops, and consequently of a large portion of her
+own revenue. Heavy complaints were also made against the direct taxes
+levied, and many refused to ride in coaches, or use those things
+taxed, thus placing themselves beside the revolutionary patriots, and
+making the General Government resemble England in its oppression.
+
+Massachusetts, with Governor Strong as its Executive head, took the
+lead in all movements designed to carry out these projects.
+Resolutions had passed the Legislature, raising an army of ten
+thousand men, and a million of money to support it. This army was to
+be officered by Governor Strong, and its movements directed by
+Federalist councils. Such a large force, raised not to aid the
+administration to carry on the war, but for selfish ends, naturally
+awakened the gravest fears, and the President saw in it the first step
+towards armed opposition. All this may be defensible, but the gallant
+sons of Kentucky, with their gray-haired but chivalrous Governor at
+their head, streaming through the northern forests, to drive back from
+the feeble settlements of Ohio the savage hordes that were laying
+them waste, and Governor Strong, bidding the militia of his State stay
+at home and take care of themselves, present a contrast so widely
+different, that no sophistry can make them appear equally patriotic
+and unselfish.
+
+[Sidenote: Oct. 18.]
+
+In order to bring the whole eastern section into similar measures, and
+to give union to the opposition, a resolution was passed calling a
+Convention of the New England States, to meet at Hartford, December
+15th, to deliberate on the best method of defence against the enemy,
+and to take measures for procuring amendments to the Constitution,
+which the Federalists had ascertained, since the war began, to be a
+most worthless instrument. The letter accompanying this resolution
+being laid before the Connecticut Legislature, seven delegates were
+appointed to the Convention, to meet the twelve sent from
+Massachusetts; Rhode Island sent four, making in all twenty-three, to
+which three County delegates from New Hampshire were added. Vermont
+refused to have any thing to do with the matter. These resolutions did
+not pass without violent opposition in each of the Legislatures.
+Holmes, of Massachusetts, openly declared his suspicions that
+Massachusetts designed to head a combination for the dissolution of
+the Union. The raising of an army of ten thousand men, not subject to
+the orders of the General Government, confirmed his fears, and gave a
+practical character to opinions hostile to the confederacy.
+
+Harrison Gray Otis and John Cabot, were leaders of the Massachusetts
+delegation.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 15.]
+
+No body of men ever assembled under such universal execration and
+odium as did these delegates. Except the few Federalist journals in
+New England, the entire press of the nation denounced them, one and
+all, as traitors.
+
+George Cabot being elected President, and Timothy Dwight, Secretary,
+the Convention proceeded to deliberate on the momentous questions they
+had proposed to discuss, with closed doors. Madison was in trepidation
+and could speak of nothing but the Convention, and sent Colonel Jesup
+to watch it. To prevent his design from being suspected, he directed
+this gallant officer to make Hartford a recruiting station.
+
+Jesup had had interviews with Governor Tompkins, to ascertain what aid
+he could afford in case it became necessary to resort to force. He was
+satisfied that the treasonable designs of the delegates had been much
+exaggerated, but he wished to be prepared for any emergency, and
+having arranged his plans, quietly awaited the result of their
+deliberations. He was in constant correspondence with Monroe,
+Secretary of War, and did much towards allaying the fears of the
+President, and promised if open treason exhibited itself, to crush it
+and its authors, with one decisive blow. Ingratiating himself with
+some of the delegates of the Convention and with the authorities of
+Hartford by his conciliatory and agreeable manner; and winning the
+respect of all by his prudent conduct, he soon became convinced that a
+resolution for disunion, if offered, could not be carried.
+
+At length, after three weeks of secret session, this dreaded
+Convention, on whose mysterious sittings the eyes of the nation had
+been turned, adjourned, and every one waited with anxiety to hear the
+decision to which it had come. The shadowy forms of disunion and
+treason had so long been seen presiding over its labors, that some
+monstrous birth was expected. But nature moved on in her accustomed
+courses, and no shock was felt by the republic, and instead of a shell
+flung into the Union, rending it asunder, there appeared a long and
+heavy document containing the collective wisdom of these twenty-six
+men. After going over the transgressions of the administration, from
+first to last, it passed to the defects of the Constitution. It
+modestly remarked that the enumeration of all the improvements of
+which this instrument was susceptible, and the proposal of all the
+amendments necessary to make it perfect, was a task which the
+Convention had "not thought proper to assume." After paying this
+flattering testimony to the grand and glorious intellects who framed
+the Constitution, it proceeded to mention six amendments on which
+there should be immediate action. The first related to the
+apportionment of representation among the slave States. The second to
+the admission of new States, restricting the powers of Congress in
+this respect, in order to keep down western influence. The third, to
+the right to pass restrictive and embargo acts, and carry on offensive
+war. The fifth, to exclude foreigners from holding places of honor,
+trust or profit under Government, and the last to limiting the
+Presidential office to one term.
+
+Resolutions and recommendations in accordance with these sentiments,
+were sent to the separate states represented in that Convention.
+
+Delegates were also appointed to repair to Washington to remonstrate
+with the President, some say to threaten him, and insist on his
+resignation. No treason appeared in all this, but the serious
+discussion of the question of disunion in the preamble, and the
+hypothetical cases put, in which such a step would be justifiable,
+showed that it had been mooted and seriously entertained by some of
+the members.
+
+The tone of the paper was bad, egotistical, and mutinous. It
+endeavored to arraign the states of New England against the
+government--urged them to resist forcible drafts and conscriptions,
+and raise armies of their own to co-operate each with the other in
+time of need.
+
+This exposé, however, did not satisfy the Democrats, who insisted that
+some deep-laid scheme was back of all this--that the secret records of
+the Convention would disclose blacker transactions than had yet seen
+the light, and from that time on, those twenty delegates have been
+stigmatized as traitors. They, on the other hand, have defended
+themselves from the aspersion, and declared that they were governed by
+the highest patriotic motives and love to the union.
+
+The truth lies, doubtless, somewhere between these extremes. The error
+of the accusers consists in making one, or two, or more delegates
+represent the Convention. There probably were men present whose
+political animosities had carried them so far beyond the limits of
+reason, that they would rather dissolve the union than live two years
+longer under the sway of Madison and his party. These views might have
+been expressed, but the Convention, in refusing to endorse them, was
+not responsible for them.
+
+But laying all this aside, there is no doubt that the Convention was
+called to organize one section of the republic against the other, and
+it depended on circumstances entirely to what extent that opposition
+should go, and what form it took. This may not be treason, and yet be
+nearly akin to it. It depends very much on the simple question whether
+the evils contemplated, as justifying open opposition, are _real_ or
+_imaginary_. A deliberate effort to ruin New England and deprive her
+of her constitutional rights, would certainly justify secession. All
+this the Federalists believed the government had done, and that party
+tyranny and oppression could no farther go. The light evils under
+which they suffered had become so magnified, in the heat of party
+strife, that many were prepared to act precisely as others would do
+under real wrongs.
+
+The obloquy that has fallen upon that Convention was merited. The time
+it chose for its session, when the country was staggering under the
+weight of a war which, however unjustifiably begun, it could not then
+close with honor or justice, and the lordly tone it assumed to
+Congress--the cold and unpatriotic feelings that characterized its
+deliberations, merit the deepest condemnation. Under a change of
+fortunes and a continuance of the war, it might, and probably would,
+have grown into a shape of evil. As events turned out, it has proved a
+blessing, for it stands as a beacon, warning all leaders of party
+factions of their fate, who, in national distress, cripple the
+government, and, by their hostility, help the enemy to inflict sorer
+evils and deeper disgrace upon a common country. It also shows how
+local interests, views, and feelings, however magnified at the time by
+peculiar circumstances, are derided or forgotten, in a movement that
+affects the fate of a hemisphere.
+
+
+
+
+THE INVASION.
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+ General Jackson appointed Major-General -- Hostility of
+ Spain -- Gallant defence of Fort Bowyer -- Seizure of
+ Pensacola -- Jackson at New Orleans -- Approach and landing
+ of the British -- Jackson proclaims martial law -- Night
+ attack on the British -- Jackson entrenches himself -- First
+ attack of the British -- Second attack -- Final Assault --
+ The battle and the victory -- Jackson fined by Judge Hall --
+ Arrival of the Treaty of Peace -- Great Rejoicings --
+ Delegates of the Hartford Convention -- Remarks on the
+ treaty.
+
+
+In the mean time, great anxiety was felt for the fate of New Orleans,
+towards which an imposing armament was hastening, bearing a veteran
+army fresh from the victorious fields of Spain. England had loaned
+this army to feudalism in Europe for the overthrow of free principles
+there, and intoxicated with success, resolved to use it to carry out
+here the same tyrannical system which has ever since been covering her
+with infamy and for which the final day of reckoning has not yet
+arrived.
+
+Jackson had been appointed Major-General in place of Harrison, who
+resigned, and given the command of the southern army to which was
+entrusted the protection of the coast near the mouth of the
+Mississippi. Pensacola, then under Spanish authority, was the resort
+of British emissaries, who stirred up the surrounding savages to
+massacre and bloodshed, and he determined as a first step to take
+active measures against it. [Sidenote: August.] He sent Captain Gordon
+to reconnoitre the place, who reported, on his return, that he had
+seen a number of soldiers and several hundred savages in British
+uniform under drill by British officers. Jackson immediately
+despatched this report to government. Under such a palpable violation
+of treaty stipulations there was only one course to be pursued, and
+Gen. Armstrong, the Secretary of War, issued an order authorizing
+Jackson to attack the town. This order was made out; but, by some
+mysterious process, was so long in getting into the post-office, that
+it never reached its destination till the 17th of January the next
+year. Jackson waited patiently for the sanction of his government to
+move forward, not wishing that his first important step as
+Major-General in the regular army should meet the disapproval of those
+who had entrusted him with power. But a proclamation, issued by a
+British officer named Nicholls, and dated Pensacola, calling on all
+the negroes and savages, nay, even the Americans themselves, to rally
+to the British standard, put an end to his indecision.
+
+In the mean time, Nicholls made an attempt on Fort Bowyer, a small
+redoubt, garrisoned by one hundred and twenty men, and defended by
+twenty pieces of cannon. This fortress commanded the entrance from the
+Gulf to Mobile. [Sidenote: Sept. 12.] To capture it, four British
+ships, carrying ninety guns, and a land force of over seven hundred
+men were despatched from Pensacola. On the 15th, the ships took up
+their position within musket-shot of the fort, and opened their fire.
+The land force, in the mean time, had gained the rear, and commenced
+an attack. Major Lawrence, with the brave little garrison under his
+command, met this double onset with the coolness of a veteran.
+Scattering the motley collection under Nicholls, with a few discharges
+of grape-shot, he turned his entire attention to the vessels of war.
+Being in such close range, the cannonading on both sides was terrific.
+The incessant and heavy explosions shook that little redoubt to its
+foundations; but at the end of three hours, the smoke slowly curled
+away from its battered sides, revealing the flag still flying aloft,
+and the begrimed cannoniers standing sternly beside their pieces.
+After the firing of the enemy ceased, the ship Hermes was seen
+drifting helplessly on a sand-bank, while the other vessels were
+crowding all sail seaward. The former soon after grounded within six
+hundred yards of the fort, whose guns opened on her anew with
+tremendous effect, and she soon blew up. Out of the one hundred and
+seventy who composed her crew, only twenty escaped. The other ships
+suffered severely, and the total loss of the enemy was one ship
+burned, and two hundred and thirty-two men killed and wounded, while
+only eight of the garrison were killed. Nicholls effected his retreat
+to Pensacola, where the governor received him as his guest, and threw
+open the public stores to the soldiers. On the flag-staff of the fort
+were "entwined the colors of Spain and England," as if on purpose to
+announce that all neutrality was at an end.
+
+These things coming to Jackson's ear, he resolved to delay no longer
+but get possession of the town and fort at once, "peaceably if he
+could, forcibly if he must." [Sidenote: Nov. 6.] He immediately
+hastened to Fort Montgomery, where he had assembled four thousand men,
+and putting himself at their head, in four days encamped within two
+miles of the place, and despatched a flag to the Spanish governor,
+disclosing his object and purpose. The messenger was fired upon from
+the fort, and compelled to return. Jackson's fiery nature was
+instantly aroused by this insult, yet remembering that he was acting
+without the sanction of government, he resolved still to negotiate.
+Having, at length, succeeded in opening a Correspondence with the
+governor, he told him that he had come to take possession of the
+town, and hold it for Spain till she was able to preserve her
+neutrality. The governor refusing entirely to be relieved from his
+charge, Jackson put his columns in motion and marched straight on the
+town. At the entrance, a battery of two cannon opened on his central
+column; but these being speedily carried by storm, together with two
+fortified houses, the troops, with loud shouts, pressed forward, and
+in a few minutes were masters of the place. The Spanish governor no
+sooner saw the American soldiers with loud hurrahs inundating the
+streets, than he rushed forward imploring mercy, and promising an
+immediate surrender. Jackson at once ordered the recall to be sounded,
+and retired without the town. The commandant of the fort, however,
+refused to surrender it, when Jackson ordered an assault. The former
+wisely averted the approaching blow by lowering his flag. The British
+fled, taking with them their allies, four hundred of whom being
+negroes, were carried to the West Indies, and sold for slaves.
+
+Having thus chastised the Spanish governor, and broken up the plans
+laid to renew the Indian war, Jackson took up his march for New
+Orleans, against which he had no doubt the large force that had left
+the eastern coast was directed. He established his headquarters there,
+on the first of December; and three days after, the news that a large
+British fleet was approaching the coast, spread through the city. The
+report was soon confirmed, and Jackson, whom danger always
+tranquilized, while it filled him with tenfold energy, began to
+prepare for the approaching shock.
+
+New Orleans, numbering at that time only thirty thousand inhabitants,
+was but recently purchased from France, and the population, being
+composed mostly of those in whose veins flowed Spanish and French
+blood, did not feel the same patriotic ardor that animated the Eastern
+cities. Many were known to be hostile, and were suspected of carrying
+on treasonable correspondence with the enemy. Feeling that he had but
+a slender hold on the city, and knowing that secret foes watched and
+reported all his movements, Jackson was compelled to act with extreme
+caution.
+
+This hostility, as it were, in his own camp, added immensely to the
+embarrassments that surrounded him. But calm, keen, resolute,
+tireless, and full of courage, he soon inspired the patriotic citizens
+with confidence. Resources they had not dreamed of, sprang up at his
+bidding. But it needed all the renown he had won, and all his personal
+influence, to impart the faintest promise of success.
+
+He had brought only a portion of his troops with him from Pensacola.
+But no sooner did he arrive, than he inspected narrowly the inlets,
+bayous, and channels, marked out the location of works, ordered
+obstructions raised, and then called on the different States to send
+him help. A thousand regulars were immediately ordered to New Orleans,
+while the Tennessee militia, under General Carrol, and the mounted
+riflemen, under General Coffee, hastened as of old, to his side.
+Concealing as much as possible the weakness of his force, and the bad
+appointments of many of the soldiers, he strained every nerve to
+increase the means of defence. The French inhabitants forgot their
+hostility to the Americans in greater hate of the English, while many
+others, who, hitherto, had taken little or no interest in the war,
+roused by the sudden danger that threatened them, flew to arms. The
+free negroes and refugees from St. Domingo, formed themselves into a
+black regiment, and were incorporated into the army. Jackson's energy
+and courage soon changed the whole current of feeling, and, day and
+night, the sounds of martial preparation echoed along the streets of
+the city. The excitement swelled higher and higher, as the hostile
+fleet gradually closed towards the mouth of the Mississippi. But one
+thought occupied every bosom--one topic became the theme of all
+conversation. Consternation and courage moved side by side; for while
+the most believed Jackson to be invincible, others, carefully weighing
+the force of the armament approaching, could not but anticipate
+discomfiture and destruction. Nor was this surprising; for a fleet of
+more than eighty sail, under the command of Admiral Cochrane, carrying
+on their decks eleven thousand veteran troops, led by men of renown,
+was advancing on the city. Besides this formidable land force, there
+were twelve thousand seamen and marines. The facts alone were
+sufficient to cause anxiety and alarm; but rumor magnified them
+fourfold. To resist all this, New Orleans had no vessels of war, no
+strong fortresses, no army of veteran troops. General Jackson, with
+his undisciplined and half-armed yeomanry, alone stood between the
+town and destruction. He was not ignorant of the tremendous force
+advancing against him; but still he was calm and resolute. To the
+panic-stricken women, who roamed the streets, filling the air with
+shrieks and cries of alarm, he said, "_The enemy shall never reach the
+city._"
+
+New Orleans, situated on the eastern bank of the Mississippi, was
+accessible not only through the various mouths of the river, but also
+with small vessels through lakes Borgne and Ponchartrain, and was
+therefore a difficult place to defend, for no one could tell by what
+way, or by how many ways the enemy would approach. Jackson saw that he
+would be compelled to divide his forces in order to guard every
+avenue. In the mean time, while he watched the approaching force, he
+kept his eye on the city. The press did not manfully sustain him, and
+the legislature, then in session, looked upon his actions with
+suspicion, if not with hostile feelings. Although a native of another
+State, and having no personal interest in the fate of the place, whose
+authorities treated him with coldness, he nevertheless, determined to
+save it at all hazards, and while apparently bending his vast energies
+to meet an external foe, boldly assumed the control of the municipal
+authority, declared martial law, and when Judge Hall liberated a
+traitor whom he had imprisoned, sternly ordered the Judge himself into
+confinement.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 9.]
+
+At length, the excited inhabitants were told that the British fleet
+had reached the coast; sixty sail being seen near the mouth of the
+Mississippi. Commodore Patterson immediately despatched Lieutenant
+Jones with five gun-boats to watch its motions. This spirited
+commander, in passing through Lake Borgne, discovered that the enemy,
+instead of approaching direct by the river, was advancing up the
+lakes. In hovering around them to ascertain their designs, he
+unfortunately got becalmed, and in that position was attacked by forty
+barges, containing twelve hundred men. Notwithstanding he had under
+him less than two hundred men, he refused to surrender, and gallantly
+returned the fire of the enemy. For a whole hour he stubbornly
+maintained the unequal conquest; but, at length, after killing nearly
+double his entire force, he was compelled to strike his flag.
+
+The British had now complete control of lakes Ponchartrain and Borgne,
+and advancing up the latter, entered a canal, and finally effected a
+landing on the levee, about eight miles from the city. This levee acts
+as a bank to keep the river from the inland, which is lower than the
+surface of the water. It varies in width from a few hundred yards to
+two or three miles, and is covered with plantations. Thus, now almost
+like a causeway, and again like an elevated plateau, it stretches away
+from the city, with the river on one side, and an impassable swamp on
+the other.
+
+The forts that commanded the river were, by this manoeuvre of the
+enemy, rendered comparatively useless, and an open road to the city
+lay before him. Jackson no sooner heard that the British had effected
+a landing, than he determined at once to attack them before their
+heavy artillery and the main body of the army could be brought
+forward. On the 23d, therefore, a few hours after they had reached the
+banks of the Mississippi, his columns were in motion, and by evening
+halted within two miles of the hostile force. His plans were
+immediately laid--the schooner of war, Caroline, commanded by
+Commodore Patterson, was ordered to drop quietly down the river, soon
+after dark, and anchor abreast the British encampment. General Coffee,
+with between six and seven hundred men, was directed to skirt the
+swamp to the left of the levee, and gain, undiscovered, the enemy's
+rear; while he himself, with thirteen hundred troops, would march
+directly down the river along the highway, and assail them in front.
+The guns of the Caroline were to be the signal for a general attack.
+She, unmolested, swept noiselessly down with the current, gained her
+position, dropped her anchors, and opened her fire. The thunder and
+blaze of her guns, as grape-shot and balls came rattling and crashing
+into the camp of the British, were the first intimation they received
+of an attack. At the same time, Generals Coffee and Jackson gave the
+orders to advance. Night had now arrived, and although there was a
+moon, the fast-rising mist from the swamps and river mingling with the
+smoke of the guns, so dimmed her light that objects could be discerned
+only a short distance, save the watch-fires of the enemy, which burned
+brightly through the gloom. Guided by these, Coffee continued to
+advance, when suddenly he was met by a sharp fire. The enemy, retiring
+before the shot of the Caroline, had left the bank of the river, not
+dreaming of a foe in their rear. Coffee was taken by surprise; but
+this brave commander had been in too many perilous scenes to be
+disconcerted, and ordering the charge to be sounded, swept the field
+before him.
+
+Again and again the British rallied, only to be driven from their
+position. At length they made a determined stand in a grove of orange
+trees, behind a ditch which was lined with a fence. But the excited
+troops charged boldly over the ditch, fence, and all, and lighting up
+the orange grove with the fire of their guns, and awakening its echoes
+with their loud huzzas, pressed fiercely after the astonished enemy,
+and forced them back to the river. Here the latter turned at bay, and
+for half an hour, maintained a determined fight. But being swept by
+such close and destructive volleys, they at length clambered down the
+levee, and turning it into a breastwork, repelled every attempt to
+dislodge them.
+
+In the mean time, Jackson had advanced along the river. Guided by the
+guns of the Caroline, and the rockets of the enemy, that rose hissing
+from the gloom, he pressed swiftly forward. He had given directions to
+move by heads of companies, and as soon as they reached the enemy, to
+deploy into line, which was to be extended till it joined that of Gen.
+Coffee, thus forcing the British back upon the river, and keeping them
+under the guns of the Caroline. But, instead of doing this, they
+formed into line at the outset. The levee being wide where the march
+commenced, no inconvenience was felt from this order; but, as it grew
+narrower, the left wing was gradually forced in, and being a little in
+advance, crowded and drove back the centre, creating confusion and
+arresting its progress. The whole, however, continued to press
+forward, and soon came upon the enemy, entrenched behind a deep ditch.
+Jackson, perceiving the advantage of their position, ordered a charge
+at once. The troops marched up to the edge of the ditch, poured one
+destructive volley over, then leaped after. The British retired behind
+another, and another, only to be again forced to retreat. At length,
+Jackson halted; the enemy had withdrawn into the darkness, the
+Caroline had almost ceased her fire, while but random volleys were
+heard in the direction of Coffee's brigade. He knew not where to renew
+the conflict, while the rapidly increasing fog shrouded everything
+in still greater darkness and uncertainty. Finding, too, that his left
+wing had got into inextricable confusion, and that a part of Coffee's
+troops were in no better condition, he determined to withdraw.
+
+While these things were passing on the banks of the Mississippi, and
+gloom and uncertainty hung over New Orleans, our commissioners at
+Ghent were wrapt in pleasant slumbers, for the next day was to witness
+the signature of a treaty of peace between the two countries, when
+the ravages of war should give place to the peaceful pursuits of
+commerce.
+
+Jackson had laid his plans with skill, and entertained no doubt of
+success; and but for the fact that the Caroline commenced her fire a
+little too early, and that the after false movement of his left wing
+prevented the rapid advance of the centre, he no doubt would have
+slain or captured nearly the whole three thousand opposed to him. But
+night attacks are always subject to failure through mistakes caused by
+the darkness, especially if the movements are at all complicated. A
+sudden, heavy onset, overturning every thing before it--a single,
+concentrated blow, like the fall of an avalanche--are best fitted for
+the night.
+
+Still, Jackson did not despair of success, and determined at daybreak
+to renew the attack. But it was soon ascertained, from prisoners and
+deserters, that by morning the enemy would be six thousand strong,
+making a disparity against him he could not hope to overcome. He
+therefore fell back to a deep ditch that stretched from the
+Mississippi, across the entire levee, to the swamp. Behind this he
+arrayed his troops, resolved, since nothing else could be done, to
+make there a determined stand. In his unsuccessful assault, he had
+lost, in killed, wounded, and prisoners, two hundred and forty men;
+while the enemy had been weakened by nearly double that number.
+
+Jackson's first plan having failed, all his hopes now rested on a
+successful defence of his position. The gun-boats had been destroyed,
+leaving the lakes open to the hostile fleet. All the passes to the
+city had been guarded in vain. Through an unimportant and almost
+unknown canal, the enemy had passed unmolested, and landed where
+nothing but undisciplined troops lay between him and the city. Too
+strong to be assailed, the British could now complete their
+arrangements and array their strength at leisure. Undismayed, however,
+and unshaken in his confidence, Jackson gathered his little band
+behind this single ditch, and coolly surveyed his chances. He knew the
+history and character of the troops opposed to him; he knew also how
+uncertain untrained militia were in a close and hot engagement. Still
+he resolved to try the issue in a great and desperate battle. No
+sooner was this determination taken, than he set about increasing the
+strength of his position with every means in his power. He deepened
+and widened the ditch; and where it terminated in the swamp, cut down
+the trees, thus extending the line still further in, to prevent being
+outflanked. The gallant Coffee was placed here, who, with his noble
+followers, day after day, and night after night, stood knee-deep in
+the mud, and slept on the brush they piled together to keep them from
+the water. Sluices were also opened in the levee, and the waters of
+the Mississippi turned on the plain, covering it breast-deep. The
+earth was piled still higher on the edge of the ditch; while cotton
+bales were brought and covered over to increase the breadth and depth
+of the breastwork.
+
+With a will unyielding as fate itself, tireless energy, and a frame of
+iron to match, Jackson no sooner set his heart on a great object, than
+he toiled towards it with a resolution--nay, almost fierceness--that
+amazed men.
+
+Night and day the soldiers were kept at work, the sound of the spade
+and pickaxe never ceased, while the constant rolling of wheels was
+heard, as wagons and carts sped to and from the city. Jackson, with
+his whole nature roused to the highest pitch of excitement, moved amid
+this busy scene, its soul and centre. Impervious to fatigue, he worked
+on when others sank to rest; and at midday and midnight, was seen
+reviewing his troops, or traversing the trenches to cheer the
+laborers; and for four days and nights scarcely took a moment's rest.
+
+In addition to the breastwork he was rearing on the east bank, he
+ordered General Morgan to take position on the right bank, opposite
+his line, and fortify it. To prevent the ships from ascending the
+river to co-operate with the army, he dispatched Major Reynolds to
+obstruct and defend the pass of Barataria--the channel through which
+they would in all probability attempt to approach.
+
+In the mean time, the British were not idle. They had deepened the
+canal through which they had effected a landing, and thus, assisted by
+the high waters of the Mississippi, been able to bring up larger
+boats, loaded with the heavy artillery.
+
+On the third day, a battery was observed, erected opposite the
+Caroline, which, after the good service she did in the night attack,
+had floated to the opposite shore, where she continued to annoy the
+enemy. Jackson knew her perilous position, but there had been no wind
+sufficiently strong to enable her to stem the rapid current; and, on
+the morning of the 27th, the battery opened on her with shells and
+red-hot shot. She was soon in a blaze; and the crew, seeing the
+attempt to save her useless, escaped to the shore. Soon after, she
+blew up.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 28.]
+
+The next day, Sir Edward Packenham ordered an attack on the American
+works. The columns advanced in beautiful order, and at the distance of
+half a mile opened their batteries, and, with bombshells and
+congreve-rockets, endeavored to send confusion among the American
+militia. But the guns of the latter were admirably served, and told
+with great effect on the exposed ranks of the enemy. The Louisiana
+sloop of war, that lay opposite the American line, swung her broadside
+so as to bear on the advancing columns, and raked them with such a
+deadly fire that the assault was abandoned, and the army returned to
+camp, with the loss of over a hundred men, while that of the Americans
+was but seven killed and eight wounded. But among the slain of the
+latter was Colonel Henderson of the Tennessee militia, a man deeply
+lamented.
+
+Events were now evidently approaching a crisis; and the anxiety and
+interest deepened daily and hourly. To add to the weight which already
+pressed the heart of Jackson, he was told that the legislature had
+become frightened, and was discussing the propriety of surrendering
+the city. He immediately sent a dispatch to Governor Clairborne,
+ordering him to watch its proceedings, and the moment such a project
+should be fairly formed, to place a guard at the door of the chamber,
+and shut the members in. In his zeal and warm-hearted patriotism, or
+through misconception of the order, the governor, making sure work of
+it, turned the whole of them _out_ of doors. Just before the execution
+of this high-handed measure, a committee of the legislature waited on
+Jackson, to inquire what he designed to do if compelled to abandon his
+position. "If," he replied, "I thought the hair of my head could
+divine what I should do, I would cut it off forthwith. Go back with
+this answer: say to your honorable body that if disaster does overtake
+me, and the fate of war drives me from my line to the city, _that they
+may expect to have a warm session_." To one who asked him afterwards
+what he would have done in such an emergency, he said, "I would have
+retreated to the city, _fired it_, and _fought the enemy amid the
+surrounding flames_." A more heroic speech never fell from the lips of
+a commander. New Orleans in flames and Jackson charging down its
+blazing streets, would have been one of the most frightful exhibitions
+furnished in the annals of the war.
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 1, 1815.]
+
+The British, after the attack of the 28th, occupied their whole time
+in landing heavier cannon. Having completed their arrangements, they
+resolved to make another attempt on the American works. The New Year
+opened with a heavy fog, which shrouded the whole plain and British
+encampment from sight. But, from its mysterious bosom, ominous,
+muffled sounds arose, which were distinctly heard in every part of the
+American line, and the troops stood to arms. At length, as the sun
+gathered strength, the fog lifted and parted--dimly revealing the
+whole plain. No sooner did the enemy, who had advanced their batteries
+within six hundred yards of the American intrenchments, see the long,
+black line of the latter, stretching through the haze, than a
+tremendous burst of artillery shook the solid levee on which it
+stood. A flight of Congreve rockets followed, crossing and recrossing
+the heavens in every direction, and weaving a fiery net-work over the
+heads of the astonished but undaunted Americans. The first heavy
+explosion sent Jackson to the lines; and luckily for him it did; for
+the British having been shown by a spy the house which he occupied,
+they directed a battery upon it, and in a few minutes it was riddled
+with balls. The American artillery replied, and it was a constant roar
+of cannon till noon, when most of the English batteries being beaten
+down or damaged, they ceased their fire. One, near the river,
+continued to play on the American works till three o'clock, when it
+also became silent, and the enemy, baffled at every point, retired
+sullenly to his camp.
+
+The two armies, each expecting reinforcements, now rested for a week
+from decisive hostilities. In the mean time, Jackson continued to
+strengthen his works and discipline his men. A Frenchman having come
+to him to complain of damage done to his property, the latter replied
+that, as he was a man of property, he knew of no one who had a better
+right to defend it, and placing a musket in his hands, ordered him
+into the ranks.
+
+During this week of comparative repose, New Orleans and the two
+hostile camps presented a spectacle of the most thrilling interest.
+The British army lay in full view of the American lines, their white
+tents looking, amid the surrounding water, like clouds of sail resting
+on the bosom of the river. At intervals were heard the sharp and
+rattling volleys of the pickets of the two armies, as they came in
+collision, while the morning and evening gun sent their stern
+challenge over the plain. There was marching and countermarching,
+strains of martial music, and all the confused sounds of a camp, when
+preparations are making for a grand and decisive blow. To the farmers,
+merchants, mechanics, and youths, who lay within the American
+intrenchments, the scene and the thoughts it awakened were new. Behind
+them stood their homes; before them, the veterans of Spain, whom, in a
+few days, they were to meet in final combat.
+
+In the city, the excitement kept increasing; but after the first
+battle, the patriotism of the population received a new impulse. In
+the night attack many of the troops had lost all their clothing except
+that which they wore on their backs, and hence soon began to suffer.
+No sooner was this known to the ladies than their fair hands were in
+motion; and in a short time the wants of the soldiers were supplied.
+
+In the mean time the long-expected Kentucky troops, upwards of two
+thousand strong, arrived. Courier after courier had been sent to hurry
+their march; and the last day had been one of incredible toil and
+speed. Only five hundred of them, however, had muskets; the rest were
+armed with fowling-pieces, and such weapons as they could lay hands
+on. Nor were there any means of supplying them, so that the accession
+of strength was comparatively trifling. Gen. Lambert, too, had
+reinforced the British with several thousand veteran troops.
+
+A canal in the mean time had been widened through the levee, by which
+boats were transported to the Mississippi for that portion of the army
+which was destined to act against the fortifications on the west bank,
+commanded by General Morgan. A long siege was out of the question, and
+now nothing remained to be done but to advance at once to the assault
+of the American intrenchments, or abandon the expedition. The latter
+alternative was not to be contemplated; and, on the night of the 7th,
+Jackson, surveying the encampment through his glass, discovered
+unmistakeable evidence that the enemy was meditating an important
+movement. The camp was in commotion; the boats which had been dragged
+through the canal, and now lay moored to the levee, were being loaded
+with artillery and munitions of war, and every thing betokened a hot
+to-morrow. Coffee still held the swamp on the left; Carroll, with his
+Tennesseans, the centre; while Jackson, with the regulars under him,
+commanded in person the right, resting on the river. Behind Carroll
+were placed the Kentuckians, under General Adair--in all, less than
+four thousand effective men. [Sidenote: Jan. 8.] This was the position
+of affairs as the Sabbath morning of the 8th of January began to dawn.
+The light had scarcely streaked the east, when the inhabitants of New
+Orleans were startled from their slumbers by an explosion of cannon
+that shook the city. The battle had opened. Under cover of the night,
+heavy batteries had been erected within eight hundred yards of the
+American intrenchments, and, the moment the fog lifted above them,
+they opened their fire. Directly after, a rocket, rising through the
+mist near the swamp, and another answering it from the shore,
+announced that all was ready. The next moment, two columns, each four
+or five thousand strong--one moving straight on Carrol's position, the
+other against the right of the intrenchments--swept steadily and
+swiftly across the plain. Three thrilling cheers rose over the dark
+intrenchments at the sight, and then all was still again.
+
+The levee here was contracted to four hundred yards in width, and as
+the columns, sixty or seventy deep, crowded over this avenue, every
+cannon on the breastwork was trained upon them by Baratarian, French
+and American engineers, and the moment they came within range, a
+murderous fire opened. Frightful gaps were made in the ranks at every
+discharge, which were closed by living men only the next moment to be
+re-opened.
+
+The Americans stood with their hands clenched around their muskets and
+rifles, gazing with astonishment on this new, unwonted spectacle. The
+calm and steady advance under such an incessant and crushing fire,
+carried with it the prestige of victory. As they approached the ditch,
+the columns swiftly, yet beautifully deployed, and under the cover of
+blazing bombs and rockets, that filled the air in every direction, and
+stooped hissing over the American works, pressed forward with loud
+cheers, to the assault. Nothing but cannon had spoken till then from
+that low breastwork; but as those two doomed columns reached the
+farthest brink of the ditch, the word "Fire!" ran along the American
+line--the next moment the intrenchments were in a blaze. It was a
+solid sheet of flame rolling on the foe. Stunned by the tremendous and
+deadly volleys, the front ranks stopped and sunk in their footsteps,
+like snow when it meets the stream. But high over the thunder of
+cannon were heard the words of command, and drums beating the charge;
+and still bravely breasting the fiery sleet, the ranks pressed
+forward, but only to melt away on the brink of that fatal ditch.
+Jackson, with flashing eye and flushed brow, rode slowly along the
+lines, cheering the men, and issuing his orders, followed by loud
+huzzas as he passed. From the effect of the American volleys, he
+knew, if the troops stood firm, the day was his own, and with stirring
+appeals and confident words he roused them to the same enthusiasm
+which animated his breast and beamed from his face. The soldiers of
+Gen. Adair, stationed in the rear of Carrol, loaded for those in
+front, so that there was no cessation to the fire. It was a constant
+flash and peal along the whole line. Every man was a marksman, every
+shot told, and no troops in the world could long withstand such a
+destructive fire. The front of battle, torn and rent, wavered to and
+fro on the plain, when Packenham galloped up, and riding bravely
+through the shaking ranks, for a moment restored order. The next
+moment he reeled from his saddle mortally wounded. Generals Gibbs and
+Keane, while nobly struggling to rally the men, were also shot down,
+and the maddened columns turned and fled. Lambert, hastening up with
+the reserve, met the fugitives, and endeavored, but in vain, to arrest
+the flight. They never halted till they reached a ditch four hundred
+yards distant, into which they flung themselves to escape the
+scourging fire that pursued them. Here he at last rallied them to
+another charge. The bleeding column, strengthened by the reserve,
+again advanced sternly but hopelessly, into the deadly fire, and
+attempted to deploy. It was a last vain effort--it was like charging
+down the mouth of a volcano, and the troops again broke and fled,
+smote at every step by the batteries.
+
+Col. Kennie led the attack against the redoubt on the right, and
+succeeded in entering, but found there his grave. Driven forth, the
+troops sought safety in flight; but the fire that pursued them was too
+fatal, and they threw themselves into a ditch, where they lay
+sheltered till night, and then stole away under cover of the darkness.
+
+The ground in front of the American intrenchments presented a
+frightful spectacle. It was red with the blood of men. The space was
+so narrow along which the enemy had advanced, that the dead literally
+cumbered the field.
+
+The sun of that Sabbath morning rose in blood, and before he had
+advanced an hour on his course, a multitude of souls "unhouseled,
+unanneled," had passed to the stillness of eternity. New Orleans never
+before witnessed such a Sabbath morning. Anxiety and fear sat on every
+countenance. The road towards the American encampment was lined with
+trembling listeners, and tearful eyes were bent on the distance to
+catch the first sight of the retreating army. But when the thunder and
+tumult ceased, and word was brought that the Americans still held the
+intrenchments, and that the British had retreated in confusion, there
+went up a long, glad shout--the bells of the churches rang out a
+joyous peal, and hope and confidence revived in every bosom.
+
+The attack on the right bank of the river had been successful, and but
+for the terrible havoc on the left shore, this stroke of good fortune
+might have changed the results of the day. The fort, from which Gen.
+Morgan had fled, commanded the interior of Jackson's entrenchments,
+and a fire opened from it would soon have shaken the steadiness of his
+troops. But Col. Thornton, who had captured it, seeing the complete
+overthrow of the main army, soon after abandoned it.
+
+The Americans, with that noble-hearted generosity which had
+distinguished them on every battle-field, hurried forth soon as the
+firing had ceased, to succor the wounded, who they knew had designed
+to riot amid their own peaceful dwellings. "Beauty and booty," was the
+watchword in an orderly-book found on the battle-field; and though
+there is not sufficient reason to believe that the city would have
+been given over to rapine and lust, yet no doubt great excesses would
+have been tolerated. The recent conduct of the English troops on the
+Atlantic coast, where no such resistance had been offered to
+exasperate them, furnished grounds for the gravest fears.
+
+The British in this attack outnumbered the Americans more than three
+to one, and yet the loss on the part of the latter was only
+_thirteen_ killed and wounded--seventy-one, all told, both sides of
+the river--while that of the former was nearly two thousand, a
+disparity unparalleled in the annals of war.
+
+The British were allowed to retreat unmolested to their ships, and the
+sails of that proud fleet, whose approach had sent such consternation
+through the hearts of the inhabitants, were seen lessening in the
+horizon with feelings of unspeakable joy and triumph. All danger had
+now passed away, and Jackson made his triumphal entry into the city.
+The bells were rung, maidens dressed in white, strewed flowers in his
+path, the heavens echoed with acclamations, and blessings unnumbered
+were poured on his head.
+
+But as there had been foes and traitors to the American cause from the
+first appearance of the British fleet, so there were those now who
+stirred up strife, and by anonymous articles published in one of the
+city papers, endeavored to sow dissensions among the troops. It would,
+no doubt, have been better for Jackson, in the fulness of his triumph,
+and in the plenitude of his power, to have overlooked this. But these
+very men he knew had acted as spies while the enemy lay before his
+entrenchments, causing him innumerable vexations, and endangering the
+cause of the country, and he determined as martial law had not yet
+been repealed, to seize the offenders. He demanded of the editor the
+name of the writer of a certain article, who proved to be a member of
+the legislature. He then applied to Judge Hall for a writ of habeas
+corpus, which was granted, and the recreant statesman was thrown into
+prison. Soon after, martial law being removed, Judge Hall issued an
+attachment against Jackson for contempt of court, and he was brought
+before him to answer interrogatories. This he refused to do, and asked
+for the sentence. The judge, still smarting under the remembrance of
+his former arrest by Jackson, fined him a thousand dollars. A burst of
+indignation followed this sentence, and as the latter turned to enter
+his carriage, the crowd around seized it, and dragged it home with
+shouts. The fine was paid immediately; but in a few hours the outraged
+citizens refunded the sum to the general. He, however, refused it,
+requesting it to be appropriated to a charitable institution. Judge
+Hall by this act secured for himself the fame of the man who, to
+figure in history, fired the temple of Delphos.
+
+The arbitrary manner in which Jackson disposed of the State
+legislature and judges of the court, became afterwards the subject of
+much discussion, and during his political life the ground of heavy
+accusations. If the question be respecting the _manner_ in which he
+assumed arbitrary power, it is not worth discussing. But if, on the
+other hand, the assumption of it at all is condemned, then the whole
+thing turns on the necessities of the case, and whether that use was
+made of it which the general good and not personal feelings required.
+That it was necessary, no one can doubt. He had a right, also, as
+commander-in-chief of the army in that section, to whom the defence of
+the southern frontier had been intrusted, to force the civil power
+into obedience to the orders of the general government. He was to
+defend and save New Orleans, and if the civil authority proved
+treacherous or weak, it was his duty to see that it did not act
+against him while plainly in the path of his duty. New Orleans so
+considered it; and six years after, the corporation appropriated fifty
+thousand dollars to the erection of a marble statue of him in the
+city. Congress thought so, when, thirty years after, it voted the
+repayment of the fine, with interest, from the date it was inflicted,
+and notwithstanding the whole matter was made a party question, it
+will not stand as such in history.
+
+Jackson remained in New Orleans till March, when he was relieved by
+General Gaines. On taking leave of his troops, who, by their cheerful
+endurance of hardships and their bravery, had become endeared to him,
+he issued an address full of encomiums on their conduct, and
+expressions of love for their character. He concluded by saying,
+"Farewell, fellow--soldiers! The expression of your General's thanks
+is feeble; but the gratitude of a country of freemen is yours--yours
+the applause of an admiring world." What a contrast does this man,
+covered with the laurels of his two recent campaigns, present to the
+captive boy in the revolutionary struggle whose hand was brutally
+gashed by a subordinate British officer, because he refused to black
+his boots! This world has changes. The lad with his eye to the
+knot-hole at Camden watching the defeat of the American army with
+anguish, and the hero gazing proudly on the flying columns of the
+veteran troops of the British empire, are the same in soul--but how
+different in position! They say, "Time sets all things even." In
+Jackson's case, the wrongs done to his family by an oppressive nation,
+and the outrages he himself had received, were terribly avenged.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 11.]
+
+At length the joyful tidings of peace reached our shores. The British
+sloop of war Favorite, chosen for her name, arrived at New York under
+a flag of truce, bearing an American and British messenger, with the
+treaty already ratified on the part of England. The unexpected news
+acted like an electrical shock on the city. It was late on Saturday
+night when the announcement was made, but in an incredible short space
+of time the whole city was in an uproar. That blessed word PEACE
+passed tremulously from lip to lip, and as if borne on the viewless
+air, was soon repeated in every dwelling. In a few minutes the
+streets were black with the excited, heaving multitudes, whose frantic
+shouts rolled like the roar of the sea through the city. In every
+direction bonfires were kindled, and as flash after flash leaped forth
+to the clouds, the deafening acclamations that followed, attested the
+unbounded joy of the people. Expresses were immediately hurried off
+north and south, and as the swift riders swept meteor-like through
+village after village, shouting "PEACE" as they sped on, the
+inhabitants sallied forth to hail the glad tidings with shouts. All
+day Sunday that electrical word "PEACE" passed like an angel of mercy
+over the towns and hamlets between New York and Boston. It swept like
+a sudden breeze through the congregations gathered for worship in the
+house of God. It imparted new fervor to the minister at the altar, and
+swelled the hymn of thanksgiving from tearful worshippers to its
+loudest, gladdest note. "PEACE," like a dove folded its wings on the
+thresholds of thousands of homes that night, turning the wintry
+fire-side into a scene of unbounded thankfulness and joy.
+
+Although news had never been carried over the country with such
+rapidity since the battle of Lexington and Concord, it did not reach
+Boston till Monday morning. The bells were at once set ringing, but
+their clamorous tongues were well nigh silenced by the louder
+rejoicings of the people. Messengers were immediately dispatched in
+every direction, sending the glad tidings on. Men forgot their
+employments--politicians their animosities in the general
+congratulation. The sea ports were suddenly gay with flags and
+streamers, and the song of the sailor blended with the sound of the
+hammer and the hum and stir of commerce. Men forgot to ask on what
+terms peace had been obtained--the joy at its unexpected announcement
+obliterated for the time all other thoughts and considerations.
+
+At Washington the pleasure was more subdued, for the politicians there
+knew that after the first enthusiasm had subsided every one would ask
+what were the terms of the treaty.
+
+But although the administration had provoked Fortune beyond all
+forbearance, she seemed resolved not to desert it, and brought, nearly
+at the same time, the news of the victory of New Orleans, to solace
+the national pride for an indefinite and unsatisfactory treaty.
+
+The delegates from the Hartford Convention arrived in Washington just
+in time to hear the confirmation of the victory and the peace, and
+without delivering their message, stole quietly back to New England,
+lighted by illuminated cities and towns, and stunned by acclamations,
+on their way. Their enemies were too full of happiness to attack them,
+still the National Advocate of New York, edited by Mr. Wheaton, could
+not refrain from indulging in a little pleasantry at their expense,
+and inserted an advertisement: "Missing--three well-looking,
+respectable men, who appeared to be travelling towards Washington, and
+suddenly disappeared from Gadzby's hotel, Baltimore, on Monday evening
+last, and have not since been heard from. They were observed to be
+very melancholic on hearing the news of peace, and one of them was
+heard to say, '_Poor Caleb Strong_,' &c. "Whoever will give any
+information of these unfortunate, tristful gentlemen to the Hartford
+Convention, will confer a favor on humanity." The National
+Intelligencer copied it, stating that those gentlemen had been seen in
+Washington, but their business was not known. One of them, however,
+was heard to groan, "_Othello's occupation's gone_."
+
+But after the first excitement passed away, men began to inquire in
+what way, and on what conditions, the government had delivered the
+country from the evils of war, and crowned it with the blessings of
+peace.
+
+We had apparently gained nothing. Our quarrel rested mainly on two
+points--first, the right of blockade as claimed and exercised under
+the orders in Council, and the right of impressment, as practiced on
+the high seas; yet no limits had been prescribed to the former, and
+no guarantees given against the latter. These great points of dispute
+were left untouched, and by the treaty the two countries stood
+precisely as they did at the commencement of the war; all (conquered
+territory on either side was to be restored) with the exception that
+for the surrender of a useless right--the navigation of the
+Mississippi--England deprived us of the valuable privilege heretofore
+conceded, of catching and curing fish on the coast of the Gulf of St.
+Lawrence. The title to the islands in the Passamaquoddy bay--the exact
+course of the boundary line running from the Atlantic coast to the
+river St. Lawrence--the line thence to the Lake of the Woods--were to
+be referred to three separate commissions, and in case of their
+disagreement, to some friendly power for final adjustment. The
+question of fisheries in the seas bordering on the British provinces,
+and the boundary line west of the Lake of the Woods were left without
+any provision for their settlement.
+
+One would naturally think that a treaty which in its stipulations thus
+silently passed over the very questions in dispute, and for which so
+much valiant blood had been shed and such a loss of life and treasure
+endured, would have been met with open condemnation, or at least with
+sullen acquiescence. On the contrary, however, its ratification was
+signalized by public rejoicings, and the most extravagant
+manifestations of delight. The astonishing victory at New Orleans
+required us to be generous, and a nation which had thus vindicated its
+rights on sea and land, could afford to drop an unpleasant subject
+just where the discussion had begun. Such seemed to be the general
+feeling. At first sight, this settlement of the difficulties between
+the two countries appeared contemptible. Abstractly considered it was,
+and if we had been a weak nation, sinking into degeneracy, it would
+have proved so.
+
+But in judging of it we must remember that treaty stipulations in
+continental diplomacy, like flags of truce in Mexico, depend almost
+entirely on circumstances whether they are regarded or not, and hence
+the _circumstances_ are more important than written stipulation.
+European treaties, like European diplomacy, have in the past, served
+only to illustrate the duplicity and faithlessness of monarchs. The
+question is, how events in their progress have settled the
+difficulties, as _fate_ settles them, and not as commissioners.
+
+Now it was evident, both to the English and American commissioners,
+that articles on neutral rights and the impressment of seamen, were
+useless. Our navy and privateers had disposed of those questions, for
+ever. Our broadsides furnished better guaranties than strips of
+parchment, adorned with impressions of regal seals.
+
+It was the fact that those two great causes of hostility, violation of
+neutral rights and impressment of seamen, were practically and
+permanently disposed of, which reconciled the nation to their omission
+in the treaty. Our people pay no attention to forms, only so far as
+they sanction their just claims. In this view, the acquiescence in the
+treaty, instead of exhibiting humility and fear on our part, indicate
+quite the reverse. Nothing can be more erroneous than to suppose that
+because those rights, for the protection of which we had gone to war,
+were not mentioned in the treaty, we therefore had concluded to waive
+them. On the contrary, we consented to leave them unnoticed, _because_
+we knew we had _obtained_ them forever. No one in England or the
+United States doubted that these were definitely settled, and those
+who sneeringly ask "what we gained by the war?" make the letter
+equivalent to the spirit, a form more important than a fact. The
+simple truth is, we got what we fought for, and it exhibits a narrow
+spirit to say, that because it was not engrossed on parchment it
+amounted virtually to nothing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ Cruise of the Constitution -- Action with the Cyane and
+ Levant -- Chased by a British fleet -- England's views of
+ neutral rights and the law of nations -- Her honor and
+ integrity at a discount -- Singular escape of the
+ Constitution -- Recapture of the Levant under the guns of a
+ neutral port -- Lampoons on the English squadron for its
+ contemptible conduct -- Decatur -- Capture of the President
+ -- The Hornet captures the Penguin -- Chased by a ship of
+ the line -- Narrow escape -- Cruise of the Peacock -- Review
+ of the American Navy -- Its future destiny.
+
+
+Naval warfare did not cease with the peace, for it was a long time
+before all our cruisers received notice of it.
+
+The old Constitution, when Bainbridge gave up the command of her in
+1813, was put on the stocks to undergo repairs, and did not get to sea
+again till 1814, when, under the command of Captain Stewart, she
+cruised southward, without meeting any vessel of her own size.
+[Sidenote: 1814.] She took the Nector, a war schooner of fourteen
+guns, and a few merchantmen, and returned to Boston. On the 17th of
+December she again put to sea, and cruised off the coast of Portugal.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 20, 1815.]
+
+Not meeting with the enemy, Captain Stewart, on the 20th of February,
+1815, stood off south-west towards Madeira, and in the afternoon made
+two strange sail. He immediately started in pursuit of the nearest,
+hoping to overtake her before she could join her consort. The moment,
+however, the stranger discovered the Constitution, he stood away under
+every stitch of canvass he could spread. The Constitution also "set
+studding sails alow and aloft," and under a perfect cloud of canvass,
+bowled along at a tremendous rate. At length the main royal mast of
+the latter gave way in the strain, which gave the stranger so much the
+advantage that he effected a junction with his consort. The two then
+hailed each other, "came by the wind, hauled up their courses," and
+cleared for action. They were the Cyane, carrying thirty-four guns,
+and the Levant, twenty-one--the crew of the former numbering one
+hundred and eighty men, the latter one hundred and fifty-six.
+
+They manoeuvered for some time to get to the windward, but finding
+this impossible they awaited the approach of the American, who had now
+set his colors. It was a bright moonlight night, and the two English
+vessels presented a beautiful spectacle, as they lay rising and
+falling on the long swell, gallantly turned at bay. As the
+Constitution approached, they cheered, and fired their broadsides. No
+answer was given. In stern and ominous silence the invincible frigate
+moved on, and ranging up about three hundred yards distant from the
+Cyane, delivered her broadside. So ready and eager were the men to
+fire, that when the order was given, the whole broadside was like the
+report of a single gun. She had taken her position to windward, and so
+as to form with the two vessels nearly an equilateral triangle, and in
+this masterly position flung her heavy metal against both alike. From
+the first gun the action became fierce and the cannonading incessant.
+After the lapse of fifteen minutes the fire of the enemy slackened,
+and Captain Stewart, unable to see their whereabouts, from the cloud
+of smoke that enveloped his ship, ordered the cannonading to cease
+till it passed off. In three minutes it lifted and rolled away before
+the wind, and he saw that the vessels had changed their position, the
+Levant being abeam, while the Cyane was evidently endeavoring to cross
+his wake and give him a raking fire. Instantly delivering a broadside
+to the vessel abeam, he by one of those sudden and prompt movements on
+which the fate of a vessel or an army often turns, threw his mizen and
+main sails flat aback, "shook all forward," let fly his jib sheet, and
+backed so swiftly astern[9] that the vessel was compelled to tack or
+be raked herself. While doing this the other ship attempted to cross
+his bows for the same purpose. The Constitution was again too quick
+for her, for as if by magic the yards swung round to the hearty "Yo,
+heave oh!" of the sailors--the sails filled, and bowing to the breeze,
+she shot ahead, compelling the vessel to ware under a tremendous and
+raking broadside, which cut her up so terribly that she had to run out
+of the action to repair damages. He had scarcely delivered this
+crushing blow when he was told the largest ship was waring. He
+instantly gave orders to ware also, and crossing the enemy's stern,
+raked her as he passed. He then ranged up alongside, when she struck,
+and Lieutenant Hoffman was put in command of her.
+
+[Footnote 9: Vide Cooper.]
+
+The Levant, in the mean time, having repaired her rigging, hauled up
+again to seek her consort, when she met the Constitution coming down.
+She immediately bore away, receiving as she did so, a raking
+broadside. The Constitution followed in her wake, firing, and
+following so close that the ripping of the enemy's planks, as the shot
+tore through them, could be distinctly heard on her decks. This, of
+course, could not be endured long, and a gun was soon fired to
+leeward, in token of submission.
+
+The loss of the enemy, in this action, was between sixty and seventy,
+while that of the Constitution was only fifteen. The latter, however,
+was hulled thirteen times, showing very accurate firing by moonlight.
+
+The masterly manner in which Captain Stewart handled his vessel, so
+that, large and unwieldy as she was, he thwarted every manoeuvre to
+rake him, and raked both his enemies successively, proved him to be a
+thorough seaman and an able commander.
+
+[Sidenote: 1815.]
+
+The Constitution proceeded with her two prizes to Port Praya, in St.
+Jago, where she arrived the 10th of March. The next day while
+Lieutenant Shubrick was walking the quarter-deck, he heard one of the
+prisoners, a midshipman, exclaim: "There is a frigate in the offing!"
+This was followed by a low subdued reprimand from an English captain.
+Shubrick's suspicions were awakened, and he looked earnestly seaward.
+A heavy fog lay close on the water, diminishing into a haze as it left
+the surface, so that the spars of a ship could be seen, while her hull
+was obscured. Through this he saw the dim outlines of the sails of a
+large vessel, evidently standing in, and immediately went below and
+reported the circumstance to Captain Stewart. The latter ordered him
+to call all hands and make ready to go in chase of her. Shubrick had
+scarcely given the orders when he saw the sails of two other vessels
+above the fog. Stewart gave them one glance and saw immediately they
+were heavy men-of-war. Though in a neutral port, and by the law of
+nations safe from attack, he was well aware that it would not avail
+him. So low had the honor of the English nation sunk in the estimation
+of independent States, that weak neutral powers knew they would not
+be allowed to afford the protection which it was their right and duty
+to extend, while our naval commanders had ceased to expect the
+recognition of those rights, guarantied by the usage of civilized
+governments. Captain Stewart immediately signalled the Cyane and
+Levant to put to sea, and cutting his own cables, not waiting even to
+take in his boats, he ordered the sails sheeted home. In ten minutes
+the gallant frigate was standing out of the roads, followed by her
+prizes.
+
+This silent declaration that men could no longer rely on the honor and
+good faith of his majesty's officers, in respecting the law of nations
+or the rights of neutral powers, was one of the most cutting rebukes
+that could have been uttered. It was well that Captain Stewart rated
+these qualities so low, or he doubtless would have been attacked and
+overcome, though, under the guns of the battery of the port. No doubt
+the Constitution would have fought worthy of her old renown, and like
+the Essex, in the Bay of Valparaiso, gained more honor in her death
+than in her life.
+
+As Stewart stood out to windward, the three vessels, which he
+afterwards learned to be the Leander and Newcastle of 50, and the
+Acasta of 40 guns, crowded all sail in chase. Stewart then cut adrift
+his cutter and gig, towing astern, and set every sail that would draw.
+Under the north-east trades that were then blowing, the Constitution
+was soon rushing along at a tremendous rate, outsailing all her
+pursuers but the Acasta. But Stewart, perceiving that the Cyane was
+steadily losing ground, and if she kept her course must evidently be
+captured, made signal for her to tack, which was instantly obeyed. Not
+a vessel, however, was detached in pursuit, as he had expected, but
+the whole three kept on after the Constitution and Levant. In an hour
+and a half the Newcastle got within gun-shot, and began to fire by
+divisions, rending the fog with flame, but leaving the Constitution
+unharmed. A half an hour after, Stewart, who with his glass in his
+hand had incessantly walked the quarter-deck, watching the movements
+of the enemy and their progress, saw that the Levant, if she held her
+course, would soon be captured, made signal for her to tack also.
+
+The foam rolled with a seething sound from the bows of the
+Constitution as she rushed rapidly through the water, but it was
+evident that the Acasta, which had fallen in her wake, could outsail
+her. An engagement with this vessel was apparently inevitable, and
+unless Stewart could prolong the chase till she was drawn so far from
+the others as to enable him to close with and carry her before they
+came up, he must be taken. But to his astonishment the whole three
+turned in pursuit of the Levant, leaving him to sail away unmolested.
+
+[Sidenote: April 10.]
+
+The Cyane, in the mean time, had disappeared in the fog, and finding
+that she was shut out of view, changed her course, and escaping the
+enemy, finally arrived safely in New York. The Levant, however, was
+not so fortunate. Seeing herself closely pressed, she put back to
+port, and though receiving the enemy's fire, stood on till she
+anchored within 150 yards of the shore, and under the very guns of a
+powerful battery. Disregarding her position which rendered her
+inviolable, the three vessels continued to approach, firing as they
+did so, throwing their shot even into the town, doing considerable
+damage. Lieutenant Shubrick, finding that the battery would not
+protect him, and that the enemy had no intention of respecting the
+neutrality of the port, struck his flag. The firing, however,
+continued for some time after.
+
+The English officer, when he came on board to take possession of her,
+supposed she was an American vessel, but to his great chagrin found
+that the whole squadron had succeeded, after a chase of several hours,
+in recapturing a prize in a neutral port.
+
+"Old Ironsides" swept proudly onward over the ocean, remaining
+unconquered to the last, the glory of the navy and the boast of the
+land.
+
+The news of the victory over the Cyane and Levant, and the after
+chase, reached New York from St. Bartholomews, without giving the
+results, and it was feared for a time that she had fallen into the
+hands of the enemy. When her safety was ascertained the exultation was
+great, for she was a great favorite, and had become deeply fixed in
+the affections of the people. As she came sweeping up Boston harbor,
+crowds gathered to the shore, answering with deafening cheers the
+thunder of her guns, as they broke over the bay.
+
+The abandonment of this frigate by the whole English squadron, to
+chase a single ship, furnished the occasion of many witticisms,
+levelled against the English officers. They reported that they lost
+her in a fog, but if either vessel had kept on alone, Captain Stewart
+would have been careful not to have been lost, and when a safe
+distance from the others had been obtained, allowed himself to be
+easily overtaken.[10]
+
+[Footnote 10: One "SQUIB" represented King George as walking his lawn
+one morning, anxiously waiting to hear the success of this squadron,
+which he had sent out expressly to capture the Ironsides, when the
+three captains of the vessels that chased her presented themselves.
+King George, in his peculiar manner, asks:--
+
+ "with sparkling eyes,
+ 'Hey! hey! what news? what news? hey! hey! he cries--
+ His Majesty to hear, was all agog;
+ When Stuart--Collins--Kerr--with crimsoned face
+ Thus spake--'We gave the Constitution chase,
+ And, oh! great sire, we lost her in _a fog_!'
+
+ "'Fog! fog! _what fog? hey! Stuart, what fog? say!_
+ _So then the foe escaped you, Stuart? hey!_'
+ 'Yes, please your Majesty, and hard our fate'--
+ 'But why not, Stuart, _different courses steer_?'
+ Stuart replied, (impute it not to fear,)
+ 'WE THOUGHT IT PRUDENT NOT TO SEPARATE.'"]
+
+[Sidenote: 1815.]
+
+The President, that did not get to sea till the middle of January, or
+just before the news of peace was received, was more unfortunate.
+Commodore Rodgers, during the summer, had been transferred from that
+vessel to the Guerriere, and Decatur took the command. The latter,
+with the United States and Macedonian, had been blockaded, as before
+stated, all summer at New London, where he had challenged Captain
+Hardy to meet him ship with ship, or to make a match between the
+United States and Macedonian, and the Endymion and Statira.
+
+Although he took command in the summer, he did not go to sea till
+mid-winter, when with the Hornet, which had run the blockade at New
+London in November, the Peacock, and store ship Tom Bowline, he
+prepared for a long cruise to the East Indies. [Sidenote: Jan. 14.]
+The President dropped down to Sandy Hook on the night of the 14th, but
+in attempting to cross the bar struck, and lay thumping for an hour
+and a half before she swung clear. She was evidently damaged by the
+shock, but Decatur thought it best to keep on, as a heavy storm the
+day before had driven the blockading squadron southward.
+
+Before daylight, next morning, he discovered a sail ahead, and two
+hours later two more, and when daylight made more distant objects
+visible, four vessels were seen, crowding all sail in chase. The
+President was heavily laden for a long voyage, which with the damage
+she had received on the bar, impeded very much her sailing. Still,
+with a stiff breeze, she might have distanced her pursuers, for with
+the wind light and baffling, the nearest vessel, the Majestic, a
+razee, was thrown astern. But the Endymion, forty, the next nearest
+vessel, evidently outsailed her, and was fast closing. Decatur then
+called all hands to lighten the ship. The anchors were cut away,
+provisions, cables, spars, boats, and every thing on which hands could
+be laid were thrown overboard, and the sails kept wet from the royals
+down, to hold the tantalizing wind. It was impossible in such hasty
+unloading to keep the vessel trim, and while it was being done she
+very probably sailed slower than before. The wind, however, was so
+light, that both frigates made slow headway, and it was not till the
+middle of the afternoon that the Endymion closed sufficiently to open
+her fire. The President answered with stern guns, and a running fight
+was kept up till five o'clock, when the former was within half
+gun-shot and on the quarter of the latter, which, of course, could not
+bring a gun to bear. Decatur, in this position, bore the fire of the
+frigate for half an hour, when he resolved to carry her by boarding,
+and escape. But the Endymion kept her advantageous position, so that
+he could not carry his bold and gallant resolution into effect, and
+as a last resort he determined at dusk to close, and so cripple her
+before the rest of the vessels arrived, that she must abandon the
+pursuit. Coming up abeam he poured in his broadsides, and for two
+hours and a half, running free all the time, the two vessels kept up a
+close and heavy cannonade. At half-past eight the Endymion was
+completely dismantled, while the President was under royal studding
+sails, and able to choose her own position. Twenty minutes more would
+have finished the English frigate, for she was too much cut up to be
+manageable; but the other vessels were now close at hand, and the
+President hauled up to resume her course. In doing this the vessel was
+exposed to a raking broadside, but not a gun was fired. She then
+crowded all sail, but at eleven o'clock was overhauled by the Pomone
+and Tenedos and Majestic, the former of which poured in a broadside
+within musket shot. Resistance, in the President's crippled state was
+hopeless, and the flag was struck. Decatur surrendered his sword to
+the commander of the Majestic, nearly four hours before the Endymion
+came up, and yet the captain of the latter claimed the victory, and to
+this day the arrogant assertion finds endorsers in England. One vessel
+goes out of an action with royal studding sails set and surrenders to
+a superior force, so far from the spot where it took place that it
+requires nearly four hours steady sailing for the other to get up,
+and yet the latter is declared the victor![11]
+
+[Footnote 11: Mr. Alison asserts that the President was completely
+beaten before the arrival of the other vessels.]
+
+This absurd pretence, however, was completely set at rest by a
+document signed by the officers of the Pomona, and published at
+Bermuda, whither the fleet sailed. After giving the details of the
+chase, they say the running fight between the President and Endymion
+ceased "at half-past eight, the Endymion falling astern--Pomona
+passing her at half-past eight. At eleven, being within gun-shot of
+the President," &c. "At _three-quarters_ past twelve the Endymion came
+up," &c.
+
+Both these vessels were dismasted in a hurricane before reaching
+Bermuda, six days after. The Peacock, Hornet, and Tom Bowline, put to
+sea and sailed for the island of Triston d'Acunha, the place of
+rendezvous appointed by Decatur. The Peacock and Tom Bowline arrived
+first. The Hornet having parted company in chase of a vessel, did not
+come in till the 23d of March. [Sidenote: 1815.] Just as she was about
+to anchor, the watch aft sung out "Sail ho!" The sails were
+immediately sheeted home again, and the Hornet bore swiftly down
+towards the stranger. The latter did not shun the combat, but coming
+to, set her colors and fired a challenge gun. The vessel was the
+Penguin, of the size and metal of the Hornet, with some additional
+equipments, which made her of superior force. There was not the
+difference of a dozen men in the crews. A more decisive single combat
+could not have been arranged, if the sole purpose of it had been to
+test the seamanship and real practical superiority of the American
+navy, for the Penguin had been fitted up and sent out for the sole
+purpose of encountering and capturing the Wasp, a heavier and newer
+vessel than the Hornet.
+
+There was no manoeuvring--from the first gun to the last, it was a
+steady broadside to broadside engagement, the vessels gradually
+drifting nearer as they fired. The Hornet was wrapped in flame from
+stem to stern, so incessant were her discharges, and in fifteen
+minutes the commander of the Penguin, finding that he would soon be a
+total wreck, put up his helm to board, and surged with a heavy crash
+full on the Hornet's quarter. The first lieutenant immediately called
+on his men to board, but they would not follow him. The American crew
+then wished to board, in turn, but Captain Biddle, seeing that his
+guns were rending the enemy in pieces, restrained their ardor, and
+recommenced firing. The sea was heavy, and as the two vessels rose and
+fell together on the huge swell, the strain was so great that the
+Penguin carried away the Hornet's mizen rigging and spanker boom, and
+swung round against her quarter. While in this position, an English
+officer cried out that he surrendered. Captain Biddle then ordered the
+firing to cease, and leaping on the taffrail, inquired if the vessel
+had struck. Two marines on the enemy's forecastle levelled their
+pieces at him and fired--the ball of one entering his neck, inflicting
+a painful wound. Enraged at this treacherous act, the crew of the
+Hornet poured in a sudden volley of musketry, which stretched the two
+marines dead on the deck. In the same moment the vessels parted, the
+Hornet forging ahead, carrying the enemy's bowsprit and foremast with
+her. The latter then wore, and was about to pour in a raking
+broadside, when twenty men rushed to the side of the ship, lifting up
+their hands and calling for quarter. It was with the greatest
+difficulty Captain Biddle could restrain his men, so excited were they
+at the attempt on their commander's life.
+
+The loss of the Penguin in this short action was forty-two killed and
+wounded, while the Hornet had but a single man killed and only ten
+wounded. Among the latter was Lieutenant (since Commodore) Conner,
+who, though helpless and bleeding, refused to leave the deck till the
+enemy struck. This disparity shows in a striking manner the superior
+gunnery of the American navy.
+
+The Penguin was dreadfully cut up, and Captain Biddle, unable to man
+her, scuttled and sunk her. Converting the Tom Bowline into a cartel
+to take the prisoners to St. Salvador, he, with Captain Harrington of
+the Peacock, waited the arrival of the President. But these two
+commanders soon received information which convinced them that Decatur
+had, in all probability, fallen into the hands of the enemy.
+[Sidenote: April 13.] They, therefore, soon as the time fixed by him
+had expired, proceeded on the original cruise, steering for the Indian
+Seas. On the 27th, the Peacock, which was ahead, made signal that a
+strange vessel was in sight, when all sail was set in chase. At night
+it fell calm, but a stiff breeze arising with the sun, the chase
+recommenced and continued till near three o'clock, when the Peacock,
+about six miles ahead, appeared to be moving cautiously, as if
+suspicious that all was not right. From the first, the chase was
+supposed to be a homeward bound East Indiaman, as they were now in the
+track of those vessels. The sailors of the Hornet were consequently
+very much elated with the prospect of so rich a prize, declaring that
+they would carpet the berth deck with India silk, and murmuring that
+the Peacock sailed so much faster, as she would have the first chance
+at the plunder.
+
+These pleasant anticipations suffered a sudden collapse when the
+Peacock, at half-past three, signalled that the stranger was an enemy
+and a line-of-battle ship. Notwithstanding the danger, there was
+something inconceivably ludicrous in the blank consternation that fell
+on the ship, exhibited in rueful countenances, the long-drawn whistle
+or laconic emphatic expression. The next moment, however, all was
+bustle and confusion--quick and sharp orders rung over the vessel, she
+was hauled upon the wind, and made off as fast as wind and sail could
+bear her. The Peacock, being a very fast sailer, soon left the enemy
+behind. Not so with the Hornet; although she spread every yard of
+canvass that would draw, it was evident by eight at night the
+man-of-war was gaining on her. An hour after all hands were turned to
+to lighten the ship. An anchor and cable first went over with some
+heavy spare spars and rigging. The ward-room was then scuttled to get
+at the kentledge, twelve tons of which were thrown overboard. Still
+the enemy gained, and his huge proportions loomed threateningly
+through the gloom, filling the crew of the gallant little Hornet with
+the keenest anxiety. It was a state of painful suspense to Captain
+Biddle and his officers, and they watched with sinking hearts the
+steady approach of their formidable foe. At day dawn he was within
+gun-shot, and soon after, hoisting to the mizen-top-gallant-mast
+English colors and a rear-admiral's flag, he opened with his bow
+guns. Captain Biddle then ordered the remaining anchors cut away, the
+cables heaved overboard, together with more kentledge, shot,
+provision, the launch and six guns. The firing was kept up for four
+hours, most of the shot overreaching the Hornet. Perceiving at length,
+that his firing deadened the wind, and hence his headway, the enemy
+ceased it at 11 o'clock, and soon again began to overhaul the chase.
+Captain Biddle then gave the reluctant order to throw over all the
+remaining guns but one, with the muskets, cutlasses, etc., in short,
+every thing above and below that could lighten the ship. Still his
+formidable antagonist steadily gained upon him, and at noon was within
+three quarters of a mile, when he opened with round and grape shot and
+shells, which dashed the spray about the little Hornet, yet most
+marvellously missed her. The water was smooth and it seemed that every
+shot would strike, yet only three hit the vessel. At this critical
+period of the chase the excitement of the crew was intense--the sails
+were watched with the keenest solicitude, while the sailors were
+ordered to lie down on the quarter deck to trim the vessel. It was
+impossible that the Hornet's spars and sails could long escape this
+close and incessant cannonade; and Captain Biddle, knowing that the
+first mishap to either must be the signal to strike his flag, called
+his fatigued crew about him, and after commending their good conduct
+in the long chase, expressed the hope they would still behave with the
+propriety which had always marked their character, now that their
+capture was almost certain. Those gallant tars saw the quivering lip
+of their noble commander when he spoke of capture, and scarcely a dry
+eye was seen on deck. He resolved, however, not to cease his efforts
+so long as a ray of hope remained, and held on his sluggish course
+amid the raining shot, his eye now turned aloft to see if the rigging
+and spars were still safe, and now towards the horizon that, to his
+delight, was getting black and squally.
+
+At length, after enduring this firing for two hours, expecting every
+moment to be crippled, he saw with irrepressible joy the wind change
+to a favorable quarter and freshen. His vessel then began to creep
+away from his pursuer. As the distance increased between them, joy and
+hope lighted up the countenances of all on board the Hornet, and the
+gathering squalls and rising sea were hailed as deliverers. At sunset
+the man-of-war was three miles astern. In the intervals of the squalls
+his huge proportions could be seen all night long against the sky,
+still crowding sail in pursuit. But the Hornet was now running nine
+knots an hour, and by daylight had gained so much that the stranger,
+a few hours after, abandoned the chase.
+
+Her escape seemed miraculous; for when the man-of-war opened his fire
+the second time upon her he was as near as the United States ever got
+to the Macedonian before the latter was a total wreck.
+
+Without guns or shot, stripped of every thing, Captain Biddle retraced
+his steps and reached New York the last day of July.
+
+The Peacock continued her course and cruised for some time in the
+straits of Sunda, where she made three captures. On the last of June
+she encountered the Nautilus, of 14 guns, which after a single
+broadside surrendered. Learning from the commander of the latter that
+peace had been declared, Captain Warrington immediately restored the
+vessel.
+
+This was the last vessel captured during the war, and the combat
+between the Hornet and the Penguin was the last regular action. Thus
+our little navy commenced and closed its career with a victory. In
+fact its history had been reports of victories. So constant and
+astounding had they become, that for a long time before the war closed
+England ceased to publish official accounts of her naval defeats. In
+the first flush of indignation at these reverses on the sea, the
+English repelled with scorn the implication that they had at last
+found a successful rival. Excuses and reasons for them were ample,
+and fairer experiments were demanded before so humiliating a thought
+should be entertained. Our ships, they said, were falsely rated, and
+in those first single contests the equality was merely nominal, not
+real. The ignorant and conceited maintained their arrogant, boastful
+tone to the end; but as the war advanced the more reflecting felt that
+the repeated victories gained by us could not be swept away by
+assertions that the world would not reason as they wished it to, and
+were compelled to admit that their "moral effect was astounding." Well
+it might be. We know of nothing in the annals of civilized warfare
+compared to the boldness and success of our little navy during the
+war. The battles of the Nile and Trafalgar, which had covered the
+English fleets with glory, had been for years ringing over our land.
+Flushed with victory and confident of success, they bore down on our
+coast. With only a handful of ships to offer against this overwhelming
+force, our commanders nevertheless stood boldly out to sea, and flung
+their flags of defiance to the breeze. The world looked with amazement
+on the rashness that could provoke so unequal a strife; but while it
+waited to hear that our little navy was blown out of the water, the
+news came of the loss of the Guerriere. Report after report of
+victories gained by us, followed with stunning rapidity. "The English
+were defeated on their own element," was the universal exclamation,
+and her indisputed claim to the seas was broken forever. The courage
+that could bear up against such fearful odds and pluck the wreath of
+victory from the English navy, has covered the commanders of that time
+with abiding honors. Our rights were restored--our commerce
+protected--and the haughty bearing of England towards us chastized
+from her forever. The British flag had been lowered so often to the
+"stars and stripes," that respect and fear usurped the place of
+contempt and pride.
+
+The true reasons of our success are to be found in our superior
+gunnery and the greater aptitude of the Americans for the sea. We are
+a maritime people, and have since outstripped England in the peaceful
+paths of commerce as much as we outmanoeuvred, outsailed, and beat her
+in the war. Whether the ships of the two countries dash side by side
+in fraternal feeling through the heavy floes of the northern seas, or
+in a spirit of rivalry press together across the Atlantic, or sweep
+where the monsoons blow, ours still lead those of England. The
+elements of such a maritime nation as ours is destined to be, have
+never existed since the creation. Let the rate of progress which her
+commerce has maintained for the last thirty-five years be as a rule to
+gauge where she will be thirty-five years hence, and the mind is
+amazed at the result.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+PRIVATEERS.
+
+ Character and daring of our Privateers -- Skill of American
+ seamen -- Acts of Congress relative to privateering -- Names
+ of ships -- Gallant action of the "Nonsuch" -- Success of
+ the Dolphin -- Cruise of the Comet -- Narrow escape of the
+ "Governor Tompkins" -- Desperate action of the Globe with
+ two brigs -- The Decatur takes a British sloop of war --
+ Action of the Neufchatel with the crew of the Endymion --
+ Desperate defence of Captain Reed against the crews of a
+ British squadron -- The Chasseur captures a British schooner
+ of war -- Character of the commanders of privateers --
+ Anecdote.
+
+
+Notwithstanding the navy won such laurels during the war, the chief
+damage done to British commerce was inflicted by our privateers. A
+history of that period is therefore incomplete without a record of
+their acts. Nothing ever brought out the daring seamanship, skill,
+fertility of resource and stubborn bravery, so characteristic of our
+sailors, as the management of those private armed vessels. Scarcely
+was war declared before they began to shoot one after another from
+out our ports, and disappeared in the distant horizon. Trade being
+prostrated, merchants fitted up their idle ships with picked crews and
+skillful commanders, and sent them forth to vex the enemy's commerce.
+Our vessels at that time, as now, being swifter sailers than the
+English, these bold rovers asked only an open sea and a gale of wind
+to outstrip their pursuers, or overtake those in flight. Their sails
+were seen skirting the horizon in every direction--now saucily looking
+into the enemy's ports to see what was going on there, and again
+sweeping boldly through the English channels. They seemed
+ubiquitous--every pathway of commerce was familiar to them, and they
+passed from sea to sea, appearing and disappearing with a suddenness
+and celerity that baffled pursuit. Sometimes one of these light armed
+vessels would slyly hover about a whole fleet of merchantmen, convoyed
+by a stately frigate, under whose guns they clustered for protection,
+until a favorable opportunity occurred, when she would suddenly dash
+into their midst like a hawk into a brood of chickens, and seizing
+one, man her and be off before the frigate could sufficiently recover
+from its astonishment at such audacity to attempt pursuit. It
+sometimes occurred that she would find herself alongside a frigate
+which she had mistaken for a large merchantman, when a seamanship and
+coolness would be exhibited in the effort to get clear, seldom
+witnessed in the oldest naval commanders. If unable to escape she
+would gallantly set her colors and fight a hopeless, yet one of the
+most desperate battles that occur in maritime warfare. The way in
+which these ships were handled, the daring manner they were carried
+into action, and the desperation with which they were fought
+astonished the English, who had never witnessed any thing like it on
+the sea. Sweeping waters covered with British cruisers, with scarcely
+a safe neutral port to enter in case of distress--shut out from their
+own harbors by blockade, they were compelled to exercise the most
+unceasing watchfulness, and keep in a state of constant preparation.
+
+It was a gallant sight to witness one of these little cruisers,
+apparently surrounded by an enemy's squadron, and yet dashing through
+its midst, fly away before the wind, while the water around was driven
+into foam by the shot that sped after her. Their conduct and success
+throughout the war, revealed the vast resources at the command of our
+navy. We have only to build ships, not educate sailors. Our commerce
+pierces to every clime, and our fisheries extend beyond the Arctic
+Circle; and, hardened by exposure and taught by experience and perils,
+our sailors are thoroughly trained in all the duties of their calling.
+Crews that the commanders of men-of-war might well be proud of, are
+at this moment afloat in every part of the world. On mere call we
+could man the navies of Europe with well instructed men. One great
+difficulty with the French navy is, that during war she has no where
+to go for recruits. Her sailors require a long training, while ours
+have been trained from boyhood.
+
+Privateering has been denounced as unworthy of civilized nations, but
+if the object of maritime warfare be to destroy the enemy's commerce,
+it is difficult to see why a private armed vessel should not be
+commissioned to do it as well as a national one. If it be plundering
+private property on the high seas, so is the capture of merchantmen by
+men-of-war. The sailors in both are stimulated by the same motives,
+viz., prize money. If maritime war was to be carried on between
+national vessels alone, and commerce be left untouched, there would be
+little use for a navy. Ports are blockaded to injure commerce and
+weaken the resources of the enemy; so are fleets of merchantmen
+captured, supplies cut off and nations distressed for the same
+purpose. And if this is to be done, it seems hardly worth quarrelling
+about who shall do it.
+
+Our fleet was so small at the commencement of the war, that the
+balance of injury and loss would have been heavy against us, but for
+our privateers. Our large vessels were soon blockaded in port, and the
+contest on the seas was for some time almost wholly carried on by
+privateers, and of the more than two thousand vessels captured during
+its progress, the greater part was taken by them. A single privateer
+would slip through a blockading squadron, stand out to sea, and in a
+few weeks destroy vessels and seize property to the amount of
+millions. At one time they cruised so daringly in the English waters,
+that sixty dollars was paid in England to insure five hundred across
+the Irish Channel. Some of them fought British national vessels and
+captured them, while it scarcely ever happened that an American
+privateer struck to an English vessel, when there was any
+approximation to an equality of force. Of the twenty-three naval
+engagements during the war, where either one or both were national
+vessels, the Americans were victorious in seventeen. A similar success
+marked the contests of private armed vessels.
+
+In 1800, the act regulating privateers gave to them the entire prize
+captured, but in March, 1812, another act was passed appropriating two
+per cent. to collectors, to be used as a fund for the support of the
+widows and orphans of those who fell in combat. This was afterwards
+modified so as to allow the disabled the benefit of the fund. On the
+19th of July the act Was amended, and two per cent. placed in the
+hands of the Secretary of the Treasury, and privateersmen put on the
+pension list with the navy. A few days after a bill passed the House,
+allowing twenty-five dollars bounty for every prisoner taken. This was
+increased the next session to one hundred dollars.
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 2.]
+
+The success attending our privateersmen, and the injury they inflicted
+on the enemy, gave them such a prominence in the country, that
+Congress increased as far as possible the inducements to fit out
+letters of marque, and in 1814 reduced the legal duties on goods
+captured by privateers thirty-three and a third per cent., and
+afterwards withdrew all claim of the government to prizes and their
+cargoes.
+
+Privateersmen had earned all these privileges for themselves by their
+activity, adroitness, and bravery; they had become the terror of the
+British commerce, and while England, proud of her naval strength, was
+blockading our entire coast, they were sweeping down upon her
+merchantmen in the chops of her own channels.
+
+The names of many of these vessels were very characteristic of the
+American sailor. "Catch me if you can," "True blooded Yankee," "Right
+of Search," "Bunker Hill," "Viper," "Rattlesnake," "Scourge," "Spit
+Fire," and "Teazer," exhibited not only the spirit that animated the
+commanders, but were well calculated to irritate and enrage the
+officers of English vessels of war, especially as their conduct
+corresponded so well with the titles they bore.
+
+In September, about three months after the war was declared, the
+"Nonsuch" privateer, of Baltimore, carrying only twelve pound
+carronades and eighty or ninety men, while cruising off Cape Vincent,
+fell in with an English ship carrying sixteen 18 and 24 pound
+carronades and two hundred men, and a schooner with six four pounders
+and 60 men. Notwithstanding this overwhelming disparity of force, the
+privateer determined to uphold the name she bore, and setting American
+colors bore gallantly down on the ship. Ranging up within close musket
+shot, she poured in her broadsides and volleys of musketry for three
+hours and a half, and maintained the unequal contest till her guns
+were all disabled and only musketry could be used. The vessels instead
+of taking advantage of the crippled condition of the ship, to capture
+her, were so amazed at her audacity and the desperate manner in which
+she was fought, that they turned and fled. The Nonsuch lost
+twenty-three killed and wounded in this engagement.
+
+Not long after, in the same waters, the Dolphin, of Baltimore, with
+only ten guns and sixty men, attacked at the same time a ship of
+sixteen guns and forty men, and a brig of 10 guns and twenty-five men,
+and captured them both.
+
+In December of this year the privateer Comet, fourteen guns, started
+on a cruise southward, and on the 14th of January gave chase to four
+sail, which were afterwards ascertained to be three English
+merchantmen, one carrying fourteen and the other two, ten guns,
+convoyed by a Portuguese brig-of-war mounting twenty thirty-twos, and
+having a crew of one hundred and sixty-five men. The privateer hailed
+the Portuguese, when the latter sent a boat aboard with her commander.
+In the conversation that followed, Captain Boyle, of the privateer,
+declared he should take those merchantmen if he could. The Portuguese
+commander replied, he must prevent him, though he should be sorry to
+have any thing disagreeable happen. The American reciprocated his good
+wishes, but told him he was afraid something unpleasant might occur if
+he undertook to interfere with his proceedings.
+
+It was dark when the Portuguese captain withdrew, and the Comet
+immediately crowded sail for the merchantmen, followed closely by the
+brig of war. Coming up with them, Captain Boyle began to pour in his
+broadsides. The vessels keeping heavy head way, firing as their guns
+bore, he was compelled to fight under a cloud of canvass. Now shooting
+ahead, he would tack, and come down on the enemy in a blaze of fire.
+But with every broadside, the Portuguese poured in his own. Captain
+Boyle, intent on capturing the English vessels, paid no attention to
+the latter, except occasionally to give him a passing salute. At
+length he compelled every vessel to strike, and succeeded in taking
+possession of and manning one. But the moon having gone down, and dark
+clouds, indicating squalls, rising over the heavens, the vessels got
+separated, except the privateer and man-of-war, which kept exchanging
+occasional broadsides till two in the morning. By daylight all
+succeeded in getting off, though dreadfully cut up, with the exception
+of the one manned the night before, which was safely brought into port
+through the squadron blockading the Chesapeake. This bold marauder
+afterwards engaged a ship of eight hundred tons burthen and carrying
+twenty-two guns, and maintained the contest for eight hours before he
+could be beaten off.
+
+The Governor Tompkins was another daring and successful cruiser,
+inflicting heavy damages on the English commerce. Her log book would
+read like a romance. [Sidenote: Jan. 1, 1813.] One morning as the sun
+rose over the sea, Captain Shaler saw in the distance three vessels
+and immediately gave chase. The wind was light and he approached
+slowly, examining the strangers narrowly. One of them appeared to be a
+large transport, so heavy that he was questioning the propriety of
+attacking her, especially as the other two were evidently determined
+to stand by her. Boats were rapidly passing to and fro, filled with
+men, and though the large vessel lay to, quietly waiting the approach
+of the privateer, she had studding-sail booms out as if prepared for a
+running fight. Her conduct looked suspicious, and while the captain of
+the Tompkins was deliberating whether to engage or haul off, a sudden
+squall struck his vessel carrying her directly under the guns of the
+stranger, which to his amazement he discovered to be a frigate. He had
+English colors flying, but instead of endeavoring with them to deceive
+the enemy till he could claw off, he hauled them down, and setting
+three American ensigns, poured a broadside into the man-of-war. The
+latter returned it with stunning effect, his balls crashing through
+the timbers, blowing up cartridges, tube boxes, etc., and strewing the
+quarter-deck with ruin. The Tompkins not daring to tack in the squall,
+kept on before the wind, passing the frigate and receiving its fire as
+she flew on. The frigate pursued, and sailing nearly as fast as the
+privateer, for a time made the water foam about him. But the latter by
+throwing over shot, lumber, etc., gradually drew ahead, and the wind
+dying away, Captain Boyle, with the aid of sweeps, got at dark beyond
+reach of the shot.
+
+About the same time the Globe had a desperate engagement off Madeira
+with two brigs, one of eighteen and the other of sixteen guns,
+compelling one to strike, though she afterwards made her escape.
+
+In August of this year, a gallant action was fought between the
+privateer Decatur, Capt. Diron, and a war schooner of the British
+navy. The Decatur had six twelve-pound carronades and one
+eighteen-pounder, and mustered 103 men. The schooner was thoroughly
+appointed, carrying _twelve twelve-pound carronades_, two long sixes,
+a brass four, a _thirty-two pound carronade_ and eighty-eight men.
+She, therefore, had but fifteen men less than her antagonist, while
+she threw more than twice the weight of metal. But, notwithstanding
+this overwhelming superiority of force, and though a packet
+accompanied the schooner whose conduct in the engagement could not be
+foretold, Captain Diron hoisted American colors to the peak, and
+closed at once and fiercely with the enemy. He knew from the outset
+that in a broadside to broadside engagement the Dominica, from her
+great superiority in metal, would soon sink him, and he determined to
+board her. The latter detected his purpose and bore away, pouring in
+her broadsides. Both commanders exhibited great skill in manoeuvering
+their ships; one to board, the other to foil the attempt. The schooner
+succeeded in firing three broadsides before the privateer could close.
+Captain Diron, who had previously got up all the ammunition, etc.
+which he wanted from below, and fastened down the hatches, the moment
+he saw from his course that the schooner could not avoid a collision,
+ordered the drums to beat the charge. Loud cheers followed, and the
+next moment the two vessels came together with a crash, the jib-boom
+of the Decatur piercing the main-sail of the enemy. In an instant they
+were lashed together. The fire from the artillery and musketry at this
+time was terrible. In the midst of it the crew of the Decatur sprang
+with shouts on the enemy's decks, when it became a hand-to-hand fight
+with pistols and cutlasses. The crew of the latter fought desperately,
+but at length, every officer being killed or wounded, with the
+exception of one midshipman and the surgeon, and only twenty-eight out
+of the eighty-eight left standing, the colors were hauled down. The
+combat, which lasted an hour, was one of the most bloody, in
+proportion to the number engaged, that occurred during the war.
+
+[Sidenote: 1814.]
+
+The privateer Neufchatel was another lucky ship. Once getting becalmed
+off Gray Head, within sight of the Endymion, she was attacked by the
+boats and launches of the latter containing over a hundred men. The
+Neufchatel carried 17 guns, but had at the time of the attack only
+thirty-three men and officers included. Although it was dark the
+captain observed the approach of the boats, five in number, and opened
+his fire upon them. They, however, steadily advanced till they reached
+the ship, when they attempted to board on bows, sides, and stern
+simultaneously.
+
+The action lasted twenty minutes, when one boat having sunk, another
+being emptied of its crew, and the others drifting away, apparently
+without men, the firing ceased. At its close the privateer found on
+her deck more prisoners than she had men in the combat. But few of the
+assailants ever reached the frigate again.
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 24.]
+
+In November of this year the Kemp privateer sailed out of Wilmington
+and two days after was attacked by a fleet of six small vessels,
+carrying in all forty-six guns and a hundred and thirty-four men.
+Enveloped in the fire of six vessels this gallant privateer maintained
+the unequal combat for half an hour, and finally succeeded in
+scattering them, when she fell on them in detail and carried three by
+boarding. She then ranged alongside the largest brig and poured in her
+broadsides and volleys of musketry. In fifteen minutes the latter
+struck. In an hour and a half the whole were taken, but while the
+prizes were being secured two hoisted sail and got away. The other
+four were secured and brought into port, the result of a six days'
+cruise.
+
+[Sidenote: 1814.]
+
+But the most desperate engagement probably during the war took place
+this year, between the privateer brig, General Armstrong, and the
+crews of an English squadron in the port of Fayal. This brig,
+carrying only seven guns and ninety men, entered that port to obtain
+water, and her commander, Captain Reid, seeing no sail on the horizon,
+dropped his anchor. A few hours after, the British brig Carnation came
+in and anchored near her. Soon after the Plantaganet, 74, and the Rota
+frigate arrived. Captain Reid, knowing how little regard English
+officers paid to the laws of neutrality, became very solicitous about
+the safety of his ship, and applied to the authorities of the place to
+know what course he should pursue. They told him he need entertain no
+fear, as the English officers knew the rights of a neutral port too
+well to molest him. Captain Reid, however, suspected it would be
+otherwise, and kept a close watch on the movements of the enemy. About
+nine o'clock in the evening, it being broad moonlight on the bay and
+not a breath of air breaking its glittering surface, he saw four boats
+rowing rapidly and silently towards him. When they came within hail he
+called out to know their purpose. The latter making no reply and
+keeping steadily on, he bade them stand off. They paid no heed to his
+repeated orders, and were about to board when he gave the command to
+fire. After a short but fierce contest the assailants were driven off
+and returned to their vessels. The news soon spread, and the
+inhabitants with the governor gathered on the shore to see the battle.
+About midnight fourteen launches, filled with four hundred men, were
+seen to put off and steer straight for the privateer. Captain Reid,
+who, in the mean time, had cut his cable and moored close in shore,
+knew he could not save his vessel; but indignant at this violation of
+the laws of neutrality he determined the enemy should pay dear for the
+conquest, and the moment the boats came within range opened a
+tremendous fire upon them. They staggered under it, but returning it
+with spirit continued to press on. But as they got nearer, the carnage
+became awful. Every gun on board that privateer seemed aimed with the
+precision of a rifle, and the discharges were so rapid and incessant
+that it was with the utmost efforts the boats could be pushed on at
+all. The dead cumbered the living, and the oars were continually
+dropping from the hands of the slain, crippling and confusing all the
+movements. At length, however, they succeeded in reaching the brig,
+and cheered on by their officers, shouting "no quarter," began to
+ascend the sides of the ship. In a moment its black hull was a sheet
+of flame rolling on the foe.
+
+Shrieks and cries, mingled with oaths and execrations, and sharp
+volleys of musketry rang out on the night air, turning that moonlight
+bay into a scene of indescribable terror. The bright waters were
+loaded with black forms, as they floated or struggled around the
+boats. The Americans fought with the ferocity of tigers and the
+desperation of mad men. Leaping into the boats they literally
+massacred all within. Several drifted ashore full of dead bodies--not
+a soul being left alive of all the crew--others were sunk. Some were
+left with one or two to row them. Overwhelmed, crushed and
+discomfitted, the remainder abandoned the attempt and pulled slowly
+back to the ships, marking their course by the groans and cries of the
+wounded that floated back over the bay. Only three officers, out of
+the whole, escaped, while scarce a hundred and fifty of the four
+hundred returned unwounded to their vessels. A hundred and twenty were
+killed outright. The loss could scarcely have been greater had the
+enemy fought a squadron equal to their own.
+
+Our Consul, after this, dropped a note to the Governor, who
+immediately sent a remonstrance to Van Lloyd, commander of the
+Plantagenet, saying that the American vessel was under the guns of the
+castle and entitled to Portuguese protection. To this Van Lloyd
+replied, that he was resolved on the destruction of the vessel, and if
+the fort undertook to protect her, he would not leave a house standing
+on shore.
+
+The next day the Carnation hauled in alongside and opened her
+broadsides on the privateer. Reid, still grimly clinging to his
+vessel, returned the fire, and in a short time so cut up his
+antagonist that he hauled off to repair. That little brig, half a
+wreck, lying under the walls of the castle fighting that hopeless
+gallant battle, vindicating her rights against such fearful odds, with
+none who dare help her, presented a sublime spectacle.
+
+At length his guns being dismounted, Captain Reid ordered his men to
+cut away the masts of the ship, blow a hole through her bottom, and
+taking out their arms and clothing, go ashore. Soon after the British
+advanced and set her on fire. Van Lloyd then made a demand on the
+Governor for Captain Reid and his crew, threatening in case of refusal
+to send an armed force and take them. Fearing that the Governor would
+not be able to prevent their arrest, this gallant band retired to an
+old convent, knocked away the drawbridge, determined to defend
+themselves to the last. The English commander had no desire to place
+his crews again under the deadly aim of those daring men, and
+abandoned the project.
+
+The American loss in this engagement was only two killed and seven
+wounded. Thus dearly did England pay for this violation of the laws of
+a neutral port. That brig, cruising successfully to the close of the
+war, could not have inflicted so heavy damage on the enemy as she
+caused in her capture.
+
+The gallant bearing and patriotic feeling that marked these little
+cruisers are worthy of record, while the hair-breadth escapes--the
+tricks employed to entice merchantmen within their reach--the wit and
+humor exhibited in hailing and answering the hails of vessels--the
+saucy and irritating acts committed on purpose to provoke--the
+good-natured jokes they cracked on those they had first outwitted,
+then conquered, would make a most characteristic and amusing chapter
+in American history.
+
+Captain Boyle, of the Chasseur, took great delight in provoking
+frigates to chase him, and when they abandoned the pursuit as
+hopeless, he would affect to chase in turn, teazing and insulting his
+formidable adversaries, who tried in vain to cut some spar out of the
+winged thing in order to lessen her fleetness. Cruising along the
+English coast, this vessel had some very narrow escapes. While here
+the captain overhauled a cartel, and sent by it a proclamation with
+orders to have it stuck up in Lloyd's coffee house, declaring the
+whole British Empire in a state of blockade, and that he considered
+the force under him sufficient to maintain it.
+
+This was probably one of the finest private armed vessels afloat
+during the war. Buoyant as a sea-gull, she sat so lightly and
+gracefully on the water, that it seemed as if she might, at will, rise
+and fly. Fleet as the wind, she was handled with such ease that the
+enemy gazed on her movements with admiration.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 26, 1815.]
+
+Her last exploit was the capture of his majesty's schooner St.
+Lawrence, carrying fifteen guns. The latter was on her way to New
+Orleans, with some soldiers, marines, and gentlemen of the navy as
+passengers. The Chasseur had only six twelve-pounders and eight short
+nine pound carronades, having been compelled a short time before, when
+hard pressed by an English frigate, to throw over nearly all her
+twelve pound carronades. Captain Boyle had no suspicion of the true
+character of the vessel when he gave chase, for her ports had been
+closed on purpose to deceive him. He therefore stood boldly on till he
+got within pistol-shot, when the schooner suddenly opened ten ports on
+a side and poured in a destructive fire. At the same time the men who
+had been concealed under the bulwarks leaped up and delivered a volley
+of musketry. Captain Boyle, discovering what a trap he had been
+beguiled into, determined at once to stay in it, and ranging alongside
+within ten yards, opened a tremendous fire with his batteries and
+musketry. The vessels were so near each other that the voices of
+officers and men could be distinctly heard, even amid the crashing
+cannonade. That little privateer exhibited a skill and practice in
+gunnery unsurpassed by any frigate, and superior to any vessel in the
+English navy. The enemy was completely stunned by the rapidity and
+destructive effect of her fire, and in eleven minutes was a perfect
+wreck. Captain Boyle then gave the command to board, when the flag was
+struck. In this short space of time the Chasseur had strewed the deck
+of that schooner with nearly half of her crew, killed and wounded.
+
+Our privateers had greatly the advantage of the English, not only in
+artillery but in musketry--our men firing with much surer aim than
+theirs.
+
+It would be impossible to give the names and details of all the
+vessels and their engagements; but, independent of the vast number of
+merchantmen captured by them, they took eight national vessels of the
+enemy, in single combat. They seemed to vie with each other in daring
+and the venturous exploits they would undertake. One of these vessels
+would shoot out of port within sight of a blockading squadron, start
+alone on a cruise, and scouring thirty or forty thousand miles of the
+ocean, return with a fleet of prizes. The commanders were almost,
+invariably humane men, treating their prisoners with vastly more
+kindness than British admirals and commodores did those Americans who
+fell in their hands. Many acts of kindness and generosity were
+performed, and a nobleness of spirit exhibited towards a fallen foe,
+which has ever been, and it is to be hoped ever will be, a
+distinguished trait in the American character. On one occasion a
+privateer captured in the channel a Welch vessel from Cardigan,
+freighted with corn. As the captain went on board he saw a small box
+with a hole in the top, in the cabin, marked "Missionary box." "What
+is this?" said he, touching it with a stick. "Oh," replied the
+Cambrian, "the truth is, my poor fellows here have been accustomed
+every Monday morning to drop a penny each into that box, for the
+purpose of sending out missionaries to preach the gospel to the
+heathen; but it's all over now." "Indeed," said the captain, and
+reflecting a moment, he added, "Captain, I'll not hurt a hair of your
+head nor touch your vessel," and immediately returned to his own ship,
+leaving him unmolested.
+
+Such conduct appears the more striking when contrasted with that of
+British officers. The murder of Mr. Sigourney, of the Alp, whose
+brains were beaten out; though when his vessel was taken possession of
+not a soul but himself was found on board--the confinement of Capt.
+Upton and his officers of the privateer Hunter, for three months in a
+filthy prison, and their after transfer to a prison ship--the cruelty
+shown to Capt. Nichols, who, after enjoying his parole for two months,
+was without the least reason thrown into a prison-ship and kept for
+more than a month in a room four feet by seven, and many other cases
+of extreme cruelty, were well known, for the facts had been sworn to
+and placed on record as state papers. Rumor aggravated all these a
+hundred fold, yet the English government can offset them with no
+retaliatory acts substantiated before courts of inquiry.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+DARTMOOR PRISON.
+
+ Impressed Americans made prisoners of war -- Treatment of
+ prisoners -- Prison Ships -- Dartmoor prison -- Neglect of
+ American prisoners -- Their sufferings -- Fourth of July in
+ Dartmoor -- Brutal attack of the French prisoners -- Fresh
+ arrivals -- Joy at the news of our naval victories --
+ Sufferings of the prisoners in winter -- American Government
+ allows them three cents per diem -- Moral effect of this
+ notice of Government -- Napoleon's downfall -- Increased
+ allowance of Government -- Industry of prisoners -- Attempts
+ to escape -- Extraordinary adventure of a lieutenant of a
+ privateer -- Number of prisoners increased -- A riot to
+ obtain bread -- Dartmoor massacre -- Messrs. King and
+ L'Arpent appointed commissioners to investigate it --
+ Decision -- The end.
+
+
+A short chapter is due to those who, though not engaged in battle,
+suffered equally for their country, and despite the oppression and
+want which drove them well nigh to despair, refused to be faithless to
+the land that had nurtured them. The conduct of the land and naval
+officers to a vanquished enemy, did not present a more striking
+contrast than that of the two governments towards prisoners who had
+never taken up arms. Those placed in confinement by us were never
+allowed to suffer through want of clothing or food, while a barbarity
+characterized the treatment of American citizens that reflects the
+deepest disgrace on the British empire.
+
+[Illustration: Dartmoor Prison.]
+
+When the declaration of war was made, the English vessels had a vast
+number of American seamen on board, most of them impressed, who flatly
+refused to fight against their country. Many of these, without having
+received the pay due them, were then sent to England as prisoners of
+war. Captures at sea swelled the number rapidly, which in the end
+amounted to nearly six thousand men. Officers of privateersmen and
+merchantmen on parole, were sent to Devonshire or Berkshire, where on
+thirty-three and a quarter cents per diem, they were allowed to
+subsist in comparative comfort; but the common sailors and merchant
+captains were scattered about in different prisons, the most, however,
+being collected and placed on board two old line-of-battle-ships in
+Portsmouth harbor. Hence, after a short imprisonment, characterized by
+a brutality not often found among half-civilized nations, they were
+transferred to Dartmoor prison, seventeen miles inland. This dreaded
+prison was situated high up on the side of a barren mountain,
+overlooking a bleak and desolate moor. It consisted of seven
+buildings, surrounded by two walls, the first a mile in extent and
+sixteen feet high; the second, thirty feet from the first, and
+surmounted by guards overlooking the spaces within. Each prison had
+but one apartment on a floor, around which, in tiers, six on a side,
+the hammocks were slung. Into one of these large cold apartments,
+nearly five hundred American prisoners were crowded during the year
+1813. Their own Government had not then provided any thing towards
+their expenses, and they were dependent entirely on the allowance of
+the British officials. The garments they brought with them, at length
+wearing out, they were reduced to the most miserable shifts to cover
+their persons. As soon as it was dark, this half-famished multitude
+was turned into their prison, and left without a light to pass the
+long and dreary winter nights. Filthy, ragged, covered with vermin,
+they strolled around the yard in the day time, or lay basking in the
+sun to obtain a little warmth, and moody and despairing, gradually
+sank, through degrading companionship and the demoralization of want
+and suffering, lower and lower in the scale of humanity. A single
+bucket, only, containing the food, was allowed to a mess, around which
+they gathered with the avidity of starving men, and each with his
+wooden spoon struggled to eat fastest and most. To add to their
+sufferings the small-pox broke out among them, carrying many to their
+graves. Faint and far echoes from home would now and then rekindle
+hope in their bosoms, to be succeeded only by blank despair.
+
+The better portion strove manfully to arrest the tendency around them
+to degradation, and constituted themselves a court to try offenders.
+When theft was proved on one, a punishment of twenty-seven lashes was
+inflicted. They also used every inducement to prevent the sailors from
+enlisting in the British service, to which last resort many were
+driven, to escape the horrors of that gloomy prison.
+
+When the 4th of July arrived, they determined to celebrate the
+national anniversary in their own prison, and so having by some means
+obtained two American standards, they placed them at the two ends of
+the building, outside the walls, and forming into two columns marched
+up and down the yard, singing patriotic songs, whistling patriotic
+tunes, and cheering the flag of their country. The keeper, hearing of
+it, ordered the turnkeys to take away the flags; but the prisoners
+sent to him, requesting as a particular favor that they might be
+allowed to celebrate the anniversary of their country's independence,
+adding if he insisted on attacking their colors he must take the
+consequences. The guards were then ordered in, when a scuffle ensued,
+in which one flag was taken, but the prisoners bore the other off in
+triumph to their room. At evening, when the guards came as usual to
+shut them up, a great deal of severe language and opprobrious epithets
+were used, stigmatizing the pitiful revenge in taking away their
+flags as mean and contemptible. Retorts followed, blows succeeded, and
+finally the guard fired on the crowd, wounding two men. Thus ended the
+4th of July, 1813, in Dartmoor.
+
+In the apartments above the Americans, were crowded nearly a thousand
+French prisoners, miserable outcasts, with scarcely any thing left of
+our common humanity but the form. Many of them were entirely naked,
+and slept on the stone floor, stretched out like so many swine. The
+moment clothing was given them they would gamble it away. These
+wretches formed a conspiracy to murder all the Americans. Arming
+themselves with whatever weapon they could lay hands on, they
+contrived one morning to get into the yard before the latter, and as
+the first group of Americans, a hundred and fifty in number, emerged
+into the open air, fell upon them with the ferocity of fiends. Passing
+between them and the prison, they blocked the entrance to prevent the
+others from coming to the rescue. A wild scene of confusion and tumult
+followed. The French succeeded in stabbing and knocking down and
+mangling nearly every American, and would doubtless have beaten the
+whole to death had not the guard, attracted by the cries for help and
+shrieks of murder, rushed in, and by a bayonet charge ended the fray.
+A great number of the Americans were more or less injured and twenty
+shockingly mangled.
+
+The succeeding months passed drearily away, with nothing occurring to
+break the weary monotony of life, except at long intervals the arrival
+of a fresh squad of prisoners. This was an event in their existence,
+and replaced them once more in communication with the outward world.
+The new comers were lions for the time. Eager groups gathered around
+each one, impatiently asking after the news, and how the war got on.
+The triumphs of our navy made them forget, for awhile, the gloom of
+their dismal abode. Every action had to be described over and over
+again, losing nothing by Jack's embellishments--the narration ever and
+anon interrupted with huzzas and acclamations. They would lie for
+hours awake in their hammocks, listening to the recital of the
+marvellous sea-fights in which "free trade and sailors' rights" were
+gallantly maintained, and cheers would burst out of the darkness,
+ringing down through the tiers of cots that lined the walls.
+
+During the autumn of 1813, a fresh arrival of prisoners brought the
+news of Perry's victory on Lake Erie, and the capture of the Boxer by
+the Enterprise. These were the occasion of great rejoicing, and while
+the more intelligent and respectable portion of the captives discussed
+the victories calmly, the hundreds of common seamen shook the prison
+walls with their uproarious mirth and unbounded exultation.
+
+[Sidenote: 1813.]
+
+The sufferings of the prisoners were the greatest during this
+winter. They were allowed no fire and no light, although the windows
+were not glazed; and locked within the cold damp stone walls at the
+close of the short winter days, were compelled to spend the long
+winter evenings in darkness, whiling away the time in telling
+stories--keeping warm by huddling together, or creeping to their
+hammocks with but a single tattered blanket to protect them from the
+cold. To make their wretchedness complete, the winter set in with a
+severity not felt before for half a century, and which has had no
+parallel since. The mountain on which the prison stood was covered
+with snow to the depth of from two to four feet. The stream running
+through the prison yard, and the buckets of water in the prisoners'
+room were frozen solid. Most of the prisoners being protected only
+by rags, and destitute of shoes, they could not go out into the yard
+at all, for it was covered with snow, but lay crouched in their
+hammocks all day and all night. The strong were bowed in gloom and
+despair, and the weak perished in protracted agonies. To fill up the
+measure of their sufferings, the commanding officer issued an order
+compelling them to turn out at nine o'clock in the morning, and
+stand in the yard till the guard counted them. This took nearly an
+hour, during which time the poor fellows stood barefoot in the snow,
+benumbed by the cold and pierced by the bleak December blasts that
+swept the desolate mountain, and hurled the snow in clouds through
+the air. Unable to bear this dreadful exposure, the prisoners cut up
+their bedding and made garments and socks for their feet to protect
+them from the frost, and slept on the cold floor. Morning after
+morning, hardy men overcome by the cold, fell lifeless in presence
+of their keepers, and were carried to the hospital, where they were
+resuscitated, only to be sent back to shiver and suffer on the icy
+floor of their prison. The better class remonstrated against this
+useless cruelty, but without effect.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec.]
+
+At length, in the latter part of the month, the agent was removed, and
+Captain Shortland took his place, who immediately revoked the order
+requiring the prisoners to be counted--represented strongly to the
+board of transport the condition they were in, and used all the means
+in his power to alleviate their sufferings and ameliorate the horrors
+of their confinement. Still, no clothing was furnished, and the cold
+was intense. The camp distemper also broke out, and many were not
+sorry to take it, in order to get in the more comfortable quarters of
+the hospital.
+
+Mr. Beasely was agent for American prisoners of war in England, to
+whom those at Dartmoor constantly appealed for help. Receiving no
+answers to their repeated appeals, they denounced him as unfeeling and
+indifferent to their distress. At last, enraged at the neglect of
+their own Government, as represented in Mr. Beasely, and maddened by
+suffering, they drew up a paper and sent it to him, in which they
+declared that unless relief was granted they would offer, _en masse_,
+their services to the British Government. To this no answer was
+received for about a month, when a letter arrived, announcing that the
+United States would allow them about three cents a day to buy soap and
+tobacco with. Slight as this relief was, it shed sunshine through that
+prison. True, it was not sufficient to purchase them clothing; it did
+more, however; it showed that they were recognized by their
+Government--they were no longer disowned, forgotten men, but stood
+once more in communication with the land of their birth, and
+acknowledged to be American citizens. The moral effect of this
+consciousness was wonderful, and notwithstanding their nakedness and
+forlorn appearance, the prisoners felt at once a new dignity. A
+committee was appointed to suppress gambling, and a petition got up to
+separate them from the blacks, who were irredeemably given over to
+thieving. Previous to this ninety-five had entered the British
+service; now every one spurned the thought. They never would desert
+the country that owned them as sons.
+
+In the spring the rigorous restrictions laid on them were relaxed, and
+they were allowed the privilege of the French prisoners. Free access
+to the other prisoners and to the market were given, and they
+established a coffee-house in their prison, selling coffee at a penny
+a pint. From French officers they learned the news of the day. The
+world was thus again thrown open to them, and though the prospect of
+exchange grew dimmer and dimmer, they resigned themselves with more
+tranquillity to their contemplated long confinement. In the mean time
+money began to arrive from friends at home, on which, as a capital,
+the recipients set up as tobacconists, butter and potatoe merchants,
+etc. Imitating the French, they learned to be economical, and invent
+methods of increasing their revenue. The bones left from their beef
+were converted into beautifully wrought miniature ships. Others
+plaited straw for hats, made hair bracelets, list shoes, etc., turning
+that gloomy receptacle of despairing, reckless men, into a perfect
+hive of industry. Soon after, another letter from Mr. Beasely arrived,
+stating that six cents a week, in addition to the former sum, would in
+future be allowed, per man. This little sum diffused new pleasure
+around, and filled every heart with animation and hope. They could now
+purchase clothing and other little articles, necessary to render
+their appearance becoming American citizens.
+
+Succeeding this came the news of Napoleon's downfall and termination
+of the continental war. The French prisoners were, of course,
+released, and the Americans purchased out their stock in trade,
+utensils, &c.
+
+Among the prisoners were gray-haired men, and boys from thirteen to
+seventeen years of age. For the latter a school was established, to
+instruct them in reading, writing, and arithmetic. Soon another
+welcome letter was received, announcing that the United States would
+hereafter clothe them. Clad in clean new, though coarse clothing, they
+now trod the yards of their prison with a manly bearing. The sense of
+inferiority was gone, and the characteristic boldness and independence
+of the American seamen again shone forth. They would argue with
+English officers on the war, repel insult, and denounce every act of
+cruelty or fraud as freely as if on their own soil.
+
+The English Government having resolved to make Dartmoor the general
+depôt of the prisoners, fresh arrivals soon swelled the number to
+fourteen hundred. [Sidenote: 1814.] Being now in a better condition,
+they resolved to celebrate the approaching 4th of July with becoming
+pomp. American colors were obtained, two hogsheads of porter and some
+rum purchased, and a grand dinner of soup and beef prepared. Early in
+the morning the flag was run up, and as it flaunted to the wind, "ALL
+CANADA, OR DARTMOOR PRISON FOR EVER!" was seen inscribed upon its
+folds. At eleven the prisoners assembled, while the walls around were
+lined with the English soldiers and officers and clerks, curious to
+hear what kind of an oration a Yankee sailor would make. Mounted on a
+cask, the orator launched at once into the war, showed how we had been
+forced into it by the injustice of England, and dwelt with great
+unction on the separate naval victories the brave tars had gained.
+Dinner followed, the grog circulated freely, toasts were given, and a
+song composed expressly for the occasion sung. Mirth and hilarity
+ruled the hour, and the walls of that old prison shook to the
+deafening cheers and boisterous mirth of these sons of the ocean.
+
+Soon after a plan of escape was put in execution, and for a long time
+proceeded without detection. Every prisoner was sworn to secresy, and
+a court organized to try any informer, who in case of conviction, was
+to be hung. Shafts were sunk in the ground--the hole at the top being
+carefully concealed--and broad excavations began and worked towards
+the walls, beyond which they were to come to the surface. A traitor,
+however, was found, who for the price of his liberty revealed all.
+
+From time to time some of the prisoners made their escape, but most
+of them were retaken before they reached the sea-board.[12]
+
+[Footnote 12: A most daring and successful attempt was made by one of
+the lieutenants of the privateer Rattlesnake. Having bribed one of the
+sentinels with six guineas, to give him the countersign, he let
+himself down with a rope, eighty feet, to the ground, and was just
+about to pass the gate, when the villain who had received the six
+guineas, informed against him. Enraged at the act, the lieutenant
+sprung on him with his dagger, but was seized and bound before he
+could plunge it in his heart. Arraigned before Capt. Shortland, he was
+asked how he obtained the countersign. Lieutenant G---- replied, that
+if the sentinel had behaved honorably to him, death itself could not
+have wrested his name from him, for it was the character of Americans
+always to keep their engagements; but, as he had deceived him, he
+should suffer for it. The culprit's name was then given, and he
+received three hundred lashes. Shortland then told the lieutenant he
+was a brave man, and pledged his honor, if he would not again attempt
+to escape, he would procure his exchange. The latter replied, that he
+had seen too much of the honor of British officers, ever to take their
+word, and he should escape that very night. The keeper assured him the
+attempt would be fatal, as he should double the sentinels, and if he
+made it he would most certainly be shot. Lieutenant G---- said he did
+not care--death was preferable to that detestable prison. Having
+obtained the countersign again, for three guineas, he that very night
+lowered himself down, and though challenged seventeen times, passed
+safely out. Keeping the fields he made his way to the sea-coast, where
+he found a boat eighteen feet long, with one oar in it. In this frail
+vessel, without provision or water, he determined to put to sea, and
+cross the channel, one hundred miles, to France. Sculling it till he
+got off shore, he converted his umbrella and clothes into a sail, and
+stood boldly away. When about half way over, he discovered a
+brig-of-war. The sea was running high at the time, but he immediately
+took down the sail, and laid himself flat in the boat, to avoid being
+seen. After the brig had passed him, he again hoisted sail, and after
+a passage of thirty-six hours, landed safely in France.]
+
+The number of prisoners continued to increase, so that by autumn, over
+five thousand were congregated in the prison. Before they were
+released, the number was swelled to five thousand six hundred and
+ninety-three. Frequent collisions occurred between them and the
+officers, which embittered the animosity of the latter, and finally
+brought on a bloody catastrophe.
+
+With the approach of winter great suffering was experienced. The
+malignant small-pox again broke out, and raged with fatal violence
+amid this army of men.
+
+The news of the treaty of peace, however, dissipated, for a time, all
+their gloom, and diffused joy and hope through the prisons. The word
+"HOME," was on every man's lips, and a speedy release from that den of
+horrors and suffering was expected. But the gloomy winter passed, and
+spring came, without mitigating their condition or restoring them to
+freedom. The prisoners became exasperated. The two countries having
+been so long at peace, they felt themselves entitled to their freedom.
+They were no longer prisoners of war, but by the very act of the
+treaty, American freemen. They burnt Mr. Beasely, the American agent,
+in effigy, railed at their keepers, and swore they would make their
+escape by violence if not soon released.
+
+On the fourth of April, Captain Shortland having gone to Plymouth,
+they were not allowed any bread. Bearing the privation patiently, for
+thirty-six hours, they resolved to break open the store-house and
+supply themselves. So at dark as the officers entered the yard and
+cried out, "_Turn in! Turn in!_" a signal previously agreed on was
+given, and in an instant the excited thousands moved in one dark mass
+towards the gates. One after another gave way before the tremendous
+pressure, and these maddened hungry men rushed around the depôt of
+provisions, their shouts and cries ringing over the alarm bells and
+beat of drums, that summoned the garrison to arms. The alarm spread to
+the neighboring villages, and the militia began to pour in. In a few
+moments the soldiers advanced with charged bayonets towards the
+multitude, when they were sternly ordered off by the prisoners, who
+swore that if they dared fire or charge, they would charge in turn,
+and level that store-house to the ground, and march out of prison. The
+officers, fearing the result of such a contest, prudently promised to
+give them their usual supply if they would retire to their respective
+prisons. They did so, and quiet was restored. The bold and successful
+manner in which the Americans had overawed the soldiery and coerced
+submission to their demands, irritated them highly, and made them wish
+for a good opportunity to retaliate. [Sidenote: April 6.] This was
+soon furnished. Two days after, Captain Shortland, who had returned,
+observed a hole in that portion of the inner wall which separated two
+of the prison yards from the barracks, and suspecting, or pretending
+to suspect it was made by the prisoners for the purpose of escaping,
+he immediately ordered the alarm bells to be rung and the drums to
+beat. The prisoners, surprised and excited, rushed towards the gates
+of the yard to ascertain the cause of the alarm. The thousands behind
+pushing forward the thousands before, they became packed in an
+impenetrable mass at the entrance, and the pressure was so great that
+some were forced out through one of the gates that gave way. In the
+midst of the confusion, Shortland entered the inner square with the
+whole garrison. The soldiers advanced close to the throng, when the
+prisoners retired towards their respective yards. Doubtless amid such
+a vast and motley collection of men, many taunted the soldiers,
+provoked them, and dared them to fire. Still they yielded before the
+bayonet, and entered their own yard. The gates were shut, but a large
+crowd remained in the passage, provoking the soldiers, from whom they
+were separated by an iron railing, and threatening them with
+vengeance. While in this position the order to fire was given.
+Immediately the massacre commenced. Volley after volley was poured
+into the terrified crowd, pushing down and trampling on each other in
+their haste to reach the shelter of the prisons. Men were killed in
+the act of supplicating mercy, others were shot down while struggling
+to enter the prison doors. It was cold-blooded murder, and before all
+the prisoners could get within the walls, over sixty were killed or
+wounded. When the living had all escaped to a place of shelter, and
+the carnage was over, the prison yard presented a ghastly spectacle.
+The man of sixty, the sailor in his prime, and the boy of fifteen, lay
+scattered around, while the groans of the wounded were borne to the
+ears of the enraged prisoners within. A sullen silence fell on those
+gloomy structures, the flags were raised half-mast, in token of
+mourning, and the prisoners assembled together and appointed a
+committee to report on the matter.
+
+Although the coroner's jury over the slain gave a verdict of
+justifiable homicide, our Government took up the matter, and appointed
+Charles King to meet Mr. Larpent, the English commissioner, and
+investigate it. In their report no one was declared culpable, though
+it was freely admitted wrong had been done. Mr. King was severely
+censured for his conduct, but it was not easy to come to a just
+conclusion, when the testimony of the two parties were so entirely at
+variance. Mr. Larpent was bound to believe the assertions of Captain
+Shortland and his troops, as much as Mr. King those of the prisoners.
+Capt. Shortland declared he never gave the order to fire, and
+attempted to arrest it after it had begun. This, of course, the
+prisoners denied, some of them swearing they heard him give the
+order. One thing, however, is certain; Mr. King never should have let
+this massacre of Americans pass, with so slight a condemnation as it
+received at his hands. In the first place, there is good reason to
+doubt whether Captain Shortland believed there was any great danger at
+all. A hole in a wall, only large enough to admit the passage of a
+single man at a time, could easily be stopped up without ringing alarm
+bells and beating drums, especially as that hole communicated with
+only two out of five of the yards, and when in three of these yards
+the prisoners were walking about in their usual quiet manner. Nor
+could he believe they meditated an escape, when they had just received
+word that preparations were nearly completed for their restoration to
+liberty. Where could they escape to without money or clothing?
+Besides, if they wished to free themselves by violence, why did they
+not do it two days before, when they had completely cowed the soldiers
+and had only to march forth without farther resistance.
+
+In the second place, he deserved disgrace and punishment, for
+allowing the soldiers to press on the multitude, when he saw them
+evidently, or the great mass of them, retiring to their prisons. To
+fire on a mob, unless they are pressing forward to assail authority
+and force, is brutal. If he gave the order to fire, he should have
+been hung. If he did not, he should be held responsible for having
+such undisciplined troops under his command. An act like this cannot
+be committed and nobody be deserving of reprehension. The commander
+of a garrison cannot so escape responsibility. The probability is,
+enraged at the conduct of the prisoners in forcing the soldiers to
+yield to their demands two days before, he resolved to punish the
+first attempt at insubordination, and irritated at the insolence and
+taunts of some of them, he in a fit of passion gave the order to
+fire. Conscience-smitten afterwards, and fearing disgrace and
+punishment, he endeavored to cover up the dark transaction.
+
+Mr. King had rather, at any time, smooth over a quarrel, than increase
+the exasperation by dealing sternly with its causes. With his thousand
+noble and excellent qualities, he lacked the energy of will and
+unflinching severity necessary to probe such a difficulty to the
+bottom, and see that justice was done at whatever cost. A great wrong
+was committed, though doubtless with good intentions and a patriotic
+heart.
+
+
+
+
+_The following_ TAX TABLES, _showing the relative amount of taxation
+during the last two years of the war, are extracted from voluminous
+tables found in the revenue department. The whole to be found in
+Ingersoll's History of the War of 1812._
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Stills and Boilers._
+
+ +----------------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
+ | | In 1814. | In 1815. |
+ | STATES OR |-------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+ | TERRITORIES. | Domestic | Foreign | Domestic | Foreign |
+ | | materials. | materials.| materials. | materials.|
+ +----------------------+-------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+ | New Hampshire | 3,982 50 | 213 90 | 888 69 | 3,015 90 |
+ | Massachusetts | 33,735 64 | 39,272 28 | 23,381 83 | 57,959 11 |
+ | Vermont | 31,836 54 | | 14,263 | |
+ | Rhode Island | 6,918 73 | 9,346 50 | 4,073 28 | 8,440 80 |
+ | Connecticut | 50,067 34 | 50,867 66 | 3,524 65 | |
+ | New York | 225,979 31 | 6,201 45 | 120,522 03 | 10,299 23 |
+ | New Jersey | 54,845 67 | 25,033 72 | 4,953 90 | |
+ | Pennsylvania | 392,536 23 | 56 70 | 228,042 13 | |
+ | Delaware | 4,457 64 | | 209 11 | |
+ | Maryland | 60,378 10 | | 28,910 87 | |
+ | Virginia | 264,135 97 | 3 50 | 87,702 63 | |
+ | North Carolina | 87,738 22 | | 13,353 81 | |
+ | Ohio | 75,596 85 | | 33,819 16 | |
+ | Kentucky | 141,157 50 | | 57,807 62 | |
+ | South Carolina | 66,941 37 | 1,425 00 | 12,615 84 | 2,550 77 |
+ | Tennessee | 77,091 59 | 34,244 77 | | |
+ | Georgia | 29,262 34 | 925 00 | 14,929 56 | 864 00 |
+ | Louisiana | 7,741 84 | | 6,109 72 | |
+ | Illinois Territory | 605 35 | | 214 91 | |
+ | Michigan " | | | | |
+ | Indiana " | 2,358 50 | | 923 20 | |
+ | Missouri " | 2,033 95 | | 1,631 08 | |
+ | Mississippi " | 1,862 41 | | 958 48 | |
+ | District of Columbia | 279 27 | | | |
+ +----------------------+-------------+-----------+------------+-----------|
+ | Total |1,621,542 86 | 57,444 33 | 760,804 22 | 91,608 36 |
+ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Spirits distilled in the United
+States._
+
+ +---------------------+-----------------------------------------+
+ | | In 1815. |
+ | +----------------------------+------------+
+ | STATES OR | Domestic materials. | Foreign |
+ | TERRITORIES. | | materials. |
+ | +--------------+-------------+------------+
+ | | At 20 cents | At 25 cents | At 20 cents|
+ | | per gal. | per gal. | per gal. |
+ +---------------------+--------------+-------------+------------+
+ | | | | |
+ |New Hampshire | 861 81 | 137 05 | 4,840 81 |
+ |Massachusetts | 29,877 84 | 1,548 14 | 110,147 27 |
+ |Vermont | 18,017 56 | 816 14 | |
+ |Rhode Island | 6,097 71 | | 12,185 97 |
+ |Connecticut | 52,996 04 | 3,692 09 | 5,645 20 |
+ |New York | 199,645 92 | 5,672 31 | 15,519 65 |
+ |New Jersey | 69,081 42 | 10,329 74 | 5,477 20 |
+ |Pennsylvania | 381,484 71 | 38,393 24 | |
+ |Delaware | 600 35 | 22,295 38 | |
+ |Maryland | 66,177 25 | 32,428 34 | |
+ |Virginia | 179,387 95 | 201,566 82 | |
+ |North Carolina | 21,961 11 | 175,922 07 | |
+ |Ohio | 56,653 68 | 15,128 83 | |
+ |Kentucky | 114,644 40 | 39,569 10 | |
+ |South Carolina | 19,640 77 | 68,107 41 | 3,391 30 |
+ |Tennessee | 55,284 66 | 56,573 59 | |
+ |Georgia | 17,563 00 | 65,162 75 | 2,021 60 |
+ |Louisiana | 12,756 54 | 177 35 | |
+ |Illinois Territory | 549 23 | 701 26 | |
+ |Michigan " | | | |
+ |Indiana " | 641 50 | 2,508 17 | |
+ |Missouri " | 833 50 | 622 89 | |
+ |Mississippi " | 583 37 | 1,045 90 | |
+ |District of Columbia | | | |
+ +---------------------+--------------+-------------+------------+
+ | Total | 1,305,340 39 | 742,398 57 | 159,229 00 |
+ +---------------------+--------------+-------------+------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Carriages._
+
+ +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+
+ | STATES OR | In 1814. | In 1815. |
+ | TERRITORIES. +--------+------------+--------+------------+
+ | | Number.| Duty. | Number.| Duty. |
+ +----------------------+--------+------------+--------+------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 3,279 | 6,895 51 | 3,337 | 4,514 09 |
+ | Massachusetts | 14,934 | 33,995 64 | 14,184 | 21,748 49 |
+ | Vermont | 1,227 | 2,890 24 | 1,628 | 2,443 09 |
+ | Rhode Island | 1,232 | 2,877 50 | 722 | 1,123 03 |
+ | Connecticut | 5,262 | 13,419 80 | 6,319 | 10,202 46 |
+ | New York | 6,499 | 22,834 15 | 7,715 | 18,675 91 |
+ | New Jersey | 4,502 | 16,781 26 | 7,892 | 14,790 02 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 7,848 | 26,800 80 | 8,361 | 20,076 29 |
+ | Delaware | 2,261 | 5,228 21 | 2,081 | 4,018 58 |
+ | Maryland | 5,014 | 17,676 78 | 4,550 | 13,283 87 |
+ | Virginia | 8,067 | 30,401 80 | 7,047 | 20,147 24 |
+ | North Carolina | 5,766 | 14,147 44 | 4,859 | 8,907 95 |
+ | Ohio | 160 | 628 36 | 219 | 732 45 |
+ | Kentucky | 610 | 3,025 77 | 546 | 3,192 86 |
+ | South Carolina | 4,560 | 15,411 58 | 4,178 | 11,345 94 |
+ | Tennessee | 209 | 778 22 | 154 | 781 43 |
+ | Georgia | 2,667 | 7,159 75 | 1,948 | 6,095 60 |
+ | Louisiana | 495 | 1,435 83 | 430 | 1,357 27 |
+ | Illinois Territory | 19 | 66 62 | 18 | 36 75 |
+ | Michigan " | 31 | 76 00 | 28 | 60 00 |
+ | Indiana " | 4 | 6 00 | 5 | 17 44 |
+ | Missouri " | 18 | 79 00 | 6 | 47 00 |
+ | Mississippi " | 78 | 371 00 | 73 | 371 98 |
+ | District of Columbia | 353 | 2,171 21 | 316 | 1,747 57 |
+ +----------------------+--------+------------+--------+------------+
+ | Total | 77,095 | 225,156 47 | 76,616 | 165,717 31 |
+ +----------------------+--------+------------+--------+------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Licenses to Retailers._
+
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | STATES OR | | |
+ | TERRITORIES. | In 1814. | 1815. |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 18,449 00 | 24,535 64 |
+ | Massachusetts | 86,211 12 | 113,906 95 |
+ | Vermont | 14,417 00 | 22,337 54 |
+ | Rhode Island | 16,058 00 | 10,093 53 |
+ | Connecticut | 32,820 26 | 42,616 04 |
+ | New York | 174,748 76 | 201,757 84 |
+ | New Jersey | 29,701 00 | 35,607 87 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 160,939 21 | 153,018 84 |
+ | Delaware | 10,102 88 | 8,093 12 |
+ | Maryland | 49,256 20 | 58,747 36 |
+ | Virginia | 52,038 68 | 69,620 64 |
+ | North Carolina | 23,985 00 | 32,967 98 |
+ | Ohio | 20,574 00 | 26,923 23 |
+ | Kentucky | 19,255 00 | 23,789 71 |
+ | South Carolina | 26,599 00 | 28,142 91 |
+ | Tennessee | 10,462 00 | 13,280 54 |
+ | Georgia | 13,908 00 | 24,454 33 |
+ | Louisiana | 7,497 00 | 9,773 09 |
+ | Illinois Territory | 1,115 00 | 1,248 80 |
+ | Michigan " | 1,405 00 | 1,817 10 |
+ | Indiana " | 2,191 00 | 3,139 59 |
+ | Missouri " | 1,540 00 | 1,861 46 |
+ | Mississippi " | 3,692 00 | 4,837 74 |
+ | District of Columbia | 10,140 00 | 14,872 62 |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | | 786,005 11 | 927,444 47 |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Sales at Auction._
+
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | STATUS OR | | |
+ | TERRITORIES. | In 1814. | 1815. |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 776 07 | 2,245 79 |
+ | Massachusetts | 35,359 04 | 87,643 63 |
+ | Vermont | 14 25 | 75 20 |
+ | Rhode Island | 6,274 82 | 452 01 |
+ | Connecticut | 283 89 | 635 55 |
+ | New York | 48,480 35 | 332,841 64 |
+ | New Jersey | 3,384 32 | 949 84 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 34,630 74 | 229,764 45 |
+ | Delaware | 116 25 | 453 82 |
+ | Maryland | 9,623 15 | 102,758 79 |
+ | Virginia | 4,079 37 | 20,003 64 |
+ | North Carolina | 1,237 62 | 3,734 47 |
+ | Ohio | 549 31 | 636 22 |
+ | Kentucky | 270 92 | 1,371 29 |
+ | South Carolina | 2,631 39 | 18,401 94 |
+ | Tennessee | 63 31 | 291 06 |
+ | Georgia | 1,346 34 | 4,133 92 |
+ | Louisiana | 4,832 24 | 13,504 09 |
+ | Illinois Territory | | |
+ | Michigan " | 80 04 | 71 05 |
+ | Indiana " | | |
+ | Missouri " | | |
+ | Mississippi " | 210 13 | 750 47 |
+ | District of Columbia | 385 65 | 4,413 96 |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | | 154,629 20 | 825,132 83 |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Refined Sugars._
+
+ +-----------------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | STATES OR | | |
+ | TERRITORIES. | In 1814. | 1815. |
+ +-----------------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | New Hampshire | | |
+ | Massachusetts | 3,542 36 | 4,394 17 |
+ | Vermont | | |
+ | Rhode Island | | |
+ | Connecticut | | |
+ | New York | 7,468 12 | 40,279 69 |
+ | New Jersey | | |
+ | Pennsylvania | 157 03 | 6,127 41 |
+ | Delaware | | |
+ | Maryland | | 18,619 48 |
+ | Virginia | 23 40 | 980 32 |
+ | North Carolina | | |
+ | Ohio | | |
+ | Kentucky | | |
+ | South Carolina | | |
+ | Tennessee | | |
+ | Georgia | | |
+ | Louisiana | 479 00 | 408 05 |
+ | Illinois Territory | | |
+ | Michigan " | | |
+ | Indiana " | | |
+ | Missouri " | | |
+ | Mississippi " | | |
+ | District of Columbia | | 4,413 96 |
+ +-----------------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | | 11,669 91 | 75,223 08 |
+ +-----------------------+-------------+-------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Stamps and in lieu of Stamps by
+Banks._
+
+ +---------------------+------------------------+------------------------+
+ | | In 1814. | In 1815. |
+ | STATES OR +------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+ | TERRITORIES. |On paper and|Banks in |On paper and|By Banks in|
+ | |Bank Notes. |lieu of |Bank Notes. | lieu, &c. |
+ | | |Bank Notes.|Bank Notes. | lieu, &c. |
+ +---------------------|------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+ | New Hampshire | 773 02 | 130 21 | 646 70 | 1,020 78 |
+ | Massachusetts | 20,741 47 | 2,880 00 | 5,520 74 | 9,339 73 |
+ | Vermont | 19 60 | | 35 75 | |
+ | Rhode Island | 5,825 15 | 97 29 | 1,131 82 | 1,461 01 |
+ | Connecticut | 11,152 07 | 2,445 44 | 9,126 97 | 3,015 91 |
+ | New York | 87,971 51 | 8,289 31 | 57,725 72 | 18,661 48 |
+ | New Jersey | 5,905 82 | 1,609 04 | 4,868 90 | 2,105 66 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 80,580 65 | 2,874 80 | 74,470 96 | 15,638 22 |
+ | Delaware | 5,570 10 | 669 48 | 3,769 01 | 753 54 |
+ | Maryland | 35,364 67 | 7,716 21 | 47,590 18 | 8,166 19 |
+ | Virginia | 36,308 41 | 2,516 96 | 33,235 88 | 6,061 96 |
+ | North Carolina | 9,132 80 | 1,865 94 | 11,909 15 | 2,852 40 |
+ | Ohio | 6,781 47 | 273 79 | 8,964 82 | 1,870 65 |
+ | Kentucky | 8,238 69 | | 7,937 97 | 1,531 18 |
+ | South Carolina | 18,916 55 | 4,055 44 | 18,156 65 | 4,093 51 |
+ | Tennessee | 1,619 85 | | 2,118 92 | 347 77 |
+ | Georgia | 5,736 75 | 900 37 | 6,302 95 | 1,070 69 |
+ | Louisiana | 11,151 21 | 384 66 | 10,821 53 | 1,920 00 |
+ | Illinois Territory | 7 85 | | 4 50 | |
+ | Michigan " | 26 10 | | 16 35 | |
+ | Indiana " | | | | |
+ | Missouri " | 84 10 | | 1,191 02 | |
+ | Mississippi " | 983 03 | 138 36 | 93 90 | |
+ | District of Columbia| 18,053 90 | 2,713 95 | 28,569 31 | 4,507 92 |
+ +---------------------+------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+ | Total | 370,945 27 | 39,571 25 | 334,209 70 | 84,418 10 |
+ +---------------------+------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Household Furniture._
+
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | STATES OR | In 1815. |
+ | TERRITORIES. | |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 376 00 |
+ | Massachusetts | 677 50 |
+ | Vermont | 211 50 |
+ | Rhode Island | 782 50 |
+ | Connecticut | 807 00 |
+ | New York | 10,877 00 |
+ | New Jersey | 1,527 50 |
+ | Pennsylvania | |
+ | Delaware | 434 50 |
+ | Maryland | 580 50 |
+ | Virginia | 168 50 |
+ | North Carolina | |
+ | Ohio | 104 50 |
+ | Kentucky | |
+ | South Carolina | 2,854 50 |
+ | Tennessee | |
+ | Georgia | 1,050 00 |
+ | Louisiana | |
+ | Illinois Territory | |
+ | Michigan " | |
+ | Indiana " | |
+ | Missouri " | |
+ | Mississippi " | |
+ | District of Columbia | 1,174 00 |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | Total | 21,625 50 |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Gold and Silver Watches._
+
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | STATES OR | In 1815. |
+ | TERRITORIES. | |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 3,377 00 |
+ | Massachusetts | 4,385 50 |
+ | Vermont | 2,765 00 |
+ | Rhode Island | 2,876 00 |
+ | Connecticut | 5,457 00 |
+ | New York | 30,449 50 |
+ | New Jersey | 7,784 00 |
+ | Pennsylvania | |
+ | Delaware | 2,943 00 |
+ | Maryland | 2,408 00 |
+ | Virginia | 33 00 |
+ | North Carolina | |
+ | Ohio | 3,104 00 |
+ | Kentucky | |
+ | South Carolina | 5,380 00 |
+ | Tennessee | 252 50 |
+ | Georgia | 2,472 00 |
+ | Louisiana | |
+ | Illinois Territory | |
+ | Michigan " | |
+ | Indiana " | |
+ | Missouri " | |
+ | Mississippi " | |
+ | District of Columbia | 1,636 00 |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | Total | 75,322 50 |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on sundry articles manufactured in the
+United States._
+
+ +------------------------+----------------+
+ | STATES OR | In 1815. |
+ | TERRITORIES. | |
+ +------------------------+----------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 4,540 76 |
+ | Massachusetts | 56,784 89 |
+ | Vermont | 9,250 40 |
+ | Rhode Island | 910 00 |
+ | Connecticut | 20,504 80 |
+ | New York | 157,176 79 |
+ | New Jersey | 28,546 87 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 228,188 88 |
+ | Delaware | 10,803 31 |
+ | Maryland | 70,746 17 |
+ | Virginia | 88,154 31 |
+ | North Carolina | 12,801 23 |
+ | Ohio | 23,270 60 |
+ | Kentucky | 33,184 46 |
+ | South Carolina | 10,156 58 |
+ | Tennessee | 15,373 43 |
+ | Georgia | 8,993 25 |
+ | Louisiana | 1,283 03 |
+ | Illinois Territory | 220 14 |
+ | Michigan " | 39 46 |
+ | Indiana " | 1,064 44 |
+ | Missouri " | 162 68 |
+ | Mississippi " | 1,158 61 |
+ | District of Columbia | 10,309 97 |
+ +------------------------+----------------+
+ | Total | 793,625 06 |
+ +------------------------+----------------+
+
+
+_Aggregate of internal Duties which accrued._
+
+ +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | DUTIES ON | In 1814. | In 1815. |
+ +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | Stills, from domestic materials | 1,621,152 86 | 760,804 22 |
+ | " " foreign " | 57,444 33 | 91,608 36 |
+ | Spirits, from domestic materials | | 2,047,738 96 |
+ | " " foreign " | | 159,229 00 |
+ | Carriages | 225,158 47 | 165,717 31 |
+ | Retailers | 786,005 11 | 927,444 47 |
+ | Sales at auction | 154,629 20 | 825,132 83 |
+ | Stamps | 370,945 27 | 334,209 70 |
+ | " Bank notes, composition | 39,571 25 | 84,418 10 |
+ | Household furniture | | 21,625 50 |
+ | Gold and silver watches | | 75,322 50 |
+ | Refined sugar | 11,669 91 | 75,223 08 |
+ | Articles manufactured in the | | |
+ | United States | | 793,625 06 |
+ +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | Total | 3,266,576 40 | 6,362,099 09 |
+ +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+
+
+_Direct Taxes._
+
+ +------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | STATES. | Tax of Aug. 3, | Tax of Jan. 9, |
+ | | 1813. | 1815. |
+ +------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 97,049 21 | 193,755 99 |
+ | Vermont | 98,534 52 | 196,789 29 |
+ | Massachusetts | 318,154 84 | 632,065 00 |
+ | Rhode Island | 34,758 86 | 69,431 78 |
+ | Connecticut | 118,533 63 | 236,507 38 |
+ | New York | 435,028 35 | 860,283 24 |
+ | New Jersey | 108,871 83 | 218,252 77 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 365,479 16 | 733,941 09 |
+ | Delaware | 32,294 76 | 63,847 32 |
+ | Maryland | 152,327 64 | 306,708 81 |
+ | Virginia | 369,018 44 | 739,738 06 |
+ | North Carolina | 220,962 98 | 440,321 11 |
+ | South Carolina | 151,905 48 | 303,810 96 |
+ | Georgia | 94,936 49 | 189,872 98 |
+ | Kentucky | 168,928 76 | 341,316 24 |
+ | Tennessee | 111,039 59 | 221,567 44 |
+ | Ohio | 104,150 14 | 208,300 28 |
+ | Louisiana | 31,621 43 | 57,519 22 |
+ | District of Columbia | | 20,605 86 |
+ +------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | Total | 3,013,596 11 | 6,034,634 82 |
+ +------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ A.
+
+ Adams the Elder, his view of the conduct of England in 1785, i. 24;
+ of the war, i. 66.
+
+ Adams, John Q., resigns his seat in Massachusetts Legislature, i. 31;
+ appointed commissioner to negotiate a peace, i. 328.
+
+ Adams, sloop of war, cruise of, ii. 165;
+ burnt, ii. 106.
+
+ Adair, General, commands the Kentuckians at New Orleans, ii. 221
+
+ Allen, Col., i. 179.
+
+ Allen, Captain of the Argus, his death, i. 285.
+
+ Allen, Lieutenant H., i. 258.
+
+ Appling, Major, captures the British detachment sent against
+ Lieutenant Woolsey, ii. 72.
+
+ Angus, Lieutenant, at Niagara, i. 113.
+
+ Argus chased by an English squadron, i. 155;
+ cruises in the English channel, i. 252;
+ captured by the Pelican, i. 254.
+
+ Armstrong, Secretary of War, i. 205;
+ plan of his campaign against Canada, i. 291;
+ his disgrace after the battle of Bladensburg, ii. 139.
+
+ Armstrong, General, Privateer, Capt. Reid, her desperate engagement
+ in Fayal Bay, ii. 270.
+
+ Armstrong, Lieutenant, heroism of, at the ford of Enotochopeo, ii. 34.
+
+ Armistead, Major, his gallant defence of fort McHenry, ii. 143.
+
+
+ B.
+
+ Backwoodsmen at Chippewa, ii, 83.
+
+ Berlin and Milan decrees, i. 20;
+ revoked, i. 41.
+
+ Beaver Dams, battle of, i. 221.
+
+ Blockade, rules of the Coast, i. 259, ii. 115.
+
+ Barlow, Joel, Minister to France, i. 41.
+
+ Barney, Captain, commands flotilla in the Chesapeake, ii. 116;
+ at Bladensburg, ii. 125.
+
+ Boestler, Col., i. 112;
+ defeated at Beaver Dams, i. 221.
+
+ Brock, General, i. 83;
+ his death, i. 102.
+
+ Broke, Commodore, chases the Constitution, i. 137;
+ captures the Chesapeake, i. 246.
+
+ Brown, General, at Ogdensburg, i. 116;
+ defends Sackett's Harbor, i. 215;
+ commands on Niagara frontier, ii. 75;
+ at Chippewa, ii. 77;
+ threatens English forts on the Niagara, ii. 88;
+ his victory at Lundy's Lane, ii. 91;
+ takes command of Fort Erie, ii. 107;
+ his successful sortie, ii. 109.
+
+ Brooks, Lieutenant, killed on Lake Erie, i. 279.
+
+ Brooke, Colonel, succeeds General Ross, ii. 143.
+
+ Bainbridge, Captain, remonstrates with the President against
+ laying up the navy, i. 128;
+ takes command of the Constitution, i. 151;
+ captures the Java, i. 162;
+ his character, i. 167;
+ singular dream of, i. 167.
+
+ Battle of Queenstown, i. 101;
+ of Lake Erie, i. 279;
+ of the Thames, i. 289;
+ of Chrystler's field, i. 298;
+ of La Cole Mill, i. 313;
+ of Talladega, ii. 20;
+ of the Horse Shoe, ii. 27;
+ of Chippewa, ii. 77;
+ of Lundy's Lane, ii. 88;
+ of Bladenburg, ii. 124;
+ of Plattsburgh, ii. 155;
+ of New Orleans, ii. 215, 217, 221.
+
+ _Bills_ in Congress, respecting minors, i. 225, ii. 187;
+ army, 226;
+ the navy, ii. 188.
+
+ Blakely, Captain, of the Wasp, ii. 167.
+
+ Boxer taken by the Enterprise, i. 250.
+
+ Boyd, General, i. 297.
+
+ Burrows, Lieutenant, commands the Enterprise, i. 248;
+ captures the Boxer, his death, i. 250.
+
+ Buffalo burned, i. 300.
+
+ Bowyer Fort, defence of, ii. 201.
+
+ Beasely, agent for American prisoners in England, ii. 286.
+
+ Biddle, Captain, of the Hornet, ii. 249;
+ narrow escape of, from a British man of war, ii. 253, 254.
+
+
+ C.
+
+ Cambria, British frigate, boards an American merchantman in
+ New York Bay, i. 19.
+
+ Canning, Prime Minister of Great Britain, i. 28.
+
+ Chesapeake and Leopard, i. 32;
+ Chesapeake captured, i. 236;
+ exultation in England, i. 247.
+
+ Campaign of 1813, plan of, i. 205;
+ Third into Canada, ii. 67.
+
+ Cabot, John, delegate to the Hartford Convention;
+ George elected President of, ii. 194.
+
+ _Congress_ revokes the restrictive system, i. 40;
+ the Twelfth, state of parties, i. 42, 43;
+ debates in, i. 45, 50, 52;
+ second session, i. 224;
+ Debates on bonds of Merchants, &c., i. 225;
+ on army bill, i. 226;
+ acts passed, i. 243;
+ Thirteenth, i. 319;
+ leaders of, i. 320;
+ first session and acts of, i. 325;
+ second session, i. 327;
+ acts of, i. 345;
+ third session, ii. 174;
+ embarrassments of, ii. 188.
+
+ Campbell, Secretary of Treasury, report, ii. 175;
+ resigned, ii. 177.
+
+ Campbell, General, destroys Indian villages, i. 178.
+
+ Cass, Col., i. 74, 82, 85.
+
+ Calhoun, sketch of, i. 238;
+ speech on repeal of embargo, i. 342.
+
+ Castlereagh, i. 53, 54;
+ arrival at Ghent, ii. 180.
+
+ Chauncey, Commodore, commands on Lake Ontario, i. 207;
+ forces Sir James Yeo into Burlington, i. 293.
+
+ Chippewa, battle of, ii. 77.
+
+ Clay, elected speaker of Congress, i. 43;
+ speech in reply to Randolph, i. 46;
+ on embargo, i. 51;
+ against Quincy, and on impressment in the war, i. 231;
+ sketch of, i. 240;
+ asks for investigation of British outrages, i. 262;
+ appointed commissioner to negotiate a peace, i. 328.
+
+ Clay, Col., relieves Harrison, i. 198;
+ his command destroyed, i. 199;
+ commands Fort Meigs, i. 199.
+
+ Coffee, General, defeats Black Warrior, ii. 14;
+ victory of Tallushatchee, ii. 17;
+ helps Jackson quell a mutiny, ii. 27;
+ gallantry at Emuckfaw, ii. 32;
+ at Enotochopeo, ii. 34;
+ at the Horse Shoe, ii. 39;
+ at New Orleans, ii. 205, 209, 220.
+
+ Chrystie Col., at Queenstown, i. 101.
+
+ Chrystler's Field, battle of, i. 298.
+
+ Creek Indians, i. 194;
+ war with, ii. 13-44.
+
+ Craney Island, defence of, ii. 262.
+
+ Constitution frigate sails from Annapolis, i. 136;
+ chased by an English squadron, i. 137;
+ captures the Guerriere, i. 146;
+ captures the Java, i. 162;
+ cruise of, in 1814-15, ii. 237;
+ captures the Cyane and Levant, ii. 238;
+ takes her prizes into St. Jago, ii. 240;
+ chased by an English fleet, ii. 242;
+ affection of the nation for her, ii. 243.
+
+ Commissioners appointed to negotiate a peace, i. 328;
+ their mortification at the arrival of the news of the burning
+ of Washington, ii. 117;
+ unfavorable news from, and their meeting at Ghent, ii. 178;
+ terms of the English ministers, &c., ii. 178-190.
+
+ Cochrane, Admiral, arrives in the Chesapeake, ii. 117;
+ bombards Fort McHenry, ii. 143.
+
+ Chandler, General, reinforces Winder in Canada, i. 218;
+ taken prisoner, i. 219.
+
+ Chittenden, Governor of Vermont, recalls a brigade, i. 321;
+ his apathy under the repeated calls of Macomb for aid, ii. 149.
+
+ Cockburn, i. 259;
+ plunders Hampton, i. 203;
+ his character, ii. 197;
+ conduct in the sack of Washington, ii. 128, 130.
+
+ Comet, privateer, Capt. Boyd, her engagement with three English
+ merchantmen and a Portuguese brig of war, ii. 265.
+
+ Covington General, killed at Chrystler's field, i. 298.
+
+ Cheves, Langdon, appointed Speaker of the Thirteenth Congress, i. 329.
+
+ Carroll, Colonel, bravery at Talladega, ii. 20;
+ at New Orleans, ii. 220.
+
+ Chasseur, privateer, Capt. Boyle, description of;
+ her engagement with the English war schooner St. Lawrence, ii. 275.
+
+ Cruelty of British naval officers, ii. 278.
+
+ Croghan, Major, bravery at Sandusky, i. 201.
+
+ Connecticut, action of her Legislature against the bill for the
+ enlistment of minors, ii. 187.
+
+ Clairborne, General, defeats the Indians under Weathersby, ii. 30.
+
+ Clairborne, Governor of Louisiana;
+ his support of Jackson, ii. 216.
+
+ Currency, deranged state of, in 1814, ii. 176.
+
+ Crowningshield, Secretary of navy, recommends a conscription of
+ seamen, ii. 189.
+
+
+ D.
+
+ Dearborn appointed Major General, i. 70;
+ enters into an armistice with Prevost, i. 99;
+ enters Canada, i. 117;
+ retires to winter quarters, i. 118;
+ review of his first campaign, i. 120;
+ second campaign, i. 205;
+ attacks Fort George, i. 213;
+ his inaction, i. 221;
+ his removal, i. 222.
+
+ Dartmoor prison, description of, ii. 280;
+ fourth of July in, ii. 282;
+ in 1814, ii. 289;
+ daring escape from, by a lieutenant, ii. 291.
+
+ Dacres, Captain, i. 148.
+
+ Dallas, Alexander, Secretary of the Treasury, ii. 177;
+ his scheme to relieve the government, ii. 178;
+ second report on state of Treasury, ii. 189.
+
+ Decatur commands the United States, captures the Macedonian, i. 152;
+ blockaded in New London, and challenges two English frigates, i. 311;
+ commands the President, ii. 245;
+ chased by an English fleet, ii. 246;
+ his capture, ii. 247.
+
+ Decatur privateer, Capt. Diron, captures a British war
+ schooner, ii. 268.
+
+ Dolphin, privateer, captures two English vessels, ii. 264.
+
+ Downes, Lieutenant, commands Essex Junior, ii. 48;
+ assists the Marquesas tribes, ii. 50;
+ wounded by the Typees, ii. 51.
+
+ Drummond, General, at Lundy's Lane, ii. 89;
+ assaults Fort Erie, ii. 100.
+
+ Drummond, Lieut.-Col, killed at Fort Erie, ii. 104.
+
+ Dudley, Colonel, killed at Fort Meigs, i. 199.
+
+ Downie, Captain, commands the British fleet in Lake Champlain, ii. 152.
+
+ Dwight, Timothy, Secretary of Hartford Convention, ii. 194.
+
+
+ E.
+
+ Embargo, its effect on the country, i. 26-29;
+ repealed, i. 32;
+ re-enacted, i. 50;
+ laid by Thirteenth Congress, i. 327;
+ repealed, i. 342.
+
+ Epervier, ii. 170.
+
+ Erie, Fort, assault of, by Gen. Drummond, ii. 103.
+
+ Erskine, English Minister, i. 36;
+ disavowal of his treaty, i. 38.
+
+ England, her conduct towards France and the world, i. 37;
+ astonishment at our naval victories;
+ her exultation over the capture of the Chesapeake;
+ her vast preparations for war in 1813, i. 259;
+ her rejoicing over the destruction of Washington compared
+ with her condemnation of the acts of Napoleon, ii. 136, 137.
+
+ Enterprise, brig, i. 248;
+ captures the Boxer, i. 250;
+ takes the Privateer Mars;
+ chased by a frigate, i. 251.
+
+ Eppes succeeds Randolph in Congress, i. 319;
+ his report on state of finances, i. 322;
+ his currency scheme, ii. 127.
+
+ Essex captures the Alert, i. 143;
+ her cruise in the Pacific, ii. 65, 66;
+ is captured at Valparaiso, ii. 66.
+
+
+ F.
+
+ Federalists, triumph of, in New England, i, 265;
+ leaders of in Massachusetts, their exultation over the failure
+ of Wilkinson's campaign, i. 301;
+ hostility of, i. 326.
+
+ Federalists and Democrats, i. 59-65.
+
+ Floyd, General, defeats the Indians at Autossee, ii. 31;
+ victorious over the Creeks, ii. 35.
+
+ Frederickton destroyed, i. 260.
+
+ Forsyth, Colonel, i. 116;
+ at York, i. 208.
+
+ Forsyth, John, speech of, in Thirteenth Congress, i. 337.
+
+ Fort George captured by the Americans, i. 213.
+
+
+ G.
+
+ Gamble, Lieutenant, ii. 51.
+
+ Gallatin opposes the employment of the navy, i. 130;
+ appointed commissioner to negotiate a treaty, i. 328;
+ letter to government advising war, ii. 181.
+
+ Gaines, General, takes command of the army stationed at Fort
+ Erie, ii. 100;
+ repels Drummond, ii. 103;
+ succeeds Jackson at New Orleans, ii. 228.
+
+ Generosity of Americans, i. 203.
+
+ Georgetown destroyed, i. 260.
+
+ Globe privateer, her action with two brigs, ii. 267.
+
+ Gordon, Captain, gallant adherence to Jackson, ii. 26.
+
+ Guerriere captured by the Constitution, i. 148;
+ blown up, i. 149.
+
+ Gunnery, superiority of American, i. 175.
+
+
+ H.
+
+ Harmar, General, i. 17.
+
+ Hammond, British minister in 1791, i. 25.
+
+ Harrington, Captain, ii. 172.
+
+ Harrison, General, supersedes Hull, i. 95;
+ at Fort Deposit and Fort Defiance, i. 96;
+ plans a winter campaign, i. 177;
+ at Fort Meigs, i. 196;
+ pursues Proctor, i. 286;
+ defeats him, i. 289.
+
+ Hartford Convention, History of, ii. 191-200;
+ delegates to Washington, ii. 231.
+
+ Hall, Judge, fines General Jackson, ii. 227.
+
+ Henry, John, his character and career, i. 49.
+
+ Hindman, Major, his gallantry at Lundy's Lane, ii. 94.
+
+ Hull, General, his campaign, i. 71;
+ tried by court-martial, i. 87;
+ character, i. 88.
+
+ Hull, Captain, commands the Constitution: his instructions, i. 136;
+ chased by an English squadron, i. 138;
+ captures the Guerriere, i. 139;
+ effect of the victory, i. 151.
+
+ Hopkins, General, i. 95.
+
+ Hardy, Commodore, remonstrates against the use of torpedos, i. 265.
+
+ Hamilton, Secretary of the navy, i. 68.
+
+ Hamilton, Lieutenant, is sent with the colors of the Macedonian
+ to Washington.
+
+ Hampton plundered, i. 263.
+
+ Hampton, General, commands at Plattsburgh, i. 292;
+ advances into Canada, i. 294;
+ retreats, i. 295;
+ refuses to join Wilkinson, i. 299;
+ goes into winter quarters at Plattsburgh, i. 300;
+ strictures on, i. 302.
+
+ Hornet captures the Peacock, i. 170;
+ takes the Penguin, ii. 249;
+ chased by an English man of war, ii. 252.
+
+ Holmes, Captain, his expedition into Canada, i. 315;
+ killed at Mackinaw, ii. 73.
+
+ Hillyar, Captain, captures the Essex, ii. 61.
+
+ Henderson, Colonel, killed at New Orleans, ii. 216.
+
+
+ I.
+
+ Impressment in 1796, i. 18;
+ cause of war, i. 19.
+
+ Indians, number in the Western States in 1812, and the
+ hostility, i. 190;
+ number of Choctaws, Chickesaws and Creeks, i. 193.
+
+ Izard, General, defeated under General Hampton, i. 295;
+ succeeds Wilkinson, ii. 106.
+
+
+ J.
+
+ Jay, treaty of, in 1796, i. 26.
+
+ Jefferson, proclamation against English vessels, i. 33.
+
+ Jackson, English Minister in place of Erskine, i. 39;
+ recalled, i. 40.
+
+ Jackson, General, ordered to Natchez, ii. 12;
+ made Major-General of the Tennessee Militia, ii. 12;
+ marches to Huntsville, ii. 15;
+ dispatches General Coffee against Black Warrior's town, ii. 17;
+ his conduct of the Creek war, ii. 12-44;
+ appointed Major-General, ii. 199;
+ seizes Pensacola, ii. 202;
+ marches to New Orleans, ii. 203;
+ his preparations for the defence of the place, ii. 204;
+ attacks the British, ii. 209, 210;
+ his final victory, ii. 221;
+ fined by Judge Hall, ii. 227;
+ review of his conduct, ii. 228.
+
+ Jessup, Colonel at Chippewa, ii. 80;
+ his heroism at Lundy's Lane, ii. 86-92;
+ watches the Hartford Convention, ii. 194.
+
+ Johnson, Colonel and Lieut.-Colonel, at battle of Thames, i. 288.
+
+ Jones, Captain of the Wasp, i. 155;
+ captures the Frolic, i. 156.
+
+ Jones, Lieutenant, his action with the British gun-boats on
+ Lake Borgne, ii. 207.
+
+
+ K.
+
+ King, Captain, at Niagara, i. 112.
+
+ Key, Francis, composes "The Star spangled Banner," while witnessing
+ the bombardment of Fort McHenry, ii. 145.
+
+ Kemp privateer captures a fleet of six vessels, ii. 270.
+
+ King, Charles appointed commissioner to investigate the massacre
+ of prisoners in Dartmoor, ii. 297.
+
+
+ L.
+
+ Lawrence, Captain, sails under Rodgers, i. 133;
+ challenges the Bonne Citoyenne, i. 160;
+ captures the Peacock, i. 170;
+ takes command of the Chesapeake, i. 244;
+ engages the Shannon, i. 245;
+ his death, i. 246.
+
+ Lawrence, Major, his defence of Fort Bowyer, ii. 201
+
+ Leavenworth, Major, gallantry at Chippewa, ii. 80;
+ gallantry at Lundy's Lane, ii. 87.
+
+ Lewis, Colonel, defeats the British at Frenchtown, i. 179;
+ captured, i. 181.
+
+ Lewistown burned, i. 306.
+
+ Lowndes, sketch of, i. 239.
+
+
+ M.
+
+ Madison, President, character of, i. 34, 35;
+ war messages, i. 55;
+ his conduct at the invasion of Washington, ii. 118-123;
+ his flight, ii. 129;
+ message to Congress, Sept. 1814, ii. 177;
+ message to Congress, accompanying English Protocol from
+ Ghent, ii. 182.
+
+ Madison, Mrs., her heroism at the burning of Washington, ii. 129;
+ refused admittance to a tavern, ii. 133.
+
+ Madison, Major, his bravery at Frenchtown, i. 182.
+
+ Madison Island, ii. 49.
+
+ Madison sloop of war, i. 207.
+
+ Marquesas Island, rendezvous of Porter, ii. 49.
+
+ Mackinaw taken by the English, i. 77;
+ expedition against, ii. 72.
+
+ Macomb, General, at Plattsburgh, ii. 148;
+ asks Governor Chittenden for aid, ii. 149;
+ defeats the British, ii. 155.
+
+ Massachusetts Legislature, action of, against the war, i. 268;
+ against the bill for the enlistment of minors, ii. 187;
+ raises an army to be under its own control, ii. 192.
+
+ Massacre at Frenchtown, i. 189;
+ effect of in Kentucky, i. 185;
+ at Fort Mimms, i. 196.
+
+ McLure, General, at Fort George, i. 303;
+ burns Newark, i. 304;
+ his proclamation and neglect to protect Fort Niagara, i. 304, 305.
+
+ Meigs, Fort of, i. 197;
+ invested by Proctor, i. 197.
+
+ Manners, Captain, death of, ii. 167.
+
+ Mitchell's speech in Congress, i. 52.
+
+ Mimm's Fort, i. 196.
+
+ Mackinaw Fort surrendered, i. 77.
+
+ Miller, Colonel, defeats British at Brownstown;
+ joins Harrison, i. 199;
+ heroic answer at Lundy's Lane, ii. 89, 90.
+
+ Mitchell, Colonel, gallant defence of Oswego, ii. 70.
+
+ McArthur, Colonel, i. 85;
+ his expedition into Canada, ii. 163.
+
+ McNeill, Major, bravery at Chippewa, ii. 78;
+ at Lundy's Lane, ii. 86.
+
+ McHenry, Fort of, ii. 142.
+
+ Madonough, Commodore, in Plattsburgh bay, ii. 152;
+ defeats the British squadron, ii. 155.
+
+ Macedonian, ship, taken by the United States, i. 153.
+
+ Montgomery, Major, killed at the battle of the Horse Shoe, ii. 38.
+
+ Monroe, Secretary of State, his conduct at Bladensburgh, ii. 123.
+
+ Morgan, Major, checks the enemy at Black Rock, ii. 101.
+
+ Morgan, General, at New Orleans, ii. 220.
+
+ Morris, Lieutenant, wounded in taking the Guerriere, i. 147;
+ commands the Adams sloop of war, ii. 165.
+
+
+ N.
+
+ Nash, Captain, base treatment of Commodore Porter, ii. 63.
+
+ Non-Intercourse law, i. 32.
+
+ Nautilus schooner captured, i. 138.
+
+ Napoleon, i. 85, 86, 258.
+
+ Navy, strength of, i. 125;
+ neglect of, i. 126;
+ saved by Captains Bainbridge and Stewart, i. 128;
+ increase of, i. 176;
+ history of, in 1814, ii. 165;
+ bill for increase of, ii. 188;
+ review of, ii. 256, 257.
+
+ Naval victories, effect of, at home and abroad, i. 171.
+
+ Naval force in 1814, i. 346.
+
+ Neufchatel privateer beats off the crew of the Endymion, ii. 269.
+
+ Nonsuch privateer engages two English vessels, ii. 264.
+
+ New England, her hostility to war, i. 58, ii. 191;
+ exempted from blockade, i. 259.
+
+ New Hampshire Legislature abolishes all the courts of the
+ State, i. 325.
+
+ New Orleans, description of, ii. 206;
+ feelings of the inhabitants, ii. 207.
+
+ Niagara Fort surprised, i. 304.
+
+ Nicholson, Lieutenant, escapes an English frigate, ii. 173.
+
+
+ O.
+
+ Orders in Council, British, i. 20;
+ repealed, i. 342;
+ effect of, in this country, i. 27-92.
+
+ Ogdensburg, attack of, i. 117.
+
+ Oneida sloop, i. 206.
+
+ Ontario, Lake, description of, i. 206;
+ naval superiority, i. 207;
+ cost of vessels in, i. 258.
+
+ Oswego attacked by Sir James Yeo, ii. 69.
+
+
+ P.
+
+ Packenham, Sir Edward, attacks the lines at New Orleans, ii. 215.
+
+ Parker, Sir Peter, killed, ii. 141.
+
+ Peacock, Captain Harrington, captures the Epervier, ii. 172;
+ chased by an English man of war, ii. 252.
+
+ Perry on Lake Erie, i. 271, 273, 274;
+ sets sail, i. 275;
+ engages the enemy, i. 278;
+ conduct after the battle, i. 283;
+ at the battle of the Thames, i. 287.
+
+ President frigate, affair with the Little Belt, i. 42;
+ puts to sea, i. 132;
+ chases the Belvidere, i. 134;
+ beats the Endymion, and finally captured by an English
+ fleet, ii. 247.
+
+ Pinckney, American Minister to England, i. 41;
+ commands Baltimore regiment at Bladensburg, ii. 118-124.
+
+ Pike, Colonel, incursion into Canada, i. 117;
+ captures York, i. 208;
+ his death, i. 210.
+
+ Pickering, Timothy, description of, his speech against loan
+ bill of Thirteenth Congress, i. 335.
+
+ Pitkin, i. 335.
+
+ Plattsburg, description of, ii. 149;
+ battle of, ii. 155.
+
+ Peace, tidings of, effect on the nation, ii. 229-230.
+
+ Porter, General, i. 114;
+ at Chippewa, ii. 77;
+ his gallantry and narrow escape at Fort Erie, ii. 109-111.
+
+ Porter, Captain, commands the Essex;
+ capture of the Alert, i. 143;
+ his cruise in the Pacific, ii. 45-66;
+ his daring escape and reception in New York, ii. 65, 66.
+
+ Proctor, Colonel, advances against Frenchtown, i. 180;
+ defeats the Americans, i. 181;
+ leaves the prisoners to be massacred, i. 182;
+ his character, i. 185;
+ invests Fort Meigs, i. 197;
+ abandons the siege, i. 199;
+ defeated at Sandusky, i. 201;
+ retreats from Malden, i. 286;
+ defeated at the Thames, i. 289.
+
+ Prescot, Governor-general of Canada, i. 99;
+ letter to Brooke, i. 121;
+ attacks Sackett's Harbor, i. 215;
+ advances against Plattsburgh, ii. 148;
+ his retreat, ii. 161.
+
+ Protocol, English, at Ghent, ii. 181;
+ transmitted to Congress, ii. 182;
+ its effect on the nation, ii. 183;
+ its reception in England, ii.
+
+ Privateering, account of, ii. 257;
+ defence of, ii. 261;
+ acts of Congress respecting, ii. 262, 263.
+
+ Privateers, characteristic names of, ii. 263;
+ superiority to English, ii. 277;
+ character of their commanders, ii. 277.
+
+ Prisoners, American, treatment of, in England, ii. 280;
+ sufferings in Dartmoor prison, ii. 281-285;
+ assailed by French prisoners, ii. 283;
+ denounce American agent for prisoners, ii. 287;
+ neglected by government, ii. 287;
+ their employments, ii. 288;
+ number of, ii. 292;
+ massacre of, ii. 294.
+
+
+ Q.
+
+ Queenstown, battle of, i. 101.
+
+ Quincy, Josiah, i. 225;
+ speech against army bill, i. 227.
+
+
+ R.
+
+ Revolution, French, i. 17.
+
+ Rose, English Minister, i. 33.
+
+ Rattlesnake, brig, captured, i. 252.
+
+ Randolph, speech in Congress, i. 45-51;
+ sketch of, i. 237;
+ succeeded by Eppes, i. 319.
+
+ Revenue, i. 292.
+
+ Retaliation acts, i. 307.
+
+ Rodgers, Commodore, his squadron at New York, i. 132;
+ his first cruise, i. 134;
+ attacks the Belvidere, i. 137;
+ second cruise, i. 151.
+
+ Riall, British General at Chippewa, ii. 76;
+ captured by Jessup at Lundy's Lane, ii. 86.
+
+ Russell, John, American Chargé to England, i. 50;
+ despatch from, i. 53.
+
+ Ripley, Colonel, at Lundy's Lane, ii. 88;
+ his strange conduct after the battle, ii. 98;
+ surrenders his command to General Gaines, ii. 100;
+ wounded at Fort Erie, ii. 109.
+
+ Ross, General, marches on Washington, ii. 119-127;
+ fires the capitol, ii. 127;
+ his hasty retreat, ii. 133;
+ killed in the advance on Baltimore, ii. 143.
+
+
+ S.
+
+ St. Clair, General, cause of his defeat, i. 17.
+
+ Smythe, General, commands on the Niagara frontier, i. 71;
+ proclamation, i. 111;
+ failure and disgrace, i. 112-114;
+ review of his campaign, i. 119.
+
+ Shelby, Governor of Kentucky, i. 95;
+ commands Kentucky volunteers under General Harrison, i. 287.
+
+ Sandusky, Fort, defence of, i. 201.
+
+ Scott, Lieut.-Colonel, at Queenstown, i. 103;
+ taken prisoner, i. 108-110;
+ captures Fort George, i. 213;
+ joins Wilkinson, i. 299;
+ introduces French system of tactics into camp of instruction
+ at Buffalo;
+ chases the Marquis of Tweedsdale, ii. 76;
+ advances on Lundy's Lane, ii. 84;
+ wounded, ii. 94;
+ his journey to Baltimore and reception at Princeton, ii. 97-98.
+
+ Sackett's Harbor, naval depôt at, i. 207;
+ attack of, i. 215.
+
+ Shortland, Captain, superintendent of Dartmoor prison, ii. 286;
+ massacres American prisoners, ii. 293.
+
+ Sheaffe, General, at Queenstown, i. 105.
+
+ Sinclair, Captain, commands the expedition against Mackinaw, ii. 73.
+
+ Stewart, Captain, remonstrates with the President against laying
+ up the navy, i. 128;
+ commands the Constitution, ii. 235;
+ captures the Cyane and Levant, i. 240.
+
+ Strong elected governor of Massachusetts, i. 265.
+
+ Stricker, General, defence at North Point, ii. 142.
+
+
+ T.
+
+ Talledega Fort, ii. 18.
+
+ Taylor, Captain, defence of Fort Harrison, i. 95.
+
+ Tax, direct, of Thirteenth Congress, i. 325;
+ on carriages, distilled spirits, auction duties, &c., ii. 187.
+
+ Towson, Captain of artillery, at Chippewa, ii. 79.
+
+ Treaty of 1783, i. 23;
+ of Pinckney and Monroe rejected by Jefferson, i. 27;
+ first Treaty of Peace at Ghent, its terms and how
+ received, ii. 232, 233;
+ review of, ii. 234.
+
+ Transportation, cost of, war materials to Sackett's Harbor, i. 257.
+
+ Tecumseh, i. 80;
+ his plan for restoring the Indians to their ancient rights;
+ his mission south, and character and eloquence, i. 191-193;
+ joins Proctor, i. 197;
+ killed, i. 290.
+
+ Torpedos, employment of, to destroy ships, i. 266.
+
+ Tompkins, Governor, privateer. Captain Boyle, her narrow escape
+ from an English frigate, ii. 266.
+
+ Treasury, state of, in May, 1813, i. 320;
+ state of during the third session of the Thirteenth Congress;
+ notes, reduced value of, ii. 187;
+ increased embarrassments of, ii. 189.
+
+ Tupper, General, defeated at the Rapids, i. 178.
+
+ Tuscarora village destroyed by the British, i. 306.
+
+ Truce, flag of, arrived in Annapolis, i. 328.
+
+ Typees, hostility to Commodore Porter, ii. 50, 51;
+ description of their country, ii. 52;
+ their towns destroyed, ii. 54.
+
+
+ V.
+
+ Van Rensselaer, General, i. 71-100;
+ resigns his command, i. 101.
+
+ Van Rensselaer, Colonel, invades Canada, and wounded, i. 100;
+ character of, i. 118.
+
+ Van Horne, Major, defeat of, i. 79.
+
+ Vincent, General, i. 214;
+ captures Generals Chandler and Hinder, i. 219.
+
+ Vermont, her patriotism when Plattsburg was attacked, ii. 150.
+
+ Volunteers, hardships of, i. 188.
+
+
+ W.
+
+ Wayne, General, i. 17.
+
+ Washington's opinion of British aggressions, i. 48;
+ city of, threatened by the British, ii. 117;
+ burned, ii. 128;
+ bad policy of, ii. 140.
+
+ War, declaration of, i. 56;
+ how received, i. 58;
+ unprepared state of the country for, ii. 67-69.
+
+ Ward, Artemus, speech of, against bill for military establishments
+ passed in Thirteenth Congress, i. 339.
+
+ Wadsworth, General, at Queenstown, i. 102.
+
+ Winchester, General, his march to the Rapids, i. 178;
+ marches to Frenchtown, i. 179;
+ taken prisoner, i. 181.
+
+ Winder, Colonel, i. 114;
+ General, pursues Vincent, i. 219;
+ surprised and captured by him, i. 219;
+ commands the troops around Washington, ii. 118.
+
+ Williams' speech in Congress, i. 225, 226.
+
+ Wasp, takes the Frolic, i. 155;
+ captured by the Poictiers, i. 159;
+ captures the Reindeer, ii. 167;
+ sinks the Avon, ii. 169;
+ her mysterious fate, ii. 170.
+
+ White, General, destroys the Hillabee towns, ii. 22.
+
+ West Point Academy, i. 124.
+
+ Webster, Daniel, elected to Congress, i. 320;
+ first speech, i. 323;
+ speech against the army bill, i. 330;
+ sketch of, i. 333;
+ speech on repeal of embargo act, i. 345;
+ contest between him and Calhoun, i. 344.
+
+ Woodward, Judge, of Michigan, his letter to Proctor on the
+ massacre at River Raisin, i. 184.
+
+ Wilkinson, General, seizes Fort Condé, i. 199;
+ takes charge of northern army, i. 292;
+ his progress down the St. Lawrence, i. 296-299;
+ goes into winter quarters at French Mills, i. 300;
+ review of his campaign, i. 302;
+ plans a winter campaign, i. 311;
+ attacks La Cole Mill, i. 312.
+
+ Woolsey, Lieutenant, i. 206;
+ transports war and ship materials from Oswego to Sackett's
+ Harbor, ii. 70-72.
+
+ Wooster, Rev., volunteers with his flock to aid General
+ Macomb, ii. 151.
+
+
+ Y.
+
+ Yarnell, Lieutenant, bravery in battle of Lake Erie, i. 279.
+
+ York captured by Americans, i. 208.
+
+ Yeo, Sir James, attacks Sackett's Harbor, i. 215;
+ attacks Oswego, ii. 69;
+ sends a detachment against Woolsey, ii. 71;
+ raises the blockade of Sackett's Harbor, ii. 72.
+
+ Youngstown burned, i. 301.
+
+
+
+
+J. T. HEADLEY'S WORKS.
+
+
+NAPOLEON AND HIS MARSHALS. By J. T. HEADLEY, 2 vols. 12mo. cloth gilt.
+Illustrated with 12 Portraits, $2.50. 25th Thousand.
+
+
+WASHINGTON AND HIS GENERALS. By J. T. HEADLEY, 2 vols. 12mo, cloth
+gilt. Illustrated with 16 Portraits, $2.50. 22d Thousand.
+
+
+THE SACRED MOUNTAINS. By J. T. HEADLEY, Illustrated with 12
+engravings, by Burt, with designs by Lossing, 20th Thousand.
+
+ Do. do. do., 12mo, cloth, gilt, $1.25
+
+
+SACRED SCENES AND CHARACTERS. By J. T. HEADLEY, with 12 Illustrations.
+Designed by Darley, 4th Thousand.
+
+ Do. do. do., 1 vol. 12mo. cloth, gilt, $1.25.
+
+
+LETTERS FROM ITALY AND ALPS AND THE RHINE. By J. T. HEADLEY, 1 vol.
+12mo. cloth. A New Edition. Revised and Enlarged. With a Portrait of
+the Author, $1.13. 8th Thousand.
+
+
+LIFE OF OLIVER CROMWELL. By J. T. HEADLEY, 1 vol. 12mo., cloth, gilt,
+with Portrait, $1.25. 6th Thousand.
+
+
+HEADLEY'S MISCELLANIES. Authorized Edition, 1 vol. 12mo., cloth, $1.
+2d Thousand.
+
+
+ADIRONDACK; OR LIFE IN THE WOODS. By J. T. HEADLEY, with Original
+Designs from Gignoux, Ingham, Durand, etc., 1 vol. 12mo., cloth,
+$1.25. 4th Thousand.
+
+
+SKETCHES AND RAMBLES. By J. T. HEADLEY, 1 vol. 12mo., cloth, 75c. 2d
+Thousand.
+
+
+THE IMPERIAL GUARD OF NAPOLEON. From Marengo to Waterloo. By J. T.
+HEADLEY, 1 vol. 12mo., with Illustrations, cloth, $1.25, Just
+Published.
+
+
+J. T. HEADLEY'S WORKS--Uniform Edition, 12 vols., in sheep, for
+Libraries and District Schools.
+
+ "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."--_N. Y.
+ Courier and Enquirer._
+
+ "His descriptions are graphic, his history correct, and his
+ summing up character scarcely suffers by a comparison with
+ similar pages in Tacitus."--_N. Y. Evening Post._
+
+ "He speaks heartily, earnestly, truthfully; and the warm
+ heart answers to his voice."--_N. Y. Observer._
+
+ "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."--_Cincinnati Herald._
+
+ "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."--_Cleveland Herald._
+
+ 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.--_N. Y. Evangelist._
+
+
+LIVING ORATORS OF AMERICA. By Rev. E. L. MAGOON. 1 vol 12mo., with
+portraits. Price, $1.25.
+
+
+THE ORATORS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. By Rev. E. L. MAGOON. 1 vol.
+12mo., with portraits. Price, $1.25.
+
+ Mr. Magoon is a decided original. Both his thoughts and his
+ manner of expressing them, are peculiar and striking.--_N.
+ Y. Evangelist._
+
+ 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.--_Christian Secretary._
+
+ 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.--_Springfield Republican._
+
+ Every American will read these works with national pride,
+ and have his better feelings and sentiments enkindled and
+ strengthened.--_Western literary Messenger._
+
+
+THE WOMEN OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. By Mrs. E. F. ELLET. 8 vols.
+12mo., with portraits. Price, $3.50.
+
+ 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.--_Hunt's
+ Magazine._
+
+ 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.--_N. Y.
+ Tribune._
+
+ 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.--_N. Y.
+ Commercial._
+
+ 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.--_N. Y. Journal of Commerce._
+
+ 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.--_Charleston
+ Inquirer._
+
+ 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--_Albany
+ Atlas._
+
+ 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.--_N. B. Mercury._
+
+
+BRACE'S HUNGARY IN 1851: With an Experience of the Austrian Police. By
+CHARLES LORING BRACE. (Beautifully illustrated, with a map of
+Hungary).
+
+ "Upon the particular field of Hungary, this is by far the
+ most complete and reliable work in the language; a work that
+ all should read who would understand the institutions, the
+ character, and the spirit of a people who just now have so
+ urgent a claim on our sympathy."--_N. Y. Independent._
+
+ "There is probably not a work within the reach of the
+ English scholar that can afford him such a satisfactory view
+ of Hungary as it now is, as this work of Mr.
+ Brace."--_Christian Intelligencer._
+
+ "It will not disappoint public expectation. It bears the
+ strongest evidence of being most reliable in its
+ descriptions and facts."--_Boston Journal._
+
+ "We have seldom taken in hand a book which bears the reader
+ along with an interest so intense and sustained."--_Watchman
+ and Reflector._
+
+ "It is a graphic picture of the people and institutions of
+ Hungary at the present moment by one who writes what he saw
+ and heard, and who was well qualified co judge."--_Troy
+ Daily Post._
+
+ "He mingled much in the social life of every class of the
+ Hungarian people, and there can be no question that he has
+ presented a faithful picture of the condition, manners,
+ customs, and feelings of the Magyars."--_Portland
+ Transcript._
+
+ "The best and most reliable work that we possess, in regard
+ to Hungary as it now is, and the only one written from
+ personal observation."--_Phil. Evening Bulletin._
+
+ "It tells us precisely what the mass of readers wish to know
+ in regard to the condition of Hungary since the Revolution.
+ Having travelled over large portions of the country on foot,
+ and mingling freely with the inhabitants in their houses,
+ the author relates his various experiences, many of which
+ are sufficiently strange to figure in a romance."--_N. Y.
+ Tribune._
+
+ "This book is exceedingly entertaining. These are clear,
+ unambitious narratives, sound views, and abundant
+ information. We get a perspicuous view of the people, life,
+ and character of the country, and learn more of the real
+ condition of things than we could elsewhere obtain."--_N. Y.
+ Evangelist._
+
+ "Its narrative is fluent and graceful, and gives the most
+ vivid and complete, and the most faithful picture of Hungary
+ ever presented to American readers."--_Courier and
+ Inquirer._
+
+ "For graphic delineation, and extent of knowledge of the
+ subject described, Mr. Brace has no equal, at least in
+ print."--_The Columbian and Far West._
+
+ "We have read it carefully, and have no hesitation in saying
+ that it presents a complete idea of Hungary and her people
+ as they were and are. Mr. Brace has the happy and rare
+ faculty of making the reader see what he saw, and feel what
+ he felt."--_The Eclectic._
+
+ "He has succeeded in gathering the fullest and most
+ satisfactory amount of information in regard to Hungary that
+ we have seen. His description of the Hungarian Church and
+ the religious character of the people are especially
+ interesting, and the whole volume is a valuable addition to
+ our knowledge of the interior of Europe."--_Watchman and
+ Observer._
+
+ "This excellent work is not one of proesy details and dry
+ statistics, but is composed of the most familiar and
+ intimate glimpses of Hungarian life, written in the most
+ graceful style."--_Worcester Spy._
+
+
+RURAL HOMES; Or, SKETCHES OF HOUSES suited to American Country Life.
+With over 70 Original Plans, Designs, &c. By GERVASE WHEELER. 1 vol.
+12mo., Price, $1.25.
+
+ It commences with the first foot-tread upon the spot chosen
+ for the house; details the considerations that should weigh
+ in selecting the site; gives models of buildings differing
+ in character, extent, and cost; shows how to harmonize the
+ building with the surrounding scenery; teaches now
+ healthfully to warm and ventilate; assists in selecting
+ furniture and the innumerable articles of utility and
+ ornament used in constructing and finishing, and concludes
+ with final practical directions, giving useful limits as to
+ drawing up written descriptions, specifications and
+ contracts.
+
+
+ "In this neat and tasteful volume, Mr. Wheeler has condensed
+ the results of an accomplished training in his art, and the
+ liberal professional practice of it.
+
+ "We can confidently recommend this elaborate production to
+ the attention of gentlemen who are about building or
+ renovating their country houses, to professional architects,
+ and to all readers of discrimination, who wish to know what
+ is truly eloquent in this beautiful art, and to cultivate a
+ taste worthy to cope with "judgment of wisest censure."
+
+ "The cost of such establishments is carefully considered, no
+ less than the comforts they should afford, the display they
+ can (honestly) pretend to, and all the adjuncts that go to
+ complete the ideal of a convenient and elegant
+ mansion."--_N. Y. Mirror._
+
+
+ "It is extremely practical, containing such simple and
+ comprehensive directions for all wishing at any time to
+ build, being in fact the sum of the author's study and
+ experience as an architect for many years."--_Albany
+ Spectator._
+
+
+ "Mr. Wheeler's remarks convey much practical and useful
+ information, evince good taste and a proper appreciation of
+ the beautiful, and no one should build a rural house without
+ first hearing what he has to recommend."--_Philadelphia
+ Presbyterian._
+
+
+ "Important in its subject, careful and ample in its details,
+ and charmingly attractive in its style. It gives all the
+ information that would be desired as to the selection of
+ sites--the choice of appropriate styles, the particulars of
+ plans, materials, fences, gateways, furniture, warming,
+ ventilation, specifications, contracts, &c., concluding with
+ a chapter on the intellectual and moral effect of rural
+ architecture."--_Hartford Religious Herald._
+
+
+ "A book very much needed, for it teaches people how to build
+ comfortable, sensible, beautiful country houses. Its
+ conformity to common sense, as well as to the sense of
+ beauty, cannot be too much commended."--_N. Y. Courier &
+ Enquirer._
+
+
+ "No person can read this book without gaining much useful
+ knowledge, and it will be a great aid to those who intend to
+ build houses for their own use. It is scientific without
+ being so interlarded with technical terms as to confuse the
+ reader, and contains all the information necessary to build
+ a house from the cellar to the ridge pole. It is a parlor
+ book, or a book for the workshop, and will be valuable in
+ either place."--_Buffalo Commercial._
+
+
+ "This work should be in the hands of every one who
+ contemplates building for himself a home. It is filled with
+ beautifully executed elevations and plans of country houses
+ from the most unpretending cottage to the villa. Its
+ contents are simple and comprehensive, embracing every
+ variety of house usually needed."--_Lowell Courier._
+
+
+ "To all who desire a delightful rural retreat of "lively
+ cottagely" of getting a fair equivalent of comfort and
+ tastefulness, for a moderate outlay, we commend the Rural
+ Homes of Mr. Wheeler."--_N. Y. Evening Post._
+
+
+N. P. WILLIS'S SELECT WORKS, IN UNIFORM 12MO., VOLS.
+
+
+RURAL LETTERS, AND OTHER RECORDS OF THOUGHTS AT LEISURE, embracing
+Letters from under a Bridge, Open Air Musings in the City, "Invalid
+Ramble in Germany," "Letters from Watering Places," &c., &c. 1 vol.
+Fourth Edition.
+
+ "There is scarcely a page in it in which the reader will not
+ remember, and turn to again with a fresh sense of delight.
+ It bears the imprint of nature in her purest and most joyous
+ forms, and under her most cheering and inspiring
+ influences."--_N. Y. Tribune._
+
+ "If we would show how a modern could write with the ease of
+ Cowley, most gentle lover of nature's gardens, and their
+ fitting accessories from life, we would offer this volume as
+ the best proof that the secret has not yet died
+ out."--_Literary World._
+
+
+PEOPLE I HAVE MET, or Pictures of Society and People of Mark--drawn
+under a thin veil of fiction. By N. P. WILLIS. 1 vol., 12mo., Third
+Edition.
+
+ "It is a collection of twenty or more of the stories which
+ have blossomed out from the summer soil of the author's
+ thoughts within the last few years. Each word in some of
+ them the author seems to have picked as daintily, for its
+ richness or grace, or its fine fitness to his purpose, as if
+ a humming-bird were picking upon his quivering wing the
+ flower whose sweets he would lovingly rifle, or a belle were
+ culling the stones for her bridal necklace."--_N. Y.
+ Independent._
+
+ "The book embraces a great variety of personal and social
+ sketches in the Old World, and concludes with some thrilling
+ reminiscences of distinguished ladies, including the Belles
+ of New York, etc."--_The Republic._
+
+
+LIFE HERE AND THERE, or Sketches of Society and Adventure at far-apart
+times and places. By N. P. WILLIS. 1 vol., 12mo.
+
+ "This very agreeable volume consists of sketches of life and
+ adventure, all of them, the author assures us, having a
+ foundation strictly historical, and to a great extent
+ autobiographical. Such of these sketches as we have read,
+ are in Mr. Willis's happiest vein--a vein, by the way, in
+ which he is unsurpassed."--_Sartain's Magazine._
+
+ "Few readers who take up this pleasant volume will lay it
+ aside until they have perused every line of its
+ contents."--_Jersey Journal._
+
+
+HURRYGRAPHS, or Sketches of Scenery, Celebrities, and Society, taken
+from Life By N. P. WILLIS. 1 vol., 12mo., Third Edition.
+
+ "Some of the best specimens of Mr. Willis's prose, we think,
+ are herein contained."--_N. Y. Evangelist._
+
+ "In the present volume, which is filled with all sorts of
+ enticements, we prefer the descriptions of nature to the
+ sketches of character, and the dusty road-side grows
+ delightful under the touches of Willis's blossoming-dropping
+ pen; and when we come to the mountain and lake, it is like
+ revelling in all the fragrant odors of Paradise."--_Boston
+ Atlas._
+
+
+LECTURES ON ART--AND POEMS. By WASHINGTON ALLSTON. Edited by Richard
+Henry Dana, Jr. Contents--Lectures on Art, pages 3-167--Aphorisms,
+sentences written by Mr. Allston on the walls of his Studio, pages
+167-179--The Hypochondriac, pages 179-199--Poems, pages 199-317. 1
+vol. 12mo., Price, $1.25.
+
+ "There is a store of intellectual wealth in this handsome
+ volume. It is a book of thought. Its contents are the rich
+ and tasteful productions of the scholar and artist, who had
+ mind to perceive and skill to portray much that is unseen by
+ ordinary minds, as well as intelligence and power to exhibit
+ whatever is grand and beautiful both in the physical and
+ moral world."--_Christian Observer._
+
+ "These are the records of one of the purest spirits and most
+ exalted geniuses of which this country can boast. The
+ intense love of the beautiful, the purity, grace and
+ gentleness which made him incomparably the finest artist of
+ the age, lend their charm and their power to these
+ productions of his pen. *** There are in his poems feeling,
+ delicacy, taste, and the keenest sense of harmony which
+ render them faultless."--_N. Y. Evangelist._
+
+ "As a writer we know of no one who in his writings has
+ exhibited such an appreciation of what constitutes beauty in
+ art, correctness in form, or the true principles of
+ composition."--_Providence Journal._
+
+ "We commend them to the intellectual and the thoughtful, for
+ we know that no one can read them without being wiser, and
+ we believe the better."--_Albany State Register._
+
+ "The production of a most ethereal spirit instinctively
+ awake to all the harmonies of creation."--_Albany Argus._
+
+ "The exquisitely pure and lofty character of the author of
+ these lectures and poetic fragments is well expressed in
+ them. It gave their structure a freshness and calmness, and
+ their tone a purity that remain to charm us, and that are
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg e-Book of The Second War with England, Vol. 2; Author: J. T. Headley.</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Second War with England, Vol. 2 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. 2 of 2
+
+Author: Joel Tyler Headley
+
+Release Date: April 4, 2012 [EBook #39369]
+
+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="287" alt="" title="">
+<p class="smcap">COM. PORTER IN THE BAY OF NOVAHEEVAH.</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. II.</p>
+
+<p class="p4 center">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> CONTENTS OF VOL. II.</h2>
+
+<div class="toc">
+<p class="center">CHAPTER I.<br>
+ <span class="smcap">THE CREEK WAR.</span></p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Jackson's first service &mdash; Is appointed commander-in-chief of the Tennessee
+ forces &mdash; Co-operation of other states &mdash; Jackson enters the Creek nation &mdash; Difficulties
+ of his position &mdash; General Coffee's expedition &mdash; Relieves Fort Talladega &mdash; Battle
+ of &mdash; Stormy condition of his army &mdash; Quells a mutiny &mdash; Abandoned
+ by his troops &mdash; Quells a second mutiny &mdash; His boldness &mdash; A third mutiny suppressed &mdash; Left
+ with but a hundred followers &mdash; Clairborne's movements &mdash; Arrival
+ of reinforcements &mdash; Makes a diversion in favor of General Floyd &mdash; Battle
+ of Nutessee &mdash; Battle of Emuckfaw &mdash; Ambuscade of the Indians &mdash; Gallantry
+ of General Coffee &mdash; Battle of the "Horse Shoe" &mdash; The war ended &mdash; Jackson's
+ character,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page11">11</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER II.</p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Cruise of Commodore Porter in the Essex &mdash; Arrival at Valparaiso &mdash; Capture of
+ British whalers and letters of marque &mdash; Essex Junior &mdash; Marquesas Islands &mdash; Description
+ of the natives &mdash; Madison Island &mdash; War with the Happahs &mdash; Invades
+ the Typee territory &mdash; Tedious march &mdash; Beautiful prospect &mdash; Fights the natives
+ and burns down their towns &mdash; Sails for Valparaiso &mdash; Blockaded by two English
+ ships &mdash; Attempts to escape &mdash; Is attacked by both vessels &mdash; His gallant
+ defence &mdash; His surrender &mdash; Returns home on parole &mdash; Insolence of an English
+ Officer &mdash; Porter escapes in an open boat and lands on Long Island &mdash; Enthusiastic
+ reception in New York,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page45">45</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center"><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagevi" name="pagevi"></a>(p. vi)</span> CHAPTER III.</p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Plan of the third Campaign &mdash; Attack on Sackett's Harbor &mdash; Attack on Oswego &mdash; Woolsey
+ transports guns to Sackett's Harbor &mdash; Capture of the detachment
+ sent against him &mdash; Expedition against Mackinaw &mdash; Death of Captain Holmes &mdash; Complete
+ failure of the expedition,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page67">67</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER IV.</p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Brown takes command of the army at Niagara &mdash; Crosses the river into Canada &mdash; Battle
+ of Chippewa &mdash; Brilliant charge of the Americans &mdash; Desperate battle
+ of Niagara &mdash; Conduct of Ripley &mdash; The army ordered to Fort Erie &mdash; General
+ Gaines takes command,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page74">74</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER V.</p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Siege of Fort Erie &mdash; Assault and repulse of the British &mdash; Brown takes command &mdash; Resolves
+ to destroy the enemy's works by a sortie &mdash; Opposed by his officers &mdash; The
+ sortie &mdash; Anecdote of General Porter &mdash; Retreat of Drummond &mdash; Conduct
+ of Izard,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page101">101</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER VI.</p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">British plan of invading our sea ports &mdash; Arrival of reinforcements &mdash; Barney's
+ flotilla &mdash; Landing of the enemy under Ross &mdash; Doubt and alarm of the inhabitants &mdash; Advance
+ of the British &mdash; Destruction of the Navy Yard &mdash; Battle of
+ Bladensburg &mdash; Flight of the President and his Cabinet &mdash; Burning and sacking
+ of Washington &mdash; Mrs. Madison's conduct during the day and night &mdash; Cockburn's
+ brutality &mdash; Sudden explosion &mdash; A hurricane &mdash; Flight of the British &mdash; State
+ of the army &mdash; Character of this outrage &mdash; Rejoicings in England &mdash; Mortification
+ of our ambassadors at Ghent &mdash; Mistake of the English &mdash; Parker's
+ expedition &mdash; Colonel Reed's defence &mdash; The English army advance on Baltimore &mdash; Death
+ of Ross &mdash; Bombardment of Fort McHenry &mdash; "The star spangled
+ banner" &mdash; Retreat of the British, and joy of the citizens of Baltimore,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page114">114</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center"><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagevii" name="pagevii"></a>(p. vii)</span> CHAPTER VII.</p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Macomb at Plattsburg &mdash; American and English fleets on Lake Champlain &mdash; Advance
+ of Prevost &mdash; Indifference of Governor Chittenden &mdash; Rev. Mr. Wooster &mdash; Macdonough &mdash; The
+ two battles &mdash; Funeral of the officers &mdash; British invasion
+ of Maine &mdash; McArthur's expedition,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page147">147</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER VIII.</p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">The Navy in 1814 &mdash; Cruise of Captain Morris in the Adams &mdash; Narrow escapes &mdash; The
+ Wasp and Reindeer &mdash; Cruise of the Wasp &mdash; Sinks the Avon &mdash; Mysterious
+ fate of the Wasp &mdash; The Peacock captures the Epervier &mdash; Lieutenant
+ Nicholson,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page165">165</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER IX.</p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Third Session of the XIIIth Congress &mdash; State of the Treasury &mdash; The President's
+ Message &mdash; Dallas appointed Secretary of the Treasury &mdash; His scheme
+ and that of Eppes for the relief of the country &mdash; Our Commissioners at Ghent &mdash; Progress
+ of the negotiations &mdash; English protocol &mdash; Its effect on Congress
+ and the nation &mdash; Effect of its publication on the English Parliament,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page174">174</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER X.<br>
+ <span class="smcap">HARTFORD CONVENTION.</span></p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Attitude of New England &mdash; Governor Strong &mdash; Views and purposes of the
+ Federalists &mdash; Anxiety of Madison &mdash; Prudence of Colonel Jesup &mdash; Result of
+ the Convention &mdash; Fears of the People &mdash; Fate of the Federalists,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page191">191</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center"><span class="pagenum"><a id="pageviii" name="pageviii"></a>(p. viii)</span> CHAPTER XI.</p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">General Jackson appointed Major-General &mdash; Hostility of Spain &mdash; Gallant defence
+ of Fort Bowyer &mdash; Seizure of Pensacola &mdash; Jackson at New Orleans &mdash; Approach
+ and landing of the British &mdash; Jackson proclaims martial law &mdash; Night attack on
+ the British &mdash; Jackson entrenches himself &mdash; First attack of the British &mdash; Second
+ attack &mdash; Final assault &mdash; The battle and the victory &mdash; Jackson fined by
+ Judge Hall &mdash; Arrival of the Treaty of Peace &mdash; Great rejoicings &mdash; Delegates
+ of the Hartford Convention &mdash; Remarks on the treaty,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page199">199</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER XII.</p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Cruise of the Constitution &mdash; Action with the Cyane and Levant &mdash; Chased by a
+ British fleet &mdash; England's views of neutral rights and the law of nations &mdash; Her
+ honor and integrity at a discount &mdash; Singular escape of the Constitution &mdash; Recapture
+ of the Levant under the guns of a neutral port &mdash; Lampoons on the
+ English squadron for its contemptible conduct &mdash; Decatur &mdash; Capture of the
+ President &mdash; The Hornet captures the Penguin &mdash; Chased by a ship of the line &mdash; Narrow
+ escape &mdash; Cruise of the Peacock &mdash; Review of the American Navy &mdash; Its
+ future destiny,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page236">236</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center">CHAPTER XIII.<br>
+ <span class="smcap">PRIVATEERS.</span></p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Character and daring of our privateers &mdash; Skill of American seamen &mdash; Acts of
+ Congress relative to privateering &mdash; Names of ships &mdash; Gallant action of the
+ Nonsuch &mdash; Success of the Dolphin &mdash; Cruise of the Comet &mdash; Narrow escape
+ of the Governor Tompkins &mdash; Desperate action of the Globe with two brigs &mdash; The
+ Decatur takes a British sloop of war &mdash; Action of the Neufchatel with
+ the crew of the Endymion &mdash; Desperate defence of Captain Reed against the
+ crews of British squadron &mdash; The Chasseur captures a British schooner of
+ war &mdash; Character of the commanders of privateers &mdash; Anecdote,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page258">258</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center"><span class="pagenum"><a id="pageix" name="pageix"></a>(p. ix)</span> CHAPTER XIV.<br>
+ <span class="smcap">DARTMOOR PRISON.</span></p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Impressed Americans made prisoners of war &mdash; Treatment of prisoners &mdash; Prison
+ Ships &mdash; Dartmoor prison &mdash; Neglect of American prisoners &mdash; Their
+ sufferings &mdash; Fourth of July in Dartmoor &mdash; Brutal attack of the French
+ prisoners &mdash; Fresh arrivals &mdash; Joy at the news of our naval victories &mdash; Sufferings
+ of the prisoners in winter &mdash; American Government allows them three cents
+ per diem &mdash; Moral effect of this notice of Government &mdash; Napoleon's downfall &mdash; Increased
+ allowance of Government &mdash; Industry of prisoners &mdash; Attempts to
+ escape &mdash; Extraordinary adventure of a lieutenant of a privateer &mdash; Number of
+ prisoners increased &mdash; A riot to obtain bread &mdash; Dartmoor massacre &mdash; Messrs.
+ King and L'Arpent appointed commissioners to investigate it &mdash; Decision &mdash; The
+ end,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page279">279</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Tax-tables,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page301">301</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="toc_resume">Index,
+<span class="ralign10"><a href="#page313">313</a></span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h1><span class="pagenum"><a id="page11" name="page11"></a>(p. 11)</span> HISTORY OF THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND.</h1>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.<br>
+<span class="smcap">THE CREEK WAR.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Jackson's first service &mdash; Is appointed commander in-chief
+ of the Tennessee forces &mdash; Co-operation of other states &mdash;
+ Jackson enters the Creek nation &mdash; Difficulties of his
+ position &mdash; General Coffee's expedition &mdash; Relieves Fort
+ Talladega &mdash; Battle of &mdash; Stormy condition of his army &mdash;
+ Quells a mutiny &mdash; Abandoned by his troops &mdash; Quells a
+ second mutiny &mdash; His boldness &mdash; A third mutiny suppressed
+ &mdash; Left with but a hundred followers &mdash; Clairborne's
+ movements &mdash; Arrival of reinforcements &mdash; Makes a diversion
+ in favor of General Floyd &mdash; Battle of Nutessee &mdash; Battle of
+ Emuckfaw &mdash; Ambuscade of the Indians &mdash; Gallantry of General
+ Coffee &mdash; Battle of the "Horse Shoe" &mdash; The war ended &mdash;
+ Jackson's character.</p>
+
+<p>Allusion has been made to Jackson's campaign against the Creeks, but I
+purposely omitted an account of its progress, preferring to go back
+and make a continuous narrative. Although embracing a portion of two
+years, it composed a single expedition, and forms a whole which loses
+much of its interest by being contemplated in parts. After the
+cowardly surrender of General Hull, at Detroit, in the commencement of
+the war, Jackson offered his <span class="pagenum"><a id="page12" name="page12"></a>(p. 12)</span> services to the government, and
+solicited the post which was assigned to Winchester. Disappointed in
+this, he repaired, at the order of the Secretary of War, to Natchez,
+to assist Wilkinson, then stationed there, to repel the attacks of the
+enemy should they advance up the Mississippi. But no danger from an
+attack in that quarter appearing, he was directed to disband his
+troops. Refusing to do this, on account of the number of sick in camp,
+many of them sons of his neighbors and friends, he became involved in
+a quarrel both with Wilkinson and his own officers. He, however,
+carried out his measures and led his men back in safety to their
+homes.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">1813.</span>
+
+<p>Here he remained idle till the massacre at Fort Mimms, the news of
+which, together with the rising of the Indians all along our southern
+frontier, burst like a sudden thunder-clap on the neighboring States.
+Georgia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina, flew at once to arms. On
+the 17th of September a mass meeting assembled at Nashville, which
+with one voice nominated Jackson commander-in-chief of the troops of
+the State. Ten days after, the nomination was confirmed by the
+Legislature, and 200,000 dollars voted to carry on the war. Jackson
+immediately issued a stirring appeal to the people, in which, after
+describing the state of things, he urged them to assemble to his
+standard with all speed, saying, "Already are large bodies <span class="pagenum"><a id="page13" name="page13"></a>(p. 13)</span> of
+the hostile Creeks marching to your borders, with their
+scalping-knives unsheathed to butcher your women and children: time is
+not to be lost. We must hasten to the frontier, or we shall find it
+drenched in the blood of our citizens." At this time he was suffering
+from a disabled arm which had been mutilated in an encounter with
+Benton, and was unable to be present at Fayetteville, the rendezvous,
+on the 4th of October; but he sent an address to be read to the
+troops, and rules regulating the police of the camp. Although too
+feeble to take the field, he, three days after, with his arm in a
+sling, put himself at the head of the army. The next evening, a
+dispatch arrived from Colonel Coffee, who had been previously sent
+forward with a large detachment to Huntsville, thirty-two miles
+distant, stating that a body of nearly a thousand Indians were on
+their way to ravage the frontiers of Georgia, and another party
+approaching Tennessee. The day after came a second express confirming
+the report. By nine o'clock the following morning, Jackson put his
+army of twenty-five hundred men in motion, and at eight in the evening
+reached Huntsville, making the thirty-two miles in eleven hours.
+Finding that the rumor was without foundation, he proceeded leisurely
+to Ditto's Landing, where Col. Coffee with his regiment was encamped.
+Here he paused to wait for supplies, and survey his position.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page14" name="page14"></a>(p. 14)</span> With promptness on the part of those co-operating with him, he
+saw that the hostile Creeks could be crushed with one blow; for on the
+west of their settlements were six hundred Mississippi volunteers and
+the 3d regiment of regular infantry, six hundred strong, under Colonel
+Russel; on the east were twenty-five hundred Georgia militia,
+commanded by General Floyd; while from the north, five thousand
+volunteers and militia&mdash;twenty-five hundred from East Tennessee, under
+Generals Cocke and White, and the same number from the western section
+of the State&mdash;were moving down on the devoted tribes. This army of
+five thousand Tennesseans was under his own command, the western half
+of which he led in person. There were, besides this formidable array,
+a few posts held by small detachments, and a few hundred friendly
+Indians, most of them Cherokees. When these separate armies should
+close around the hostile settlements, encircling them in a girdle of
+fire, it was universally believed that the war would be over.</p>
+
+<p>While Jackson remained at Ditto's Landing, waiting anxiously for the
+supplies which Generals Cocke and White had promised to forward, he
+dispatched General Coffee, with six hundred picked men, to destroy
+Blackwarrior town, a hundred miles south.</p>
+
+<p>At length, being urged by the earnest appeals of friendly Indians, who
+were in daily danger of being <span class="pagenum"><a id="page15" name="page15"></a>(p. 15)</span> cut off by the Creeks, he, on
+the 19th, started for Thompson's Creek, where he had ordered the
+provisions, which he supposed were near at hand, to be stopped.
+Cutting his way through the heavy forests, and dragging his artillery
+over steep mountains, he at length, after a painful march of two days,
+reached the place of depôt but no provisions had arrived. Instead of
+supplies, came a letter from General White, who was at Lookout
+Mountain in the Cherokee country, stating that no flour could be
+spared from that post. His position was now becoming painful and
+critical. Standing in the centre of the wilderness, on the borders of
+the enemy's country, with his little band around him, he saw no
+alternative but to retreat, unless he ran the risk of starving in the
+forest. But to abandon his design, would leave the friendly Indians at
+the mercy of their enemies, an act not only cruel in the extreme, and
+utterly repugnant to his nature, but which would furnish a fatal
+example to the other friendly tribes, whose alliance it was of the
+highest importance to secure. Prudence would have dictated a retreat,
+but Jackson had never yet turned his back voluntarily on a foe, and he
+resolved, at all hazards, to proceed. Sending off expresses to
+Generals Cocke and White, and to the Governors of Tennessee and
+Georgia, and the American agents in the Choctaw and Cherokee nations,
+he issued a stirring address to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page16" name="page16"></a>(p. 16)</span> his troops, in which he
+promised them that the "order to charge would be the signal for
+victory." In urging on them the importance of coolness, and presence
+of mind, in every emergency, even in "retreat," he adds,</p>
+
+<p>"Your general laments that he has been compelled, even incidentally,
+to <i>hint</i> at a retreat, when speaking to freemen and to soldiers.
+Never, until you forget all that is due to yourselves and your
+country, will you have any practical understanding of that word. Shall
+an enemy, wholly unacquainted with military evolutions, and who rely
+more for victory on their grim visages, and hideous yells, than upon
+their bravery or their weapons&mdash;shall such an enemy ever drive before
+them, the well-trained youths of our country, whose bosoms pant for
+glory, and a desire to avenge the wrongs they have received? Your
+general will not live to behold such a spectacle; rather would he rush
+into the thickest of the enemy, and submit himself to their
+scalping-knives; but he has no fear of such a result. He knows the
+valor of the men he commands, and how certainly that valor, regulated
+as it will be, will lead to victory."</p>
+
+<p>Cut off from supplies, locked up in the wilderness, through which
+swarmed thousands of savages eagerly watching his advance, with only
+six days' rations of meat and two of flour, he issued this bold and
+confident <span class="pagenum"><a id="page17" name="page17"></a>(p. 17)</span> address, and then gave orders for the army to
+march. Arriving at Ten Islands, he erected Fort Strother, to serve as
+a depôt, and to cover his retreat. In a letter to Governor Blount,
+from this place, he says,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, sir, we have been wretchedly supplied,&mdash;scarcely two rations
+in succession have been regularly drawn, yet we are not despondent.
+While we can procure an ear of corn apiece, or anything that will
+answer as a substitute for it, we shall continue our exertions to
+accomplish the object for which we were sent."</p>
+
+<p>Here, being informed that General White was only twenty-five miles
+distant up the river, he sent him a despatch to hasten, at once, to
+the fort. In the mean time, General Coffee, who had returned
+successful from his southern expedition, was sent to attack a large
+body of Indians at Tallushatchee, some thirty miles distant. With nine
+hundred men, this gallant officer advanced, and succeeded in
+completely surrounding them; and though the savages fought desperately
+to the last, but few escaped. A hundred and eighty warriors lay
+stretched around the ashes of their dwellings. Among the slain, was a
+mother, on whose bosom her infant boy was found, struggling in vain to
+draw nourishment from the lifeless breast. When he was brought to
+camp, Jackson endeavored to persuade some of the female captives to
+take care of him, but they all refused, saying, "His relations
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page18" name="page18"></a>(p. 18)</span> are all dead, kill him too." He then ordered some sugar to be
+given him, and sent him to Huntsville, where he could be properly
+cared for. He afterwards adopted him, gave him a good education, and
+placed him at a saddler's to learn a trade. The latter was accustomed
+to spend every Sunday at the Hermitage, with his adopted father, who
+was strongly attached to him. But he always pined for the free, wild
+life of his race. The close air of the shop and the drudgery of an
+apprentice did not agree with him, and he soon after sickened. He was
+then taken home to the Hermitage, where he lingered some time, and
+died.</p>
+
+<p>At length, on the 7th of November, an Indian runner arrived in camp,
+stating that Fort Talladega, about thirty miles distant, was
+surrounded by the hostile Red-sticks, and if he did not hurry to its
+relief, the friendly Indians, who had taken refuge in it must be
+massacred. The runner had scarcely finished his message when the order
+to march was issued, and in a few minutes the columns were in motion.
+It was midnight, and through the dim cathedrals of nature, lighted
+only by the stars of heaven, Jackson led his two thousand men towards
+the Talladega. Eight hundred of these were mounted riflemen, who
+presented a picturesque appearance, as they wound slowly along the
+rough forest path underneath the autumnal woods, each with <span class="pagenum"><a id="page19" name="page19"></a>(p. 19)</span>
+unceasing watchfulness, piercing the surrounding gloom, and every hand
+grasping a trusty rifle. Their heavy tramp frightened the wild beasts
+from their lairs, and awoke strange echoes in the solitude. Now
+straining up steep ascents, and now swimming deep rivers, the fearless
+and gallant band pressed forward. In three columns, so as to prevent
+the confusion that might arise from a sudden surprise, it forced its
+difficult way through the forest, and at night arrived within six
+miles of the besieged fort. Here Jackson halted, and sent forward two
+friendly Indians and a white man, to reconnoitre. About eleven o'clock
+they returned, and reported the enemy in great force, and within a
+quarter of a mile of the fort. No time was to be lost, and though the
+troops had been without sleep, and constantly on the strain for
+twenty-four hours, another night, and a battle, lay between them and
+repose.</p>
+
+<p>It was four o'clock of a cool November morning, when the three columns
+again moved forward. Advancing with the utmost caution and quietness
+to within a mile of the Indian encampment, they halted, and formed in
+order of battle. Two hundred and fifty of the cavalry, under
+Lieut.-Col. Dyer, were left in the rear of the centre to act as a
+reserve, while the remaining four hundred and fifty were ordered to
+push forward to the right and left on either side, until the heads of
+their columns met beyond <span class="pagenum"><a id="page20" name="page20"></a>(p. 20)</span> the hostile encampment, and thus
+completely encircle it. The two brigades of Hall and Roberts,
+occupying the right and left, were directed to advance, while the ring
+of cavalry was steadily to contract, so as to shut in every savage and
+prevent escape. At eight o'clock, Colonel Carroll boldly charged the
+position in front of him, and carried it; he then retreated, in order
+to draw the Indians in pursuit. They charged after him with such
+terrific whoops and screams, that a portion of General Roberts'
+brigade, on whom they were rushing with uplifted tomahawks, broke and
+fled. This made a chasm in the line, which Jackson immediately ordered
+Colonel Bradley to fill with his regiment, that for some reason, known
+only to the latter, had lagged behind, to the great detriment of the
+order of battle. But not only had he proved a laggard in the approach,
+but he refused to fill the chasm, as ordered by his commander, and the
+latter was compelled to dismount his reserve and hurry them forward.
+As these steadily and firmly advanced, and poured in their volleys,
+the panic-stricken militia recovered their courage and resumed their
+places in the line. In the mean time, the encircling cavalry came
+galloping, with loud hurrahs, towards the centre. The next moment the
+forest rang with the sharp reports of their rifles. In fifteen minutes
+the battle was over, and the terrified savages were wildly skirting
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page21" name="page21"></a>(p. 21)</span> the inner edge of this circle of fire, seeking, in vain, an
+avenue to the open forest beyond. Turned back at every step, they fell
+like the autumn leaves which the wind shook around them. At length
+they discovered a gap, made by the neglect of Colonel Bradley and the
+delay of a portion of the cavalry, which had taken too wide a circuit,
+and poured like a torrent that has suddenly found vent, through it.
+The mounted riflemen wheeled and streamed after; and the quick, sharp
+reports of their pieces, and the receding yells rising from the
+forest, told how fiercely they pressed on the flying traces of the
+foe. The savages made straight for the mountains, three miles distant,
+fighting as they went. The moment they bounded up the steep acclivity
+they were safe, and the wearied horsemen turned again to the camp.
+Their way back was easily tracked by the swarthy forms that lay
+stretched on the leaves, showing where the flight and pursuit had
+swept. Of the thousand and more who had composed the force of the
+enemy, more than half were killed or wounded. Three hundred were left
+dead on the spot where they had first fought. The loss of the
+Americans in killed and wounded, was ninety-five.</p>
+
+<p>The friendly Indians, who had been so long shut up without a drop of
+water, in momentary expectation of being massacred, listened to the
+uproar without, with beating hearts; but when the battle was <span class="pagenum"><a id="page22" name="page22"></a>(p. 22)</span>
+over, they rushed forth with the most frantic cries of joy, and leaped
+and shouted around their deliverers in all the wildness of savage
+delight. They crowded around Jackson as if he had been their deity,
+toward whom they could not show too much reverence.</p>
+
+<p>The refusal of General White to march to Fort Strother, left the
+feeble garrison of the latter in a perilous state. If it should fall,
+Jackson's whole line of retreat would be cut off; and he, therefore,
+with deep pain, was compelled to stop in his victorious progress, and
+return to the fort. On his arrival, he found that no supplies had
+reached it, and that the soldiers, half-starved, were bordering on
+mutiny. General Cocke, from the first, seemed resolved to withhold all
+aid from Jackson, lest he himself should be eclipsed in the campaign.
+<span class="sidenote">Nov. 11.</span> This officer directed his movements against the
+Hillabee towns. General White, with the mounted men, succeeded in
+destroying the place, killing and capturing three hundred and sixteen
+warriors.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Nov. 18.</span>
+
+<p>Jackson, however, endeavored to keep alive the spirits and courage of
+his troops, and distributed all his private stores to the feeble and
+wounded. Having nothing left for himself and staff, he repaired to the
+bullock-pen, and from the offals cut tripe, on which he and they lived
+for days, in the vain hope of receiving the long-promised <span class="pagenum"><a id="page23" name="page23"></a>(p. 23)</span>
+supplies. One day, as he sat at the foot of a tree, thinking of the
+hard condition of his men, and planning how he might find some relief
+from the increasing difficulties that pressed so hard upon him, one of
+the soldiers, observing that he was eating something, approached, and
+asked for a portion. Jackson looked up with a pleasant smile, and
+said, "I will, most cheerfully, divide with you what I have;" and
+taking some acorns from his pocket, he handed them to the astonished
+and mortified soldier. His solicitude for the army did not expend
+itself in words, for he shared with the meanest soldier his privations
+and his wants, while many of his subordinate officers possessed
+abundance. He let the latter enjoy the rations to which they were
+legally entitled, but himself scorned to sit down to a well-supplied
+table, while the army was perishing with want.</p>
+
+<p>This state of things, of course, could not last long. The soldiers
+believed themselves neglected by the State for whose safety they were
+fighting; else why this protracted refusal to send them provisions?
+The incipient discontent was fed and aggravated by several of the
+officers, who were getting tired of the campaign, and wished to return
+home, till at last it broke out into open revolt. The militia
+regiments, <i>en masse</i>, had resolved to leave. Jackson received the
+communication with grief and indignation. He felt for his poor,
+half-starved men, but all his passionate <span class="pagenum"><a id="page24" name="page24"></a>(p. 24)</span> nature was roused at
+this deliberate defiance of his authority. The militia, however, did
+not regard his expostulations or threats, and they fixed on a morning
+to commence their march. But as they drew out to take their departure,
+they found, to their astonishment, the volunteers paraded across the
+path, with Jackson at their head. He ordered them to return to their
+position, or they should answer for their disobedience with their
+lives. They obeyed; but the volunteers, indignant that they had been
+made the instrument of quelling the revolt, and anxious as the others
+were to get away, resolved next morning to depart themselves. To their
+surprise, however, they saw the militia drawn up in the same position
+they had occupied the day before, to arrest the first forward movement
+that was made. This was a dangerous game to play with armed men, and
+would not bear a second trial.</p>
+
+<p>The cavalry, on the ground that the country yielded no forage for
+their horses, were permitted to retire to the neighborhood of
+Huntsville, where they promised to wait the orders of their commander.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, Jackson hearing that provisions were on the way,
+made an effort to allay the excited, angry feelings that existed in
+the army, and so, on the 14th of November, invited all the field and
+platoon officers to his quarters, and after informing them that
+abundant supplies were close at hand, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page25" name="page25"></a>(p. 25)</span> addressed them in a
+kind and sympathizing manner, told them how deeply he felt for their
+sufferings, and concluded by promising, if provisions did not arrive
+within two days, to lead them back himself to Tennessee. But this kind
+and conciliatory speech produced no effect on a portion of the army,
+and the first regiment of volunteers insisted on abandoning the fort.
+Permission to leave was granted, and Jackson, with chagrin and
+anguish, saw the men whom he refused to abandon at Natchez, forsake
+him in the heart of the forest, surrounded by hostile savages.</p>
+
+<p>The two days expiring without the arrival of provisions, he was
+compelled to fulfill his promise to the army, and preparations were
+made for departure. In the midst of the breaking up of the camp, he
+sat down and wrote a letter to Colonel Pope, the contractor, which
+exhibits how deeply he felt, not merely this abandonment of him, but
+the failure of the expedition. He says in conclusion:</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot express the torture of my feelings, when I reflect that a
+campaign so auspiciously begun, and which might be so soon and so
+gloriously terminated, is likely to be rendered abortive for the want
+of supplies. For God's sake, prevent so great an evil."</p>
+
+<p>As the baggage-wagons were loaded up, and the men fell into marching
+order, the palpable evidence <span class="pagenum"><a id="page26" name="page26"></a>(p. 26)</span> of the failure of the project on
+which he had so deeply set his heart, and the disgrace that awaited
+his army, became so painful, that he could not endure the sight, and
+he exclaimed in mingled grief and shame,</p>
+
+<p>"If only two men will remain with me, I will never abandon the post."</p>
+
+<p>"You have one, General!" exclaimed Captain Gordon, of the spies, who
+stood beside him.</p>
+
+<p>The gallant captain immediately began to beat up for volunteers, and
+it was not long before a hundred and nine brave fellows surrounded
+their general, swearing to stand by him to the last.</p>
+
+<p>The latter then put himself at the head of the militia, telling them
+he should order them back, if they met provisions near by. They had
+gone but ten or twelve miles, when they met a hundred and fifty beeves
+on their way to the fort. The men fell to, and in a short time were
+gorging themselves with half roasted meat. Invigorated by their
+gluttonous repast, most of them consented to return. One company,
+however, quietly resumed its journey homeward. When Jackson was
+informed of it, he sprang into his saddle, and galloping a quarter of
+a mile ahead, where General Coffee with his staff and a few soldiers
+had halted, ordered them to form across the road, and fire on the
+first man that attempted to pass. As the mutineers came up and saw
+that living <span class="pagenum"><a id="page27" name="page27"></a>(p. 27)</span> barrier before them, and in front of it the stern
+and decided face of their commander, they wheeled about, and retraced
+their steps. Jackson then dismounted and began to mingle among the
+men, to allay their excitement, and conciliate their feelings. While
+he was thus endeavoring to reduce to cheerful obedience this
+refractory company, he was told, to his utter amazement, that the
+other portion of the army had changed their mind, and the whole
+brigade was drawn up in column, and on the point of marching homeward.
+He immediately walked up in front of it, snatched a musket from the
+hands of a soldier, and resting it across the neck of his horse, swore
+he would shoot the first man who attempted to move. The soldiers stood
+and looked in sullen silence at that resolute face, undecided whether
+to advance or not, when General Coffee and his staff galloped up.
+These, together with the faithful companies, Jackson ordered to form
+behind him, and fire when he did. Not a word was uttered for some
+time, as the two parties thus stood face to face, and gazed on each
+other. At length a murmur rang along the column&mdash;rebellion was
+crushed, and the mutineers consented to return. Discontent, however,
+prevailed, and the volunteers looked anxiously forward to the 10th of
+December, the time when they supposed the term of their enlistment
+expired. They had originally enlisted for twelve months, and counting
+in the time they had been disbanded, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page28" name="page28"></a>(p. 28)</span> after their return from
+Natchez, the year would be completed on that date. But Jackson refused
+to allow the time they were not in actual service. Letters passed
+between the officers and himself, and every effort was made on his
+part to allay the excitement, and convince the troops of the justice
+of his demands. He appealed to their patriotism, their courage, and
+honor, and finally told them if the General Government gave permission
+for their discharge, he would discharge them, otherwise they should
+walk over his dead body before they stirred a foot, until the twelve
+months' actual service was accomplished. <span class="sidenote">Dec.</span> Anticipating
+trouble, he wrote home for reinforcements, and sent off officers for
+recruits.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, the 10th of December drew near, and every heart was
+filled with anxiety for the result. A portion of the army was resolved
+to <i>take</i> their discharge, whether granted or not. It was not a sudden
+impulse, created by want and suffering, but a well-considered and
+settled determination, grounded on what they considered their rights.
+The thing had been long discussed, and many of the officers had given
+their decided opinion that the time of the men actually expired on the
+10th. Jackson knew that his troops were brave, and when backed by the
+consciousness of right, would be resolute and firm. But he had made up
+his mind to prevent mutiny, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page29" name="page29"></a>(p. 29)</span> though he was compelled to
+sacrifice a whole regiment in doing it.</p>
+
+<p>At length, on the evening of the 9th, Gen. Hall entered the tent of
+Jackson, and informed him that his whole brigade was in a state of
+revolt. The latter immediately issued an order stating the fact, and
+calling on all the officers to aid in quelling it. He then directed
+the two guns he had with him, to be placed, one in front and the other
+in the rear, and the militia on the rising ground in advance, to check
+any movement in that direction, and waited the result. The brigade
+assembled, and were soon in marching order. Jackson then rode slowly
+along the line, and addressed the soldiers. He reminded them of their
+former good conduct, spoke of the love and esteem he had always borne
+them, of the reinforcements on the way, saying, also, that he expected
+every day, the decision of the government, on the question of their
+discharge, and wound up by telling them emphatically, that he had done
+with entreaty,&mdash;go they should not, and if they persisted, he would
+settle the matter in a very few minutes. He demanded an immediate and
+explicit answer. They persisted. He repeated his demand, and still
+receiving no answer, he ordered the artillerists to prepare their
+matches, and at the word "Fire!" to pour their volleys of grape-shot
+into the closely crowded ranks. There he sat, gazing sternly down
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page30" name="page30"></a>(p. 30)</span> the line, while the few moments of grace allowed them, were
+passing rapidly away. The men knew it was no idle threat. He had never
+been known to break his word, and that sooner than swerve one hair
+from his purpose, he would drench that field in blood. Alarmed, they
+began to whisper one to another, "Let us go back." The contagion of
+fear spread, and soon the officers advanced, and promised, on behalf
+of the men, that they would return to their quarters.</p>
+
+<p>As if to try this resolute man to the utmost, and drive him to
+despair, no sooner was one evil averted than another overtook him. He
+had, by his boldness, quelled the mutiny; but he now began again to
+feel the horrors of famine. Supplies did not arrive; or in such scanty
+proportion, that he was compelled, at last, to discharge the troops,
+and, notwithstanding all the distressing scenes through which he had
+passed to retain them, see them take up their line of march for home,
+leaving him, with only a hundred devoted followers, shut up in the
+forest.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Dec. 23.</span>
+
+<p>While these things were passing, General Clairborne, with his
+volunteers, passed up the east side of the Alabama, and piercing to
+the towns above the Cahawba, gave battle to the Indians under their
+great leader, Weathersford, and defeated them, with the loss of but
+one man killed and seven wounded. Destroying their <span class="pagenum"><a id="page31" name="page31"></a>(p. 31)</span> villages,
+he returned to Fort Clairborne. <span class="sidenote">1814.</span> Jackson remained
+idle till the middle of January, when he was gladdened by the arrival
+of eight hundred recruits. Not deeming these, however, sufficient to
+penetrate into the heart of the Creek country, he resolved to make a
+diversion in favor of General Floyd, who was advancing from the east.
+<span class="sidenote">Dec. 29.</span> This officer, leaving his encampment on the
+Chattahouche, and advancing into the Indian territory along the
+southern bank of the Talapoosa River, came on the morning of the 29th
+upon the town of Autossee, where a large number of Indians were
+assembled. Having marched since one o'clock in the morning, he took
+the savages by surprise. They however rallied and fought desperately,
+retreating only before the fire of the artillery. Two towns, within
+sight of each other, were soon in flames. Several hundred of the enemy
+were killed and wounded, while the loss of the Americans was but
+sixty-five. Among the wounded was General Floyd, who was struck by a
+shot while gallantly leading on his command. Hearing that a large
+number of Indians were encamped on the Emuckfaw Creek, where it
+empties into the Tallapoosa River, Jackson marched thither, and on the
+evening of the 21st of January, arrived within a short distance of
+their encampment. The Indians were aware of his approach, and resolved
+to anticipate his <span class="pagenum"><a id="page32" name="page32"></a>(p. 32)</span> attack. To prevent a surprise, however,
+Jackson had ordered a circle of watch-fires to be built around his
+little band. The men stood to their arms all night; and just before
+daylight a wild yell, which always precedes an attack, went up from
+the forest, and the next moment the savages charged down on the camp.
+But, the instant the light of the watch-fires fell on their tawny
+bodies they were swept with such a destructive volley, that they again
+took shelter in the darkness. At length, daylight appeared, when
+General Coffee ordered a charge, which cleared the field. He was then
+directed to advance on the encampment with four hundred men, and carry
+it by storm. On his approach, however, he found it too strong for his
+force, and retired. Jackson, attacked in return, was compelled to
+charge repeatedly, before the savages finally took to flight. Many of
+their bravest warriors fell in this short conflict; while, on the
+American side, several valuable officers were badly wounded, among
+them General Coffee, who, from the commencement to the close, was in
+the thickest of the fight.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding his victory, Jackson prudently determined to retreat.
+He had gained his object; for in drawing the attention of the Indians
+to his own force, he had diverted it from that under Gen. Floyd.
+Besides, his horses had been without forage for two days, and would
+soon break down. He, therefore, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page33" name="page33"></a>(p. 33)</span> buried the dead on the field
+where they had fallen; and, on the 23d, began to retrace his
+footsteps. Judging from the quietness of the Indians since the battle,
+he suspected they were lurking in ambush ahead. Remembering also what
+an excellent place there was for a surprise at the ford of
+Enotochopeo, he sent men in advance to reconnoitre, who discovered
+another ford some six hundred yards farther down the stream. Reaching
+this just at evening, he encamped there all night, and the next
+morning commenced crossing. He expected an attack while in the middle
+of the stream, and, therefore, had his rear formed in order of battle.
+His anticipations proved correct; for no sooner had a part of the army
+reached the opposite bank, than an alarm-gun was heard in the rear. In
+an instant, all was in commotion. The next moment, the forest
+resounded with the war-whoop and yells of the savages, as they came
+rushing on in great numbers. As they crowded on the militia, the
+latter, with their officers, gave way in affright, and poured
+pell-mell down the bank. Jackson was standing on the shore
+superintending the crossing of his two pieces of artillery, when his
+broken ranks came tumbling about him. Foremost among the fugitives was
+Captain Stump; and, Jackson, enraged at the shameful disorder, aimed a
+desperate blow at him with his sword, fully intending to cut him down.
+One glance of his eye revealed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page34" name="page34"></a>(p. 34)</span> the whole extent of the
+danger. But for Gen. Carroll, who, with Capt. Quarles and twenty-five
+men, stood nobly at bay, beating back with their deliberate volleys
+the hordes of savages, the entire rear of the army would have been
+massacred. But, over the din and tumult, Jackson's voice rang clear
+and steady as a bugle-note, as he rapidly issued his orders. The
+gallant and intrepid Coffee, roused by the tumult, raised himself from
+the litter on which he lay wounded, and casting one glance on the
+panic, and another upon the little band that stood like a rock
+embedded in the farther bank, leaped to the ground, and with one bound
+landed in his saddle. The next moment, his shout of encouragement
+broke on the ears of his companions as he dashed forward to the
+conflict. Jackson looked up in surprise as that pale face galloped up
+the bank, and then his rage at the cowardice of the men gave way to
+the joy of the true hero when another hero moves to his side, and he
+shouted, "We shall whip them yet, my men! <i>the dead have risen, and
+come to aid us</i>." The company of artillery followed, leaving
+Lieutenant Armstrong and a few men to drag up the cannon. When one of
+the guns, at length, reached the top of the bank, the rammer and
+picker were nowhere to be found. A man instantly wrenched the bayonet
+from his musket, and rammed home the cartridge with the stock, and
+picked it with his ramrod. Lieutenant <span class="pagenum"><a id="page35" name="page35"></a>(p. 35)</span> Armstrong fell beside
+his piece; but as he lay upon the ground, he cried out, "My brave
+fellows, some of you must fall; but save the cannon." Such heroism is
+always contagious; and the men soon rallied, and charging home on the
+savages, turned them in flight on every side.</p>
+
+<p>After burying his dead and caring for the wounded, Jackson resumed his
+march; and, four days after, reached Fort Strother in safety. Nearly
+one-eighth of his little army had been killed or wounded since he left
+the post, and he now dismissed the remainder, who claimed that the
+time of their enlistment was expired; and quietly waited till
+sufficient reinforcements should arrive for him to undertake a
+thorough campaign into the Creek country.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Jan. 27.</span>
+
+<p>Four days after this, General Floyd again advancing into the Creek
+country, was attacked just before daylight by a large body of Indians,
+who rushed on him with terrible impetuosity. Determined on victory,
+they advanced within thirty steps of the artillery, and would have
+taken it but for the uncommon coolness and bravery of the subordinate
+officers. At length a charge of bayonet sent them flying in all
+directions. The cavalry then charged, and the horses rushing furiously
+forward, to the sound of bugles, completed the terror of the savages,
+who disappeared like frightened deer in the surrounding forests,
+leaving thirty-seven dead on the field.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page36" name="page36"></a>(p. 36)</span> Reinforcements soon began to come in to Jackson; for his
+bravery and success awakened confidence, and stimulated the ambition
+of thousands, who were sure to win distinction under such a leader;
+and, by March, he found himself at the head of four thousand militia
+and volunteers, and a regiment of regular troops, together with
+several hundred friendly Indians. While preparing to advance, mutiny
+again broke out in the camp. He determined this time to make an
+example which should deter others in future; and a private, being
+tried and convicted, was shot. The spectacle was not lost on the
+soldiers, and nothing more was heard of a revolt.</p>
+
+<p>Having completed all his arrangements, Jackson, with four thousand
+men, advanced, on the 16th of March, into the Creek country. At the
+junction of the Cedar Creek with the Coosa River, he established Fort
+Williams, and left a garrison. He then continued his march, with some
+two thousand five hundred men, towards his previous battle-ground at
+Emuckfaw. About five miles below it, in the bend of the Tallapoosa,
+the Indians, a thousand strong, had entrenched themselves, determined
+to give battle. They were on sacred ground; for all that tract between
+the Coosa and Tallapoosa Rivers, known as the "hickory ground," their
+prophets had told them the white man could never conquer. This bend
+contained about a hundred acres, around which the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page37" name="page37"></a>(p. 37)</span> river
+wrapped itself in the form of a horse-shoe, from whence it derived its
+name. Across the neck leading to this open plain, the Indians had
+erected a breastwork of logs, seven or eight feet high, and pierced it
+with a double row of port-holes. Behind it, the ground rose into an
+elevation; while still farther back, along the shore, lay the village,
+in which were the women and children. Early in the morning of the
+25th, Jackson ordered General Coffee to take the mounted riflemen
+together with the friendly Indians and cross the river at a ford
+below, and stretch around the bend, on the opposite bank from the
+village, so as to prevent the fugitives from escaping. He then
+advanced in front, and took up his position, and opened on the
+breastwork with his light artillery. The cannonade was kept up for two
+hours without producing any effect. In the mean time, the friendly
+Indians attached to General Coffee's command had swam the river and
+loosened a large number of canoes, which they brought back. Captain
+Russell's company of spies immediately leaped into them, and, with the
+friendly Indians, crossed over and set the village on fire, and with
+loud shouts pressed towards the rear of the encampment. The Indians
+returned the shout of defiance, and, with a courage and steadiness
+they seldom exhibited, repelled every effort to advance.</p>
+
+<p>The troops under Jackson heard the din of the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page38" name="page38"></a>(p. 38)</span> conflict
+within, and clamored loudly to be led to the assault. He, however,
+held them back, and stood and listened. Discovering, at length, by the
+incessant firing in a single place, that the Americans were making no
+progress, he ordered the drums to beat the charge. A loud and
+thrilling shout rolled along the American line, and, with levelled
+bayonets, the excited ranks precipitated themselves on the breastwork.
+A withering fire received them, the rifle-balls sweeping like a sudden
+gust of sleet, in their very faces. Not an Indian flinched, and many
+were pierced through the port-holes; while, in several instances, the
+enemy's bullets were welded to the American bayonets. The swarthy
+warriors looked grimly through the openings, as though impervious to
+death. This, however, was of short duration, and soon the breastwork
+was black with men, as they streamed up the sides. Major Montgomery
+was the first who planted his foot on the top, but he had scarcely
+waved his sword in triumph above his head, when he fell back upon his
+companions, dead. A cry of vengeance swelled up from his followers,
+and the next moment the troops rolled like a sudden inundation over
+the barrier. It then became a hand-to-hand fight. The Indians refused
+to yield, and with gleaming knives and tomahawks, and clubbed rifles
+and muskets, closed in a death grapple with their foes. Civilization
+gave the bold frontiersmen <span class="pagenum"><a id="page39" name="page39"></a>(p. 39)</span> no advantage here&mdash;it was a
+personal struggle with his swarthy rival for the mastery, where they
+both claimed the right of possession. The wild yell of the savage
+blended in with the stem curse of the Anglo-Saxon, while high and
+shrill over the clangor and clash of arms, arose the shouts of the
+prophets, as dancing frantically around their blazing dwellings, they
+continued their strange incantations, still crying victory.</p>
+
+<p>At length one was shot in the mouth, as if to give the lie to his
+declarations. Pressed in front and rear, many at last turned and fled.
+But the unerring rifle dropped them along the shore; while those who
+endeavored to save themselves by swimming, sunk in mid-stream under
+the deadly fire of Coffee's mounted men. The greater part, however,
+fought and fell, face to face, with their foes. It was a long and
+desperate struggle; not a soul asked for quarter, but turned, with a
+last look of hate and defiance, on his conqueror. As the ranks grew
+thin, it ceased to be a fight, and became a butchery. Driven at last
+from the breastwork, the few surviving warriors took refuge in the
+brush and timber on the hill. Wishing to spare their lives, Jackson
+sent an interpreter to them, offering them pardon; but they proudly
+refused it, and fired on the messenger. He then turned his cannon on
+the spot, but failing to dislodge them, ordered the grass and brush to
+be <span class="pagenum"><a id="page40" name="page40"></a>(p. 40)</span> fired. Driven out by the flames, they ran for the river,
+but most of them fell before they reached the water. On every side the
+crack of the rifle told how many eyes were on the fugitives. Darkness
+at last closed the scene, and still night, broken only by the cries of
+the wounded, fell on the forest and river. Nearly eight hundred of the
+Indians had fallen, five hundred and fifty-seven of whom lay stark and
+stiff around and in that encampment. The loss of the Americans, in
+killed and wounded, was about two hundred.<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1" title="Go to footnote 1"><span class="smaller">[1]</span></a></p>
+
+<p>The tired soldier slept on the field of slaughter, around the
+smouldering fires of the Indian dwellings. The next morning they sunk
+the dead bodies of their companions in the river, to save them from
+the scalping-knives of the savages, and then took up their backward
+march to Fort William.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page41" name="page41"></a>(p. 41)</span> The original design of having the three armies from Tennessee,
+Georgia, and Mississippi, meet in the centre of the Creek nation, and
+thus crush it with one united effort, had never been carried out, and
+Jackson now resolved alone to overrun and subdue the country. Issuing
+a noble address to his troops, he, on the 7th of April, set out for
+the Indian village of Hoithlowalle. But he met with no opposition; the
+battle of Tohopeka had completely prostrated the tribe, and the war
+was virtually at an end. He, however, scoured the country, the Indians
+everywhere fleeing before the terror of his name. On his march, he
+sent orders to Colonel Milton, who, with a strong force, was also
+advancing into the Creek country, to send him provisions. The latter
+returned a cavalier refusal. Jackson then sent a peremptory order, not
+only to forward provisions, but to join him at once with his troops.
+Colonel Milton, after reading the order, asked the bearer what sort of
+a man Jackson was. "One," he replied, "who intends, when he gives an
+order, to have it obeyed." The colonel concluded to obey, and soon
+effected a junction with his troops. Jackson then resumed his march
+along the banks of the Tallapoosa; but he had hardly set the leading
+column in motion, when word was brought him that Colonel Milton's
+brigade was unable to follow, as the wagon-horses had strayed away
+during the night, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page42" name="page42"></a>(p. 42)</span> and could not be found. Jackson immediately
+sent him word to detail twenty men to each wagon. The astonished
+colonel soon found horses sufficient to draw the wagons.</p>
+
+<p>The enemy, however, did not make a stand, and either fled, or came in
+voluntarily to tender their submission. The latter part of April,
+General Pinckney arrived at Fort Jackson, and assumed the command, and
+General Jackson returned to Tennessee, greeted with acclamations, and
+covered with honors. In a few months peace was restored with all the
+Southern tribes, and the machinations of England in that quarter
+completely frustrated.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing in the history of our country more remarkable than
+this campaign, and nothing illustrates the genius of this nation more
+than it and the man who carried it triumphantly through. Rising from a
+sick couch, he called the young men of every profession to rally to
+the defence of their country. Placing himself at the head of the brave
+but undisciplined bands that gathered at his bidding, he boldly
+plunged into the untrodden wilderness. Unskilled in the art of war,
+never having witnessed a battle since he was a boy, he did not
+hesitate to assume the command of an army without discipline, and
+without knowledge of the toils and difficulties before it. Yet with it
+he crossed broad rivers, climbed pathless mountains, and penetrated
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page43" name="page43"></a>(p. 43)</span> almost impassable swamps filled with crafty savages. More
+subtle and more tireless than his foes, he thwarted all their schemes.
+With famine on one side and an army in open mutiny on the other, he
+scorned to yield to discouragement, and would not be forced by the
+apparently insurmountable obstacles that opposed his progress, from
+his purpose. By his constancy and more than Roman fortitude,
+compelling adversity at length to relent, and quelling his rebellious
+troops by the terror of his presence and his indomitable will, he at
+last, with a smile of triumph, saw his columns winding over the
+consecrated grounds of the savages. Soon his battle-shout was heard
+rising over the crackling of burning villages. Kings, prophets, and
+chieftains fell before him; and crushing towns, villages, and
+fortresses under his feet, he at last, with one terrible blow,
+paralyzed the nation for ever.</p>
+
+<p>Indian warfare, though exhibiting none of the grand movements of a
+well-appointed battle, often calls out equally striking qualities, and
+requires more promptness and self-possession, and greater mental
+resources in a commander. Especially with such an army as Jackson had
+under him, the task he accomplished was Herculean, and reveals a
+character of vast strength and executiveness. That single man,
+standing up alone in the heart of the wilderness, and boldly facing
+his famine-struck and rebellious army, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page44" name="page44"></a>(p. 44)</span> presents a scene
+partaking far more of the moral sublime than Cromwell seizing a rebel
+from the very midst of his murmuring band.</p>
+
+<p>His gloomy isolation for a whole winter, with only a few devoted
+followers, reveals a fixedness of purpose and grandeur of character
+that no circumstances can affect. Inferior to the contagion of fear,
+unaffected by general discouragement, equal in himself to every
+emergency, he moves before us in this campaign the embodiment of the
+noblest qualities that distinguish the American race.</p>
+
+<p>Jackson, with his undisciplined, mutinous, and starving army in the
+southern wilderness, does not seem to belong to the same race as Hull,
+Dearborn, Wilkinson and Izard on the northern frontier. Contrast the
+difficulties that surrounded him with those that embarrassed them, and
+how pitiful do their apologies and excuses sound. Had he been in
+Dearborn's place, the first campaign would have placed Canada in our
+possession.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page45" name="page45"></a>(p. 45)</span> CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Cruise of Commodore Porter in the Essex &mdash; Arrival at
+ Valparaiso &mdash; Capture of British whalers and letters of
+ marque &mdash; Essex Junior &mdash; Marquesas Islands &mdash; Description
+ of the natives &mdash; Madison Island &mdash; War with the Happahs &mdash;
+ Invades the Typee territory &mdash; Tedious march &mdash; Beautiful
+ prospect &mdash; Fights the natives and burns down their towns &mdash;
+ Sails for Valparaiso &mdash; Blockaded by two English ships &mdash;
+ Attempts to escape &mdash; Is attacked by both vessels &mdash; His
+ gallant defence &mdash; His surrender &mdash; Returns home on parole
+ &mdash; Insolence of an English Officer &mdash; Porter escapes in an
+ open boat and lands on Long Island &mdash; Enthusiastic reception
+ in New York.</p>
+
+<p>An expedition similar in its unity to that of Jackson's, and hence
+requiring a connected narrative, was carried forward by Captain Porter
+during the year 1813 in the Pacific Ocean. When Commodore Bainbridge
+sailed from Boston with the Constitution and Hornet, Porter, then
+lying in the Delaware with the Essex, was ordered to join him at Port
+Praya in St. Jago, or at Fernando Noronha. <span class="sidenote">Oct. 26, 1812.</span>
+The capture of the Java by the Constitution, and of the Peacock by the
+Hornet, caused a change in the plans of Bainbridge, and Captain
+Porter, not finding him or the Hornet at either of the two places
+mentioned, or off Frio, a rendezvous <span class="pagenum"><a id="page46" name="page46"></a>(p. 46)</span> afterwards designated by
+the Commodore, he was left to cruise where he thought best.
+<span class="sidenote">Dec. 12.</span> While searching for these vessels, he captured an English
+government packet with $55,000 in specie on board, and sent her home.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Jan. 1813.</span>
+
+<p>At length, after revolving various schemes in his mind, he took the
+bold resolution to go alone into the Pacific, where we had not a depôt
+of any kind, or a place in which a disabled vessel could be refitted,
+while all the neutral ports were under the influence of our enemy, and
+make a dash at the British fishermen. The vessels employed in these
+fisheries he knew were invariably supplied with naval stores, etc.,
+and he resolved to live on them. This original and daring cruise was
+no sooner decided upon than he turned his prow southward, and was soon
+wrapt in the storms that sweep Cape Horn. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 28.</span> Again
+and again beaten back, as if to deter him from his hazardous course,
+he still held on, and at length, after a most tempestuous and toilsome
+passage, took the breezes of the Pacific and stretched northward.
+<span class="sidenote">March 5.</span> His provisions getting short, and being in want
+of some new rigging, he determined to run into Valparaiso. On his
+arrival at that port he found, to his astonishment and delight, that
+Chili had declared herself free of Spain, and his reception was kind
+and courteous. Here he learned, also, that <span class="pagenum"><a id="page47" name="page47"></a>(p. 47)</span> Peru had sent out
+cruisers against American shipping, which, together with British
+letters of marque, threatened to make destructive work with our
+whalers. He therefore remained only a week in port, and then steered
+northward. On the 25th he captured one of the Peruvian cruisers,
+which, with an English vessel, had seized two American whalers a few
+days before.<a id="footnotetag2" name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2" title="Go to footnote 2"><span class="smaller">[2]</span></a> Four days after, he recaptured the Barclay, one of the
+American vessels taken by the Peruvians, and the British letter of
+marque. Looking into Callao to see if any thing had arrived from
+Valparaiso since he left, he cruised from island to island till the
+latter part of April without making any prizes. At length, on the
+morning of the 29th, three sail were discerned and chase was
+immediately made for the nearest, which soon struck. She was a British
+whaler with fourteen hundred barrels of oil on board. It having fallen
+calm when the Essex was yet eight miles distant from the other
+vessels, he was compelled to resort to his boats to effect their
+capture. One of these, the Georgiana, Captain Porter equipped as a
+cruiser, with sixteen guns, and put her under the command of
+Lieutenant Downes, who soon started on a cruise of his own.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page48" name="page48"></a>(p. 48)</span> <span class="sidenote">June 24.</span>
+
+<p>These two vessels joined company again at Tumbez, the Essex in the
+mean time having captured two large British vessels, and the Georgiana
+three. The Atlantic, one of those taken by Porter, being a much larger
+and faster ship than the Georgiana, Lieutenant Downes was transferred
+to her, and she was christened Essex Junior. On the last day of June
+this little fleet of nine sail put to sea, and on the 4th of July
+fired a general salute with the enemy's powder. A few days after, the
+Essex Junior parted company, steering for Valparaiso with all the
+prizes but two in company. Porter continued his cruise with the
+Georgiana and Greenwich, and on the 13th captured three more vessels.
+The Greenwich behaved gallantly in the action, closing courageously
+with the largest vessel, a cruiser, while the Essex was led away in
+chase of the first. Porter soon after captured another whaler, when,
+being joined by the Essex Junior, bringing information that the
+Chilian government was assuming a more unfriendly attitude towards the
+Americans, he resolved to proceed to the Marquesas to refit, and
+return home. Having made the vessels of the enemy answer for a naval
+depôt, he now sought the bay of an island inhabited by savages, where
+unseen he could prepare to retrace his voyage of ten thousand miles.</p>
+
+<p>He made the Marquesas Islands on the 23d of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page49" name="page49"></a>(p. 49)</span> October. Winding
+among them to find a hiding-place secure as possible against English
+war vessels that he heard had been sent out to capture him, he at
+length dropped anchor in the sequestered bay of Novaheevah and took
+possession of it in the name of the United States, naming it Madison
+Island. In a short time the native women came swimming off naked to
+the ship in crowds, and as they climbed up the vessel's sides, the
+sailors, astonished at the novel spectacle, threw them their
+handkerchiefs to cover their persons. Though swarthy, many of them
+possessed beautiful forms and handsome features. Apparently wholly
+unconscious of those feelings of modesty which seem innate in the sex,
+they received with pride the advances of the men, and in a short time
+every petty officer had chosen his wife, and the long and tedious
+confinement on ship-board was exchanged for unbridled license.</p>
+
+<p>A year before, Porter had sailed from the United States alone, with
+only a few months' provisions on board, and in the mean time had taken
+thirteen vessels and four hundred prisoners. With but a single
+imperfect chart to direct him, he had boldly threaded the islands of
+the Pacific, and swept it of nearly all the enemy's ships. His journal
+of this long cruise reads more like a romance than a logbook, and
+seems to belong to that class of literature in which Robinson Crusoe
+and Captain Kidd figure <span class="pagenum"><a id="page50" name="page50"></a>(p. 50)</span> as heroes. That frigate dropping down
+the Delaware in October, the autumn previous, and now riding at
+anchor, with a large fleet about her, in a deserted bay amid the
+Marquesas Islands, presents a striking contrast, and shows what a
+single brave, energetic, and skillful officer can accomplish.</p>
+
+<p>In a short time those quiet waters resounded with the hammer of the
+workmen, and were filled with the stir and activity of a civilized
+port.</p>
+
+<p>The nations were at first friendly, but those occupying the valley
+where Porter had landed being at war with another tribe, the Happahs,
+they insisted that he should make common cause with them against their
+enemies. This, at last, for the sake of peace, he was compelled to do,
+and sent a party of sailors, under Lieutenant Downes, to assist them
+in their invasion of the enemy's territory. The hostile tribe had
+assembled to the number of three or four thousand, but Downes soon
+scattered them and returned with five dead bodies, which his allies
+brought back in triumph, slung on poles.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time Captain Porter built a small village, consisting of
+several houses, a bakery, and rope-walk, and erected a fort which he
+mounted with four guns.</p>
+
+<p>At length the Typees, a warlike tribe, succeeded in exciting the
+friendly tribes to hostilities, and a plan was rapidly maturing to
+murder the American <span class="pagenum"><a id="page51" name="page51"></a>(p. 51)</span> crews. Presents and requests to induce
+them to maintain a peaceful attitude, only increased their arrogance,
+and Porter at last resolved to make them feel his power. Accompanied
+by thirty-five sailors he advanced into their country, but the natives
+avoided a combat and retired into the mountain fastnesses. The next
+day he took nearly his whole crew and boldly entered the mountains,
+whose bald tops swarmed with thousands of savages. But to his
+surprise, he suddenly came to a wall seven feet high flanked with
+impenetrable thickets. Behind this the Typees made a bold stand, and
+hurled stones and arrows against their assailants. The volleys of the
+Americans produced but little effect, and Porter discovering at length
+that his ammunition was nearly exhausted, sent Lieutenant Gamble to
+the boats for more, while he, with only nineteen sailors, maintained
+his position. On the return of Gamble it was thought best to retreat,
+and the whole took up their backward march. The savages, elated with
+their victory, pressed forward in pursuit, when Porter gave them a
+volley which killed two and wounded several more. Coming to a river,
+the Americans heard the snapping of slings in the thickets on the
+bank, and immediately after, a shower of stones fell among them, one
+of which fractured the leg of Lieutenant Downes. Weary and
+disappointed, they at length reached the boats. Here they rested till
+night, when they were <span class="pagenum"><a id="page52" name="page52"></a>(p. 52)</span> again ordered forward. The moon shone
+bright as this little column slowly and painfully climbed the heights,
+from whose summits arose the yells and songs of the savages. As the
+party advanced, the sterile region grew more dreary and broken, and
+the prospect ahead more disheartening. Now wading foaming torrents,
+and again creeping along dizzy precipices, the astonished sailors,
+unaccustomed to such labors, became exhausted, and many dropped down
+amid the rocks unable to proceed further. At length the summit, from
+which the valley of the Typees could be seen, was reached. But in the
+mean time the sky had become overcast, the moon was obscured, and the
+guide declared it would be impossible to descend in the darkness. They
+therefore laid down, where they were, to wait for morning.</p>
+
+<p>Those American sailors reposing on the top of the Typee mountain, in
+that remote and almost unknown region, presented a novel spectacle. An
+impenetrable gloom hung over the valley beneath, the sky spread like a
+pall above them, while the dull, heavy roar of the Pacific, as its
+billows broke in the darkness far below them, added to the strangeness
+and romance of the scene. At length the gathering storm burst, and the
+rain fell in torrents. It was a tropical shower&mdash;one of those deluges
+of the skies, and in a few moments the little band was flooded with
+water. Porter, fearing the ammunition would <span class="pagenum"><a id="page53" name="page53"></a>(p. 53)</span> all be spoiled,
+bade every man protect it with the utmost care. The Typees, assembled
+in the valley below to the number of four or five thousand, appeared
+to entertain the same expectations, for they began to shout and beat
+their drums in exultation.</p>
+
+<p>At length the long wished for day dawned&mdash;the storm had ceased, and as
+the light crept down the sides of the mountain, a scene of surpassing
+beauty presented itself. A valley nine miles long and three broad, lay
+spread out before them, inclosed on every side by high mountains. At
+the farther extremity arose a lofty precipice, over whose brink a
+torrent rushed in a flying leap, and falling in foam at the base,
+formed a stream, which, after winding tranquilly through the green and
+lovely valley, passed, by an opening in the mountains, into the
+Pacific, that, far away, rolled and glittered in the early dawn. All
+over this sequestered plain were scattered the breadfruit and cocoa
+trees, while picturesque villages of bamboo dotted it in every
+direction. Amid these, immense crowds of swarthy men were moving, and
+animals grazing, giving life and animation to the strange and
+beautiful panorama.</p>
+
+<p>Firing a volley, to let the enemy know his powder was not destroyed,
+Porter began the difficult descent. The tortuous course he was
+compelled to pursue made the journey long and tedious, and that night
+he encamped in a village of friendly natives. The next <span class="pagenum"><a id="page54" name="page54"></a>(p. 54)</span>
+morning he moved on the Typee towns. The natives at first closed
+bravely with him, but frightened by the musketry they soon retreated,
+followed by the sailors. Retiring from village to village, they at
+last took refuge in a strong fortress, against which small arms could
+have no effect. Porter then began the work of destruction, and soon
+nine villages were wrapt in fire. As the flames and smoke rolled up
+from the plain, he began his backward march to the ships. At sunset he
+stood again on the mountain where he had reposed the night before, and
+looked down on the valley, but it was now a scene of desolation. The
+smoke curling slowly up from the ruins revealed where the Typee towns
+had stood, while around the smouldering ashes the inhabitants were
+gathered in consternation and despair.</p>
+
+<p>Porter reached his boats in safety, having marched sixty miles in all.
+The sailors, unaccustomed to such land duty, were completely broken
+down with the fatigue and exposure.</p>
+
+<p>This novel expedition succeeded in humbling the hostile tribes, and
+Porter had no further trouble with them while he remained.</p>
+
+<p>The burning of these villages furnished the English papers a subject
+for the exercise of their philanthropy. An act of self-preservation by
+which a few empty wigwams were destroyed, aroused the humanity of
+those who could see no cause of complaint <span class="pagenum"><a id="page55" name="page55"></a>(p. 55)</span> in the
+conflagration that lighted up the Niagara river from Buffalo to the
+falls, and kept the Chesapeake in a glow from burning farm-houses and
+villages.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Dec. 12, 1813.</span>
+
+<p>Leaving behind him three prizes under the protection of the fort he
+had erected, Porter set sail for Valparaiso, where he arrived the 12th
+of January. Although it was evident that the sympathies of the Chilian
+government had changed, and were now entirely with the English, he
+determined to wait at that port for the Ph&oelig;be, an English ship,
+which he understood had been sent out on purpose to capture him. She
+at length arrived, but not alone&mdash;the Cherub, a sloop of war bearing
+her company. These vessels bore flags with the mottoes on them "God
+and our country&mdash;British sailors' best rights&mdash;traitors offend them."
+Porter immediately hoisted at his mizen, "God, our country and
+liberty; tyrants offend them." The Essex could doubtless have made
+good her voyage home, but Porter in capturing merchantmen and whalers
+had done nothing in his own view to distinguish himself, and he longed
+to grapple with this English ship of war. But the vast superiority of
+these two vessels to his own and the Essex Junior, forbade a combat
+unless he was forced into it.</p>
+
+<p>When the Ph&oelig;be, commanded by Captain Hillyar, came into port she
+passed close to the Essex <span class="pagenum"><a id="page56" name="page56"></a>(p. 56)</span> with her men at quarters. Porter
+hailed her, saying the vessels would get foul, and requesting the
+officers in command to keep off. The English captain declared he had
+no intention of provoking an action, but his conduct arousing the
+suspicion of Porter he summoned the boarders. In the mean time the
+English vessel being taken aback, passed her bows directly over the
+decks of the Essex, and she lay exposed to a raking broadside from the
+latter, and was for the time completely at her mercy. There is
+scarcely a doubt that Captain Hillyar had orders to attack the Essex
+wherever he found her, even if in a neutral port, and if the positions
+of the two vessels had been reversed he would not have hesitated to
+demolish the American frigate. The whole proceeding justified Porter
+in such a construction, and his broadsides should have anticipated
+those of the enemy, which soon after left him a wreck.</p>
+
+<p>The English ships having taken in supplies, cruised outside for six
+weeks, completely blockading the Essex. Porter saw that his vessel
+could outsail the enemy, but he was not anxious to escape. He wished
+if possible, notwithstanding his inferiority in men and weight of
+metal, to engage the Ph&oelig;be alone. In this Captain Hillyar would not
+gratify him. Once Porter got within range and opened his fire on the
+Ph&oelig;be, but her gallant commander, though his vessel was a
+thirty-six, while the Essex was a thirty-two, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page57" name="page57"></a>(p. 57)</span> and his crew
+mustered one hundred more men, refused the challenge and dropped
+nearly three miles astern to close with her consort, the Cherub. This
+enraged Porter, for Hillyar had hove to off port, and fired a gun to
+windward, which could be interpreted in no other way than as a
+challenge.</p>
+
+<p>The former so understood it, and immediately got under way, when his
+adversary retired. Hillyar afterwards declared that the gun to
+windward was a signal to the Cherub. It was doubtless a ruse practiced
+to decoy the Essex into a chase till she could be assailed by both
+vessels at once. There can be only one of two explanations to
+Hillyar's conduct in this affair; he either was afraid to meet the
+American frigate, though the latter was inferior in force, or his
+instructions were not to hazard a single engagement.</p>
+
+<p>Finding that his adversary was determined to avoid him, unless he
+could close with both his vessels at the same time, and hearing that
+other British cruisers were on the way, Porter resolved to put to sea,
+and by tempting Captain Hillyar in pursuit, give the Essex Junior, a
+slow sailer, an opportunity to follow. So on the 28th of March the
+wind blowing fresh, he stood out of port. For awhile every thing
+promised a safe exit, and an open sea, where he would have defied the
+enemy. But in doubling the Point of Angels to clear the harbor, a
+squall struck <span class="pagenum"><a id="page58" name="page58"></a>(p. 58)</span> the vessel, carrying away her main-top-mast,
+and with it several men, who were drowned. Unable to go to sea in this
+crippled condition, and unable also to beat back to his former
+anchorage, he passed to the north-eastern side of the harbor and
+dropped his anchor within three miles of the town, a mile and a half
+from the Castello Viego, and close in shore. He was on neutral ground,
+as much so by the law of nations, as if under the guns of the castle,
+and where, in the same circumstances, at the present day, no nation on
+the globe would dare fire into an American frigate; and yet Captain
+Hillyar moved down on her with both his vessels, chose his position,
+and opened his broadsides. Only one of two measures was therefore left
+to the American commander&mdash;strike his flag at once, or fight his ship
+to the last. To conquer he knew was impossible, still he could not
+give up his vessel without an effort, and he sternly ordered the decks
+cleared for action.</p>
+
+<p>The two English vessels, although they had chosen their own position,
+were in a short time so cut up by the deadly aim of the gunners of the
+Essex that they hauled off for repairs.</p>
+
+<p>The state of affairs having got wind, thousands of spectators
+assembled on the surrounding heights to witness the combat. Porter's
+situation was well nigh hopeless, but he was one of those few men whom
+desperate circumstances only stimulate to greater <span class="pagenum"><a id="page59" name="page59"></a>(p. 59)</span> exertions.
+Fortune, as if envious of his long success, seemed determined to crush
+him. Yet he resolved that what adverse fate got out of him, should be
+on terms that would cover him with more glory than ordinary success
+could possibly do.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Hillyar having completed his repairs, again took his position
+where the Essex could not bring a gun to bear. Porter finding himself
+a mere target on the water, determined if possible to board the
+Ph&oelig;be. But his sheets and halyards had been so shot away that not a
+sail could be set, except the flying jib. Giving this to wind and
+cutting his cable, he drove slowly down on his foes, and when he got
+them within range of his carronades, opened a terrible fire. The
+cannonade on both sides was incessant and awful. The Essex on fire,
+almost a wreck, and swept by the broadsides of two vessels, still bore
+steadily down to close, but the Cherub hauled off, while the Ph&oelig;be,
+seeing the advantage she possessed with her long guns, when out of the
+reach of carronades, kept edging away. It was a painful spectacle to
+behold, that crippled, dismantled ship, bravely limping up to grapple
+with her powerful adversary, and that adversary as slowly moving off
+and pouring in the while a ceaseless, murderous fire. Hulled at almost
+every shot, her decks ripped up and strewed with the dead, her guns
+torn from their carriages and rendered useless, it was evident
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page60" name="page60"></a>(p. 60)</span> that noble frigate could not be fought much longer. Still
+Porter would not strike his flag, and he resolved to run his vessel
+ashore and blow her up. Her head was turned towards the beach, and he
+had got within musket-shot of it, when the wind suddenly veered and
+blew him back on the Ph&oelig;be and under her raking broadsides. Foiled
+in his first effort, he now for a moment hoped to get foul and board
+the enemy, but she kept away, raking the Essex as she retired. The
+scene on board the frigate at this time was horrible. The cock-pit was
+crowded with the wounded&mdash;men by the dozens were mowed down at every
+discharge&mdash;fifteen had successively fallen at one gun, and scarcely a
+quarter deck officer was left standing. Amid this scene of carnage and
+desolation, Porter moved with a knit brow and gloomy heart. As he
+looked at his crippled condition and slaughtered crew, he felt that he
+must submit, but when he turned his eye to the flag of his country,
+still fluttering at the mizen, he could not give the order to strike
+it. The sympathies of the thousands of spectators that covered the
+hill-top were with him&mdash;as they ever are with the brave. The American
+consul hastened to the governor of the city and claimed the protection
+of the batteries for the Essex, but in vain. It had, no doubt, been
+all arranged beforehand between the authorities and the British
+commander. Every thing, even the elements of nature, seemed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page61" name="page61"></a>(p. 61)</span>
+combined against this single ship. As a last resort, Porter let go his
+sheet anchor, which brought the head of his vessel round so that his
+broadsides again bore. A gleam of hope lighted up for a moment the
+gloom that hung over his prospects, and walking amid his bleeding
+crew, he encouraged the few survivors to hold on. The broadsides of
+the two vessels again thundered over the bay, telling with frightful
+effect on both vessels. But this last forlorn hope was snatched from
+the fated frigate&mdash;the hawser parted in the strain, and she drifted an
+unmanageable wreck on the water&mdash;while, to complete the horror of the
+scene, the flames burst from the hatchways and rolled away towards the
+magazine. Finding that his doom was now inevitably sealed, for his
+boats had all been shot away, Porter ordered those of his crew who
+could swim to jump overboard and make for the shore, three-quarters of
+a mile distant. Some reached it, while the remainder who made the
+attempt were either drowned or picked up by the enemy's boats. He
+then, with the few who preferred to share his fate, extinguished the
+fire, and again worked the guns that could be brought to bear. It was,
+however, the last feeble effort of a dying giant. The enemy could now
+fire more leisurely, and the water being smooth, he soon made a
+perfect riddle of the Essex. The crew at last entreated their
+commander to surrender&mdash;the contest was hopeless&mdash;the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page62" name="page62"></a>(p. 62)</span>
+cock-pit, ward-room, steerage, and berth-deck could contain no more
+wounded, who were constantly killed while under the surgeon's hand. Of
+the carpenter's crew not one remained to stop the shot-holes, through
+which the water was pouring in streams, and the entire vessel was a
+wreck. Porter would have sunk with his flag flying, but for the number
+of wounded who would thus perish with him. For their sakes he finally
+consented to surrender, and ordered the officers of the different
+divisions to be sent for, but to his amazement only one was left to
+answer his call,<a id="footnotetag3" name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3" title="Go to footnote 3"><span class="smaller">[3]</span></a> while out of two hundred and fifty-five men only
+seventy-five were left fit for duty. This unexampled and murderous
+combat had lasted nearly two hours and a half, and he gave the
+melancholy order to lower the flag. The enemy not at first observing
+it, kept up his fire. Porter, thinking it was his intention to give no
+quarter, was about to hoist his flag again, and go down with it
+flying, when the firing ceased.</p>
+
+<p>A ship was never fought more bravely or skilfully, and Porter, though
+compelled to surrender, earned imperishable renown, and set an example
+to our navy, which if followed, will ensure its success, and cover it
+with glory.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page63" name="page63"></a>(p. 63)</span> Captain Hillyar's conduct after the victory, was distinguished
+by a courtesy and delicacy rarely witnessed in English commanders at
+that time. But he was blameworthy in attacking a ship in a neutral
+port, and it would not take many such victories to ruin his
+reputation. The whole transaction shows what little respect England
+paid to the laws of neutrality. The national heart was exceedingly
+shocked at the violation of those laws by Napoleon when he seized the
+Duke D'Enghien, but she could give orders, the execution of which did
+not cause the death of merely one man, but more than one hundred brave
+spirits, on neutral territory. The authorities of Valparaiso were also
+guilty of a base act in not defending the rights of their own port,
+and extending the protection required by the laws of nations to the
+American vessel.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">1814.</span>
+
+<p>The Essex Junior was transformed into a cartel, and the prisoners sent
+in her to the United States, on parole. She arrived off Sandy Hook the
+5th of July, and though provided with passports from Captain Hillyar,
+to prevent a recapture, she was overhauled and detained by the British
+ship Saturn. Captain Nash, the commander, at first treated Porter very
+civilly, endorsed his passports, and allowed the vessel to proceed.
+Standing on the same tack with the Essex, he kept her company for two
+hours, when he ordered the former to heave to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page64" name="page64"></a>(p. 64)</span> again, and her
+papers brought on board for re-examination. Porter was indignant at
+this proceeding, but he was told that his passport must not only go on
+board the Saturn, but the vessel itself be detained. He remonstrated,
+declaring that it was in direct violation of the contract entered into
+with Captain Hillyar, and he should consider himself a prisoner of
+Captain Nash's, and no longer on parole, and at the same time offered
+to deliver up his sword. On being told that the vessel must remain
+under the lee of the Saturn all night, he said, "then I am your
+prisoner, and do not feel myself bound any longer by my agreement with
+Captain Hillyar." He withdrew his parole at once, declaring he should
+act as he saw fit. The English captain evidently suspected some Yankee
+trick was at the bottom of the whole proceeding, and as it usually
+happened during the war, suspicion was aroused at precisely the wrong
+times. English vessels had been so often duped by Yankee shrewdness
+that they were constantly on the alert, and hence to be safe, often
+committed blunders of a grave character. Porter, whether treading the
+quarter-deck of his own vessel or a prisoner of war, was not a man to
+be trifled with, and as a British officer had treated him basely, he
+determined to be free of the obligations that galled him, at all
+hazards, and the next morning finding that he was off Long Island, and
+that <span class="pagenum"><a id="page65" name="page65"></a>(p. 65)</span> Captain Nash had no idea of releasing him, he ordered a
+boat lowered, into which he jumped with an armed crew, and pushed off.
+As he went down the vessel's side, he told Lieutenant Downs to say to
+Captain Nash, "that he was now satisfied that <i>most British naval
+officers were not only destitute of honor, but regardless of the honor
+of each other</i>; that he was armed and should fight any force sent
+against him, to the last, and if he met him again, it would be as an
+enemy." Keeping the Essex Junior between him and the British vessel,
+he got nearly out of gun-shot before he was discovered. The Saturn
+immediately gave chase, but a fog suddenly rising, concealed the boat,
+when Porter changed his course and eluded his pursuers. Lieutenant
+Downs, taking advantage of the same fog endeavored to escape with his
+vessel, but the Saturn suspecting his movements, opened her guns,
+which brought him to. Porter heard the firing, and kept off in an
+opposite direction, and by rowing and sailing, alternately, for nearly
+sixty miles, in an open boat, at length reached Babylon, on Long
+Island. The people there discredited his story. Suspecting he was an
+English officer in disguise, they began to question him, and he was
+compelled to show his commission before they would let him go. When
+their doubts were at length removed, every attention was lavished upon
+him, and he started for New <span class="pagenum"><a id="page66" name="page66"></a>(p. 66)</span> York. His arrival was soon spread
+abroad, and as the carriage that contained him entered the city the
+horses were snatched away, and the people seizing it, dragged him
+through the streets with huzzas and shouts of welcome.</p>
+
+<p>Porter had lost his ship, but not his place in the heart of the
+nation, nay he was deeply and forever fixed there. His cruise had been
+a great triumph, notwithstanding its disastrous close. The boldness
+and originality of its conception&mdash;the daring and gallant manner in
+which he had carried it out&mdash;the spirit and desperation with which he
+had fought his ship against a superior force, were themes of universal
+eulogy, and endeared him to the American people.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page67" name="page67"></a>(p. 67)</span> CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Plan of the third Campaign &mdash; Attack on Sackett's Harbor &mdash;
+ Attack on Oswego &mdash; Woolsey transports guns to Sackett's
+ Harbor &mdash; Capture of the detachment sent against him &mdash;
+ Expedition against Mackinaw &mdash; Death of Captain Holmes &mdash;
+ Complete failure of the expedition.</p>
+
+<p>While Porter was slowly approaching our coast, on his return from the
+Pacific, events on our northern frontier were assuming an entirely
+different aspect from that which they had worn for the last two years.
+In the spring, just before and after Congress adjourned, small
+expeditions on both sides were set on foot; one, on our part, to
+Mackinaw, to aid in carrying out Armstrong's plan for the summer
+campaign. This, like all the previous plans looked to the same result,
+the details being varied apparently for the sole purpose of appeasing
+the people, who it was thought, would not allow a repetition of those
+man&oelig;uvres which had ended in such signal disgrace. It was therefore
+proposed, first to humble the Indians in the north-west, by capturing
+Mackinaw, and thus hold the key of that whole region, so valuable for
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page68" name="page68"></a>(p. 68)</span> its fur trade, and then march an army from the east of Lake
+Erie to Burlington Heights, and seize and fortify that position till
+the co-operation of the Ontario fleet and the troops at Sackett's
+harbor could be secured, when a rapid advance might be made on
+Kingston, and after its reduction, on Montreal. The Secretary clung to
+the conquest of Canada with a tenacity that deserved success, but this
+plan also utterly failed, and the progress of the campaign brought
+about results widely different from those anticipated. That part of it
+looking to the seizure of Mackinaw, was placed under the direction of
+Colonel Croghan and Major Holmes, with whom Captain Sinclair, recently
+appointed to the command of the upper lakes, was to co-operate with a
+portion of his fleet&mdash;the other portion to aid in the expedition
+against Burlington Heights. Major Holmes had at first been appointed
+by the Secretary to command the land forces, but Colonel Croghan,
+stationed at Detroit, and senior officer during Colonel Butler's
+absence, denied the right thus directly to appoint him, insisting that
+the commission should go through his hands. A correspondence followed,
+which delayed the expedition till the third of July. In the mean time,
+a British force, under Colonel McDowell, had visited and reinforced
+all the posts on the northern lakes, penetrating even beyond Mackinaw.
+While Holmes and Sinclair were detained <span class="pagenum"><a id="page69" name="page69"></a>(p. 69)</span> till Colonel Croghan
+and the Secretary could settle a question of etiquette, the English,
+who had again acquired the ascendancy on Lake Ontario, by building
+more ships, made an attack on Sackett's Harbor. Being repulsed, Sir
+James Yeo then sailed for Oswego, to destroy materials for ship
+building, etc., which he supposed to be assembled there. He arrived on
+the 5th of May, and began to bombard the place. The American garrison
+at the fort, consisted of three hundred men under Colonel Mitchell,
+with five guns, three of which were almost useless. The place
+contained at that time, but five hundred inhabitants. The schooner
+Growler being in the river, and exposed to certain capture, was sunk,
+and her cannon transferred to the fort, situated on a high bank east
+of the town.</p>
+
+<p>Finding that the bombardment produced no effect, a large body of
+troops, under General Drummond, was sent forward to carry the fort by
+storm. The fifteen barges that contained them were led on by
+gun-boats, destined to cover the landing. These no sooner came within
+range of the artillery on shore, than a spirited fire was opened on
+them, repulsing them twice, and finally compelling the whole flotilla
+to seek the shelter of the ships. The next day the fleet approached
+nearer shore, and commenced a heavy cannonade which lasted three
+hours. Under cover of it, General De Watteville landed two thousand
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page70" name="page70"></a>(p. 70)</span> troops, and advanced in perfect order over the ground that
+intervened between the water and the fort. The soldiers and marines of
+the Growler fought bravely, but Colonel Mitchell seeing that
+resistance was hopeless, retired, scourging the enemy as he withdrew,
+with well-directed volleys, and strewing the ground with more than two
+hundred dead and wounded. He fell back to Oswego Falls, where the
+naval stores had all been removed, destroying the bridges as he
+retired. Foiled in their attempt to get possession of the stores, the
+British, after having raised the Growler, retired to Sackett's Harbor,
+and blockaded it, resolving to intercept the supplies, guns, etc.,
+that were ready to be sent forward. Lighter materials could be
+transported by land, but the guns, cables, and anchors, &amp;c., destined
+for two vessels recently built at Sackett's Harbor, could reach there
+only by water, from Oswego, whither they had been carried by way of
+the Mohawk river, Woods' creek, Oneida lake, and the Oswego river.
+Captain Woolsey, a brave, skillful and energetic officer, who had been
+appointed to take charge of their transportation, caused a rumor to be
+spread that he designed to effect it through Oneida lake.
+<span class="sidenote">May 28.</span> But soon as the British fleet left Oswego, he dropped down
+the river with fifteen boats, loaded with thirty-four cannon and ten
+cables. Halting at Oswego till dark, he <span class="pagenum"><a id="page71" name="page71"></a>(p. 71)</span> then pulled out into
+the lake. A detachment of a hundred and thirty riflemen accompanied
+him, while a body of Oneida Indians marched along the shore. The night
+was dark and gloomy&mdash;the rain fell in torrents, drenching sailors and
+soldiers to the skin, while the waves dashed over the boats, adding to
+the discomforts and labors of the voyage. It was a long and tedious
+pull along the scarcely visible shores, on which swayed and moaned an
+unbroken forest.</p>
+
+<p>The next day at sunrise the fleet of boats reached Big Salmon river,
+with the exception of one, which kept on, under the pretence of going
+direct to Sackett's Harbor, and fell into the hands of the blockading
+squadron, giving it information of the approach of the others.
+Woolsey, knowing that he could not run the blockade, had resolved to
+land his guns at Big Sandy creek and transport them by land eight
+miles distant, to Sackett's Harbor. Having reached the mouth of the
+creek in safety, he ascended two miles and landed. In the mean time
+Sir James Yeo had dispatched two gun-boats, with three cutters and a
+gig, in search of him. Finding the fleet had ascended Big Sandy creek,
+Captains Popham and Spilsbury, who commanded the expedition, followed
+after. The soldiers and marines were landed a mile or more below where
+Woolsey was unloading, and moved forward, keeping parallel with the
+gun-boats, which incessantly probed the thickets, as they advanced,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page72" name="page72"></a>(p. 72)</span> with grape shot. Major Appling, who commanded the American
+riflemen, placed them and his Indian allies in ambush about half a
+mile below the American barges. Allowing the enemy to approach within
+close range, he suddenly poured in a destructive volley, which so
+paralyzed them that they threw down their arms and begged for quarter.
+All the boats, officers, and men were taken, making a total loss of a
+hundred and eighty-six men.</p>
+
+<p>The guns were then carried across to Sackett's Harbor, and the new
+ship Superior armed, which so strengthened Chauncey's force that Sir
+James Yeo raised the blockade and sailed for the Canada shore.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">July 3.</span>
+
+<p>At last the expedition against Mackinaw got under way. Two war brigs,
+the Lawrence and Niagara, together with several smaller vessels,
+carrying in all nine hundred men, began slowly to traverse the inland
+seas from Detroit to Mackinaw. Nothing but canoes and batteaux had
+hitherto floated on those scarcely known waters, with the exception of
+a single schooner or sloop, which made an annual solitary trip to the
+extreme north-western posts to carry supplies. More than a thousand
+miles from the ocean, and lifted nearly six hundred feet above it,
+those vast seas rolled their waves through unbroken forests. This was
+the first fleet that ever penetrated those solitudes, through which
+roamed unscared beasts of prey, and from whose further margin <span class="pagenum"><a id="page73" name="page73"></a>(p. 73)</span>
+stretched away those immense prairies that go rolling up to the base
+of the Rocky Mountains. Amid unknown rocks and shoals&mdash;feeling its way
+along narrow channels&mdash;at one moment almost grazing the sand-bars with
+its keels, and the next moment floating over water nearly a thousand
+feet deep&mdash;now traversing groups of beautiful islands, and anon
+skirting the bases of precipices, on whose summit waved forests that
+had stood undisturbed since the birth of time&mdash;that little fleet crept
+on towards its destination. Its progress was so slow that Colonel
+McDowell, commanding at Mackinaw, had ample time to make preparations
+for defence.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Sinclair, on his arrival, refused to advance against the fort,
+for its batteries looked down on his decks from a hundred feet in the
+air. A land attack was therefore resolved upon and carried into
+execution. <span class="sidenote">Aug. 4.</span> But the dense woods, filled with sharp
+shooters, through which the troops were compelled to force their way,
+rendered the movement a complete failure. Captain Holmes, a gallant
+officer, was shot by an Indian boy. A black servant of Colonel Croghan
+immediately covered the body with leaves, to prevent mutilation by the
+Indians, and the next day it was recovered. The troops were
+re-embarked, and the discomfitted fleet turned homeward. Overtaken by
+a storm in Lake Huron, all their boats were destroyed, and the vessels
+themselves narrowly escaped <span class="pagenum"><a id="page74" name="page74"></a>(p. 74)</span> being wrecked. A detachment
+having destroyed six months' supplies at the mouth of the Natewasaga
+river destined for Mackinaw, two schooners were left to blockade the
+place. <span class="sidenote">Sept. 13.</span> Mackinaw, thus cut off from all
+communication with the provinces, would be starved out and compelled
+to surrender. But to complete the disaster of this unfortunate
+enterprise, four batteaux, with a fleet of small boats from Mackinaw,
+surprised and captured one of the schooners, the Tigress. Lieutenant
+Woolsey then took command of her, and the next morning, with American
+colors flying, stood steadily down on the Scorpion until he ranged
+alongside, when he fired all his guns at once, and running aboard,
+took the unsuspecting vessel without a struggle.</p>
+
+<p>Thus ended an expedition, romantic from the scenery through which it
+passed, but comparatively useless in its results, and costing more
+than it was worth, even if it had been successful.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page75" name="page75"></a>(p. 75)</span> CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Brown takes command of the army at Niagara &mdash; Crosses the
+ river into Canada &mdash; Battle of Chippewa &mdash; Brilliant charge
+ of the Americans &mdash; Desperate battle of Niagara &mdash; Conduct
+ of Ripley &mdash; The army ordered to Fort Erie &mdash; General Gaines
+ takes command.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">July 3.</span>
+
+<p>On the same day the expedition to Mackinaw sailed from Detroit, the
+army which had been concentrated at Buffalo during the winter, crossed
+the Niagara, in its third campaign against Canada. Brown, who had been
+made Brigadier-General for his gallant conduct at Sackett's Harbor,
+was afterward promoted to the rank of Major-General and given the
+command of the army destined to act on the Niagara frontier. Two
+regular brigades, commanded by Scott and Ripley, and a brigade of
+volunteers and militia, with a few Indians, under General Porter,
+composed his force. He was directed to carry out that portion of the
+Secretary's plan which looked to the possession and fortification of
+Burlington Heights, previous to a descent on Kingston and Montreal.
+First, he was to seize Fort <span class="pagenum"><a id="page76" name="page76"></a>(p. 76)</span> Erie, risk a combat with the
+enemy at Chippewa, menace Fort George, and then, if Chauncey's fleet
+could co-operate with him, advance rapidly on Burlington.</p>
+
+<p>The two regular brigades had been subjected for three months to a new
+and most rigid discipline. The system of tactics hitherto in use, had
+been handed down from the Revolution, and was not, therefore, adapted
+to the improved mode of warfare. Scott, here, for the first time,
+introduced the French system. He drilled the officers, and they, in
+turn, the men. So severe and constant was this discipline, that, in
+the short space of three months, these brigades became intelligent,
+steady, and invincible as veterans.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">July 3.</span>
+
+<p>The preparations being completed, the army crossed the Niagara river,
+and took Fort Erie without a struggle. The main British army, under
+General Riall, lay at Chippewa, towards which Scott pressed, heading
+the advance, with his brigade, chasing before him for sixteen miles, a
+detachment commanded by the Marquis of Tweesdale, who said he could
+not account for the ardor of the pursuit until he remembered it was
+the 4th of July, our great anniversary. At dark the Marquis crossed
+the Chippewa, behind which lay the British army. This river enters the
+Niagara nearly at right angles. Two miles farther up, Street's Creek
+joins the Niagara <span class="pagenum"><a id="page77" name="page77"></a>(p. 77)</span> also, and behind it Gen. Brown drew up the
+American forces. Those two miles of interval between the streams was
+an open plain, skirted on one side by the Niagara river and on the
+other by a forest.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning Gen. Brown resolved to advance and attack the British
+in their position. The latter had determined on a similar movement
+against the Americans, and unbeknown to each other, the one prepared
+to cross the bridge of Chippewa, and the other that of Street's Creek.</p>
+
+<p>The battle commenced in the woods on the left, and an irregular fight
+was kept up for a long time between Porter's brigade and the Canadian
+militia stationed there. The latter were at length driven back to the
+Chippewa, when General Riall advanced to their support. Before this
+formidable array, the American militia, notwithstanding the noble
+efforts of General Porter to steady their courage, broke and fled.
+General Brown immediately hastened to the scene, merely saying to
+Scott as he passed on, "The enemy is advancing, you will have a
+fight." The latter, ignorant of the forward movement of Riall, had
+just put his brigade in marching order to cross the creek for a drill
+on the level plain beyond. But as the head of the column reached the
+bank, he saw the British army drawn up in beautiful array in the open
+field, on the farther side, while a battery of nine pieces stood in
+point blank range of the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page78" name="page78"></a>(p. 78)</span> bridge over which he was to cross.
+Swiftly yet beautifully the corps of Scott swept over the bridge and
+deployed under the steady fire of the battery. The first and second
+battalions under Majors Leavenworth and McNeil, took position in front
+of the left and centre of the enemy, while the third, under Jessup,
+obliqued to the left to attack their right, stationed in the woods,
+and which threatened to outflank the American line. It was a bright,
+hot July afternoon, the dusty plain presented no obstacle behind which
+either party could find shelter, and the march of the steady
+battalions over its surface led on by bands of music, playing national
+airs, presented one of those stirring scenes which make man forget the
+carnage that is to follow. The heavy monotonous thunder of Niagara
+rolled on over the discharges of artillery, while its clouds of spray
+rising from the strife of waters, and glittering in the sunbeams,
+contrasted strangely with the sulphurous clouds that heaved heavenward
+from the conflict of men beneath.</p>
+
+<p>Both armies halting, firing, and advancing in turn, continued to
+approach until they stood within eighty yards of each other. Scott who
+had been man&oelig;uvering to get the two battalions of Leavenworth and
+M'Neil in an oblique position to the British line, at length
+succeeded, the two farther extremities being nearest the enemy. Thus
+the American army stood <span class="pagenum"><a id="page79" name="page79"></a>(p. 79)</span> like an obtuse triangle of which the
+British line formed the base. While in this position, Scott, wishing
+to pass from one extremity to the other and being in too great a hurry
+to go back of the lines <i>around</i> the triangle, cut directly across,
+taking the cross fire of both armies, as he spurred in a fierce gallop
+through the smoke. A loud cheer rolled along the American line as they
+saw this daring act of their commander. Riding up to Towson's battery,
+he cried out, "a little more to the left, captain, the enemy is
+there." This gallant officer was standing amid his guns, enveloped in
+smoke, and had not observed that the British had advanced so far that
+his fire fell behind them. Instantly discovering his mistake, he
+changed the direction of his two remaining pieces and poured a raking,
+destructive fire through the enemy's ranks, blowing up an ammunition
+wagon, which spread destruction on every side. At this critical
+moment, Scott rode up to M'Neil's battalion, his face blazing with
+excitement, and shouted, "The enemy say that we are good at long shot
+but cannot stand the cold iron. I call upon the Eleventh <i>instantly to
+give the lie to that slander&mdash;Charge</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Just as the order "charge," escaped his lips, came that destructive
+fire from Towson's battery. The thunder of those guns at that critical
+moment, was to Scott's young and excited heart like the shout of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page80" name="page80"></a>(p. 80)</span> victory, and rising in his stirrups and swinging his sword
+aloft, he cried, "<span class="smcap">Charge, charge the rascals</span>." With a high and ringing
+cheer, that gallant battalion moved with leveled bayonets on the foe.
+Taking the close and deadly volleys without shrinking&mdash;never for a
+moment losing its firm formation, it struck the British line
+obliquely, crumbling it to pieces, as it swept on and making awful
+havoc in its passage.</p>
+
+<p>Leavenworth did the same on the right with like success, while Jessup
+in the woods, ignorant how the battle was going in the plain, but
+finding himself outflanked, ordered his troops "to support arms and
+advance." They cheerfully obeyed and in the face of a most deadly fire
+charged home on the enemy, and obtaining a better position poured in
+their volleys with tremendous effect. From the moment these charges
+commenced, till the enemy fled, the field presented a frightful
+spectacle. The two armies were in such close proximity, and the
+volleys were so incessant and destructive, and the uproar so terrific
+that orders could no longer be heard. But through his two aids
+Lieutenants Worth and Watts, who galloped to and fro, and by their
+presence and gestures transmitted his orders in the midst of the
+hottest fire, Scott caused every movement to be executed with
+precision, and not an error was committed from first to last.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page81" name="page81"></a>(p. 81)</span> The enemy fled over the Chippewa, tore up the bridge and
+retired to his encampment.</p>
+
+<p>The sun went down in blood and the loud voice of Niagara which had
+been drowned in the roar of battle, sounded on as before, chaunting a
+requiem for the gallant dead, while the moans of the wounded loaded
+the air of the calm summer evening.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly eight hundred killed and wounded, had been stretched on the
+earth in that short battle, out of some four thousand, or one-fifth of
+all engaged.<a id="footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4" title="Go to footnote 4"><span class="smaller">[4]</span></a> A bloodier battle, considering the numbers, was scarce
+ever fought. The British having been taught to believe that the
+American troops would give way in an open fight, and that the resort
+to the bayonet was always the signal of victory to them, could not be
+made to yield, until they were literally crushed under the headlong
+charge of the Americans.</p>
+
+<p>Gen. Brown, when he found that Scott had the whole British army on his
+hands, hurried back to bring up Ripley's brigade; but Scott's
+evolutions and advance had been so rapid, and his blow so sudden and
+deadly, that the field was swept before he could arrive.</p>
+
+<p>M'Neil's battalion had not a recruit in it, and Scott knew when he
+called on them to give the lie <span class="pagenum"><a id="page82" name="page82"></a>(p. 82)</span> to the slander, that American
+troops could not stand the cold steel, that they would do it though
+every man perished in his footsteps.</p>
+
+<p>Maj. Leavenworth's battalion, however, embraced a few volunteers, and
+among them a company of backwoodsmen, who joined the army at Buffalo a
+few days before it was to cross the Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>An incident illustrating their character, was told the writer's father
+by Maj. Gen. Leavenworth himself. Although a battle was expected in a
+few days, the Major resolved in the mean time to drill these men.
+Having ordered them out for that purpose, he endeavored to apply the
+manual; but to his surprise, found that they were ignorant of the most
+common terms familiar even to untrained militia. While thus puzzled
+with their awkwardness, Scott rode on the field, and in a sharp voice
+asked Maj. Leavenworth if he could not manage those soldiers better.
+The Major lifting his chapeau to the General, replied, that he wished
+the General would try them himself. The latter rode forward and issued
+his commands&mdash;but the backwoodsmen instead of obeying him, were
+ignorant even of the military terms he used. After a few moments'
+trial, he saw it was a hopeless task, and touching his chapeau in
+return to Leavenworth, said, "Major, I leave you your men," and rode
+off the field. The latter, finding that all attempts at drill during
+the short interval that must elapse before <span class="pagenum"><a id="page83" name="page83"></a>(p. 83)</span> a battle occurred,
+would be useless, ordered them to their quarters. On the day of the
+battle he placed them at one extremity of the line, where he thought
+they would interfere the least with the man&oelig;uvres of the rest of
+the battalion. He said that during the engagement, this company
+occurred to him, and he rode the whole length of his line to see what
+they were about. They were where he had placed them, captain and all,
+obeying no orders, except those to advance. Their ranks were open and
+out of all line; but the soldiers were cool and collected as veterans.
+They had thrown away their hats and coats, and besmeared with powder
+and smoke were loading and firing, each for himself. They paid no
+attention to the order to fire, for the idea of "shooting" till they
+had good aim was preposterous. The thought of running had evidently
+never crossed their minds. Fearless of danger, and accustomed to pick
+off squirrels from the tops of the loftiest trees with their
+rifle-balls, they were quietly doing what they were put there to
+perform, viz., kill men, and Maj. Leavenworth said there was the most
+deadly work in the whole line. Men fell like grass before the scythe.
+Not a shot was thrown away&mdash;ten men were equal to a hundred firing in
+the ordinary way.</p>
+
+<p>The American army rested but two days after the battle, and then
+advanced over the Chippewa, Scott's brigade leading. The British
+retreated to Burlington <span class="pagenum"><a id="page84" name="page84"></a>(p. 84)</span> Heights, near the head of Lake
+Ontario. Thither Brown resolved to follow them. But on the 25th, while
+the army was resting, preparatory to the next day's battle, word was
+brought that a thousand English troops had crossed the river to
+Lewistown, for the purpose, evidently, of seizing our magazines at
+Fort Schlosser, and the supplies, on the way to the American camp,
+from Buffalo. In order to force them to return, Brown resolved
+immediately to threaten the forts at the mouth of the Niagara river,
+and in twenty minutes, Scott, with a detachment of twelve hundred men,
+was on the march. He had proceeded but two miles, when he came in
+sight of a group of British officers on horseback, evidently
+reconnoitering. The force to which they belonged lay behind a strip of
+wood, which prevented him from seeing it. Supposing it, however, to be
+the fragments of the army he had so terribly shattered at Chippewa, he
+ordered the march to be resumed. But as he cleared the road he saw
+before him an army of two thousand men drawn up in order of battle. He
+paused a moment at this unexpected sight, and his eye had an anxious
+look as it ran along his little band. To retreat would endanger the
+reserve marching to his relief, and destroy the confidence of the
+troops. Besides, Scott never had, and never has since, learned
+<i>practically</i>, what the word "retreat" meant. He determined,
+therefore, hazardous <span class="pagenum"><a id="page85" name="page85"></a>(p. 85)</span> as it was, to maintain the unequal
+contest till the other portion of the army arrived. Despatching
+officers to General Brown with directions to ride as for life, he gave
+the orders to advance. The sun, at this time, was but half an hour
+high, and unobscured by a cloud, was going to his lordly repose behind
+the forest that stood bathed in his departing splendor. Near by, in
+full view, rolled the cataract, sending up its incense towards heaven,
+and filling that summer evening with its voice of thunder. The spray,
+as it floated inland, hovered over the American army, and as the
+departing sunbeams struck it, a rainbow was formed, which encircled
+the head of Scott's column like a halo&mdash;a symbol of the wreath of
+glory that should adorn it forever.</p>
+
+<p>The British, two thousand strong, were posted just below the Falls, on
+a ridge at the head of Lundy's Lane. Their left was in the highway,
+and separated from the main body by an interval of two hundred yards,
+covered with brushwood, etc. General Drummond had landed a short time
+before with reinforcements, which were rapidly marching up to the aid
+of Riall. Scott, however, would not turn his back on the enemy, and
+gallantly led in person his little army into the fire. His bearing and
+words inspired confidence, and officers and men forgot the odds that
+were against them. Major Jessup was ordered to fling himself in the
+interval, between the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page86" name="page86"></a>(p. 86)</span> British centre and left, and turn the
+latter. In the mean time the enemy discovering that he outflanked the
+Americans on the left, advanced a battalion to take them in rear. The
+brave McNeil stopped, with one terrible blow, its progress, though his
+own battalion was dreadfully shattered by it. Jessup had succeeded in
+his movement, and having gained the enemy's rear, charged back through
+his line, captured the commanding general, Riall, with his whole
+staff. When this was told to Scott, he announced it to the army, and
+three loud cheers rang over the field. A destructive discharge from
+the English battery of seven pieces, replied.</p>
+
+<p>It was night now, and a serene moon rose over the scene, but its light
+struggled in vain to pierce the smoke that curtained in the
+combatants. The flashes from the battery that crowned the heights, and
+from the infantry below, alone revealed where they were struggling.
+Scott's regiments were soon all reduced to skeletons&mdash;a fourth of the
+whole brigade had fallen in the unequal conflict. The English battery
+of twenty-four-pounders and howitzers, sent destruction through his
+ranks. He, however, refused to yield a foot of ground, and heading
+almost every charge in person, moved with such gay spirits and
+reckless courage through the deadliest fire, that the troops caught
+the infection. But the British batteries, now augmented to nine guns,
+made frightful havoc <span class="pagenum"><a id="page87" name="page87"></a>(p. 87)</span> in his uncovered brigade. Towson's few
+pieces being necessarily placed so much lower, could produce but
+little effect, while the enemy's twenty-four-pounders, loaded with
+grape, swept the entire field. The eleventh and twenty-second
+regiments, deprived of their commanders, and destitute of ammunition
+were withdrawn, and Leavenworth, with the gallant ninth, was compelled
+to withstand the whole shock of battle. With such energy and superior
+numbers did the British press upon this single regiment, that it
+appeared amid the darkness to be enveloped in fire. Its destruction
+seemed inevitable, and in a short time one-half of its number lay
+stretched on the field. Leavenworth sent to Scott, informing him of
+his desperate condition. The latter soon came up on a gallop, when
+Leavenworth pointing to the bleeding fragment of his regiment, said,
+"Your rule for retreating is fulfilled," referring to Scott's maxim
+that a regiment might retreat when every third man was killed. Scott,
+however, answered buoyantly, cheered up the men and officers by
+promising victory, and spurring where the balls fell thickest,
+animated them by his daring courage and chivalric bearing to still
+greater efforts. Still he could not but see that his case was getting
+desperate, and unless aid arrived soon, he must retreat. Only five or
+six hundred of the twelve hundred he at sunset had led into battle,
+remained to him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page88" name="page88"></a>(p. 88)</span> General Brown, however, was hurrying to the rescue. The
+incessant cannonading convinced him that Scott had a heavy force on
+his hands; and without waiting the arrival of a messenger, he directed
+Ripley to move forward with the second brigade. Meeting Scott's
+dispatch on the way, he learned how desperate the battle was, and
+immediately directed Porter with the volunteers to hurry on after
+Ripley, while he, in advance of all, hastened to the field of action.
+The constant and heavy explosions of artillery, rising over the roar
+of the cataract, announced to the excited soldiers the danger of their
+comrades; and no sooner were they wheeled into marching order than
+they started on a trot along the road. Lieut. Riddle, who was off on a
+scouring expedition in the country, paused as he heard the thunder of
+cannon, and waiting for no dispatch, gave orders to march, and his men
+moving at the <i>charge de pas</i>, soon came with shouts on the field. At
+length the head of Ripley's column emerged into view, sending joy
+through those gallant regiments, and a loud huzza rolled along their
+line. Brown, seeing that Scott's brigade was exhausted, ordered Ripley
+to form in advance of it. In the mean time, Drummond had arrived on
+the field with reinforcements, swelling the English army to four
+thousand men. At this moment there was a lull in the battle, and both
+armies prepared for a decisive blow. It was evident the deadly
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page89" name="page89"></a>(p. 89)</span> battery on the heights must be carried, or the field be lost,
+and Brown, turning to Colonel Miller, asked him if he could take it.
+"<span class="smcap">I will try</span>, sir," was the brief reply of the fearless soldier, as he
+coolly scanned the frowning heights. Placing himself at the head of
+the 21st regiment, he prepared to ascend the hill. Major M'Farland
+with the 23d was to support him. Not having arrived on the field till
+after dark, he was ignorant of the formation of the ground or the best
+point from which to commence the ascent. Scott, who had fought over
+almost every foot of it since sunset, offered to pilot him. Passing by
+an old church and grave-yard, that showed dimly in the moonlight, he
+took the column to the proper place, and then returned to his post. In
+close order and dead silence the two regiments then moved straight for
+the battery. It was by their heavy muffled tread that General Drummond
+first detected their approach. But the moment he caught the dark
+outlines of the swiftly advancing columns he turned his battery upon
+them with terrific effect. The twenty-third staggered under the
+discharge, but soon rallied and pressed forward. Smitten again, it
+reeled backward down the hill; but the twenty-first never faltered.
+"Close up, steady, men!" rung from the lips of their leader, and
+taking the loads of grape-shot unshrinkingly into their bosoms, they
+marched sternly on, their bayonets gleaming red in the fire <span class="pagenum"><a id="page90" name="page90"></a>(p. 90)</span>
+that rolled in streams down the slope. Every explosion revealed the
+whole hill and that dark column winding through flame and smoke up its
+sides. At length it came within range of musketry, when the carnage
+became awful; but still on through the sheets of flame, over their
+dead comrades, this invincible regiment held its stubborn course
+towards the very vortex of the battle. The English gazed with
+amazement on its steady advance. No hesitation marked its movement;
+closing up its ranks after every discharge, it kept on its terrible
+way, till at last it stood face to face with the murderous battery,
+and within a few steps of the gunners. A sudden flash, a deafening
+explosion, and then "<i>Close up, steady, charge</i>," rung out from the
+sulphurous cloud that rolled over the shattered regiment, and the next
+instant it swept with a thrilling shout over guns, gunners, and all.
+The struggle became at once close and fierce,&mdash;bayonet crossed
+bayonet,&mdash;weapon clashed against weapon,&mdash;but nothing could resist
+that determined onset. The British were driven down the hill, and the
+remnants of that gallant regiment, together with M'Farland's, which
+had again rallied, formed between the guns and the foe. Ripley then
+moved his brigade to the top of the hill, in order to keep what had
+been so heroically won.</p>
+
+<p>Stung with rage and mortification at this unexpected defeat, Drummond
+resolved to retake that height and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page91" name="page91"></a>(p. 91)</span> his guns, cost what it
+might; and soon the tread of his advancing columns was heard ascending
+the slope. With their uniforms glittering in the bright moonlight, the
+excited troops came on at the charge step, until within twenty yards
+of the American line, when they halted and delivered their fire.
+"Charge" then ran along the line, but the order had scarcely pealed on
+the night air before they were shattered and torn into fragments by
+the sudden and destructive volley of the Americans. Rallying, however,
+they returned to the attack, and for twenty minutes the conflict
+around those guns was indescribably awful and murderous. No sounds of
+music drowned the death-cry; the struggle was too close and fatal.
+There were only the fierce tramp and the clash of steel,&mdash;the stifled
+cry and wavering to and fro of men in a death-grapple. At length the
+British broke, and disappeared in the darkness. General Ripley again
+formed his line, while Scott, who had succeeded in getting a single
+battalion out of the fragments of his whole brigade, was ordered to
+the top of the hill.</p>
+
+<p>In about half an hour the sound of the returning enemy was again
+heard. Smote by the same fierce fire, Drummond with a desperate effort
+threw his entire strength on the centre of the American line. But
+there stood the gallant twenty-first, whose resistless charge had
+first swept the hill; and where <span class="pagenum"><a id="page92" name="page92"></a>(p. 92)</span> they had conquered they could
+not yield. Scott in the mean time led his column so as to take the
+enemy in flank and rear, and but for a sudden volley from a concealed
+body of the enemy, cutting his command in two, would have finished the
+battle with a blow. As it was, he charged again and again, with
+resistless energy, and the disordered ranks of the British for the
+second time rolled back and were lost in the gloom. Here Scott's last
+horse fell under him, and he moved on foot amid his battalion. Jessup
+was also severely wounded, yet there he stood amid the darkness and
+carnage, cheering on his men. The soldiers vied with the officers in
+heroic daring and patient suffering. Many would call out for muskets
+as they had none, or for cartridges as theirs were all gone. On every
+side from pallid lips and prostrate bleeding forms came the reply,
+"take mine, and mine, my gun is in good order, and my cartridge box is
+full." There was scarcely an officer at this time unwounded; yet, one
+and all refused to yield the command while they could keep their feet.</p>
+
+<p>Jessup's flag was riddled with balls, and as a sergeant waved it amid
+a storm of bullets, the staff was severed in three places in his hand.
+Turning to his commander he exclaimed as he took up the fragments,
+"Look, colonel, how they have cut us." The next moment a ball passed
+through his body. But he still kept his feet, and still waved his
+mutilated <span class="pagenum"><a id="page93" name="page93"></a>(p. 93)</span> standard, until faint with loss of blood he sunk on
+the field.</p>
+
+<p>After being driven the second time down the hill, the enemy for a
+while ceased their efforts, and sudden silence fell on the two armies,
+broken only by the groans of the wounded and dying. The scene, and the
+hour, combined to render that hill-top a strange and fearful object in
+the darkness. On one side lay a wilderness, on the other rolled the
+cataract, whose solemn anthem could again be heard pealing on through
+the night. Leaning on their heated guns, that gallant band stood
+bleeding amid the wreck it had made. It was midnight&mdash;the stars looked
+quietly down from the sky&mdash;the summer wind swept softly by, and nature
+was breathing long and peacefully. But all over that hill lay the
+brave dead, and adown its sides in every direction the blood of men
+was rippling. Nothing but skeletons of regiments remained, yet calm
+and stern were the words spoken there in the darkness. "<i>Close up the
+ranks</i>," were the heroic orders that still fell on the shattered
+battalions, and they closed with the same firm presence and dauntless
+hearts as before.</p>
+
+<p>It was thought that the British would make no further attempts to
+recover their guns, but reinforcements having arrived from Fort
+George, they, after an hour's repose and refreshment, prepared for a
+final assault. Our troops had all this time stood to their <span class="pagenum"><a id="page94" name="page94"></a>(p. 94)</span>
+arms, and faint with hunger, thirst, and fatigue, seemed unequal to a
+third conflict against a fresh force. But as they heard the enemy
+advancing, they forgot their weariness and met the onset firmly as
+before. But this time the ranks of the enemy did not yield under the
+fire that smote them&mdash;they pressed steadily forward, and delivering
+their volleys as they advanced, at length stood on the summit of the
+hill, and breast to breast with the American line. The conflict now
+became fearful and more like the murderous hand-to-hand fights of old
+than a modern battle. Battalions on both sides were forced back till
+the ranks became mingled. Bayonet crossed bayonet and men lay
+transfixed side by side. Hindman, whose artillery had been from the
+first served with surpassing skill, found the enemy amid his guns,
+across which he was compelled to fight them.</p>
+
+<p>The firing gave way to the clash of steel, the blazing hill-top
+subsided into gloom, out of which the sound of this nocturnal combat
+arose in strange and wild confusion.</p>
+
+<p>Scott, charging like fire at the head of his exhausted battalion,
+received another severe wound which prostrated him&mdash;but his last words
+to Leavenworth were, "<i>Charge again!</i>" "Charge again, Leavenworth!" he
+cried, as they bore him, apparently dying, from that fierce foughten
+field. General Brown, supported on his horse, and suffering from a
+severe <span class="pagenum"><a id="page95" name="page95"></a>(p. 95)</span> wound, was slowly led away. Jesup was bleeding from
+several wounds; every regimental officer in Scott's brigade was killed
+or wounded. <i>Only one soldier out of every four stood up unhurt.</i> The
+annals of war rarely reveal such a slaughter in a single brigade, but
+it is rarer still a brigade has such a leader. The ghosts of regiments
+alone remained, yet before these the veterans of England were at last
+compelled to flee, and betake themselves to the darkness for safety.
+Sullen, mortified, and badly wounded, Drummond was carried from the
+field, and all farther attempts to take the hill were abandoned. The
+Americans, however, kept watch and ward, around the cannon that had
+cost them so great a sacrifice, till near daybreak, when orders were
+received to retire to camp. No water could be obtained on the heights,
+and the troops wanted repose. Through the want of drag-ropes and
+horses, the cannon were left behind. This was a sad drawback to the
+victory, and Major Ripley should have detailed some men to have taken
+at least the lightest ones away. Trophies won with the blood of so
+many brave men were worth more effort than he put forth to secure
+them.</p>
+
+<p>A bloodier battle, in proportion to the numbers engaged, was never
+fought than this. Nearly eight hundred Americans, and as many English,
+had fallen on and around that single hill. It was literally loaded
+with the slain. Seventy-six officers were <span class="pagenum"><a id="page96" name="page96"></a>(p. 96)</span> either killed or
+wounded out of our army of some three thousand men, and not a general
+on either side remained unwounded.</p>
+
+<p>Among the slain was young Captain Hull, son of the General who had so
+shamefully capitulated at Detroit. This young officer, who had fought
+one duel in defence of his father's honor, and struggled in vain to
+shake off the sense of disgrace that clung to him, told a friend at
+the opening of the battle, that he had resolved to fling away a life
+which had become insupportable. When the conflict was done, he was
+found stark and stiff where the dead lay thickest.</p>
+
+<p>It would be impossible to relate all the deeds of daring and gallantry
+which distinguished this bloody engagement. Almost every man was a
+hero, and from that hour England felt a respect for our arms she had
+never before entertained. The navy had established its reputation
+forever, and now the army challenged the respect of the world. The
+timorous and the ignorant had been swept away with the old martinets,
+and the true genius of the country was shining forth in her young men,
+who, while they did not despise the past, took lessons of the present.
+Scott at this time, but twenty-eight years of age, had shown to the
+country what a single youth, fired with patriotism, confident in his
+resources, and daring in spirit, could accomplish. His brigade, it is
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page97" name="page97"></a>(p. 97)</span> true, had been almost annihilated, and nothing apparently
+been gained; but those err much who graduate the results of a battle
+by the number taken prisoners or the territory acquired. Moral power
+is always more valuable than physical, and though we are forever
+demanding something tangible to show as the reward of such a great
+effort and sacrifice, yet to gain a national position is more
+important than to take an army. Thus while many think that the battle
+of Niagara, though gallantly fought, was a barren one, and furnished
+no compensation for the great slaughter that characterized it, yet
+there has been none since that of Bunker Hill, more important to this
+country, and which, directly and indirectly, has more affected its
+interests. It probably saved more battles than if, by stratagem or
+superior force, General Brown had succeeded in capturing Drummond's
+entire army.</p>
+
+<p>Brown and Scott both being disabled, the command devolved on Major
+Ripley, who retired behind the Chippewa, and the defences recently
+erected by the British. Scott's last wound was a severe one. A musket
+ball had shattered his shoulder dreadfully, and for a long time it was
+extremely doubtful whether he ever recovered. He suffered excruciating
+pain from it, and it was September before he ventured to travel, and
+then slowly and with great care. His progress was a constant ovation.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page98" name="page98"></a>(p. 98)</span> The young and wounded chieftain was hailed on his passage
+with salvos of artillery, and shouts of freemen. He arrived at
+Princeton on commencement day of Nassau Hall. The professors
+immediately sent a delegation requesting his attendance at the church.
+Leaning on the arm of his gallant aid-de-camp, Worth&mdash;his arm in a
+sling, and his countenance haggard and worn from his long suffering
+and confinement, the tall young warrior slowly moved up the aisle, and
+with great difficulty ascended the steps to the stage. At first sight
+of the invalid, looking so unlike the dashing, fearless commander, a
+murmur of sympathy ran through the house, the next moment there went
+up a shout that shook the building to its foundations.</p>
+
+<p>Passing on to Baltimore, then threatened with an attack by the
+British, he finally so far recovered as to take command in the middle
+of October of the tenth military district, and established his
+headquarters at Washington City.</p>
+
+<p>General Brown was indignant with General Ripley for leaving the cannon
+behind, and peremptorily ordered him to reoccupy the heights of
+Lundy's Lane at daybreak, and remain there till the dead were buried
+and the guns removed. He however did not commence his march till after
+sunrise, and then being told that the enemy were in possession
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page99" name="page99"></a>(p. 99)</span> of the heights, he halted, and finally retired to Chippewa.</p>
+
+<p>This officer, on whom the command had devolved since the battle,
+seemed from the first opposed to all the movements. When the army was
+about to cross the river against Riall, he not only strongly condemned
+the proceeding, but even offered his resignation, which was not
+accepted. By his neglect to remove, or attempt to remove the captured
+guns, which had cost such a heroic struggle, and his after delay to
+return and take them, it would seem as if he were offended that such
+brilliant results had followed a course which had met with his strong
+disapprobation. He was an able officer and a brave man, yet his heart
+was not in this movement of Brown's, consequently he did not go into
+combat with the enthusiasm of Scott, Miller, and Jesup, nor feel so
+elated by the victory.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after, a rumor was spread that Drummond was marching on the
+American camp. Although occupying a strong position, Ripley
+immediately ordered a retreat to the ferry opposite Black Rock, with
+the intention of recrossing the river into the limits of the United
+States. This sudden determination, founded on a mere rumor, can hardly
+be accounted for, except on the supposition that he could not be
+contented till the army was back to the place it started from, and
+whence it never would have <span class="pagenum"><a id="page100" name="page100"></a>(p. 100)</span> moved had he been
+commander-in-chief. He was prevented from carrying out this purpose by
+the earnest remonstrances of McCrea and Wood, who scorned to flee so
+ignominiously from the field of their fame. Ripley then left the army
+and hastened to Buffalo, to obtain Brown's consent to the measure. The
+wounded hero was enraged that the commanding officer should
+contemplate such a virtual confession of defeat&mdash;rebuked him, and
+ordered the division to remain at Fort Erie, and fortify and defend it
+to the last extremity. He also sent a dispatch to General Gaines,
+commanding at Sackett's Harbor, to repair at once to the army at Fort
+Erie, and take command of both.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page101" name="page101"></a>(p. 101)</span> CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Siege of Fort Erie &mdash; Assault and repulse of the British &mdash;
+ Brown takes command &mdash; Resolves to destroy the enemy's works
+ by a sortie &mdash; Opposed by his officers &mdash; The sortie &mdash;
+ Anecdote of General Porter &mdash; Retreat of Drummond &mdash; Conduct
+ of Izard.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Aug. 3.</span>
+
+<p>Gaines, immediately on his arrival at Fort Erie, set about
+strengthening the works, so that when Drummond actually invested it,
+he found it in a good state of defence.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, the English commander hearing that Brown's magazine
+had been removed from Schlosser to Buffalo, dispatched Colonel Tucker
+to the latter place, with twelve hundred men, to seize them. But Brown
+anticipating such a movement, had stationed Major Morgan, with a
+battalion of riflemen, at Black Rock, to meet and repel it. This
+vigilant and gallant officer thwarted every attempt of the British to
+advance, and compelled them reluctantly to return.</p>
+
+<p>A night expedition sent to cut out three small American vessels at
+anchor in the river, succeeded better&mdash;two of them being surprised and
+captured.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page102" name="page102"></a>(p. 102)</span> <span class="sidenote">Aug. 13.</span>
+
+<p>Having completed his trenches and erected his batteries, Drummond, on
+the 13th, opened his fire. Shot and shells were incessantly hurled all
+that and the succeeding day against the fort without materially
+weakening its strength. The British commander then resolved to carry
+it by assault. The garrison was composed of about 2500 men, while the
+force under Drummond was estimated at four thousand. As night
+approached, and the cannonading ceased, General Gaines observed a
+commotion in the British camp, and suspecting that preparations were
+making for an assault, ordered one third of the garrison to stand to
+their arms all night.</p>
+
+<p>Drummond had resolved to assail the works in three separate strong
+columns, of from twelve to fifteen hundred men each, moving
+simultaneously against three separate points. One against Towson's
+battery, occupying the extreme north-east angle of the fortifications;
+a second against the right, and the third full on the fort itself. The
+day had been stormy, with torrents of rain deluging the earth, and the
+night set in dark and dismal. The watch fires of the enemy's camp
+could scarcely be discerned through the gloom, and dead silence
+reigned over both encampments. Hour after hour wore slowly away, till
+midnight came, and yet no sound but the moaning of the wind as it
+swept over the water and the woods, broke the stillness.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page103" name="page103"></a>(p. 103)</span> At length about two o'clock in the morning, the muffled tread
+of the advancing columns was distinctly heard in the darkness. The one
+directed against Towson's batteries near the water, came first within
+range, when a tremendous fire opened upon it. In an instant, the whole
+scenery was lit up by the blaze of the guns, which threw also a red
+and baleful light over the serried ranks, pressing with fixed bayonets
+to the assault. Although Towson kept his batteries in fierce play, and
+sheets of flame went rolling on the doomed column, it kept resolutely
+on till it approached within ten feet of the infantry. But its
+strength was exhausted; it could stagger on no farther; and first
+wavering, it then halted, and finally recoiled. Rallied to a second
+attack, it advanced with loud shouts, only to be smitten with the same
+overwhelming fire. Encouraged to a third effort, it swerved from the
+direct assault, and endeavored to wade around an abattis of loose
+brushwood, that stretched from the batteries to the shore. Pressing
+forward, up to their arm-pits in the water, some few reached the
+enclosure within, but only to perish, and the remainder retreated. The
+column advancing against the right battery, commanded by Douglas, was
+allowed to approach within fifty yards, when such a rapid and wasting
+fire was poured upon it, that it recoiled in confusion. The central
+column, led on by Lieutenant-Colonel Drummond, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page104" name="page104"></a>(p. 104)</span> pressed
+firmly and rapidly through the fire of Hindman's guns, applied their
+ladders to the walls, and began to mount. Repulsed, they made a second
+and third desperate effort to reach the parapets, but without success.
+Stubborn and brave, this officer was resolved not to abandon the
+attempt, and favored by the darkness, led his troops quietly along the
+ditch to a point where no assault was expected, and applying his
+ladders, mounted to the top of one of the bastions. Enraged by his
+successive repulses, and maddened by the slaughter of his troops, this
+intrepid but brutal leader no sooner gained the parapet than he cried
+out "give the damned Yankees no quarter." The latter instantly closed
+on him with a sternness and ferocity that made that single bastion
+swim in blood. Carrying out his own inhuman orders, Drummond shot
+Lieutenant Macdonough as he lay prostrate and wounded, bravely beating
+off the soldiers who refused his cry for quarter. The next instant the
+barbarous act was avenged by a soldier, who shot him dead in his
+footsteps. The troops, however, courageously maintained the advantage
+they had gained, till daylight, when some cartridges in a stone
+building near by, catching fire by accident, exploded with a
+tremendous concussion, lifting the platform of the bastion from its
+bed, and hurling the shattered and affrighted occupants of it
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page105" name="page105"></a>(p. 105)</span> to the ground. A disorderly flight followed, and the British
+troops withdrew to their encampment.</p>
+
+<p>General Drummond, however, did not abandon the siege, but sat down
+before the fort with a stronger determination than ever to reduce it.</p>
+
+<p>General Gaines being wounded by a shell, now retired to Buffalo,
+leaving Ripley in command. When the state of affairs was reported to
+General Brown, he saw at once that another and heavier assault would
+soon be made, and though his wounds were yet unhealed, repaired to the
+fort, and assumed the command. <span class="sidenote">Sept. 2.</span> The brave Jessup
+with his arm in a sling, and still suffering from his wounds,
+volunteered his services, and every preparation was made for a
+desperate resistance.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to the sickness of Commodore Chauncey the co-operation expected
+from the fleet had entirely failed, so that the brilliant victories of
+the summer, on the Niagara frontier, had not advanced the original
+plan of the campaign, and the American army instead of marching to
+Burlington Heights, and thence on Kingston, was compelled to stand on
+the defensive. Commodore Chauncey was a gallant and skillful
+commander, and had reduced his crews to a state of discipline rarely
+equaled. But he lay sick in Sackett's Harbor till the 2d of July, and
+then was carried on board his ship. His arrival near <span class="pagenum"><a id="page106" name="page106"></a>(p. 106)</span>
+<span class="sidenote">Aug. 5.</span> Niagara was too late to be of any service to the
+army shut up in Fort Erie, and he cruised in the lake, blockading Yeo
+in Kingston, and striving in vain to bring him to an engagement. It
+was no fault of his that Ontario was not signalized by a victory equal
+to that on Lake Erie.</p>
+
+<p>General Izard, after sitting on the court-martial of Wilkinson, was
+appointed to take command of the northern army at Plattsburg.
+<span class="sidenote">May 4.</span> He was an accomplished officer, but like his
+predecessors, too much of a martinet to effect any thing with
+irregular troops. He fell a victim to military rules, which, in the
+changing, disorderly army under his command, could not be applied. Cut
+adrift from them he knew not what to do. A thoroughly-educated
+officer, he became a slave to his knowledge, and without the genius to
+create resources, or skill to mould and apply the materials that
+surrounded him, he made matters worse by grumbling. Quarrels, duels
+among the officers, desertion, the mixture of black and white
+recruits, misrule, and bad appointments, discouraged and disgusted him
+with the army he commanded. In the mean time, the arrival of fresh
+troops from England rendered some movement necessary, and Izard, at
+the head of seven thousand men, such as they were, was ordered to
+Sackett's Harbor, to plan an attack on Kingston, if circumstances
+rendered it prudent, or succor General <span class="pagenum"><a id="page107" name="page107"></a>(p. 107)</span> Brown. Leaving three
+thousand under Macomb, at Plattsburgh, he with the remainder took up
+his sulky and discontented march for Sackett's Harbor, where he
+arrived on the 13th of September. Three days previously, Brown wrote
+him from Fort Erie, imploring his assistance, saying unless it was
+rendered speedily, the fate of his army was doubtful. The accounts,
+however, which he received of the dilatory manner in which Izard
+marched, and of the feelings he entertained, left him no hope from
+that quarter, and he said, "We must, if saved, do the business
+ourselves." He fell back on himself, and his little band resolved to
+defend the fort to the last, against whatever force might be brought
+against it. Weak from his wounds, he yet toiled day and night to
+strengthen his defences. Neither his sickness, nor the torrents of
+rain that fell almost daily, could deter him from exertion, and by his
+energy and bearing he diffused an air of cheerfulness and confidence
+amid and around those entrenchments, which are always the forerunner
+of great deeds. Having ascertained what formidable preparations were
+making to press the siege, he resolved not to wait their completion,
+but with one bold sortie overwhelm the batteries of the enemy and
+destroy their works. A council of officers was called, to whom he
+submitted his plans. Their decision was adverse, which chagrined him
+much; he was also annoyed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page108" name="page108"></a>(p. 108)</span> to find himself opposed by his
+next in command. He, nevertheless, was determined to carry out his
+purpose, and said to Jesup, "We must keep our own counsels; the
+impression must be made that we are done with the affair; <i>but as sure
+as there is a God in heaven the enemy shall be attacked in his works,
+and beaten, too, as soon as all the volunteers shall have passed
+over</i>." These were rapidly coming in at the call and efforts of General
+Porter, who was worthy to command them, and with whom they knew no
+disgrace could occur.</p>
+
+<p>General Brown having made himself perfectly acquainted with the
+position and designs of the enemy, quietly matured his own plans.
+Drummond's army, four thousand strong, was encamped in an open field
+surrounded by a forest, two miles distant from his entrenchments in
+order to be out of reach of the American cannon. One-third of this
+force protected the artillerists in completing their batteries and the
+workmen in digging trenches and erecting blockhouses.</p>
+
+<p>Two batteries were at length completed and a third nearly
+finished&mdash;all mounted with heavy cannon, one being a sixty-eight
+pounder&mdash;before the sortie was made. For four days previous Brown
+tried the effect of his artillery upon these works, and during the
+whole of the thirteenth and fourteenth a tremendous cannonading was
+kept up in the midst of a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page109" name="page109"></a>(p. 109)</span> pelting storm. The two succeeding
+days the firing continued at intervals, interspersed with conflicts
+between the pickets. <span class="sidenote">Sept. 17.</span> The next day at noon, an
+hour when such an attempt would be least expected, Brown resolved to
+make a sortie with nearly the whole of his disposable force, capture
+the batteries, spike the cannon, and overwhelm the brigade in
+attendance before the other two brigades, two miles distant, could
+arrive. The assault was to be made in two columns. The left composed
+of Porter's volunteers, Gibson's riflemen, a portion of the 1st and
+23rd regiments of regulars and some Indians was directed to march
+along a road which had been cut through the woods, while the gallant
+Miller with the first brigade was to move swiftly along a deep ravine
+that run between the first and second batteries of the enemy, and the
+moment he heard the crack of Porter's rifles, mount the ravine and
+storm the batteries. It was a dark and sombre day&mdash;the clouds flew
+low, sending down at intervals torrents of rain and giving to the
+whole scenery a sour and gloomy aspect. But everything being ready,
+Brown, about ten o'clock, opened with his artillery, and for two hours
+it was an incessant blaze and roar all along the line of the
+entrenchments. Its cessation was the signal for the two columns to
+advance. General Ripley commanded the reserve, while Jesup with a
+hundred and fifty <span class="pagenum"><a id="page110" name="page110"></a>(p. 110)</span> men held the fort itself. Porter with his
+column surprised and overthrew the enemy's pickets, and began to pour
+in rapid volleys on his flank. Miller no sooner heard the welcome
+sound than he gave the order to charge. In an instant the brigade was
+on the top of the bank, and without giving the enemy time to recover
+from their surprise the troops dashed forward on the entrenchments in
+front of them. Though assailed so unexpectedly and suddenly the enemy
+fought gallantly to save the works which had cost them so much labor.
+The contest was fierce but short. Carrying battery after battery at
+the point of the bayonet, the victorious Americans pressed fiercely on
+till all the batteries and the labor of nearly fifty days were
+completely in their possession. Ripley then hastened up with the
+reserve to form a line for the protection of the troops while the work
+of destruction went on; while executing the movement he was wounded in
+the neck and carried back to the fort.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, Drummond aroused by the first volleys, had hurried
+off reinforcements on a run. Pressing forward through the rain, urged
+to their utmost speed by the officers pointing forward with their
+swords to the scene of action, they, nevertheless, arrived too late to
+prevent the disaster. In an hour the conflict was over; yet in that
+short space of time the work of demolition had been <span class="pagenum"><a id="page111" name="page111"></a>(p. 111)</span>
+completed. In the midst of incessant volleys and shouts and the
+rallying beat of the drum, heavy explosions shook the field and
+magazines and block houses one after another blew up, spreading ruin
+and desolation around.</p>
+
+<p>In that short combat more than four hundred of the enemy had fallen,
+and nearly as many more been taken prisoners. The American loss was
+three hundred killed and wounded; among the slain, however, were the
+gallant Wood and Gibson. The bayonet and sabre were wielded with
+terrible effect in the strife.</p>
+
+<p>General Porter in passing with a few men from one detachment to
+another, during the engagement, suddenly found himself in the presence
+of sixty or eighty British soldiers drawn up in the woods, and
+apparently not knowing what to do. Thinking it better to put a bold
+face on the matter, he ran up to them, exclaiming, "That's right, my
+good fellows, surrender and we will take care of you!" and taking the
+musket out of the hands of the first and flinging it on the ground he
+pushed him towards the fort. In this way he went nearly through the
+first line, the men advancing unarmed in front. At length a soldier
+stepped back and presented the point of his bayonet to General
+Porter's breast, and demanded <i>his</i> surrender. A scuffle ensued, and
+some officers coming to the rescue of the soldier Porter was flung
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page112" name="page112"></a>(p. 112)</span> upon the ground and his hand cut with a sword. On recovering
+his feet he saw himself surrounded by twenty or thirty men, shouting
+to him to surrender. He very coolly told <i>them</i> to surrender, and
+declared if they fired a gun he would have the whole put to the sword.
+In the mean time a company of American riflemen coming up, fired upon
+the English. After a short fight the whole were killed or taken
+prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>Having accomplished his work, Brown retired in good order within the
+fort. Drummond, weakened by nearly one-fourth of his force, and the
+labors of so long a time being destroyed, raised the siege and retired
+behind the Chippewa.</p>
+
+<p>General Izard, who was to fall on his rear, did not reach Lewistown
+till the 5th of October. <span class="sidenote">Oct. 14.</span> At length, forming a
+junction with Brown's troops, he moved forward, and sat down before
+Drummond encamped, behind the Chippewa. His army, six thousand strong,
+was deemed sufficiently large to capture the enemy, and this event was
+confidently expected to crown the Canadian campaign. <span class="sidenote">Oct.
+21.</span> But after some faint demonstrations, not worth recording, he
+seven days after retired to Black Rock, preparatory to winter
+quarters. Although pressed by the Secretary of War to attack the
+enemy, he declined, and having spent the summer in grumbling, went
+sullenly into winter quarters, thus <span class="pagenum"><a id="page113" name="page113"></a>(p. 113)</span> closing the list of
+inefficient commanders, which threatened for awhile never to become
+complete.</p>
+
+<p>While Izard was thus ending a military career in which he had gathered
+no laurels, Macomb, whom he had left at Plattsburgh, doomed as he said
+to destruction, had crowned himself with honor, and shed lustre on the
+American arms.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page114" name="page114"></a>(p. 114)</span> CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<p class="resume">British plan of invading our sea ports &mdash; Arrival of
+ reinforcements &mdash; Barney's flotilla &mdash; Landing of the enemy
+ under Ross &mdash; Doubt and alarm of the inhabitants &mdash; Advance
+ of the British &mdash; Destruction of the Navy Yard &mdash; Battle of
+ Bladensburg &mdash; Flight of the President and his Cabinet &mdash;
+ Burning and sacking of Washington &mdash; Mrs. Madison's conduct
+ during the day and night &mdash; Cockburn's brutality &mdash; Sudden
+ explosion &mdash; A hurricane &mdash; Flight of the British &mdash; State
+ of the army &mdash; Character of this outrage &mdash; Rejoicings in
+ England &mdash; Mortification of our ambassadors at Ghent &mdash;
+ Mistake of the English &mdash; Parker's expedition &mdash; Colonel
+ Reed's defence &mdash; The English army advance on Baltimore &mdash;
+ Death of Ross &mdash; Bombardment of Fort McHenry &mdash; "The star
+ spangled banner" &mdash; Retreat of the British, and joy of the
+ citizens of Baltimore.</p>
+
+<p>But while these events were passing around Niagara&mdash;in the interval
+between the assault on Fort Erie by Drummond and the successful sortie
+of Brown&mdash;a calamity overtook the country, which fortunately resulted
+in producing more harmony of feeling among the people, and
+strengthened materially the administration. Washington was taken and
+sacked by the enemy. The overthrow of Napoleon and his banishment to
+Elba, enabled England to send over more than 30,000 troops, which were
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page115" name="page115"></a>(p. 115)</span> soon on our sea-board or in the British Provinces. New
+England no longer remained excluded from the blockade, and the whole
+Atlantic sea-board was locked up by British cruisers. The
+Constitution, the year previous, after a cruise in which she captured
+but a single war schooner and a few merchantmen, was chased into
+Marble Head, from whence she escaped to Boston. The blockading of our
+other large ships, and the destruction of the Essex about the same
+time in the Bay of Valparaiso, had left us without a frigate at sea.
+The Adams, a sloop of twenty-eight guns, was the largest cruiser we
+had afloat.</p>
+
+<p>Hitherto the enemy had been content with blockading our seaports, and
+making descents on small towns in their neighborhood, but as the
+summer advanced, rumors arrived of the preparation of a large force,
+destined to strike a heavy blow at some of our most important cities.
+To meet this new danger the President addressed a circular letter to
+the States, calling on them to hold in readiness 93,500 militia.
+Fearing that Washington or Baltimore might be the points at which the
+enemy would first strike, the tenth military district was erected, as
+mentioned before, and General Winder, recently released by exchange,
+given the command of it.</p>
+
+<p>The whole sea-board was in a state of alarm&mdash;even Massachusetts caught
+the infection, and preparations <span class="pagenum"><a id="page116" name="page116"></a>(p. 116)</span> were immediately made to
+defend her seaports and protect her coast. The militia of the
+different States were called out&mdash;Governor Barbour, of Virginia,
+garrisoned Norfolk, the intrenching tools were busy night and day
+around Baltimore, Providence voted money for fortifications, Portland
+shipmasters formed themselves into a company of sea fencibles, and
+gun-boats were collected in New York and all the great northern ports.
+The notes of alarm and preparation rang along the coast from Maine to
+Louisiana, and before the mysterious shadow of the gigantic coming
+evil, party animosities sunk into insignificance. Released from her
+Continental struggle, England, with her fleets that had conquered at
+Aboukir, Trafalgar, and Copenhagen, and her troops fresh from the
+fields of Spain, had resolved to fall upon us in her power, and
+crushing city after city, leave us at length without a seaport, from
+the Merrimack to the Mississippi. Even the brilliant victories of
+Chippewa and Lundy's Lane could not dispel the terror inspired by this
+gathering of her energies.</p>
+
+<p>But the first serious demonstration was made in the Chesapeake. To act
+against the fleet a flotilla was placed there under the charge of
+Captain Barney, a bold and skillful officer. Constantly on the alert,
+he would dash suddenly out of the Patuxent River, and roughly handling
+the light vessels of the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page117" name="page117"></a>(p. 117)</span> enemy that approached the shallow
+waters, compel them to take refuge under the guns of the frigates. But
+the river at length became blockaded, and the flotilla was compelled
+to run up into Leonard's Creek. From the 1st to the 26th of June,
+frequent skirmishes took place, in which Captain Barney exhibited a
+daring, skill and prudence combined, which proved him to be an able
+commander. On the 26th he attacked the British vessels in the river,
+and after a sharp cannonade of two hours, drove them into the bay, and
+broke up the blockade.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Aug. 14.</span>
+
+<p>At length Admiral Cochrane arrived from Bermuda, in an eighty gun
+ship, bringing with him three thousand troops, commanded by General
+Ross. Entering the Chesapeake he joined Rear Admiral Cockburn, who by
+this timely reinforcement found himself in command of twenty-three
+vessels of war. This imposing fleet stood slowly up the waters of the
+Chesapeake, sending consternation among the inhabitants of Washington
+and Baltimore. <span class="sidenote">Aug. 21.</span> Cockburn, designed by nature for a
+freebooter, was admirably fitted for the work he had designed to do.
+Landing four thousand five hundred troops at Benedict, he began to
+advance up the Potomac. Barney, acting under instructions he had
+received, immediately took four hundred men and fell back to the Wood
+Yard, where <span class="pagenum"><a id="page118" name="page118"></a>(p. 118)</span> he joined what was called the army. He had left
+five or six men in each boat, to blow them up, should the enemy
+advance. That night, about one o'clock, the President, with the
+Secretaries of War and Navy, visited Winder's camp, and next morning
+reviewed the troops. The camp was in confusion. Citizens and soldiers
+intermingled&mdash;each giving his opinion of the course to be
+pursued&mdash;disordered ranks and loud and fierce talking&mdash;the utter
+absence of the quiet demeanor and military precision characteristic of
+a regular army, gave to the one assembled there the appearance of a
+motley crowd on a gala day. General Smith and Barney, however, seemed
+to understand themselves, and were anxious to advance and attack the
+enemy.</p>
+
+<p>At the first appearance of the fleet Winder had sent off for the
+militia, but none had yet arrived. Six hundred from Virginia were
+reported close at hand&mdash;fourteen hundred from near Baltimore had
+reached Bladensburg, whither, also, was marching a picked regiment
+from the city itself, led by Pinckney, recently our Embassador to
+England. The whole country was filled with excited men, hurrying on
+foot or on horseback from one army and place to another&mdash;some without
+arms and others in citizens' dress, with only swords or pistols. The
+President and Cabinet were also in the saddle, riding by night and
+day, yet all without definite object. Rumor had swelled the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page119" name="page119"></a>(p. 119)</span>
+invading force to twelve thousand men, but whether its destination was
+Washington, Baltimore, or Annapolis, no one could tell.</p>
+
+<p>While affairs were in this excited, disorderly state around
+Washington, great uncertainty reigned in the British camp. It was a
+hot day when the troops landed, and the sight of neat farm-houses,
+rich fields, and green pastures, seemed to increase the lassitude
+occasioned by their long confinement on ship-board, rather than
+invigorate them, and it required the exercise of rigid authority and
+unceasing care to keep them from straggling away to the cool shelter
+of trees. Weighed down with their knapsacks and three days'
+provisions, and sixty rounds of ball cartridge&mdash;without cavalry, and
+with only one six-pounder and two three-pounders drawn by a hundred
+seamen, this army of invasion took up its slow and cautious march
+inland on Sunday afternoon, and reached Nottingham that night.
+<span class="sidenote">Aug. 21.</span> They found the village wholly deserted&mdash;not a
+soul was left behind, while the bread remaining in the ovens, the
+furniture standing just as it had last been used, showed that the
+flight had been sudden and the panic complete.</p>
+
+<p>At this time the object of the expedition was the destruction of
+Barney's flotilla, which had so harassed and injured the lighter
+vessels of the fleet.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning at eight o'clock the army took up <span class="pagenum"><a id="page120" name="page120"></a>(p. 120)</span> its line of
+March, and soon entered a cool, refreshing forest. But they had
+traversed scarce half its extent, when Ross was filled with anxiety
+and alarm by frequent and loud explosions, like the booming of heavy
+artillery, in the distance. Officers were immediately hurried off to
+ascertain the cause, who soon returned with the welcome and unexpected
+intelligence that the Americans were blowing up their own flotilla.</p>
+
+<p>The first and chief object of the invasion being secured, Ross halted
+his column at Marlborough, only ten miles from Nottingham, and sent
+for Cockburn, who, with a flotilla, was advancing up the river "<i>pari
+passu</i>," to advise with him what course to pursue. The admiral
+proposed to march on Washington. To this Ross at first objected, for
+to pierce a country of which he was ignorant fifty miles, with no
+cavalry or heavy artillery, seemed a rash undertaking, especially
+when, in a military point of view, success would accomplish
+comparatively nothing. Cockburn, however, who had been on the coast
+longer, and through informants residing in the city, had become
+acquainted with its defenceless state, persuaded him that its capture
+would be easy, and the results glorious. The taking of a nation's
+capital certainly seemed no mean exploit, while the heavy ransom the
+government would doubtless pay to save <span class="pagenum"><a id="page121" name="page121"></a>(p. 121)</span> its public buildings,
+would compensate Cockburn for lack of prize money at sea.</p>
+
+<p>It was not, however, till next noon that the army, preceded by a
+company of a hundred blacks, composed of fugitive slaves, began to
+advance. After making a few miles, it halted for the night.</p>
+
+<p>The Secretary of War had insisted from the first that Washington was
+not the point threatened, and still adhered to that opinion. He could
+not conceive that an experienced commander would select as the first
+object of attack a town of some nine hundred houses, scattered over a
+surface of three miles, and destitute of wealth, while the opulent
+cities of Baltimore and Annapolis lay so near. This, too, was the
+opinion of many others, creating great confusion, and preventing the
+selection of strong positions, where successful stands could have been
+made.</p>
+
+<p>While the British were thus slowly advancing, General Winder was
+riding hither and thither, now making a reconnoissance in person, now
+posting to Washington to rouse the Secretary of War out of his
+lethargy, or hurrying on foot back again to his army, doing every
+thing but restoring tranquillity and order. Confusion in the
+camp&mdash;disorder in the ranks&mdash;consternation among the inhabitants, and
+gloom and doubt in the cabinet, combined to render the three days the
+British were marching on Washington, a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page122" name="page122"></a>(p. 122)</span> scene of
+extraordinary excitement and misdirected efforts.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Aug. 24.</span>
+
+<p>At length, videttes and scouts, coming in quick succession, announced
+that the British army was approaching Bladensburg, where General
+Stansbury, with the Baltimore militia, was encamped. There was not a
+breath of air, and the column staggered on through a cloud of dust,
+and under a sweltering August sun. The soldiers, exhausted, reeled
+from the ranks and fell by the road side, while many others could
+scarcely drag their weary limbs along. The American troops were busy
+cooking their dinner when the drums beat to arms, announcing the
+approach of this much dreaded army.</p>
+
+<p>When the news reached Winder, he immediately transmitted an order to
+Stansbury to give battle where he was, and hastened thither with the
+main army, arriving just before the action commenced. Barney, who had
+been stationed with five hundred men at the bridge over the eastern
+branch of the Potomac, with directions to blow it up should the enemy
+approach by that route, no sooner heard of his advance on Bladensburg,
+than he earnestly requested to repair thither with his brave seamen.
+He chafed under the inaction to which he was doomed, talking in a
+boisterous manner, half to himself and half to others, lashing the
+generals with the bluntness and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page123" name="page123"></a>(p. 123)</span> truth of a sailor, saying,
+loud enough to be heard by the President and his cabinet standing
+near, it was absurd to leave him there with five hundred men to blow
+up a bridge which any "d&mdash;&mdash;d corporal could better do with five." At
+length permission was given him to join the army, when he leaped on a
+horse, and ordering his seamen to follow, galloped to Bladensburg. The
+advance was already engaged, and he immediately sent back to his men
+to hurry up, and soon the brave and panting fellows appeared on a trot
+and took their stand beside their commander. The President and his
+cabinet galloped thither also, but retired at the commencement of the
+action, not before, however, Monroe, Secretary of State, had tried his
+hand at military evolutions, and altered the order of battle.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of taking advantage of patches of woods, thickets, etc., where
+inexperienced militia would have fought well, this heterogeneous army
+of five or six thousand men was arranged in the form of a semi-circle
+on the slope that makes up westward from the eastern branch of the
+Potomac, here a shallow stream and crossed by a wooden bridge. The
+British, supposing of course, that the position was chosen because it
+commanded a narrow bridge, the passage of which is always so difficult
+in the face of batteries, never dreamed the river could be forded, and
+therefore never attempted it. Ross, who from <span class="pagenum"><a id="page124" name="page124"></a>(p. 124)</span> the top of the
+highest house in the neighborhood surveyed the American army, was
+disconcerted at the formidable appearance it presented&mdash;posted on such
+a commanding eminence with heavy artillery,&mdash;and would doubtless have
+retreated but for the greater danger of a retrogade movement with his
+exhausted troops.</p>
+
+<p>The American army was arranged in three lines like regiments on a
+parade, connected by the guns that could pour no cross fire on the
+assailing column. The latter advancing steadily, throwing Congreve
+rockets as they approached, so shook the courage of the militia that
+it required but the levelled gleaming bayonet to scatter them like
+sheep over the field. Many of the officers were brave men and strove
+to arrest the panic, but in vain. Pinckney with a broken arm rode
+leisurely out of the battle, his heart filled with rage and
+mortification at the poltroonry of those under his command.</p>
+
+<p>The details of the engagement are useless&mdash;there was a show of
+resistance and some well sustained firing for awhile; but the whole
+battle, so far as it can be called one, was fought by Barney. He had
+planted four guns, among them an eighteen pounder, so as to sweep the
+main road, and quietly sat beside them on his bay horse, allowing the
+column to come within close range before he gave orders to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page125" name="page125"></a>(p. 125)</span>
+fire. The first terrible discharge cleared the road. Three times the
+British endeavored to advance in front, and as often were swept to
+destruction by that battery. At length they were compelled to abandon
+the attempt, and taking shelter under a ravine filed off to the right
+and left and assailed Barney in flank and rear. Driving easily before
+them the regiments whose duty it was to protect the artillery, they
+moved swiftly forward. Barney's horse had been shot under him and he
+himself, prostrated by a wound, lay stretched in the road. Seeing that
+the battle was lost, he bade his seamen cut their way through the
+enemy and escape. Reluctant at first to obey him, they at last fled,
+and their gallant commander was taken prisoner. A few such determined
+men would have saved Washington from the flames.</p>
+
+<p>The six hundred Virginians who had hastened to the rescue never joined
+the army at all. Having arrived without arms, they slept in the House
+of Representatives all night and were not equipped next day till the
+battle was over.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>retreat</i> became a wild and shameful flight. No other stand was
+made, and the fugitive army fled unpursued in squads hither and
+thither. It was a regular stampede. The fields and roads were covered
+with a broken and flying multitude. President, secretaries of war and
+navy, attorney-general <span class="pagenum"><a id="page126" name="page126"></a>(p. 126)</span> and all were borne away in the
+headlong torrent; and though the enemy had no cavalry to pursue, and
+the infantry were too tired to follow up their success, the panic was
+so complete and ridiculous that our troops never stopped their flight
+except when compelled to pause from sheer exhaustion. Fatigue, not the
+interval they had put between themselves and the enemy, arrested their
+footsteps. Only fifty or sixty had been killed on our side, while the
+British had lost several hundred, a large portion of whom fell under
+the murderous discharges of Barney's battery.</p>
+
+<p>After the shouts and derision of the enemy had subsided with the
+disappearance of the last fugitive over the hills, the tired army
+instead of advancing to Washington reposed on the field of battle.</p>
+
+<p>Winder endeavored to rally the troops at the capital for another
+defence, but not a sufficient number could be found to make a stand,
+and with curses and oaths the rabble rout streamed along the road to
+Georgetown, presenting a picture of demoralization and insubordination
+that formed a fit counterpart to their poltroonry.</p>
+
+<p>The first arrival of the fugitives, officers and citizens, riding
+pell-mell through the streets, carried consternation into the city,
+and the inhabitants, some on foot, some in carts or carriages,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page127" name="page127"></a>(p. 127)</span> rushed forth, and streaming on after the frightened militia
+completed the turbulence of the scene.</p>
+
+<p>Cockburn and Ross leaving the main army to repose itself, took a
+body-guard and rode into Washington. No resistance was offered&mdash;a
+single shot only was fired, which killed the horse of General Ross.
+The house from which it issued was formerly occupied by Mr. Gallatin.
+In a few moments it was in flames. Halting in front of the capitol,
+they fired a volley at the edifice and took possession of it in the
+name of the king.</p>
+
+<p>The troops were then marched in, and entering the Hall of
+Representatives, piled together chairs, desks and whatever was
+combustible, and applied the torch. The flames passing from room to
+room, soon wrapped the noble library, and bursting forth from the
+windows leaped to the roof, enveloping the whole edifice in fire and
+illuminating the country for miles around. The house of Washington and
+other buildings were also set on fire. The remaining British force,
+lighted by the ruddy glow that illumined the landscape and the road
+along which they were marching, entered the city to assist in the work
+of destruction. In the mean time, the navy-yard was set on fire by
+order of the secretary of war, mingling its flames and explosions with
+the light and roar of the burning capitol. The gallant officer in
+command of it had offered to defend it, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page128" name="page128"></a>(p. 128)</span> but was refused
+permission. Whether the refusal was discreet or not, one thing is
+certain, the enemy could have accomplished no more than the
+destruction of the materials collected there, and it was not worth
+while to save them the labor.</p>
+
+<p>The capitol being in flames, Ross and Cockburn led their troops along
+Pennsylvania Avenue to the President's house, a mile distant, and soon
+the blazing pile beaconed back to the burning capitol. The Treasury
+building swelled the conflagration, and by the light of the flames
+Cockburn and Ross sat down to supper at the house of Mrs. Suter, whom
+they had compelled to furnish it. Pillage and devastation moved side
+by side through the streets, while to give still greater terror and
+sublimity to the scene, a heavy thunder storm burst over the city.
+From the lurid bosom of the cloud leaped flashes brighter than the
+flames below, followed by crashes that drowned the roar and tumult
+which swelled up from the thronged streets, making the night wild and
+appalling as the last day of time.</p>
+
+<p>To bring the day's work to a fitting close, Cockburn, while the
+heavens and surrounding country were still ruddy with the flames,
+entered a brothel and spent in lust and riot a night begun in
+incendiarism and pillage.</p>
+
+<a id="img002" name="img002"></a>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/img002.jpg" width="500" height="306" alt="" title="">
+<p class="smcap">BURNING OF WASHINGTON.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>While these things were transpiring in the city, the President and his
+Cabinet were fleeing into Virginia. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page129" name="page129"></a>(p. 129)</span> During the battle of
+Bladensburg, Mrs. Madison had sat in the Presidential mansion,
+listening to the roar of cannon in the distance, and anxiously
+sweeping the road, with her spy-glass, to catch the first approach of
+her husband, but saw instead, "groups of military, wandering in all
+directions, as if there was a lack of arms or of spirit, to fight for
+their own firesides." A carriage stood waiting at the door, filled
+with plate and other valuables, ready to leave at a moment's warning.
+The Mayor of the city waited on her, urging her to depart, but she
+bravely refused, saying she would not stir till she heard from her
+husband. At length a note from him, in pencil-marks, arrived, bidding
+her flee. Still delaying, till she could detach a portrait of
+Washington, by Stuart, from the wall, her friends remonstrated with
+her. Finding it would take too long to unscrew the painting from the
+walls, she seized a carving-knife, and cutting the canvas out, hurried
+away. At Georgetown she met her husband, who, with his Cabinet, in
+trepidation and alarm, was en route for Virginia. Just as the flames
+were kindling in the capitol, the President, Mr. Monroe, Mr. Rush, Mr.
+Mason, and Carroll, were assembled on the shores of the Potomac, where
+but one little boat could be found to transport them over. Desponding
+and sad, they were rowed across in the gloom, a part at a time, and
+mounting their <span class="pagenum"><a id="page130" name="page130"></a>(p. 130)</span> horses, rode hurriedly and sadly away. Mrs.
+Madison returned towards Georgetown, accompanied by nine troopers, and
+stopped ten miles and a half from the town. Trembling from the anxiety
+and fright of the day&mdash;separated from her husband, now a fugitive in
+the darkness&mdash;oppressed with fears and gloomy forebodings, she sat
+down by an open window, and through the tears that streamed from her
+eyes, gazed forth on the flames of the burning city, and listened with
+palpitating heart to the muffled shouts and tumult that rose in the
+distance.</p>
+
+<p>Before daylight, she, with her lady companions, started for a place of
+rendezvous appointed by her husband, sixteen miles from Georgetown.</p>
+
+<p>The 25th of August dawned gloomily over the smouldering city, and the
+red sun, as he rolled into view, looked on a scene of devastation and
+ruin. From their drunken orgies, negroes and soldiers crawled forth to
+the light of day, roused by the reveille from the hill of the capitol,
+and the morning gun that sent its echoes through the sultry air.</p>
+
+<p>Rising from his debauch, Cockburn sallied forth to new deeds of shame.
+The War office, and other public offices, among them the building of
+the National Intelligencer, were set on fire, and the pillage and riot
+of the preceding day again sent terror through the city. The gallant
+admiral seemed refreshed rather than enervated by the plunder,
+conflagration <span class="pagenum"><a id="page131" name="page131"></a>(p. 131)</span> and debauch of the night that had passed, and
+brilliant and witty as the day before, "was merry in his grotesque
+rambles about Washington, mounted on a white, uncurried, long
+switch-tail brood mare, followed by a black foal, neighing after its
+dam, in which caricature of horsemanship that harlequin of havoc,
+paraded the streets, and laughed at the terrified women imploring him
+not to destroy their homes. "Never fear," said he, "you shall be much
+safer under my administration than Madison's." "Be sure," said he to
+those who were destroying the types of the National Intelligencer,
+"that all the C's are demolished, so that the rascals can no longer
+abuse my name as they have done."<a id="footnotetag5" name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5" title="Go to footnote 5"><span class="smaller">[5]</span></a></p>
+
+<p>In the midst of this wanton destruction and barbarian licentiousness,
+two events occurred calculated to sober even a more brutal man than
+he. A detachment had been sent to destroy two rope-walks, at a place
+called Greenleaf's point, a short distance from the city. After they
+were burned, an officer threw the torch with which the buildings had
+been lighted, into a dry well near by. But this well had been made for
+a long time the repository of useless shells, cartridges and
+gunpowder. The unextinguished torch ignited this subterranean
+magazine, which exploded with a violence that shook the earth, and
+sent dismembered bodies and limbs, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page132" name="page132"></a>(p. 132)</span> mingled with fragments of
+iron, and dust and smoke, heavenward together. When it cleared away,
+nearly a hundred officers and men were seen strewed around, some
+killed, others presenting torn, misshapen masses of human flesh. The
+sad procession, carrying the mutilated and dead back to the city, had
+scarcely reached it before the heavens became dark as twilight, and
+that ominous silence which always betokens some dreadful convulsion of
+nature fell on the earth. The air was still, and the burning dwellings
+around shed a baleful light over the faces of men, on which sat terror
+and perplexity. This portentous silence was broken by the rush and
+roar of a hurricane, that swept with the voice and strength of the
+sea, over the devastated city. Flashes of lightning rent the gloom,
+and the thunder rolled and broke in deafening crashes over head. The
+flames leaped up into fiercer glow, under the strong breath of the
+tempest; private dwellings that had escaped the incendiary's torch
+were stripped of their roofs, and the crash of falling, walls and
+shrieks of terrified men and women fleeing through the streets,
+imparted still greater terror to the appalling spectacle. The British
+army, on the Capitol hill, was rent into fragments before it, and
+scattered as though a magazine had exploded in its midst. Thirty
+soldiers, besides many of the inhabitants, were overwhelmed in the
+ruins.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page133" name="page133"></a>(p. 133)</span> Fleeing before this same hurricane, Mrs. Madison approached
+the tavern designated by the President as the place where he would
+meet her, but was refused admittance by the terrified women within,
+who had also fled thither, because she was the wife of the man who had
+involved them in those horrors of war, made still more terrible by the
+visitation of God. He, in thus turning day into night, had evinced his
+displeasure, and foretold his judgments; and not until an entrance was
+forced by the men, would they allow her a shelter from the storm.
+There her husband, the fugitive President of the republic, drenched
+with rain, hungry and exhausted, joined her in the evening. Provided
+with nothing but a cold lunch, he retired to his miserable couch, not
+knowing what tidings the morning would bring him.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time General Ross, chagrined at the part he had been
+compelled to play&mdash;filled with self-reproaches at the wanton
+destruction of a public library, was anxious and unquiet at the
+non-arrival of the boats that had accompanied him to Alexandria. In
+constant fear of an uprising of the people of the country, he was
+eager to get back to the ships. As soon therefore as night set in, he
+resolved to commence his retreat. To prevent pursuit, an order was
+issued prohibiting the appearance of a single inhabitant in the street
+after eight o'clock. At nine, in <span class="pagenum"><a id="page134" name="page134"></a>(p. 134)</span> dead silence, and with
+quick step, as though stealing on a sleeping foe, the advance column
+took up its march and passed unnoticed out of the city. The camp fires
+on the hill of the capitol were kept blazing, and piled with fuel
+sufficient to preserve them bright till near morning, in order to
+convey the impression that the army was still there, and at a late
+hour the rear column followed after, and silently and rapidly
+traversed the road to Bladensburg. Not a word was spoken, not a man
+allowed to step out of his place. Arriving on the ground which had
+been occupied by other brigades, they found it deserted, but the fires
+were still blazing as though the encampment had not been broken up.
+Approaching the field of Bladensburg, they saw in the white moonbeams
+the whiter corpses of the unburied dead, who had been stripped of
+their clothing and now lay scattered around on the green slope and
+banks of the stream where they had fallen. The hot August rain and sun
+had already begun to act on the mutilated flesh, and a horrible stench
+loaded the midnight air. Stopping there for an hour, to enable the
+soldiers to hunt up their knapsacks thrown aside the day before, Ross
+again hurried them forward, and kept them at the top of their speed
+all night. If the column paused for a moment, the road was instantly
+filled with soldiers fast asleep. Men were constantly straggling away,
+or falling into slumbers, from which even the sword <span class="pagenum"><a id="page135" name="page135"></a>(p. 135)</span> could
+with difficulty prick them, and the army threatened to be
+disorganized. It therefore became necessary to halt, and the order to
+do so had scarcely passed down the line before every man was sound
+asleep, and the entire army in five minutes resembled a heap of dead
+bodies on a field of battle. Resting here under the burning sun until
+midday, Ross then resumed his march and reached Marlborough at night,
+and the next day proceeded leisurely back to the ships.</p>
+
+<p>The raid had been successful&mdash;Washington was sacked. Two millions of
+property had been destroyed&mdash;the capitol, with its library&mdash;the
+President's house&mdash;the Treasury and War, Post offices, and other
+public edifices, burned to the ground, together with five private
+dwellings, thirteen more being pillaged. These, with the destruction
+of the office of the National Intelligencer, two rope-walks, and a
+bridge over the Potomac, constituted the achievements of this
+redoubtable army of invasion.</p>
+
+<p>The English press, which had teemed with accounts of Napoleon's
+barbarity, and the English heart, which had heaved with noble
+indignation against the man who could rob the galleries of conquered
+provinces to adorn those of Paris, had no word of condemnation or
+expression of anger for this wanton outrage, but on the contrary,
+laudations innumerable. Napoleon had marched into almost every capital
+of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page136" name="page136"></a>(p. 136)</span> Europe without destroying a library or work of art, or
+firing a dwelling. With his victorious armies he had entered city
+after city, and yet no Vandalism marred his conquest. The palaces of
+kings, who had perjured themselves again and again to secure his
+downfall, had never been touched, and yet he was denounced as a robber
+and proclaimed to the world a modern Attila. But an English army,
+warring against a nation that spoke the same language, and was
+descended from the same ancestors, could enter a city that had made no
+defence&mdash;had not exasperated the conquerors by forcing them to a long
+siege or desperate assault, and, without provocation, burn down a
+public library, the unoffending capitol and presidential mansion,
+state offices, and even private dwellings. Incredible as this act
+appears, the greater marvel is how the English nation could exult over
+it. An American victory tarnished by such barbarity and meanness,
+would overwhelm the authors of it in eternal disgrace. And yet, a
+popular so-called historian of England, in narrating this transaction,
+says it was "one of the most brilliant expeditions ever carried into
+execution by any nation." An army of some four thousand regulars put
+to flight five or six thousand raw militia, and, with the loss of a
+few hundred men, marched into a small unfortified town, occupied as
+the capital of the United States, and like a band of robbers, set fire
+to the public Library, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page137" name="page137"></a>(p. 137)</span> Arsenal, Treasury, War office,
+President's house, two rope-walks and a bridge; and such an affair the
+historian of Lodi, Marengo, Austerlitz, and Waterloo,&mdash;of the terrible
+conflicts of the peninsular, and the sublime sea-fights of Aboukir and
+Trafalgar, calls "one of the most brilliant expeditions carried into
+execution by any nation."</p>
+
+<p class="poem10">
+ "Ille crucem, scelenis pretium tulit, hic diadema."</p>
+
+<p>The news was received in England with the liveliest demonstrations of
+joy. The Lord Mayor of London ordered the Park and Tower guns to be
+fired at noon, in honor of a victory, which he pompously declared was
+"worth an illumination." The official account was translated into
+French, German and Italian, and scattered over the continent. Mr. Clay
+and Mr. Russell were in the theatre at Brussels when the news arrived.
+The secretary of the legation, Mr. Hughes, had overheard an English
+officer in the lobby saying&mdash;"We have taken and burned the Yankee
+capital, and thrown those rebels back half a century"&mdash;and going to
+their box told them there were reasons why they should leave the
+theatre, which he would disclose at their hotel. He had observed some
+of the British legation present, and the announcement of such tidings
+would be embarrassing to the American embassy. They were exceedingly
+annoyed by the news, especially next morning, when the English
+embassadors sent them a paper <span class="pagenum"><a id="page138" name="page138"></a>(p. 138)</span> giving an account of the act;
+and they returned, mortified, to Ghent. It was received on the
+continent, however, with marked disapprobation. Even a Bourbon paper,
+in Paris, declared that notwithstanding the atrocities charged on
+Napoleon, he had never committed an act so degrading to civilized
+warfare as this.</p>
+
+<p>The vessels designed to coöperate with the movement on Washington,
+reached Alexandria the same evening the British army left the former
+place, and after levying a contribution on the inhabitants, seizing
+twenty-one merchant vessels, sixteen thousand barrels of flour, a
+thousand hogsheads of tobacco, and whatever else was valuable,
+departed. In their descent, they were harassed by Porter and Perry
+from the shore, but the guns of the latter were too light to effect
+much damage. Commodore Rodgers also hovered with fire ships around
+their flight, but it was too rapid to allow the concentration of a
+sufficient force to arrest them.</p>
+
+<p>Armstrong, the Secretary of War, following the example of President,
+Cabinet, Generals and army, galloped away from the disastrous field of
+Bladensburg, and took refuge in a farm-house. The fugitive President
+and the fugitive Secretary at length met, and returned together to
+Washington. The entrance of the latter to the capital was the signal
+for the indignant outburst of the entire population. The militia
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page139" name="page139"></a>(p. 139)</span> officers of the District refused to obey his orders in the
+future, and a committee of the citizens waited on the President,
+demanding his dismissal from the post of Secretary of War. It was
+suddenly discovered that he was wholly to blame for the conduct of the
+troops at Bladensburg. Borne away by the popular current, which he was
+thankful was not directed against himself, Madison requested Armstrong
+to retire for awhile to Baltimore. <span class="sidenote">Sept. 3.</span> The latter
+obeyed, but immediately sent in his resignation, in which he paid the
+President the compliment of having, as he declared, shamefully yielded
+to the "humors of a village mob." Monroe, Secretary of State, was
+appointed to discharge his duties, and a proclamation was issued
+calling an early meeting of Congress.</p>
+
+<p>The British government never committed a greater blunder than when it
+sanctioned the sack and burning of Washington. Estimating its
+importance by that which the capitals of Europe held in their
+respective kingdoms, her misguided statesmen supposed its overthrow
+would paralyze the nation and humble the government into submission.
+But there was scarcely a seaport on our coast, whose destruction would
+not have been a greater public calamity. Besides, the greater its
+value in the eyes of the people, the more egregious the mistake.
+Judging us by the effeminate races of India, or the ignorant
+population <span class="pagenum"><a id="page140" name="page140"></a>(p. 140)</span> of central Europe, who are accustomed to be
+governed by blows, they imagined the heavier the scourging, the more
+prostrated by fear, and more eager for peace we should become. But
+resistance and boldness rise with us in exact proportion to the
+indignities offered and injuries inflicted. With a country, whose
+vital part is no where fixed, but consisting in the unity of the
+people, can shift with changing fortunes from the sea-coast even to
+the Rocky Mountains, its heart can never be reached by the combined
+forces of the world. This republic can never die but by its own hand.
+In a foreign war, our strength can be weakened only by sowing
+dissensions. Outrages which inflame the national heart, or local
+sufferings that awaken national sympathy serve only to heal all these,
+and hence render us impregnable. Thus, when Mr. Alison, in closing up
+his account of this war and speaking of the probabilities of another,
+advises the sudden precipitation of vast armies on our shore as the
+only way to insure success, he exhibits a lamentable ignorance of our
+character. An outrage or calamity at the outset, sufficiently great to
+break down party opposition, and drown all personal and political
+contests in one shout for vengeance, rolling from limit to limit of
+our vast possessions, would endow us with resistless energy and
+strength. The attacks on Baltimore and New Orleans teach an
+instructive lesson on this <span class="pagenum"><a id="page141" name="page141"></a>(p. 141)</span> point. In the latter place, where
+a veteran army of nine thousand men were repulsed by scarcely
+one-third of its force, now an army of two hundred thousand would make
+no impression.</p>
+
+<p>The sack of Washington furnishes a striking illustration of the effect
+of a great public calamity on this nation. One feeling of wrath and
+cry for vengeance swept the land. A high national impulse hushed the
+bickerings and frightened into silence the quarrels of factions, and
+the President and his Cabinet never gained strength so fast as when
+the capitol was in flames, and they were fleeing through the storm and
+darkness, weighed down with sorrow and despondency.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time this expedition against Washington was moving to its
+termination, Sir Peter Parker ascended the Chesapeake to Rockhall,
+from whence he sent out detachments in various quarters, burning
+dwellings, grain, stacks, outhouses, etc. On the 30th, he landed at
+midnight, to surprise Colonel Reed, encamped in an open plain with a
+hundred and seventy militia. It was bright moonlight, and as the
+column advanced it was received with a steady and well-directed fire.
+At length the ammunition failing, this brave band was compelled to
+fall back. The enemy at the same time retreated, carrying with them
+Sir Peter Parker, mortally wounded with buck shot.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page142" name="page142"></a>(p. 142)</span> On the return of these several expeditions, it was resolved
+to make a grand and united attack on Baltimore, that nest of
+privateers. On the 6th of September, the whole fleet, consisting of
+more than forty sail, moved slowly up the Chesapeake, carrying a
+mixed, heterogeneous land force of five thousand men. Six days after,
+it reached the Patapsco, and landed the troops at North Point. The
+first object of attack was fort M'Henry, situated about two miles from
+Baltimore. The capture of this, it was thought, would open a passage
+to the city. Having put their forces in marching order, General Ross
+and Cochrane moved forward towards the intrenchments erected for the
+defence of Baltimore, while the vessels of war advanced against the
+fort.</p>
+
+<p>After marching four miles, the leading column of the army was checked
+by General Stricker, who with three thousand men had taken post near
+the head of Bear Creek. A sharp skirmish ensued, in which the two
+companies of Levering and Howard under Major Heath and Captain
+Aisquith's rifle company, fought gallantly. General Ross, hearing the
+firing rode forward, and mingled with the skirmishers, to ascertain
+the cause of it, when he was pierced by the unerring ball of a
+rifleman, and fell in the road. His riderless horse went plunging back
+towards the main army, his "saddle and housings stained with blood,
+carrying the melancholy news of his master's fate to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page143" name="page143"></a>(p. 143)</span> the
+astonished troops." Stretched by the road side, the dying general lay
+writhing in the agonies of death. He had only time to speak of his
+wife and children, before he expired. He was a gallant, skillful and
+humane officer, and his part in the burning of Washington, must be
+laid to his instructions rather than to his character.</p>
+
+<p>The command devolved on Colonel Brooke, who gave the orders to
+advance. General Stricker defended his position firmly, but at length
+was compelled to fall back on his reserve, and finally took post
+within half a mile of the intrenchments of the city. This ended the
+combat for the day. The next morning Colonel Brooke recommenced his
+march, and advanced to within two miles of the intrenchments, where he
+encamped till the following morning, to wait the movements of the
+fleet.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, Cochrane had moved up to within two miles and a half
+of the fort, and forming his vessels in a semi-circle, began to
+bombard it. These works, under the command of Major Armstead, had no
+guns sufficiently heavy to reach the vessels, which all that day threw
+shells and rockets, making a grand commotion but doing little damage.
+At night, Cochrane moved his fleet farther up, and opened again. The
+scene then became grand and terrific. It was dark and rainy, and amid
+the gloom, rockets and shells, weighing, some of them, two hundred
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page144" name="page144"></a>(p. 144)</span> and fifty pounds, rose heavenward, followed by a long train
+of light, and stooping over the fort burst with detonations that shook
+the shore. Singly, and in groups, these fiery messengers traversed the
+sky, lighting up the fort and surrounding scenery in a sudden glow,
+and then with their sullen thunder, sinking all again in darkness. The
+deafening explosions broke over the American army and the city of
+Baltimore like heavy thunder-claps, calling forth soldiers and
+inhabitants to gaze on the illumined sky. The city was in a state of
+intense excitement. The streets were thronged with the sleepless
+inhabitants, and the tearful eyes and pallid cheeks of women, attested
+the anguish and fear that wild night created. As soon as Armstead
+discovered that the vessels had come within range, he opened his fire
+with such precision that they were compelled to withdraw again,
+content with their distant bombardment. At length a sudden and heavy
+cannonade was heard above the fort, carrying consternation into the
+city, for the inhabitants believed that it had fallen. It soon ceased,
+however. Several barges, loaded with troops, had passed the fort
+unobserved, and attempted to land and take it in rear. Pulling to the
+shore with loud shouts, they were met by a well-directed fire from a
+battery, and compelled to seek shelter under their ships.</p>
+
+<p>During this tremendous bombardment Francis Key <span class="pagenum"><a id="page145" name="page145"></a>(p. 145)</span> lay in a
+little vessel under the Admiral's frigate. He had visited him for the
+purpose of obtaining an exchange of some prisoners of war, especially
+of one who was a personal friend, and was directed to remain till
+after the action. During the day his eye had rested eagerly on that
+low fortification, over which the flag of his country was flying, and
+he watched with the intensest anxiety the progress of each shell in
+its flight, rejoicing when it fell short of its aim, and filled with
+fear as he saw it stooping without exploding, within those silent
+enclosures. At night, when darkness shut out that object of so much
+and intense interest, around which every hope and desire of his life
+seemed to cling, he still stood straining his eyes through the gloom,
+to catch, if he could, by the light of the blazing shells, a glimpse
+of his country's flag, waving proudly in the storm. The early dawn
+found him still a watcher, and there, to the music of bursting shells,
+and the roar of cannon, he composed "The Star-Spangled Banner."<a id="footnotetag6" name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6" title="Go to footnote 6"><span class="smaller">[6]</span></a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page146" name="page146"></a>(p. 146)</span> In the morning, Broke not deeming it prudent to assail those
+intrenchments, manned by brave and determined men,<a id="footnotetag7" name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7" title="Go to footnote 7"><span class="smaller">[7]</span></a> while the
+heights around bristled with artillery, resolved to retreat. Waiting
+till night to take advantage of the darkness, he retraced his steps to
+the shipping.</p>
+
+<p>From the extreme apprehensions that had oppressed it, Baltimore passed
+to the most extravagant joy. Beaming faces once more filled the
+streets, and the military bands, as they marched through, playing
+triumphant strains, were saluted with shouts. The officers were feted
+and exultation and confidence filled every bosom.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page147" name="page147"></a>(p. 147)</span> CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Macomb at Plattsburg &mdash; American and English fleets on Lake
+ Champlain &mdash; Advance of Prevost &mdash; Indifference of Governor
+ Chittenden &mdash; Rev. Mr. Wooster &mdash; Macdonough &mdash; The two
+ battles &mdash; Funeral of the officers &mdash; British invasion of
+ Maine &mdash; McArthur's expedition.</p>
+
+<p>The gallant defence of Baltimore was still the theme of every tongue,
+when tidings from our northern borders swelled the enthusiasm to the
+highest pitch, and extinguished for a moment the remembrance of the
+barbarities committed at Washington.</p>
+
+<p>The day before the British landed at North Point and received their
+first shock in the death of General Ross, the double battle of
+Plattsburg was fought.</p>
+
+<p>Izard, when he started on his tortoise-like march, to the relief of
+Brown, left Colonel Macomb in command of three thousand men, not more
+than half of whom were fit for service. Their defeat he considered
+certain, and the result would have justified his <span class="pagenum"><a id="page148" name="page148"></a>(p. 148)</span>
+prognostications, had Macomb, like him, sat down to brood over his
+troubles and gaze only on the difficulties that beset the army, till
+his confidence was gone and his energies paralyzed. But he was made of
+sterner stuff&mdash;difficulties only roused and developed him. Were the
+well men under his command few? then his defences must be the
+stronger, and the labor of those able to work, the more constant and
+exhausting.</p>
+
+<p>Calling on New York and Vermont for militia, he toiled night and day
+at the works, and soon found himself strongly intrenched.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, Prevost, at the head of a disciplined army of twelve
+thousand men, began to advance on Plattsburg. The ulterior design of
+this invasion of the States has never been disclosed. It is hardly
+possible that the British General meditated a movement similar to
+Burgoyne's, hoping to reach Albany. The object may have been to get
+entire command of Lake Champlain; and, pushing his land forces as far
+as Ticonderoga, there wait the development of events on the sea-coast,
+or by conquests along the northern boundary, create a claim to the
+lakes, to be enforced in the negotiations for peace.</p>
+
+<p>Prevost marched slowly, cumbering the road with his heavy baggage and
+artillery trains as he advanced, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page149" name="page149"></a>(p. 149)</span> and did not arrive at
+Plattsburg till the 7th of September.</p>
+
+<p>This town is situated on the Saranac River, a deep and rapid stream,
+crossed at the time by several bridges. Abandoning that portion of it
+on the north shore, as untenable, Macomb withdrew his forces to the
+southern bank. Prevost, after a sharp action with the advance of the
+American army, was allowed to erect his batteries at his leisure. It
+took him four days to complete his works, or rather that time elapsed
+before the arrival of the British fleet.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Sept. 1.</span>
+
+<p>In the mean time Macomb had sent an express to Governor Chittenden, of
+Vermont, telling him that Prevost had commenced his march on
+Plattsburg, and beseeching him to call out the militia to his aid. But
+this Federalist Governor, acting on the rebellious doctrine of
+Massachusetts, coldly replied that he had no authority to send militia
+out of the State. On the 4th, Macomb sent another express saying the
+army was approaching, that his force was too small to resist it, and
+begging for assistance. General Newell, more patriotic than the
+Governor, offered to take his brigade over to the help of Macomb, but
+the former would not sanction the movement by his authority, though he
+advised him to beat up for volunteers. With every feeling of
+patriotism deadened by the poison of the spirit of faction&mdash;every
+generous sentiment and sympathy apparently extinguished&mdash;deaf to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page150" name="page150"></a>(p. 150)</span> piteous plea rising from a neighboring town, he coldly
+entrenched himself behind a party dogma, and let the ruin and
+devastation sweep onward. The cannonading on the 6th, by Majors
+Appling and Wool, who gallantly attacked the enemy's advance, did not
+rouse him from his apathy.</p>
+
+<p>One can hardly imagine that the call he issued for volunteers before
+the battle, and the stirring proclamation he made afterwards under the
+pressure of popular enthusiasm, emanated from the same person.</p>
+
+<p>The people, however, did not require to be stimulated into patriotism
+by their executive. As that sullen thunder came booming over the lake,
+it stirred with fiery ardor the gallant sons of that noble State, who
+never yet turned a deaf ear to the calls of their country, and before
+whose stern and valorous onset the enemy's ranks have never stood
+unbroken. Spurning the indifference of their Governor, and trampling
+under foot his constitutional scruples, they flew to their homes, and
+snatching down their muskets and rifles, and giving a short adieu to
+their families, rushed to the shore, and soon the lake was covered
+with boats, urged fiercely forward by strong arms and willing hearts
+towards the spot where the heavy explosions told that their brave
+countrymen were struggling in unequal combat. The face of young Macomb
+lighted <span class="pagenum"><a id="page151" name="page151"></a>(p. 151)</span> with joy as his eye fell on those bold men, and a
+heavy load was taken from his heart.</p>
+
+<p>Among those who had previously volunteered, was the Rev. Benjamin
+Wooster, of Fairfield, Vermont. Responding to the call of Governor
+Tompkins, he put himself at the head of his parishioners and repaired
+to the American camp, where he endured all the privations of a common
+soldier. The aged members of his church and the women, when they saw
+him draw up his little flock on the village green, prior to their
+departure for the scene of conflict, assembled in the church and sent
+for him, saying, "We shall see you no more&mdash;come, go to the house of
+God and preach us a last sermon, and administer to us the holy
+sacrament for the last time." But fearing the effect of so touching an
+interview on his own decisions, he refused. Sending them an
+affectionate farewell, he embraced his weeping family, kissed his
+babes, and gently untwining their arms from his neck, turned away. On
+the day of battle this brave old shepherd led his fearless flock into
+the fire, with the serenity of a good man doing his duty.</p>
+
+<p>During the summer the English at the northern, and the Americans at
+the southern portion of the lake, had been busy in building ships to
+contest the supremacy of this sheet of water, whose head pierces so
+deep into the bosom of New York. The latter had at length assembled a
+flotilla consisting <span class="pagenum"><a id="page152" name="page152"></a>(p. 152)</span> of four vessels&mdash;the largest carrying
+twenty-six guns&mdash;and ten galleys, the whole under the command of
+Macdonough. After some skirmishing, this little fleet, which early in
+the season lay in Otter Creek, was got into the lake and steered for
+Plattsburg Bay, to assist Macomb in his defence of the town. This bay
+opens to the southward, and instead of piercing the main land at right
+angles, runs north, nearly parallel with the lake itself. A narrow
+tongue of land divides it from the main water, the extreme point of
+which is called Cumberland Head. Just within its mouth, and nearly
+opposite where the turbulent Saranac empties into it, Macdonough
+anchored his vessels. <span class="sidenote">Sept 20.</span> Between him and the main
+land was a large shoal and an island which effectually blocked the
+approach of vessels on that side.</p>
+
+<p>The English fleet sent to attack him, consisted, also, of four
+vessels&mdash;the largest mounting 32 guns&mdash;and 13 galleys. The American
+force, all told, was 14 vessels, mounting 86 guns and carrying 850
+men, while that of the English was 17 vessels, mounting 96 guns and
+carrying 1000 men. The largest, the Confiance, "had the gun deck of a
+frigate," and by her superior size and strength, and her 30 long
+twenty-fours, was considered a match for any two vessels in
+Macdonough's squadron. Captain Downie, who commanded the British
+fleet, joined his gun boats at <span class="pagenum"><a id="page153" name="page153"></a>(p. 153)</span> the Isle au Motte on the 8th
+of September, where he lay at anchor till the 11th. In the mean time,
+Prevost, whose batteries were all erected, remained silent behind his
+works waiting the arrival of the fleet before he should commence his
+fire.</p>
+
+<p>During those sleepless nights, and days of agitation, young Macdonough
+lay calmly watching the approach of his superior foe, while Macomb
+strained every nerve to complete his defences. Fearless, frank and
+social, the young General moved among his soldiers with such animation
+and confidence, that they caught his spirit, and like the Green
+Mountain boys and yeomanry of New York at Saratoga, resolved to defend
+their homes to the last.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Sept. 11.</span>
+
+<p>At length, on Sunday morning, just as the sun rose over the eastern
+mountains, the American guard boat, on the watch, was seen rowing
+swiftly into the harbor. It reported the enemy in sight. The drums
+immediately beat to quarters, and every vessel was cleared for action.
+The preparations being completed, young Macdonough summoned his
+officers around him, and there, on the deck of the Saratoga, read the
+prayers of the ritual before entering into battle, and that voice,
+which soon after rung like a clarion amid the carnage, sent
+heavenward, in earnest tones, "Stir up thy strength, O Lord, and come
+and help us, for thou givest not always the battle to the strong, but
+canst save by many or by <span class="pagenum"><a id="page154" name="page154"></a>(p. 154)</span> few." It was a solemn and thrilling
+spectacle, and one never before witnessed on a vessel of war cleared
+for action. A young commander who had the courage thus to brave the
+derision and sneers which such an act was sure to provoke, would fight
+his vessel while there was a plank left to stand on. Of the deeds of
+daring done on that day of great achievements, none evinced so bold
+and firm a heart as this act of religious worship.</p>
+
+<p>At eight o'clock the crews of the different vessels could see, over
+the tongue of land that divided the bay from the lake, the topsails of
+the enemy moving steadily down. These had also been seen from shore,
+and every eminence around was covered with anxious spectators. The
+house of God was deserted, and the light of that bright Sabbath
+morning, with its early stillness, flooded a scene at once picturesque
+and terrible. On one side was the hostile squadron, coming down to the
+sound of music&mdash;on the other, stood the armies on shore in order of
+battle, with their banners flying&mdash;between, lay Macdonough's silent
+little fleet at anchor, while the hills around were black with
+spectators, gazing on the strange and fearful panorama.</p>
+
+<p>As the British approached, Macdonough showed his signal, "<i>Impressed
+seamen call on every man to do his duty</i>." As vessel after vessel
+traced the letters, loud cheers rent the air.</p>
+
+<p>The English vessels, under easy sail, swept one <span class="pagenum"><a id="page155" name="page155"></a>(p. 155)</span> after
+another round Cumberland Head, and hauling up in the wind, waited the
+approach of the galleys.</p>
+
+<a id="img003" name="img003"></a>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/img003.jpg">
+<img src="images/img003tb.jpg" width="500" height="230" alt="" title=""></a>
+<p class="smcap">BATTLE OF LAKE CHAMPLAIN.</p>
+<p>Position of the two squadrons.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As Macdonough lay anchored with his vessels in line north and
+south&mdash;his galleys on their sweeps forming a second line in rear&mdash;the
+English fleet, as it doubled the head, was compelled to approach with
+bows on. The Eagle was farthest up the bay, the Saratoga second,
+Ticonderoga third, and Preble fourth. The impressive silence which
+rested on the American fleet was at last broken by the Eagle, which
+opened her broadsides. Startled by the sound, a cock on board the
+Saratoga, which had escaped from the coop, flew upon a gun slide and
+crowed. A loud laugh and three hearty cheers acknowledged the
+favorable omen, and spread confidence through the ship. Macdonough,
+seeing the enemy were at too great distance to be reached by his guns,
+reserved his fire, and watched the Confiance standing boldly on till
+she came within range. He then sighted a long twenty-four himself and
+fired her. The heavy shot passed the entire length of the deck of the
+Confiance, killing many of her men and shivering her wheel into
+fragments. This was the signal for every vessel to open its fire, and
+in a moment that quiet bay was in an uproar. The Confiance, however,
+though suffering severely, did not return a shot, but kept on till she
+got within a quarter of a mile, when she let go her anchors and swung
+broadside <span class="pagenum"><a id="page156" name="page156"></a>(p. 156)</span> to the Saratoga. Sixteen long twenty-fours then
+opened at once with a terrific crash. The Saratoga shook from kelson
+to cross trees under the tremendous discharge. Nearly half of her crew
+were knocked down by it, while fifty men were either killed or
+wounded, and among them Lieutenant Gamble. He was in the act of
+sighting a gun, when a shot entered the port and struck him dead. The
+effect of this first broadside was awful, and the Saratoga was for a
+moment completely stunned. The next, however, she opened her fire with
+a precision and accuracy that told fatally on the English ship. But
+the latter soon commenced pouring in her broadsides so rapidly that
+she seemed enveloped in flame. The Eagle could not withstand it, and
+changed her position, falling in nearer shore, leaving the Saratoga to
+sustain almost alone the whole weight of the unequal contest. She gave
+broadside for broadside, but the weight of metal was against her, and
+she was fast becoming a wreck. Her deck soon presented a scene of the
+most frightful carnage. The living could hardly tumble the wounded
+down the hatchway as fast as they fell. At length, as a full broadside
+burst on the staggering ship, a cry of despair rang from stem to
+stern, "the Commodore is killed!&mdash;the Commodore is killed!" and there
+he lay on the blood-stained deck amid the dead, senseless, and
+apparently lifeless. A spar, cut in two by a cannon <span class="pagenum"><a id="page157" name="page157"></a>(p. 157)</span> shot,
+had fallen on his back and stunned him. But after two or three minutes
+he recovered, and cheering on his men, took his place again beside his
+favorite gun that he had sighted from the commencement of the action.
+As the men saw him once more at his post, they took new courage.</p>
+
+<p>But a few minutes after, the cry of "the Commodore is killed," again
+passed through the ship. Every eye was instantly turned to a group of
+officers gathered around Macdonough, who lay in the scuppers, between
+two guns, covered with blood. He had been knocked clean across the
+ship, with a force sufficient to have killed him. Again he revived,
+and limping to a gun, was soon coolly hulling his antagonist. Maimed
+and suffering, he fought on, showing an example that always makes
+heroes of subordinates.</p>
+
+<p>At length every gun on the side of his vessel towards the enemy was
+silenced, but one, and this, on firing it again, bounded from its
+fastenings, and tumbled down the hatchway. Not a gun was left with
+which to continue the contest, while the ship was on fire. A
+surrender, therefore, seemed inevitable. Macdonough, however, resolved
+to wind his ship, so as to get the other broadside to bear. Failing in
+the first attempt, the sailing-master, Brum, bethought him of an
+expedient, which proved successful, and the crippled vessel slowly
+swung her stern around, until the uninjured guns bore. The Confiance,
+seeing the man&oelig;uvre, imitated <span class="pagenum"><a id="page158" name="page158"></a>(p. 158)</span> it, but she could not
+succeed, and lay with her crippled side exposed to the fire of the
+Saratoga.</p>
+
+<p>In a short time not a gun could be brought to bear. Further resistance
+was therefore useless, and she surrendered. She had been hulled a
+<i>hundred and five times</i>, while half of her men were killed and
+wounded. Captain Downie had fallen some time before, and hence was
+spared the mortification of seeing her flag lowered.</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle, commanded by Capt. Henley, behaved gallantly in the
+engagement, while the Ticonderoga, under Lieutenant Cassin, was
+handled in a manner that astonished those who beheld her. This
+fearless officer walked backward and forward over his deck,
+encouraging his men, and directing the fire, apparently unconscious of
+the balls that smote and crashed around him. His broadsides were so
+incessant, that several times the vessel was thought to be on fire.</p>
+
+<p>The surrender of the Confiance virtually terminated the contest, which
+had lasted two hours and a quarter; and as flag after flag struck the
+galleys took to their sweeps and escaped.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of this tremendous cannonade, came, at intervals, the
+explosions on shore. The first gun in the bay, was the signal for
+Prevost on land, and as the thunder of his heavy batteries mingled in
+with the incessant broadsides of the contending squadrons, the very
+shores trembled, and far over the lake, amid the quiet farm-houses of
+Vermont, the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page159" name="page159"></a>(p. 159)</span> echoes rolled away, carrying anxiety and fear
+into hundreds of families. Its shore was lined with men, gazing
+intently in the direction of Plattsburgh, as though from the smoke
+that rolled heavenward, some tidings might be got of how the battle
+was going.</p>
+
+<p>To the spectators on the commanding heights around Plattsburgh, the
+scene was indescribably fearful and thrilling. It was as if two
+volcanoes were raging below&mdash;turning that quiet Sabbath morning into a
+scene wild and awful as the strife of fiends. But when the firing in
+the bay ceased, and the American flag was seen still flying, and the
+Union Jack down, there went up a shout that shook the hills. From the
+water to the shore, and back again, the deafening huzzas echoed and
+re-echoed. The American army took up the shout, and sending it high
+and clear over the thunder of cannon, spread dismay and astonishment
+into the heart of the enemy's camp.</p>
+
+<p>The American loss in killed and wounded, was one hundred and ten, of
+whom all but twenty fell on board the Saratoga and Eagle&mdash;that of the
+English was never fully known, though it was supposed to be nearly
+double.</p>
+
+<p>The force of Macomb was so inferior, and the most of the volunteers
+were so recently arrived, that from the first he was advised to
+retreat, a course that Wilkinson and Dearborn and Izard would
+doubtless have <span class="pagenum"><a id="page160" name="page160"></a>(p. 160)</span> taken, and defended it by rules laid down in
+books on military tactics. But Macomb had resolved to fight where he
+stood. The two forts of Brown and Scott, which he had erected and
+named, he designed should be symbolical of the defence he would make,
+and the battle he would fight.</p>
+
+<p>After the British batteries had been in fierce operation for some
+time, throwing shells, hot shot and rockets in a perfect shower upon
+the American ranks, three columns of attack were formed&mdash;two pressing
+straight for the bridges, the planks of which had been taken up, and
+the third for a ford farther up the river. The last was repulsed by
+the volunteers and militia. The other two steadily approached the
+bridges, but the artillery rained such a tempest of grape shot on the
+uncovered ranks of one, and the pickets and rifles so scourged the
+other, that they were driven back to their intrenchments for shelter.
+After Macdonough's victory, their fire slackened, not only from
+discouragement, but from the destructive effect of the American
+gunnery on their batteries, and at nightfall ceased entirely. As soon
+as it became dark, Prevost ordered a retreat. So rapidly and silently
+was it conducted, that the army had advanced eight miles before Macomb
+knew of it. He immediately ordered a pursuit, but this day of strife
+had ended in a storm of wind and rain, and it was soon abandoned.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page161" name="page161"></a>(p. 161)</span> Prevost lost two hundred and fifty in killed and wounded,
+many of whom were left on the ground, drenched and beat upon by the
+storm. These he commended to the humanity of Macomb, and continued his
+rapid flight to the St. Lawrence. That British fleet, shattered and
+torn, lying at anchor under the guns of Macdonough, in the bay, and
+the army of twelve thousand men streaming through the gloom and rain,
+panic stricken, lest the feeble force behind should overtake it,
+present a striking contrast to their prospects in the morning, and
+show how changeful is fortune. Downie heard not the shout of victory,
+for he lay stiff and cold in the vessel he had carried so gallantly
+into action, and Prevost did not long survive his defeat.</p>
+
+<p>So large a hostile force had never before crossed the Canada line,
+while no such sudden and terrible reverse of fortune had befallen the
+feeblest expedition. Two such victories on one day, were enough to
+intoxicate the nation. The news spread like wildfire, and shouts and
+salvos of artillery, and bonfires, hailed the messengers, as they sped
+the glad tidings on. The campaign was closing gloriously. Instead of
+the defeats and failures of the last year, there were Chippewa and
+Lundy's Lane and Fort Erie, crowned by the victories of Baltimore and
+Plattsburgh. The news of the two last, approaching from different
+directions, set the land in a glow of transport, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page162" name="page162"></a>(p. 162)</span> lifted
+it from despondency and gloom to confidence and bright expectations.</p>
+
+<p>The Thursday following the battle of Champlain was devoted to the
+burial of the officers killed in the naval action. As the procession
+of boats left the Confiance, minute guns were fired from the vessels
+in the harbor. The artillery and infantry on shore received the dead
+and bore them to the place of burial, while the cannon of the forts
+responded to those from the fleet, blending their mournful echoes over
+the fallen in their prime and manhood. The clouds hung low and gloomy
+over lake and land, and the rain fell in a gentle shower, imparting
+still greater loneliness to the scene. On this very day, while friends
+and foes were thus paying the last tribute of respect to the fallen,
+Baltimore was shaking to the huzzas of the inhabitants, at the news
+that the British fleet was sailing down the bay, baffled and
+disappointed.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Sept 1.</span>
+
+<p>Simultaneous with these two invasions of our territory, a British
+force was sent against Machias. The misfortune which befel the Adams,
+sloop-of-war, compelling her to take refuge at Hampden, in the
+Penobscot river, caused a change in the movements of the expedition,
+and it did not stop to take Machias, but seized Castine and Belfast,
+on the Penobscot bay, then pushed on with a sloop of war and small
+craft carrying in all 700 men, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page163" name="page163"></a>(p. 163)</span> to capture this vessel.
+<span class="sidenote">Sept 9.</span> Machias was then seized, and all the country east
+of Penobscot taken possession of. <span class="sidenote">July 14.</span> The islands in
+Passamaquoddy bay had been seized and occupied two months previous.</p>
+
+<p>Our whole maritime coast was still threatened, and every seaport of
+any magnitude, was fortifying itself when Congress assembled again.</p>
+
+<p>The only other military movement of note during this fall, was an
+expedition which set out from Detroit, under the command of General
+McArthur. It consisted of 700 mounted men, seventy of whom were
+Indians, and for secresy, daring and skill was not surpassed during
+the war. Its object was to prevent the enemy from molesting Michigan
+during the winter, and if successful in its operations, eventually
+attack Burlington Heights, and form a junction with Generals Brown and
+Izard. This body of seven hundred bold and well-mounted borderers,
+left Detroit the 22d of October, and plunged at once into the
+wilderness. <span class="sidenote">Oct 22.</span> The long and straggling column would
+now be seen wading along the shallow shores of the lake, and then be
+lost in the primeval forest, to reappear on the bank of deep rivers,
+from whose farther shore the wilderness again spread away. The bivouac
+by night in the autumnal woods, or on the bank of a stream, presented
+a fine subject for a painter. Their seven hundred horses tied to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page164" name="page164"></a>(p. 164)</span> trees around, only half relieved by the ruddy fire that
+strove in vain to pierce the limitless gloom&mdash;the lofty trunks of
+trees receding away like the columns in some old dimly-lighted
+cathedral&mdash;the hardy and rough-looking frontiersmen, stretched with
+the half-clad savages around the fire&mdash;the sentinels scarcely
+discernible in the distance, all combined to form a picture which has
+a charm even for the most civilized and refined.</p>
+
+<p>It was, however, no holiday march&mdash;expedition was necessary to
+success, and the horses were kept to the top of their endurance.
+Straining up acclivities, floundering through swamps, struggling with
+the rapid currents of rivers, this detachment succeeded in penetrating
+more than two hundred miles into the enemy's country, and to within
+twenty-five miles of Burlington Heights. It marched more than four
+hundred miles, one hundred and eighty of it through an unbroken
+wilderness, defeated five hundred militia strongly posted, killed and
+wounded twenty-seven men, and took a hundred and eleven prisoners, and
+returned with the loss of but one man. <span class="sidenote">Oct 17.</span> In the
+discipline he maintained, the health of the troops, and their safe
+return, McArthur showed himself a skillful and able commander, while
+his subordinates deserve the highest commendation.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page165" name="page165"></a>(p. 165)</span> CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="resume">The Navy in 1814 &mdash; Cruise of Captain Morris in the Adams &mdash;
+ Narrow escapes &mdash; The Wasp and Reindeer &mdash; Cruise of the
+ Wasp &mdash; Sinks the Avon &mdash; Mysterious fate of the Wasp &mdash; The
+ Peacock captures the Epervier &mdash; Lieutenant Nicholson.</p>
+
+<p>During the season of almost uninterrupted success on land and on our
+inland waters, we had but few vessels at sea, the greater part being
+blockaded, but those few nobly sustained the reputation won by the
+navy in the two previous years. The Guerriere 44, the Independence 74,
+and the Java 44, were launched during the summer, but remained in
+their docks till the close of the war. In the January previous Captain
+Morris, commanding the Adams, which had been cut down to a sloop of
+war, got to sea and took a few prizes. In the spring he captured an
+East Indiaman, but while taking possession of her an English fleet
+hove in sight, which compelled him to abandon the prize and crowd all
+sail to escape. Succeeding in throwing off his pursuers he gave chase
+to the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page166" name="page166"></a>(p. 166)</span> Jamaica fleet which had passed him in the night, but
+failed in every attempt to cut out a vessel. <span class="sidenote">July 3.</span>
+Continuing eastward he at length made the Irish coast, but was soon
+after chased by an English frigate and pressed so closely that he
+found it necessary to throw overboard his anchors and two guns. This
+sacrifice, however, did not increase materially the distance between
+him and his adversary, and after dark, it falling a dead calm, Capt.
+Morris and his first Lieutenant Wadsworth, both of whom were on board
+the Constitution when first chased by the English fleet, got out their
+boats and by towing all night, succeeded in gaining two leagues by
+daylight. As soon as the commander of the English frigate discovered
+the trick that had been played him, he crowded all sail and kept in
+the wake of the Adams till ten at night, when the latter altering her
+course, escaped.</p>
+
+<p>But the ocean being filled with the enemy's cruisers, this persecuted
+solitary vessel was soon chased again by two frigates, for twenty-four
+hours, and only got off at last by the aid of a friendly fog. In
+August, however, she went ashore off the coast of Maine, while
+attempting to run the English blockade, as mentioned in the preceding
+chapter, and was so injured that Morris run her into the Penobscot
+River, where he was compelled to burn her to prevent her capture by
+the British.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page167" name="page167"></a>(p. 167)</span> The Wasp put to sea, from Portsmouth, the first of May, and
+giving her canvass to the wind steered boldly for the English Channel.
+Leaving the British fleet blockading our ships at home, her commander,
+Captain Blakely, sought the English coast, resolved to strike at the
+enemy's commerce assembling there from every sea. It required constant
+watchfulness and great prudence to cruise on such dangerous ground as
+this, and had not all suspicion of an enemy in that quarter been
+removed, she would doubtless have been captured. The unexampled daring
+of the act alone saved her.</p>
+
+<p>On the 28th of June Blakely gave chase to a sail, which proved to be
+the English brig of war Reindeer, commanded by Captain Manners. The
+latter, though inferior in strength, showed no disinclination to
+close, and came down in gallant style. As they approached, the
+Reindeer by using a shifting twelve-pound carronade, was able to fire
+it five times before Blakely could get a gun to bear. At first within
+sixty, and afterwards within thirty yards, the crew stood for twelve
+minutes this galling fire without flinching. But when at length a
+favorable position was obtained, the broadsides of the American was
+delivered with such awful effect, that Captain Manners saw at once his
+vessel would be a wreck unless he run her aboard; and setting his
+sails he drove full on the Wasp. As the vessels fell foul he <span class="pagenum"><a id="page168" name="page168"></a>(p. 168)</span>
+called to his men to follow him, and endeavored to leap on the deck of
+his antagonist. But coolly, as on a parade, the crew of the latter
+steadily repulsed every attempt to board.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Manners had been wounded early in the action, but still kept
+his feet, and just before boarding was struck by a shot which carried
+away the calves of both his legs. In this mangled condition he gave
+the orders to board, and leaping into the rigging of his own vessel in
+order to swing himself on that of his adversary, he was struck by two
+musket balls which entered the top of his head and passed out through
+his chin. Waving his sword above his head he exclaimed, "Oh, God!"
+and fell lifeless on the deck.</p>
+
+<p>After the enemy had been repulsed three times, the Wasp boarded in
+turn, and in one minute the conflict was over. The English vessel was
+literally a wreck, and had lost in killed and wounded sixty-seven out
+of one hundred and fifteen, constituting her crew, or more than half
+of her entire number. The Wasp had but five men killed and twenty-two
+wounded. <span class="sidenote">July 8.</span> Captain Blakely took his prize into
+L'Orient, where he burned her to prevent recapture. Up to this time he
+had taken eight merchantmen. <span class="sidenote">Aug. 27.</span> Remaining here till
+the latter part of August, he again set sail, and on the 1st of
+September cut out a vessel loaded with guns and military <span class="pagenum"><a id="page169" name="page169"></a>(p. 169)</span>
+stores from a fleet of ten sail, convoyed by a seventy-four.
+Endeavoring to repeat the saucy experiment he was chased away by a
+man-of-war. The same evening, however, making four sail, he in turn
+gave chase to one, which immediately threw up rockets and fired signal
+guns to attract the attention of the other vessels. But Captain
+Blakely held steadily on, crashing along under a ten knot breeze, and
+as he approached the stranger fired a gun and hailed. His fire being
+returned he poured in a destructive broadside. Notwithstanding the
+swell was heavy and the night dark, his fire was terribly effective.
+For a night action it was remarkably short, and in forty minutes the
+enemy struck. But as the boat was about being lowered to take
+possession of her, Blakely saw beneath the lifting smoke a brig of war
+within musket-shot, and two more vessels rapidly closing. Ordering the
+boat to be run up again quickly, and the men to hasten to their posts,
+he filled away and catching the wind dead astern was soon out of
+sight. <span class="sidenote">Sept. 1.</span> The enemy gave him one broadside and then
+turned to the captured vessel, whose guns of distress were echoing
+loudly over the sea. She soon sunk. This vessel was afterwards
+ascertained to be the Avon, of eighteen guns.</p>
+
+<p>Continuing his cruise, Blakely took three more vessels, among them a
+valuable prize, the Atalanta, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page170" name="page170"></a>(p. 170)</span> of eight guns, which was
+immediately dispatched to the states.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Sept. 22.</span>
+
+<p>This was the last direct tidings ever received from the gallant Wasp.
+Various rumors were afloat concerning her fate, but nothing certain of
+her after cruise, or the manner in which she was lost, was ever known.
+One report stated that an English frigate had put into Cadiz badly cut
+up by an American corvette, which had sunk in the night time, and so
+suddenly, that her name could not be ascertained. This was thought at
+first to be the Wasp, but no confirmation of this report being
+received, it was discredited. The spirited conduct of this little
+vessel had made her a great favorite with the nation, and a deep
+sympathy was universally felt for her mysterious fate.<a id="footnotetag8" name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8" title="Go to footnote 8"><span class="smaller">[8]</span></a> Years passed
+by, when an incident occurred which awakened a fresh interest in her.
+Two officers on board the Essex, when she was captured at Valparaiso,
+had gone to Rio Janeiro, but were never after heard from. Inquiries
+were made by friends in every direction, but in vain. At last it was
+ascertained that they had taken passage in a Swedish brig for England,
+from which they had been transferred to the Wasp. The commander stated
+that on the 9th of October he was chased by a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page171" name="page171"></a>(p. 171)</span> strange sail,
+which fired several guns, when he hove to and was boarded. The
+boarding officer, ascertaining there were two American officers on
+board, took them with him to his own ship. On their return, they told
+the Swedish captain that the strange sail was the Wasp, and they had
+determined to accept a passage in her. They did so, and nothing more
+was ever heard of them.</p>
+
+<p>This was sixteen days after the prize left her, and, according to the
+Swedish brig's reckoning, she was at the time nearly a thousand miles
+farther south, and where she very naturally might be. Added to this
+was another rumor, which seemed to throw still more light on her fate.
+Soon after her rencontre with the Swedish vessel, it was said that two
+English frigates chased off the southern coast an American
+sloop-of-war, and while in pursuit were struck with a heavy squall.
+After the squall was over, the sloop was no where to be seen. If the
+rumor be true, that vessel was no doubt the Wasp, for we had no other
+sloop-of-war in those seas at that time. Besides, when met by the
+Swedish brig, she was evidently bound in that direction, and should
+have arrived off the coast about the time mentioned in the rumor.
+Nothing is more probable than that she capsized and went down, while
+carrying a press of sail to escape her pursuers.</p>
+
+<p>At all events, whatever was her fate, the sea never <span class="pagenum"><a id="page172" name="page172"></a>(p. 172)</span> rolled
+over a more gallant commander and crew. Watchful, full of resources,
+indefatigable and fearless, Captain Blakely was the model of a naval
+commander, and had he lived would no doubt have reached the highest
+rank in his profession.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">March, 1814.</span>
+
+<p>The Peacock, Captain Harrington, also started on a cruise in the
+spring, steering southward. On the 29th of April she made three sail,
+which proved to be merchantmen under convoy of the Epervier, a large
+brig-of-war. The former took to flight, while the latter bore up to
+engage. At the first fire the forward sails of the American were so
+cut up that they became nearly useless. There was, consequently, but
+little man&oelig;uvering; the vessels moved off together, and a steady
+discharge of broadsides settled the contest. The force and weight of
+metal in this case were nearly equal, but the superior gunnery of the
+American was soon manifest, for in forty-two minutes the Epervier was
+so riddled that she had five feet of water in the hold. In this
+condition she struck, and with great difficulty was kept from sinking.
+Twenty-two of her crew were killed and wounded, while not a man in the
+Peacock was killed, and only two wounded. A hundred and eighteen
+thousand dollars in specie were found on board of her.</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Nicholson was sent home with the prize. He reached the
+American sea board in <span class="pagenum"><a id="page173" name="page173"></a>(p. 173)</span> safety, but while running along the
+coast, steering for Savannah, was chased by an English frigate, and
+escaped capture only by one of those artifices so common among Yankee
+sailors. The wind being light, he crept close along shore, and kept in
+shoal water where the frigate dared not approach. The commander of the
+latter observing this, manned his boats and sent them forward in
+pursuit. The prize had but seventeen officers and men all told, and
+hence could make no serious resistance if boarded. As the boats came
+steadily on under sweeps, the fate of the Epervier appeared to be
+sealed, but Nicholson, putting the best face on the matter, took down
+his trumpet and thundered out his orders to yaw and pour in a
+broadside. The boats hesitated on hearing this dangerous command, and
+finally withdrew, leaving the prize a safe passage to the Savannah.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">May 1.</span>
+
+<p>Three days after, the Peacock also came in. The latter, however,
+remained in port but a short time, and again set sail, sweeping the
+seas to the bay of Biscay.</p>
+
+<p>Her cruise was conducted with great prudence and sagacity, and she
+returned in October, having captured fourteen merchantmen.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page174" name="page174"></a>(p. 174)</span> CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Third Session of the XIIIth Congress &mdash; State of the
+ Treasury &mdash; The President's Message &mdash; Dallas appointed
+ Secretary of the Treasury &mdash; His scheme and that of Eppes
+ for the relief of the country &mdash; Our Commissioners at Ghent
+ &mdash; Progress of the negotiations &mdash; English protocol &mdash; Its
+ effect on Congress and the nation &mdash; Effect of its
+ publication on the English Parliament.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Sept. 19.</span>
+
+<p>During the agitation and excitement preceding the bombardment of Fort
+McHenry, and the battles of Champlain and Plattsburg, the members of
+Congress were slowly gathering to the ruined Capital, and two days
+after Brown's gallant sortie from Fort Erie, assembled in the Patent
+Office, the only public building left standing by the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the glorious victories that had marked the summer
+campaign, a gloom rested on Congress. The Government, indeed,
+presented a melancholy spectacle, sitting amid the ashes of the
+Capital, while the fact could not be disguised that <span class="pagenum"><a id="page175" name="page175"></a>(p. 175)</span> the
+Commissioners at Ghent gave no hope of peace. The war seemed far as
+ever from a termination, while England, released from the drains on
+her troops, navy and treasury, by the Continental war, was evidently
+making preparations for grander and more terrible exhibitions of her
+power. Her forces were gathering and her fleets accumulating upon our
+coast for the avowed purpose of demolishing our seaports, burning up
+our shipping, destroying our cities, and carrying a wide-spread
+desolation along our shores. To meet the expenses required to resist
+these attacks, a vast accession of funds was necessary, and yet the
+Treasury was worse than empty. The effort to borrow, in August, the
+paltry sum of six millions, a part of the $25,000,000 voted, had
+proved unsuccessful, not half the amount being taken and that at less
+than 80 per cent. In May previous over nine millions and a half had
+been obtained at from 85 to 88 per cent, and yet while victories were
+illustrating our arms, not $3,000,000 would now be taken, and the
+offers for that all below 80 per cent.</p>
+
+<p>As the Treasury accounts stood at the close of the second quarter of
+the year 1814, Mr. Campbell, the Secretary, estimated that nearly
+twenty-five millions of dollars would be necessary to meet the
+expenditures of the remaining two quarters. The public revenue during
+that time would be nearly five millions, which the two loans and four
+millions of Treasury <span class="pagenum"><a id="page176" name="page176"></a>(p. 176)</span> notes would swell to a little over
+thirteen millions, leaving about eleven millions to be obtained by
+some process or other. A foreign loan of six millions was recommended.</p>
+
+<p>Added to this the currency was thoroughly deranged. New banks had set
+a vast amount of paper afloat, while the specie was all drained off to
+pay for British goods, which surreptitiously got into the country. The
+banks of the District of Columbia suspended payment with the British
+invasion, and the panic spreading northward, there commenced a run
+upon the banks which in turn stopped payment, until out of New
+England, a large bank could scarcely be found that had not suspended.</p>
+
+<p>The expense of maintaining such a vast army of militia as was kept on
+foot, called for enormous disbursements, and many saw national
+bankruptcy in the future should the war continue.</p>
+
+<p>The burning of Washington furnished the President, in his message, an
+excellent occasion for making an appeal to the people. He was not
+constrained to fall back on the justice of the war, and persuade the
+nation that the invasion of Canada was both right and politic. The war
+had become defensive&mdash;men must now fight, not for maritime rights, not
+march to distant and questionable ground, but standing on their own
+hearth-stones, strike for their firesides and their homes. The Indian
+barbarities <span class="pagenum"><a id="page177" name="page177"></a>(p. 177)</span> at the west, which inflamed to such a pitch of
+rage the Kentuckians, had been repeated by a civilized nation, and in
+speaking of them and the enemy, the President said: "He has avowed his
+purpose of trampling on the usages of civilized warfare, and given
+earnest of it in the plunder and wanton destruction of private
+property. *** His barbarous policy has not even spared those monuments
+of the arts and models of taste with which our country had enriched
+and embellished its infant metropolis. From such an adversary,
+hostility in its greatest force and worst forms may be looked for. The
+American people will face it with the undaunted spirit, which in our
+Revolutionary struggle, defeated his unrighteous projects. His threats
+and barbarities instead of dismay, will kindle in every bosom an
+indignation not to be extinguished but in the disaster and expulsion
+of such cruel invaders."</p>
+
+<p>The ardor and indignation of the people were easily roused, but these
+did not bring what just then was most needed, <i>money</i>.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Sept.</span>
+
+<p>Campbell having resigned his place as Secretary of the Treasury,
+immediately after sending in his report, Alexander Dallas was
+appointed in his place, who brought forward a scheme for relieving the
+Government. Eppes, from the Committee of Ways and Means, also offered
+a project. He proposed to lay new taxes to the amount of eleven and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page178" name="page178"></a>(p. 178)</span> a half millions, and make a new issue of Treasury Notes,
+redeemable after six months. Dallas agreed with him in the amount of
+taxes, but recommended also the creation of a National Bank with a
+capital of fifty millions, five of it in specie and the residue in
+government stock. This would regulate the currency by furnishing a
+circulating medium, and constitute a basis on which loans could be
+obtained.</p>
+
+<p>Bills were also brought in regulating the army.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time unfavorable news arrived from our embassy at Ghent.
+They had been compelled to wait some time for the English
+Commissioners, spending the interval in a round of amusements and
+entertainments furnished by the people of Ghent and General Lyons,
+commanding the British troops in that place. At length, on the 7th of
+August, the Secretary of the English legation called at the American
+hotel, to arrange the place and day for commencing negotiations. No
+one but Mr. Bayard was in at the time, and he seeing no breach of
+diplomatic etiquette in the proposal of the English Secretary to meet
+next day at the hotel of the English legation, assented. But the other
+members when they returned and were told of the arrangements that had
+been made, were indignant. "What!" said Mr. Adams, "meet the English
+Ministers who have kept us here so long waiting the condescension of
+their coming, in the face of all <span class="pagenum"><a id="page179" name="page179"></a>(p. 179)</span> Ghent&mdash;meet them at their
+bidding at their own hotel, to be the laughing stock of the city, of
+London, and of Europe?" "Never!" added Mr. Gallatin, "never!" Mr.
+Bayard replied, that the promise had been made, and they stood
+pledged. "No," said Mr. Adams, "<i>you</i> may be, but we are not."</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Aug. 8.</span>
+
+<p>Another place was therefore agreed upon, and the negotiations
+commenced. The city was filled with men, watching their progress, not
+only statesmen, but speculators eager to take advantage of the change
+in the price of stocks, which rose and fell with the wavering
+character of the proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>After expressing the pacific feelings of their government, the English
+ministers stated the three points which would probably arise, and on
+which they were instructed:</p>
+
+<p>1. The right of search to obtain seamen, and the claim of his
+Britannic Majesty to the perpetual allegiance of his subjects, whether
+naturalized in America or not.</p>
+
+<p>2. The Indian allies were to have a definite boundary fixed for their
+territory.</p>
+
+<p>3. There must be a revision of the boundary line between the United
+States and the adjacent British colonies.</p>
+
+<p>The question of the fisheries, it was intimated, would also come up.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page180" name="page180"></a>(p. 180)</span> The American legation replied, that they had instructions
+upon the first and third propositions, but not on the second, nor on
+the subject of the fisheries. They also were instructed to obtain a
+definition of blockade, and to consider claims for indemnity in
+certain cases of seizure. After some discussion, the American embassy
+inquired if the pacification and settlement of a boundary for the
+Indians was a <i>sine qua non</i>. The reply was, yes. It was then asked if
+it was intended to preclude the United States from purchasing lands of
+the Indians, whose possessions clearly lay within the limits of their
+territory. An affirmative answer was given. The native tribes were to
+be kept simply as a barrier between the possessions of the two
+countries. On being told that no instructions had been given on this
+point, the English embassy expressed great surprise, and declared that
+they could do nothing until farther advices from their government. A
+messenger was therefore despatched to England that night, and the two
+embassies, after meeting next day to arrange a protocol, adjourned
+till the decision of the English cabinet could be received.</p>
+
+<p>Nine days after, Lord Castlereagh, elated with his success as English
+minister to the headquarters of the allied armies, on their way to
+Paris,&mdash;exulting over the downfall of Napoleon, and representing in
+himself the intoxication of the English people at the overthrow
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page181" name="page181"></a>(p. 181)</span> of their rival&mdash;haughty, unscrupulous, and overbearing,
+swept into Ghent with a train of twenty carriages, on his way to the
+great Congress of Vienna, where European diplomacy, in all its
+monstrous deformity and rottenness, was to be exhibited to the world.</p>
+
+<p>The next day the embassies met, and the reply of the English
+government was rendered. In the first place, the Indian boundary
+question was declared a <i>sine qua non</i>. The question then arose, what
+would become of the hundreds of American citizens residing at that
+time within the limits thus to be drawn. The reply was, they must
+shift for themselves.</p>
+
+<p>In the second place, the entire jurisdiction of the northern lakes,
+extending from Lake Ontario to Lake Superior, where our squadrons were
+riding victorious, must be surrendered to the British government, the
+United States not being permitted to erect even a military post on the
+southern shore, on their own soil, nor keep those already established
+there. As a backer to this insolent demand, the legation affirmed that
+the United States ought to consider it moderate, since England might
+justly have claimed a cession of territory within the States. Beyond
+Lake Superior, the question of boundary was open to discussion.
+Another item in this protocol required the surrender of that part of
+Maine over which a direct route from Halifax to Canada would
+necessarily pass. When asked what <span class="pagenum"><a id="page182" name="page182"></a>(p. 182)</span> they proposed to do with
+those islands in the Passamaquoddy Bay, recently captured by the
+English, they replied, these were not subjects of discussion,
+belonging, of course, to Great Britain. They farther informed the
+American Legation that this extraordinary and magnanimous offer, on
+the part of his majesty, was not to remain open for any length of
+time&mdash;that if delay was demanded till instructions could be received
+from across the ocean on the one single question of Indian boundary,
+it would be considered withdrawn, and the English government feel
+itself at liberty to make other and less generous demands, as
+circumstances might indicate.</p>
+
+<p>To such arrogant claims but one answer could be given, and Gallatin,
+in sending them home, wrote that all negotiations might be considered
+at an end, and that no course was left for the United States but "in
+union and a vigorous prosecution of the war." Mr. Clay accepted an
+invitation to visit Paris, and Mr. Adams prepared to return to St.
+Petersburgh.</p>
+
+<p>While this news was slowly traversing the Atlantic in the cartel John
+Adams, the victories of Brown, Macomb, and Macdonough, were
+electrifying the nation.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Oct. 10.</span>
+
+<p>On the 10th of October the President transmitted a message to
+Congress, with the despatches received from Ghent, and the protocol of
+the English legation. Their reading was listened <span class="pagenum"><a id="page183" name="page183"></a>(p. 183)</span> to with
+breathless silence, and as the extraordinary claims set forth by
+England became one after another clearly revealed, the astonishment of
+the members exceeded all bounds, and they gazed at each other
+incredulously. The Federalists were paralyzed with disappointment. The
+party had never received such a blow since the commencement of the
+war. Their arguments were prostrated. They had always represented
+England as desirous of peace, fighting only because she was forced to
+by a reckless, unprincipled administration and party. Towards the
+nation at large she cherished no hostile feelings, and entertained no
+ultimate sinister designs. But the mask was now snatched away, and she
+stood revealed in all her arrogance and injustice. If any thing more
+than the ravages on our coast was needed to bind the nation together
+in one determined effort, it was furnished in these despatches. As the
+news spread on every side, the passions of men were kindled into rage.
+What, burn up our victorious war-ships on those great mediterraneans,
+the command of which had been gained by such vast expenditures and
+such heroic conduct&mdash;abandon forts standing on our own soil, around
+which such valiant blood had been shed? "Never, never," responded from
+every lip.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely less excitement was produced by the discussion of the Indian
+boundary question. Stripped <span class="pagenum"><a id="page184" name="page184"></a>(p. 184)</span> of its false pretences, it
+looked solely to the prevention of all settlement on our part, of the
+North-western territory, and designed to bar us forever from acquiring
+possessions in that quarter. To give some show of fairness to the
+transaction, it was proposed that both countries should be restricted
+from purchasing the land of the Indians, but leave the market open to
+the whole world beside. In short, that vast territory, including a
+large portion of Ohio, all of Michigan, Illinois and Indiana, must not
+only be surrendered by us, but placed under the complete control of
+the British government, whose ships of war were alone to sail the
+waters that washed its northern limits, and whose fortifications were
+to awe the inhabitants that occupied it. Never before had the cry of
+war rung so loudly over the land, and the nation began to prepare for
+the approaching conflict with an earnestness and determination that
+promised results worthy of itself and the cause for which it
+struggled. The Federalist journals came at last to the rescue,
+declaring that the terms offered were too humiliating and degrading to
+be entertained for a moment. Only one paper in Boston was besotted
+enough to assert that they were honorable and ought to be accepted.</p>
+
+<p>Congress, after the reception of this protocol and the accompanying
+despatches, took a different tone, and when the question of ways and
+means for the coming year was taken up, a spirit was exhibited, that
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page185" name="page185"></a>(p. 185)</span> since the declaration of war, had never been witnessed in
+its deliberations. The fear and hesitation which were weighing it
+down, vanished, and it began to assume the character and exhibit the
+qualities belonging to it, but which the spirit of faction had kept in
+abeyance. The Legislatures of the different states responded to the
+sentiments of the commissioners&mdash;declaring that the terms proposed
+were insulting and disgraceful, and called for a vigorous prosecution
+of the war. New York voted a local force of 12,000 men, and Virginia
+followed her example.</p>
+
+<p>It was a grand stroke of policy, on the part of the administration, to
+fling those despatches at once into Congress and thus before the
+nation. Their sudden publication took the British Ministry by
+surprise, for it exposed their extraordinary demands to the whole
+realm, and they remonstrated against such undiplomatic conduct.</p>
+
+<p>Before the Convention of Ghent the English press ridiculed
+concessions, declaring that punishment must be inflicted on the
+Americans, and they be chastised into humility and supplication. The
+war with us was a Lilliputian affair compared to the struggles out of
+which England had come victorious, and the Convention was not looked
+upon so much as the meeting of Commissioners to adjust things
+amicably, as furnishing the opportunity for the American government to
+make a request to have hostilities cease. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page186" name="page186"></a>(p. 186)</span> But the disasters
+to Drummond, at Fort Erie, to Prevost at Plattsburgh, and the utter
+demolition of the British fleet on Champlain, together with the
+repulse from Baltimore, acted as a condenser on much of this vapor.
+<span class="sidenote">Nov. 4.</span> The vast expenditures wasted on the Canadian
+frontier were now all to be renewed, newer and stronger armies were to
+be transported to our shores, and when the Prince Regent opened
+Parliament he plainly hinted that it would be well to avoid all this,
+if possible. The arrival of the despatches which the President had
+laid before Congress, containing the protocol of the English Embassy,
+created a deep sensation in both houses of Parliament. The claims set
+up by the English government were loudly denounced by many of the
+members, and it was soon apparent that if the war was pressed to make
+them good, a large opposition party would be formed, not only in
+Parliament but in the country. Sixty manufacturing towns sent in
+petitions for peace. Cobbett, who had all along defended the conduct
+of the United States, was unsparing in his flagellations of the
+British government, and of those papers that advocated the war.</p>
+
+<p>While the war question was passing through these phases in England,
+and on the continent, Congress was preparing to call out the whole
+resources of the country. But a second despatch received from Ghent,
+stating that negotiations were resumed and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page187" name="page187"></a>(p. 187)</span> that the British
+government had receded from the Indian boundary question, awakened
+lively hopes that peace would be secured.</p>
+
+<p>But the energy with which Congress had entered on the question of ways
+and means, began to expend itself in party strife. Monroe's plan for
+raising a standing force of 80,000 men to serve for two years; a bill
+authorizing the enlistment of minors; and Dallas' National Bank
+scheme, to relieve the finances of the country, after fierce
+discussions and many modifications, one after another fell to the
+ground. In the mean time, the treasury was compelled to subsist on the
+issue of Treasury notes, which as business paper were worth only 78
+per cent.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Dec. 15.</span>
+
+<p>New tax bills were soon after passed&mdash;laying taxes on carriages
+according to their value; 20 cts. per gallon on distilled spirits;
+increasing a hundred per cent. the tax on auction duties, and 50 per
+cent. on postage. Heavy duties were also placed on most goods of
+domestic manufacture, with the exception of cotton, and a direct tax
+of six millions was levied on the nation.</p>
+
+<p>As time passed on, and no farther tidings was received from Ghent,
+Congress again took up and finally passed the bill for the enlistment
+of minors. The Legislatures of Connecticut and Massachusetts
+immediately passed acts requiring the judges of these respective
+states to discharge on habeas corpus all <span class="pagenum"><a id="page188" name="page188"></a>(p. 188)</span> enlistments made
+under the provisions of the bill, and to punish with fine and
+imprisonment all who engaged in it, and removed minors out of the
+state to prevent their discharge.</p>
+
+<p>These acts of Congress, however, did not avail to help the government
+out of the troubles that were once more gathering thick about it.
+Everything was at a stand still for lack of funds&mdash;even the recruiting
+service got on slowly. In the mean time, negotiations for peace did
+not wear a very encouraging aspect, while the gain of the Federalists
+in some of the states, in the recent elections, and the Hartford
+Convention, helped to swell the evils under which the administration
+labored.</p>
+
+<p>The conscription scheme would not work in many of the states, and
+resort was had to the old system of raising 40,000 volunteers for
+twelve months, and the acceptance of as many more for local defence.</p>
+
+<a id="img004" name="img004"></a>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/img004.jpg" width="500" height="287" alt="" title="">
+<p class="smcap">PAINFUL MARCH OF VOLUNTEERS.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The administration then turned its attention to the navy, the pride
+and glory of the country, and a bill was passed Congress authorizing
+the equipment of twenty small cruisers. Under its provisions two small
+squadrons of five vessels each, one to be commanded by Porter and the
+other by Perry, had been set on foot, whose object was to inflict on
+the British West Indies the havoc and destruction with which the enemy
+had visited our coast. But it was difficult to obtain seamen, as most
+of those who had enlisted during the last year <span class="pagenum"><a id="page189" name="page189"></a>(p. 189)</span> had been
+sent to the northern lakes to serve on fresh water&mdash;a duty always
+unpalatable to a sailor. Our vessels of war being blockaded, we had no
+occasion for seamen on the coast, and could find employment for them
+on the lakes alone. Crowningshield, who had succeeded Jones as
+Secretary of the Navy, actually recommended a conscription of seamen.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, Great Britain had concentrated in Canada a larger
+force than she had ever before assembled there, ready to march on the
+states, while Cockburn, in possession of Cumberland island, threatened
+the coasts of Georgia and South Carolina with the same ravages that
+marked his course in the Chesapeake. Added to all this, a heavy force
+was known to be on its way to New Orleans, which the government had
+neglected to defend, and hence expected to see fall into the hands of
+the enemy. The prospect was black as night around the
+administration&mdash;not a ray of light visited it from any quarter of the
+heavens. Funds and troops and ships had never been so scarce, while
+overpowering fleets and armies were assembling on our coasts and
+frontiers. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 17, 1815.</span> In the midst of all this, as if
+on purpose to drive the government to despair, Dallas came out with a
+new report on the state of the Treasury, in which he informed it that
+the year had closed with $19,000,000 of unpaid debts, to meet which
+there was less than $2,000,000 on hand, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page190" name="page190"></a>(p. 190)</span> $4,500,000 of
+taxes not yet collected. The revenue was estimated at $11,000,000, of
+which only one million was from imports, the rest from taxes. While he
+thus exhibited the beggared condition of the Treasury, he informed the
+administration that fifty millions would be needed to meet the
+expenditures of the coming year, and gravely asked where it all was to
+come from. The government looked on in dismay, and to what measures it
+would have been compelled to resort for relief it is impossible to
+say; but in reviewing that period one shudders to contemplate the
+probable results of another year of war, and another Hartford
+Convention. But like the sun suddenly bursting through a dark and
+ominous thundercloud, just before he sinks beneath the horizon, came
+at length the news of the great victory at New Orleans, and the
+conclusion of peace at Ghent. Never before was an administration so
+loudly called upon to ask that public thanks might be offered for
+deliverance from great perils.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page191" name="page191"></a>(p. 191)</span> CHAPTER X.<br>
+<span class="smcap">HARTFORD CONVENTION.<br>
+1814.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Attitude of New England &mdash; Governor Strong &mdash; Views and
+ purposes of the Federalists &mdash; Anxiety of Madison &mdash;
+ Prudence of Colonel Jesup &mdash; Result of the Convention &mdash;
+ Fears of the people &mdash; Fate of the Federalists.</p>
+
+<p>While Government was thus struggling to avert the perils that every
+day grew darker around it, and the negotiations at Ghent were drawing
+to a conclusion, serious events were occurring in the New England
+States.</p>
+
+<p>Although the ravages of the enemy along our coast during the summer,
+and our victories at the north in autumn, together with the insulting
+demands of England, had seriously weakened the Federalist power, and
+brought it into still greater disrepute with the mass of the people,
+and passing events admonished delay, still they resolved to carry out
+a favorite plan of calling a Convention of the disaffected States, to
+consult on the best mode of defending themselves, and of forcing the
+administration <span class="pagenum"><a id="page192" name="page192"></a>(p. 192)</span> into the adoption of their measures, and to
+take steps towards amending the Constitution. New England had all
+along denied the right of the General Government to call out the
+militia, except for the defence of the States in which they resided,
+and demanded the control of her own troops, and consequently of a
+large portion of her own revenue. Heavy complaints were also made
+against the direct taxes levied, and many refused to ride in coaches,
+or use those things taxed, thus placing themselves beside the
+revolutionary patriots, and making the General Government resemble
+England in its oppression.</p>
+
+<p>Massachusetts, with Governor Strong as its Executive head, took the
+lead in all movements designed to carry out these projects.
+Resolutions had passed the Legislature, raising an army of ten
+thousand men, and a million of money to support it. This army was to
+be officered by Governor Strong, and its movements directed by
+Federalist councils. Such a large force, raised not to aid the
+administration to carry on the war, but for selfish ends, naturally
+awakened the gravest fears, and the President saw in it the first step
+towards armed opposition. All this may be defensible, but the gallant
+sons of Kentucky, with their gray-haired but chivalrous Governor at
+their head, streaming through the northern forests, to drive back from
+the feeble settlements of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page193" name="page193"></a>(p. 193)</span> Ohio the savage hordes that were
+laying them waste, and Governor Strong, bidding the militia of his
+State stay at home and take care of themselves, present a contrast so
+widely different, that no sophistry can make them appear equally
+patriotic and unselfish.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Oct. 18.</span>
+
+<p>In order to bring the whole eastern section into similar measures, and
+to give union to the opposition, a resolution was passed calling a
+Convention of the New England States, to meet at Hartford, December
+15th, to deliberate on the best method of defence against the enemy,
+and to take measures for procuring amendments to the Constitution,
+which the Federalists had ascertained, since the war began, to be a
+most worthless instrument. The letter accompanying this resolution
+being laid before the Connecticut Legislature, seven delegates were
+appointed to the Convention, to meet the twelve sent from
+Massachusetts; Rhode Island sent four, making in all twenty-three, to
+which three County delegates from New Hampshire were added. Vermont
+refused to have any thing to do with the matter. These resolutions did
+not pass without violent opposition in each of the Legislatures.
+Holmes, of Massachusetts, openly declared his suspicions that
+Massachusetts designed to head a combination for the dissolution of
+the Union. The raising of an army of ten thousand men, not subject to
+the orders of the General Government, confirmed his fears, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page194" name="page194"></a>(p. 194)</span> gave a practical character to opinions hostile to the
+confederacy.</p>
+
+<p>Harrison Gray Otis and John Cabot, were leaders of the Massachusetts
+delegation.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Dec. 15.</span>
+
+<p>No body of men ever assembled under such universal execration and
+odium as did these delegates. Except the few Federalist journals in
+New England, the entire press of the nation denounced them, one and
+all, as traitors.</p>
+
+<p>George Cabot being elected President, and Timothy Dwight, Secretary,
+the Convention proceeded to deliberate on the momentous questions they
+had proposed to discuss, with closed doors. Madison was in trepidation
+and could speak of nothing but the Convention, and sent Colonel Jesup
+to watch it. To prevent his design from being suspected, he directed
+this gallant officer to make Hartford a recruiting station.</p>
+
+<p>Jesup had had interviews with Governor Tompkins, to ascertain what aid
+he could afford in case it became necessary to resort to force. He was
+satisfied that the treasonable designs of the delegates had been much
+exaggerated, but he wished to be prepared for any emergency, and
+having arranged his plans, quietly awaited the result of their
+deliberations. He was in constant correspondence with Monroe,
+Secretary of War, and did much towards allaying the fears of the
+President, and promised if <span class="pagenum"><a id="page195" name="page195"></a>(p. 195)</span> open treason exhibited itself, to
+crush it and its authors, with one decisive blow. Ingratiating himself
+with some of the delegates of the Convention and with the authorities
+of Hartford by his conciliatory and agreeable manner; and winning the
+respect of all by his prudent conduct, he soon became convinced that a
+resolution for disunion, if offered, could not be carried.</p>
+
+<p>At length, after three weeks of secret session, this dreaded
+Convention, on whose mysterious sittings the eyes of the nation had
+been turned, adjourned, and every one waited with anxiety to hear the
+decision to which it had come. The shadowy forms of disunion and
+treason had so long been seen presiding over its labors, that some
+monstrous birth was expected. But nature moved on in her accustomed
+courses, and no shock was felt by the republic, and instead of a shell
+flung into the Union, rending it asunder, there appeared a long and
+heavy document containing the collective wisdom of these twenty-six
+men. After going over the transgressions of the administration, from
+first to last, it passed to the defects of the Constitution. It
+modestly remarked that the enumeration of all the improvements of
+which this instrument was susceptible, and the proposal of all the
+amendments necessary to make it perfect, was a task which the
+Convention had "not thought proper to assume." After paying this
+flattering testimony <span class="pagenum"><a id="page196" name="page196"></a>(p. 196)</span> to the grand and glorious intellects
+who framed the Constitution, it proceeded to mention six amendments on
+which there should be immediate action. The first related to the
+apportionment of representation among the slave States. The second to
+the admission of new States, restricting the powers of Congress in
+this respect, in order to keep down western influence. The third, to
+the right to pass restrictive and embargo acts, and carry on offensive
+war. The fifth, to exclude foreigners from holding places of honor,
+trust or profit under Government, and the last to limiting the
+Presidential office to one term.</p>
+
+<p>Resolutions and recommendations in accordance with these sentiments,
+were sent to the separate states represented in that Convention.</p>
+
+<p>Delegates were also appointed to repair to Washington to remonstrate
+with the President, some say to threaten him, and insist on his
+resignation. No treason appeared in all this, but the serious
+discussion of the question of disunion in the preamble, and the
+hypothetical cases put, in which such a step would be justifiable,
+showed that it had been mooted and seriously entertained by some of
+the members.</p>
+
+<p>The tone of the paper was bad, egotistical, and mutinous. It
+endeavored to arraign the states of New England against the
+government&mdash;urged them to resist forcible drafts and conscriptions,
+and raise <span class="pagenum"><a id="page197" name="page197"></a>(p. 197)</span> armies of their own to co-operate each with the
+other in time of need.</p>
+
+<p>This exposé, however, did not satisfy the Democrats, who insisted that
+some deep-laid scheme was back of all this&mdash;that the secret records of
+the Convention would disclose blacker transactions than had yet seen
+the light, and from that time on, those twenty delegates have been
+stigmatized as traitors. They, on the other hand, have defended
+themselves from the aspersion, and declared that they were governed by
+the highest patriotic motives and love to the union.</p>
+
+<p>The truth lies, doubtless, somewhere between these extremes. The error
+of the accusers consists in making one, or two, or more delegates
+represent the Convention. There probably were men present whose
+political animosities had carried them so far beyond the limits of
+reason, that they would rather dissolve the union than live two years
+longer under the sway of Madison and his party. These views might have
+been expressed, but the Convention, in refusing to endorse them, was
+not responsible for them.</p>
+
+<p>But laying all this aside, there is no doubt that the Convention was
+called to organize one section of the republic against the other, and
+it depended on circumstances entirely to what extent that opposition
+should go, and what form it took. This may not be treason, and yet be
+nearly akin to it. It depends very much on the simple question whether
+the evils <span class="pagenum"><a id="page198" name="page198"></a>(p. 198)</span> contemplated, as justifying open opposition, are
+<i>real</i> or <i>imaginary</i>. A deliberate effort to ruin New England and
+deprive her of her constitutional rights, would certainly justify
+secession. All this the Federalists believed the government had done,
+and that party tyranny and oppression could no farther go. The light
+evils under which they suffered had become so magnified, in the heat
+of party strife, that many were prepared to act precisely as others
+would do under real wrongs.</p>
+
+<p>The obloquy that has fallen upon that Convention was merited. The time
+it chose for its session, when the country was staggering under the
+weight of a war which, however unjustifiably begun, it could not then
+close with honor or justice, and the lordly tone it assumed to
+Congress&mdash;the cold and unpatriotic feelings that characterized its
+deliberations, merit the deepest condemnation. Under a change of
+fortunes and a continuance of the war, it might, and probably would,
+have grown into a shape of evil. As events turned out, it has proved a
+blessing, for it stands as a beacon, warning all leaders of party
+factions of their fate, who, in national distress, cripple the
+government, and, by their hostility, help the enemy to inflict sorer
+evils and deeper disgrace upon a common country. It also shows how
+local interests, views, and feelings, however magnified at the time by
+peculiar circumstances, are derided or forgotten, in a movement that
+affects the fate of a hemisphere.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page199" name="page199"></a>(p. 199)</span> THE INVASION.<br>
+CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<p class="resume">General Jackson appointed Major-General &mdash; Hostility of
+ Spain &mdash; Gallant defence of Fort Bowyer &mdash; Seizure of
+ Pensacola &mdash; Jackson at New Orleans &mdash; Approach and landing
+ of the British &mdash; Jackson proclaims martial law &mdash; Night
+ attack on the British &mdash; Jackson entrenches himself &mdash; First
+ attack of the British &mdash; Second attack &mdash; Final Assault &mdash;
+ The battle and the victory &mdash; Jackson fined by Judge Hall &mdash;
+ Arrival of the Treaty of Peace &mdash; Great Rejoicings &mdash;
+ Delegates of the Hartford Convention &mdash; Remarks on the
+ treaty.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, great anxiety was felt for the fate of New Orleans,
+towards which an imposing armament was hastening, bearing a veteran
+army fresh from the victorious fields of Spain. England had loaned
+this army to feudalism in Europe for the overthrow of free principles
+there, and intoxicated with success, resolved to use it to carry out
+here the same tyrannical system which has ever since been covering her
+with infamy and for which the final day of reckoning has not yet
+arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Jackson had been appointed Major-General in place of Harrison, who
+resigned, and given the command <span class="pagenum"><a id="page200" name="page200"></a>(p. 200)</span> of the southern army to
+which was entrusted the protection of the coast near the mouth of the
+Mississippi. Pensacola, then under Spanish authority, was the resort
+of British emissaries, who stirred up the surrounding savages to
+massacre and bloodshed, and he determined as a first step to take
+active measures against it. <span class="sidenote">August.</span> He sent Captain Gordon
+to reconnoitre the place, who reported, on his return, that he had
+seen a number of soldiers and several hundred savages in British
+uniform under drill by British officers. Jackson immediately
+despatched this report to government. Under such a palpable violation
+of treaty stipulations there was only one course to be pursued, and
+Gen. Armstrong, the Secretary of War, issued an order authorizing
+Jackson to attack the town. This order was made out; but, by some
+mysterious process, was so long in getting into the post-office, that
+it never reached its destination till the 17th of January the next
+year. Jackson waited patiently for the sanction of his government to
+move forward, not wishing that his first important step as
+Major-General in the regular army should meet the disapproval of those
+who had entrusted him with power. But a proclamation, issued by a
+British officer named Nicholls, and dated Pensacola, calling on all
+the negroes and savages, nay, even the Americans themselves, to rally
+to the British standard, put an end to his indecision.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page201" name="page201"></a>(p. 201)</span> In the mean time, Nicholls made an attempt on Fort Bowyer, a
+small redoubt, garrisoned by one hundred and twenty men, and defended
+by twenty pieces of cannon. This fortress commanded the entrance from
+the Gulf to Mobile. <span class="sidenote">Sept. 12.</span> To capture it, four British
+ships, carrying ninety guns, and a land force of over seven hundred
+men were despatched from Pensacola. On the 15th, the ships took up
+their position within musket-shot of the fort, and opened their fire.
+The land force, in the mean time, had gained the rear, and commenced
+an attack. Major Lawrence, with the brave little garrison under his
+command, met this double onset with the coolness of a veteran.
+Scattering the motley collection under Nicholls, with a few discharges
+of grape-shot, he turned his entire attention to the vessels of war.
+Being in such close range, the cannonading on both sides was terrific.
+The incessant and heavy explosions shook that little redoubt to its
+foundations; but at the end of three hours, the smoke slowly curled
+away from its battered sides, revealing the flag still flying aloft,
+and the begrimed cannoniers standing sternly beside their pieces.
+After the firing of the enemy ceased, the ship Hermes was seen
+drifting helplessly on a sand-bank, while the other vessels were
+crowding all sail seaward. The former soon after grounded within six
+hundred yards of the fort, whose guns opened on her anew <span class="pagenum"><a id="page202" name="page202"></a>(p. 202)</span>
+with tremendous effect, and she soon blew up. Out of the one hundred
+and seventy who composed her crew, only twenty escaped. The other
+ships suffered severely, and the total loss of the enemy was one ship
+burned, and two hundred and thirty-two men killed and wounded, while
+only eight of the garrison were killed. Nicholls effected his retreat
+to Pensacola, where the governor received him as his guest, and threw
+open the public stores to the soldiers. On the flag-staff of the fort
+were "entwined the colors of Spain and England," as if on purpose to
+announce that all neutrality was at an end.</p>
+
+<p>These things coming to Jackson's ear, he resolved to delay no longer
+but get possession of the town and fort at once, "peaceably if he
+could, forcibly if he must." <span class="sidenote">Nov. 6.</span> He immediately
+hastened to Fort Montgomery, where he had assembled four thousand men,
+and putting himself at their head, in four days encamped within two
+miles of the place, and despatched a flag to the Spanish governor,
+disclosing his object and purpose. The messenger was fired upon from
+the fort, and compelled to return. Jackson's fiery nature was
+instantly aroused by this insult, yet remembering that he was acting
+without the sanction of government, he resolved still to negotiate.
+Having, at length, succeeded in opening a Correspondence with the
+governor, he told him <span class="pagenum"><a id="page203" name="page203"></a>(p. 203)</span> that he had come to take possession of
+the town, and hold it for Spain till she was able to preserve her
+neutrality. The governor refusing entirely to be relieved from his
+charge, Jackson put his columns in motion and marched straight on the
+town. At the entrance, a battery of two cannon opened on his central
+column; but these being speedily carried by storm, together with two
+fortified houses, the troops, with loud shouts, pressed forward, and
+in a few minutes were masters of the place. The Spanish governor no
+sooner saw the American soldiers with loud hurrahs inundating the
+streets, than he rushed forward imploring mercy, and promising an
+immediate surrender. Jackson at once ordered the recall to be sounded,
+and retired without the town. The commandant of the fort, however,
+refused to surrender it, when Jackson ordered an assault. The former
+wisely averted the approaching blow by lowering his flag. The British
+fled, taking with them their allies, four hundred of whom being
+negroes, were carried to the West Indies, and sold for slaves.</p>
+
+<p>Having thus chastised the Spanish governor, and broken up the plans
+laid to renew the Indian war, Jackson took up his march for New
+Orleans, against which he had no doubt the large force that had left
+the eastern coast was directed. He established his headquarters there,
+on the first of December; and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page204" name="page204"></a>(p. 204)</span> three days after, the news
+that a large British fleet was approaching the coast, spread through
+the city. The report was soon confirmed, and Jackson, whom danger
+always tranquilized, while it filled him with tenfold energy, began to
+prepare for the approaching shock.</p>
+
+<p>New Orleans, numbering at that time only thirty thousand inhabitants,
+was but recently purchased from France, and the population, being
+composed mostly of those in whose veins flowed Spanish and French
+blood, did not feel the same patriotic ardor that animated the Eastern
+cities. Many were known to be hostile, and were suspected of carrying
+on treasonable correspondence with the enemy. Feeling that he had but
+a slender hold on the city, and knowing that secret foes watched and
+reported all his movements, Jackson was compelled to act with extreme
+caution.</p>
+
+<p>This hostility, as it were, in his own camp, added immensely to the
+embarrassments that surrounded him. But calm, keen, resolute,
+tireless, and full of courage, he soon inspired the patriotic citizens
+with confidence. Resources they had not dreamed of, sprang up at his
+bidding. But it needed all the renown he had won, and all his personal
+influence, to impart the faintest promise of success.</p>
+
+<p>He had brought only a portion of his troops with him from Pensacola.
+But no sooner did he arrive, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page205" name="page205"></a>(p. 205)</span> than he inspected narrowly the
+inlets, bayous, and channels, marked out the location of works,
+ordered obstructions raised, and then called on the different States
+to send him help. A thousand regulars were immediately ordered to New
+Orleans, while the Tennessee militia, under General Carrol, and the
+mounted riflemen, under General Coffee, hastened as of old, to his
+side. Concealing as much as possible the weakness of his force, and
+the bad appointments of many of the soldiers, he strained every nerve
+to increase the means of defence. The French inhabitants forgot their
+hostility to the Americans in greater hate of the English, while many
+others, who, hitherto, had taken little or no interest in the war,
+roused by the sudden danger that threatened them, flew to arms. The
+free negroes and refugees from St. Domingo, formed themselves into a
+black regiment, and were incorporated into the army. Jackson's energy
+and courage soon changed the whole current of feeling, and, day and
+night, the sounds of martial preparation echoed along the streets of
+the city. The excitement swelled higher and higher, as the hostile
+fleet gradually closed towards the mouth of the Mississippi. But one
+thought occupied every bosom&mdash;one topic became the theme of all
+conversation. Consternation and courage moved side by side; for while
+the most believed Jackson to be invincible, others, carefully weighing
+the force <span class="pagenum"><a id="page206" name="page206"></a>(p. 206)</span> of the armament approaching, could not but
+anticipate discomfiture and destruction. Nor was this surprising; for
+a fleet of more than eighty sail, under the command of Admiral
+Cochrane, carrying on their decks eleven thousand veteran troops, led
+by men of renown, was advancing on the city. Besides this formidable
+land force, there were twelve thousand seamen and marines. The facts
+alone were sufficient to cause anxiety and alarm; but rumor magnified
+them fourfold. To resist all this, New Orleans had no vessels of war,
+no strong fortresses, no army of veteran troops. General Jackson, with
+his undisciplined and half-armed yeomanry, alone stood between the
+town and destruction. He was not ignorant of the tremendous force
+advancing against him; but still he was calm and resolute. To the
+panic-stricken women, who roamed the streets, filling the air with
+shrieks and cries of alarm, he said, "<i>The enemy shall never reach the
+city.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>New Orleans, situated on the eastern bank of the Mississippi, was
+accessible not only through the various mouths of the river, but also
+with small vessels through lakes Borgne and Ponchartrain, and was
+therefore a difficult place to defend, for no one could tell by what
+way, or by how many ways the enemy would approach. Jackson saw that he
+would be compelled to divide his forces in order to guard every
+avenue. In the mean time, while he watched <span class="pagenum"><a id="page207" name="page207"></a>(p. 207)</span> the approaching
+force, he kept his eye on the city. The press did not manfully sustain
+him, and the legislature, then in session, looked upon his actions
+with suspicion, if not with hostile feelings. Although a native of
+another State, and having no personal interest in the fate of the
+place, whose authorities treated him with coldness, he nevertheless,
+determined to save it at all hazards, and while apparently bending his
+vast energies to meet an external foe, boldly assumed the control of
+the municipal authority, declared martial law, and when Judge Hall
+liberated a traitor whom he had imprisoned, sternly ordered the Judge
+himself into confinement.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Dec. 9.</span>
+
+<p>At length, the excited inhabitants were told that the British fleet
+had reached the coast; sixty sail being seen near the mouth of the
+Mississippi. Commodore Patterson immediately despatched Lieutenant
+Jones with five gun-boats to watch its motions. This spirited
+commander, in passing through Lake Borgne, discovered that the enemy,
+instead of approaching direct by the river, was advancing up the
+lakes. In hovering around them to ascertain their designs, he
+unfortunately got becalmed, and in that position was attacked by forty
+barges, containing twelve hundred men. Notwithstanding he had under
+him less than two hundred men, he refused to surrender, and gallantly
+returned the fire of the enemy. For a whole hour he stubbornly
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page208" name="page208"></a>(p. 208)</span> maintained the unequal conquest; but, at length, after
+killing nearly double his entire force, he was compelled to strike his
+flag.</p>
+
+<p>The British had now complete control of lakes Ponchartrain and Borgne,
+and advancing up the latter, entered a canal, and finally effected a
+landing on the levee, about eight miles from the city. This levee acts
+as a bank to keep the river from the inland, which is lower than the
+surface of the water. It varies in width from a few hundred yards to
+two or three miles, and is covered with plantations. Thus, now almost
+like a causeway, and again like an elevated plateau, it stretches away
+from the city, with the river on one side, and an impassable swamp on
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>The forts that commanded the river were, by this man&oelig;uvre of the
+enemy, rendered comparatively useless, and an open road to the city
+lay before him. Jackson no sooner heard that the British had effected
+a landing, than he determined at once to attack them before their
+heavy artillery and the main body of the army could be brought
+forward. On the 23d, therefore, a few hours after they had reached the
+banks of the Mississippi, his columns were in motion, and by evening
+halted within two miles of the hostile force. His plans were
+immediately laid&mdash;the schooner of war, Caroline, commanded by
+Commodore Patterson, was ordered to drop quietly down the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page209" name="page209"></a>(p. 209)</span>
+river, soon after dark, and anchor abreast the British encampment.
+General Coffee, with between six and seven hundred men, was directed
+to skirt the swamp to the left of the levee, and gain, undiscovered,
+the enemy's rear; while he himself, with thirteen hundred troops,
+would march directly down the river along the highway, and assail them
+in front. The guns of the Caroline were to be the signal for a general
+attack. She, unmolested, swept noiselessly down with the current,
+gained her position, dropped her anchors, and opened her fire. The
+thunder and blaze of her guns, as grape-shot and balls came rattling
+and crashing into the camp of the British, were the first intimation
+they received of an attack. At the same time, Generals Coffee and
+Jackson gave the orders to advance. Night had now arrived, and
+although there was a moon, the fast-rising mist from the swamps and
+river mingling with the smoke of the guns, so dimmed her light that
+objects could be discerned only a short distance, save the watch-fires
+of the enemy, which burned brightly through the gloom. Guided by
+these, Coffee continued to advance, when suddenly he was met by a
+sharp fire. The enemy, retiring before the shot of the Caroline, had
+left the bank of the river, not dreaming of a foe in their rear.
+Coffee was taken by surprise; but this brave commander had been in too
+many perilous <span class="pagenum"><a id="page210" name="page210"></a>(p. 210)</span> scenes to be disconcerted, and ordering the
+charge to be sounded, swept the field before him.</p>
+
+<p>Again and again the British rallied, only to be driven from their
+position. At length they made a determined stand in a grove of orange
+trees, behind a ditch which was lined with a fence. But the excited
+troops charged boldly over the ditch, fence, and all, and lighting up
+the orange grove with the fire of their guns, and awakening its echoes
+with their loud huzzas, pressed fiercely after the astonished enemy,
+and forced them back to the river. Here the latter turned at bay, and
+for half an hour, maintained a determined fight. But being swept by
+such close and destructive volleys, they at length clambered down the
+levee, and turning it into a breastwork, repelled every attempt to
+dislodge them.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, Jackson had advanced along the river. Guided by the
+guns of the Caroline, and the rockets of the enemy, that rose hissing
+from the gloom, he pressed swiftly forward. He had given directions to
+move by heads of companies, and as soon as they reached the enemy, to
+deploy into line, which was to be extended till it joined that of Gen.
+Coffee, thus forcing the British back upon the river, and keeping them
+under the guns of the Caroline. But, instead of doing this, they
+formed into line at the outset. The levee being wide where the march
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page211" name="page211"></a>(p. 211)</span> commenced, no inconvenience was felt from this order; but,
+as it grew narrower, the left wing was gradually forced in, and being
+a little in advance, crowded and drove back the centre, creating
+confusion and arresting its progress. The whole, however, continued to
+press forward, and soon came upon the enemy, entrenched behind a deep
+ditch. Jackson, perceiving the advantage of their position, ordered a
+charge at once. The troops marched up to the edge of the ditch, poured
+one destructive volley over, then leaped after. The British retired
+behind another, and another, only to be again forced to retreat. At
+length, Jackson halted; the enemy had withdrawn into the darkness, the
+Caroline had almost ceased her fire, while but random volleys were
+heard in the direction of Coffee's brigade. He knew not where to renew
+the conflict, while the rapidly increasing fog shrouded everything
+in still greater darkness and uncertainty. Finding, too, that his left
+wing had got into inextricable confusion, and that a part of Coffee's
+troops were in no better condition, he determined to withdraw.</p>
+
+<p>While these things were passing on the banks of the Mississippi, and
+gloom and uncertainty hung over New Orleans, our commissioners at
+Ghent were wrapt in pleasant slumbers, for the next day was to witness
+the signature of a treaty of peace between <span class="pagenum"><a id="page212" name="page212"></a>(p. 212)</span> the two
+countries, when the ravages of war should give place to the peaceful
+pursuits of commerce.</p>
+
+<p>Jackson had laid his plans with skill, and entertained no doubt of
+success; and but for the fact that the Caroline commenced her fire a
+little too early, and that the after false movement of his left wing
+prevented the rapid advance of the centre, he no doubt would have
+slain or captured nearly the whole three thousand opposed to him. But
+night attacks are always subject to failure through mistakes caused by
+the darkness, especially if the movements are at all complicated. A
+sudden, heavy onset, overturning every thing before it&mdash;a single,
+concentrated blow, like the fall of an avalanche&mdash;are best fitted for
+the night.</p>
+
+<p>Still, Jackson did not despair of success, and determined at daybreak
+to renew the attack. But it was soon ascertained, from prisoners and
+deserters, that by morning the enemy would be six thousand strong,
+making a disparity against him he could not hope to overcome. He
+therefore fell back to a deep ditch that stretched from the
+Mississippi, across the entire levee, to the swamp. Behind this he
+arrayed his troops, resolved, since nothing else could be done, to
+make there a determined stand. In his unsuccessful assault, he had
+lost, in killed, wounded, and prisoners, two hundred and forty men;
+while the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page213" name="page213"></a>(p. 213)</span> enemy had been weakened by nearly double that
+number.</p>
+
+<p>Jackson's first plan having failed, all his hopes now rested on a
+successful defence of his position. The gun-boats had been destroyed,
+leaving the lakes open to the hostile fleet. All the passes to the
+city had been guarded in vain. Through an unimportant and almost
+unknown canal, the enemy had passed unmolested, and landed where
+nothing but undisciplined troops lay between him and the city. Too
+strong to be assailed, the British could now complete their
+arrangements and array their strength at leisure. Undismayed, however,
+and unshaken in his confidence, Jackson gathered his little band
+behind this single ditch, and coolly surveyed his chances. He knew the
+history and character of the troops opposed to him; he knew also how
+uncertain untrained militia were in a close and hot engagement. Still
+he resolved to try the issue in a great and desperate battle. No
+sooner was this determination taken, than he set about increasing the
+strength of his position with every means in his power. He deepened
+and widened the ditch; and where it terminated in the swamp, cut down
+the trees, thus extending the line still further in, to prevent being
+outflanked. The gallant Coffee was placed here, who, with his noble
+followers, day after day, and night after night, stood knee-deep in
+the mud, and slept on the brush they <span class="pagenum"><a id="page214" name="page214"></a>(p. 214)</span> piled together to keep
+them from the water. Sluices were also opened in the levee, and the
+waters of the Mississippi turned on the plain, covering it
+breast-deep. The earth was piled still higher on the edge of the
+ditch; while cotton bales were brought and covered over to increase
+the breadth and depth of the breastwork.</p>
+
+<p>With a will unyielding as fate itself, tireless energy, and a frame of
+iron to match, Jackson no sooner set his heart on a great object, than
+he toiled towards it with a resolution&mdash;nay, almost fierceness&mdash;that
+amazed men.</p>
+
+<p>Night and day the soldiers were kept at work, the sound of the spade
+and pickaxe never ceased, while the constant rolling of wheels was
+heard, as wagons and carts sped to and from the city. Jackson, with
+his whole nature roused to the highest pitch of excitement, moved amid
+this busy scene, its soul and centre. Impervious to fatigue, he worked
+on when others sank to rest; and at midday and midnight, was seen
+reviewing his troops, or traversing the trenches to cheer the
+laborers; and for four days and nights scarcely took a moment's rest.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to the breastwork he was rearing on the east bank, he
+ordered General Morgan to take position on the right bank, opposite
+his line, and fortify it. To prevent the ships from ascending the
+river to co-operate with the army, he dispatched <span class="pagenum"><a id="page215" name="page215"></a>(p. 215)</span> Major
+Reynolds to obstruct and defend the pass of Barataria&mdash;the channel
+through which they would in all probability attempt to approach.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, the British were not idle. They had deepened the
+canal through which they had effected a landing, and thus, assisted by
+the high waters of the Mississippi, been able to bring up larger
+boats, loaded with the heavy artillery.</p>
+
+<p>On the third day, a battery was observed, erected opposite the
+Caroline, which, after the good service she did in the night attack,
+had floated to the opposite shore, where she continued to annoy the
+enemy. Jackson knew her perilous position, but there had been no wind
+sufficiently strong to enable her to stem the rapid current; and, on
+the morning of the 27th, the battery opened on her with shells and
+red-hot shot. She was soon in a blaze; and the crew, seeing the
+attempt to save her useless, escaped to the shore. Soon after, she
+blew up.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Dec. 28.</span>
+
+<p>The next day, Sir Edward Packenham ordered an attack on the American
+works. The columns advanced in beautiful order, and at the distance of
+half a mile opened their batteries, and, with bombshells and
+congreve-rockets, endeavored to send confusion among the American
+militia. But the guns of the latter were admirably served, and told
+with great effect on the exposed ranks of the enemy. The <span class="pagenum"><a id="page216" name="page216"></a>(p. 216)</span>
+Louisiana sloop of war, that lay opposite the American line, swung her
+broadside so as to bear on the advancing columns, and raked them with
+such a deadly fire that the assault was abandoned, and the army
+returned to camp, with the loss of over a hundred men, while that of
+the Americans was but seven killed and eight wounded. But among the
+slain of the latter was Colonel Henderson of the Tennessee militia, a
+man deeply lamented.</p>
+
+<p>Events were now evidently approaching a crisis; and the anxiety and
+interest deepened daily and hourly. To add to the weight which already
+pressed the heart of Jackson, he was told that the legislature had
+become frightened, and was discussing the propriety of surrendering
+the city. He immediately sent a dispatch to Governor Clairborne,
+ordering him to watch its proceedings, and the moment such a project
+should be fairly formed, to place a guard at the door of the chamber,
+and shut the members in. In his zeal and warm-hearted patriotism, or
+through misconception of the order, the governor, making sure work of
+it, turned the whole of them <i>out</i> of doors. Just before the execution
+of this high-handed measure, a committee of the legislature waited on
+Jackson, to inquire what he designed to do if compelled to abandon his
+position. "If," he replied, "I thought the hair of my head could
+divine what I should do, I would cut it off forthwith. Go back
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page217" name="page217"></a>(p. 217)</span> with this answer: say to your honorable body that if
+disaster does overtake me, and the fate of war drives me from my line
+to the city, <i>that they may expect to have a warm session</i>." To one
+who asked him afterwards what he would have done in such an emergency,
+he said, "I would have retreated to the city, <i>fired it</i>, and <i>fought
+the enemy amid the surrounding flames</i>." A more heroic speech never
+fell from the lips of a commander. New Orleans in flames and Jackson
+charging down its blazing streets, would have been one of the most
+frightful exhibitions furnished in the annals of the war.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Jan. 1, 1815.</span>
+
+<p>The British, after the attack of the 28th, occupied their whole time
+in landing heavier cannon. Having completed their arrangements, they
+resolved to make another attempt on the American works. The New Year
+opened with a heavy fog, which shrouded the whole plain and British
+encampment from sight. But, from its mysterious bosom, ominous,
+muffled sounds arose, which were distinctly heard in every part of the
+American line, and the troops stood to arms. At length, as the sun
+gathered strength, the fog lifted and parted&mdash;dimly revealing the
+whole plain. No sooner did the enemy, who had advanced their batteries
+within six hundred yards of the American intrenchments, see the long,
+black line of the latter, stretching through the haze, than a
+tremendous burst <span class="pagenum"><a id="page218" name="page218"></a>(p. 218)</span> of artillery shook the solid levee on which
+it stood. A flight of Congreve rockets followed, crossing and
+recrossing the heavens in every direction, and weaving a fiery
+net-work over the heads of the astonished but undaunted Americans. The
+first heavy explosion sent Jackson to the lines; and luckily for him
+it did; for the British having been shown by a spy the house which he
+occupied, they directed a battery upon it, and in a few minutes it was
+riddled with balls. The American artillery replied, and it was a
+constant roar of cannon till noon, when most of the English batteries
+being beaten down or damaged, they ceased their fire. One, near the
+river, continued to play on the American works till three o'clock,
+when it also became silent, and the enemy, baffled at every point,
+retired sullenly to his camp.</p>
+
+<p>The two armies, each expecting reinforcements, now rested for a week
+from decisive hostilities. In the mean time, Jackson continued to
+strengthen his works and discipline his men. A Frenchman having come
+to him to complain of damage done to his property, the latter replied
+that, as he was a man of property, he knew of no one who had a better
+right to defend it, and placing a musket in his hands, ordered him
+into the ranks.</p>
+
+<p>During this week of comparative repose, New Orleans and the two
+hostile camps presented a spectacle of the most thrilling interest.
+The British army <span class="pagenum"><a id="page219" name="page219"></a>(p. 219)</span> lay in full view of the American lines,
+their white tents looking, amid the surrounding water, like clouds of
+sail resting on the bosom of the river. At intervals were heard the
+sharp and rattling volleys of the pickets of the two armies, as they
+came in collision, while the morning and evening gun sent their stern
+challenge over the plain. There was marching and countermarching,
+strains of martial music, and all the confused sounds of a camp, when
+preparations are making for a grand and decisive blow. To the farmers,
+merchants, mechanics, and youths, who lay within the American
+intrenchments, the scene and the thoughts it awakened were new. Behind
+them stood their homes; before them, the veterans of Spain, whom, in a
+few days, they were to meet in final combat.</p>
+
+<p>In the city, the excitement kept increasing; but after the first
+battle, the patriotism of the population received a new impulse. In
+the night attack many of the troops had lost all their clothing except
+that which they wore on their backs, and hence soon began to suffer.
+No sooner was this known to the ladies than their fair hands were in
+motion; and in a short time the wants of the soldiers were supplied.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time the long-expected Kentucky troops, upwards of two
+thousand strong, arrived. Courier after courier had been sent to hurry
+their march; and the last day had been one of incredible <span class="pagenum"><a id="page220" name="page220"></a>(p. 220)</span>
+toil and speed. Only five hundred of them, however, had muskets; the
+rest were armed with fowling-pieces, and such weapons as they could
+lay hands on. Nor were there any means of supplying them, so that the
+accession of strength was comparatively trifling. Gen. Lambert, too,
+had reinforced the British with several thousand veteran troops.</p>
+
+<p>A canal in the mean time had been widened through the levee, by which
+boats were transported to the Mississippi for that portion of the army
+which was destined to act against the fortifications on the west bank,
+commanded by General Morgan. A long siege was out of the question, and
+now nothing remained to be done but to advance at once to the assault
+of the American intrenchments, or abandon the expedition. The latter
+alternative was not to be contemplated; and, on the night of the 7th,
+Jackson, surveying the encampment through his glass, discovered
+unmistakeable evidence that the enemy was meditating an important
+movement. The camp was in commotion; the boats which had been dragged
+through the canal, and now lay moored to the levee, were being loaded
+with artillery and munitions of war, and every thing betokened a hot
+to-morrow. Coffee still held the swamp on the left; Carroll, with his
+Tennesseans, the centre; while Jackson, with the regulars under him,
+commanded in person the right, resting on the river. Behind <span class="pagenum"><a id="page221" name="page221"></a>(p. 221)</span>
+Carroll were placed the Kentuckians, under General Adair&mdash;in all, less
+than four thousand effective men. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 8.</span> This was the
+position of affairs as the Sabbath morning of the 8th of January began
+to dawn. The light had scarcely streaked the east, when the
+inhabitants of New Orleans were startled from their slumbers by an
+explosion of cannon that shook the city. The battle had opened. Under
+cover of the night, heavy batteries had been erected within eight
+hundred yards of the American intrenchments, and, the moment the fog
+lifted above them, they opened their fire. Directly after, a rocket,
+rising through the mist near the swamp, and another answering it from
+the shore, announced that all was ready. The next moment, two columns,
+each four or five thousand strong&mdash;one moving straight on Carrol's
+position, the other against the right of the intrenchments&mdash;swept
+steadily and swiftly across the plain. Three thrilling cheers rose
+over the dark intrenchments at the sight, and then all was still
+again.</p>
+
+<p>The levee here was contracted to four hundred yards in width, and as
+the columns, sixty or seventy deep, crowded over this avenue, every
+cannon on the breastwork was trained upon them by Baratarian, French
+and American engineers, and the moment they came within range, a
+murderous fire opened. Frightful gaps were made in the ranks at every
+discharge, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page222" name="page222"></a>(p. 222)</span> which were closed by living men only the next
+moment to be re-opened.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans stood with their hands clenched around their muskets and
+rifles, gazing with astonishment on this new, unwonted spectacle. The
+calm and steady advance under such an incessant and crushing fire,
+carried with it the prestige of victory. As they approached the ditch,
+the columns swiftly, yet beautifully deployed, and under the cover of
+blazing bombs and rockets, that filled the air in every direction, and
+stooped hissing over the American works, pressed forward with loud
+cheers, to the assault. Nothing but cannon had spoken till then from
+that low breastwork; but as those two doomed columns reached the
+farthest brink of the ditch, the word "Fire!" ran along the American
+line&mdash;the next moment the intrenchments were in a blaze. It was a
+solid sheet of flame rolling on the foe. Stunned by the tremendous and
+deadly volleys, the front ranks stopped and sunk in their footsteps,
+like snow when it meets the stream. But high over the thunder of
+cannon were heard the words of command, and drums beating the charge;
+and still bravely breasting the fiery sleet, the ranks pressed
+forward, but only to melt away on the brink of that fatal ditch.
+Jackson, with flashing eye and flushed brow, rode slowly along the
+lines, cheering the men, and issuing his orders, followed by loud
+huzzas as he passed. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page223" name="page223"></a>(p. 223)</span> From the effect of the American
+volleys, he knew, if the troops stood firm, the day was his own, and
+with stirring appeals and confident words he roused them to the same
+enthusiasm which animated his breast and beamed from his face. The
+soldiers of Gen. Adair, stationed in the rear of Carrol, loaded for
+those in front, so that there was no cessation to the fire. It was a
+constant flash and peal along the whole line. Every man was a
+marksman, every shot told, and no troops in the world could long
+withstand such a destructive fire. The front of battle, torn and rent,
+wavered to and fro on the plain, when Packenham galloped up, and
+riding bravely through the shaking ranks, for a moment restored order.
+The next moment he reeled from his saddle mortally wounded. Generals
+Gibbs and Keane, while nobly struggling to rally the men, were also
+shot down, and the maddened columns turned and fled. Lambert,
+hastening up with the reserve, met the fugitives, and endeavored, but
+in vain, to arrest the flight. They never halted till they reached a
+ditch four hundred yards distant, into which they flung themselves to
+escape the scourging fire that pursued them. Here he at last rallied
+them to another charge. The bleeding column, strengthened by the
+reserve, again advanced sternly but hopelessly, into the deadly fire,
+and attempted to deploy. It was a last vain effort&mdash;it was like
+charging down <span class="pagenum"><a id="page224" name="page224"></a>(p. 224)</span> the mouth of a volcano, and the troops again
+broke and fled, smote at every step by the batteries.</p>
+
+<p>Col. Kennie led the attack against the redoubt on the right, and
+succeeded in entering, but found there his grave. Driven forth, the
+troops sought safety in flight; but the fire that pursued them was too
+fatal, and they threw themselves into a ditch, where they lay
+sheltered till night, and then stole away under cover of the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>The ground in front of the American intrenchments presented a
+frightful spectacle. It was red with the blood of men. The space was
+so narrow along which the enemy had advanced, that the dead literally
+cumbered the field.</p>
+
+<p>The sun of that Sabbath morning rose in blood, and before he had
+advanced an hour on his course, a multitude of souls "unhouseled,
+unanneled," had passed to the stillness of eternity. New Orleans never
+before witnessed such a Sabbath morning. Anxiety and fear sat on every
+countenance. The road towards the American encampment was lined with
+trembling listeners, and tearful eyes were bent on the distance to
+catch the first sight of the retreating army. But when the thunder and
+tumult ceased, and word was brought that the Americans still held the
+intrenchments, and that the British had retreated in confusion, there
+went up a long, glad shout&mdash;the bells of the churches rang out a
+joyous <span class="pagenum"><a id="page225" name="page225"></a>(p. 225)</span> peal, and hope and confidence revived in every bosom.</p>
+
+<p>The attack on the right bank of the river had been successful, and but
+for the terrible havoc on the left shore, this stroke of good fortune
+might have changed the results of the day. The fort, from which Gen.
+Morgan had fled, commanded the interior of Jackson's entrenchments,
+and a fire opened from it would soon have shaken the steadiness of his
+troops. But Col. Thornton, who had captured it, seeing the complete
+overthrow of the main army, soon after abandoned it.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans, with that noble-hearted generosity which had
+distinguished them on every battle-field, hurried forth soon as the
+firing had ceased, to succor the wounded, who they knew had designed
+to riot amid their own peaceful dwellings. "Beauty and booty," was the
+watchword in an orderly-book found on the battle-field; and though
+there is not sufficient reason to believe that the city would have
+been given over to rapine and lust, yet no doubt great excesses would
+have been tolerated. The recent conduct of the English troops on the
+Atlantic coast, where no such resistance had been offered to
+exasperate them, furnished grounds for the gravest fears.</p>
+
+<p>The British in this attack outnumbered the Americans more than three
+to one, and yet the loss on the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page226" name="page226"></a>(p. 226)</span> part of the latter was only
+<i>thirteen</i> killed and wounded&mdash;seventy-one, all told, both sides of
+the river&mdash;while that of the former was nearly two thousand, a
+disparity unparalleled in the annals of war.</p>
+
+<p>The British were allowed to retreat unmolested to their ships, and the
+sails of that proud fleet, whose approach had sent such consternation
+through the hearts of the inhabitants, were seen lessening in the
+horizon with feelings of unspeakable joy and triumph. All danger had
+now passed away, and Jackson made his triumphal entry into the city.
+The bells were rung, maidens dressed in white, strewed flowers in his
+path, the heavens echoed with acclamations, and blessings unnumbered
+were poured on his head.</p>
+
+<p>But as there had been foes and traitors to the American cause from the
+first appearance of the British fleet, so there were those now who
+stirred up strife, and by anonymous articles published in one of the
+city papers, endeavored to sow dissensions among the troops. It would,
+no doubt, have been better for Jackson, in the fulness of his triumph,
+and in the plenitude of his power, to have overlooked this. But these
+very men he knew had acted as spies while the enemy lay before his
+entrenchments, causing him innumerable vexations, and endangering the
+cause of the country, and he determined as martial law had not yet
+been repealed, to seize the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page227" name="page227"></a>(p. 227)</span> offenders. He demanded of the
+editor the name of the writer of a certain article, who proved to be a
+member of the legislature. He then applied to Judge Hall for a writ of
+habeas corpus, which was granted, and the recreant statesman was
+thrown into prison. Soon after, martial law being removed, Judge Hall
+issued an attachment against Jackson for contempt of court, and he was
+brought before him to answer interrogatories. This he refused to do,
+and asked for the sentence. The judge, still smarting under the
+remembrance of his former arrest by Jackson, fined him a thousand
+dollars. A burst of indignation followed this sentence, and as the
+latter turned to enter his carriage, the crowd around seized it, and
+dragged it home with shouts. The fine was paid immediately; but in a
+few hours the outraged citizens refunded the sum to the general. He,
+however, refused it, requesting it to be appropriated to a charitable
+institution. Judge Hall by this act secured for himself the fame of
+the man who, to figure in history, fired the temple of Delphos.</p>
+
+<p>The arbitrary manner in which Jackson disposed of the State
+legislature and judges of the court, became afterwards the subject of
+much discussion, and during his political life the ground of heavy
+accusations. If the question be respecting the <i>manner</i> in which he
+assumed arbitrary power, it is not worth <span class="pagenum"><a id="page228" name="page228"></a>(p. 228)</span> discussing. But if,
+on the other hand, the assumption of it at all is condemned, then the
+whole thing turns on the necessities of the case, and whether that use
+was made of it which the general good and not personal feelings
+required. That it was necessary, no one can doubt. He had a right,
+also, as commander-in-chief of the army in that section, to whom the
+defence of the southern frontier had been intrusted, to force the
+civil power into obedience to the orders of the general government. He
+was to defend and save New Orleans, and if the civil authority proved
+treacherous or weak, it was his duty to see that it did not act
+against him while plainly in the path of his duty. New Orleans so
+considered it; and six years after, the corporation appropriated fifty
+thousand dollars to the erection of a marble statue of him in the
+city. Congress thought so, when, thirty years after, it voted the
+repayment of the fine, with interest, from the date it was inflicted,
+and notwithstanding the whole matter was made a party question, it
+will not stand as such in history.</p>
+
+<p>Jackson remained in New Orleans till March, when he was relieved by
+General Gaines. On taking leave of his troops, who, by their cheerful
+endurance of hardships and their bravery, had become endeared to him,
+he issued an address full of encomiums on their conduct, and
+expressions of love for their character. He concluded by saying,
+"Farewell, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page229" name="page229"></a>(p. 229)</span> fellow&mdash;soldiers! The expression of your
+General's thanks is feeble; but the gratitude of a country of freemen
+is yours&mdash;yours the applause of an admiring world." What a contrast
+does this man, covered with the laurels of his two recent campaigns,
+present to the captive boy in the revolutionary struggle whose hand
+was brutally gashed by a subordinate British officer, because he
+refused to black his boots! This world has changes. The lad with his
+eye to the knot-hole at Camden watching the defeat of the American
+army with anguish, and the hero gazing proudly on the flying columns
+of the veteran troops of the British empire, are the same in soul&mdash;but
+how different in position! They say, "Time sets all things even." In
+Jackson's case, the wrongs done to his family by an oppressive nation,
+and the outrages he himself had received, were terribly avenged.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Feb. 11.</span>
+
+<p>At length the joyful tidings of peace reached our shores. The British
+sloop of war Favorite, chosen for her name, arrived at New York under
+a flag of truce, bearing an American and British messenger, with the
+treaty already ratified on the part of England. The unexpected news
+acted like an electrical shock on the city. It was late on Saturday
+night when the announcement was made, but in an incredible short space
+of time the whole city was in an uproar. That blessed word <span class="smcap">Peace</span>
+passed tremulously from lip to lip, and as if borne on the viewless
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page230" name="page230"></a>(p. 230)</span> air, was soon repeated in every dwelling. In a few minutes
+the streets were black with the excited, heaving multitudes, whose
+frantic shouts rolled like the roar of the sea through the city. In
+every direction bonfires were kindled, and as flash after flash leaped
+forth to the clouds, the deafening acclamations that followed,
+attested the unbounded joy of the people. Expresses were immediately
+hurried off north and south, and as the swift riders swept meteor-like
+through village after village, shouting "<span class="smcap">Peace</span>" as they sped on, the
+inhabitants sallied forth to hail the glad tidings with shouts. All
+day Sunday that electrical word "<span class="smcap">Peace</span>" passed like an angel of mercy
+over the towns and hamlets between New York and Boston. It swept like
+a sudden breeze through the congregations gathered for worship in the
+house of God. It imparted new fervor to the minister at the altar, and
+swelled the hymn of thanksgiving from tearful worshippers to its
+loudest, gladdest note. "<span class="smcap">Peace</span>," like a dove folded its wings on the
+thresholds of thousands of homes that night, turning the wintry
+fire-side into a scene of unbounded thankfulness and joy.</p>
+
+<p>Although news had never been carried over the country with such
+rapidity since the battle of Lexington and Concord, it did not reach
+Boston till Monday morning. The bells were at once set ringing, but
+their clamorous tongues were well nigh silenced by <span class="pagenum"><a id="page231" name="page231"></a>(p. 231)</span> the
+louder rejoicings of the people. Messengers were immediately
+dispatched in every direction, sending the glad tidings on. Men forgot
+their employments&mdash;politicians their animosities in the general
+congratulation. The sea ports were suddenly gay with flags and
+streamers, and the song of the sailor blended with the sound of the
+hammer and the hum and stir of commerce. Men forgot to ask on what
+terms peace had been obtained&mdash;the joy at its unexpected announcement
+obliterated for the time all other thoughts and considerations.</p>
+
+<p>At Washington the pleasure was more subdued, for the politicians there
+knew that after the first enthusiasm had subsided every one would ask
+what were the terms of the treaty.</p>
+
+<p>But although the administration had provoked Fortune beyond all
+forbearance, she seemed resolved not to desert it, and brought, nearly
+at the same time, the news of the victory of New Orleans, to solace
+the national pride for an indefinite and unsatisfactory treaty.</p>
+
+<p>The delegates from the Hartford Convention arrived in Washington just
+in time to hear the confirmation of the victory and the peace, and
+without delivering their message, stole quietly back to New England,
+lighted by illuminated cities and towns, and stunned by acclamations,
+on their way. Their enemies were too full of happiness to attack them,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page232" name="page232"></a>(p. 232)</span> still the National Advocate of New York, edited by Mr.
+Wheaton, could not refrain from indulging in a little pleasantry at
+their expense, and inserted an advertisement: "Missing&mdash;three
+well-looking, respectable men, who appeared to be travelling towards
+Washington, and suddenly disappeared from Gadzby's hotel, Baltimore,
+on Monday evening last, and have not since been heard from. They were
+observed to be very melancholic on hearing the news of peace, and one
+of them was heard to say, '<i>Poor Caleb Strong</i>,' &amp;c. "Whoever will
+give any information of these unfortunate, tristful gentlemen to the
+Hartford Convention, will confer a favor on humanity." The National
+Intelligencer copied it, stating that those gentlemen had been seen in
+Washington, but their business was not known. One of them, however,
+was heard to groan, "<i>Othello's occupation's gone</i>."</p>
+
+<p>But after the first excitement passed away, men began to inquire in
+what way, and on what conditions, the government had delivered the
+country from the evils of war, and crowned it with the blessings of
+peace.</p>
+
+<p>We had apparently gained nothing. Our quarrel rested mainly on two
+points&mdash;first, the right of blockade as claimed and exercised under
+the orders in Council, and the right of impressment, as practiced on
+the high seas; yet no limits had been prescribed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page233" name="page233"></a>(p. 233)</span> to the
+former, and no guarantees given against the latter. These great points
+of dispute were left untouched, and by the treaty the two countries
+stood precisely as they did at the commencement of the war; all
+(conquered territory on either side was to be restored) with the
+exception that for the surrender of a useless right&mdash;the navigation of
+the Mississippi&mdash;England deprived us of the valuable privilege
+heretofore conceded, of catching and curing fish on the coast of the
+Gulf of St. Lawrence. The title to the islands in the Passamaquoddy
+bay&mdash;the exact course of the boundary line running from the Atlantic
+coast to the river St. Lawrence&mdash;the line thence to the Lake of the
+Woods&mdash;were to be referred to three separate commissions, and in case
+of their disagreement, to some friendly power for final adjustment.
+The question of fisheries in the seas bordering on the British
+provinces, and the boundary line west of the Lake of the Woods were
+left without any provision for their settlement.</p>
+
+<p>One would naturally think that a treaty which in its stipulations thus
+silently passed over the very questions in dispute, and for which so
+much valiant blood had been shed and such a loss of life and treasure
+endured, would have been met with open condemnation, or at least with
+sullen acquiescence. On the contrary, however, its ratification was
+signalized by public rejoicings, and the most extravagant
+manifestations <span class="pagenum"><a id="page234" name="page234"></a>(p. 234)</span> of delight. The astonishing victory at New
+Orleans required us to be generous, and a nation which had thus
+vindicated its rights on sea and land, could afford to drop an
+unpleasant subject just where the discussion had begun. Such seemed to
+be the general feeling. At first sight, this settlement of the
+difficulties between the two countries appeared contemptible.
+Abstractly considered it was, and if we had been a weak nation,
+sinking into degeneracy, it would have proved so.</p>
+
+<p>But in judging of it we must remember that treaty stipulations in
+continental diplomacy, like flags of truce in Mexico, depend almost
+entirely on circumstances whether they are regarded or not, and hence
+the <i>circumstances</i> are more important than written stipulation.
+European treaties, like European diplomacy, have in the past, served
+only to illustrate the duplicity and faithlessness of monarchs. The
+question is, how events in their progress have settled the
+difficulties, as <i>fate</i> settles them, and not as commissioners.</p>
+
+<p>Now it was evident, both to the English and American commissioners,
+that articles on neutral rights and the impressment of seamen, were
+useless. Our navy and privateers had disposed of those questions, for
+ever. Our broadsides furnished better guaranties than strips of
+parchment, adorned with impressions of regal seals.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page235" name="page235"></a>(p. 235)</span> It was the fact that those two great causes of hostility,
+violation of neutral rights and impressment of seamen, were
+practically and permanently disposed of, which reconciled the nation
+to their omission in the treaty. Our people pay no attention to forms,
+only so far as they sanction their just claims. In this view, the
+acquiescence in the treaty, instead of exhibiting humility and fear on
+our part, indicate quite the reverse. Nothing can be more erroneous
+than to suppose that because those rights, for the protection of which
+we had gone to war, were not mentioned in the treaty, we therefore had
+concluded to waive them. On the contrary, we consented to leave them
+unnoticed, <i>because</i> we knew we had <i>obtained</i> them forever. No one in
+England or the United States doubted that these were definitely
+settled, and those who sneeringly ask "what we gained by the war?"
+make the letter equivalent to the spirit, a form more important than a
+fact. The simple truth is, we got what we fought for, and it exhibits
+a narrow spirit to say, that because it was not engrossed on parchment
+it amounted virtually to nothing.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page236" name="page236"></a>(p. 236)</span> CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Cruise of the Constitution &mdash; Action with the Cyane and
+ Levant &mdash; Chased by a British fleet &mdash; England's views of
+ neutral rights and the law of nations &mdash; Her honor and
+ integrity at a discount &mdash; Singular escape of the
+ Constitution &mdash; Recapture of the Levant under the guns of a
+ neutral port &mdash; Lampoons on the English squadron for its
+ contemptible conduct &mdash; Decatur &mdash; Capture of the President
+ &mdash; The Hornet captures the Penguin &mdash; Chased by a ship of
+ the line &mdash; Narrow escape &mdash; Cruise of the Peacock &mdash; Review
+ of the American Navy &mdash; Its future destiny.</p>
+
+<p>Naval warfare did not cease with the peace, for it was a long time
+before all our cruisers received notice of it.</p>
+
+<p>The old Constitution, when Bainbridge gave up the command of her in
+1813, was put on the stocks to undergo repairs, and did not get to sea
+again till 1814, when, under the command of Captain Stewart, she
+cruised southward, without meeting any vessel of her own size.
+<span class="sidenote">1814.</span> She took the Nector, a war schooner of fourteen
+guns, and a few merchantmen, and returned to Boston. On the 17th of
+December she again put to sea, and cruised off the coast of Portugal.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page237" name="page237"></a>(p. 237)</span> <span class="sidenote">Feb. 20, 1815.</span>
+
+<p>Not meeting with the enemy, Captain Stewart, on the 20th of February,
+1815, stood off south-west towards Madeira, and in the afternoon made
+two strange sail. He immediately started in pursuit of the nearest,
+hoping to overtake her before she could join her consort. The moment,
+however, the stranger discovered the Constitution, he stood away under
+every stitch of canvass he could spread. The Constitution also "set
+studding sails alow and aloft," and under a perfect cloud of canvass,
+bowled along at a tremendous rate. At length the main royal mast of
+the latter gave way in the strain, which gave the stranger so much the
+advantage that he effected a junction with his consort. The two then
+hailed each other, "came by the wind, hauled up their courses," and
+cleared for action. They were the Cyane, carrying thirty-four guns,
+and the Levant, twenty-one&mdash;the crew of the former numbering one
+hundred and eighty men, the latter one hundred and fifty-six.</p>
+
+<p>They man&oelig;uvered for some time to get to the windward, but finding
+this impossible they awaited the approach of the American, who had now
+set his colors. It was a bright moonlight night, and the two English
+vessels presented a beautiful spectacle, as they lay rising and
+falling on the long swell, gallantly turned at bay. As the
+Constitution approached, they cheered, and fired their broadsides.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page238" name="page238"></a>(p. 238)</span> No answer was given. In stern and ominous silence the
+invincible frigate moved on, and ranging up about three hundred yards
+distant from the Cyane, delivered her broadside. So ready and eager
+were the men to fire, that when the order was given, the whole
+broadside was like the report of a single gun. She had taken her
+position to windward, and so as to form with the two vessels nearly an
+equilateral triangle, and in this masterly position flung her heavy
+metal against both alike. From the first gun the action became fierce
+and the cannonading incessant. After the lapse of fifteen minutes the
+fire of the enemy slackened, and Captain Stewart, unable to see their
+whereabouts, from the cloud of smoke that enveloped his ship, ordered
+the cannonading to cease till it passed off. In three minutes it
+lifted and rolled away before the wind, and he saw that the vessels
+had changed their position, the Levant being abeam, while the Cyane
+was evidently endeavoring to cross his wake and give him a raking
+fire. Instantly delivering a broadside to the vessel abeam, he by one
+of those sudden and prompt movements on which the fate of a vessel or
+an army often turns, threw his mizen and main sails flat aback, "shook
+all forward," let fly his jib sheet, and backed so swiftly astern<a id="footnotetag9" name="footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9" title="Go to footnote 9"><span class="smaller">[9]</span></a>
+that the vessel was compelled to tack or be raked herself. While
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page239" name="page239"></a>(p. 239)</span> doing this the other ship attempted to cross his bows for
+the same purpose. The Constitution was again too quick for her, for as
+if by magic the yards swung round to the hearty "Yo, heave oh!" of the
+sailors&mdash;the sails filled, and bowing to the breeze, she shot ahead,
+compelling the vessel to ware under a tremendous and raking broadside,
+which cut her up so terribly that she had to run out of the action to
+repair damages. He had scarcely delivered this crushing blow when he
+was told the largest ship was waring. He instantly gave orders to ware
+also, and crossing the enemy's stern, raked her as he passed. He then
+ranged up alongside, when she struck, and Lieutenant Hoffman was put
+in command of her.</p>
+
+<p>The Levant, in the mean time, having repaired her rigging, hauled up
+again to seek her consort, when she met the Constitution coming down.
+She immediately bore away, receiving as she did so, a raking
+broadside. The Constitution followed in her wake, firing, and
+following so close that the ripping of the enemy's planks, as the shot
+tore through them, could be distinctly heard on her decks. This, of
+course, could not be endured long, and a gun was soon fired to
+leeward, in token of submission.</p>
+
+<p>The loss of the enemy, in this action, was between sixty and seventy,
+while that of the Constitution was only fifteen. The latter, however,
+was hulled thirteen times, showing very accurate firing by moonlight.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page240" name="page240"></a>(p. 240)</span> The masterly manner in which Captain Stewart handled his
+vessel, so that, large and unwieldy as she was, he thwarted every
+man&oelig;uvre to rake him, and raked both his enemies successively,
+proved him to be a thorough seaman and an able commander.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">1815.</span>
+
+<p>The Constitution proceeded with her two prizes to Port Praya, in St.
+Jago, where she arrived the 10th of March. The next day while
+Lieutenant Shubrick was walking the quarter-deck, he heard one of the
+prisoners, a midshipman, exclaim: "There is a frigate in the offing!"
+This was followed by a low subdued reprimand from an English captain.
+Shubrick's suspicions were awakened, and he looked earnestly seaward.
+A heavy fog lay close on the water, diminishing into a haze as it left
+the surface, so that the spars of a ship could be seen, while her hull
+was obscured. Through this he saw the dim outlines of the sails of a
+large vessel, evidently standing in, and immediately went below and
+reported the circumstance to Captain Stewart. The latter ordered him
+to call all hands and make ready to go in chase of her. Shubrick had
+scarcely given the orders when he saw the sails of two other vessels
+above the fog. Stewart gave them one glance and saw immediately they
+were heavy men-of-war. Though in a neutral port, and by the law of
+nations safe from attack, he was well aware that it would not avail
+him. So low had the honor of the English nation sunk in the estimation
+of independent <span class="pagenum"><a id="page241" name="page241"></a>(p. 241)</span> States, that weak neutral powers knew they
+would not be allowed to afford the protection which it was their right
+and duty to extend, while our naval commanders had ceased to expect
+the recognition of those rights, guarantied by the usage of civilized
+governments. Captain Stewart immediately signalled the Cyane and
+Levant to put to sea, and cutting his own cables, not waiting even to
+take in his boats, he ordered the sails sheeted home. In ten minutes
+the gallant frigate was standing out of the roads, followed by her
+prizes.</p>
+
+<p>This silent declaration that men could no longer rely on the honor and
+good faith of his majesty's officers, in respecting the law of nations
+or the rights of neutral powers, was one of the most cutting rebukes
+that could have been uttered. It was well that Captain Stewart rated
+these qualities so low, or he doubtless would have been attacked and
+overcome, though, under the guns of the battery of the port. No doubt
+the Constitution would have fought worthy of her old renown, and like
+the Essex, in the Bay of Valparaiso, gained more honor in her death
+than in her life.</p>
+
+<p>As Stewart stood out to windward, the three vessels, which he
+afterwards learned to be the Leander and Newcastle of 50, and the
+Acasta of 40 guns, crowded all sail in chase. Stewart then cut adrift
+his cutter and gig, towing astern, and set every sail that would draw.
+Under the north-east trades that were <span class="pagenum"><a id="page242" name="page242"></a>(p. 242)</span> then blowing, the
+Constitution was soon rushing along at a tremendous rate, outsailing
+all her pursuers but the Acasta. But Stewart, perceiving that the
+Cyane was steadily losing ground, and if she kept her course must
+evidently be captured, made signal for her to tack, which was
+instantly obeyed. Not a vessel, however, was detached in pursuit, as
+he had expected, but the whole three kept on after the Constitution
+and Levant. In an hour and a half the Newcastle got within gun-shot,
+and began to fire by divisions, rending the fog with flame, but
+leaving the Constitution unharmed. A half an hour after, Stewart, who
+with his glass in his hand had incessantly walked the quarter-deck,
+watching the movements of the enemy and their progress, saw that the
+Levant, if she held her course, would soon be captured, made signal
+for her to tack also.</p>
+
+<p>The foam rolled with a seething sound from the bows of the
+Constitution as she rushed rapidly through the water, but it was
+evident that the Acasta, which had fallen in her wake, could outsail
+her. An engagement with this vessel was apparently inevitable, and
+unless Stewart could prolong the chase till she was drawn so far from
+the others as to enable him to close with and carry her before they
+came up, he must be taken. But to his astonishment the whole three
+turned in pursuit of the Levant, leaving him to sail away unmolested.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page243" name="page243"></a>(p. 243)</span> <span class="sidenote">April 10.</span>
+
+<p>The Cyane, in the mean time, had disappeared in the fog, and finding
+that she was shut out of view, changed her course, and escaping the
+enemy, finally arrived safely in New York. The Levant, however, was
+not so fortunate. Seeing herself closely pressed, she put back to
+port, and though receiving the enemy's fire, stood on till she
+anchored within 150 yards of the shore, and under the very guns of a
+powerful battery. Disregarding her position which rendered her
+inviolable, the three vessels continued to approach, firing as they
+did so, throwing their shot even into the town, doing considerable
+damage. Lieutenant Shubrick, finding that the battery would not
+protect him, and that the enemy had no intention of respecting the
+neutrality of the port, struck his flag. The firing, however,
+continued for some time after.</p>
+
+<p>The English officer, when he came on board to take possession of her,
+supposed she was an American vessel, but to his great chagrin found
+that the whole squadron had succeeded, after a chase of several hours,
+in recapturing a prize in a neutral port.</p>
+
+<p>"Old Ironsides" swept proudly onward over the ocean, remaining
+unconquered to the last, the glory of the navy and the boast of the
+land.</p>
+
+<p>The news of the victory over the Cyane and Levant, and the after
+chase, reached New York from St. Bartholomews, without giving the
+results, and it <span class="pagenum"><a id="page244" name="page244"></a>(p. 244)</span> was feared for a time that she had fallen
+into the hands of the enemy. When her safety was ascertained the
+exultation was great, for she was a great favorite, and had become
+deeply fixed in the affections of the people. As she came sweeping up
+Boston harbor, crowds gathered to the shore, answering with deafening
+cheers the thunder of her guns, as they broke over the bay.</p>
+
+<p>The abandonment of this frigate by the whole English squadron, to
+chase a single ship, furnished the occasion of many witticisms,
+levelled against the English officers. They reported that they lost
+her in a fog, but if either vessel had kept on alone, Captain Stewart
+would have been careful not to have been lost, and when a safe
+distance from the others had been obtained, allowed himself to be
+easily overtaken.<a id="footnotetag10" name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10" title="Go to footnote 10"><span class="smaller">[10]</span></a></p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page245" name="page245"></a>(p. 245)</span> <span class="sidenote">1815.</span>
+
+<p>The President, that did not get to sea till the middle of January, or
+just before the news of peace was received, was more unfortunate.
+Commodore Rodgers, during the summer, had been transferred from that
+vessel to the Guerriere, and Decatur took the command. The latter,
+with the United States and Macedonian, had been blockaded, as before
+stated, all summer at New London, where he had challenged Captain
+Hardy to meet him ship with ship, or to make a match between the
+United States and Macedonian, and the Endymion and Statira.</p>
+
+<p>Although he took command in the summer, he did not go to sea till
+mid-winter, when with the Hornet, which had run the blockade at New
+London in November, the Peacock, and store ship Tom Bowline, he
+prepared for a long cruise to the East Indies. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 14.</span>
+The President dropped down to Sandy Hook on the night of the 14th, but
+in attempting to cross the bar struck, and lay thumping for an hour
+and a half before she swung clear. She was evidently damaged by the
+shock, but Decatur thought it best to keep on, as a heavy storm the
+day before had driven the blockading squadron southward.</p>
+
+<p>Before daylight, next morning, he discovered a sail ahead, and two
+hours later two more, and when daylight made more distant objects
+visible, four vessels were seen, crowding all sail in chase. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page246" name="page246"></a>(p. 246)</span> President was heavily laden for a long voyage, which with
+the damage she had received on the bar, impeded very much her sailing.
+Still, with a stiff breeze, she might have distanced her pursuers, for
+with the wind light and baffling, the nearest vessel, the Majestic, a
+razee, was thrown astern. But the Endymion, forty, the next nearest
+vessel, evidently outsailed her, and was fast closing. Decatur then
+called all hands to lighten the ship. The anchors were cut away,
+provisions, cables, spars, boats, and every thing on which hands could
+be laid were thrown overboard, and the sails kept wet from the royals
+down, to hold the tantalizing wind. It was impossible in such hasty
+unloading to keep the vessel trim, and while it was being done she
+very probably sailed slower than before. The wind, however, was so
+light, that both frigates made slow headway, and it was not till the
+middle of the afternoon that the Endymion closed sufficiently to open
+her fire. The President answered with stern guns, and a running fight
+was kept up till five o'clock, when the former was within half
+gun-shot and on the quarter of the latter, which, of course, could not
+bring a gun to bear. Decatur, in this position, bore the fire of the
+frigate for half an hour, when he resolved to carry her by boarding,
+and escape. But the Endymion kept her advantageous position, so that
+he could not carry his bold and gallant resolution into effect, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page247" name="page247"></a>(p. 247)</span> as a last resort he determined at dusk to close, and so
+cripple her before the rest of the vessels arrived, that she must
+abandon the pursuit. Coming up abeam he poured in his broadsides, and
+for two hours and a half, running free all the time, the two vessels
+kept up a close and heavy cannonade. At half-past eight the Endymion
+was completely dismantled, while the President was under royal
+studding sails, and able to choose her own position. Twenty minutes
+more would have finished the English frigate, for she was too much cut
+up to be manageable; but the other vessels were now close at hand, and
+the President hauled up to resume her course. In doing this the vessel
+was exposed to a raking broadside, but not a gun was fired. She then
+crowded all sail, but at eleven o'clock was overhauled by the Pomone
+and Tenedos and Majestic, the former of which poured in a broadside
+within musket shot. Resistance, in the President's crippled state was
+hopeless, and the flag was struck. Decatur surrendered his sword to
+the commander of the Majestic, nearly four hours before the Endymion
+came up, and yet the captain of the latter claimed the victory, and to
+this day the arrogant assertion finds endorsers in England. One vessel
+goes out of an action with royal studding sails set and surrenders to
+a superior force, so far from the spot where it took place that it
+requires nearly four hours steady <span class="pagenum"><a id="page248" name="page248"></a>(p. 248)</span> sailing for the other to
+get up, and yet the latter is declared the victor!<a id="footnotetag11" name="footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11" title="Go to footnote 11"><span class="smaller">[11]</span></a></p>
+
+<p>This absurd pretence, however, was completely set at rest by a
+document signed by the officers of the Pomona, and published at
+Bermuda, whither the fleet sailed. After giving the details of the
+chase, they say the running fight between the President and Endymion
+ceased "at half-past eight, the Endymion falling astern&mdash;Pomona
+passing her at half-past eight. At eleven, being within gun-shot of
+the President," &amp;c. "At <i>three-quarters</i> past twelve the Endymion came
+up," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>Both these vessels were dismasted in a hurricane before reaching
+Bermuda, six days after. The Peacock, Hornet, and Tom Bowline, put to
+sea and sailed for the island of Triston d'Acunha, the place of
+rendezvous appointed by Decatur. The Peacock and Tom Bowline arrived
+first. The Hornet having parted company in chase of a vessel, did not
+come in till the 23d of March. <span class="sidenote">1815.</span> Just as she was about
+to anchor, the watch aft sung out "Sail ho!" The sails were
+immediately sheeted home again, and the Hornet bore swiftly down
+towards the stranger. The latter did not shun the combat, but coming
+to, set her colors and fired a challenge gun. The vessel was the
+Penguin, of the size and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page249" name="page249"></a>(p. 249)</span> metal of the Hornet, with some
+additional equipments, which made her of superior force. There was not
+the difference of a dozen men in the crews. A more decisive single
+combat could not have been arranged, if the sole purpose of it had
+been to test the seamanship and real practical superiority of the
+American navy, for the Penguin had been fitted up and sent out for the
+sole purpose of encountering and capturing the Wasp, a heavier and
+newer vessel than the Hornet.</p>
+
+<p>There was no man&oelig;uvring&mdash;from the first gun to the last, it was a
+steady broadside to broadside engagement, the vessels gradually
+drifting nearer as they fired. The Hornet was wrapped in flame from
+stem to stern, so incessant were her discharges, and in fifteen
+minutes the commander of the Penguin, finding that he would soon be a
+total wreck, put up his helm to board, and surged with a heavy crash
+full on the Hornet's quarter. The first lieutenant immediately called
+on his men to board, but they would not follow him. The American crew
+then wished to board, in turn, but Captain Biddle, seeing that his
+guns were rending the enemy in pieces, restrained their ardor, and
+recommenced firing. The sea was heavy, and as the two vessels rose and
+fell together on the huge swell, the strain was so great that the
+Penguin carried away the Hornet's mizen rigging and spanker boom, and
+swung round against her <span class="pagenum"><a id="page250" name="page250"></a>(p. 250)</span> quarter. While in this position, an
+English officer cried out that he surrendered. Captain Biddle then
+ordered the firing to cease, and leaping on the taffrail, inquired if
+the vessel had struck. Two marines on the enemy's forecastle levelled
+their pieces at him and fired&mdash;the ball of one entering his neck,
+inflicting a painful wound. Enraged at this treacherous act, the crew
+of the Hornet poured in a sudden volley of musketry, which stretched
+the two marines dead on the deck. In the same moment the vessels
+parted, the Hornet forging ahead, carrying the enemy's bowsprit and
+foremast with her. The latter then wore, and was about to pour in a
+raking broadside, when twenty men rushed to the side of the ship,
+lifting up their hands and calling for quarter. It was with the
+greatest difficulty Captain Biddle could restrain his men, so excited
+were they at the attempt on their commander's life.</p>
+
+<p>The loss of the Penguin in this short action was forty-two killed and
+wounded, while the Hornet had but a single man killed and only ten
+wounded. Among the latter was Lieutenant (since Commodore) Conner,
+who, though helpless and bleeding, refused to leave the deck till the
+enemy struck. This disparity shows in a striking manner the superior
+gunnery of the American navy.</p>
+
+<p>The Penguin was dreadfully cut up, and Captain <span class="pagenum"><a id="page251" name="page251"></a>(p. 251)</span> Biddle,
+unable to man her, scuttled and sunk her. Converting the Tom Bowline
+into a cartel to take the prisoners to St. Salvador, he, with Captain
+Harrington of the Peacock, waited the arrival of the President. But
+these two commanders soon received information which convinced them
+that Decatur had, in all probability, fallen into the hands of the
+enemy. <span class="sidenote">April 13.</span> They, therefore, soon as the time fixed
+by him had expired, proceeded on the original cruise, steering for the
+Indian Seas. On the 27th, the Peacock, which was ahead, made signal
+that a strange vessel was in sight, when all sail was set in chase. At
+night it fell calm, but a stiff breeze arising with the sun, the chase
+recommenced and continued till near three o'clock, when the Peacock,
+about six miles ahead, appeared to be moving cautiously, as if
+suspicious that all was not right. From the first, the chase was
+supposed to be a homeward bound East Indiaman, as they were now in the
+track of those vessels. The sailors of the Hornet were consequently
+very much elated with the prospect of so rich a prize, declaring that
+they would carpet the berth deck with India silk, and murmuring that
+the Peacock sailed so much faster, as she would have the first chance
+at the plunder.</p>
+
+<p>These pleasant anticipations suffered a sudden <span class="pagenum"><a id="page252" name="page252"></a>(p. 252)</span> collapse when
+the Peacock, at half-past three, signalled that the stranger was an
+enemy and a line-of-battle ship. Notwithstanding the danger, there was
+something inconceivably ludicrous in the blank consternation that fell
+on the ship, exhibited in rueful countenances, the long-drawn whistle
+or laconic emphatic expression. The next moment, however, all was
+bustle and confusion&mdash;quick and sharp orders rung over the vessel, she
+was hauled upon the wind, and made off as fast as wind and sail could
+bear her. The Peacock, being a very fast sailer, soon left the enemy
+behind. Not so with the Hornet; although she spread every yard of
+canvass that would draw, it was evident by eight at night the
+man-of-war was gaining on her. An hour after all hands were turned to
+to lighten the ship. An anchor and cable first went over with some
+heavy spare spars and rigging. The ward-room was then scuttled to get
+at the kentledge, twelve tons of which were thrown overboard. Still
+the enemy gained, and his huge proportions loomed threateningly
+through the gloom, filling the crew of the gallant little Hornet with
+the keenest anxiety. It was a state of painful suspense to Captain
+Biddle and his officers, and they watched with sinking hearts the
+steady approach of their formidable foe. At day dawn he was within
+gun-shot, and soon after, hoisting to the mizen-top-gallant-mast
+English <span class="pagenum"><a id="page253" name="page253"></a>(p. 253)</span> colors and a rear-admiral's flag, he opened with his
+bow guns. Captain Biddle then ordered the remaining anchors cut away,
+the cables heaved overboard, together with more kentledge, shot,
+provision, the launch and six guns. The firing was kept up for four
+hours, most of the shot overreaching the Hornet. Perceiving at length,
+that his firing deadened the wind, and hence his headway, the enemy
+ceased it at 11 o'clock, and soon again began to overhaul the chase.
+Captain Biddle then gave the reluctant order to throw over all the
+remaining guns but one, with the muskets, cutlasses, etc., in short,
+every thing above and below that could lighten the ship. Still his
+formidable antagonist steadily gained upon him, and at noon was within
+three quarters of a mile, when he opened with round and grape shot and
+shells, which dashed the spray about the little Hornet, yet most
+marvellously missed her. The water was smooth and it seemed that every
+shot would strike, yet only three hit the vessel. At this critical
+period of the chase the excitement of the crew was intense&mdash;the sails
+were watched with the keenest solicitude, while the sailors were
+ordered to lie down on the quarter deck to trim the vessel. It was
+impossible that the Hornet's spars and sails could long escape this
+close and incessant cannonade; and Captain Biddle, knowing that the
+first mishap to either must be the signal to strike his <span class="pagenum"><a id="page254" name="page254"></a>(p. 254)</span>
+flag, called his fatigued crew about him, and after commending their
+good conduct in the long chase, expressed the hope they would still
+behave with the propriety which had always marked their character, now
+that their capture was almost certain. Those gallant tars saw the
+quivering lip of their noble commander when he spoke of capture, and
+scarcely a dry eye was seen on deck. He resolved, however, not to
+cease his efforts so long as a ray of hope remained, and held on his
+sluggish course amid the raining shot, his eye now turned aloft to see
+if the rigging and spars were still safe, and now towards the horizon
+that, to his delight, was getting black and squally.</p>
+
+<p>At length, after enduring this firing for two hours, expecting every
+moment to be crippled, he saw with irrepressible joy the wind change
+to a favorable quarter and freshen. His vessel then began to creep
+away from his pursuer. As the distance increased between them, joy and
+hope lighted up the countenances of all on board the Hornet, and the
+gathering squalls and rising sea were hailed as deliverers. At sunset
+the man-of-war was three miles astern. In the intervals of the squalls
+his huge proportions could be seen all night long against the sky,
+still crowding sail in pursuit. But the Hornet was now running nine
+knots an hour, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page255" name="page255"></a>(p. 255)</span> by daylight had gained so much that the
+stranger, a few hours after, abandoned the chase.</p>
+
+<p>Her escape seemed miraculous; for when the man-of-war opened his fire
+the second time upon her he was as near as the United States ever got
+to the Macedonian before the latter was a total wreck.</p>
+
+<p>Without guns or shot, stripped of every thing, Captain Biddle retraced
+his steps and reached New York the last day of July.</p>
+
+<p>The Peacock continued her course and cruised for some time in the
+straits of Sunda, where she made three captures. On the last of June
+she encountered the Nautilus, of 14 guns, which after a single
+broadside surrendered. Learning from the commander of the latter that
+peace had been declared, Captain Warrington immediately restored the
+vessel.</p>
+
+<p>This was the last vessel captured during the war, and the combat
+between the Hornet and the Penguin was the last regular action. Thus
+our little navy commenced and closed its career with a victory. In
+fact its history had been reports of victories. So constant and
+astounding had they become, that for a long time before the war closed
+England ceased to publish official accounts of her naval defeats. In
+the first flush of indignation at these reverses on the sea, the
+English repelled with scorn the implication that they had at last
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page256" name="page256"></a>(p. 256)</span> found a successful rival. Excuses and reasons for them were
+ample, and fairer experiments were demanded before so humiliating a
+thought should be entertained. Our ships, they said, were falsely
+rated, and in those first single contests the equality was merely
+nominal, not real. The ignorant and conceited maintained their
+arrogant, boastful tone to the end; but as the war advanced the more
+reflecting felt that the repeated victories gained by us could not be
+swept away by assertions that the world would not reason as they
+wished it to, and were compelled to admit that their "moral effect was
+astounding." Well it might be. We know of nothing in the annals of
+civilized warfare compared to the boldness and success of our little
+navy during the war. The battles of the Nile and Trafalgar, which had
+covered the English fleets with glory, had been for years ringing over
+our land. Flushed with victory and confident of success, they bore
+down on our coast. With only a handful of ships to offer against this
+overwhelming force, our commanders nevertheless stood boldly out to
+sea, and flung their flags of defiance to the breeze. The world looked
+with amazement on the rashness that could provoke so unequal a strife;
+but while it waited to hear that our little navy was blown out of the
+water, the news came of the loss of the Guerriere. Report after report
+of victories gained by us, followed with stunning rapidity. "The
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page257" name="page257"></a>(p. 257)</span> English were defeated on their own element," was the
+universal exclamation, and her indisputed claim to the seas was broken
+forever. The courage that could bear up against such fearful odds and
+pluck the wreath of victory from the English navy, has covered the
+commanders of that time with abiding honors. Our rights were
+restored&mdash;our commerce protected&mdash;and the haughty bearing of England
+towards us chastized from her forever. The British flag had been
+lowered so often to the "stars and stripes," that respect and fear
+usurped the place of contempt and pride.</p>
+
+<p>The true reasons of our success are to be found in our superior
+gunnery and the greater aptitude of the Americans for the sea. We are
+a maritime people, and have since outstripped England in the peaceful
+paths of commerce as much as we outman&oelig;uvred, outsailed, and beat
+her in the war. Whether the ships of the two countries dash side by
+side in fraternal feeling through the heavy floes of the northern
+seas, or in a spirit of rivalry press together across the Atlantic, or
+sweep where the monsoons blow, ours still lead those of England. The
+elements of such a maritime nation as ours is destined to be, have
+never existed since the creation. Let the rate of progress which her
+commerce has maintained for the last thirty-five years be as a rule to
+gauge where she will be thirty-five years hence, and the mind is
+amazed at the result.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page258" name="page258"></a>(p. 258)</span> CHAPTER XIII.<br>
+<span class="smcap">PRIVATEERS.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Character and daring of our Privateers &mdash; Skill of American
+ seamen &mdash; Acts of Congress relative to privateering &mdash; Names
+ of ships &mdash; Gallant action of the "Nonsuch" &mdash; Success of
+ the Dolphin &mdash; Cruise of the Comet &mdash; Narrow escape of the
+ "Governor Tompkins" &mdash; Desperate action of the Globe with
+ two brigs &mdash; The Decatur takes a British sloop of war &mdash;
+ Action of the Neufchatel with the crew of the Endymion &mdash;
+ Desperate defence of Captain Reed against the crews of a
+ British squadron &mdash; The Chasseur captures a British schooner
+ of war &mdash; Character of the commanders of privateers &mdash;
+ Anecdote.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the navy won such laurels during the war, the chief
+damage done to British commerce was inflicted by our privateers. A
+history of that period is therefore incomplete without a record of
+their acts. Nothing ever brought out the daring seamanship, skill,
+fertility of resource and stubborn bravery, so characteristic of our
+sailors, as the management of those private armed vessels. Scarcely
+was war declared before they began to shoot one <span class="pagenum"><a id="page259" name="page259"></a>(p. 259)</span> after
+another from out our ports, and disappeared in the distant horizon.
+Trade being prostrated, merchants fitted up their idle ships with
+picked crews and skillful commanders, and sent them forth to vex the
+enemy's commerce. Our vessels at that time, as now, being swifter
+sailers than the English, these bold rovers asked only an open sea and
+a gale of wind to outstrip their pursuers, or overtake those in
+flight. Their sails were seen skirting the horizon in every
+direction&mdash;now saucily looking into the enemy's ports to see what was
+going on there, and again sweeping boldly through the English
+channels. They seemed ubiquitous&mdash;every pathway of commerce was
+familiar to them, and they passed from sea to sea, appearing and
+disappearing with a suddenness and celerity that baffled pursuit.
+Sometimes one of these light armed vessels would slyly hover about a
+whole fleet of merchantmen, convoyed by a stately frigate, under whose
+guns they clustered for protection, until a favorable opportunity
+occurred, when she would suddenly dash into their midst like a hawk
+into a brood of chickens, and seizing one, man her and be off before
+the frigate could sufficiently recover from its astonishment at such
+audacity to attempt pursuit. It sometimes occurred that she would find
+herself alongside a frigate which she had mistaken for a large
+merchantman, when a seamanship and coolness <span class="pagenum"><a id="page260" name="page260"></a>(p. 260)</span> would be
+exhibited in the effort to get clear, seldom witnessed in the oldest
+naval commanders. If unable to escape she would gallantly set her
+colors and fight a hopeless, yet one of the most desperate battles
+that occur in maritime warfare. The way in which these ships were
+handled, the daring manner they were carried into action, and the
+desperation with which they were fought astonished the English, who
+had never witnessed any thing like it on the sea. Sweeping waters
+covered with British cruisers, with scarcely a safe neutral port to
+enter in case of distress&mdash;shut out from their own harbors by
+blockade, they were compelled to exercise the most unceasing
+watchfulness, and keep in a state of constant preparation.</p>
+
+<p>It was a gallant sight to witness one of these little cruisers,
+apparently surrounded by an enemy's squadron, and yet dashing through
+its midst, fly away before the wind, while the water around was driven
+into foam by the shot that sped after her. Their conduct and success
+throughout the war, revealed the vast resources at the command of our
+navy. We have only to build ships, not educate sailors. Our commerce
+pierces to every clime, and our fisheries extend beyond the Arctic
+Circle; and, hardened by exposure and taught by experience and perils,
+our sailors are thoroughly trained in all the duties of their calling.
+Crews that the commanders <span class="pagenum"><a id="page261" name="page261"></a>(p. 261)</span> of men-of-war might well be proud
+of, are at this moment afloat in every part of the world. On mere call
+we could man the navies of Europe with well instructed men. One great
+difficulty with the French navy is, that during war she has no where
+to go for recruits. Her sailors require a long training, while ours
+have been trained from boyhood.</p>
+
+<p>Privateering has been denounced as unworthy of civilized nations, but
+if the object of maritime warfare be to destroy the enemy's commerce,
+it is difficult to see why a private armed vessel should not be
+commissioned to do it as well as a national one. If it be plundering
+private property on the high seas, so is the capture of merchantmen by
+men-of-war. The sailors in both are stimulated by the same motives,
+viz., prize money. If maritime war was to be carried on between
+national vessels alone, and commerce be left untouched, there would be
+little use for a navy. Ports are blockaded to injure commerce and
+weaken the resources of the enemy; so are fleets of merchantmen
+captured, supplies cut off and nations distressed for the same
+purpose. And if this is to be done, it seems hardly worth quarrelling
+about who shall do it.</p>
+
+<p>Our fleet was so small at the commencement of the war, that the
+balance of injury and loss would have been heavy against us, but for
+our privateers. Our large vessels were soon blockaded in port, and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page262" name="page262"></a>(p. 262)</span> contest on the seas was for some time almost wholly carried
+on by privateers, and of the more than two thousand vessels captured
+during its progress, the greater part was taken by them. A single
+privateer would slip through a blockading squadron, stand out to sea,
+and in a few weeks destroy vessels and seize property to the amount of
+millions. At one time they cruised so daringly in the English waters,
+that sixty dollars was paid in England to insure five hundred across
+the Irish Channel. Some of them fought British national vessels and
+captured them, while it scarcely ever happened that an American
+privateer struck to an English vessel, when there was any
+approximation to an equality of force. Of the twenty-three naval
+engagements during the war, where either one or both were national
+vessels, the Americans were victorious in seventeen. A similar success
+marked the contests of private armed vessels.</p>
+
+<p>In 1800, the act regulating privateers gave to them the entire prize
+captured, but in March, 1812, another act was passed appropriating two
+per cent. to collectors, to be used as a fund for the support of the
+widows and orphans of those who fell in combat. This was afterwards
+modified so as to allow the disabled the benefit of the fund. On the
+19th of July the act Was amended, and two per cent. placed in the
+hands of the Secretary of the Treasury, and privateersmen put on the
+pension list with the navy. A <span class="pagenum"><a id="page263" name="page263"></a>(p. 263)</span> few days after a bill passed
+the House, allowing twenty-five dollars bounty for every prisoner
+taken. This was increased the next session to one hundred dollars.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Aug. 2.</span>
+
+<p>The success attending our privateersmen, and the injury they inflicted
+on the enemy, gave them such a prominence in the country, that
+Congress increased as far as possible the inducements to fit out
+letters of marque, and in 1814 reduced the legal duties on goods
+captured by privateers thirty-three and a third per cent., and
+afterwards withdrew all claim of the government to prizes and their
+cargoes.</p>
+
+<p>Privateersmen had earned all these privileges for themselves by their
+activity, adroitness, and bravery; they had become the terror of the
+British commerce, and while England, proud of her naval strength, was
+blockading our entire coast, they were sweeping down upon her
+merchantmen in the chops of her own channels.</p>
+
+<p>The names of many of these vessels were very characteristic of the
+American sailor. "Catch me if you can," "True blooded Yankee," "Right
+of Search," "Bunker Hill," "Viper," "Rattlesnake," "Scourge," "Spit
+Fire," and "Teazer," exhibited not only the spirit that animated the
+commanders, but were well calculated to irritate and enrage the
+officers of English vessels of war, especially as their <span class="pagenum"><a id="page264" name="page264"></a>(p. 264)</span>
+conduct corresponded so well with the titles they bore.</p>
+
+<p>In September, about three months after the war was declared, the
+"Nonsuch" privateer, of Baltimore, carrying only twelve pound
+carronades and eighty or ninety men, while cruising off Cape Vincent,
+fell in with an English ship carrying sixteen 18 and 24 pound
+carronades and two hundred men, and a schooner with six four pounders
+and 60 men. Notwithstanding this overwhelming disparity of force, the
+privateer determined to uphold the name she bore, and setting American
+colors bore gallantly down on the ship. Ranging up within close musket
+shot, she poured in her broadsides and volleys of musketry for three
+hours and a half, and maintained the unequal contest till her guns
+were all disabled and only musketry could be used. The vessels instead
+of taking advantage of the crippled condition of the ship, to capture
+her, were so amazed at her audacity and the desperate manner in which
+she was fought, that they turned and fled. The Nonsuch lost
+twenty-three killed and wounded in this engagement.</p>
+
+<p>Not long after, in the same waters, the Dolphin, of Baltimore, with
+only ten guns and sixty men, attacked at the same time a ship of
+sixteen guns and forty men, and a brig of 10 guns and twenty-five men,
+and captured them both.</p>
+
+<p>In December of this year the privateer Comet, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page265" name="page265"></a>(p. 265)</span> fourteen guns,
+started on a cruise southward, and on the 14th of January gave chase
+to four sail, which were afterwards ascertained to be three English
+merchantmen, one carrying fourteen and the other two, ten guns,
+convoyed by a Portuguese brig-of-war mounting twenty thirty-twos, and
+having a crew of one hundred and sixty-five men. The privateer hailed
+the Portuguese, when the latter sent a boat aboard with her commander.
+In the conversation that followed, Captain Boyle, of the privateer,
+declared he should take those merchantmen if he could. The Portuguese
+commander replied, he must prevent him, though he should be sorry to
+have any thing disagreeable happen. The American reciprocated his good
+wishes, but told him he was afraid something unpleasant might occur if
+he undertook to interfere with his proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>It was dark when the Portuguese captain withdrew, and the Comet
+immediately crowded sail for the merchantmen, followed closely by the
+brig of war. Coming up with them, Captain Boyle began to pour in his
+broadsides. The vessels keeping heavy head way, firing as their guns
+bore, he was compelled to fight under a cloud of canvass. Now shooting
+ahead, he would tack, and come down on the enemy in a blaze of fire.
+But with every broadside, the Portuguese poured in his own. Captain
+Boyle, intent on capturing the English vessels, paid <span class="pagenum"><a id="page266" name="page266"></a>(p. 266)</span> no
+attention to the latter, except occasionally to give him a passing
+salute. At length he compelled every vessel to strike, and succeeded
+in taking possession of and manning one. But the moon having gone
+down, and dark clouds, indicating squalls, rising over the heavens,
+the vessels got separated, except the privateer and man-of-war, which
+kept exchanging occasional broadsides till two in the morning. By
+daylight all succeeded in getting off, though dreadfully cut up, with
+the exception of the one manned the night before, which was safely
+brought into port through the squadron blockading the Chesapeake. This
+bold marauder afterwards engaged a ship of eight hundred tons burthen
+and carrying twenty-two guns, and maintained the contest for eight
+hours before he could be beaten off.</p>
+
+<p>The Governor Tompkins was another daring and successful cruiser,
+inflicting heavy damages on the English commerce. Her log book would
+read like a romance. <span class="sidenote">Jan. 1, 1813.</span> One morning as the sun
+rose over the sea, Captain Shaler saw in the distance three vessels
+and immediately gave chase. The wind was light and he approached
+slowly, examining the strangers narrowly. One of them appeared to be a
+large transport, so heavy that he was questioning the propriety of
+attacking her, especially as the other two were evidently determined
+to stand by her. Boats were rapidly passing to and fro, filled with
+men, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page267" name="page267"></a>(p. 267)</span> though the large vessel lay to, quietly waiting the
+approach of the privateer, she had studding-sail booms out as if
+prepared for a running fight. Her conduct looked suspicious, and while
+the captain of the Tompkins was deliberating whether to engage or haul
+off, a sudden squall struck his vessel carrying her directly under the
+guns of the stranger, which to his amazement he discovered to be a
+frigate. He had English colors flying, but instead of endeavoring with
+them to deceive the enemy till he could claw off, he hauled them down,
+and setting three American ensigns, poured a broadside into the
+man-of-war. The latter returned it with stunning effect, his balls
+crashing through the timbers, blowing up cartridges, tube boxes, etc.,
+and strewing the quarter-deck with ruin. The Tompkins not daring to
+tack in the squall, kept on before the wind, passing the frigate and
+receiving its fire as she flew on. The frigate pursued, and sailing
+nearly as fast as the privateer, for a time made the water foam about
+him. But the latter by throwing over shot, lumber, etc., gradually
+drew ahead, and the wind dying away, Captain Boyle, with the aid of
+sweeps, got at dark beyond reach of the shot.</p>
+
+<p>About the same time the Globe had a desperate engagement off Madeira
+with two brigs, one of eighteen and the other of sixteen guns,
+compelling one to strike, though she afterwards made her escape.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page268" name="page268"></a>(p. 268)</span> In August of this year, a gallant action was fought between
+the privateer Decatur, Capt. Diron, and a war schooner of the British
+navy. The Decatur had six twelve-pound carronades and one
+eighteen-pounder, and mustered 103 men. The schooner was thoroughly
+appointed, carrying <i>twelve twelve-pound carronades</i>, two long sixes,
+a brass four, a <i>thirty-two pound carronade</i> and eighty-eight men.
+She, therefore, had but fifteen men less than her antagonist, while
+she threw more than twice the weight of metal. But, notwithstanding
+this overwhelming superiority of force, and though a packet
+accompanied the schooner whose conduct in the engagement could not be
+foretold, Captain Diron hoisted American colors to the peak, and
+closed at once and fiercely with the enemy. He knew from the outset
+that in a broadside to broadside engagement the Dominica, from her
+great superiority in metal, would soon sink him, and he determined to
+board her. The latter detected his purpose and bore away, pouring in
+her broadsides. Both commanders exhibited great skill in
+man&oelig;uvering their ships; one to board, the other to foil the
+attempt. The schooner succeeded in firing three broadsides before the
+privateer could close. Captain Diron, who had previously got up all
+the ammunition, etc. which he wanted from below, and fastened down the
+hatches, the moment he saw from his course that <span class="pagenum"><a id="page269" name="page269"></a>(p. 269)</span> the schooner
+could not avoid a collision, ordered the drums to beat the charge.
+Loud cheers followed, and the next moment the two vessels came
+together with a crash, the jib-boom of the Decatur piercing the
+main-sail of the enemy. In an instant they were lashed together. The
+fire from the artillery and musketry at this time was terrible. In the
+midst of it the crew of the Decatur sprang with shouts on the enemy's
+decks, when it became a hand-to-hand fight with pistols and cutlasses.
+The crew of the latter fought desperately, but at length, every
+officer being killed or wounded, with the exception of one midshipman
+and the surgeon, and only twenty-eight out of the eighty-eight left
+standing, the colors were hauled down. The combat, which lasted an
+hour, was one of the most bloody, in proportion to the number engaged,
+that occurred during the war.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">1814.</span>
+
+<p>The privateer Neufchatel was another lucky ship. Once getting becalmed
+off Gray Head, within sight of the Endymion, she was attacked by the
+boats and launches of the latter containing over a hundred men. The
+Neufchatel carried 17 guns, but had at the time of the attack only
+thirty-three men and officers included. Although it was dark the
+captain observed the approach of the boats, five in number, and opened
+his fire upon them. They, however, steadily advanced till they reached
+the ship, when <span class="pagenum"><a id="page270" name="page270"></a>(p. 270)</span> they attempted to board on bows, sides, and
+stern simultaneously.</p>
+
+<p>The action lasted twenty minutes, when one boat having sunk, another
+being emptied of its crew, and the others drifting away, apparently
+without men, the firing ceased. At its close the privateer found on
+her deck more prisoners than she had men in the combat. But few of the
+assailants ever reached the frigate again.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Nov. 24.</span>
+
+<p>In November of this year the Kemp privateer sailed out of Wilmington
+and two days after was attacked by a fleet of six small vessels,
+carrying in all forty-six guns and a hundred and thirty-four men.
+Enveloped in the fire of six vessels this gallant privateer maintained
+the unequal combat for half an hour, and finally succeeded in
+scattering them, when she fell on them in detail and carried three by
+boarding. She then ranged alongside the largest brig and poured in her
+broadsides and volleys of musketry. In fifteen minutes the latter
+struck. In an hour and a half the whole were taken, but while the
+prizes were being secured two hoisted sail and got away. The other
+four were secured and brought into port, the result of a six days'
+cruise.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">1814.</span>
+
+<p>But the most desperate engagement probably during the war took place
+this year, between the privateer brig, General Armstrong, and the
+crews of an English squadron in the port of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page271" name="page271"></a>(p. 271)</span> Fayal. This
+brig, carrying only seven guns and ninety men, entered that port to
+obtain water, and her commander, Captain Reid, seeing no sail on the
+horizon, dropped his anchor. A few hours after, the British brig
+Carnation came in and anchored near her. Soon after the Plantaganet,
+74, and the Rota frigate arrived. Captain Reid, knowing how little
+regard English officers paid to the laws of neutrality, became very
+solicitous about the safety of his ship, and applied to the
+authorities of the place to know what course he should pursue. They
+told him he need entertain no fear, as the English officers knew the
+rights of a neutral port too well to molest him. Captain Reid,
+however, suspected it would be otherwise, and kept a close watch on
+the movements of the enemy. About nine o'clock in the evening, it
+being broad moonlight on the bay and not a breath of air breaking its
+glittering surface, he saw four boats rowing rapidly and silently
+towards him. When they came within hail he called out to know their
+purpose. The latter making no reply and keeping steadily on, he bade
+them stand off. They paid no heed to his repeated orders, and were
+about to board when he gave the command to fire. After a short but
+fierce contest the assailants were driven off and returned to their
+vessels. The news soon spread, and the inhabitants with the governor
+gathered on the shore to see the battle. About midnight fourteen
+launches, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page272" name="page272"></a>(p. 272)</span> filled with four hundred men, were seen to put off
+and steer straight for the privateer. Captain Reid, who, in the mean
+time, had cut his cable and moored close in shore, knew he could not
+save his vessel; but indignant at this violation of the laws of
+neutrality he determined the enemy should pay dear for the conquest,
+and the moment the boats came within range opened a tremendous fire
+upon them. They staggered under it, but returning it with spirit
+continued to press on. But as they got nearer, the carnage became
+awful. Every gun on board that privateer seemed aimed with the
+precision of a rifle, and the discharges were so rapid and incessant
+that it was with the utmost efforts the boats could be pushed on at
+all. The dead cumbered the living, and the oars were continually
+dropping from the hands of the slain, crippling and confusing all the
+movements. At length, however, they succeeded in reaching the brig,
+and cheered on by their officers, shouting "no quarter," began to
+ascend the sides of the ship. In a moment its black hull was a sheet
+of flame rolling on the foe.</p>
+
+<p>Shrieks and cries, mingled with oaths and execrations, and sharp
+volleys of musketry rang out on the night air, turning that moonlight
+bay into a scene of indescribable terror. The bright waters were
+loaded with black forms, as they floated or struggled around the
+boats. The Americans fought with the ferocity <span class="pagenum"><a id="page273" name="page273"></a>(p. 273)</span> of tigers and
+the desperation of mad men. Leaping into the boats they literally
+massacred all within. Several drifted ashore full of dead bodies&mdash;not
+a soul being left alive of all the crew&mdash;others were sunk. Some were
+left with one or two to row them. Overwhelmed, crushed and
+discomfitted, the remainder abandoned the attempt and pulled slowly
+back to the ships, marking their course by the groans and cries of the
+wounded that floated back over the bay. Only three officers, out of
+the whole, escaped, while scarce a hundred and fifty of the four
+hundred returned unwounded to their vessels. A hundred and twenty were
+killed outright. The loss could scarcely have been greater had the
+enemy fought a squadron equal to their own.</p>
+
+<p>Our Consul, after this, dropped a note to the Governor, who
+immediately sent a remonstrance to Van Lloyd, commander of the
+Plantagenet, saying that the American vessel was under the guns of the
+castle and entitled to Portuguese protection. To this Van Lloyd
+replied, that he was resolved on the destruction of the vessel, and if
+the fort undertook to protect her, he would not leave a house standing
+on shore.</p>
+
+<p>The next day the Carnation hauled in alongside and opened her
+broadsides on the privateer. Reid, still grimly clinging to his
+vessel, returned the fire, and in a short time so cut up his
+antagonist that he hauled off to repair. That little brig, half a
+wreck, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page274" name="page274"></a>(p. 274)</span> lying under the walls of the castle fighting that
+hopeless gallant battle, vindicating her rights against such fearful
+odds, with none who dare help her, presented a sublime spectacle.</p>
+
+<p>At length his guns being dismounted, Captain Reid ordered his men to
+cut away the masts of the ship, blow a hole through her bottom, and
+taking out their arms and clothing, go ashore. Soon after the British
+advanced and set her on fire. Van Lloyd then made a demand on the
+Governor for Captain Reid and his crew, threatening in case of refusal
+to send an armed force and take them. Fearing that the Governor would
+not be able to prevent their arrest, this gallant band retired to an
+old convent, knocked away the drawbridge, determined to defend
+themselves to the last. The English commander had no desire to place
+his crews again under the deadly aim of those daring men, and
+abandoned the project.</p>
+
+<p>The American loss in this engagement was only two killed and seven
+wounded. Thus dearly did England pay for this violation of the laws of
+a neutral port. That brig, cruising successfully to the close of the
+war, could not have inflicted so heavy damage on the enemy as she
+caused in her capture.</p>
+
+<p>The gallant bearing and patriotic feeling that marked these little
+cruisers are worthy of record, while the hair-breadth escapes&mdash;the
+tricks employed to entice merchantmen within their reach&mdash;the wit
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page275" name="page275"></a>(p. 275)</span> and humor exhibited in hailing and answering the hails of
+vessels&mdash;the saucy and irritating acts committed on purpose to
+provoke&mdash;the good-natured jokes they cracked on those they had first
+outwitted, then conquered, would make a most characteristic and
+amusing chapter in American history.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Boyle, of the Chasseur, took great delight in provoking
+frigates to chase him, and when they abandoned the pursuit as
+hopeless, he would affect to chase in turn, teazing and insulting his
+formidable adversaries, who tried in vain to cut some spar out of the
+winged thing in order to lessen her fleetness. Cruising along the
+English coast, this vessel had some very narrow escapes. While here
+the captain overhauled a cartel, and sent by it a proclamation with
+orders to have it stuck up in Lloyd's coffee house, declaring the
+whole British Empire in a state of blockade, and that he considered
+the force under him sufficient to maintain it.</p>
+
+<p>This was probably one of the finest private armed vessels afloat
+during the war. Buoyant as a sea-gull, she sat so lightly and
+gracefully on the water, that it seemed as if she might, at will, rise
+and fly. Fleet as the wind, she was handled with such ease that the
+enemy gazed on her movements with admiration.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Feb. 26, 1815.</span>
+
+<p>Her last exploit was the capture of his majesty's schooner St.
+Lawrence, carrying fifteen guns. The latter was on her way to New
+Orleans, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page276" name="page276"></a>(p. 276)</span> with some soldiers, marines, and gentlemen of the
+navy as passengers. The Chasseur had only six twelve-pounders and
+eight short nine pound carronades, having been compelled a short time
+before, when hard pressed by an English frigate, to throw over nearly
+all her twelve pound carronades. Captain Boyle had no suspicion of the
+true character of the vessel when he gave chase, for her ports had
+been closed on purpose to deceive him. He therefore stood boldly on
+till he got within pistol-shot, when the schooner suddenly opened ten
+ports on a side and poured in a destructive fire. At the same time the
+men who had been concealed under the bulwarks leaped up and delivered
+a volley of musketry. Captain Boyle, discovering what a trap he had
+been beguiled into, determined at once to stay in it, and ranging
+alongside within ten yards, opened a tremendous fire with his
+batteries and musketry. The vessels were so near each other that the
+voices of officers and men could be distinctly heard, even amid the
+crashing cannonade. That little privateer exhibited a skill and
+practice in gunnery unsurpassed by any frigate, and superior to any
+vessel in the English navy. The enemy was completely stunned by the
+rapidity and destructive effect of her fire, and in eleven minutes was
+a perfect wreck. Captain Boyle then gave the command to board, when
+the flag was struck. In this short space of time the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page277" name="page277"></a>(p. 277)</span>
+Chasseur had strewed the deck of that schooner with nearly half of her
+crew, killed and wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Our privateers had greatly the advantage of the English, not only in
+artillery but in musketry&mdash;our men firing with much surer aim than
+theirs.</p>
+
+<p>It would be impossible to give the names and details of all the
+vessels and their engagements; but, independent of the vast number of
+merchantmen captured by them, they took eight national vessels of the
+enemy, in single combat. They seemed to vie with each other in daring
+and the venturous exploits they would undertake. One of these vessels
+would shoot out of port within sight of a blockading squadron, start
+alone on a cruise, and scouring thirty or forty thousand miles of the
+ocean, return with a fleet of prizes. The commanders were almost,
+invariably humane men, treating their prisoners with vastly more
+kindness than British admirals and commodores did those Americans who
+fell in their hands. Many acts of kindness and generosity were
+performed, and a nobleness of spirit exhibited towards a fallen foe,
+which has ever been, and it is to be hoped ever will be, a
+distinguished trait in the American character. On one occasion a
+privateer captured in the channel a Welch vessel from Cardigan,
+freighted with corn. As the captain went on board he saw a small box
+with a hole in the top, in the cabin, marked "Missionary box." "What
+is this?" said he, touching it <span class="pagenum"><a id="page278" name="page278"></a>(p. 278)</span> with a stick. "Oh," replied
+the Cambrian, "the truth is, my poor fellows here have been accustomed
+every Monday morning to drop a penny each into that box, for the
+purpose of sending out missionaries to preach the gospel to the
+heathen; but it's all over now." "Indeed," said the captain, and
+reflecting a moment, he added, "Captain, I'll not hurt a hair of your
+head nor touch your vessel," and immediately returned to his own ship,
+leaving him unmolested.</p>
+
+<p>Such conduct appears the more striking when contrasted with that of
+British officers. The murder of Mr. Sigourney, of the Alp, whose
+brains were beaten out; though when his vessel was taken possession of
+not a soul but himself was found on board&mdash;the confinement of Capt.
+Upton and his officers of the privateer Hunter, for three months in a
+filthy prison, and their after transfer to a prison ship&mdash;the cruelty
+shown to Capt. Nichols, who, after enjoying his parole for two months,
+was without the least reason thrown into a prison-ship and kept for
+more than a month in a room four feet by seven, and many other cases
+of extreme cruelty, were well known, for the facts had been sworn to
+and placed on record as state papers. Rumor aggravated all these a
+hundred fold, yet the English government can offset them with no
+retaliatory acts substantiated before courts of inquiry.</p>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page279" name="page279"></a>(p. 279)</span> CHAPTER XIV.<br>
+<span class="smcap">DARTMOOR PRISON.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="resume">Impressed Americans made prisoners of war &mdash; Treatment of
+ prisoners &mdash; Prison Ships &mdash; Dartmoor prison &mdash; Neglect of
+ American prisoners &mdash; Their sufferings &mdash; Fourth of July in
+ Dartmoor &mdash; Brutal attack of the French prisoners &mdash; Fresh
+ arrivals &mdash; Joy at the news of our naval victories &mdash;
+ Sufferings of the prisoners in winter &mdash; American Government
+ allows them three cents per diem &mdash; Moral effect of this
+ notice of Government &mdash; Napoleon's downfall &mdash; Increased
+ allowance of Government &mdash; Industry of prisoners &mdash; Attempts
+ to escape &mdash; Extraordinary adventure of a lieutenant of a
+ privateer &mdash; Number of prisoners increased &mdash; A riot to
+ obtain bread &mdash; Dartmoor massacre &mdash; Messrs. King and
+ L'Arpent appointed commissioners to investigate it &mdash;
+ Decision &mdash; The end.</p>
+
+<p>A short chapter is due to those who, though not engaged in battle,
+suffered equally for their country, and despite the oppression and
+want which drove them well nigh to despair, refused to be faithless to
+the land that had nurtured them. The conduct of the land and naval
+officers to a vanquished enemy, did not present a more striking
+contrast than that of the two governments towards prisoners who had
+never taken up arms. Those placed in confinement by us were never
+allowed to suffer through want of clothing <span class="pagenum"><a id="page280" name="page280"></a>(p. 280)</span> or food, while a
+barbarity characterized the treatment of American citizens that
+reflects the deepest disgrace on the British empire.</p>
+
+<a id="img005" name="img005"></a>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/img005.jpg" width="400" height="418" alt="" title="">
+<p class="smcap">DARTMOOR PRISON.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>When the declaration of war was made, the English vessels had a vast
+number of American seamen on board, most of them impressed, who flatly
+refused to fight against their country. Many of these, without having
+received the pay due them, were then sent to England as prisoners of
+war. Captures at sea swelled the number rapidly, which in the end
+amounted to nearly six thousand men. Officers of privateersmen and
+merchantmen on parole, were sent to Devonshire or Berkshire, where on
+thirty-three and a quarter cents per diem, they were allowed to
+subsist in comparative comfort; but the common sailors and merchant
+captains were scattered about in different prisons, the most, however,
+being collected and placed on board two old line-of-battle-ships in
+Portsmouth harbor. Hence, after a short imprisonment, characterized by
+a brutality not often found among half-civilized nations, they were
+transferred to Dartmoor prison, seventeen miles inland. This dreaded
+prison was situated high up on the side of a barren mountain,
+overlooking a bleak and desolate moor. It consisted of seven
+buildings, surrounded by two walls, the first a mile in extent and
+sixteen feet high; the second, thirty feet from the first, and
+surmounted by guards overlooking the spaces within. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page281" name="page281"></a>(p. 281)</span> Each
+prison had but one apartment on a floor, around which, in tiers, six
+on a side, the hammocks were slung. Into one of these large cold
+apartments, nearly five hundred American prisoners were crowded during
+the year 1813. Their own Government had not then provided any thing
+towards their expenses, and they were dependent entirely on the
+allowance of the British officials. The garments they brought with
+them, at length wearing out, they were reduced to the most miserable
+shifts to cover their persons. As soon as it was dark, this
+half-famished multitude was turned into their prison, and left without
+a light to pass the long and dreary winter nights. Filthy, ragged,
+covered with vermin, they strolled around the yard in the day time, or
+lay basking in the sun to obtain a little warmth, and moody and
+despairing, gradually sank, through degrading companionship and the
+demoralization of want and suffering, lower and lower in the scale of
+humanity. A single bucket, only, containing the food, was allowed to a
+mess, around which they gathered with the avidity of starving men, and
+each with his wooden spoon struggled to eat fastest and most. To add
+to their sufferings the small-pox broke out among them, carrying many
+to their graves. Faint and far echoes from home would now and then
+rekindle hope in their bosoms, to be succeeded only by blank despair.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page282" name="page282"></a>(p. 282)</span> The better portion strove manfully to arrest the tendency
+around them to degradation, and constituted themselves a court to try
+offenders. When theft was proved on one, a punishment of twenty-seven
+lashes was inflicted. They also used every inducement to prevent the
+sailors from enlisting in the British service, to which last resort
+many were driven, to escape the horrors of that gloomy prison.</p>
+
+<p>When the 4th of July arrived, they determined to celebrate the
+national anniversary in their own prison, and so having by some means
+obtained two American standards, they placed them at the two ends of
+the building, outside the walls, and forming into two columns marched
+up and down the yard, singing patriotic songs, whistling patriotic
+tunes, and cheering the flag of their country. The keeper, hearing of
+it, ordered the turnkeys to take away the flags; but the prisoners
+sent to him, requesting as a particular favor that they might be
+allowed to celebrate the anniversary of their country's independence,
+adding if he insisted on attacking their colors he must take the
+consequences. The guards were then ordered in, when a scuffle ensued,
+in which one flag was taken, but the prisoners bore the other off in
+triumph to their room. At evening, when the guards came as usual to
+shut them up, a great deal of severe language and opprobrious epithets
+were used, stigmatizing the pitiful revenge in taking away <span class="pagenum"><a id="page283" name="page283"></a>(p. 283)</span>
+their flags as mean and contemptible. Retorts followed, blows
+succeeded, and finally the guard fired on the crowd, wounding two men.
+Thus ended the 4th of July, 1813, in Dartmoor.</p>
+
+<p>In the apartments above the Americans, were crowded nearly a thousand
+French prisoners, miserable outcasts, with scarcely any thing left of
+our common humanity but the form. Many of them were entirely naked,
+and slept on the stone floor, stretched out like so many swine. The
+moment clothing was given them they would gamble it away. These
+wretches formed a conspiracy to murder all the Americans. Arming
+themselves with whatever weapon they could lay hands on, they
+contrived one morning to get into the yard before the latter, and as
+the first group of Americans, a hundred and fifty in number, emerged
+into the open air, fell upon them with the ferocity of fiends. Passing
+between them and the prison, they blocked the entrance to prevent the
+others from coming to the rescue. A wild scene of confusion and tumult
+followed. The French succeeded in stabbing and knocking down and
+mangling nearly every American, and would doubtless have beaten the
+whole to death had not the guard, attracted by the cries for help and
+shrieks of murder, rushed in, and by a bayonet charge ended the fray.
+A great number of the Americans <span class="pagenum"><a id="page284" name="page284"></a>(p. 284)</span> were more or less injured
+and twenty shockingly mangled.</p>
+
+<p>The succeeding months passed drearily away, with nothing occurring to
+break the weary monotony of life, except at long intervals the arrival
+of a fresh squad of prisoners. This was an event in their existence,
+and replaced them once more in communication with the outward world.
+The new comers were lions for the time. Eager groups gathered around
+each one, impatiently asking after the news, and how the war got on.
+The triumphs of our navy made them forget, for awhile, the gloom of
+their dismal abode. Every action had to be described over and over
+again, losing nothing by Jack's embellishments&mdash;the narration ever and
+anon interrupted with huzzas and acclamations. They would lie for
+hours awake in their hammocks, listening to the recital of the
+marvellous sea-fights in which "free trade and sailors' rights" were
+gallantly maintained, and cheers would burst out of the darkness,
+ringing down through the tiers of cots that lined the walls.</p>
+
+<p>During the autumn of 1813, a fresh arrival of prisoners brought the
+news of Perry's victory on Lake Erie, and the capture of the Boxer by
+the Enterprise. These were the occasion of great rejoicing, and while
+the more intelligent and respectable portion of the captives discussed
+the victories calmly, the hundreds of common seamen shook the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page285" name="page285"></a>(p. 285)</span> prison walls with their uproarious mirth and unbounded
+exultation.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">1813.</span>
+
+<p>The sufferings of the prisoners were the greatest during this winter.
+They were allowed no fire and no light, although the windows were not
+glazed; and locked within the cold damp stone walls at the close of
+the short winter days, were compelled to spend the long winter
+evenings in darkness, whiling away the time in telling
+stories&mdash;keeping warm by huddling together, or creeping to their
+hammocks with but a single tattered blanket to protect them from the
+cold. To make their wretchedness complete, the winter set in with a
+severity not felt before for half a century, and which has had no
+parallel since. The mountain on which the prison stood was covered
+with snow to the depth of from two to four feet. The stream running
+through the prison yard, and the buckets of water in the prisoners'
+room were frozen solid. Most of the prisoners being protected only by
+rags, and destitute of shoes, they could not go out into the yard at
+all, for it was covered with snow, but lay crouched in their hammocks
+all day and all night. The strong were bowed in gloom and despair, and
+the weak perished in protracted agonies. To fill up the measure of
+their sufferings, the commanding officer issued an order compelling
+them to turn out at nine o'clock in the morning, and stand in the yard
+till <span class="pagenum"><a id="page286" name="page286"></a>(p. 286)</span> the guard counted them. This took nearly an hour,
+during which time the poor fellows stood barefoot in the snow,
+benumbed by the cold and pierced by the bleak December blasts that
+swept the desolate mountain, and hurled the snow in clouds through the
+air. Unable to bear this dreadful exposure, the prisoners cut up their
+bedding and made garments and socks for their feet to protect them
+from the frost, and slept on the cold floor. Morning after morning,
+hardy men overcome by the cold, fell lifeless in presence of their
+keepers, and were carried to the hospital, where they were
+resuscitated, only to be sent back to shiver and suffer on the icy
+floor of their prison. The better class remonstrated against this
+useless cruelty, but without effect.</p>
+
+<span class="sidenote">Dec.</span>
+
+<p>At length, in the latter part of the month, the agent was removed, and
+Captain Shortland took his place, who immediately revoked the order
+requiring the prisoners to be counted&mdash;represented strongly to the
+board of transport the condition they were in, and used all the means
+in his power to alleviate their sufferings and ameliorate the horrors
+of their confinement. Still, no clothing was furnished, and the cold
+was intense. The camp distemper also broke out, and many were not
+sorry to take it, in order to get in the more comfortable quarters of
+the hospital.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Beasely was agent for American prisoners of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page287" name="page287"></a>(p. 287)</span> war in
+England, to whom those at Dartmoor constantly appealed for help.
+Receiving no answers to their repeated appeals, they denounced him as
+unfeeling and indifferent to their distress. At last, enraged at the
+neglect of their own Government, as represented in Mr. Beasely, and
+maddened by suffering, they drew up a paper and sent it to him, in
+which they declared that unless relief was granted they would offer,
+<i>en masse</i>, their services to the British Government. To this no
+answer was received for about a month, when a letter arrived,
+announcing that the United States would allow them about three cents a
+day to buy soap and tobacco with. Slight as this relief was, it shed
+sunshine through that prison. True, it was not sufficient to purchase
+them clothing; it did more, however; it showed that they were
+recognized by their Government&mdash;they were no longer disowned,
+forgotten men, but stood once more in communication with the land of
+their birth, and acknowledged to be American citizens. The moral
+effect of this consciousness was wonderful, and notwithstanding their
+nakedness and forlorn appearance, the prisoners felt at once a new
+dignity. A committee was appointed to suppress gambling, and a
+petition got up to separate them from the blacks, who were
+irredeemably given over to thieving. Previous to this ninety-five had
+entered the British service; now every <span class="pagenum"><a id="page288" name="page288"></a>(p. 288)</span> one spurned the
+thought. They never would desert the country that owned them as sons.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring the rigorous restrictions laid on them were relaxed, and
+they were allowed the privilege of the French prisoners. Free access
+to the other prisoners and to the market were given, and they
+established a coffee-house in their prison, selling coffee at a penny
+a pint. From French officers they learned the news of the day. The
+world was thus again thrown open to them, and though the prospect of
+exchange grew dimmer and dimmer, they resigned themselves with more
+tranquillity to their contemplated long confinement. In the mean time
+money began to arrive from friends at home, on which, as a capital,
+the recipients set up as tobacconists, butter and potatoe merchants,
+etc. Imitating the French, they learned to be economical, and invent
+methods of increasing their revenue. The bones left from their beef
+were converted into beautifully wrought miniature ships. Others
+plaited straw for hats, made hair bracelets, list shoes, etc., turning
+that gloomy receptacle of despairing, reckless men, into a perfect
+hive of industry. Soon after, another letter from Mr. Beasely arrived,
+stating that six cents a week, in addition to the former sum, would in
+future be allowed, per man. This little sum diffused new pleasure
+around, and filled every heart with animation and hope. They could now
+purchase clothing and other <span class="pagenum"><a id="page289" name="page289"></a>(p. 289)</span> little articles, necessary to
+render their appearance becoming American citizens.</p>
+
+<p>Succeeding this came the news of Napoleon's downfall and termination
+of the continental war. The French prisoners were, of course,
+released, and the Americans purchased out their stock in trade,
+utensils, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>Among the prisoners were gray-haired men, and boys from thirteen to
+seventeen years of age. For the latter a school was established, to
+instruct them in reading, writing, and arithmetic. Soon another
+welcome letter was received, announcing that the United States would
+hereafter clothe them. Clad in clean new, though coarse clothing, they
+now trod the yards of their prison with a manly bearing. The sense of
+inferiority was gone, and the characteristic boldness and independence
+of the American seamen again shone forth. They would argue with
+English officers on the war, repel insult, and denounce every act of
+cruelty or fraud as freely as if on their own soil.</p>
+
+<p>The English Government having resolved to make Dartmoor the general
+depôt of the prisoners, fresh arrivals soon swelled the number to
+fourteen hundred. <span class="sidenote">1814.</span> Being now in a better condition,
+they resolved to celebrate the approaching 4th of July with becoming
+pomp. American colors were obtained, two hogsheads of porter and some
+rum purchased, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page290" name="page290"></a>(p. 290)</span> and a grand dinner of soup and beef prepared.
+Early in the morning the flag was run up, and as it flaunted to the
+wind, "<span class="smcap">All Canada, or Dartmoor prison for ever!</span>" was seen inscribed
+upon its folds. At eleven the prisoners assembled, while the walls
+around were lined with the English soldiers and officers and clerks,
+curious to hear what kind of an oration a Yankee sailor would make.
+Mounted on a cask, the orator launched at once into the war, showed
+how we had been forced into it by the injustice of England, and dwelt
+with great unction on the separate naval victories the brave tars had
+gained. Dinner followed, the grog circulated freely, toasts were
+given, and a song composed expressly for the occasion sung. Mirth and
+hilarity ruled the hour, and the walls of that old prison shook to the
+deafening cheers and boisterous mirth of these sons of the ocean.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after a plan of escape was put in execution, and for a long time
+proceeded without detection. Every prisoner was sworn to secresy, and
+a court organized to try any informer, who in case of conviction, was
+to be hung. Shafts were sunk in the ground&mdash;the hole at the top being
+carefully concealed&mdash;and broad excavations began and worked towards
+the walls, beyond which they were to come to the surface. A traitor,
+however, was found, who for the price of his liberty revealed all.</p>
+
+<p>From time to time some of the prisoners made <span class="pagenum"><a id="page291" name="page291"></a>(p. 291)</span> their escape,
+but most of them were retaken before they reached the sea-board.<a id="footnotetag12" name="footnotetag12"></a><a href="#footnote12" title="Go to footnote 12"><span class="smaller">[12]</span></a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page292" name="page292"></a>(p. 292)</span> The number of prisoners continued to increase, so that by
+autumn, over five thousand were congregated in the prison. Before they
+were released, the number was swelled to five thousand six hundred and
+ninety-three. Frequent collisions occurred between them and the
+officers, which embittered the animosity of the latter, and finally
+brought on a bloody catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p>With the approach of winter great suffering was experienced. The
+malignant small-pox again broke out, and raged with fatal violence
+amid this army of men.</p>
+
+<p>The news of the treaty of peace, however, dissipated, for a time, all
+their gloom, and diffused joy and hope through the prisons. The word
+"<span class="smcap">Home</span>," was on every man's lips, and a speedy release from that den of
+horrors and suffering was expected. But the gloomy winter passed, and
+spring came, without mitigating their condition or restoring them to
+freedom. The prisoners became exasperated. The two countries having
+been so long at peace, they felt themselves entitled to their freedom.
+They were no longer prisoners of war, but by the very act of the
+treaty, American freemen. They burnt Mr. Beasely, the American agent,
+in effigy, railed at their keepers, and swore they would make their
+escape by violence if not soon released.</p>
+
+<p>On the fourth of April, Captain Shortland having <span class="pagenum"><a id="page293" name="page293"></a>(p. 293)</span> gone to
+Plymouth, they were not allowed any bread. Bearing the privation
+patiently, for thirty-six hours, they resolved to break open the
+store-house and supply themselves. So at dark as the officers entered
+the yard and cried out, "<i>Turn in! Turn in!</i>" a signal previously
+agreed on was given, and in an instant the excited thousands moved in
+one dark mass towards the gates. One after another gave way before the
+tremendous pressure, and these maddened hungry men rushed around the
+depôt of provisions, their shouts and cries ringing over the alarm
+bells and beat of drums, that summoned the garrison to arms. The alarm
+spread to the neighboring villages, and the militia began to pour in.
+In a few moments the soldiers advanced with charged bayonets towards
+the multitude, when they were sternly ordered off by the prisoners,
+who swore that if they dared fire or charge, they would charge in
+turn, and level that store-house to the ground, and march out of
+prison. The officers, fearing the result of such a contest, prudently
+promised to give them their usual supply if they would retire to their
+respective prisons. They did so, and quiet was restored. The bold and
+successful manner in which the Americans had overawed the soldiery and
+coerced submission to their demands, irritated them highly, and made
+them wish for a good opportunity to retaliate. <span class="sidenote">April 6.</span>
+This was soon furnished. Two days after, Captain Shortland, who had
+returned, observed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page294" name="page294"></a>(p. 294)</span> a hole in that portion of the inner wall
+which separated two of the prison yards from the barracks, and
+suspecting, or pretending to suspect it was made by the prisoners for
+the purpose of escaping, he immediately ordered the alarm bells to be
+rung and the drums to beat. The prisoners, surprised and excited,
+rushed towards the gates of the yard to ascertain the cause of the
+alarm. The thousands behind pushing forward the thousands before, they
+became packed in an impenetrable mass at the entrance, and the
+pressure was so great that some were forced out through one of the
+gates that gave way. In the midst of the confusion, Shortland entered
+the inner square with the whole garrison. The soldiers advanced close
+to the throng, when the prisoners retired towards their respective
+yards. Doubtless amid such a vast and motley collection of men, many
+taunted the soldiers, provoked them, and dared them to fire. Still
+they yielded before the bayonet, and entered their own yard. The gates
+were shut, but a large crowd remained in the passage, provoking the
+soldiers, from whom they were separated by an iron railing, and
+threatening them with vengeance. While in this position the order to
+fire was given. Immediately the massacre commenced. Volley after
+volley was poured into the terrified crowd, pushing down and trampling
+on each other in their haste to reach the shelter of the prisons. Men
+were killed in the act of supplicating mercy, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page295" name="page295"></a>(p. 295)</span> others were
+shot down while struggling to enter the prison doors. It was
+cold-blooded murder, and before all the prisoners could get within the
+walls, over sixty were killed or wounded. When the living had all
+escaped to a place of shelter, and the carnage was over, the prison
+yard presented a ghastly spectacle. The man of sixty, the sailor in
+his prime, and the boy of fifteen, lay scattered around, while the
+groans of the wounded were borne to the ears of the enraged prisoners
+within. A sullen silence fell on those gloomy structures, the flags
+were raised half-mast, in token of mourning, and the prisoners
+assembled together and appointed a committee to report on the matter.</p>
+
+<p>Although the coroner's jury over the slain gave a verdict of
+justifiable homicide, our Government took up the matter, and appointed
+Charles King to meet Mr. Larpent, the English commissioner, and
+investigate it. In their report no one was declared culpable, though
+it was freely admitted wrong had been done. Mr. King was severely
+censured for his conduct, but it was not easy to come to a just
+conclusion, when the testimony of the two parties were so entirely at
+variance. Mr. Larpent was bound to believe the assertions of Captain
+Shortland and his troops, as much as Mr. King those of the prisoners.
+Capt. Shortland declared he never gave the order to fire, and
+attempted to arrest it after it had begun. This, of course, the
+prisoners denied, some of them swearing <span class="pagenum"><a id="page296" name="page296"></a>(p. 296)</span> they heard him give
+the order. One thing, however, is certain; Mr. King never should have
+let this massacre of Americans pass, with so slight a condemnation as
+it received at his hands. In the first place, there is good reason to
+doubt whether Captain Shortland believed there was any great danger at
+all. A hole in a wall, only large enough to admit the passage of a
+single man at a time, could easily be stopped up without ringing alarm
+bells and beating drums, especially as that hole communicated with
+only two out of five of the yards, and when in three of these yards
+the prisoners were walking about in their usual quiet manner. Nor
+could he believe they meditated an escape, when they had just received
+word that preparations were nearly completed for their restoration to
+liberty. Where could they escape to without money or clothing?
+Besides, if they wished to free themselves by violence, why did they
+not do it two days before, when they had completely cowed the soldiers
+and had only to march forth without farther resistance.</p>
+
+<p>In the second place, he deserved disgrace and punishment, for allowing
+the soldiers to press on the multitude, when he saw them evidently, or
+the great mass of them, retiring to their prisons. To fire on a mob,
+unless they are pressing forward to assail authority and force, is
+brutal. If he gave the order to fire, he should have been hung. If he
+did not, he <span class="pagenum"><a id="page297" name="page297"></a>(p. 297)</span> should be held responsible for having such
+undisciplined troops under his command. An act like this cannot be
+committed and nobody be deserving of reprehension. The commander of a
+garrison cannot so escape responsibility. The probability is, enraged
+at the conduct of the prisoners in forcing the soldiers to yield to
+their demands two days before, he resolved to punish the first attempt
+at insubordination, and irritated at the insolence and taunts of some
+of them, he in a fit of passion gave the order to fire.
+Conscience-smitten afterwards, and fearing disgrace and punishment, he
+endeavored to cover up the dark transaction.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. King had rather, at any time, smooth over a quarrel, than increase
+the exasperation by dealing sternly with its causes. With his thousand
+noble and excellent qualities, he lacked the energy of will and
+unflinching severity necessary to probe such a difficulty to the
+bottom, and see that justice was done at whatever cost. A great wrong
+was committed, though doubtless with good intentions and a patriotic
+heart.</p>
+
+<p class="p4"><i>The following</i> <span class="smcap">Tax Tables</span>, <i>showing the relative amount of taxation
+during the last two years of the war, are extracted from voluminous
+tables found in the revenue department. The whole to be found in
+Ingersoll's History of the War of 1812.</i></p>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page301" name="page301"></a>(p. 301)</span> <i>Internal Duties which accrued on Stills and Boilers.</i></h3>
+
+<table border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="25%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="center" rowspan="2" colspan="2">STATES OR TERRITORIES.</td>
+<td class="center" colspan="2">In 1814.</td>
+<td class="center" colspan="2">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="center">Domestic materials.</td>
+<td class="center">Foreign materials.</td>
+<td class="center">Domestic materials.</td>
+<td class="center">Foreign materials.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot" colspan="2">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="nobot right">3,982 50</td>
+<td class="nobot right">213 90</td>
+<td class="nobot right">888 69</td>
+<td class="nobot right">3,015 90</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">33,735 64</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">39,272 28</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">23,381 83</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">57,959 11</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">31,836 54</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">14,263 <span class="invis">00</span></td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,918 73</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">9,346 50</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,073 28</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">8,440 80</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">50,067 34</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">50,867 66</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,524 65</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">225,979 31</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,201 45</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">120,522 03</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">10,299 23</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">54,845 67</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">25,033 72</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,953 90</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">392,536 23</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">56 70</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">228,042 13</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,457 64</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">209 11</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">60,378 10</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">28,910 87</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">264,135 97</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3 50</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">87,702 63</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">87,738 22</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">13,353 81</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">75,596 85</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">33,819 16</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">141,157 50</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">57,807 62</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">66,941 37</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,425 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">12,615 84</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,550 77</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">77,091 59</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">34,244 77</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">29,262 34</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">925 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">14,929 56</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">864 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,741 84</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,109 72</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Illinois Territory</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">605 35</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">214 91</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Michigan</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Indiana</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,358 50</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">923 20</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Missouri</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,033 95</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,631 08</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Mississippi</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,862 41</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">958 48</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notop right">279 27</td>
+<td class="notop right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notop right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notop right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="noborright">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="noborleft">Total</td>
+<td class="right">1,621,542 86</td>
+<td class="right">57,444 33</td>
+<td class="right">760,804 22</td>
+<td class="right">91,608 36</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page302" name="page302"></a>(p. 302)</span> <i>Internal Duties which accrued on Spirits distilled in the
+United States.</i></h3>
+
+<table border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="25%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="20%">
+ <col width="20%">
+ <col width="20%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" rowspan="3" class="center">STATES OR TERRITORIES.</td>
+<td colspan="3" class="center">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="center">Domestic materials.</td>
+<td class="center">Foreign materials.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="center">At 20 cents per gal.</td>
+<td class="center">At 25 cents per gal.</td>
+<td class="center">At 20 cents per gal.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="notop right">861 81</td>
+<td class="notop right">137 05</td>
+<td class="notop right">4,840 81</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">29,877 84</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,548 14</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">110,147 27</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">18,017 56</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">816 14</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,097 71</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">12,185 97</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">52,996 04</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,692 09</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,645 20</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">199,645 92</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,672 31</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">15,519 65</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">69,081 42</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">10,329 74</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,477 20</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">381,484 71</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">38,393 24</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">600 35</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">22,295 38</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">66,177 25</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">32,428 34</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">179,387 95</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">201,566 82</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">21,961 11</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">175,922 07</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">56,653 68</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">15,128 83</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">114,644 40</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">39,569 10</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">19,640 77</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">68,107 41</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,391 30</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">55,284 66</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">56,573 59</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">17,563 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">65,162 75</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,021 60</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">12,756 54</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">177 35</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Illinois Territory</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">549 23</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">701 26</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Michigan</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Indiana</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">641 50</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,508 17</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Missouri</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">833 50</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">622 89</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Mississippi</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">583 37</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,045 90</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notop right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notop right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notop right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="noborright">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="noborleft">Total</td>
+<td class="right">1,305,340 39</td>
+<td class="right">742,398 57</td>
+<td class="right">159,229 00</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page303" name="page303"></a>(p. 303)</span> <i>Internal Duties which accrued on Carriages.</i></h3>
+
+<table border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="25%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" rowspan="2" class="center">STATES OR TERRITORIES.</td>
+<td colspan="2" class="center">In 1814.</td>
+<td colspan="2" class="center">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="center">Number.</td>
+<td class="center">Duty.</td>
+<td class="center">Number.</td>
+<td class="center">Duty.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot" colspan="2">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="nobot right">3,279</td>
+<td class="nobot right">6,895 51</td>
+<td class="nobot right">3,337</td>
+<td class="nobot right">4,514 09</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">14,934</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">33,995 64</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">14,184</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">21,748 49</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,227</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,890 24</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,628</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,443 09</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,232</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,877 50</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">722</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,123 03</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,262</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">13,419 80</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,319</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">10,202 46</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,499</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">22,834 15</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,715</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">18,675 91</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,502</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">16,781 26</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,892</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">14,790 02</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,848</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">26,800 80</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">8,361</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">20,076 29</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,261</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,228 21</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,081</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,018 58</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,014</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">17,676 78</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,550</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">13,283 87</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">8,067</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">30,401 80</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,047</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">20,147 24</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,766</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">14,147 44</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,859</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">8,907 95</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">160</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">628 36</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">219</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">732 45</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">610</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,025 77</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">546</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,192 86</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,560</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">15,411 58</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,178</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">11,345 94</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">209</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">778 22</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">154</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">781 43</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,667</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,159 75</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,948</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,095 60</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">495</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,435 83</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">430</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,357 27</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Illinois Territory</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">19</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">66 62</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">18</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">36 75</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Michigan</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">31</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">76 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">28</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">60 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Indiana</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">17 44</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Missouri</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">18</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">79 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">47 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbotright">Mississippi</td>
+<td class="notopbotleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">78</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">371 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">73</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">371 98</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notop right">353</td>
+<td class="notop right">2,171 21</td>
+<td class="notop right">316</td>
+<td class="notop right">1,747 57</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="noborright">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="noborleft">Total</td>
+<td class="right">77,095</td>
+<td class="right">225,156 47</td>
+<td class="right">76,616</td>
+<td class="right">165,717 31</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page304" name="page304"></a>(p. 304)</span> <i>Internal Duties which accrued on Licenses to Retailers.</i></h3>
+
+<table border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="30%">
+ <col width="10%">
+ <col width="20%">
+ <col width="20%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="center" colspan="2">STATES OR TERRITORIES.</td>
+<td class="center">In 1814.</td>
+<td class="center">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot" colspan="2">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="nobot right">18,449 00</td>
+<td class="nobot right">24,535 64</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">86,211 12</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">113,906 95</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">14,417 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">22,337 54</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">16,058 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">10,093 53</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">32,820 26</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">42,616 04</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">174,748 76</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">201,757 84</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">29,701 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">35,607 87</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">160,939 21</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">153,018 84</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">10,102 88</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">8,093 12</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">49,256 20</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">58,747 36</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">52,038 68</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">69,620 64</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">23,985 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">32,967 98</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">20,574 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">26,923 23</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">19,255 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">23,789 71</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">26,599 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">28,142 91</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">10,462 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">13,280 54</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">13,908 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">24,454 33</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,497 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">9,773 09</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Illinois Territory</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,115 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,248 80</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Michigan</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,405 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,817 10</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Indiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,191 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,139 59</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Missouri</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,540 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,861 46</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Mississippi</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,692 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,837 74</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notop right">10,140 00</td>
+<td class="notop right">14,872 62</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="right">786,005 11</td>
+<td class="right">927,444 47</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page305" name="page305"></a>(p. 305)</span> <i>Internal Duties which accrued on Sales at Auction.</i></h3>
+
+<table border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="30%">
+ <col width="10%">
+ <col width="20%">
+ <col width="20%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="center" colspan="2">STATES OR TERRITORIES.</td>
+<td class="center">In 1814.</td>
+<td class="center">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot" colspan="2">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="nobot right">776 07</td>
+<td class="nobot right">2,245 79</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">35,359 04</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">87,643 63</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">14 25</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">75 20</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,274 82</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">452 01</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">283 89</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">635 55</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">48,480 35</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">332,841 64</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,384 32</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">949 84</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">34,630 74</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">229,764 45</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">116 25</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">453 82</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">9,623 15</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">102,758 79</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,079 37</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">20,003 64</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,237 62</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,734 47</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">549 31</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">636 22</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">270 92</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,371 29</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,631 39</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">18,401 94</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">63 31</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">291 06</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,346 34</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,133 92</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,832 24</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">13,504 09</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Illinois Territory</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Michigan</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">80 04</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">71 05</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Indiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Missouri</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Mississippi</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">210 13</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">750 47</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notop right">385 65</td>
+<td class="notop right">4,413 96</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="right">154,629 20</td>
+<td class="right">825,132 83</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page306" name="page306"></a>(p. 306)</span> <i>Internal Duties which accrued on Refined Sugars.</i></h3>
+
+<table border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="30%">
+ <col width="10%">
+ <col width="20%">
+ <col width="20%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="center" colspan="2">STATES OR TERRITORIES.</td>
+<td class="center">In 1814.</td>
+<td class="center">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot" colspan="2">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="nobot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="nobot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;3,542 36</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;4,394 17</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,468 12</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">40,279 69</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">157 03</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,127 41</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">18,619 48</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">23 40</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">980 32</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">479 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">408 05</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Illinois Territory</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Michigan</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Indiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Missouri</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Mississippi</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notop right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notop right">4,413 96</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="right">11,669 91</td>
+<td class="right">75,223 08</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page307" name="page307"></a>(p. 307)</span> <i>Internal Duties which accrued on Stamps and in lieu of
+Stamps by Banks.</i></h3>
+
+<table border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="30%">
+ <col width="10%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+ <col width="15%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="center" colspan="2" rowspan="2">STATES OR TERRITORIES.</td>
+<td class="center" colspan="2">In 1814.</td>
+<td class="center" colspan="2">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="center">On paper and Bank Notes.</td>
+<td class="center">Banks in lieu of Bank Notes.</td>
+<td class="center">On paper and Bank Notes.</td>
+<td class="center">By Banks in lieu, &amp;c.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot" colspan="2">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="nobot right">773 02</td>
+<td class="nobot right">130 21</td>
+<td class="nobot right">646 70</td>
+<td class="nobot right">1,020 78</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">20,741 47</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,880 00</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,520 74</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">9,339 73</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">19 60</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">35 75</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,825 15</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">97 29</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,131 82</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,461 01</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">11,152 07</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,445 44</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">9,126 97</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,015 91</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">87,971 51</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">8,289 31</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">57,725 72</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">18,661 48</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,905 82</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,609 04</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,868 90</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,105 66</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">80,580 65</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,874 80</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">74,470 96</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">15,638 22</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,570 10</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">669 48</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,769 01</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">753 54</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">35,364 67</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,716 21</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">47,590 18</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">8,166 19</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">36,308 41</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,516 96</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">33,235 88</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,061 96</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">9,132 80</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,865 94</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">11,909 15</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,852 40</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,781 47</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">273 79</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">8,964 82</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,870 65</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">8,238 69</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,937 97</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,531 18</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">18,916 55</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,055 44</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">18,156 65</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,093 51</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,619 85</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,118 92</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">347 77</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,736 75</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">900 37</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">6,302 95</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,070 69</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">11,151 21</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">384 66</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">10,821 53</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,920 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Illinois Territory</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7 85</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4 50</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Michigan</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">26 10</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">16 35</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Indiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Missouri</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">84 10</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,191 02</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Mississippi</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">983 03</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">138 36</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">93 90</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notop right">18,053 90</td>
+<td class="notop right">2,713 95</td>
+<td class="notop right">28,569 31</td>
+<td class="notop right">4,507 92</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="noborright">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="noborleft">Total</td>
+<td class="right">370,945 27</td>
+<td class="right">39,571 25</td>
+<td class="right">334,209 70</td>
+<td class="right">84,418 10</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page308" name="page308"></a>(p. 308)</span> <i>Internal Duties which accrued on Household Furniture.</i></h3>
+
+<table style="margin-left: 20%; width: 50%;" border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="30%">
+ <col width="10%">
+ <col width="15%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="center" colspan="2">STATES OR TERRITORIES.</td>
+<td class="center">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot" colspan="2">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="nobot right">376 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">677 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">211 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">782 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">807 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">10,877 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,527 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">434 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">580 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">168 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">104 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,854 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,050 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Illinois Territory</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Michigan</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Indiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Missouri</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Mississippi</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notop right">1,174 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="noborright">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="noborleft">Total</td>
+<td class="right">21,625 50</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page309" name="page309"></a>(p. 309)</span> <i>Internal Duties which accrued on Gold and Silver Watches.</i></h3>
+
+<table style="margin-left: 20%; width: 50%;" border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="30%">
+ <col width="10%">
+ <col width="15%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="center" colspan="2">STATES OR TERRITORIES.</td>
+<td class="center">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot" colspan="2">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="nobot right">3,377 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">4,385 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,765 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,876 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,457 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">30,449 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">7,784 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,943 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,408 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">33 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">3,104 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">5,380 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">252 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,472 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Illinois Territory</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Michigan</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Indiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Missouri</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Mississippi</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notop right">1,636 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="noborright">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="noborleft">Total</td>
+<td class="right">75,322 50</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page310" name="page310"></a>(p. 310)</span> <i>Internal Duties which accrued on sundry articles
+manufactured in the United States.</i></h3>
+
+<table style="margin-left: 20%; width: 50%;" border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="30%">
+ <col width="10%">
+ <col width="15%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="center" colspan="2">STATES OR TERRITORIES.</td>
+<td class="center">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot" colspan="2">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="nobot right">4,540 76</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">56,784 89</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">9,250 40</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">910 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">20,504 80</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">157,176 79</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">28,546 87</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">228,188 88</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">10,803 31</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">70,746 17</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">88,154 31</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">12,801 23</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">23,270 60</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">33,184 46</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">10,156 58</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">15,373 43</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">8,993 25</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,283 03</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot" colspan="2">Illinois Territory</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">220 14</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Michigan</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">39 46</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Indiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,064 44</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Missouri</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">162 68</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot noborright">Mississippi</td>
+<td class="notopbot noborleft">"</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">1,158 61</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop" colspan="2">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notop right">10,309 97</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="noborright">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="noborleft">Total</td>
+<td class="right">793,625 06</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page311" name="page311"></a>(p. 311)</span> <i>Aggregate of internal Duties which accrued.</i></h3>
+
+<table border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Internal Duties.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="50%">
+ <col width="20%">
+ <col width="20%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="center">DUTIES ON</td>
+<td class="center">In 1814.</td>
+<td class="center">In 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot">Stills, from domestic materials</td>
+<td class="nobot right">1,621,152 86</td>
+<td class="nobot right">760,804 22</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot"><span class="add1em">"</span> <span class="add2em">"</span> <span class="add1em">foreign</span> <span class="add2em">"</span></td>
+<td class="notopbot right">57,444 33</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">91,608 36</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Spirits, from domestic materials</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">2,047,738 96</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot"><span class="add2em">"</span> <span class="add2em">"</span> <span class="add1em">foreign</span> <span class="add2em">"</span></td>
+<td class="notopbot">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">159,229 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Carriages</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">225,158 47</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">165,717 31</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Retailers</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">786,005 11</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">927,444 47</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Sales at auction</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">154,629 20</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">825,132 83</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Stamps</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">370,945 27</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">334,209 70</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot"> <span class="add2em">"</span> <span class="add1em">Bank notes, composition</span></td>
+<td class="notopbot right">39,571 25</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">84,418 10</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Household furniture</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">21,625 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Gold and silver watches</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">75,322 50</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Refined sugar</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">11,669 91</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">75,223 08</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notop">Articles manufactured in the United States</td>
+<td class="notop right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notop right">793,625 06</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><span class="add2em">Total</span></td>
+<td class="right">3,266,576 40</td>
+<td class="right">6,362,099 09</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page312" name="page312"></a>(p. 312)</span> <i>Direct Taxes.</i></h3>
+
+<table border="1" cellpadding="1" summary="Direct Taxes.">
+<colgroup>
+ <col width="50%">
+ <col width="20%">
+ <col width="20%">
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="center">STATES.</td>
+<td class="center">Tax of Aug. 3, 1813.</td>
+<td class="center">Tax of Jan. 9, 1815.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="nobot">New Hampshire</td>
+<td class="nobot right">97,049 21</td>
+<td class="nobot right">193,755 99</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Vermont</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">98,534 52</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">196,789 29</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Massachusetts</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">318,154 84</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">632,065 00</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Rhode Island</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">34,758 86</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">69,431 78</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Connecticut</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">118,533 63</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">236,507 38</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">New York</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">435,028 35</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">860,283 24</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">New Jersey</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">108,871 83</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">218,252 77</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Pennsylvania</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">365,479 16</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">733,941 09</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Delaware</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">32,294 76</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">63,847 32</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Maryland</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">152,327 64</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">306,708 81</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Virginia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">369,018 44</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">739,738 06</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">North Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">220,962 98</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">440,321 11</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">South Carolina</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">151,905 48</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">303,810 96</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Georgia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">94,936 49</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">189,872 98</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Kentucky</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">168,928 76</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">341,316 24</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Tennessee</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">111,039 59</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">221,567 44</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Ohio</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">104,150 14</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">208,300 28</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">Louisiana</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">31,621 43</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">57,519 22</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="notopbot">District of Columbia</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="notopbot right">20,605 86</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><span class="add2em">Total</span></td>
+<td class="right">3,013,596 11</td>
+<td class="right">6,034,634 82</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page313" name="page313"></a>(p. 313)</span> INDEX.</h2>
+
+<div class="index">
+<p class="add2em">A.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Adams the Elder, his view of the conduct of England in 1785,</span> i. 24;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of the war,</span> i. 66.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Adams, John Q., resigns his seat in Massachusetts Legislature,</span> i. 31;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">appointed commissioner to negotiate a peace,</span> i. 328.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Adams, sloop of war, cruise of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page165">165</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">burnt,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page106">106</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Adair, General, commands the Kentuckians at New Orleans,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page221">221</a><br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Allen, Col.,</span> i. 179.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Allen, Captain of the Argus, his death,</span> i. 285.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Allen, Lieutenant H.,</span> i. 258.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Appling, Major, captures the British detachment sent against Lieutenant Woolsey,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page72">72</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Angus, Lieutenant, at Niagara,</span> i. 113.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Argus chased by an English squadron,</span> i. 155;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">cruises in the English channel,</span> i. 252;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captured by the Pelican,</span> i. 254.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Armstrong, Secretary of War,</span> i. 205;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">plan of his campaign against Canada,</span> i. 291;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his disgrace after the battle of Bladensburg,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page139">139</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Armstrong, General, Privateer, Capt. Reid, her desperate engagement in Fayal Bay,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page270">270</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Armstrong, Lieutenant, heroism of, at the ford of Enotochopeo,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page34">34</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Armistead, Major, his gallant defence of fort McHenry,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page143">143</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">B.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Backwoodsmen at Chippewa,</span> ii,
+<a href="#page83">83</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Berlin and Milan decrees,</span> i. 20;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">revoked,</span> i. 41.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Beaver Dams, battle of,</span> i. 221.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Blockade, rules of the Coast,</span> i. 259, ii.
+<a href="#page115">115</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Barlow, Joel, Minister to France,</span> i. 41.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Barney, Captain, commands flotilla in the Chesapeake,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page116">116</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at Bladensburg,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page125">125</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">B&oelig;stler, Col.,</span> i. 112;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">defeated at Beaver Dams,</span> i. 221.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Brock, General,</span> i. 83;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his death,</span> i. 102.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Broke, Commodore, chases the Constitution,</span> i. 137;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Chesapeake,</span> i. 246.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Brown, General, at Ogdensburg,</span> i. 116;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">defends Sackett's Harbor,</span> i. 215;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">commands on Niagara frontier,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page75">75</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at Chippewa,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page77">77</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">threatens English forts on the Niagara,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page88">88</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his victory at Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page91">91</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">takes command of Fort Erie,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page107">107</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his successful sortie,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page109">109</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Brooks, Lieutenant, killed on Lake Erie,</span> i. 279.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Brooke, Colonel, succeeds General Ross,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page143">143</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Bainbridge, Captain, remonstrates with the President against laying up the navy,</span> i. 128;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">takes command of the Constitution,</span> i. 151;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Java,</span> i. 162;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his character,</span> i. 167;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">singular dream of,</span> i. 167.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Battle of Queenstown,</span> i. 101;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of Lake Erie,</span> i. 279;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of the Thames,</span> i. 289;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of Chrystler's field,</span> i. 298;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of La Cole Mill,</span> i. 313;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of Talladega,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page20">20</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of the Horse Shoe,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page27">27</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of Chippewa,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page77">77</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page88">88</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of Bladenburg,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page124">124</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of Plattsburgh,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page155">155</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of New Orleans,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page215">215</a>,
+<a href="#page217">217</a>,
+<a href="#page221">221</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em"><i>Bills</i> in Congress, respecting minors,</span> i. 225, ii.
+<a href="#page187">187</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">army,</span>
+<a href="#page226">226</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">the navy,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page188">188</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Blakely, Captain, of the Wasp,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page167">167</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Boxer taken by the Enterprise,</span> i. 250.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Boyd, General,</span> i. 297.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Burrows, Lieutenant, commands the Enterprise,</span> i. 248;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Boxer, his death,</span> i. 250.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Buffalo burned,</span> i. 300.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Bowyer Fort, defence of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page201">201</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Beasely, agent for American prisoners in England,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page286">286</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Biddle, Captain, of the Hornet,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page249">249</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">narrow escape of, from a British man of war,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page253">253</a>,
+<a href="#page254">254</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">C.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Cambria, British frigate, boards an American merchantman in New York Bay,</span> i. 19.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Canning, Prime Minister of Great Britain,</span> i. 28.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Chesapeake and Leopard,</span> i. 32;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">Chesapeake captured,</span> i. 236;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">exultation in England,</span> i. 247.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Campaign of 1813, plan of,</span> i. 205;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">Third into Canada,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page67">67</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Cabot, John, delegate to the Hartford Convention;</span><br>
+ <span class="min3em">George elected President of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page194">194</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em"><i>Congress</i> revokes the restrictive system,</span> i. 40;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">the Twelfth, state of parties,</span> i. 42, 43;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">debates in,</span> i. 45, 50, 52;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">second session,</span> i. 224;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">Debates on bonds of Merchants, &amp;c.,</span> i. 225;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">on army bill,</span> i. 226;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">acts passed,</span> i. 243;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">Thirteenth,</span> i. 319;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">leaders of,</span> i. 320;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">first session and acts of,</span> i. 325;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">second session,</span> i. 327;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">acts of,</span> i. 345;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">third session,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page174">174</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">embarrassments of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page188">188</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Campbell, Secretary of Treasury, report,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page175">175</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">resigned,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page177">177</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Campbell, General, destroys Indian villages,</span> i. 178.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Cass, Col.,</span> i. 74, 82, 85.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Calhoun, sketch of,</span> i. 238;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">speech on repeal of embargo,</span> i. 342.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Castlereagh,</span> i. 53, 54;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">arrival at Ghent,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page180">180</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Chauncey, Commodore, commands on Lake Ontario,</span> i. 207;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">forces Sir James Yeo into Burlington,</span> i. 293.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Chippewa, battle of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page77">77</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Clay, elected speaker of Congress,</span> i. 43;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">speech in reply to Randolph,</span> i. 46;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">on embargo,</span> i. 51;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">against Quincy, and on impressment in the war,</span> i. 231;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">sketch of,</span> i. 240;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">asks for investigation of British outrages,</span> i. 262;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">appointed commissioner to negotiate a peace,</span> i. 328.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Clay, Col., relieves Harrison,</span> i. 198;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his command destroyed,</span> i. 199;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">commands Fort Meigs,</span> i. 199.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Coffee, General, defeats Black Warrior,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page14">14</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">victory of Tallushatchee,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page17">17</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">helps Jackson quell a mutiny,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page27">27</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">gallantry at Emuckfaw,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page32">32</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at Enotochopeo,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page34">34</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at the Horse Shoe,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page39">39</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at New Orleans,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page205">205</a>,
+<a href="#page209">209</a>,
+<a href="#page220">220</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Chrystie Col., at Queenstown,</span> i. 101.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Chrystler's Field, battle of,</span> i. 298.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Creek Indians,</span> i. 194;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">war with,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page13">13</a>-
+<a href="#page44">44</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Craney Island, defence of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page262">262</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Constitution frigate sails from Annapolis,</span> i. 136;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">chased by an English squadron,</span> i. 137;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Guerriere,</span> i. 146;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Java,</span> i. 162;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">cruise of, in 1814-15,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page237">237</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Cyane and Levant,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page238">238</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">takes her prizes into St. Jago,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page240">240</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">chased by an English fleet,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page242">242</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">affection of the nation for her,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page243">243</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Commissioners appointed to negotiate a peace,</span> i. 328;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">their mortification at the arrival of the news of the burning of Washington,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page117">117</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">unfavorable news from, and their meeting at Ghent,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page178">178</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">terms of the English ministers, &amp;c.,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page178">178</a>-
+<a href="#page190">190</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Cochrane, Admiral, arrives in the Chesapeake,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page117">117</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">bombards Fort McHenry,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page143">143</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Chandler, General, reinforces Winder in Canada,</span> i. 218;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">taken prisoner,</span> i. 219.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Chittenden, Governor of Vermont, recalls a brigade,</span> i. 321;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his apathy under the repeated calls of Macomb for aid,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page149">149</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Cockburn,</span> i. 259;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">plunders Hampton,</span> i. 203;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his character,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page197">197</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">conduct in the sack of Washington,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page128">128</a>,
+<a href="#page130">130</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Comet, privateer, Capt. Boyd, her engagement with three English merchantmen and a Portuguese brig of war,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page265">265</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Covington General, killed at Chrystler's field,</span> i. 298.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Cheves, Langdon, appointed Speaker of the Thirteenth Congress,</span> i. 329.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Carroll, Colonel, bravery at Talladega,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page20">20</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at New Orleans,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page220">220</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Chasseur, privateer, Capt. Boyle, description of;</span><br>
+ <span class="min3em">her engagement with the English war schooner St. Lawrence,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page275">275</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Cruelty of British naval officers,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page278">278</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Croghan, Major, bravery at Sandusky,</span> i. 201.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Connecticut, action of her Legislature against the bill for the enlistment of minors,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page187">187</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Clairborne, General, defeats the Indians under Weathersby,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page30">30</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Clairborne, Governor of Louisiana;</span><br>
+ <span class="min3em">his support of Jackson,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page216">216</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Currency, deranged state of, in 1814,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page176">176</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Crowningshield, Secretary of navy, recommends a conscription of seamen,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page189">189</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">D.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Dearborn appointed Major General,</span> i. 70;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">enters into an armistice with Prevost,</span> i. 99;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">enters Canada,</span> i. 117;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">retires to winter quarters,</span> i. 118;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">review of his first campaign,</span> i. 120;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">second campaign,</span> i. 205;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">attacks Fort George,</span> i. 213;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his inaction,</span> i. 221;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his removal,</span> i. 222.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Dartmoor prison, description of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page280">280</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">fourth of July in,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page282">282</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">in 1814,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page289">289</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">daring escape from, by a lieutenant,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page291">291</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Dacres, Captain,</span> i. 148.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Dallas, Alexander, Secretary of the Treasury,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page177">177</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his scheme to relieve the government,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page178">178</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">second report on state of Treasury,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page189">189</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Decatur commands the United States, captures the Macedonian,</span> i. 152;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">blockaded in New London, and challenges two English frigates,</span> i. 311;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">commands the President,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page245">245</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">chased by an English fleet,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page246">246</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his capture,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page247">247</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Decatur privateer, Capt. Diron, captures a British war schooner,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page268">268</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Dolphin, privateer, captures two English vessels,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page264">264</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Downes, Lieutenant, commands Essex Junior,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page48">48</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">assists the Marquesas tribes,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page50">50</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">wounded by the Typees,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page51">51</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Drummond, General, at Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page89">89</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">assaults Fort Erie,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page100">100</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Drummond, Lieut.-Col, killed at Fort Erie,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page104">104</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Dudley, Colonel, killed at Fort Meigs,</span> i. 199.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Downie, Captain, commands the British fleet in Lake Champlain,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page152">152</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Dwight, Timothy, Secretary of Hartford Convention,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page194">194</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">E.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Embargo, its effect on the country,</span> i. 26-29;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">repealed,</span> i. 32;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">re-enacted,</span> i. 50;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">laid by Thirteenth Congress,</span> i. 327;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">repealed,</span> i. 342.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Epervier,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page170">170</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Erie, Fort, assault of, by Gen. Drummond,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page103">103</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Erskine, English Minister,</span> i. 36;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">disavowal of his treaty,</span> i. 38.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">England, her conduct towards France and the world,</span> i. 37;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">astonishment at our naval victories;</span><br>
+ <span class="min3em">her exultation over the capture of the Chesapeake;</span><br>
+ <span class="min3em">her vast preparations for war in 1813,</span> i. 259;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">her rejoicing over the destruction of Washington compared with her condemnation of the acts of Napoleon,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page136">136</a>,
+<a href="#page137">137</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Enterprise, brig,</span> i. 248;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Boxer,</span> i. 250;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">takes the Privateer Mars;</span><br>
+ <span class="min3em">chased by a frigate,</span> i. 251.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Eppes succeeds Randolph in Congress,</span> i. 319;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his report on state of finances,</span> i. 322;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his currency scheme,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page127">127</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Essex captures the Alert,</span> i. 143;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">her cruise in the Pacific,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page65">65</a>,
+<a href="#page66">66</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">is captured at Valparaiso,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page66">66</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">F.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Federalists, triumph of, in New England,</span> i, 265;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">leaders of in Massachusetts, their exultation over the failure of Wilkinson's campaign,</span> i. 301;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">hostility of,</span> i. 326.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Federalists and Democrats,</span> i. 59-65.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Floyd, General, defeats the Indians at Autossee,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page31">31</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">victorious over the Creeks,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page35">35</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Frederickton destroyed,</span> i. 260.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Forsyth, Colonel,</span> i. 116;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at York,</span> i. 208.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Forsyth, John, speech of, in Thirteenth Congress,</span> i. 337.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Fort George captured by the Americans,</span> i. 213.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">G.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Gamble, Lieutenant,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page51">51</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Gallatin opposes the employment of the navy,</span> i. 130;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">appointed commissioner to negotiate a treaty,</span> i. 328;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">letter to government advising war,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page181">181</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Gaines, General, takes command of the army stationed at Fort Erie,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page100">100</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">repels Drummond,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page103">103</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">succeeds Jackson at New Orleans,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page228">228</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Generosity of Americans,</span> i. 203.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Georgetown destroyed,</span> i. 260.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Globe privateer, her action with two brigs,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page267">267</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Gordon, Captain, gallant adherence to Jackson,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page26">26</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Guerriere captured by the Constitution,</span> i. 148;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">blown up,</span> i. 149.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Gunnery, superiority of American,</span> i. 175.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">H.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Harmar, General,</span> i. 17.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hammond, British minister in 1791,</span> i. 25.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Harrington, Captain,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page172">172</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Harrison, General, supersedes Hull,</span> i. 95;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at Fort Deposit and Fort Defiance,</span> i. 96;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">plans a winter campaign,</span> i. 177;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at Fort Meigs,</span> i. 196;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">pursues Proctor,</span> i. 286;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">defeats him,</span> i. 289.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hartford Convention, History of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page191">191</a>-
+<a href="#page200">200</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">delegates to Washington,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page231">231</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hall, Judge, fines General Jackson,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page227">227</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Henry, John, his character and career,</span> i. 49.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hindman, Major, his gallantry at Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page94">94</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hull, General, his campaign,</span> i. 71;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">tried by court-martial,</span> i. 87;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">character,</span> i. 88.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hull, Captain, commands the Constitution: his instructions,</span> i. 136;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">chased by an English squadron,</span> i. 138;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Guerriere,</span> i. 139;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">effect of the victory,</span> i. 151.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hopkins, General,</span> i. 95.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hardy, Commodore, remonstrates against the use of torpedos,</span> i. 265.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hamilton, Secretary of the navy,</span> i. 68.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hamilton, Lieutenant, is sent with the colors of the Macedonian to Washington.</span><br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hampton plundered,</span> i. 263.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hampton, General, commands at Plattsburgh,</span> i. 292;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">advances into Canada,</span> i. 294;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">retreats,</span> i. 295;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">refuses to join Wilkinson,</span> i. 299;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">goes into winter quarters at Plattsburgh,</span> i. 300;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">strictures on,</span> i. 302.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hornet captures the Peacock,</span> i. 170;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">takes the Penguin,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page249">249</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">chased by an English man of war,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page252">252</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Holmes, Captain, his expedition into Canada,</span> i. 315;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">killed at Mackinaw,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page73">73</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Hillyar, Captain, captures the Essex,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page61">61</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Henderson, Colonel, killed at New Orleans,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page216">216</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Impressment in 1796,</span> i. 18;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">cause of war,</span> i. 19.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Indians, number in the Western States in 1812, and the hostility,</span> i. 190;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">number of Choctaws, Chickesaws and Creeks,</span> i. 193.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Izard, General, defeated under General Hampton,</span> i. 295;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">succeeds Wilkinson,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page106">106</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">J.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Jay, treaty of, in 1796,</span> i. 26.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Jefferson, proclamation against English vessels,</span> i. 33.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Jackson, English Minister in place of Erskine,</span> i. 39;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">recalled,</span> i. 40.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Jackson, General, ordered to Natchez,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page12">12</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">made Major-General of the Tennessee Militia,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page12">12</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">marches to Huntsville,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page15">15</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">dispatches General Coffee against Black Warrior's town,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page17">17</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his conduct of the Creek war,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page12">12</a>-
+<a href="#page44">44</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">appointed Major-General,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page199">199</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">seizes Pensacola,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page202">202</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">marches to New Orleans,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page203">203</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his preparations for the defence of the place,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page204">204</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">attacks the British,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page209">209</a>,
+<a href="#page210">210</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his final victory,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page221">221</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">fined by Judge Hall,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page227">227</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">review of his conduct,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page228">228</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Jessup, Colonel at Chippewa,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page80">80</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his heroism at Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page86">86</a>-
+<a href="#page92">92</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">watches the Hartford Convention,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page194">194</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Johnson, Colonel and Lieut.-Colonel, at battle of Thames,</span> i. 288.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Jones, Captain of the Wasp,</span> i. 155;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Frolic,</span> i. 156.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Jones, Lieutenant, his action with the British gun-boats on Lake Borgne,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page207">207</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">K.
+
+<p><span class="min4em">King, Captain, at Niagara,</span> i. 112.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Key, Francis, composes "The Star spangled Banner," while witnessing the bombardment of Fort McHenry,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page145">145</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Kemp privateer captures a fleet of six vessels,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page270">270</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">King, Charles appointed commissioner to investigate the massacre of prisoners in Dartmoor,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page297">297</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">L.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Lawrence, Captain, sails under Rodgers,</span> i. 133;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">challenges the Bonne Citoyenne,</span> i. 160;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Peacock,</span> i. 170;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">takes command of the Chesapeake,</span> i. 244;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">engages the Shannon,</span> i. 245;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his death,</span> i 246.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Lawrence, Major, his defence of Fort Bowyer,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page201">201</a><br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Leavenworth, Major, gallantry at Chippewa,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page80">80</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">gallantry at Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page87">87</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Lewis, Colonel, defeats the British at Frenchtown,</span> i. 179;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captured,</span> i. 181.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Lewistown burned,</span> i. 306.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Lowndes, sketch of,</span> i. 239.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">M.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Madison, President, character of,</span> i. 34, 35;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">war messages,</span> i. 55;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his conduct at the invasion of Washington,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page118">118</a>-
+<a href="#page123">123</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his flight,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page129">129</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">message to Congress, Sept. 1814,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page177">177</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">message to Congress, accompanying English Protocol from Ghent,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page182">182</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Madison, Mrs., her heroism at the burning of Washington,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page129">129</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">refused admittance to a tavern,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page133">133</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Madison, Major, his bravery at Frenchtown,</span> i. 182.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Madison Island,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page49">49</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Madison sloop of war,</span> i. 207.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Marquesas Island, rendezvous of Porter,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page49">49</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Mackinaw taken by the English,</span> i. 77;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">expedition against,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page72">72</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Macomb, General, at Plattsburgh,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page148">148</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">asks Governor Chittenden for aid,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page149">149</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">defeats the British,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page155">155</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Massachusetts Legislature, action of, against the war,</span> i. 268;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">against the bill for the enlistment of minors,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page187">187</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">raises an army to be under its own control,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page192">192</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Massacre at Frenchtown,</span> i. 189;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">effect of in Kentucky,</span> i. 185;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at Fort Mimms,</span> i. 196.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">McLure, General, at Fort George,</span> i. 303;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">burns Newark,</span> i. 304;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his proclamation and neglect to protect Fort Niagara,</span> i. 304, 305.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Meigs, Fort of,</span> i. 197;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">invested by Proctor,</span> i. 197.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Manners, Captain, death of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page167">167</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Mitchell's speech in Congress,</span> i. 52.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Mimm's Fort,</span> i. 196.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Mackinaw Fort surrendered,</span> i. 77.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Miller, Colonel, defeats British at Brownstown;</span><br>
+ <span class="min3em">joins Harrison,</span> i. 199;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">heroic answer at Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page89">89</a>,
+<a href="#page90">90</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Mitchell, Colonel, gallant defence of Oswego,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page70">70</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">McArthur, Colonel,</span> i. 85;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his expedition into Canada,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page163">163</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">McNeill, Major, bravery at Chippewa,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page78">78</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page86">86</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">McHenry, Fort of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page142">142</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Madonough, Commodore, in Plattsburgh bay,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page152">152</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">defeats the British squadron,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page155">155</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Macedonian, ship, taken by the United States,</span> i. 153.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Montgomery, Major, killed at the battle of the Horse Shoe,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page38">38</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Monroe, Secretary of State, his conduct at Bladensburgh,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page123">123</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Morgan, Major, checks the enemy at Black Rock,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page101">101</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Morgan, General, at New Orleans,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page220">220</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Morris, Lieutenant, wounded in taking the Guerriere,</span> i. 147;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">commands the Adams sloop of war,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page165">165</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">N.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Nash, Captain, base treatment of Commodore Porter,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page63">63</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Non-Intercourse law,</span> i. 32.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Nautilus schooner captured,</span> i. 138.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Napoleon,</span> i. 85, 86, 258.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Navy, strength of,</span> i. 125;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">neglect of,</span> i. 126;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">saved by Captains Bainbridge and Stewart,</span> i. 128;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">increase of,</span> i. 176;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">history of, in 1814,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page165">165</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">bill for increase of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page188">188</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">review of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page256">256</a>.
+<a href="#page257">257</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Naval victories, effect of, at home and abroad,</span> i. 171.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Naval force in 1814,</span> i. 346.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Neufchatel privateer beats off the crew of the Endymion,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page269">269</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Nonsuch privateer engages two English vessels,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page264">264</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">New England, her hostility to war,</span> i. 58, ii.
+<a href="#page191">191</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">exempted from blockade,</span> i. 259.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">New Hampshire Legislature abolishes all the courts of the State,</span> i. 325.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">New Orleans, description of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page206">206</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">feelings of the inhabitants,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page207">207</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Niagara Fort surprised,</span> i. 304.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Nicholson, Lieutenant, escapes an English frigate,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page173">173</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">O.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Orders in Council, British,</span> i. 20;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">repealed,</span> i. 342;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">effect of, in this country,</span> i. 27-92.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Ogdensburg, attack of,</span> i. 117.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Oneida sloop,</span> i. 206.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Ontario, Lake, description of,</span> i. 206;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">naval superiority,</span> i. 207;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">cost of vessels in,</span> i. 258.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Oswego attacked by Sir James Yeo,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page69">69</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">P.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Packenham, Sir Edward, attacks the lines at New Orleans,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page215">215</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Parker, Sir Peter, killed,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page141">141</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Peacock, Captain Harrington, captures the Epervier,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page172">172</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">chased by an English man of war,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page252">252</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Perry on Lake Erie,</span> i. 271, 273, 274;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">sets sail,</span> i. 275;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">engages the enemy,</span> i. 278;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">conduct after the battle,</span> i. 283;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at the battle of the Thames,</span> i. 287.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">President frigate, affair with the Little Belt,</span> i. 42;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">puts to sea,</span> i. 132;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">chases the Belvidere,</span> i. 134;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">beats the Endymion, and finally captured by an English fleet,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page247">247</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Pinckney, American Minister to England,</span> i. 41;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">commands Baltimore regiment at Bladensburg,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page118">118</a>-
+<a href="#page124">124</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Pike, Colonel, incursion into Canada,</span> i. 117;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures York,</span> i. 208;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his death,</span> i. 210.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Pickering, Timothy, description of, his speech against loan bill of Thirteenth Congress,</span> i. 335.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Pitkin,</span> i. 335.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Plattsburg, description of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page149">149</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">battle of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page155">155</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Peace, tidings of, effect on the nation,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page229">229</a>-
+<a href="#page230">230</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Porter, General,</span> i. 114;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">at Chippewa,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page77">77</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his gallantry and narrow escape at Fort Erie,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page109">109</a>-
+<a href="#page111">111</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Porter, Captain, commands the Essex;</span><br>
+ <span class="min3em">capture of the Alert,</span> i. 143;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his cruise in the Pacific,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page45">45</a>-
+<a href="#page66">66</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his daring escape and reception in New York,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page65">65</a>,
+<a href="#page66">66</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Proctor, Colonel, advances against Frenchtown,</span> i. 180;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">defeats the Americans,</span> i. 181;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">leaves the prisoners to be massacred,</span> i. 182;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his character,</span> i. 185;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">invests Fort Meigs,</span> i. 197;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">abandons the siege,</span> i. 199;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">defeated at Sandusky,</span> i. 201;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">retreats from Malden,</span> i. 286;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">defeated at the Thames,</span> i. 289.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Prescot, Governor-general of Canada,</span> i. 99;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">letter to Brooke,</span> i. 121;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">attacks Sackett's Harbor,</span> i. 215;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">advances against Plattsburgh,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page148">148</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his retreat,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page161">161</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Protocol, English, at Ghent,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page181">181</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">transmitted to Congress,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page182">182</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">its effect on the nation,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page183">183</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">its reception in England,</span> ii.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Privateering, account of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page257">257</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">defence of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page261">261</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">acts of Congress respecting,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page262">262</a>,
+<a href="#page263">263</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Privateers, characteristic names of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page263">263</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">superiority to English,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page277">277</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">character of their commanders,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page277">277</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Prisoners, American, treatment of, in England,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page280">280</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">sufferings in Dartmoor prison,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page281">281</a>-
+<a href="#page285">285</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">assailed by French prisoners,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page283">283</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">denounce American agent for prisoners,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page287">287</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">neglected by government,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page287">287</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">their employments,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page288">288</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">number of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page292">292</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">massacre of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page294">294</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">Q.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Queenstown, battle of,</span> i. 101.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Quincy, Josiah,</span> i. 225;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">speech against army bill,</span> i. 227.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">R.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Revolution, French,</span> i. 17.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Rose, English Minister,</span> i. 33.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Rattlesnake, brig, captured,</span> i. 252.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Randolph, speech in Congress,</span> i. 45-51;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">sketch of,</span> i. 237;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">succeeded by Eppes,</span> i. 319.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Revenue,</span> i. 292.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Retaliation acts,</span> i. 307.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Rodgers, Commodore, his squadron at New York,</span> i. 132;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his first cruise,</span> i. 134;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">attacks the Belvidere,</span> i. 137;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">second cruise,</span> i. 151.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Riall, British General at Chippewa,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page76">76</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captured by Jessup at Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page86">86</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Russell, John, American Chargé to England,</span> i. 50;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">despatch from,</span> i. 53.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Ripley, Colonel, at Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page88">88</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his strange conduct after the battle,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page98">98</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">surrenders his command to General Gaines,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page100">100</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">wounded at Fort Erie,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page109">109</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Ross, General, marches on Washington,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page119">119</a>-
+<a href="#page127">127</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">fires the capitol,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page127">127</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his hasty retreat,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page133">133</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">killed in the advance on Baltimore,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page143">143</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">S.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">St. Clair, General, cause of his defeat,</span> i. 17.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Smythe, General, commands on the Niagara frontier,</span> i. 71;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">proclamation,</span> i. 111;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">failure and disgrace,</span> i. 112-114;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">review of his campaign,</span> i. 119.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Shelby, Governor of Kentucky,</span> i. 95;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">commands Kentucky volunteers under General Harrison,</span> i. 287.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Sandusky, Fort, defence of,</span> i. 201.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Scott, Lieut.-Colonel, at Queenstown,</span> i. 103;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">taken prisoner,</span> i. 108-110;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures Fort George,</span> i. 213;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">joins Wilkinson,</span> i. 299;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">introduces French system of tactics into camp of instruction at Buffalo;</span><br>
+ <span class="min3em">chases the Marquis of Tweedsdale,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page76">76</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">advances on Lundy's Lane,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page84">84</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">wounded,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page94">94</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his journey to Baltimore and reception at Princeton,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page97">97</a>-
+<a href="#page98">98</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Sackett's Harbor, naval depôt at,</span> i. 207;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">attack of,</span> i. 215.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Shortland, Captain, superintendent of Dartmoor prison,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page286">286</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">massacres American prisoners,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page293">293</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Sheaffe, General, at Queenstown,</span> i. 105.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Sinclair, Captain, commands the expedition against Mackinaw,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page73">73</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Stewart, Captain, remonstrates with the President against laying up the navy,</span> i. 128;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">commands the Constitution,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page235">235</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Cyane and Levant,</span> i. 240.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Strong elected governor of Massachusetts,</span> i. 265.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Stricker, General, defence at North Point,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page142">142</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">T.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Talledega Fort,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page18">18</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Taylor, Captain, defence of Fort Harrison,</span> i. 95.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Tax, direct, of Thirteenth Congress,</span> i. 325;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">on carriages, distilled spirits, auction duties, &amp;c.,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page187">187</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Towson, Captain of artillery, at Chippewa,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page79">79</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Treaty of 1783,</span> i. 23;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">of Pinckney and Monroe rejected by Jefferson,</span> i. 27;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">first Treaty of Peace at Ghent, its terms and how received,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page232">232</a>,
+<a href="#page233">233</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">review of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page234">234</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Transportation, cost of, war materials to Sackett's Harbor,</span> i. 257.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Tecumseh,</span> i. 80;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his plan for restoring the Indians to their ancient rights;</span><br>
+ <span class="min3em">his mission south, and character and eloquence,</span> i. 191-193;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">joins Proctor,</span> i. 197;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">killed,</span> i. 290.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Torpedos, employment of, to destroy ships,</span> i. 266.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Tompkins, Governor, privateer. Captain Boyle, her narrow escape from an English frigate,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page266">266</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Treasury, state of, in May, 1813,</span> i. 320;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">state of during the third session of the Thirteenth Congress; notes, reduced value of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page187">187</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">increased embarrassments of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page189">189</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Tupper, General, defeated at the Rapids,</span> i. 178.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Tuscarora village destroyed by the British,</span> i. 306.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Truce, flag of, arrived in Annapolis,</span> i. 328.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Typees, hostility to Commodore Porter,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page50">50</a>,
+<a href="#page51">51</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">description of their country,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page52">52</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">their towns destroyed,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page54">54</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">V.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Van Rensselaer, General,</span> i. 71-100;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">resigns his command,</span> i. 101.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Van Rensselaer, Colonel, invades Canada, and wounded,</span> i. 100;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">character of,</span> i. 118.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Van Horne, Major, defeat of,</span> i. 79.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Vincent, General,</span> i. 214;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures Generals Chandler and Hinder,</span> i. 219.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Vermont, her patriotism when Plattsburg was attacked,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page150">150</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Volunteers, hardships of,</span> i. 188.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">W.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Wayne, General,</span> i. 17.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Washington's opinion of British aggressions,</span> i. 48;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">city of, threatened by the British,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page117">117</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">burned,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page128">128</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">bad policy of,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page140">140</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">War, declaration of,</span> i. 56;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">how received,</span> i. 58;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">unprepared state of the country for,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page67">67</a>-
+<a href="#page69">69</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Ward, Artemus, speech of, against bill for military establishments passed in Thirteenth Congress,</span> i. 339.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Wadsworth, General, at Queenstown,</span> i. 102.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Winchester, General, his march to the Rapids,</span> i. 178;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">marches to Frenchtown,</span> i. 179;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">taken prisoner,</span> i. 181.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Winder, Colonel,</span> i. 114;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">General, pursues Vincent,</span> i. 219;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">surprised and captured by him,</span> i. 219;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">commands the troops around Washington,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page118">118</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Williams' speech in Congress,</span> i. 225, 226.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Wasp, takes the Frolic,</span> i. 155;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captured by the Poictiers,</span> i. 159;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">captures the Reindeer,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page167">167</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">sinks the Avon,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page169">169</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">her mysterious fate,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page170">170</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">White, General, destroys the Hillabee towns,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page22">22</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">West Point Academy,</span> i. 124.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Webster, Daniel, elected to Congress,</span> i. 320;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">first speech,</span> i. 323;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">speech against the army bill,</span> i. 330;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">sketch of,</span> i. 333;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">speech on repeal of embargo act</span> i. 345;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">contest between him and Calhoun,</span> i. 344.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Woodward, Judge, of Michigan, his letter to Proctor on the massacre at River Raisin,</span> i. 184.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Wilkinson, General, seizes Fort Condé,</span> i. 199;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">takes charge of northern army,</span> i. 292;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">his progress down the St. Lawrence,</span> i. 296-299;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">goes into winter quarters at French Mills,</span> i. 300;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">review of his campaign,</span> i. 302;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">plans a winter campaign,</span> i. 311;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">attacks La Cole Mill,</span> i. 312.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Woolsey, Lieutenant,</span> i. 206;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">transports war and ship materials from Oswego to Sackett's Harbor,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page70">70</a>-
+<a href="#page72">72</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Wooster, Rev., volunteers with his flock to aid General Macomb,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page151">151</a>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 add2em">Y.</p>
+
+<p><span class="min4em">Yarnell, Lieutenant, bravery in battle of Lake Erie,</span> i. 279.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">York captured by Americans,</span> i. 208.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Yeo, Sir James, attacks Sackett's Harbor,</span> i. 215;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">attacks Oswego,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page69">69</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">sends a detachment against Woolsey,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page71">71</a>;<br>
+ <span class="min3em">raises the blockade of Sackett's Harbor,</span> ii.
+<a href="#page72">72</a>.<br>
+
+ <span class="min4em">Youngstown burned,</span> i. 301.</p>
+</div>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page329" name="page329"></a>(p. 329)</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>&mdash;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."&mdash;<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."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Evening Post.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"He speaks heartily, earnestly, truthfully; and the warm
+ heart answers to his voice."&mdash;<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."&mdash;<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."&mdash;<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.&mdash;<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.&mdash;<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.&mdash;<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.&mdash;<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.&mdash;<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>. 8 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.&mdash;<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.&mdash;<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.&mdash;<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.&mdash;<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 <i>domestic scenes</i> of the war.&mdash;<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&mdash;<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.&mdash;<i>N. B. Mercury.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2"><b>BRACE'S HUNGARY IN 1851</b>: With an Experience of the Austrian Police. By
+<span class="smcap">Charles Loring Brace</span>. (Beautifully illustrated, with a map of
+Hungary).</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+ <p>"Upon the particular field of Hungary, this is by far the
+ most complete and reliable work in the language; a work that
+ all should read who would understand the institutions, the
+ character, and the spirit of a people who just now have so
+ urgent a claim on our sympathy."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Independent.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"There is probably not a work within the reach of the
+ English scholar that can afford him such a satisfactory view
+ of Hungary as it now is, as this work of Mr.
+ Brace."&mdash;<i>Christian Intelligencer.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"It will not disappoint public expectation. It bears the
+ strongest evidence of being most reliable in its
+ descriptions and facts."&mdash;<i>Boston Journal.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"We have seldom taken in hand a book which bears the reader
+ along with an interest so intense and sustained."&mdash;<i>Watchman
+ and Reflector.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"It is a graphic picture of the people and institutions of
+ Hungary at the present moment by one who writes what he saw
+ and heard, and who was well qualified co judge."&mdash;<i>Troy
+ Daily Post.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"He mingled much in the social life of every class of the
+ Hungarian people, and there can be no question that he has
+ presented a faithful picture of the condition, manners,
+ customs, and feelings of the Magyars."&mdash;<i>Portland
+ Transcript.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"The best and most reliable work that we possess, in regard
+ to Hungary as it now is, and the only one written from
+ personal observation."&mdash;<i>Phil. Evening Bulletin.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"It tells us precisely what the mass of readers wish to know
+ in regard to the condition of Hungary since the Revolution.
+ Having travelled over large portions of the country on foot,
+ and mingling freely with the inhabitants in their houses,
+ the author relates his various experiences, many of which
+ are sufficiently strange to figure in a romance."&mdash;<i>N. Y.
+ Tribune.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"This book is exceedingly entertaining. These are clear,
+ unambitious narratives, sound views, and abundant
+ information. We get a perspicuous view of the people, life,
+ and character of the country, and learn more of the real
+ condition of things than we could elsewhere obtain."&mdash;<i>N. Y.
+ Evangelist.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"Its narrative is fluent and graceful, and gives the most
+ vivid and complete, and the most faithful picture of Hungary
+ ever presented to American readers."&mdash;<i>Courier and
+ Inquirer.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"For graphic delineation, and extent of knowledge of the
+ subject described, Mr. Brace has no equal, at least in
+ print."&mdash;<i>The Columbian and Far West.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"We have read it carefully, and have no hesitation in saying
+ that it presents a complete idea of Hungary and her people
+ as they were and are. Mr. Brace has the happy and rare
+ faculty of making the reader see what he saw, and feel what
+ he felt."&mdash;<i>The Eclectic.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"He has succeeded in gathering the fullest and most
+ satisfactory amount of information in regard to Hungary that
+ we have seen. His description of the Hungarian Church and
+ the religious character of the people are especially
+ interesting, and the whole volume is a valuable addition to
+ our knowledge of the interior of Europe."&mdash;<i>Watchman and
+ Observer.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"This excellent work is not one of proesy details and dry
+ statistics, but is composed of the most familiar and
+ intimate glimpses of Hungarian life, written in the most
+ graceful style."&mdash;<i>Worcester Spy.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2"><b>RURAL HOMES</b>; Or, SKETCHES OF HOUSES suited to American Country Life.
+With over 70 Original Plans, Designs, &amp;c. By <span class="smcap">Gervase Wheeler</span>. 1 vol.
+12mo., Price, $1.25.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>It commences with the first foot-tread upon the spot chosen
+ for the house; details the considerations that should weigh
+ in selecting the site; gives models of buildings differing
+ in character, extent, and cost; shows how to harmonize the
+ building with the surrounding scenery; teaches now
+ healthfully to warm and ventilate; assists in selecting
+ furniture and the innumerable articles of utility and
+ ornament used in constructing and finishing, and concludes
+ with final practical directions, giving useful limits as to
+ drawing up written descriptions, specifications and
+ contracts.</p>
+
+<p class="p2">"In this neat and tasteful volume, Mr. Wheeler has condensed
+ the results of an accomplished training in his art, and the
+ liberal professional practice of it.</p>
+
+ <p>"We can confidently recommend this elaborate production to
+ the attention of gentlemen who are about building or
+ renovating their country houses, to professional architects,
+ and to all readers of discrimination, who wish to know what
+ is truly eloquent in this beautiful art, and to cultivate a
+ taste worthy to cope with "judgment of wisest censure."</p>
+
+ <p>"The cost of such establishments is carefully considered, no
+ less than the comforts they should afford, the display they
+ can (honestly) pretend to, and all the adjuncts that go to
+ complete the ideal of a convenient and elegant
+ mansion."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Mirror.</i></p>
+
+<p class="p2">"It is extremely practical, containing such simple and
+ comprehensive directions for all wishing at any time to
+ build, being in fact the sum of the author's study and
+ experience as an architect for many years."&mdash;<i>Albany
+ Spectator.</i></p>
+
+<p class="p2">"Mr. Wheeler's remarks convey much practical and useful
+ information, evince good taste and a proper appreciation of
+ the beautiful, and no one should build a rural house without
+ first hearing what he has to recommend."&mdash;<i>Philadelphia
+ Presbyterian.</i></p>
+
+<p class="p2">"Important in its subject, careful and ample in its details,
+ and charmingly attractive in its style. It gives all the
+ information that would be desired as to the selection of
+ sites&mdash;the choice of appropriate styles, the particulars of
+ plans, materials, fences, gateways, furniture, warming,
+ ventilation, specifications, contracts, &amp;c., concluding with
+ a chapter on the intellectual and moral effect of rural
+ architecture."&mdash;<i>Hartford Religious Herald.</i></p>
+
+<p class="p2">"A book very much needed, for it teaches people how to build
+ comfortable, sensible, beautiful country houses. Its
+ conformity to common sense, as well as to the sense of
+ beauty, cannot be too much commended."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Courier &amp;
+ Enquirer.</i></p>
+
+<p class="p2">"No person can read this book without gaining much useful
+ knowledge, and it will be a great aid to those who intend to
+ build houses for their own use. It is scientific without
+ being so interlarded with technical terms as to confuse the
+ reader, and contains all the information necessary to build
+ a house from the cellar to the ridge pole. It is a parlor
+ book, or a book for the workshop, and will be valuable in
+ either place."&mdash;<i>Buffalo Commercial.</i></p>
+
+<p class="p2">"This work should be in the hands of every one who
+ contemplates building for himself a home. It is filled with
+ beautifully executed elevations and plans of country houses
+ from the most unpretending cottage to the villa. Its
+ contents are simple and comprehensive, embracing every
+ variety of house usually needed."&mdash;<i>Lowell Courier.</i></p>
+
+<p class="p2">"To all who desire a delightful rural retreat of "lively
+ cottagely" of getting a fair equivalent of comfort and
+ tastefulness, for a moderate outlay, we commend the Rural
+ Homes of Mr. Wheeler."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Evening Post.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2 center">N. P. WILLIS'S SELECT WORKS, IN UNIFORM 12MO., VOLS.</p>
+
+<p class="p2"><b>RURAL LETTERS, AND OTHER RECORDS OF THOUGHTS AT LEISURE</b>, embracing
+Letters from under a Bridge, Open Air Musings in the City, "Invalid
+Ramble in Germany," "Letters from Watering Places," &amp;c., &amp;c. 1 vol.
+Fourth Edition.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+ <p>"There is scarcely a page in it in which the reader will not
+ remember, and turn to again with a fresh sense of delight.
+ It bears the imprint of nature in her purest and most joyous
+ forms, and under her most cheering and inspiring
+ influences."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Tribune.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"If we would show how a modern could write with the ease of
+ Cowley, most gentle lover of nature's gardens, and their
+ fitting accessories from life, we would offer this volume as
+ the best proof that the secret has not yet died
+ out."&mdash;<i>Literary World.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2"><b>PEOPLE I HAVE MET</b>, or Pictures of Society and People of Mark&mdash;drawn
+under a thin veil of fiction. By <span class="smcap">N. P. Willis</span>. 1 vol., 12mo., Third
+Edition.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+ <p>"It is a collection of twenty or more of the stories which
+ have blossomed out from the summer soil of the author's
+ thoughts within the last few years. Each word in some of
+ them the author seems to have picked as daintily, for its
+ richness or grace, or its fine fitness to his purpose, as if
+ a humming-bird were picking upon his quivering wing the
+ flower whose sweets he would lovingly rifle, or a belle were
+ culling the stones for her bridal necklace."&mdash;<i>N. Y.
+ Independent.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"The book embraces a great variety of personal and social
+ sketches in the Old World, and concludes with some thrilling
+ reminiscences of distinguished ladies, including the Belles
+ of New York, etc."&mdash;<i>The Republic.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2"><b>LIFE HERE AND THERE</b>, or Sketches of Society and Adventure at far-apart
+times and places. By <span class="smcap">N. P. Willis</span>. 1 vol., 12mo.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+ <p>"This very agreeable volume consists of sketches of life and
+ adventure, all of them, the author assures us, having a
+ foundation strictly historical, and to a great extent
+ autobiographical. Such of these sketches as we have read,
+ are in Mr. Willis's happiest vein&mdash;a vein, by the way, in
+ which he is unsurpassed."&mdash;<i>Sartain's Magazine.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"Few readers who take up this pleasant volume will lay it
+ aside until they have perused every line of its
+ contents."&mdash;<i>Jersey Journal.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2"><b>HURRYGRAPHS</b>, or Sketches of Scenery, Celebrities, and Society, taken
+from Life By <span class="smcap">N. P. Willis</span>. 1 vol., 12mo., Third Edition.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+ <p>"Some of the best specimens of Mr. Willis's prose, we think,
+ are herein contained."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Evangelist.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"In the present volume, which is filled with all sorts of
+ enticements, we prefer the descriptions of nature to the
+ sketches of character, and the dusty road-side grows
+ delightful under the touches of Willis's blossoming-dropping
+ pen; and when we come to the mountain and lake, it is like
+ revelling in all the fragrant odors of Paradise."&mdash;<i>Boston
+ Atlas.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2"><b>LECTURES ON ART&mdash;AND POEMS</b>. By <span class="smcap">Washington Allston</span>. Edited by Richard
+Henry Dana, Jr. Contents&mdash;Lectures on Art, pages 3-167&mdash;Aphorisms,
+sentences written by Mr. Allston on the walls of his Studio, pages
+167-179&mdash;The Hypochondriac, pages 179-199&mdash;Poems, pages 199-317. 1
+vol. 12mo., Price, $1.25.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+ <p>"There is a store of intellectual wealth in this handsome
+ volume. It is a book of thought. Its contents are the rich
+ and tasteful productions of the scholar and artist, who had
+ mind to perceive and skill to portray much that is unseen by
+ ordinary minds, as well as intelligence and power to exhibit
+ whatever is grand and beautiful both in the physical and
+ moral world."&mdash;<i>Christian Observer.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"These are the records of one of the purest spirits and most
+ exalted geniuses of which this country can boast. The
+ intense love of the beautiful, the purity, grace and
+ gentleness which made him incomparably the finest artist of
+ the age, lend their charm and their power to these
+ productions of his pen. *** There are in his poems feeling,
+ delicacy, taste, and the keenest sense of harmony which
+ render them faultless."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Evangelist.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"As a writer we know of no one who in his writings has
+ exhibited such an appreciation of what constitutes beauty in
+ art, correctness in form, or the true principles of
+ composition."&mdash;<i>Providence Journal.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"We commend them to the intellectual and the thoughtful, for
+ we know that no one can read them without being wiser, and
+ we believe the better."&mdash;<i>Albany State Register.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"The production of a most ethereal spirit instinctively
+ awake to all the harmonies of creation."&mdash;<i>Albany Argus.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"The exquisitely pure and lofty character of the author of
+ these lectures and poetic fragments is well expressed in
+ them. It gave their structure a freshness and calmness, and
+ their tone a purity that remain to charm us, and that are
+ equally admirable and delightful."&mdash;<i>The Independent.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"His lectures possess great attractions for every one aiming
+ at cultivation of mind and refinement of taste, while his
+ poems, which elicited so high praise when published singly,
+ are sure to receive it when as now embodied in a more
+ classic form."&mdash;<i>Natchez Courier.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"The lovers of American literature and art will rejoice in
+ the possession of these matured fruits of the genius which
+ seemed alike skilled in the use of the pen and
+ pencil."&mdash;<i>Newark Daily Advertiser.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2"><b>POEMS AND PROSE WRITINGS</b>. By <span class="smcap">Richard Henry Dana</span>. 2 vols. 12mo., Price,
+$2.50.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+ <p>"Mr. Dana's writings are addressed to readers of thought,
+ sensibility and experience. By tenderness, by force, in
+ purity, the poet paints the world, treading in safety the
+ dizziest verge of passion, through all things, honorable to
+ all men; the just style resolving all perplexities, a rich
+ instruction and solace in these volumes to the young and old
+ who are to come hereafter."&mdash;<i>Literary World.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Dana is evidently a close observer of nature, and
+ therefore his thoughts are original and fresh."&mdash;<i>True
+ Democrat.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"In addition to the Poems and Prose Writings included in the
+ former edition of his works, they contain some short,
+ practical pieces, and a number of reviews and essays
+ contributed to different periodicals, some of them as much
+ as thirty years since, and now republished for the first
+ time&mdash;as the expression of the inmost soul, these writings
+ bear a strong stamp of originality."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Tribune.</i></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<h2>Notes</h2>
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag1">1</a></b>: An incident occurred after the battle, which presented in
+striking contrast the two opposite natures of Jackson. An Indian
+warrior, severely wounded, was brought to him, whom he placed at once
+in the hands of the surgeon. While under the operation, the bold,
+athletic warrior looked up, and asked Jackson in broken English, "Cure
+'im, kill 'im again?" The latter replied, "No; on the contrary, he
+should be well taken care of." He recovered, and Jackson pleased with
+his noble bearing, sent him to his own house in Tennessee, and
+afterwards had him taught a trade in Nashville, where he eventually
+married and settled down in business. When that terrible ferocity,
+which took entire possession of this strange, indomitable man in
+battle, subsided away, the most gentle and tender emotions usurped its
+place. The tiger and the lamb united in his single person.</p>
+
+<p><a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag2">2</a></b>: The Peruvian Government supposed that Spain, as the ally
+of England, would make common cause with her on this continent, and so
+to be beforehand, fitted out cruisers against our commerce in the
+Pacific.</p>
+
+<p><a id="footnote3" name="footnote3"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag3">3</a></b>: This was Stephen Decatur M'Knight. Lieut. Wilmer, after
+fighting gallantly, was knocked overboard and drowned. The other
+officers were badly wounded, and one, Lieut. Cowell, died soon after.</p>
+
+<p><a id="footnote4" name="footnote4"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag4">4</a></b>: The British were 2100 strong. American troops actually
+engaged, 1900.</p>
+
+<p>British killed 138. Wounded and missing 365. Americans killed 68.
+Wounded and missing 267.</p>
+
+<p><a id="footnote5" name="footnote5"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag5">5</a></b>: Vide Ingersoll, vol. II, page 189.</p>
+
+<p><a id="footnote6" name="footnote6"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag6">6</a></b>: The scene and the occasion which called forth this
+beautiful ode, have helped to make it a national one. It requires but
+little imagination to conceive the intense and thrilling anxiety with
+which a true patriot would look for the first gray streak of morning,
+to see if the flag of his country was still flying, while the heart
+involuntarily asks the question&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem10">
+<p><span class="min33em">"</span>O, say, can you see by the dawn's early light,<br>
+ <span class="add1em">What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming?</span><br>
+ Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight<br>
+ <span class="add1em">O'er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming&mdash;</span><br>
+ And the rocket's red glare, the bombs bursting in air,<br>
+ Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="add2em">O, say, does that star-spangled banner yet wave,</span><br>
+<span class="add2em">O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?</span></p>
+
+<p>On that shore, dimly seen through the mists of the deep,<br>
+<span class="add1em">Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence reposes,</span><br>
+ What is that which the breeze o'er the towering steep,<br>
+<span class="add1em">As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses;</span><br>
+ Now it catches the gleam of the morning's first beam,<br>
+ In full glory reflected, now shines in the stream?<br>
+<span class="add1em"><span class="min20em">'</span>Tis the star-spangled banner, O, long may it wave</span><br>
+<span class="add1em">O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave."</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a id="footnote7" name="footnote7"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag7">7</a></b>: Senator Smith, who had been appointed general, commanded
+the 10,000 militia who manned the works.</p>
+
+<p><a id="footnote8" name="footnote8"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag8">8</a></b>: She had been built to take the place of the vessel
+captured by the Poictiers, after she had taken the Frolic. She did not
+disgrace the name and character she bore.</p>
+
+<p><a id="footnote9" name="footnote9"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag9">9</a></b>: Vide Cooper.</p>
+
+<p><a id="footnote10" name="footnote10"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag10">10</a></b>: One "<span class="smcap">Squib</span>" represented King George as walking his lawn
+one morning, anxiously waiting to hear the success of this squadron,
+which he had sent out expressly to capture the Ironsides, when the
+three captains of the vessels that chased her presented themselves.
+King George, in his peculiar manner, asks:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem10">
+<p><span class="add15em">"with sparkling eyes,</span><br>
+<span class="min20em">'</span>Hey! hey! what news? what news? hey! hey! he cries&mdash;<br>
+<span class="add2em">His Majesty to hear, was all agog;</span><br>
+ When Stuart&mdash;Collins&mdash;Kerr&mdash;with crimsoned face<br>
+ Thus spake&mdash;'We gave the Constitution chase,<br>
+<span class="add2em">And, oh! great sire, we lost her in <i>a fog</i>!'</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="min33em">"</span>'Fog! fog! <i>what fog? hey! Stuart, what fog? say!</i><br>
+ <i>So then the foe escaped you, Stuart? hey!</i>'<br>
+<span class="add2em">'Yes, please your Majesty, and hard our fate'&mdash;</span><br>
+<span class="min20em">'</span>But why not, Stuart, <i>different courses steer</i>?'<br>
+ Stuart replied, (impute it not to fear,)<br>
+<span class="add2em">'<span class="smcap">We thought it prudent not to separate.</span>'"</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a id="footnote11" name="footnote11"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag11">11</a></b>: Mr. Alison asserts that the President was completely
+beaten before the arrival of the other vessels.</p>
+
+<p><a id="footnote12" name="footnote12"></a>
+<b><a href="#footnotetag12">12</a></b>: A most daring and successful attempt was made by one of
+the lieutenants of the privateer Rattlesnake. Having bribed one of the
+sentinels with six guineas, to give him the countersign, he let
+himself down with a rope, eighty feet, to the ground, and was just
+about to pass the gate, when the villain who had received the six
+guineas, informed against him. Enraged at the act, the lieutenant
+sprung on him with his dagger, but was seized and bound before he
+could plunge it in his heart. Arraigned before Capt. Shortland, he was
+asked how he obtained the countersign. Lieutenant G&mdash;&mdash; replied, that
+if the sentinel had behaved honorably to him, death itself could not
+have wrested his name from him, for it was the character of Americans
+always to keep their engagements; but, as he had deceived him, he
+should suffer for it. The culprit's name was then given, and he
+received three hundred lashes. Shortland then told the lieutenant he
+was a brave man, and pledged his honor, if he would not again attempt
+to escape, he would procure his exchange. The latter replied, that he
+had seen too much of the honor of British officers, ever to take their
+word, and he should escape that very night. The keeper assured him the
+attempt would be fatal, as he should double the sentinels, and if he
+made it he would most certainly be shot. Lieutenant G&mdash;&mdash; said he did
+not care&mdash;death was preferable to that detestable prison. Having
+obtained the countersign again, for three guineas, he that very night
+lowered himself down, and though challenged seventeen times, passed
+safely out. Keeping the fields he made his way to the sea-coast, where
+he found a boat eighteen feet long, with one oar in it. In this frail
+vessel, without provision or water, he determined to put to sea, and
+cross the channel, one hundred miles, to France. Sculling it till he
+got off shore, he converted his umbrella and clothes into a sail, and
+stood boldly away. When about half way over, he discovered a
+brig-of-war. The sea was running high at the time, but he immediately
+took down the sail, and laid himself flat in the boat, to avoid being
+seen. After the brig had passed him, he again hoisted sail, and after
+a passage of thirty-six hours, landed safely in France.</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 printed in the original book are most probably wrong, but
+have been left as it is (e.g. July 14, page 163).</p>
+
+<p>Some entries in the index do not have any page number.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Second War with England, Vol. 2 of
+2, by Joel Tyler Headley
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Second War with England, Vol. 2 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. 2 of 2
+
+Author: Joel Tyler Headley
+
+Release Date: April 4, 2012 [EBook #39369]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** 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
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Com. Porter in the Bay of Novaheevah.]
+
+
+
+
+ THE SECOND WAR
+
+ WITH
+
+ ENGLAND.
+
+
+ BY J. T. HEADLEY,
+
+ AUTHOR OF "NAPOLEON AND HIS MARSHALS," "WASHINGTON AND HIS GENERALS,"
+ "THE OLD GUARD," "SCOTT AND JACKSON," ETC. ETC.
+
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES.
+
+
+ VOL. II.
+
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ CHARLES SCRIBNER, 145 NASSAU STREET.
+ 1853.
+
+
+
+
+ Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1853, by
+
+ CHARLES SCRIBNER,
+
+ In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for
+ the Southern District of New York.
+
+
+ C. W. BENEDICT,
+ STEREOTYPER AND PRINTER,
+ 12 Spruce Street, N. Y.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE CREEK WAR.
+
+ Jackson's first service -- Is appointed commander-in-chief
+ of the Tennessee forces -- Co-operation of other states --
+ Jackson enters the Creek nation -- Difficulties of his
+ position -- General Coffee's expedition -- Relieves Fort
+ Talladega -- Battle of -- Stormy condition of his army --
+ Quells a mutiny -- Abandoned by his troops -- Quells a
+ second mutiny -- His boldness -- A third mutiny suppressed
+ -- Left with but a hundred followers -- Clairborne's
+ movements -- Arrival of reinforcements -- Makes a diversion
+ in favor of General Floyd -- Battle of Nutessee -- Battle of
+ Emuckfaw -- Ambuscade of the Indians -- Gallantry of General
+ Coffee -- Battle of the "Horse Shoe" -- The war ended --
+ Jackson's character, 11
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ Cruise of Commodore Porter in the Essex -- Arrival at
+ Valparaiso -- Capture of British whalers and letters of
+ marque -- Essex Junior -- Marquesas Islands -- Description
+ of the natives -- Madison Island -- War with the Happahs --
+ Invades the Typee territory -- Tedious march -- Beautiful
+ prospect -- Fights the natives and burns down their towns --
+ Sails for Valparaiso -- Blockaded by two English ships --
+ Attempts to escape -- Is attacked by both vessels -- His
+ gallant defence -- His surrender -- Returns home on parole
+ -- Insolence of an English Officer -- Porter escapes in an
+ open boat and lands on Long Island -- Enthusiastic reception
+ in New York, 45
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ Plan of the third Campaign -- Attack on Sackett's Harbor --
+ Attack on Oswego -- Woolsey transports guns to Sackett's
+ Harbor -- Capture of the detachment sent against him --
+ Expedition against Mackinaw -- Death of Captain Holmes --
+ Complete failure of the expedition, 67
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ Brown takes command of the army at Niagara -- Crosses the
+ river into Canada -- Battle of Chippewa -- Brilliant charge
+ of the Americans -- Desperate battle of Niagara -- Conduct
+ of Ripley -- The army ordered to Fort Erie -- General Gaines
+ takes command, 74
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ Siege of Fort Erie -- Assault and repulse of the British --
+ Brown takes command -- Resolves to destroy the enemy's works
+ by a sortie -- Opposed by his officers -- The sortie --
+ Anecdote of General Porter -- Retreat of Drummond -- Conduct
+ of Izard, 101
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ British plan of invading our sea ports -- Arrival of
+ reinforcements -- Barney's flotilla -- Landing of the enemy
+ under Ross -- Doubt and alarm of the inhabitants -- Advance
+ of the British -- Destruction of the Navy Yard -- Battle of
+ Bladensburg -- Flight of the President and his Cabinet --
+ Burning and sacking of Washington -- Mrs. Madison's conduct
+ during the day and night -- Cockburn's brutality -- Sudden
+ explosion -- A hurricane -- Flight of the British -- State
+ of the army -- Character of this outrage -- Rejoicings in
+ England -- Mortification of our ambassadors at Ghent --
+ Mistake of the English -- Parker's expedition -- Colonel
+ Reed's defence -- The English army advance on Baltimore --
+ Death of Ross -- Bombardment of Fort McHenry -- "The star
+ spangled banner" -- Retreat of the British, and joy of the
+ citizens of Baltimore, 114
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Macomb at Plattsburg -- American and English fleets on Lake
+ Champlain -- Advance of Prevost -- Indifference of Governor
+ Chittenden -- Rev. Mr. Wooster -- Macdonough -- The two
+ battles -- Funeral of the officers -- British invasion of
+ Maine -- McArthur's expedition, 147
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ The Navy in 1814 -- Cruise of Captain Morris in the Adams --
+ Narrow escapes -- The Wasp and Reindeer -- Cruise of the
+ Wasp -- Sinks the Avon -- Mysterious fate of the Wasp -- The
+ Peacock captures the Epervier -- Lieutenant Nicholson, 165
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ Third Session of the XIIIth Congress -- State of the
+ Treasury -- The President's Message -- Dallas appointed
+ Secretary of the Treasury -- His scheme and that of Eppes
+ for the relief of the country -- Our Commissioners at Ghent
+ -- Progress of the negotiations -- English protocol -- Its
+ effect on Congress and the nation -- Effect of its
+ publication on the English Parliament, 174
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+HARTFORD CONVENTION.
+
+ Attitude of New England -- Governor Strong -- Views and
+ purposes of the Federalists -- Anxiety of Madison --
+ Prudence of Colonel Jesup -- Result of the Convention --
+ Fears of the People -- Fate of the Federalists, 191
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+ General Jackson appointed Major-General -- Hostility of
+ Spain -- Gallant defence of Fort Bowyer -- Seizure of
+ Pensacola -- Jackson at New Orleans -- Approach and landing
+ of the British -- Jackson proclaims martial law -- Night
+ attack on the British -- Jackson entrenches himself -- First
+ attack of the British -- Second attack -- Final assault --
+ The battle and the victory -- Jackson fined by Judge Hall --
+ Arrival of the Treaty of Peace -- Great rejoicings --
+ Delegates of the Hartford Convention -- Remarks on the
+ treaty, 199
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ Cruise of the Constitution -- Action with the Cyane and
+ Levant -- Chased by a British fleet -- England's views of
+ neutral rights and the law of nations -- Her honor and
+ integrity at a discount -- Singular escape of the
+ Constitution -- Recapture of the Levant under the guns of a
+ neutral port -- Lampoons on the English squadron for its
+ contemptible conduct -- Decatur -- Capture of the President
+ -- The Hornet captures the Penguin -- Chased by a ship of
+ the line -- Narrow escape -- Cruise of the Peacock -- Review
+ of the American Navy -- Its future destiny, 236
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+PRIVATEERS.
+
+ Character and daring of our privateers -- Skill of American
+ seamen -- Acts of Congress relative to privateering -- Names
+ of ships -- Gallant action of the Nonsuch -- Success of the
+ Dolphin -- Cruise of the Comet -- Narrow escape of the
+ Governor Tompkins -- Desperate action of the Globe with two
+ brigs -- The Decatur takes a British sloop of war -- Action
+ of the Neufchatel with the crew of the Endymion -- Desperate
+ defence of Captain Reed against the crews of British
+ squadron -- The Chasseur captures a British schooner of war
+ -- Character of the commanders of privateers -- Anecdote, 258
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+DARTMOOR PRISON.
+
+ Impressed Americans made prisoners of war -- Treatment of
+ prisoners -- Prison Ships -- Dartmoor prison -- Neglect of
+ American prisoners -- Their sufferings -- Fourth of July in
+ Dartmoor -- Brutal attack of the French prisoners -- Fresh
+ arrivals -- Joy at the news of our naval victories --
+ Sufferings of the prisoners in winter -- American Government
+ allows them three cents per diem -- Moral effect of this
+ notice of Government -- Napoleon's downfall -- Increased
+ allowance of Government -- Industry of prisoners -- Attempts
+ to escape -- Extraordinary adventure of a lieutenant of a
+ privateer -- Number of prisoners increased -- A riot to
+ obtain bread -- Dartmoor massacre -- Messrs. King and
+ L'Arpent appointed commissioners to investigate it --
+ Decision -- The end, 279
+
+
+ Tax-tables, 301
+
+
+ Index, 313
+
+
+
+
+HISTORY OF THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE CREEK WAR.
+
+ Jackson's first service -- Is appointed commander in-chief
+ of the Tennessee forces -- Co-operation of other states --
+ Jackson enters the Creek nation -- Difficulties of his
+ position -- General Coffee's expedition -- Relieves Fort
+ Talladega -- Battle of -- Stormy condition of his army --
+ Quells a mutiny -- Abandoned by his troops -- Quells a
+ second mutiny -- His boldness -- A third mutiny suppressed
+ -- Left with but a hundred followers -- Clairborne's
+ movements -- Arrival of reinforcements -- Makes a diversion
+ in favor of General Floyd -- Battle of Nutessee -- Battle of
+ Emuckfaw -- Ambuscade of the Indians -- Gallantry of General
+ Coffee -- Battle of the "Horse Shoe" -- The war ended --
+ Jackson's character.
+
+
+Allusion has been made to Jackson's campaign against the Creeks, but I
+purposely omitted an account of its progress, preferring to go back
+and make a continuous narrative. Although embracing a portion of two
+years, it composed a single expedition, and forms a whole which loses
+much of its interest by being contemplated in parts. After the
+cowardly surrender of General Hull, at Detroit, in the commencement of
+the war, Jackson offered his services to the government, and
+solicited the post which was assigned to Winchester. Disappointed in
+this, he repaired, at the order of the Secretary of War, to Natchez,
+to assist Wilkinson, then stationed there, to repel the attacks of the
+enemy should they advance up the Mississippi. But no danger from an
+attack in that quarter appearing, he was directed to disband his
+troops. Refusing to do this, on account of the number of sick in camp,
+many of them sons of his neighbors and friends, he became involved in
+a quarrel both with Wilkinson and his own officers. He, however,
+carried out his measures and led his men back in safety to their
+homes.
+
+[Sidenote: 1813.]
+
+Here he remained idle till the massacre at Fort Mimms, the news of
+which, together with the rising of the Indians all along our southern
+frontier, burst like a sudden thunder-clap on the neighboring States.
+Georgia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina, flew at once to arms. On
+the 17th of September a mass meeting assembled at Nashville, which
+with one voice nominated Jackson commander-in-chief of the troops of
+the State. Ten days after, the nomination was confirmed by the
+Legislature, and 200,000 dollars voted to carry on the war. Jackson
+immediately issued a stirring appeal to the people, in which, after
+describing the state of things, he urged them to assemble to his
+standard with all speed, saying, "Already are large bodies of the
+hostile Creeks marching to your borders, with their scalping-knives
+unsheathed to butcher your women and children: time is not to be lost.
+We must hasten to the frontier, or we shall find it drenched in the
+blood of our citizens." At this time he was suffering from a disabled
+arm which had been mutilated in an encounter with Benton, and was
+unable to be present at Fayetteville, the rendezvous, on the 4th of
+October; but he sent an address to be read to the troops, and rules
+regulating the police of the camp. Although too feeble to take the
+field, he, three days after, with his arm in a sling, put himself at
+the head of the army. The next evening, a dispatch arrived from
+Colonel Coffee, who had been previously sent forward with a large
+detachment to Huntsville, thirty-two miles distant, stating that a
+body of nearly a thousand Indians were on their way to ravage the
+frontiers of Georgia, and another party approaching Tennessee. The day
+after came a second express confirming the report. By nine o'clock the
+following morning, Jackson put his army of twenty-five hundred men in
+motion, and at eight in the evening reached Huntsville, making the
+thirty-two miles in eleven hours. Finding that the rumor was without
+foundation, he proceeded leisurely to Ditto's Landing, where Col.
+Coffee with his regiment was encamped. Here he paused to wait for
+supplies, and survey his position.
+
+With promptness on the part of those co-operating with him, he saw
+that the hostile Creeks could be crushed with one blow; for on the
+west of their settlements were six hundred Mississippi volunteers and
+the 3d regiment of regular infantry, six hundred strong, under Colonel
+Russel; on the east were twenty-five hundred Georgia militia,
+commanded by General Floyd; while from the north, five thousand
+volunteers and militia--twenty-five hundred from East Tennessee, under
+Generals Cocke and White, and the same number from the western section
+of the State--were moving down on the devoted tribes. This army of
+five thousand Tennesseans was under his own command, the western half
+of which he led in person. There were, besides this formidable array,
+a few posts held by small detachments, and a few hundred friendly
+Indians, most of them Cherokees. When these separate armies should
+close around the hostile settlements, encircling them in a girdle of
+fire, it was universally believed that the war would be over.
+
+While Jackson remained at Ditto's Landing, waiting anxiously for the
+supplies which Generals Cocke and White had promised to forward, he
+dispatched General Coffee, with six hundred picked men, to destroy
+Blackwarrior town, a hundred miles south.
+
+At length, being urged by the earnest appeals of friendly Indians, who
+were in daily danger of being cut off by the Creeks, he, on the 19th,
+started for Thompson's Creek, where he had ordered the provisions,
+which he supposed were near at hand, to be stopped. Cutting his way
+through the heavy forests, and dragging his artillery over steep
+mountains, he at length, after a painful march of two days, reached
+the place of depot but no provisions had arrived. Instead of supplies,
+came a letter from General White, who was at Lookout Mountain in the
+Cherokee country, stating that no flour could be spared from that
+post. His position was now becoming painful and critical. Standing in
+the centre of the wilderness, on the borders of the enemy's country,
+with his little band around him, he saw no alternative but to retreat,
+unless he ran the risk of starving in the forest. But to abandon his
+design, would leave the friendly Indians at the mercy of their
+enemies, an act not only cruel in the extreme, and utterly repugnant
+to his nature, but which would furnish a fatal example to the other
+friendly tribes, whose alliance it was of the highest importance to
+secure. Prudence would have dictated a retreat, but Jackson had never
+yet turned his back voluntarily on a foe, and he resolved, at all
+hazards, to proceed. Sending off expresses to Generals Cocke and
+White, and to the Governors of Tennessee and Georgia, and the American
+agents in the Choctaw and Cherokee nations, he issued a stirring
+address to his troops, in which he promised them that the "order to
+charge would be the signal for victory." In urging on them the
+importance of coolness, and presence of mind, in every emergency, even
+in "retreat," he adds,
+
+"Your general laments that he has been compelled, even incidentally,
+to _hint_ at a retreat, when speaking to freemen and to soldiers.
+Never, until you forget all that is due to yourselves and your
+country, will you have any practical understanding of that word. Shall
+an enemy, wholly unacquainted with military evolutions, and who rely
+more for victory on their grim visages, and hideous yells, than upon
+their bravery or their weapons--shall such an enemy ever drive before
+them, the well-trained youths of our country, whose bosoms pant for
+glory, and a desire to avenge the wrongs they have received? Your
+general will not live to behold such a spectacle; rather would he rush
+into the thickest of the enemy, and submit himself to their
+scalping-knives; but he has no fear of such a result. He knows the
+valor of the men he commands, and how certainly that valor, regulated
+as it will be, will lead to victory."
+
+Cut off from supplies, locked up in the wilderness, through which
+swarmed thousands of savages eagerly watching his advance, with only
+six days' rations of meat and two of flour, he issued this bold and
+confident address, and then gave orders for the army to march.
+Arriving at Ten Islands, he erected Fort Strother, to serve as a
+depot, and to cover his retreat. In a letter to Governor Blount, from
+this place, he says,--
+
+"Indeed, sir, we have been wretchedly supplied,--scarcely two rations
+in succession have been regularly drawn, yet we are not despondent.
+While we can procure an ear of corn apiece, or anything that will
+answer as a substitute for it, we shall continue our exertions to
+accomplish the object for which we were sent."
+
+Here, being informed that General White was only twenty-five miles
+distant up the river, he sent him a despatch to hasten, at once, to
+the fort. In the mean time, General Coffee, who had returned
+successful from his southern expedition, was sent to attack a large
+body of Indians at Tallushatchee, some thirty miles distant. With nine
+hundred men, this gallant officer advanced, and succeeded in
+completely surrounding them; and though the savages fought desperately
+to the last, but few escaped. A hundred and eighty warriors lay
+stretched around the ashes of their dwellings. Among the slain, was a
+mother, on whose bosom her infant boy was found, struggling in vain to
+draw nourishment from the lifeless breast. When he was brought to
+camp, Jackson endeavored to persuade some of the female captives to
+take care of him, but they all refused, saying, "His relations are
+all dead, kill him too." He then ordered some sugar to be given him,
+and sent him to Huntsville, where he could be properly cared for. He
+afterwards adopted him, gave him a good education, and placed him at a
+saddler's to learn a trade. The latter was accustomed to spend every
+Sunday at the Hermitage, with his adopted father, who was strongly
+attached to him. But he always pined for the free, wild life of his
+race. The close air of the shop and the drudgery of an apprentice did
+not agree with him, and he soon after sickened. He was then taken home
+to the Hermitage, where he lingered some time, and died.
+
+At length, on the 7th of November, an Indian runner arrived in camp,
+stating that Fort Talladega, about thirty miles distant, was
+surrounded by the hostile Red-sticks, and if he did not hurry to its
+relief, the friendly Indians, who had taken refuge in it must be
+massacred. The runner had scarcely finished his message when the order
+to march was issued, and in a few minutes the columns were in motion.
+It was midnight, and through the dim cathedrals of nature, lighted
+only by the stars of heaven, Jackson led his two thousand men towards
+the Talladega. Eight hundred of these were mounted riflemen, who
+presented a picturesque appearance, as they wound slowly along the
+rough forest path underneath the autumnal woods, each with unceasing
+watchfulness, piercing the surrounding gloom, and every hand grasping
+a trusty rifle. Their heavy tramp frightened the wild beasts from
+their lairs, and awoke strange echoes in the solitude. Now straining
+up steep ascents, and now swimming deep rivers, the fearless and
+gallant band pressed forward. In three columns, so as to prevent the
+confusion that might arise from a sudden surprise, it forced its
+difficult way through the forest, and at night arrived within six
+miles of the besieged fort. Here Jackson halted, and sent forward two
+friendly Indians and a white man, to reconnoitre. About eleven o'clock
+they returned, and reported the enemy in great force, and within a
+quarter of a mile of the fort. No time was to be lost, and though the
+troops had been without sleep, and constantly on the strain for
+twenty-four hours, another night, and a battle, lay between them and
+repose.
+
+It was four o'clock of a cool November morning, when the three columns
+again moved forward. Advancing with the utmost caution and quietness
+to within a mile of the Indian encampment, they halted, and formed in
+order of battle. Two hundred and fifty of the cavalry, under
+Lieut.-Col. Dyer, were left in the rear of the centre to act as a
+reserve, while the remaining four hundred and fifty were ordered to
+push forward to the right and left on either side, until the heads of
+their columns met beyond the hostile encampment, and thus completely
+encircle it. The two brigades of Hall and Roberts, occupying the right
+and left, were directed to advance, while the ring of cavalry was
+steadily to contract, so as to shut in every savage and prevent
+escape. At eight o'clock, Colonel Carroll boldly charged the position
+in front of him, and carried it; he then retreated, in order to draw
+the Indians in pursuit. They charged after him with such terrific
+whoops and screams, that a portion of General Roberts' brigade, on
+whom they were rushing with uplifted tomahawks, broke and fled. This
+made a chasm in the line, which Jackson immediately ordered Colonel
+Bradley to fill with his regiment, that for some reason, known only to
+the latter, had lagged behind, to the great detriment of the order of
+battle. But not only had he proved a laggard in the approach, but he
+refused to fill the chasm, as ordered by his commander, and the latter
+was compelled to dismount his reserve and hurry them forward. As these
+steadily and firmly advanced, and poured in their volleys, the
+panic-stricken militia recovered their courage and resumed their
+places in the line. In the mean time, the encircling cavalry came
+galloping, with loud hurrahs, towards the centre. The next moment the
+forest rang with the sharp reports of their rifles. In fifteen minutes
+the battle was over, and the terrified savages were wildly skirting
+the inner edge of this circle of fire, seeking, in vain, an avenue to
+the open forest beyond. Turned back at every step, they fell like the
+autumn leaves which the wind shook around them. At length they
+discovered a gap, made by the neglect of Colonel Bradley and the delay
+of a portion of the cavalry, which had taken too wide a circuit, and
+poured like a torrent that has suddenly found vent, through it. The
+mounted riflemen wheeled and streamed after; and the quick, sharp
+reports of their pieces, and the receding yells rising from the
+forest, told how fiercely they pressed on the flying traces of the
+foe. The savages made straight for the mountains, three miles distant,
+fighting as they went. The moment they bounded up the steep acclivity
+they were safe, and the wearied horsemen turned again to the camp.
+Their way back was easily tracked by the swarthy forms that lay
+stretched on the leaves, showing where the flight and pursuit had
+swept. Of the thousand and more who had composed the force of the
+enemy, more than half were killed or wounded. Three hundred were left
+dead on the spot where they had first fought. The loss of the
+Americans in killed and wounded, was ninety-five.
+
+The friendly Indians, who had been so long shut up without a drop of
+water, in momentary expectation of being massacred, listened to the
+uproar without, with beating hearts; but when the battle was over,
+they rushed forth with the most frantic cries of joy, and leaped and
+shouted around their deliverers in all the wildness of savage delight.
+They crowded around Jackson as if he had been their deity, toward whom
+they could not show too much reverence.
+
+The refusal of General White to march to Fort Strother, left the
+feeble garrison of the latter in a perilous state. If it should fall,
+Jackson's whole line of retreat would be cut off; and he, therefore,
+with deep pain, was compelled to stop in his victorious progress, and
+return to the fort. On his arrival, he found that no supplies had
+reached it, and that the soldiers, half-starved, were bordering on
+mutiny. General Cocke, from the first, seemed resolved to withhold all
+aid from Jackson, lest he himself should be eclipsed in the campaign.
+[Sidenote: Nov. 11.] This officer directed his movements against the
+Hillabee towns. General White, with the mounted men, succeeded in
+destroying the place, killing and capturing three hundred and sixteen
+warriors.
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 18.]
+
+Jackson, however, endeavored to keep alive the spirits and courage of
+his troops, and distributed all his private stores to the feeble and
+wounded. Having nothing left for himself and staff, he repaired to the
+bullock-pen, and from the offals cut tripe, on which he and they lived
+for days, in the vain hope of receiving the long-promised supplies.
+One day, as he sat at the foot of a tree, thinking of the hard
+condition of his men, and planning how he might find some relief from
+the increasing difficulties that pressed so hard upon him, one of the
+soldiers, observing that he was eating something, approached, and
+asked for a portion. Jackson looked up with a pleasant smile, and
+said, "I will, most cheerfully, divide with you what I have;" and
+taking some acorns from his pocket, he handed them to the astonished
+and mortified soldier. His solicitude for the army did not expend
+itself in words, for he shared with the meanest soldier his privations
+and his wants, while many of his subordinate officers possessed
+abundance. He let the latter enjoy the rations to which they were
+legally entitled, but himself scorned to sit down to a well-supplied
+table, while the army was perishing with want.
+
+This state of things, of course, could not last long. The soldiers
+believed themselves neglected by the State for whose safety they were
+fighting; else why this protracted refusal to send them provisions?
+The incipient discontent was fed and aggravated by several of the
+officers, who were getting tired of the campaign, and wished to return
+home, till at last it broke out into open revolt. The militia
+regiments, _en masse_, had resolved to leave. Jackson received the
+communication with grief and indignation. He felt for his poor,
+half-starved men, but all his passionate nature was roused at this
+deliberate defiance of his authority. The militia, however, did not
+regard his expostulations or threats, and they fixed on a morning to
+commence their march. But as they drew out to take their departure,
+they found, to their astonishment, the volunteers paraded across the
+path, with Jackson at their head. He ordered them to return to their
+position, or they should answer for their disobedience with their
+lives. They obeyed; but the volunteers, indignant that they had been
+made the instrument of quelling the revolt, and anxious as the others
+were to get away, resolved next morning to depart themselves. To their
+surprise, however, they saw the militia drawn up in the same position
+they had occupied the day before, to arrest the first forward movement
+that was made. This was a dangerous game to play with armed men, and
+would not bear a second trial.
+
+The cavalry, on the ground that the country yielded no forage for
+their horses, were permitted to retire to the neighborhood of
+Huntsville, where they promised to wait the orders of their commander.
+
+In the mean time, Jackson hearing that provisions were on the way,
+made an effort to allay the excited, angry feelings that existed in
+the army, and so, on the 14th of November, invited all the field and
+platoon officers to his quarters, and after informing them that
+abundant supplies were close at hand, addressed them in a kind and
+sympathizing manner, told them how deeply he felt for their
+sufferings, and concluded by promising, if provisions did not arrive
+within two days, to lead them back himself to Tennessee. But this kind
+and conciliatory speech produced no effect on a portion of the army,
+and the first regiment of volunteers insisted on abandoning the fort.
+Permission to leave was granted, and Jackson, with chagrin and
+anguish, saw the men whom he refused to abandon at Natchez, forsake
+him in the heart of the forest, surrounded by hostile savages.
+
+The two days expiring without the arrival of provisions, he was
+compelled to fulfill his promise to the army, and preparations were
+made for departure. In the midst of the breaking up of the camp, he
+sat down and wrote a letter to Colonel Pope, the contractor, which
+exhibits how deeply he felt, not merely this abandonment of him, but
+the failure of the expedition. He says in conclusion:
+
+"I cannot express the torture of my feelings, when I reflect that a
+campaign so auspiciously begun, and which might be so soon and so
+gloriously terminated, is likely to be rendered abortive for the want
+of supplies. For God's sake, prevent so great an evil."
+
+As the baggage-wagons were loaded up, and the men fell into marching
+order, the palpable evidence of the failure of the project on which
+he had so deeply set his heart, and the disgrace that awaited his
+army, became so painful, that he could not endure the sight, and he
+exclaimed in mingled grief and shame,
+
+"If only two men will remain with me, I will never abandon the post."
+
+"You have one, General!" exclaimed Captain Gordon, of the spies, who
+stood beside him.
+
+The gallant captain immediately began to beat up for volunteers, and
+it was not long before a hundred and nine brave fellows surrounded
+their general, swearing to stand by him to the last.
+
+The latter then put himself at the head of the militia, telling them
+he should order them back, if they met provisions near by. They had
+gone but ten or twelve miles, when they met a hundred and fifty beeves
+on their way to the fort. The men fell to, and in a short time were
+gorging themselves with half roasted meat. Invigorated by their
+gluttonous repast, most of them consented to return. One company,
+however, quietly resumed its journey homeward. When Jackson was
+informed of it, he sprang into his saddle, and galloping a quarter of
+a mile ahead, where General Coffee with his staff and a few soldiers
+had halted, ordered them to form across the road, and fire on the
+first man that attempted to pass. As the mutineers came up and saw
+that living barrier before them, and in front of it the stern and
+decided face of their commander, they wheeled about, and retraced
+their steps. Jackson then dismounted and began to mingle among the
+men, to allay their excitement, and conciliate their feelings. While
+he was thus endeavoring to reduce to cheerful obedience this
+refractory company, he was told, to his utter amazement, that the
+other portion of the army had changed their mind, and the whole
+brigade was drawn up in column, and on the point of marching homeward.
+He immediately walked up in front of it, snatched a musket from the
+hands of a soldier, and resting it across the neck of his horse, swore
+he would shoot the first man who attempted to move. The soldiers stood
+and looked in sullen silence at that resolute face, undecided whether
+to advance or not, when General Coffee and his staff galloped up.
+These, together with the faithful companies, Jackson ordered to form
+behind him, and fire when he did. Not a word was uttered for some
+time, as the two parties thus stood face to face, and gazed on each
+other. At length a murmur rang along the column--rebellion was
+crushed, and the mutineers consented to return. Discontent, however,
+prevailed, and the volunteers looked anxiously forward to the 10th of
+December, the time when they supposed the term of their enlistment
+expired. They had originally enlisted for twelve months, and counting
+in the time they had been disbanded, after their return from Natchez,
+the year would be completed on that date. But Jackson refused to allow
+the time they were not in actual service. Letters passed between the
+officers and himself, and every effort was made on his part to allay
+the excitement, and convince the troops of the justice of his demands.
+He appealed to their patriotism, their courage, and honor, and finally
+told them if the General Government gave permission for their
+discharge, he would discharge them, otherwise they should walk over
+his dead body before they stirred a foot, until the twelve months'
+actual service was accomplished. [Sidenote: Dec.] Anticipating
+trouble, he wrote home for reinforcements, and sent off officers for
+recruits.
+
+In the mean time, the 10th of December drew near, and every heart was
+filled with anxiety for the result. A portion of the army was resolved
+to _take_ their discharge, whether granted or not. It was not a sudden
+impulse, created by want and suffering, but a well-considered and
+settled determination, grounded on what they considered their rights.
+The thing had been long discussed, and many of the officers had given
+their decided opinion that the time of the men actually expired on the
+10th. Jackson knew that his troops were brave, and when backed by the
+consciousness of right, would be resolute and firm. But he had made up
+his mind to prevent mutiny, though he was compelled to sacrifice a
+whole regiment in doing it.
+
+At length, on the evening of the 9th, Gen. Hall entered the tent of
+Jackson, and informed him that his whole brigade was in a state of
+revolt. The latter immediately issued an order stating the fact, and
+calling on all the officers to aid in quelling it. He then directed
+the two guns he had with him, to be placed, one in front and the other
+in the rear, and the militia on the rising ground in advance, to check
+any movement in that direction, and waited the result. The brigade
+assembled, and were soon in marching order. Jackson then rode slowly
+along the line, and addressed the soldiers. He reminded them of their
+former good conduct, spoke of the love and esteem he had always borne
+them, of the reinforcements on the way, saying, also, that he expected
+every day, the decision of the government, on the question of their
+discharge, and wound up by telling them emphatically, that he had done
+with entreaty,--go they should not, and if they persisted, he would
+settle the matter in a very few minutes. He demanded an immediate and
+explicit answer. They persisted. He repeated his demand, and still
+receiving no answer, he ordered the artillerists to prepare their
+matches, and at the word "Fire!" to pour their volleys of grape-shot
+into the closely crowded ranks. There he sat, gazing sternly down the
+line, while the few moments of grace allowed them, were passing
+rapidly away. The men knew it was no idle threat. He had never been
+known to break his word, and that sooner than swerve one hair from his
+purpose, he would drench that field in blood. Alarmed, they began to
+whisper one to another, "Let us go back." The contagion of fear
+spread, and soon the officers advanced, and promised, on behalf of the
+men, that they would return to their quarters.
+
+As if to try this resolute man to the utmost, and drive him to
+despair, no sooner was one evil averted than another overtook him. He
+had, by his boldness, quelled the mutiny; but he now began again to
+feel the horrors of famine. Supplies did not arrive; or in such scanty
+proportion, that he was compelled, at last, to discharge the troops,
+and, notwithstanding all the distressing scenes through which he had
+passed to retain them, see them take up their line of march for home,
+leaving him, with only a hundred devoted followers, shut up in the
+forest.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 23.]
+
+While these things were passing, General Clairborne, with his
+volunteers, passed up the east side of the Alabama, and piercing to
+the towns above the Cahawba, gave battle to the Indians under their
+great leader, Weathersford, and defeated them, with the loss of but
+one man killed and seven wounded. Destroying their villages, he
+returned to Fort Clairborne. [Sidenote: 1814.] Jackson remained idle
+till the middle of January, when he was gladdened by the arrival of
+eight hundred recruits. Not deeming these, however, sufficient to
+penetrate into the heart of the Creek country, he resolved to make a
+diversion in favor of General Floyd, who was advancing from the east.
+[Sidenote: Dec. 29.] This officer, leaving his encampment on the
+Chattahouche, and advancing into the Indian territory along the
+southern bank of the Talapoosa River, came on the morning of the 29th
+upon the town of Autossee, where a large number of Indians were
+assembled. Having marched since one o'clock in the morning, he took
+the savages by surprise. They however rallied and fought desperately,
+retreating only before the fire of the artillery. Two towns, within
+sight of each other, were soon in flames. Several hundred of the enemy
+were killed and wounded, while the loss of the Americans was but
+sixty-five. Among the wounded was General Floyd, who was struck by a
+shot while gallantly leading on his command. Hearing that a large
+number of Indians were encamped on the Emuckfaw Creek, where it
+empties into the Tallapoosa River, Jackson marched thither, and on the
+evening of the 21st of January, arrived within a short distance of
+their encampment. The Indians were aware of his approach, and resolved
+to anticipate his attack. To prevent a surprise, however, Jackson had
+ordered a circle of watch-fires to be built around his little band.
+The men stood to their arms all night; and just before daylight a wild
+yell, which always precedes an attack, went up from the forest, and
+the next moment the savages charged down on the camp. But, the instant
+the light of the watch-fires fell on their tawny bodies they were
+swept with such a destructive volley, that they again took shelter in
+the darkness. At length, daylight appeared, when General Coffee
+ordered a charge, which cleared the field. He was then directed to
+advance on the encampment with four hundred men, and carry it by
+storm. On his approach, however, he found it too strong for his force,
+and retired. Jackson, attacked in return, was compelled to charge
+repeatedly, before the savages finally took to flight. Many of their
+bravest warriors fell in this short conflict; while, on the American
+side, several valuable officers were badly wounded, among them General
+Coffee, who, from the commencement to the close, was in the thickest
+of the fight.
+
+Notwithstanding his victory, Jackson prudently determined to retreat.
+He had gained his object; for in drawing the attention of the Indians
+to his own force, he had diverted it from that under Gen. Floyd.
+Besides, his horses had been without forage for two days, and would
+soon break down. He, therefore, buried the dead on the field where
+they had fallen; and, on the 23d, began to retrace his footsteps.
+Judging from the quietness of the Indians since the battle, he
+suspected they were lurking in ambush ahead. Remembering also what an
+excellent place there was for a surprise at the ford of Enotochopeo,
+he sent men in advance to reconnoitre, who discovered another ford
+some six hundred yards farther down the stream. Reaching this just at
+evening, he encamped there all night, and the next morning commenced
+crossing. He expected an attack while in the middle of the stream,
+and, therefore, had his rear formed in order of battle. His
+anticipations proved correct; for no sooner had a part of the army
+reached the opposite bank, than an alarm-gun was heard in the rear. In
+an instant, all was in commotion. The next moment, the forest
+resounded with the war-whoop and yells of the savages, as they came
+rushing on in great numbers. As they crowded on the militia, the
+latter, with their officers, gave way in affright, and poured
+pell-mell down the bank. Jackson was standing on the shore
+superintending the crossing of his two pieces of artillery, when his
+broken ranks came tumbling about him. Foremost among the fugitives was
+Captain Stump; and, Jackson, enraged at the shameful disorder, aimed a
+desperate blow at him with his sword, fully intending to cut him down.
+One glance of his eye revealed the whole extent of the danger. But
+for Gen. Carroll, who, with Capt. Quarles and twenty-five men, stood
+nobly at bay, beating back with their deliberate volleys the hordes of
+savages, the entire rear of the army would have been massacred. But,
+over the din and tumult, Jackson's voice rang clear and steady as a
+bugle-note, as he rapidly issued his orders. The gallant and intrepid
+Coffee, roused by the tumult, raised himself from the litter on which
+he lay wounded, and casting one glance on the panic, and another upon
+the little band that stood like a rock embedded in the farther bank,
+leaped to the ground, and with one bound landed in his saddle. The
+next moment, his shout of encouragement broke on the ears of his
+companions as he dashed forward to the conflict. Jackson looked up in
+surprise as that pale face galloped up the bank, and then his rage at
+the cowardice of the men gave way to the joy of the true hero when
+another hero moves to his side, and he shouted, "We shall whip them
+yet, my men! _the dead have risen, and come to aid us_." The company
+of artillery followed, leaving Lieutenant Armstrong and a few men to
+drag up the cannon. When one of the guns, at length, reached the top
+of the bank, the rammer and picker were nowhere to be found. A man
+instantly wrenched the bayonet from his musket, and rammed home the
+cartridge with the stock, and picked it with his ramrod. Lieutenant
+Armstrong fell beside his piece; but as he lay upon the ground, he
+cried out, "My brave fellows, some of you must fall; but save the
+cannon." Such heroism is always contagious; and the men soon rallied,
+and charging home on the savages, turned them in flight on every side.
+
+After burying his dead and caring for the wounded, Jackson resumed his
+march; and, four days after, reached Fort Strother in safety. Nearly
+one-eighth of his little army had been killed or wounded since he left
+the post, and he now dismissed the remainder, who claimed that the
+time of their enlistment was expired; and quietly waited till
+sufficient reinforcements should arrive for him to undertake a
+thorough campaign into the Creek country.
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 27.]
+
+Four days after this, General Floyd again advancing into the Creek
+country, was attacked just before daylight by a large body of Indians,
+who rushed on him with terrible impetuosity. Determined on victory,
+they advanced within thirty steps of the artillery, and would have
+taken it but for the uncommon coolness and bravery of the subordinate
+officers. At length a charge of bayonet sent them flying in all
+directions. The cavalry then charged, and the horses rushing furiously
+forward, to the sound of bugles, completed the terror of the savages,
+who disappeared like frightened deer in the surrounding forests,
+leaving thirty-seven dead on the field.
+
+Reinforcements soon began to come in to Jackson; for his bravery and
+success awakened confidence, and stimulated the ambition of thousands,
+who were sure to win distinction under such a leader; and, by March,
+he found himself at the head of four thousand militia and volunteers,
+and a regiment of regular troops, together with several hundred
+friendly Indians. While preparing to advance, mutiny again broke out
+in the camp. He determined this time to make an example which should
+deter others in future; and a private, being tried and convicted, was
+shot. The spectacle was not lost on the soldiers, and nothing more was
+heard of a revolt.
+
+Having completed all his arrangements, Jackson, with four thousand
+men, advanced, on the 16th of March, into the Creek country. At the
+junction of the Cedar Creek with the Coosa River, he established Fort
+Williams, and left a garrison. He then continued his march, with some
+two thousand five hundred men, towards his previous battle-ground at
+Emuckfaw. About five miles below it, in the bend of the Tallapoosa,
+the Indians, a thousand strong, had entrenched themselves, determined
+to give battle. They were on sacred ground; for all that tract between
+the Coosa and Tallapoosa Rivers, known as the "hickory ground," their
+prophets had told them the white man could never conquer. This bend
+contained about a hundred acres, around which the river wrapped
+itself in the form of a horse-shoe, from whence it derived its name.
+Across the neck leading to this open plain, the Indians had erected a
+breastwork of logs, seven or eight feet high, and pierced it with a
+double row of port-holes. Behind it, the ground rose into an
+elevation; while still farther back, along the shore, lay the village,
+in which were the women and children. Early in the morning of the
+25th, Jackson ordered General Coffee to take the mounted riflemen
+together with the friendly Indians and cross the river at a ford
+below, and stretch around the bend, on the opposite bank from the
+village, so as to prevent the fugitives from escaping. He then
+advanced in front, and took up his position, and opened on the
+breastwork with his light artillery. The cannonade was kept up for two
+hours without producing any effect. In the mean time, the friendly
+Indians attached to General Coffee's command had swam the river and
+loosened a large number of canoes, which they brought back. Captain
+Russell's company of spies immediately leaped into them, and, with the
+friendly Indians, crossed over and set the village on fire, and with
+loud shouts pressed towards the rear of the encampment. The Indians
+returned the shout of defiance, and, with a courage and steadiness
+they seldom exhibited, repelled every effort to advance.
+
+The troops under Jackson heard the din of the conflict within, and
+clamored loudly to be led to the assault. He, however, held them back,
+and stood and listened. Discovering, at length, by the incessant
+firing in a single place, that the Americans were making no progress,
+he ordered the drums to beat the charge. A loud and thrilling shout
+rolled along the American line, and, with levelled bayonets, the
+excited ranks precipitated themselves on the breastwork. A withering
+fire received them, the rifle-balls sweeping like a sudden gust of
+sleet, in their very faces. Not an Indian flinched, and many were
+pierced through the port-holes; while, in several instances, the
+enemy's bullets were welded to the American bayonets. The swarthy
+warriors looked grimly through the openings, as though impervious to
+death. This, however, was of short duration, and soon the breastwork
+was black with men, as they streamed up the sides. Major Montgomery
+was the first who planted his foot on the top, but he had scarcely
+waved his sword in triumph above his head, when he fell back upon his
+companions, dead. A cry of vengeance swelled up from his followers,
+and the next moment the troops rolled like a sudden inundation over
+the barrier. It then became a hand-to-hand fight. The Indians refused
+to yield, and with gleaming knives and tomahawks, and clubbed rifles
+and muskets, closed in a death grapple with their foes. Civilization
+gave the bold frontiersmen no advantage here--it was a personal
+struggle with his swarthy rival for the mastery, where they both
+claimed the right of possession. The wild yell of the savage blended
+in with the stem curse of the Anglo-Saxon, while high and shrill over
+the clangor and clash of arms, arose the shouts of the prophets, as
+dancing frantically around their blazing dwellings, they continued
+their strange incantations, still crying victory.
+
+At length one was shot in the mouth, as if to give the lie to his
+declarations. Pressed in front and rear, many at last turned and fled.
+But the unerring rifle dropped them along the shore; while those who
+endeavored to save themselves by swimming, sunk in mid-stream under
+the deadly fire of Coffee's mounted men. The greater part, however,
+fought and fell, face to face, with their foes. It was a long and
+desperate struggle; not a soul asked for quarter, but turned, with a
+last look of hate and defiance, on his conqueror. As the ranks grew
+thin, it ceased to be a fight, and became a butchery. Driven at last
+from the breastwork, the few surviving warriors took refuge in the
+brush and timber on the hill. Wishing to spare their lives, Jackson
+sent an interpreter to them, offering them pardon; but they proudly
+refused it, and fired on the messenger. He then turned his cannon on
+the spot, but failing to dislodge them, ordered the grass and brush to
+be fired. Driven out by the flames, they ran for the river, but most
+of them fell before they reached the water. On every side the crack of
+the rifle told how many eyes were on the fugitives. Darkness at last
+closed the scene, and still night, broken only by the cries of the
+wounded, fell on the forest and river. Nearly eight hundred of the
+Indians had fallen, five hundred and fifty-seven of whom lay stark and
+stiff around and in that encampment. The loss of the Americans, in
+killed and wounded, was about two hundred.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: An incident occurred after the battle, which presented in
+striking contrast the two opposite natures of Jackson. An Indian
+warrior, severely wounded, was brought to him, whom he placed at once
+in the hands of the surgeon. While under the operation, the bold,
+athletic warrior looked up, and asked Jackson in broken English, "Cure
+'im, kill 'im again?" The latter replied, "No; on the contrary, he
+should be well taken care of." He recovered, and Jackson pleased with
+his noble bearing, sent him to his own house in Tennessee, and
+afterwards had him taught a trade in Nashville, where he eventually
+married and settled down in business. When that terrible ferocity,
+which took entire possession of this strange, indomitable man in
+battle, subsided away, the most gentle and tender emotions usurped its
+place. The tiger and the lamb united in his single person.]
+
+The tired soldier slept on the field of slaughter, around the
+smouldering fires of the Indian dwellings. The next morning they sunk
+the dead bodies of their companions in the river, to save them from
+the scalping-knives of the savages, and then took up their backward
+march to Fort William.
+
+The original design of having the three armies from Tennessee,
+Georgia, and Mississippi, meet in the centre of the Creek nation, and
+thus crush it with one united effort, had never been carried out, and
+Jackson now resolved alone to overrun and subdue the country. Issuing
+a noble address to his troops, he, on the 7th of April, set out for
+the Indian village of Hoithlowalle. But he met with no opposition; the
+battle of Tohopeka had completely prostrated the tribe, and the war
+was virtually at an end. He, however, scoured the country, the Indians
+everywhere fleeing before the terror of his name. On his march, he
+sent orders to Colonel Milton, who, with a strong force, was also
+advancing into the Creek country, to send him provisions. The latter
+returned a cavalier refusal. Jackson then sent a peremptory order, not
+only to forward provisions, but to join him at once with his troops.
+Colonel Milton, after reading the order, asked the bearer what sort of
+a man Jackson was. "One," he replied, "who intends, when he gives an
+order, to have it obeyed." The colonel concluded to obey, and soon
+effected a junction with his troops. Jackson then resumed his march
+along the banks of the Tallapoosa; but he had hardly set the leading
+column in motion, when word was brought him that Colonel Milton's
+brigade was unable to follow, as the wagon-horses had strayed away
+during the night, and could not be found. Jackson immediately sent
+him word to detail twenty men to each wagon. The astonished colonel
+soon found horses sufficient to draw the wagons.
+
+The enemy, however, did not make a stand, and either fled, or came in
+voluntarily to tender their submission. The latter part of April,
+General Pinckney arrived at Fort Jackson, and assumed the command, and
+General Jackson returned to Tennessee, greeted with acclamations, and
+covered with honors. In a few months peace was restored with all the
+Southern tribes, and the machinations of England in that quarter
+completely frustrated.
+
+There is nothing in the history of our country more remarkable than
+this campaign, and nothing illustrates the genius of this nation more
+than it and the man who carried it triumphantly through. Rising from a
+sick couch, he called the young men of every profession to rally to
+the defence of their country. Placing himself at the head of the brave
+but undisciplined bands that gathered at his bidding, he boldly
+plunged into the untrodden wilderness. Unskilled in the art of war,
+never having witnessed a battle since he was a boy, he did not
+hesitate to assume the command of an army without discipline, and
+without knowledge of the toils and difficulties before it. Yet with it
+he crossed broad rivers, climbed pathless mountains, and penetrated
+almost impassable swamps filled with crafty savages. More subtle and
+more tireless than his foes, he thwarted all their schemes. With
+famine on one side and an army in open mutiny on the other, he scorned
+to yield to discouragement, and would not be forced by the apparently
+insurmountable obstacles that opposed his progress, from his purpose.
+By his constancy and more than Roman fortitude, compelling adversity
+at length to relent, and quelling his rebellious troops by the terror
+of his presence and his indomitable will, he at last, with a smile of
+triumph, saw his columns winding over the consecrated grounds of the
+savages. Soon his battle-shout was heard rising over the crackling of
+burning villages. Kings, prophets, and chieftains fell before him; and
+crushing towns, villages, and fortresses under his feet, he at last,
+with one terrible blow, paralyzed the nation for ever.
+
+Indian warfare, though exhibiting none of the grand movements of a
+well-appointed battle, often calls out equally striking qualities, and
+requires more promptness and self-possession, and greater mental
+resources in a commander. Especially with such an army as Jackson had
+under him, the task he accomplished was Herculean, and reveals a
+character of vast strength and executiveness. That single man,
+standing up alone in the heart of the wilderness, and boldly facing
+his famine-struck and rebellious army, presents a scene partaking far
+more of the moral sublime than Cromwell seizing a rebel from the very
+midst of his murmuring band.
+
+His gloomy isolation for a whole winter, with only a few devoted
+followers, reveals a fixedness of purpose and grandeur of character
+that no circumstances can affect. Inferior to the contagion of fear,
+unaffected by general discouragement, equal in himself to every
+emergency, he moves before us in this campaign the embodiment of the
+noblest qualities that distinguish the American race.
+
+Jackson, with his undisciplined, mutinous, and starving army in the
+southern wilderness, does not seem to belong to the same race as Hull,
+Dearborn, Wilkinson and Izard on the northern frontier. Contrast the
+difficulties that surrounded him with those that embarrassed them, and
+how pitiful do their apologies and excuses sound. Had he been in
+Dearborn's place, the first campaign would have placed Canada in our
+possession.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ Cruise of Commodore Porter in the Essex -- Arrival at
+ Valparaiso -- Capture of British whalers and letters of
+ marque -- Essex Junior -- Marquesas Islands -- Description
+ of the natives -- Madison Island -- War with the Happahs --
+ Invades the Typee territory -- Tedious march -- Beautiful
+ prospect -- Fights the natives and burns down their towns --
+ Sails for Valparaiso -- Blockaded by two English ships --
+ Attempts to escape -- Is attacked by both vessels -- His
+ gallant defence -- His surrender -- Returns home on parole
+ -- Insolence of an English Officer -- Porter escapes in an
+ open boat and lands on Long Island -- Enthusiastic reception
+ in New York.
+
+
+An expedition similar in its unity to that of Jackson's, and hence
+requiring a connected narrative, was carried forward by Captain Porter
+during the year 1813 in the Pacific Ocean. When Commodore Bainbridge
+sailed from Boston with the Constitution and Hornet, Porter, then
+lying in the Delaware with the Essex, was ordered to join him at Port
+Praya in St. Jago, or at Fernando Noronha. [Sidenote: Oct. 26, 1812.]
+The capture of the Java by the Constitution, and of the Peacock by the
+Hornet, caused a change in the plans of Bainbridge, and Captain
+Porter, not finding him or the Hornet at either of the two places
+mentioned, or off Frio, a rendezvous afterwards designated by the
+Commodore, he was left to cruise where he thought best. [Sidenote:
+Dec. 12.] While searching for these vessels, he captured an English
+government packet with $55,000 in specie on board, and sent her home.
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 1813.]
+
+At length, after revolving various schemes in his mind, he took the
+bold resolution to go alone into the Pacific, where we had not a depot
+of any kind, or a place in which a disabled vessel could be refitted,
+while all the neutral ports were under the influence of our enemy, and
+make a dash at the British fishermen. The vessels employed in these
+fisheries he knew were invariably supplied with naval stores, etc.,
+and he resolved to live on them. This original and daring cruise was
+no sooner decided upon than he turned his prow southward, and was soon
+wrapt in the storms that sweep Cape Horn. [Sidenote: Jan. 28.] Again
+and again beaten back, as if to deter him from his hazardous course,
+he still held on, and at length, after a most tempestuous and toilsome
+passage, took the breezes of the Pacific and stretched northward.
+[Sidenote: March 5.] His provisions getting short, and being in want
+of some new rigging, he determined to run into Valparaiso. On his
+arrival at that port he found, to his astonishment and delight, that
+Chili had declared herself free of Spain, and his reception was kind
+and courteous. Here he learned, also, that Peru had sent out cruisers
+against American shipping, which, together with British letters of
+marque, threatened to make destructive work with our whalers. He
+therefore remained only a week in port, and then steered northward. On
+the 25th he captured one of the Peruvian cruisers, which, with an
+English vessel, had seized two American whalers a few days before.[2]
+Four days after, he recaptured the Barclay, one of the American
+vessels taken by the Peruvians, and the British letter of marque.
+Looking into Callao to see if any thing had arrived from Valparaiso
+since he left, he cruised from island to island till the latter part
+of April without making any prizes. At length, on the morning of the
+29th, three sail were discerned and chase was immediately made for the
+nearest, which soon struck. She was a British whaler with fourteen
+hundred barrels of oil on board. It having fallen calm when the Essex
+was yet eight miles distant from the other vessels, he was compelled
+to resort to his boats to effect their capture. One of these, the
+Georgiana, Captain Porter equipped as a cruiser, with sixteen guns,
+and put her under the command of Lieutenant Downes, who soon started
+on a cruise of his own.
+
+[Footnote 2: The Peruvian Government supposed that Spain, as the ally
+of England, would make common cause with her on this continent, and so
+to be beforehand, fitted out cruisers against our commerce in the
+Pacific.]
+
+[Sidenote: June 24.]
+
+These two vessels joined company again at Tumbez, the Essex in the
+mean time having captured two large British vessels, and the Georgiana
+three. The Atlantic, one of those taken by Porter, being a much larger
+and faster ship than the Georgiana, Lieutenant Downes was transferred
+to her, and she was christened Essex Junior. On the last day of June
+this little fleet of nine sail put to sea, and on the 4th of July
+fired a general salute with the enemy's powder. A few days after, the
+Essex Junior parted company, steering for Valparaiso with all the
+prizes but two in company. Porter continued his cruise with the
+Georgiana and Greenwich, and on the 13th captured three more vessels.
+The Greenwich behaved gallantly in the action, closing courageously
+with the largest vessel, a cruiser, while the Essex was led away in
+chase of the first. Porter soon after captured another whaler, when,
+being joined by the Essex Junior, bringing information that the
+Chilian government was assuming a more unfriendly attitude towards the
+Americans, he resolved to proceed to the Marquesas to refit, and
+return home. Having made the vessels of the enemy answer for a naval
+depot, he now sought the bay of an island inhabited by savages, where
+unseen he could prepare to retrace his voyage of ten thousand miles.
+
+He made the Marquesas Islands on the 23d of October. Winding among
+them to find a hiding-place secure as possible against English war
+vessels that he heard had been sent out to capture him, he at length
+dropped anchor in the sequestered bay of Novaheevah and took
+possession of it in the name of the United States, naming it Madison
+Island. In a short time the native women came swimming off naked to
+the ship in crowds, and as they climbed up the vessel's sides, the
+sailors, astonished at the novel spectacle, threw them their
+handkerchiefs to cover their persons. Though swarthy, many of them
+possessed beautiful forms and handsome features. Apparently wholly
+unconscious of those feelings of modesty which seem innate in the sex,
+they received with pride the advances of the men, and in a short time
+every petty officer had chosen his wife, and the long and tedious
+confinement on ship-board was exchanged for unbridled license.
+
+A year before, Porter had sailed from the United States alone, with
+only a few months' provisions on board, and in the mean time had taken
+thirteen vessels and four hundred prisoners. With but a single
+imperfect chart to direct him, he had boldly threaded the islands of
+the Pacific, and swept it of nearly all the enemy's ships. His journal
+of this long cruise reads more like a romance than a logbook, and
+seems to belong to that class of literature in which Robinson Crusoe
+and Captain Kidd figure as heroes. That frigate dropping down the
+Delaware in October, the autumn previous, and now riding at anchor,
+with a large fleet about her, in a deserted bay amid the Marquesas
+Islands, presents a striking contrast, and shows what a single brave,
+energetic, and skillful officer can accomplish.
+
+In a short time those quiet waters resounded with the hammer of the
+workmen, and were filled with the stir and activity of a civilized
+port.
+
+The nations were at first friendly, but those occupying the valley
+where Porter had landed being at war with another tribe, the Happahs,
+they insisted that he should make common cause with them against their
+enemies. This, at last, for the sake of peace, he was compelled to do,
+and sent a party of sailors, under Lieutenant Downes, to assist them
+in their invasion of the enemy's territory. The hostile tribe had
+assembled to the number of three or four thousand, but Downes soon
+scattered them and returned with five dead bodies, which his allies
+brought back in triumph, slung on poles.
+
+In the mean time Captain Porter built a small village, consisting of
+several houses, a bakery, and rope-walk, and erected a fort which he
+mounted with four guns.
+
+At length the Typees, a warlike tribe, succeeded in exciting the
+friendly tribes to hostilities, and a plan was rapidly maturing to
+murder the American crews. Presents and requests to induce them to
+maintain a peaceful attitude, only increased their arrogance, and
+Porter at last resolved to make them feel his power. Accompanied by
+thirty-five sailors he advanced into their country, but the natives
+avoided a combat and retired into the mountain fastnesses. The next
+day he took nearly his whole crew and boldly entered the mountains,
+whose bald tops swarmed with thousands of savages. But to his
+surprise, he suddenly came to a wall seven feet high flanked with
+impenetrable thickets. Behind this the Typees made a bold stand, and
+hurled stones and arrows against their assailants. The volleys of the
+Americans produced but little effect, and Porter discovering at length
+that his ammunition was nearly exhausted, sent Lieutenant Gamble to
+the boats for more, while he, with only nineteen sailors, maintained
+his position. On the return of Gamble it was thought best to retreat,
+and the whole took up their backward march. The savages, elated with
+their victory, pressed forward in pursuit, when Porter gave them a
+volley which killed two and wounded several more. Coming to a river,
+the Americans heard the snapping of slings in the thickets on the
+bank, and immediately after, a shower of stones fell among them, one
+of which fractured the leg of Lieutenant Downes. Weary and
+disappointed, they at length reached the boats. Here they rested till
+night, when they were again ordered forward. The moon shone bright as
+this little column slowly and painfully climbed the heights, from
+whose summits arose the yells and songs of the savages. As the party
+advanced, the sterile region grew more dreary and broken, and the
+prospect ahead more disheartening. Now wading foaming torrents, and
+again creeping along dizzy precipices, the astonished sailors,
+unaccustomed to such labors, became exhausted, and many dropped down
+amid the rocks unable to proceed further. At length the summit, from
+which the valley of the Typees could be seen, was reached. But in the
+mean time the sky had become overcast, the moon was obscured, and the
+guide declared it would be impossible to descend in the darkness. They
+therefore laid down, where they were, to wait for morning.
+
+Those American sailors reposing on the top of the Typee mountain, in
+that remote and almost unknown region, presented a novel spectacle. An
+impenetrable gloom hung over the valley beneath, the sky spread like a
+pall above them, while the dull, heavy roar of the Pacific, as its
+billows broke in the darkness far below them, added to the strangeness
+and romance of the scene. At length the gathering storm burst, and the
+rain fell in torrents. It was a tropical shower--one of those deluges
+of the skies, and in a few moments the little band was flooded with
+water. Porter, fearing the ammunition would all be spoiled, bade
+every man protect it with the utmost care. The Typees, assembled in
+the valley below to the number of four or five thousand, appeared to
+entertain the same expectations, for they began to shout and beat
+their drums in exultation.
+
+At length the long wished for day dawned--the storm had ceased, and as
+the light crept down the sides of the mountain, a scene of surpassing
+beauty presented itself. A valley nine miles long and three broad, lay
+spread out before them, inclosed on every side by high mountains. At
+the farther extremity arose a lofty precipice, over whose brink a
+torrent rushed in a flying leap, and falling in foam at the base,
+formed a stream, which, after winding tranquilly through the green and
+lovely valley, passed, by an opening in the mountains, into the
+Pacific, that, far away, rolled and glittered in the early dawn. All
+over this sequestered plain were scattered the breadfruit and cocoa
+trees, while picturesque villages of bamboo dotted it in every
+direction. Amid these, immense crowds of swarthy men were moving, and
+animals grazing, giving life and animation to the strange and
+beautiful panorama.
+
+Firing a volley, to let the enemy know his powder was not destroyed,
+Porter began the difficult descent. The tortuous course he was
+compelled to pursue made the journey long and tedious, and that night
+he encamped in a village of friendly natives. The next morning he
+moved on the Typee towns. The natives at first closed bravely with
+him, but frightened by the musketry they soon retreated, followed by
+the sailors. Retiring from village to village, they at last took
+refuge in a strong fortress, against which small arms could have no
+effect. Porter then began the work of destruction, and soon nine
+villages were wrapt in fire. As the flames and smoke rolled up from
+the plain, he began his backward march to the ships. At sunset he
+stood again on the mountain where he had reposed the night before, and
+looked down on the valley, but it was now a scene of desolation. The
+smoke curling slowly up from the ruins revealed where the Typee towns
+had stood, while around the smouldering ashes the inhabitants were
+gathered in consternation and despair.
+
+Porter reached his boats in safety, having marched sixty miles in all.
+The sailors, unaccustomed to such land duty, were completely broken
+down with the fatigue and exposure.
+
+This novel expedition succeeded in humbling the hostile tribes, and
+Porter had no further trouble with them while he remained.
+
+The burning of these villages furnished the English papers a subject
+for the exercise of their philanthropy. An act of self-preservation by
+which a few empty wigwams were destroyed, aroused the humanity of
+those who could see no cause of complaint in the conflagration that
+lighted up the Niagara river from Buffalo to the falls, and kept the
+Chesapeake in a glow from burning farm-houses and villages.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 12, 1813.]
+
+Leaving behind him three prizes under the protection of the fort he
+had erected, Porter set sail for Valparaiso, where he arrived the 12th
+of January. Although it was evident that the sympathies of the Chilian
+government had changed, and were now entirely with the English, he
+determined to wait at that port for the Phoebe, an English ship, which
+he understood had been sent out on purpose to capture him. She at
+length arrived, but not alone--the Cherub, a sloop of war bearing her
+company. These vessels bore flags with the mottoes on them "God and
+our country--British sailors' best rights--traitors offend them."
+Porter immediately hoisted at his mizen, "God, our country and
+liberty; tyrants offend them." The Essex could doubtless have made
+good her voyage home, but Porter in capturing merchantmen and whalers
+had done nothing in his own view to distinguish himself, and he longed
+to grapple with this English ship of war. But the vast superiority of
+these two vessels to his own and the Essex Junior, forbade a combat
+unless he was forced into it.
+
+When the Phoebe, commanded by Captain Hillyar, came into port she
+passed close to the Essex with her men at quarters. Porter hailed
+her, saying the vessels would get foul, and requesting the officers in
+command to keep off. The English captain declared he had no intention
+of provoking an action, but his conduct arousing the suspicion of
+Porter he summoned the boarders. In the mean time the English vessel
+being taken aback, passed her bows directly over the decks of the
+Essex, and she lay exposed to a raking broadside from the latter, and
+was for the time completely at her mercy. There is scarcely a doubt
+that Captain Hillyar had orders to attack the Essex wherever he found
+her, even if in a neutral port, and if the positions of the two
+vessels had been reversed he would not have hesitated to demolish the
+American frigate. The whole proceeding justified Porter in such a
+construction, and his broadsides should have anticipated those of the
+enemy, which soon after left him a wreck.
+
+The English ships having taken in supplies, cruised outside for six
+weeks, completely blockading the Essex. Porter saw that his vessel
+could outsail the enemy, but he was not anxious to escape. He wished
+if possible, notwithstanding his inferiority in men and weight of
+metal, to engage the Phoebe alone. In this Captain Hillyar would not
+gratify him. Once Porter got within range and opened his fire on the
+Phoebe, but her gallant commander, though his vessel was a thirty-six,
+while the Essex was a thirty-two, and his crew mustered one hundred
+more men, refused the challenge and dropped nearly three miles astern
+to close with her consort, the Cherub. This enraged Porter, for
+Hillyar had hove to off port, and fired a gun to windward, which could
+be interpreted in no other way than as a challenge.
+
+The former so understood it, and immediately got under way, when his
+adversary retired. Hillyar afterwards declared that the gun to
+windward was a signal to the Cherub. It was doubtless a ruse practiced
+to decoy the Essex into a chase till she could be assailed by both
+vessels at once. There can be only one of two explanations to
+Hillyar's conduct in this affair; he either was afraid to meet the
+American frigate, though the latter was inferior in force, or his
+instructions were not to hazard a single engagement.
+
+Finding that his adversary was determined to avoid him, unless he
+could close with both his vessels at the same time, and hearing that
+other British cruisers were on the way, Porter resolved to put to sea,
+and by tempting Captain Hillyar in pursuit, give the Essex Junior, a
+slow sailer, an opportunity to follow. So on the 28th of March the
+wind blowing fresh, he stood out of port. For awhile every thing
+promised a safe exit, and an open sea, where he would have defied the
+enemy. But in doubling the Point of Angels to clear the harbor, a
+squall struck the vessel, carrying away her main-top-mast, and with
+it several men, who were drowned. Unable to go to sea in this crippled
+condition, and unable also to beat back to his former anchorage, he
+passed to the north-eastern side of the harbor and dropped his anchor
+within three miles of the town, a mile and a half from the Castello
+Viego, and close in shore. He was on neutral ground, as much so by the
+law of nations, as if under the guns of the castle, and where, in the
+same circumstances, at the present day, no nation on the globe would
+dare fire into an American frigate; and yet Captain Hillyar moved down
+on her with both his vessels, chose his position, and opened his
+broadsides. Only one of two measures was therefore left to the
+American commander--strike his flag at once, or fight his ship to the
+last. To conquer he knew was impossible, still he could not give up
+his vessel without an effort, and he sternly ordered the decks cleared
+for action.
+
+The two English vessels, although they had chosen their own position,
+were in a short time so cut up by the deadly aim of the gunners of the
+Essex that they hauled off for repairs.
+
+The state of affairs having got wind, thousands of spectators
+assembled on the surrounding heights to witness the combat. Porter's
+situation was well nigh hopeless, but he was one of those few men whom
+desperate circumstances only stimulate to greater exertions. Fortune,
+as if envious of his long success, seemed determined to crush him. Yet
+he resolved that what adverse fate got out of him, should be on terms
+that would cover him with more glory than ordinary success could
+possibly do.
+
+Captain Hillyar having completed his repairs, again took his position
+where the Essex could not bring a gun to bear. Porter finding himself
+a mere target on the water, determined if possible to board the
+Phoebe. But his sheets and halyards had been so shot away that not a
+sail could be set, except the flying jib. Giving this to wind and
+cutting his cable, he drove slowly down on his foes, and when he got
+them within range of his carronades, opened a terrible fire. The
+cannonade on both sides was incessant and awful. The Essex on fire,
+almost a wreck, and swept by the broadsides of two vessels, still bore
+steadily down to close, but the Cherub hauled off, while the Phoebe,
+seeing the advantage she possessed with her long guns, when out of the
+reach of carronades, kept edging away. It was a painful spectacle to
+behold, that crippled, dismantled ship, bravely limping up to grapple
+with her powerful adversary, and that adversary as slowly moving off
+and pouring in the while a ceaseless, murderous fire. Hulled at almost
+every shot, her decks ripped up and strewed with the dead, her guns
+torn from their carriages and rendered useless, it was evident that
+noble frigate could not be fought much longer. Still Porter would not
+strike his flag, and he resolved to run his vessel ashore and blow her
+up. Her head was turned towards the beach, and he had got within
+musket-shot of it, when the wind suddenly veered and blew him back on
+the Phoebe and under her raking broadsides. Foiled in his first
+effort, he now for a moment hoped to get foul and board the enemy, but
+she kept away, raking the Essex as she retired. The scene on board the
+frigate at this time was horrible. The cock-pit was crowded with the
+wounded--men by the dozens were mowed down at every discharge--fifteen
+had successively fallen at one gun, and scarcely a quarter deck
+officer was left standing. Amid this scene of carnage and desolation,
+Porter moved with a knit brow and gloomy heart. As he looked at his
+crippled condition and slaughtered crew, he felt that he must submit,
+but when he turned his eye to the flag of his country, still
+fluttering at the mizen, he could not give the order to strike it. The
+sympathies of the thousands of spectators that covered the hill-top
+were with him--as they ever are with the brave. The American consul
+hastened to the governor of the city and claimed the protection of the
+batteries for the Essex, but in vain. It had, no doubt, been all
+arranged beforehand between the authorities and the British commander.
+Every thing, even the elements of nature, seemed combined against
+this single ship. As a last resort, Porter let go his sheet anchor,
+which brought the head of his vessel round so that his broadsides
+again bore. A gleam of hope lighted up for a moment the gloom that
+hung over his prospects, and walking amid his bleeding crew, he
+encouraged the few survivors to hold on. The broadsides of the two
+vessels again thundered over the bay, telling with frightful effect on
+both vessels. But this last forlorn hope was snatched from the fated
+frigate--the hawser parted in the strain, and she drifted an
+unmanageable wreck on the water--while, to complete the horror of the
+scene, the flames burst from the hatchways and rolled away towards the
+magazine. Finding that his doom was now inevitably sealed, for his
+boats had all been shot away, Porter ordered those of his crew who
+could swim to jump overboard and make for the shore, three-quarters of
+a mile distant. Some reached it, while the remainder who made the
+attempt were either drowned or picked up by the enemy's boats. He
+then, with the few who preferred to share his fate, extinguished the
+fire, and again worked the guns that could be brought to bear. It was,
+however, the last feeble effort of a dying giant. The enemy could now
+fire more leisurely, and the water being smooth, he soon made a
+perfect riddle of the Essex. The crew at last entreated their
+commander to surrender--the contest was hopeless--the cock-pit,
+ward-room, steerage, and berth-deck could contain no more wounded, who
+were constantly killed while under the surgeon's hand. Of the
+carpenter's crew not one remained to stop the shot-holes, through
+which the water was pouring in streams, and the entire vessel was a
+wreck. Porter would have sunk with his flag flying, but for the number
+of wounded who would thus perish with him. For their sakes he finally
+consented to surrender, and ordered the officers of the different
+divisions to be sent for, but to his amazement only one was left to
+answer his call,[3] while out of two hundred and fifty-five men only
+seventy-five were left fit for duty. This unexampled and murderous
+combat had lasted nearly two hours and a half, and he gave the
+melancholy order to lower the flag. The enemy not at first observing
+it, kept up his fire. Porter, thinking it was his intention to give no
+quarter, was about to hoist his flag again, and go down with it
+flying, when the firing ceased.
+
+[Footnote 3: This was Stephen Decatur M'Knight. Lieut. Wilmer, after
+fighting gallantly, was knocked overboard and drowned. The other
+officers were badly wounded, and one, Lieut. Cowell, died soon after.]
+
+A ship was never fought more bravely or skilfully, and Porter, though
+compelled to surrender, earned imperishable renown, and set an example
+to our navy, which if followed, will ensure its success, and cover it
+with glory.
+
+Captain Hillyar's conduct after the victory, was distinguished by a
+courtesy and delicacy rarely witnessed in English commanders at that
+time. But he was blameworthy in attacking a ship in a neutral port,
+and it would not take many such victories to ruin his reputation. The
+whole transaction shows what little respect England paid to the laws
+of neutrality. The national heart was exceedingly shocked at the
+violation of those laws by Napoleon when he seized the Duke D'Enghien,
+but she could give orders, the execution of which did not cause the
+death of merely one man, but more than one hundred brave spirits, on
+neutral territory. The authorities of Valparaiso were also guilty of a
+base act in not defending the rights of their own port, and extending
+the protection required by the laws of nations to the American vessel.
+
+[Sidenote: 1814.]
+
+The Essex Junior was transformed into a cartel, and the prisoners sent
+in her to the United States, on parole. She arrived off Sandy Hook the
+5th of July, and though provided with passports from Captain Hillyar,
+to prevent a recapture, she was overhauled and detained by the British
+ship Saturn. Captain Nash, the commander, at first treated Porter very
+civilly, endorsed his passports, and allowed the vessel to proceed.
+Standing on the same tack with the Essex, he kept her company for two
+hours, when he ordered the former to heave to again, and her papers
+brought on board for re-examination. Porter was indignant at this
+proceeding, but he was told that his passport must not only go on
+board the Saturn, but the vessel itself be detained. He remonstrated,
+declaring that it was in direct violation of the contract entered into
+with Captain Hillyar, and he should consider himself a prisoner of
+Captain Nash's, and no longer on parole, and at the same time offered
+to deliver up his sword. On being told that the vessel must remain
+under the lee of the Saturn all night, he said, "then I am your
+prisoner, and do not feel myself bound any longer by my agreement with
+Captain Hillyar." He withdrew his parole at once, declaring he should
+act as he saw fit. The English captain evidently suspected some Yankee
+trick was at the bottom of the whole proceeding, and as it usually
+happened during the war, suspicion was aroused at precisely the wrong
+times. English vessels had been so often duped by Yankee shrewdness
+that they were constantly on the alert, and hence to be safe, often
+committed blunders of a grave character. Porter, whether treading the
+quarter-deck of his own vessel or a prisoner of war, was not a man to
+be trifled with, and as a British officer had treated him basely, he
+determined to be free of the obligations that galled him, at all
+hazards, and the next morning finding that he was off Long Island, and
+that Captain Nash had no idea of releasing him, he ordered a boat
+lowered, into which he jumped with an armed crew, and pushed off. As
+he went down the vessel's side, he told Lieutenant Downs to say to
+Captain Nash, "that he was now satisfied that _most British naval
+officers were not only destitute of honor, but regardless of the honor
+of each other_; that he was armed and should fight any force sent
+against him, to the last, and if he met him again, it would be as an
+enemy." Keeping the Essex Junior between him and the British vessel,
+he got nearly out of gun-shot before he was discovered. The Saturn
+immediately gave chase, but a fog suddenly rising, concealed the boat,
+when Porter changed his course and eluded his pursuers. Lieutenant
+Downs, taking advantage of the same fog endeavored to escape with his
+vessel, but the Saturn suspecting his movements, opened her guns,
+which brought him to. Porter heard the firing, and kept off in an
+opposite direction, and by rowing and sailing, alternately, for nearly
+sixty miles, in an open boat, at length reached Babylon, on Long
+Island. The people there discredited his story. Suspecting he was an
+English officer in disguise, they began to question him, and he was
+compelled to show his commission before they would let him go. When
+their doubts were at length removed, every attention was lavished upon
+him, and he started for New York. His arrival was soon spread abroad,
+and as the carriage that contained him entered the city the horses
+were snatched away, and the people seizing it, dragged him through the
+streets with huzzas and shouts of welcome.
+
+Porter had lost his ship, but not his place in the heart of the
+nation, nay he was deeply and forever fixed there. His cruise had been
+a great triumph, notwithstanding its disastrous close. The boldness
+and originality of its conception--the daring and gallant manner in
+which he had carried it out--the spirit and desperation with which he
+had fought his ship against a superior force, were themes of universal
+eulogy, and endeared him to the American people.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ Plan of the third Campaign -- Attack on Sackett's Harbor --
+ Attack on Oswego -- Woolsey transports guns to Sackett's
+ Harbor -- Capture of the detachment sent against him --
+ Expedition against Mackinaw -- Death of Captain Holmes --
+ Complete failure of the expedition.
+
+
+While Porter was slowly approaching our coast, on his return from the
+Pacific, events on our northern frontier were assuming an entirely
+different aspect from that which they had worn for the last two years.
+In the spring, just before and after Congress adjourned, small
+expeditions on both sides were set on foot; one, on our part, to
+Mackinaw, to aid in carrying out Armstrong's plan for the summer
+campaign. This, like all the previous plans looked to the same result,
+the details being varied apparently for the sole purpose of appeasing
+the people, who it was thought, would not allow a repetition of those
+manoeuvres which had ended in such signal disgrace. It was therefore
+proposed, first to humble the Indians in the north-west, by capturing
+Mackinaw, and thus hold the key of that whole region, so valuable for
+its fur trade, and then march an army from the east of Lake Erie to
+Burlington Heights, and seize and fortify that position till the
+co-operation of the Ontario fleet and the troops at Sackett's harbor
+could be secured, when a rapid advance might be made on Kingston, and
+after its reduction, on Montreal. The Secretary clung to the conquest
+of Canada with a tenacity that deserved success, but this plan also
+utterly failed, and the progress of the campaign brought about results
+widely different from those anticipated. That part of it looking to
+the seizure of Mackinaw, was placed under the direction of Colonel
+Croghan and Major Holmes, with whom Captain Sinclair, recently
+appointed to the command of the upper lakes, was to co-operate with a
+portion of his fleet--the other portion to aid in the expedition
+against Burlington Heights. Major Holmes had at first been appointed
+by the Secretary to command the land forces, but Colonel Croghan,
+stationed at Detroit, and senior officer during Colonel Butler's
+absence, denied the right thus directly to appoint him, insisting that
+the commission should go through his hands. A correspondence followed,
+which delayed the expedition till the third of July. In the mean time,
+a British force, under Colonel McDowell, had visited and reinforced
+all the posts on the northern lakes, penetrating even beyond Mackinaw.
+While Holmes and Sinclair were detained till Colonel Croghan and the
+Secretary could settle a question of etiquette, the English, who had
+again acquired the ascendancy on Lake Ontario, by building more ships,
+made an attack on Sackett's Harbor. Being repulsed, Sir James Yeo then
+sailed for Oswego, to destroy materials for ship building, etc., which
+he supposed to be assembled there. He arrived on the 5th of May, and
+began to bombard the place. The American garrison at the fort,
+consisted of three hundred men under Colonel Mitchell, with five guns,
+three of which were almost useless. The place contained at that time,
+but five hundred inhabitants. The schooner Growler being in the river,
+and exposed to certain capture, was sunk, and her cannon transferred
+to the fort, situated on a high bank east of the town.
+
+Finding that the bombardment produced no effect, a large body of
+troops, under General Drummond, was sent forward to carry the fort by
+storm. The fifteen barges that contained them were led on by
+gun-boats, destined to cover the landing. These no sooner came within
+range of the artillery on shore, than a spirited fire was opened on
+them, repulsing them twice, and finally compelling the whole flotilla
+to seek the shelter of the ships. The next day the fleet approached
+nearer shore, and commenced a heavy cannonade which lasted three
+hours. Under cover of it, General De Watteville landed two thousand
+troops, and advanced in perfect order over the ground that intervened
+between the water and the fort. The soldiers and marines of the
+Growler fought bravely, but Colonel Mitchell seeing that resistance
+was hopeless, retired, scourging the enemy as he withdrew, with
+well-directed volleys, and strewing the ground with more than two
+hundred dead and wounded. He fell back to Oswego Falls, where the
+naval stores had all been removed, destroying the bridges as he
+retired. Foiled in their attempt to get possession of the stores, the
+British, after having raised the Growler, retired to Sackett's Harbor,
+and blockaded it, resolving to intercept the supplies, guns, etc.,
+that were ready to be sent forward. Lighter materials could be
+transported by land, but the guns, cables, and anchors, &c., destined
+for two vessels recently built at Sackett's Harbor, could reach there
+only by water, from Oswego, whither they had been carried by way of
+the Mohawk river, Woods' creek, Oneida lake, and the Oswego river.
+Captain Woolsey, a brave, skillful and energetic officer, who had been
+appointed to take charge of their transportation, caused a rumor to be
+spread that he designed to effect it through Oneida lake. [Sidenote:
+May 28.] But soon as the British fleet left Oswego, he dropped down
+the river with fifteen boats, loaded with thirty-four cannon and ten
+cables. Halting at Oswego till dark, he then pulled out into the
+lake. A detachment of a hundred and thirty riflemen accompanied him,
+while a body of Oneida Indians marched along the shore. The night was
+dark and gloomy--the rain fell in torrents, drenching sailors and
+soldiers to the skin, while the waves dashed over the boats, adding to
+the discomforts and labors of the voyage. It was a long and tedious
+pull along the scarcely visible shores, on which swayed and moaned an
+unbroken forest.
+
+The next day at sunrise the fleet of boats reached Big Salmon river,
+with the exception of one, which kept on, under the pretence of going
+direct to Sackett's Harbor, and fell into the hands of the blockading
+squadron, giving it information of the approach of the others.
+Woolsey, knowing that he could not run the blockade, had resolved to
+land his guns at Big Sandy creek and transport them by land eight
+miles distant, to Sackett's Harbor. Having reached the mouth of the
+creek in safety, he ascended two miles and landed. In the mean time
+Sir James Yeo had dispatched two gun-boats, with three cutters and a
+gig, in search of him. Finding the fleet had ascended Big Sandy creek,
+Captains Popham and Spilsbury, who commanded the expedition, followed
+after. The soldiers and marines were landed a mile or more below where
+Woolsey was unloading, and moved forward, keeping parallel with the
+gun-boats, which incessantly probed the thickets, as they advanced,
+with grape shot. Major Appling, who commanded the American riflemen,
+placed them and his Indian allies in ambush about half a mile below
+the American barges. Allowing the enemy to approach within close
+range, he suddenly poured in a destructive volley, which so paralyzed
+them that they threw down their arms and begged for quarter. All the
+boats, officers, and men were taken, making a total loss of a hundred
+and eighty-six men.
+
+The guns were then carried across to Sackett's Harbor, and the new
+ship Superior armed, which so strengthened Chauncey's force that Sir
+James Yeo raised the blockade and sailed for the Canada shore.
+
+[Sidenote: July 3.]
+
+At last the expedition against Mackinaw got under way. Two war brigs,
+the Lawrence and Niagara, together with several smaller vessels,
+carrying in all nine hundred men, began slowly to traverse the inland
+seas from Detroit to Mackinaw. Nothing but canoes and batteaux had
+hitherto floated on those scarcely known waters, with the exception of
+a single schooner or sloop, which made an annual solitary trip to the
+extreme north-western posts to carry supplies. More than a thousand
+miles from the ocean, and lifted nearly six hundred feet above it,
+those vast seas rolled their waves through unbroken forests. This was
+the first fleet that ever penetrated those solitudes, through which
+roamed unscared beasts of prey, and from whose further margin
+stretched away those immense prairies that go rolling up to the base
+of the Rocky Mountains. Amid unknown rocks and shoals--feeling its way
+along narrow channels--at one moment almost grazing the sand-bars with
+its keels, and the next moment floating over water nearly a thousand
+feet deep--now traversing groups of beautiful islands, and anon
+skirting the bases of precipices, on whose summit waved forests that
+had stood undisturbed since the birth of time--that little fleet crept
+on towards its destination. Its progress was so slow that Colonel
+McDowell, commanding at Mackinaw, had ample time to make preparations
+for defence.
+
+Captain Sinclair, on his arrival, refused to advance against the fort,
+for its batteries looked down on his decks from a hundred feet in the
+air. A land attack was therefore resolved upon and carried into
+execution. [Sidenote: Aug. 4.] But the dense woods, filled with sharp
+shooters, through which the troops were compelled to force their way,
+rendered the movement a complete failure. Captain Holmes, a gallant
+officer, was shot by an Indian boy. A black servant of Colonel Croghan
+immediately covered the body with leaves, to prevent mutilation by the
+Indians, and the next day it was recovered. The troops were
+re-embarked, and the discomfitted fleet turned homeward. Overtaken by
+a storm in Lake Huron, all their boats were destroyed, and the vessels
+themselves narrowly escaped being wrecked. A detachment having
+destroyed six months' supplies at the mouth of the Natewasaga river
+destined for Mackinaw, two schooners were left to blockade the place.
+[Sidenote: Sept. 13.] Mackinaw, thus cut off from all communication
+with the provinces, would be starved out and compelled to surrender.
+But to complete the disaster of this unfortunate enterprise, four
+batteaux, with a fleet of small boats from Mackinaw, surprised and
+captured one of the schooners, the Tigress. Lieutenant Woolsey then
+took command of her, and the next morning, with American colors
+flying, stood steadily down on the Scorpion until he ranged alongside,
+when he fired all his guns at once, and running aboard, took the
+unsuspecting vessel without a struggle.
+
+Thus ended an expedition, romantic from the scenery through which it
+passed, but comparatively useless in its results, and costing more
+than it was worth, even if it had been successful.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ Brown takes command of the army at Niagara -- Crosses the
+ river into Canada -- Battle of Chippewa -- Brilliant charge
+ of the Americans -- Desperate battle of Niagara -- Conduct
+ of Ripley -- The army ordered to Fort Erie -- General Gaines
+ takes command.
+
+
+[Sidenote: July 3.]
+
+On the same day the expedition to Mackinaw sailed from Detroit, the
+army which had been concentrated at Buffalo during the winter, crossed
+the Niagara, in its third campaign against Canada. Brown, who had been
+made Brigadier-General for his gallant conduct at Sackett's Harbor,
+was afterward promoted to the rank of Major-General and given the
+command of the army destined to act on the Niagara frontier. Two
+regular brigades, commanded by Scott and Ripley, and a brigade of
+volunteers and militia, with a few Indians, under General Porter,
+composed his force. He was directed to carry out that portion of the
+Secretary's plan which looked to the possession and fortification of
+Burlington Heights, previous to a descent on Kingston and Montreal.
+First, he was to seize Fort Erie, risk a combat with the enemy at
+Chippewa, menace Fort George, and then, if Chauncey's fleet could
+co-operate with him, advance rapidly on Burlington.
+
+The two regular brigades had been subjected for three months to a new
+and most rigid discipline. The system of tactics hitherto in use, had
+been handed down from the Revolution, and was not, therefore, adapted
+to the improved mode of warfare. Scott, here, for the first time,
+introduced the French system. He drilled the officers, and they, in
+turn, the men. So severe and constant was this discipline, that, in
+the short space of three months, these brigades became intelligent,
+steady, and invincible as veterans.
+
+[Sidenote: July 3.]
+
+The preparations being completed, the army crossed the Niagara river,
+and took Fort Erie without a struggle. The main British army, under
+General Riall, lay at Chippewa, towards which Scott pressed, heading
+the advance, with his brigade, chasing before him for sixteen miles, a
+detachment commanded by the Marquis of Tweesdale, who said he could
+not account for the ardor of the pursuit until he remembered it was
+the 4th of July, our great anniversary. At dark the Marquis crossed
+the Chippewa, behind which lay the British army. This river enters the
+Niagara nearly at right angles. Two miles farther up, Street's Creek
+joins the Niagara also, and behind it Gen. Brown drew up the American
+forces. Those two miles of interval between the streams was an open
+plain, skirted on one side by the Niagara river and on the other by a
+forest.
+
+In the morning Gen. Brown resolved to advance and attack the British
+in their position. The latter had determined on a similar movement
+against the Americans, and unbeknown to each other, the one prepared
+to cross the bridge of Chippewa, and the other that of Street's Creek.
+
+The battle commenced in the woods on the left, and an irregular fight
+was kept up for a long time between Porter's brigade and the Canadian
+militia stationed there. The latter were at length driven back to the
+Chippewa, when General Riall advanced to their support. Before this
+formidable array, the American militia, notwithstanding the noble
+efforts of General Porter to steady their courage, broke and fled.
+General Brown immediately hastened to the scene, merely saying to
+Scott as he passed on, "The enemy is advancing, you will have a
+fight." The latter, ignorant of the forward movement of Riall, had
+just put his brigade in marching order to cross the creek for a drill
+on the level plain beyond. But as the head of the column reached the
+bank, he saw the British army drawn up in beautiful array in the open
+field, on the farther side, while a battery of nine pieces stood in
+point blank range of the bridge over which he was to cross. Swiftly
+yet beautifully the corps of Scott swept over the bridge and deployed
+under the steady fire of the battery. The first and second battalions
+under Majors Leavenworth and McNeil, took position in front of the
+left and centre of the enemy, while the third, under Jessup, obliqued
+to the left to attack their right, stationed in the woods, and which
+threatened to outflank the American line. It was a bright, hot July
+afternoon, the dusty plain presented no obstacle behind which either
+party could find shelter, and the march of the steady battalions over
+its surface led on by bands of music, playing national airs, presented
+one of those stirring scenes which make man forget the carnage that is
+to follow. The heavy monotonous thunder of Niagara rolled on over the
+discharges of artillery, while its clouds of spray rising from the
+strife of waters, and glittering in the sunbeams, contrasted strangely
+with the sulphurous clouds that heaved heavenward from the conflict of
+men beneath.
+
+Both armies halting, firing, and advancing in turn, continued to
+approach until they stood within eighty yards of each other. Scott who
+had been manoeuvering to get the two battalions of Leavenworth and
+M'Neil in an oblique position to the British line, at length
+succeeded, the two farther extremities being nearest the enemy. Thus
+the American army stood like an obtuse triangle of which the British
+line formed the base. While in this position, Scott, wishing to pass
+from one extremity to the other and being in too great a hurry to go
+back of the lines _around_ the triangle, cut directly across, taking
+the cross fire of both armies, as he spurred in a fierce gallop
+through the smoke. A loud cheer rolled along the American line as they
+saw this daring act of their commander. Riding up to Towson's battery,
+he cried out, "a little more to the left, captain, the enemy is
+there." This gallant officer was standing amid his guns, enveloped in
+smoke, and had not observed that the British had advanced so far that
+his fire fell behind them. Instantly discovering his mistake, he
+changed the direction of his two remaining pieces and poured a raking,
+destructive fire through the enemy's ranks, blowing up an ammunition
+wagon, which spread destruction on every side. At this critical
+moment, Scott rode up to M'Neil's battalion, his face blazing with
+excitement, and shouted, "The enemy say that we are good at long shot
+but cannot stand the cold iron. I call upon the Eleventh _instantly to
+give the lie to that slander--Charge_."
+
+Just as the order "charge," escaped his lips, came that destructive
+fire from Towson's battery. The thunder of those guns at that critical
+moment, was to Scott's young and excited heart like the shout of
+victory, and rising in his stirrups and swinging his sword aloft, he
+cried, "CHARGE, CHARGE THE RASCALS." With a high and ringing cheer,
+that gallant battalion moved with leveled bayonets on the foe. Taking
+the close and deadly volleys without shrinking--never for a moment
+losing its firm formation, it struck the British line obliquely,
+crumbling it to pieces, as it swept on and making awful havoc in its
+passage.
+
+Leavenworth did the same on the right with like success, while Jessup
+in the woods, ignorant how the battle was going in the plain, but
+finding himself outflanked, ordered his troops "to support arms and
+advance." They cheerfully obeyed and in the face of a most deadly fire
+charged home on the enemy, and obtaining a better position poured in
+their volleys with tremendous effect. From the moment these charges
+commenced, till the enemy fled, the field presented a frightful
+spectacle. The two armies were in such close proximity, and the
+volleys were so incessant and destructive, and the uproar so terrific
+that orders could no longer be heard. But through his two aids
+Lieutenants Worth and Watts, who galloped to and fro, and by their
+presence and gestures transmitted his orders in the midst of the
+hottest fire, Scott caused every movement to be executed with
+precision, and not an error was committed from first to last.
+
+The enemy fled over the Chippewa, tore up the bridge and retired to
+his encampment.
+
+The sun went down in blood and the loud voice of Niagara which had
+been drowned in the roar of battle, sounded on as before, chaunting a
+requiem for the gallant dead, while the moans of the wounded loaded
+the air of the calm summer evening.
+
+Nearly eight hundred killed and wounded, had been stretched on the
+earth in that short battle, out of some four thousand, or one-fifth of
+all engaged.[4] A bloodier battle, considering the numbers, was scarce
+ever fought. The British having been taught to believe that the
+American troops would give way in an open fight, and that the resort
+to the bayonet was always the signal of victory to them, could not be
+made to yield, until they were literally crushed under the headlong
+charge of the Americans.
+
+[Footnote 4: The British were 2100 strong. American troops actually
+engaged, 1900.
+
+British killed 138. Wounded and missing 365. Americans killed 68.
+Wounded and missing 267.]
+
+Gen. Brown, when he found that Scott had the whole British army on his
+hands, hurried back to bring up Ripley's brigade; but Scott's
+evolutions and advance had been so rapid, and his blow so sudden and
+deadly, that the field was swept before he could arrive.
+
+M'Neil's battalion had not a recruit in it, and Scott knew when he
+called on them to give the lie to the slander, that American troops
+could not stand the cold steel, that they would do it though every man
+perished in his footsteps.
+
+Maj. Leavenworth's battalion, however, embraced a few volunteers, and
+among them a company of backwoodsmen, who joined the army at Buffalo a
+few days before it was to cross the Niagara.
+
+An incident illustrating their character, was told the writer's father
+by Maj. Gen. Leavenworth himself. Although a battle was expected in a
+few days, the Major resolved in the mean time to drill these men.
+Having ordered them out for that purpose, he endeavored to apply the
+manual; but to his surprise, found that they were ignorant of the most
+common terms familiar even to untrained militia. While thus puzzled
+with their awkwardness, Scott rode on the field, and in a sharp voice
+asked Maj. Leavenworth if he could not manage those soldiers better.
+The Major lifting his chapeau to the General, replied, that he wished
+the General would try them himself. The latter rode forward and issued
+his commands--but the backwoodsmen instead of obeying him, were
+ignorant even of the military terms he used. After a few moments'
+trial, he saw it was a hopeless task, and touching his chapeau in
+return to Leavenworth, said, "Major, I leave you your men," and rode
+off the field. The latter, finding that all attempts at drill during
+the short interval that must elapse before a battle occurred, would
+be useless, ordered them to their quarters. On the day of the battle
+he placed them at one extremity of the line, where he thought they
+would interfere the least with the manoeuvres of the rest of the
+battalion. He said that during the engagement, this company occurred
+to him, and he rode the whole length of his line to see what they were
+about. They were where he had placed them, captain and all, obeying no
+orders, except those to advance. Their ranks were open and out of all
+line; but the soldiers were cool and collected as veterans. They had
+thrown away their hats and coats, and besmeared with powder and smoke
+were loading and firing, each for himself. They paid no attention to
+the order to fire, for the idea of "shooting" till they had good aim
+was preposterous. The thought of running had evidently never crossed
+their minds. Fearless of danger, and accustomed to pick off squirrels
+from the tops of the loftiest trees with their rifle-balls, they were
+quietly doing what they were put there to perform, viz., kill men, and
+Maj. Leavenworth said there was the most deadly work in the whole
+line. Men fell like grass before the scythe. Not a shot was thrown
+away--ten men were equal to a hundred firing in the ordinary way.
+
+The American army rested but two days after the battle, and then
+advanced over the Chippewa, Scott's brigade leading. The British
+retreated to Burlington Heights, near the head of Lake Ontario.
+Thither Brown resolved to follow them. But on the 25th, while the army
+was resting, preparatory to the next day's battle, word was brought
+that a thousand English troops had crossed the river to Lewistown, for
+the purpose, evidently, of seizing our magazines at Fort Schlosser,
+and the supplies, on the way to the American camp, from Buffalo. In
+order to force them to return, Brown resolved immediately to threaten
+the forts at the mouth of the Niagara river, and in twenty minutes,
+Scott, with a detachment of twelve hundred men, was on the march. He
+had proceeded but two miles, when he came in sight of a group of
+British officers on horseback, evidently reconnoitering. The force to
+which they belonged lay behind a strip of wood, which prevented him
+from seeing it. Supposing it, however, to be the fragments of the army
+he had so terribly shattered at Chippewa, he ordered the march to be
+resumed. But as he cleared the road he saw before him an army of two
+thousand men drawn up in order of battle. He paused a moment at this
+unexpected sight, and his eye had an anxious look as it ran along his
+little band. To retreat would endanger the reserve marching to his
+relief, and destroy the confidence of the troops. Besides, Scott never
+had, and never has since, learned _practically_, what the word
+"retreat" meant. He determined, therefore, hazardous as it was, to
+maintain the unequal contest till the other portion of the army
+arrived. Despatching officers to General Brown with directions to ride
+as for life, he gave the orders to advance. The sun, at this time, was
+but half an hour high, and unobscured by a cloud, was going to his
+lordly repose behind the forest that stood bathed in his departing
+splendor. Near by, in full view, rolled the cataract, sending up its
+incense towards heaven, and filling that summer evening with its voice
+of thunder. The spray, as it floated inland, hovered over the American
+army, and as the departing sunbeams struck it, a rainbow was formed,
+which encircled the head of Scott's column like a halo--a symbol of
+the wreath of glory that should adorn it forever.
+
+The British, two thousand strong, were posted just below the Falls, on
+a ridge at the head of Lundy's Lane. Their left was in the highway,
+and separated from the main body by an interval of two hundred yards,
+covered with brushwood, etc. General Drummond had landed a short time
+before with reinforcements, which were rapidly marching up to the aid
+of Riall. Scott, however, would not turn his back on the enemy, and
+gallantly led in person his little army into the fire. His bearing and
+words inspired confidence, and officers and men forgot the odds that
+were against them. Major Jessup was ordered to fling himself in the
+interval, between the British centre and left, and turn the latter.
+In the mean time the enemy discovering that he outflanked the
+Americans on the left, advanced a battalion to take them in rear. The
+brave McNeil stopped, with one terrible blow, its progress, though his
+own battalion was dreadfully shattered by it. Jessup had succeeded in
+his movement, and having gained the enemy's rear, charged back through
+his line, captured the commanding general, Riall, with his whole
+staff. When this was told to Scott, he announced it to the army, and
+three loud cheers rang over the field. A destructive discharge from
+the English battery of seven pieces, replied.
+
+It was night now, and a serene moon rose over the scene, but its light
+struggled in vain to pierce the smoke that curtained in the
+combatants. The flashes from the battery that crowned the heights, and
+from the infantry below, alone revealed where they were struggling.
+Scott's regiments were soon all reduced to skeletons--a fourth of the
+whole brigade had fallen in the unequal conflict. The English battery
+of twenty-four-pounders and howitzers, sent destruction through his
+ranks. He, however, refused to yield a foot of ground, and heading
+almost every charge in person, moved with such gay spirits and
+reckless courage through the deadliest fire, that the troops caught
+the infection. But the British batteries, now augmented to nine guns,
+made frightful havoc in his uncovered brigade. Towson's few pieces
+being necessarily placed so much lower, could produce but little
+effect, while the enemy's twenty-four-pounders, loaded with grape,
+swept the entire field. The eleventh and twenty-second regiments,
+deprived of their commanders, and destitute of ammunition were
+withdrawn, and Leavenworth, with the gallant ninth, was compelled to
+withstand the whole shock of battle. With such energy and superior
+numbers did the British press upon this single regiment, that it
+appeared amid the darkness to be enveloped in fire. Its destruction
+seemed inevitable, and in a short time one-half of its number lay
+stretched on the field. Leavenworth sent to Scott, informing him of
+his desperate condition. The latter soon came up on a gallop, when
+Leavenworth pointing to the bleeding fragment of his regiment, said,
+"Your rule for retreating is fulfilled," referring to Scott's maxim
+that a regiment might retreat when every third man was killed. Scott,
+however, answered buoyantly, cheered up the men and officers by
+promising victory, and spurring where the balls fell thickest,
+animated them by his daring courage and chivalric bearing to still
+greater efforts. Still he could not but see that his case was getting
+desperate, and unless aid arrived soon, he must retreat. Only five or
+six hundred of the twelve hundred he at sunset had led into battle,
+remained to him.
+
+General Brown, however, was hurrying to the rescue. The incessant
+cannonading convinced him that Scott had a heavy force on his hands;
+and without waiting the arrival of a messenger, he directed Ripley to
+move forward with the second brigade. Meeting Scott's dispatch on the
+way, he learned how desperate the battle was, and immediately directed
+Porter with the volunteers to hurry on after Ripley, while he, in
+advance of all, hastened to the field of action. The constant and
+heavy explosions of artillery, rising over the roar of the cataract,
+announced to the excited soldiers the danger of their comrades; and no
+sooner were they wheeled into marching order than they started on a
+trot along the road. Lieut. Riddle, who was off on a scouring
+expedition in the country, paused as he heard the thunder of cannon,
+and waiting for no dispatch, gave orders to march, and his men moving
+at the _charge de pas_, soon came with shouts on the field. At length
+the head of Ripley's column emerged into view, sending joy through
+those gallant regiments, and a loud huzza rolled along their line.
+Brown, seeing that Scott's brigade was exhausted, ordered Ripley to
+form in advance of it. In the mean time, Drummond had arrived on the
+field with reinforcements, swelling the English army to four thousand
+men. At this moment there was a lull in the battle, and both armies
+prepared for a decisive blow. It was evident the deadly battery on
+the heights must be carried, or the field be lost, and Brown, turning
+to Colonel Miller, asked him if he could take it. "I WILL TRY, sir,"
+was the brief reply of the fearless soldier, as he coolly scanned the
+frowning heights. Placing himself at the head of the 21st regiment, he
+prepared to ascend the hill. Major M'Farland with the 23d was to
+support him. Not having arrived on the field till after dark, he was
+ignorant of the formation of the ground or the best point from which
+to commence the ascent. Scott, who had fought over almost every foot
+of it since sunset, offered to pilot him. Passing by an old church and
+grave-yard, that showed dimly in the moonlight, he took the column to
+the proper place, and then returned to his post. In close order and
+dead silence the two regiments then moved straight for the battery. It
+was by their heavy muffled tread that General Drummond first detected
+their approach. But the moment he caught the dark outlines of the
+swiftly advancing columns he turned his battery upon them with
+terrific effect. The twenty-third staggered under the discharge, but
+soon rallied and pressed forward. Smitten again, it reeled backward
+down the hill; but the twenty-first never faltered. "Close up, steady,
+men!" rung from the lips of their leader, and taking the loads of
+grape-shot unshrinkingly into their bosoms, they marched sternly on,
+their bayonets gleaming red in the fire that rolled in streams down
+the slope. Every explosion revealed the whole hill and that dark
+column winding through flame and smoke up its sides. At length it came
+within range of musketry, when the carnage became awful; but still on
+through the sheets of flame, over their dead comrades, this invincible
+regiment held its stubborn course towards the very vortex of the
+battle. The English gazed with amazement on its steady advance. No
+hesitation marked its movement; closing up its ranks after every
+discharge, it kept on its terrible way, till at last it stood face to
+face with the murderous battery, and within a few steps of the
+gunners. A sudden flash, a deafening explosion, and then "_Close up,
+steady, charge_," rung out from the sulphurous cloud that rolled over
+the shattered regiment, and the next instant it swept with a thrilling
+shout over guns, gunners, and all. The struggle became at once close
+and fierce,--bayonet crossed bayonet,--weapon clashed against
+weapon,--but nothing could resist that determined onset. The British
+were driven down the hill, and the remnants of that gallant regiment,
+together with M'Farland's, which had again rallied, formed between the
+guns and the foe. Ripley then moved his brigade to the top of the
+hill, in order to keep what had been so heroically won.
+
+Stung with rage and mortification at this unexpected defeat, Drummond
+resolved to retake that height and his guns, cost what it might; and
+soon the tread of his advancing columns was heard ascending the slope.
+With their uniforms glittering in the bright moonlight, the excited
+troops came on at the charge step, until within twenty yards of the
+American line, when they halted and delivered their fire. "Charge"
+then ran along the line, but the order had scarcely pealed on the
+night air before they were shattered and torn into fragments by the
+sudden and destructive volley of the Americans. Rallying, however,
+they returned to the attack, and for twenty minutes the conflict
+around those guns was indescribably awful and murderous. No sounds of
+music drowned the death-cry; the struggle was too close and fatal.
+There were only the fierce tramp and the clash of steel,--the stifled
+cry and wavering to and fro of men in a death-grapple. At length the
+British broke, and disappeared in the darkness. General Ripley again
+formed his line, while Scott, who had succeeded in getting a single
+battalion out of the fragments of his whole brigade, was ordered to
+the top of the hill.
+
+In about half an hour the sound of the returning enemy was again
+heard. Smote by the same fierce fire, Drummond with a desperate effort
+threw his entire strength on the centre of the American line. But
+there stood the gallant twenty-first, whose resistless charge had
+first swept the hill; and where they had conquered they could not
+yield. Scott in the mean time led his column so as to take the enemy
+in flank and rear, and but for a sudden volley from a concealed body
+of the enemy, cutting his command in two, would have finished the
+battle with a blow. As it was, he charged again and again, with
+resistless energy, and the disordered ranks of the British for the
+second time rolled back and were lost in the gloom. Here Scott's last
+horse fell under him, and he moved on foot amid his battalion. Jessup
+was also severely wounded, yet there he stood amid the darkness and
+carnage, cheering on his men. The soldiers vied with the officers in
+heroic daring and patient suffering. Many would call out for muskets
+as they had none, or for cartridges as theirs were all gone. On every
+side from pallid lips and prostrate bleeding forms came the reply,
+"take mine, and mine, my gun is in good order, and my cartridge box is
+full." There was scarcely an officer at this time unwounded; yet, one
+and all refused to yield the command while they could keep their feet.
+
+Jessup's flag was riddled with balls, and as a sergeant waved it amid
+a storm of bullets, the staff was severed in three places in his hand.
+Turning to his commander he exclaimed as he took up the fragments,
+"Look, colonel, how they have cut us." The next moment a ball passed
+through his body. But he still kept his feet, and still waved his
+mutilated standard, until faint with loss of blood he sunk on the
+field.
+
+After being driven the second time down the hill, the enemy for a
+while ceased their efforts, and sudden silence fell on the two armies,
+broken only by the groans of the wounded and dying. The scene, and the
+hour, combined to render that hill-top a strange and fearful object in
+the darkness. On one side lay a wilderness, on the other rolled the
+cataract, whose solemn anthem could again be heard pealing on through
+the night. Leaning on their heated guns, that gallant band stood
+bleeding amid the wreck it had made. It was midnight--the stars looked
+quietly down from the sky--the summer wind swept softly by, and nature
+was breathing long and peacefully. But all over that hill lay the
+brave dead, and adown its sides in every direction the blood of men
+was rippling. Nothing but skeletons of regiments remained, yet calm
+and stern were the words spoken there in the darkness. "_Close up the
+ranks_," were the heroic orders that still fell on the shattered
+battalions, and they closed with the same firm presence and dauntless
+hearts as before.
+
+It was thought that the British would make no further attempts to
+recover their guns, but reinforcements having arrived from Fort
+George, they, after an hour's repose and refreshment, prepared for a
+final assault. Our troops had all this time stood to their arms, and
+faint with hunger, thirst, and fatigue, seemed unequal to a third
+conflict against a fresh force. But as they heard the enemy advancing,
+they forgot their weariness and met the onset firmly as before. But
+this time the ranks of the enemy did not yield under the fire that
+smote them--they pressed steadily forward, and delivering their
+volleys as they advanced, at length stood on the summit of the hill,
+and breast to breast with the American line. The conflict now became
+fearful and more like the murderous hand-to-hand fights of old than a
+modern battle. Battalions on both sides were forced back till the
+ranks became mingled. Bayonet crossed bayonet and men lay transfixed
+side by side. Hindman, whose artillery had been from the first served
+with surpassing skill, found the enemy amid his guns, across which he
+was compelled to fight them.
+
+The firing gave way to the clash of steel, the blazing hill-top
+subsided into gloom, out of which the sound of this nocturnal combat
+arose in strange and wild confusion.
+
+Scott, charging like fire at the head of his exhausted battalion,
+received another severe wound which prostrated him--but his last words
+to Leavenworth were, "_Charge again!_" "Charge again, Leavenworth!" he
+cried, as they bore him, apparently dying, from that fierce foughten
+field. General Brown, supported on his horse, and suffering from a
+severe wound, was slowly led away. Jesup was bleeding from several
+wounds; every regimental officer in Scott's brigade was killed or
+wounded. _Only one soldier out of every four stood up unhurt._ The
+annals of war rarely reveal such a slaughter in a single brigade, but
+it is rarer still a brigade has such a leader. The ghosts of regiments
+alone remained, yet before these the veterans of England were at last
+compelled to flee, and betake themselves to the darkness for safety.
+Sullen, mortified, and badly wounded, Drummond was carried from the
+field, and all farther attempts to take the hill were abandoned. The
+Americans, however, kept watch and ward, around the cannon that had
+cost them so great a sacrifice, till near daybreak, when orders were
+received to retire to camp. No water could be obtained on the heights,
+and the troops wanted repose. Through the want of drag-ropes and
+horses, the cannon were left behind. This was a sad drawback to the
+victory, and Major Ripley should have detailed some men to have taken
+at least the lightest ones away. Trophies won with the blood of so
+many brave men were worth more effort than he put forth to secure
+them.
+
+A bloodier battle, in proportion to the numbers engaged, was never
+fought than this. Nearly eight hundred Americans, and as many English,
+had fallen on and around that single hill. It was literally loaded
+with the slain. Seventy-six officers were either killed or wounded
+out of our army of some three thousand men, and not a general on
+either side remained unwounded.
+
+Among the slain was young Captain Hull, son of the General who had so
+shamefully capitulated at Detroit. This young officer, who had fought
+one duel in defence of his father's honor, and struggled in vain to
+shake off the sense of disgrace that clung to him, told a friend at
+the opening of the battle, that he had resolved to fling away a life
+which had become insupportable. When the conflict was done, he was
+found stark and stiff where the dead lay thickest.
+
+It would be impossible to relate all the deeds of daring and gallantry
+which distinguished this bloody engagement. Almost every man was a
+hero, and from that hour England felt a respect for our arms she had
+never before entertained. The navy had established its reputation
+forever, and now the army challenged the respect of the world. The
+timorous and the ignorant had been swept away with the old martinets,
+and the true genius of the country was shining forth in her young men,
+who, while they did not despise the past, took lessons of the present.
+Scott at this time, but twenty-eight years of age, had shown to the
+country what a single youth, fired with patriotism, confident in his
+resources, and daring in spirit, could accomplish. His brigade, it is
+true, had been almost annihilated, and nothing apparently been
+gained; but those err much who graduate the results of a battle by the
+number taken prisoners or the territory acquired. Moral power is
+always more valuable than physical, and though we are forever
+demanding something tangible to show as the reward of such a great
+effort and sacrifice, yet to gain a national position is more
+important than to take an army. Thus while many think that the battle
+of Niagara, though gallantly fought, was a barren one, and furnished
+no compensation for the great slaughter that characterized it, yet
+there has been none since that of Bunker Hill, more important to this
+country, and which, directly and indirectly, has more affected its
+interests. It probably saved more battles than if, by stratagem or
+superior force, General Brown had succeeded in capturing Drummond's
+entire army.
+
+Brown and Scott both being disabled, the command devolved on Major
+Ripley, who retired behind the Chippewa, and the defences recently
+erected by the British. Scott's last wound was a severe one. A musket
+ball had shattered his shoulder dreadfully, and for a long time it was
+extremely doubtful whether he ever recovered. He suffered excruciating
+pain from it, and it was September before he ventured to travel, and
+then slowly and with great care. His progress was a constant ovation.
+The young and wounded chieftain was hailed on his passage with salvos
+of artillery, and shouts of freemen. He arrived at Princeton on
+commencement day of Nassau Hall. The professors immediately sent a
+delegation requesting his attendance at the church. Leaning on the arm
+of his gallant aid-de-camp, Worth--his arm in a sling, and his
+countenance haggard and worn from his long suffering and confinement,
+the tall young warrior slowly moved up the aisle, and with great
+difficulty ascended the steps to the stage. At first sight of the
+invalid, looking so unlike the dashing, fearless commander, a murmur
+of sympathy ran through the house, the next moment there went up a
+shout that shook the building to its foundations.
+
+Passing on to Baltimore, then threatened with an attack by the
+British, he finally so far recovered as to take command in the middle
+of October of the tenth military district, and established his
+headquarters at Washington City.
+
+General Brown was indignant with General Ripley for leaving the cannon
+behind, and peremptorily ordered him to reoccupy the heights of
+Lundy's Lane at daybreak, and remain there till the dead were buried
+and the guns removed. He however did not commence his march till after
+sunrise, and then being told that the enemy were in possession of the
+heights, he halted, and finally retired to Chippewa.
+
+This officer, on whom the command had devolved since the battle,
+seemed from the first opposed to all the movements. When the army was
+about to cross the river against Riall, he not only strongly condemned
+the proceeding, but even offered his resignation, which was not
+accepted. By his neglect to remove, or attempt to remove the captured
+guns, which had cost such a heroic struggle, and his after delay to
+return and take them, it would seem as if he were offended that such
+brilliant results had followed a course which had met with his strong
+disapprobation. He was an able officer and a brave man, yet his heart
+was not in this movement of Brown's, consequently he did not go into
+combat with the enthusiasm of Scott, Miller, and Jesup, nor feel so
+elated by the victory.
+
+Soon after, a rumor was spread that Drummond was marching on the
+American camp. Although occupying a strong position, Ripley
+immediately ordered a retreat to the ferry opposite Black Rock, with
+the intention of recrossing the river into the limits of the United
+States. This sudden determination, founded on a mere rumor, can hardly
+be accounted for, except on the supposition that he could not be
+contented till the army was back to the place it started from, and
+whence it never would have moved had he been commander-in-chief. He
+was prevented from carrying out this purpose by the earnest
+remonstrances of McCrea and Wood, who scorned to flee so ignominiously
+from the field of their fame. Ripley then left the army and hastened
+to Buffalo, to obtain Brown's consent to the measure. The wounded hero
+was enraged that the commanding officer should contemplate such a
+virtual confession of defeat--rebuked him, and ordered the division to
+remain at Fort Erie, and fortify and defend it to the last extremity.
+He also sent a dispatch to General Gaines, commanding at Sackett's
+Harbor, to repair at once to the army at Fort Erie, and take command
+of both.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ Siege of Fort Erie -- Assault and repulse of the British --
+ Brown takes command -- Resolves to destroy the enemy's works
+ by a sortie -- Opposed by his officers -- The sortie --
+ Anecdote of General Porter -- Retreat of Drummond -- Conduct
+ of Izard.
+
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 3.]
+
+Gaines, immediately on his arrival at Fort Erie, set about
+strengthening the works, so that when Drummond actually invested it,
+he found it in a good state of defence.
+
+In the mean time, the English commander hearing that Brown's magazine
+had been removed from Schlosser to Buffalo, dispatched Colonel Tucker
+to the latter place, with twelve hundred men, to seize them. But Brown
+anticipating such a movement, had stationed Major Morgan, with a
+battalion of riflemen, at Black Rock, to meet and repel it. This
+vigilant and gallant officer thwarted every attempt of the British to
+advance, and compelled them reluctantly to return.
+
+A night expedition sent to cut out three small American vessels at
+anchor in the river, succeeded better--two of them being surprised and
+captured.
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 13.]
+
+Having completed his trenches and erected his batteries, Drummond, on
+the 13th, opened his fire. Shot and shells were incessantly hurled all
+that and the succeeding day against the fort without materially
+weakening its strength. The British commander then resolved to carry
+it by assault. The garrison was composed of about 2500 men, while the
+force under Drummond was estimated at four thousand. As night
+approached, and the cannonading ceased, General Gaines observed a
+commotion in the British camp, and suspecting that preparations were
+making for an assault, ordered one third of the garrison to stand to
+their arms all night.
+
+Drummond had resolved to assail the works in three separate strong
+columns, of from twelve to fifteen hundred men each, moving
+simultaneously against three separate points. One against Towson's
+battery, occupying the extreme north-east angle of the fortifications;
+a second against the right, and the third full on the fort itself. The
+day had been stormy, with torrents of rain deluging the earth, and the
+night set in dark and dismal. The watch fires of the enemy's camp
+could scarcely be discerned through the gloom, and dead silence
+reigned over both encampments. Hour after hour wore slowly away, till
+midnight came, and yet no sound but the moaning of the wind as it
+swept over the water and the woods, broke the stillness.
+
+At length about two o'clock in the morning, the muffled tread of the
+advancing columns was distinctly heard in the darkness. The one
+directed against Towson's batteries near the water, came first within
+range, when a tremendous fire opened upon it. In an instant, the whole
+scenery was lit up by the blaze of the guns, which threw also a red
+and baleful light over the serried ranks, pressing with fixed bayonets
+to the assault. Although Towson kept his batteries in fierce play, and
+sheets of flame went rolling on the doomed column, it kept resolutely
+on till it approached within ten feet of the infantry. But its
+strength was exhausted; it could stagger on no farther; and first
+wavering, it then halted, and finally recoiled. Rallied to a second
+attack, it advanced with loud shouts, only to be smitten with the same
+overwhelming fire. Encouraged to a third effort, it swerved from the
+direct assault, and endeavored to wade around an abattis of loose
+brushwood, that stretched from the batteries to the shore. Pressing
+forward, up to their arm-pits in the water, some few reached the
+enclosure within, but only to perish, and the remainder retreated. The
+column advancing against the right battery, commanded by Douglas, was
+allowed to approach within fifty yards, when such a rapid and wasting
+fire was poured upon it, that it recoiled in confusion. The central
+column, led on by Lieutenant-Colonel Drummond, pressed firmly and
+rapidly through the fire of Hindman's guns, applied their ladders to
+the walls, and began to mount. Repulsed, they made a second and third
+desperate effort to reach the parapets, but without success. Stubborn
+and brave, this officer was resolved not to abandon the attempt, and
+favored by the darkness, led his troops quietly along the ditch to a
+point where no assault was expected, and applying his ladders, mounted
+to the top of one of the bastions. Enraged by his successive repulses,
+and maddened by the slaughter of his troops, this intrepid but brutal
+leader no sooner gained the parapet than he cried out "give the damned
+Yankees no quarter." The latter instantly closed on him with a
+sternness and ferocity that made that single bastion swim in blood.
+Carrying out his own inhuman orders, Drummond shot Lieutenant
+Macdonough as he lay prostrate and wounded, bravely beating off the
+soldiers who refused his cry for quarter. The next instant the
+barbarous act was avenged by a soldier, who shot him dead in his
+footsteps. The troops, however, courageously maintained the advantage
+they had gained, till daylight, when some cartridges in a stone
+building near by, catching fire by accident, exploded with a
+tremendous concussion, lifting the platform of the bastion from its
+bed, and hurling the shattered and affrighted occupants of it to the
+ground. A disorderly flight followed, and the British troops withdrew
+to their encampment.
+
+General Drummond, however, did not abandon the siege, but sat down
+before the fort with a stronger determination than ever to reduce it.
+
+General Gaines being wounded by a shell, now retired to Buffalo,
+leaving Ripley in command. When the state of affairs was reported to
+General Brown, he saw at once that another and heavier assault would
+soon be made, and though his wounds were yet unhealed, repaired to the
+fort, and assumed the command. [Sidenote: Sept. 2.] The brave Jessup
+with his arm in a sling, and still suffering from his wounds,
+volunteered his services, and every preparation was made for a
+desperate resistance.
+
+Owing to the sickness of Commodore Chauncey the co-operation expected
+from the fleet had entirely failed, so that the brilliant victories of
+the summer, on the Niagara frontier, had not advanced the original
+plan of the campaign, and the American army instead of marching to
+Burlington Heights, and thence on Kingston, was compelled to stand on
+the defensive. Commodore Chauncey was a gallant and skillful
+commander, and had reduced his crews to a state of discipline rarely
+equaled. But he lay sick in Sackett's Harbor till the 2d of July, and
+then was carried on board his ship. His arrival near [Sidenote: Aug.
+5.] Niagara was too late to be of any service to the army shut up in
+Fort Erie, and he cruised in the lake, blockading Yeo in Kingston, and
+striving in vain to bring him to an engagement. It was no fault of his
+that Ontario was not signalized by a victory equal to that on Lake
+Erie.
+
+General Izard, after sitting on the court-martial of Wilkinson, was
+appointed to take command of the northern army at Plattsburg.
+[Sidenote: May 4.] He was an accomplished officer, but like his
+predecessors, too much of a martinet to effect any thing with
+irregular troops. He fell a victim to military rules, which, in the
+changing, disorderly army under his command, could not be applied. Cut
+adrift from them he knew not what to do. A thoroughly-educated
+officer, he became a slave to his knowledge, and without the genius to
+create resources, or skill to mould and apply the materials that
+surrounded him, he made matters worse by grumbling. Quarrels, duels
+among the officers, desertion, the mixture of black and white
+recruits, misrule, and bad appointments, discouraged and disgusted him
+with the army he commanded. In the mean time, the arrival of fresh
+troops from England rendered some movement necessary, and Izard, at
+the head of seven thousand men, such as they were, was ordered to
+Sackett's Harbor, to plan an attack on Kingston, if circumstances
+rendered it prudent, or succor General Brown. Leaving three thousand
+under Macomb, at Plattsburgh, he with the remainder took up his sulky
+and discontented march for Sackett's Harbor, where he arrived on the
+13th of September. Three days previously, Brown wrote him from Fort
+Erie, imploring his assistance, saying unless it was rendered
+speedily, the fate of his army was doubtful. The accounts, however,
+which he received of the dilatory manner in which Izard marched, and
+of the feelings he entertained, left him no hope from that quarter,
+and he said, "We must, if saved, do the business ourselves." He fell
+back on himself, and his little band resolved to defend the fort to
+the last, against whatever force might be brought against it. Weak
+from his wounds, he yet toiled day and night to strengthen his
+defences. Neither his sickness, nor the torrents of rain that fell
+almost daily, could deter him from exertion, and by his energy and
+bearing he diffused an air of cheerfulness and confidence amid and
+around those entrenchments, which are always the forerunner of great
+deeds. Having ascertained what formidable preparations were making to
+press the siege, he resolved not to wait their completion, but with
+one bold sortie overwhelm the batteries of the enemy and destroy their
+works. A council of officers was called, to whom he submitted his
+plans. Their decision was adverse, which chagrined him much; he was
+also annoyed to find himself opposed by his next in command. He,
+nevertheless, was determined to carry out his purpose, and said to
+Jesup, "We must keep our own counsels; the impression must be made
+that we are done with the affair; _but as sure as there is a God in
+heaven the enemy shall be attacked in his works, and beaten, too, as
+soon as all the volunteers shall have passed over_." These were
+rapidly coming in at the call and efforts of General Porter, who was
+worthy to command them, and with whom they knew no disgrace could
+occur.
+
+General Brown having made himself perfectly acquainted with the
+position and designs of the enemy, quietly matured his own plans.
+Drummond's army, four thousand strong, was encamped in an open field
+surrounded by a forest, two miles distant from his entrenchments in
+order to be out of reach of the American cannon. One-third of this
+force protected the artillerists in completing their batteries and the
+workmen in digging trenches and erecting blockhouses.
+
+Two batteries were at length completed and a third nearly
+finished--all mounted with heavy cannon, one being a sixty-eight
+pounder--before the sortie was made. For four days previous Brown
+tried the effect of his artillery upon these works, and during the
+whole of the thirteenth and fourteenth a tremendous cannonading was
+kept up in the midst of a pelting storm. The two succeeding days the
+firing continued at intervals, interspersed with conflicts between the
+pickets. [Sidenote: Sept. 17.] The next day at noon, an hour when such
+an attempt would be least expected, Brown resolved to make a sortie
+with nearly the whole of his disposable force, capture the batteries,
+spike the cannon, and overwhelm the brigade in attendance before the
+other two brigades, two miles distant, could arrive. The assault was
+to be made in two columns. The left composed of Porter's volunteers,
+Gibson's riflemen, a portion of the 1st and 23rd regiments of regulars
+and some Indians was directed to march along a road which had been cut
+through the woods, while the gallant Miller with the first brigade was
+to move swiftly along a deep ravine that run between the first and
+second batteries of the enemy, and the moment he heard the crack of
+Porter's rifles, mount the ravine and storm the batteries. It was a
+dark and sombre day--the clouds flew low, sending down at intervals
+torrents of rain and giving to the whole scenery a sour and gloomy
+aspect. But everything being ready, Brown, about ten o'clock, opened
+with his artillery, and for two hours it was an incessant blaze and
+roar all along the line of the entrenchments. Its cessation was the
+signal for the two columns to advance. General Ripley commanded the
+reserve, while Jesup with a hundred and fifty men held the fort
+itself. Porter with his column surprised and overthrew the enemy's
+pickets, and began to pour in rapid volleys on his flank. Miller no
+sooner heard the welcome sound than he gave the order to charge. In an
+instant the brigade was on the top of the bank, and without giving the
+enemy time to recover from their surprise the troops dashed forward on
+the entrenchments in front of them. Though assailed so unexpectedly
+and suddenly the enemy fought gallantly to save the works which had
+cost them so much labor. The contest was fierce but short. Carrying
+battery after battery at the point of the bayonet, the victorious
+Americans pressed fiercely on till all the batteries and the labor of
+nearly fifty days were completely in their possession. Ripley then
+hastened up with the reserve to form a line for the protection of the
+troops while the work of destruction went on; while executing the
+movement he was wounded in the neck and carried back to the fort.
+
+In the mean time, Drummond aroused by the first volleys, had hurried
+off reinforcements on a run. Pressing forward through the rain, urged
+to their utmost speed by the officers pointing forward with their
+swords to the scene of action, they, nevertheless, arrived too late to
+prevent the disaster. In an hour the conflict was over; yet in that
+short space of time the work of demolition had been completed. In the
+midst of incessant volleys and shouts and the rallying beat of the
+drum, heavy explosions shook the field and magazines and block houses
+one after another blew up, spreading ruin and desolation around.
+
+In that short combat more than four hundred of the enemy had fallen,
+and nearly as many more been taken prisoners. The American loss was
+three hundred killed and wounded; among the slain, however, were the
+gallant Wood and Gibson. The bayonet and sabre were wielded with
+terrible effect in the strife.
+
+General Porter in passing with a few men from one detachment to
+another, during the engagement, suddenly found himself in the presence
+of sixty or eighty British soldiers drawn up in the woods, and
+apparently not knowing what to do. Thinking it better to put a bold
+face on the matter, he ran up to them, exclaiming, "That's right, my
+good fellows, surrender and we will take care of you!" and taking the
+musket out of the hands of the first and flinging it on the ground he
+pushed him towards the fort. In this way he went nearly through the
+first line, the men advancing unarmed in front. At length a soldier
+stepped back and presented the point of his bayonet to General
+Porter's breast, and demanded _his_ surrender. A scuffle ensued, and
+some officers coming to the rescue of the soldier Porter was flung
+upon the ground and his hand cut with a sword. On recovering his feet
+he saw himself surrounded by twenty or thirty men, shouting to him to
+surrender. He very coolly told _them_ to surrender, and declared if
+they fired a gun he would have the whole put to the sword. In the mean
+time a company of American riflemen coming up, fired upon the English.
+After a short fight the whole were killed or taken prisoners.
+
+Having accomplished his work, Brown retired in good order within the
+fort. Drummond, weakened by nearly one-fourth of his force, and the
+labors of so long a time being destroyed, raised the siege and retired
+behind the Chippewa.
+
+General Izard, who was to fall on his rear, did not reach Lewistown
+till the 5th of October. [Sidenote: Oct. 14.] At length, forming a
+junction with Brown's troops, he moved forward, and sat down before
+Drummond encamped, behind the Chippewa. His army, six thousand strong,
+was deemed sufficiently large to capture the enemy, and this event was
+confidently expected to crown the Canadian campaign. [Sidenote: Oct.
+21.] But after some faint demonstrations, not worth recording, he
+seven days after retired to Black Rock, preparatory to winter
+quarters. Although pressed by the Secretary of War to attack the
+enemy, he declined, and having spent the summer in grumbling, went
+sullenly into winter quarters, thus closing the list of inefficient
+commanders, which threatened for awhile never to become complete.
+
+While Izard was thus ending a military career in which he had gathered
+no laurels, Macomb, whom he had left at Plattsburgh, doomed as he said
+to destruction, had crowned himself with honor, and shed lustre on the
+American arms.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ British plan of invading our sea ports -- Arrival of
+ reinforcements -- Barney's flotilla -- Landing of the enemy
+ under Ross -- Doubt and alarm of the inhabitants -- Advance
+ of the British -- Destruction of the Navy Yard -- Battle of
+ Bladensburg -- Flight of the President and his Cabinet --
+ Burning and sacking of Washington -- Mrs. Madison's conduct
+ during the day and night -- Cockburn's brutality -- Sudden
+ explosion -- A hurricane -- Flight of the British -- State
+ of the army -- Character of this outrage -- Rejoicings in
+ England -- Mortification of our ambassadors at Ghent --
+ Mistake of the English -- Parker's expedition -- Colonel
+ Reed's defence -- The English army advance on Baltimore --
+ Death of Ross -- Bombardment of Fort McHenry -- "The star
+ spangled banner" -- Retreat of the British, and joy of the
+ citizens of Baltimore.
+
+
+But while these events were passing around Niagara--in the interval
+between the assault on Fort Erie by Drummond and the successful sortie
+of Brown--a calamity overtook the country, which fortunately resulted
+in producing more harmony of feeling among the people, and
+strengthened materially the administration. Washington was taken and
+sacked by the enemy. The overthrow of Napoleon and his banishment to
+Elba, enabled England to send over more than 30,000 troops, which were
+soon on our sea-board or in the British Provinces. New England no
+longer remained excluded from the blockade, and the whole Atlantic
+sea-board was locked up by British cruisers. The Constitution, the
+year previous, after a cruise in which she captured but a single war
+schooner and a few merchantmen, was chased into Marble Head, from
+whence she escaped to Boston. The blockading of our other large ships,
+and the destruction of the Essex about the same time in the Bay of
+Valparaiso, had left us without a frigate at sea. The Adams, a sloop
+of twenty-eight guns, was the largest cruiser we had afloat.
+
+Hitherto the enemy had been content with blockading our seaports, and
+making descents on small towns in their neighborhood, but as the
+summer advanced, rumors arrived of the preparation of a large force,
+destined to strike a heavy blow at some of our most important cities.
+To meet this new danger the President addressed a circular letter to
+the States, calling on them to hold in readiness 93,500 militia.
+Fearing that Washington or Baltimore might be the points at which the
+enemy would first strike, the tenth military district was erected, as
+mentioned before, and General Winder, recently released by exchange,
+given the command of it.
+
+The whole sea-board was in a state of alarm--even Massachusetts caught
+the infection, and preparations were immediately made to defend her
+seaports and protect her coast. The militia of the different States
+were called out--Governor Barbour, of Virginia, garrisoned Norfolk,
+the intrenching tools were busy night and day around Baltimore,
+Providence voted money for fortifications, Portland shipmasters formed
+themselves into a company of sea fencibles, and gun-boats were
+collected in New York and all the great northern ports. The notes of
+alarm and preparation rang along the coast from Maine to Louisiana,
+and before the mysterious shadow of the gigantic coming evil, party
+animosities sunk into insignificance. Released from her Continental
+struggle, England, with her fleets that had conquered at Aboukir,
+Trafalgar, and Copenhagen, and her troops fresh from the fields of
+Spain, had resolved to fall upon us in her power, and crushing city
+after city, leave us at length without a seaport, from the Merrimack
+to the Mississippi. Even the brilliant victories of Chippewa and
+Lundy's Lane could not dispel the terror inspired by this gathering of
+her energies.
+
+But the first serious demonstration was made in the Chesapeake. To act
+against the fleet a flotilla was placed there under the charge of
+Captain Barney, a bold and skillful officer. Constantly on the alert,
+he would dash suddenly out of the Patuxent River, and roughly handling
+the light vessels of the enemy that approached the shallow waters,
+compel them to take refuge under the guns of the frigates. But the
+river at length became blockaded, and the flotilla was compelled to
+run up into Leonard's Creek. From the 1st to the 26th of June,
+frequent skirmishes took place, in which Captain Barney exhibited a
+daring, skill and prudence combined, which proved him to be an able
+commander. On the 26th he attacked the British vessels in the river,
+and after a sharp cannonade of two hours, drove them into the bay, and
+broke up the blockade.
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 14.]
+
+At length Admiral Cochrane arrived from Bermuda, in an eighty gun
+ship, bringing with him three thousand troops, commanded by General
+Ross. Entering the Chesapeake he joined Rear Admiral Cockburn, who by
+this timely reinforcement found himself in command of twenty-three
+vessels of war. This imposing fleet stood slowly up the waters of the
+Chesapeake, sending consternation among the inhabitants of Washington
+and Baltimore. [Sidenote: Aug. 21.] Cockburn, designed by nature for a
+freebooter, was admirably fitted for the work he had designed to do.
+Landing four thousand five hundred troops at Benedict, he began to
+advance up the Potomac. Barney, acting under instructions he had
+received, immediately took four hundred men and fell back to the Wood
+Yard, where he joined what was called the army. He had left five or
+six men in each boat, to blow them up, should the enemy advance. That
+night, about one o'clock, the President, with the Secretaries of War
+and Navy, visited Winder's camp, and next morning reviewed the troops.
+The camp was in confusion. Citizens and soldiers intermingled--each
+giving his opinion of the course to be pursued--disordered ranks and
+loud and fierce talking--the utter absence of the quiet demeanor and
+military precision characteristic of a regular army, gave to the one
+assembled there the appearance of a motley crowd on a gala day.
+General Smith and Barney, however, seemed to understand themselves,
+and were anxious to advance and attack the enemy.
+
+At the first appearance of the fleet Winder had sent off for the
+militia, but none had yet arrived. Six hundred from Virginia were
+reported close at hand--fourteen hundred from near Baltimore had
+reached Bladensburg, whither, also, was marching a picked regiment
+from the city itself, led by Pinckney, recently our Embassador to
+England. The whole country was filled with excited men, hurrying on
+foot or on horseback from one army and place to another--some without
+arms and others in citizens' dress, with only swords or pistols. The
+President and Cabinet were also in the saddle, riding by night and
+day, yet all without definite object. Rumor had swelled the invading
+force to twelve thousand men, but whether its destination was
+Washington, Baltimore, or Annapolis, no one could tell.
+
+While affairs were in this excited, disorderly state around
+Washington, great uncertainty reigned in the British camp. It was a
+hot day when the troops landed, and the sight of neat farm-houses,
+rich fields, and green pastures, seemed to increase the lassitude
+occasioned by their long confinement on ship-board, rather than
+invigorate them, and it required the exercise of rigid authority and
+unceasing care to keep them from straggling away to the cool shelter
+of trees. Weighed down with their knapsacks and three days'
+provisions, and sixty rounds of ball cartridge--without cavalry, and
+with only one six-pounder and two three-pounders drawn by a hundred
+seamen, this army of invasion took up its slow and cautious march
+inland on Sunday afternoon, and reached Nottingham that night.
+[Sidenote: Aug. 21.] They found the village wholly deserted--not a
+soul was left behind, while the bread remaining in the ovens, the
+furniture standing just as it had last been used, showed that the
+flight had been sudden and the panic complete.
+
+At this time the object of the expedition was the destruction of
+Barney's flotilla, which had so harassed and injured the lighter
+vessels of the fleet.
+
+Next morning at eight o'clock the army took up its line of March, and
+soon entered a cool, refreshing forest. But they had traversed scarce
+half its extent, when Ross was filled with anxiety and alarm by
+frequent and loud explosions, like the booming of heavy artillery, in
+the distance. Officers were immediately hurried off to ascertain the
+cause, who soon returned with the welcome and unexpected intelligence
+that the Americans were blowing up their own flotilla.
+
+The first and chief object of the invasion being secured, Ross halted
+his column at Marlborough, only ten miles from Nottingham, and sent
+for Cockburn, who, with a flotilla, was advancing up the river "_pari
+passu_," to advise with him what course to pursue. The admiral
+proposed to march on Washington. To this Ross at first objected, for
+to pierce a country of which he was ignorant fifty miles, with no
+cavalry or heavy artillery, seemed a rash undertaking, especially
+when, in a military point of view, success would accomplish
+comparatively nothing. Cockburn, however, who had been on the coast
+longer, and through informants residing in the city, had become
+acquainted with its defenceless state, persuaded him that its capture
+would be easy, and the results glorious. The taking of a nation's
+capital certainly seemed no mean exploit, while the heavy ransom the
+government would doubtless pay to save its public buildings, would
+compensate Cockburn for lack of prize money at sea.
+
+It was not, however, till next noon that the army, preceded by a
+company of a hundred blacks, composed of fugitive slaves, began to
+advance. After making a few miles, it halted for the night.
+
+The Secretary of War had insisted from the first that Washington was
+not the point threatened, and still adhered to that opinion. He could
+not conceive that an experienced commander would select as the first
+object of attack a town of some nine hundred houses, scattered over a
+surface of three miles, and destitute of wealth, while the opulent
+cities of Baltimore and Annapolis lay so near. This, too, was the
+opinion of many others, creating great confusion, and preventing the
+selection of strong positions, where successful stands could have been
+made.
+
+While the British were thus slowly advancing, General Winder was
+riding hither and thither, now making a reconnoissance in person, now
+posting to Washington to rouse the Secretary of War out of his
+lethargy, or hurrying on foot back again to his army, doing every
+thing but restoring tranquillity and order. Confusion in the
+camp--disorder in the ranks--consternation among the inhabitants, and
+gloom and doubt in the cabinet, combined to render the three days the
+British were marching on Washington, a scene of extraordinary
+excitement and misdirected efforts.
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 24.]
+
+At length, videttes and scouts, coming in quick succession, announced
+that the British army was approaching Bladensburg, where General
+Stansbury, with the Baltimore militia, was encamped. There was not a
+breath of air, and the column staggered on through a cloud of dust,
+and under a sweltering August sun. The soldiers, exhausted, reeled
+from the ranks and fell by the road side, while many others could
+scarcely drag their weary limbs along. The American troops were busy
+cooking their dinner when the drums beat to arms, announcing the
+approach of this much dreaded army.
+
+When the news reached Winder, he immediately transmitted an order to
+Stansbury to give battle where he was, and hastened thither with the
+main army, arriving just before the action commenced. Barney, who had
+been stationed with five hundred men at the bridge over the eastern
+branch of the Potomac, with directions to blow it up should the enemy
+approach by that route, no sooner heard of his advance on Bladensburg,
+than he earnestly requested to repair thither with his brave seamen.
+He chafed under the inaction to which he was doomed, talking in a
+boisterous manner, half to himself and half to others, lashing the
+generals with the bluntness and truth of a sailor, saying, loud
+enough to be heard by the President and his cabinet standing near, it
+was absurd to leave him there with five hundred men to blow up a
+bridge which any "d----d corporal could better do with five." At
+length permission was given him to join the army, when he leaped on a
+horse, and ordering his seamen to follow, galloped to Bladensburg. The
+advance was already engaged, and he immediately sent back to his men
+to hurry up, and soon the brave and panting fellows appeared on a trot
+and took their stand beside their commander. The President and his
+cabinet galloped thither also, but retired at the commencement of the
+action, not before, however, Monroe, Secretary of State, had tried his
+hand at military evolutions, and altered the order of battle.
+
+Instead of taking advantage of patches of woods, thickets, etc., where
+inexperienced militia would have fought well, this heterogeneous army
+of five or six thousand men was arranged in the form of a semi-circle
+on the slope that makes up westward from the eastern branch of the
+Potomac, here a shallow stream and crossed by a wooden bridge. The
+British, supposing of course, that the position was chosen because it
+commanded a narrow bridge, the passage of which is always so difficult
+in the face of batteries, never dreamed the river could be forded, and
+therefore never attempted it. Ross, who from the top of the highest
+house in the neighborhood surveyed the American army, was disconcerted
+at the formidable appearance it presented--posted on such a commanding
+eminence with heavy artillery,--and would doubtless have retreated but
+for the greater danger of a retrogade movement with his exhausted
+troops.
+
+The American army was arranged in three lines like regiments on a
+parade, connected by the guns that could pour no cross fire on the
+assailing column. The latter advancing steadily, throwing Congreve
+rockets as they approached, so shook the courage of the militia that
+it required but the levelled gleaming bayonet to scatter them like
+sheep over the field. Many of the officers were brave men and strove
+to arrest the panic, but in vain. Pinckney with a broken arm rode
+leisurely out of the battle, his heart filled with rage and
+mortification at the poltroonry of those under his command.
+
+The details of the engagement are useless--there was a show of
+resistance and some well sustained firing for awhile; but the whole
+battle, so far as it can be called one, was fought by Barney. He had
+planted four guns, among them an eighteen pounder, so as to sweep the
+main road, and quietly sat beside them on his bay horse, allowing the
+column to come within close range before he gave orders to fire. The
+first terrible discharge cleared the road. Three times the British
+endeavored to advance in front, and as often were swept to destruction
+by that battery. At length they were compelled to abandon the attempt,
+and taking shelter under a ravine filed off to the right and left and
+assailed Barney in flank and rear. Driving easily before them the
+regiments whose duty it was to protect the artillery, they moved
+swiftly forward. Barney's horse had been shot under him and he
+himself, prostrated by a wound, lay stretched in the road. Seeing that
+the battle was lost, he bade his seamen cut their way through the
+enemy and escape. Reluctant at first to obey him, they at last fled,
+and their gallant commander was taken prisoner. A few such determined
+men would have saved Washington from the flames.
+
+The six hundred Virginians who had hastened to the rescue never joined
+the army at all. Having arrived without arms, they slept in the House
+of Representatives all night and were not equipped next day till the
+battle was over.
+
+The _retreat_ became a wild and shameful flight. No other stand was
+made, and the fugitive army fled unpursued in squads hither and
+thither. It was a regular stampede. The fields and roads were covered
+with a broken and flying multitude. President, secretaries of war and
+navy, attorney-general and all were borne away in the headlong
+torrent; and though the enemy had no cavalry to pursue, and the
+infantry were too tired to follow up their success, the panic was so
+complete and ridiculous that our troops never stopped their flight
+except when compelled to pause from sheer exhaustion. Fatigue, not the
+interval they had put between themselves and the enemy, arrested their
+footsteps. Only fifty or sixty had been killed on our side, while the
+British had lost several hundred, a large portion of whom fell under
+the murderous discharges of Barney's battery.
+
+After the shouts and derision of the enemy had subsided with the
+disappearance of the last fugitive over the hills, the tired army
+instead of advancing to Washington reposed on the field of battle.
+
+Winder endeavored to rally the troops at the capital for another
+defence, but not a sufficient number could be found to make a stand,
+and with curses and oaths the rabble rout streamed along the road to
+Georgetown, presenting a picture of demoralization and insubordination
+that formed a fit counterpart to their poltroonry.
+
+The first arrival of the fugitives, officers and citizens, riding
+pell-mell through the streets, carried consternation into the city,
+and the inhabitants, some on foot, some in carts or carriages, rushed
+forth, and streaming on after the frightened militia completed the
+turbulence of the scene.
+
+Cockburn and Ross leaving the main army to repose itself, took a
+body-guard and rode into Washington. No resistance was offered--a
+single shot only was fired, which killed the horse of General Ross.
+The house from which it issued was formerly occupied by Mr. Gallatin.
+In a few moments it was in flames. Halting in front of the capitol,
+they fired a volley at the edifice and took possession of it in the
+name of the king.
+
+The troops were then marched in, and entering the Hall of
+Representatives, piled together chairs, desks and whatever was
+combustible, and applied the torch. The flames passing from room to
+room, soon wrapped the noble library, and bursting forth from the
+windows leaped to the roof, enveloping the whole edifice in fire and
+illuminating the country for miles around. The house of Washington and
+other buildings were also set on fire. The remaining British force,
+lighted by the ruddy glow that illumined the landscape and the road
+along which they were marching, entered the city to assist in the work
+of destruction. In the mean time, the navy-yard was set on fire by
+order of the secretary of war, mingling its flames and explosions with
+the light and roar of the burning capitol. The gallant officer in
+command of it had offered to defend it, but was refused permission.
+Whether the refusal was discreet or not, one thing is certain, the
+enemy could have accomplished no more than the destruction of the
+materials collected there, and it was not worth while to save them the
+labor.
+
+The capitol being in flames, Ross and Cockburn led their troops along
+Pennsylvania Avenue to the President's house, a mile distant, and soon
+the blazing pile beaconed back to the burning capitol. The Treasury
+building swelled the conflagration, and by the light of the flames
+Cockburn and Ross sat down to supper at the house of Mrs. Suter, whom
+they had compelled to furnish it. Pillage and devastation moved side
+by side through the streets, while to give still greater terror and
+sublimity to the scene, a heavy thunder storm burst over the city.
+From the lurid bosom of the cloud leaped flashes brighter than the
+flames below, followed by crashes that drowned the roar and tumult
+which swelled up from the thronged streets, making the night wild and
+appalling as the last day of time.
+
+To bring the day's work to a fitting close, Cockburn, while the
+heavens and surrounding country were still ruddy with the flames,
+entered a brothel and spent in lust and riot a night begun in
+incendiarism and pillage.
+
+[Illustration: Burning of Washington.]
+
+While these things were transpiring in the city, the President and his
+Cabinet were fleeing into Virginia. During the battle of
+Bladensburg, Mrs. Madison had sat in the Presidential mansion,
+listening to the roar of cannon in the distance, and anxiously
+sweeping the road, with her spy-glass, to catch the first approach of
+her husband, but saw instead, "groups of military, wandering in all
+directions, as if there was a lack of arms or of spirit, to fight for
+their own firesides." A carriage stood waiting at the door, filled
+with plate and other valuables, ready to leave at a moment's warning.
+The Mayor of the city waited on her, urging her to depart, but she
+bravely refused, saying she would not stir till she heard from her
+husband. At length a note from him, in pencil-marks, arrived, bidding
+her flee. Still delaying, till she could detach a portrait of
+Washington, by Stuart, from the wall, her friends remonstrated with
+her. Finding it would take too long to unscrew the painting from the
+walls, she seized a carving-knife, and cutting the canvas out, hurried
+away. At Georgetown she met her husband, who, with his Cabinet, in
+trepidation and alarm, was en route for Virginia. Just as the flames
+were kindling in the capitol, the President, Mr. Monroe, Mr. Rush, Mr.
+Mason, and Carroll, were assembled on the shores of the Potomac, where
+but one little boat could be found to transport them over. Desponding
+and sad, they were rowed across in the gloom, a part at a time, and
+mounting their horses, rode hurriedly and sadly away. Mrs. Madison
+returned towards Georgetown, accompanied by nine troopers, and stopped
+ten miles and a half from the town. Trembling from the anxiety and
+fright of the day--separated from her husband, now a fugitive in the
+darkness--oppressed with fears and gloomy forebodings, she sat down by
+an open window, and through the tears that streamed from her eyes,
+gazed forth on the flames of the burning city, and listened with
+palpitating heart to the muffled shouts and tumult that rose in the
+distance.
+
+Before daylight, she, with her lady companions, started for a place of
+rendezvous appointed by her husband, sixteen miles from Georgetown.
+
+The 25th of August dawned gloomily over the smouldering city, and the
+red sun, as he rolled into view, looked on a scene of devastation and
+ruin. From their drunken orgies, negroes and soldiers crawled forth to
+the light of day, roused by the reveille from the hill of the capitol,
+and the morning gun that sent its echoes through the sultry air.
+
+Rising from his debauch, Cockburn sallied forth to new deeds of shame.
+The War office, and other public offices, among them the building of
+the National Intelligencer, were set on fire, and the pillage and riot
+of the preceding day again sent terror through the city. The gallant
+admiral seemed refreshed rather than enervated by the plunder,
+conflagration and debauch of the night that had passed, and brilliant
+and witty as the day before, "was merry in his grotesque rambles about
+Washington, mounted on a white, uncurried, long switch-tail brood
+mare, followed by a black foal, neighing after its dam, in which
+caricature of horsemanship that harlequin of havoc, paraded the
+streets, and laughed at the terrified women imploring him not to
+destroy their homes. "Never fear," said he, "you shall be much safer
+under my administration than Madison's." "Be sure," said he to those
+who were destroying the types of the National Intelligencer, "that all
+the C's are demolished, so that the rascals can no longer abuse my
+name as they have done."[5]
+
+[Footnote 5: Vide Ingersoll, vol. II, page 189.]
+
+In the midst of this wanton destruction and barbarian licentiousness,
+two events occurred calculated to sober even a more brutal man than
+he. A detachment had been sent to destroy two rope-walks, at a place
+called Greenleaf's point, a short distance from the city. After they
+were burned, an officer threw the torch with which the buildings had
+been lighted, into a dry well near by. But this well had been made for
+a long time the repository of useless shells, cartridges and
+gunpowder. The unextinguished torch ignited this subterranean
+magazine, which exploded with a violence that shook the earth, and
+sent dismembered bodies and limbs, mingled with fragments of iron,
+and dust and smoke, heavenward together. When it cleared away, nearly
+a hundred officers and men were seen strewed around, some killed,
+others presenting torn, misshapen masses of human flesh. The sad
+procession, carrying the mutilated and dead back to the city, had
+scarcely reached it before the heavens became dark as twilight, and
+that ominous silence which always betokens some dreadful convulsion of
+nature fell on the earth. The air was still, and the burning dwellings
+around shed a baleful light over the faces of men, on which sat terror
+and perplexity. This portentous silence was broken by the rush and
+roar of a hurricane, that swept with the voice and strength of the
+sea, over the devastated city. Flashes of lightning rent the gloom,
+and the thunder rolled and broke in deafening crashes over head. The
+flames leaped up into fiercer glow, under the strong breath of the
+tempest; private dwellings that had escaped the incendiary's torch
+were stripped of their roofs, and the crash of falling, walls and
+shrieks of terrified men and women fleeing through the streets,
+imparted still greater terror to the appalling spectacle. The British
+army, on the Capitol hill, was rent into fragments before it, and
+scattered as though a magazine had exploded in its midst. Thirty
+soldiers, besides many of the inhabitants, were overwhelmed in the
+ruins.
+
+Fleeing before this same hurricane, Mrs. Madison approached the tavern
+designated by the President as the place where he would meet her, but
+was refused admittance by the terrified women within, who had also
+fled thither, because she was the wife of the man who had involved
+them in those horrors of war, made still more terrible by the
+visitation of God. He, in thus turning day into night, had evinced his
+displeasure, and foretold his judgments; and not until an entrance was
+forced by the men, would they allow her a shelter from the storm.
+There her husband, the fugitive President of the republic, drenched
+with rain, hungry and exhausted, joined her in the evening. Provided
+with nothing but a cold lunch, he retired to his miserable couch, not
+knowing what tidings the morning would bring him.
+
+In the mean time General Ross, chagrined at the part he had been
+compelled to play--filled with self-reproaches at the wanton
+destruction of a public library, was anxious and unquiet at the
+non-arrival of the boats that had accompanied him to Alexandria. In
+constant fear of an uprising of the people of the country, he was
+eager to get back to the ships. As soon therefore as night set in, he
+resolved to commence his retreat. To prevent pursuit, an order was
+issued prohibiting the appearance of a single inhabitant in the street
+after eight o'clock. At nine, in dead silence, and with quick step,
+as though stealing on a sleeping foe, the advance column took up its
+march and passed unnoticed out of the city. The camp fires on the hill
+of the capitol were kept blazing, and piled with fuel sufficient to
+preserve them bright till near morning, in order to convey the
+impression that the army was still there, and at a late hour the rear
+column followed after, and silently and rapidly traversed the road to
+Bladensburg. Not a word was spoken, not a man allowed to step out of
+his place. Arriving on the ground which had been occupied by other
+brigades, they found it deserted, but the fires were still blazing as
+though the encampment had not been broken up. Approaching the field of
+Bladensburg, they saw in the white moonbeams the whiter corpses of the
+unburied dead, who had been stripped of their clothing and now lay
+scattered around on the green slope and banks of the stream where they
+had fallen. The hot August rain and sun had already begun to act on
+the mutilated flesh, and a horrible stench loaded the midnight air.
+Stopping there for an hour, to enable the soldiers to hunt up their
+knapsacks thrown aside the day before, Ross again hurried them
+forward, and kept them at the top of their speed all night. If the
+column paused for a moment, the road was instantly filled with
+soldiers fast asleep. Men were constantly straggling away, or falling
+into slumbers, from which even the sword could with difficulty prick
+them, and the army threatened to be disorganized. It therefore became
+necessary to halt, and the order to do so had scarcely passed down the
+line before every man was sound asleep, and the entire army in five
+minutes resembled a heap of dead bodies on a field of battle. Resting
+here under the burning sun until midday, Ross then resumed his march
+and reached Marlborough at night, and the next day proceeded leisurely
+back to the ships.
+
+The raid had been successful--Washington was sacked. Two millions of
+property had been destroyed--the capitol, with its library--the
+President's house--the Treasury and War, Post offices, and other
+public edifices, burned to the ground, together with five private
+dwellings, thirteen more being pillaged. These, with the destruction
+of the office of the National Intelligencer, two rope-walks, and a
+bridge over the Potomac, constituted the achievements of this
+redoubtable army of invasion.
+
+The English press, which had teemed with accounts of Napoleon's
+barbarity, and the English heart, which had heaved with noble
+indignation against the man who could rob the galleries of conquered
+provinces to adorn those of Paris, had no word of condemnation or
+expression of anger for this wanton outrage, but on the contrary,
+laudations innumerable. Napoleon had marched into almost every capital
+of Europe without destroying a library or work of art, or firing a
+dwelling. With his victorious armies he had entered city after city,
+and yet no Vandalism marred his conquest. The palaces of kings, who
+had perjured themselves again and again to secure his downfall, had
+never been touched, and yet he was denounced as a robber and
+proclaimed to the world a modern Attila. But an English army, warring
+against a nation that spoke the same language, and was descended from
+the same ancestors, could enter a city that had made no defence--had
+not exasperated the conquerors by forcing them to a long siege or
+desperate assault, and, without provocation, burn down a public
+library, the unoffending capitol and presidential mansion, state
+offices, and even private dwellings. Incredible as this act appears,
+the greater marvel is how the English nation could exult over it. An
+American victory tarnished by such barbarity and meanness, would
+overwhelm the authors of it in eternal disgrace. And yet, a popular
+so-called historian of England, in narrating this transaction, says it
+was "one of the most brilliant expeditions ever carried into execution
+by any nation." An army of some four thousand regulars put to flight
+five or six thousand raw militia, and, with the loss of a few hundred
+men, marched into a small unfortified town, occupied as the capital of
+the United States, and like a band of robbers, set fire to the public
+Library, Arsenal, Treasury, War office, President's house, two
+rope-walks and a bridge; and such an affair the historian of Lodi,
+Marengo, Austerlitz, and Waterloo,--of the terrible conflicts of the
+peninsular, and the sublime sea-fights of Aboukir and Trafalgar, calls
+"one of the most brilliant expeditions carried into execution by any
+nation."
+
+ "Ille crucem, scelenis pretium tulit, hic diadema."
+
+The news was received in England with the liveliest demonstrations of
+joy. The Lord Mayor of London ordered the Park and Tower guns to be
+fired at noon, in honor of a victory, which he pompously declared was
+"worth an illumination." The official account was translated into
+French, German and Italian, and scattered over the continent. Mr. Clay
+and Mr. Russell were in the theatre at Brussels when the news arrived.
+The secretary of the legation, Mr. Hughes, had overheard an English
+officer in the lobby saying--"We have taken and burned the Yankee
+capital, and thrown those rebels back half a century"--and going to
+their box told them there were reasons why they should leave the
+theatre, which he would disclose at their hotel. He had observed some
+of the British legation present, and the announcement of such tidings
+would be embarrassing to the American embassy. They were exceedingly
+annoyed by the news, especially next morning, when the English
+embassadors sent them a paper giving an account of the act; and they
+returned, mortified, to Ghent. It was received on the continent,
+however, with marked disapprobation. Even a Bourbon paper, in Paris,
+declared that notwithstanding the atrocities charged on Napoleon, he
+had never committed an act so degrading to civilized warfare as this.
+
+The vessels designed to cooeperate with the movement on Washington,
+reached Alexandria the same evening the British army left the former
+place, and after levying a contribution on the inhabitants, seizing
+twenty-one merchant vessels, sixteen thousand barrels of flour, a
+thousand hogsheads of tobacco, and whatever else was valuable,
+departed. In their descent, they were harassed by Porter and Perry
+from the shore, but the guns of the latter were too light to effect
+much damage. Commodore Rodgers also hovered with fire ships around
+their flight, but it was too rapid to allow the concentration of a
+sufficient force to arrest them.
+
+Armstrong, the Secretary of War, following the example of President,
+Cabinet, Generals and army, galloped away from the disastrous field of
+Bladensburg, and took refuge in a farm-house. The fugitive President
+and the fugitive Secretary at length met, and returned together to
+Washington. The entrance of the latter to the capital was the signal
+for the indignant outburst of the entire population. The militia
+officers of the District refused to obey his orders in the future,
+and a committee of the citizens waited on the President, demanding his
+dismissal from the post of Secretary of War. It was suddenly
+discovered that he was wholly to blame for the conduct of the troops
+at Bladensburg. Borne away by the popular current, which he was
+thankful was not directed against himself, Madison requested Armstrong
+to retire for awhile to Baltimore. [Sidenote: Sept. 3.] The latter
+obeyed, but immediately sent in his resignation, in which he paid the
+President the compliment of having, as he declared, shamefully yielded
+to the "humors of a village mob." Monroe, Secretary of State, was
+appointed to discharge his duties, and a proclamation was issued
+calling an early meeting of Congress.
+
+The British government never committed a greater blunder than when it
+sanctioned the sack and burning of Washington. Estimating its
+importance by that which the capitals of Europe held in their
+respective kingdoms, her misguided statesmen supposed its overthrow
+would paralyze the nation and humble the government into submission.
+But there was scarcely a seaport on our coast, whose destruction would
+not have been a greater public calamity. Besides, the greater its
+value in the eyes of the people, the more egregious the mistake.
+Judging us by the effeminate races of India, or the ignorant
+population of central Europe, who are accustomed to be governed by
+blows, they imagined the heavier the scourging, the more prostrated by
+fear, and more eager for peace we should become. But resistance and
+boldness rise with us in exact proportion to the indignities offered
+and injuries inflicted. With a country, whose vital part is no where
+fixed, but consisting in the unity of the people, can shift with
+changing fortunes from the sea-coast even to the Rocky Mountains, its
+heart can never be reached by the combined forces of the world. This
+republic can never die but by its own hand. In a foreign war, our
+strength can be weakened only by sowing dissensions. Outrages which
+inflame the national heart, or local sufferings that awaken national
+sympathy serve only to heal all these, and hence render us
+impregnable. Thus, when Mr. Alison, in closing up his account of this
+war and speaking of the probabilities of another, advises the sudden
+precipitation of vast armies on our shore as the only way to insure
+success, he exhibits a lamentable ignorance of our character. An
+outrage or calamity at the outset, sufficiently great to break down
+party opposition, and drown all personal and political contests in one
+shout for vengeance, rolling from limit to limit of our vast
+possessions, would endow us with resistless energy and strength. The
+attacks on Baltimore and New Orleans teach an instructive lesson on
+this point. In the latter place, where a veteran army of nine
+thousand men were repulsed by scarcely one-third of its force, now an
+army of two hundred thousand would make no impression.
+
+The sack of Washington furnishes a striking illustration of the effect
+of a great public calamity on this nation. One feeling of wrath and
+cry for vengeance swept the land. A high national impulse hushed the
+bickerings and frightened into silence the quarrels of factions, and
+the President and his Cabinet never gained strength so fast as when
+the capitol was in flames, and they were fleeing through the storm and
+darkness, weighed down with sorrow and despondency.
+
+At the same time this expedition against Washington was moving to its
+termination, Sir Peter Parker ascended the Chesapeake to Rockhall,
+from whence he sent out detachments in various quarters, burning
+dwellings, grain, stacks, outhouses, etc. On the 30th, he landed at
+midnight, to surprise Colonel Reed, encamped in an open plain with a
+hundred and seventy militia. It was bright moonlight, and as the
+column advanced it was received with a steady and well-directed fire.
+At length the ammunition failing, this brave band was compelled to
+fall back. The enemy at the same time retreated, carrying with them
+Sir Peter Parker, mortally wounded with buck shot.
+
+On the return of these several expeditions, it was resolved to make a
+grand and united attack on Baltimore, that nest of privateers. On the
+6th of September, the whole fleet, consisting of more than forty sail,
+moved slowly up the Chesapeake, carrying a mixed, heterogeneous land
+force of five thousand men. Six days after, it reached the Patapsco,
+and landed the troops at North Point. The first object of attack was
+fort M'Henry, situated about two miles from Baltimore. The capture of
+this, it was thought, would open a passage to the city. Having put
+their forces in marching order, General Ross and Cochrane moved
+forward towards the intrenchments erected for the defence of
+Baltimore, while the vessels of war advanced against the fort.
+
+After marching four miles, the leading column of the army was checked
+by General Stricker, who with three thousand men had taken post near
+the head of Bear Creek. A sharp skirmish ensued, in which the two
+companies of Levering and Howard under Major Heath and Captain
+Aisquith's rifle company, fought gallantly. General Ross, hearing the
+firing rode forward, and mingled with the skirmishers, to ascertain
+the cause of it, when he was pierced by the unerring ball of a
+rifleman, and fell in the road. His riderless horse went plunging back
+towards the main army, his "saddle and housings stained with blood,
+carrying the melancholy news of his master's fate to the astonished
+troops." Stretched by the road side, the dying general lay writhing in
+the agonies of death. He had only time to speak of his wife and
+children, before he expired. He was a gallant, skillful and humane
+officer, and his part in the burning of Washington, must be laid to
+his instructions rather than to his character.
+
+The command devolved on Colonel Brooke, who gave the orders to
+advance. General Stricker defended his position firmly, but at length
+was compelled to fall back on his reserve, and finally took post
+within half a mile of the intrenchments of the city. This ended the
+combat for the day. The next morning Colonel Brooke recommenced his
+march, and advanced to within two miles of the intrenchments, where he
+encamped till the following morning, to wait the movements of the
+fleet.
+
+In the mean time, Cochrane had moved up to within two miles and a half
+of the fort, and forming his vessels in a semi-circle, began to
+bombard it. These works, under the command of Major Armstead, had no
+guns sufficiently heavy to reach the vessels, which all that day threw
+shells and rockets, making a grand commotion but doing little damage.
+At night, Cochrane moved his fleet farther up, and opened again. The
+scene then became grand and terrific. It was dark and rainy, and amid
+the gloom, rockets and shells, weighing, some of them, two hundred
+and fifty pounds, rose heavenward, followed by a long train of light,
+and stooping over the fort burst with detonations that shook the
+shore. Singly, and in groups, these fiery messengers traversed the
+sky, lighting up the fort and surrounding scenery in a sudden glow,
+and then with their sullen thunder, sinking all again in darkness. The
+deafening explosions broke over the American army and the city of
+Baltimore like heavy thunder-claps, calling forth soldiers and
+inhabitants to gaze on the illumined sky. The city was in a state of
+intense excitement. The streets were thronged with the sleepless
+inhabitants, and the tearful eyes and pallid cheeks of women, attested
+the anguish and fear that wild night created. As soon as Armstead
+discovered that the vessels had come within range, he opened his fire
+with such precision that they were compelled to withdraw again,
+content with their distant bombardment. At length a sudden and heavy
+cannonade was heard above the fort, carrying consternation into the
+city, for the inhabitants believed that it had fallen. It soon ceased,
+however. Several barges, loaded with troops, had passed the fort
+unobserved, and attempted to land and take it in rear. Pulling to the
+shore with loud shouts, they were met by a well-directed fire from a
+battery, and compelled to seek shelter under their ships.
+
+During this tremendous bombardment Francis Key lay in a little vessel
+under the Admiral's frigate. He had visited him for the purpose of
+obtaining an exchange of some prisoners of war, especially of one who
+was a personal friend, and was directed to remain till after the
+action. During the day his eye had rested eagerly on that low
+fortification, over which the flag of his country was flying, and he
+watched with the intensest anxiety the progress of each shell in its
+flight, rejoicing when it fell short of its aim, and filled with fear
+as he saw it stooping without exploding, within those silent
+enclosures. At night, when darkness shut out that object of so much
+and intense interest, around which every hope and desire of his life
+seemed to cling, he still stood straining his eyes through the gloom,
+to catch, if he could, by the light of the blazing shells, a glimpse
+of his country's flag, waving proudly in the storm. The early dawn
+found him still a watcher, and there, to the music of bursting shells,
+and the roar of cannon, he composed "The Star-Spangled Banner."[6]
+
+[Footnote 6: The scene and the occasion which called forth this
+beautiful ode, have helped to make it a national one. It requires but
+little imagination to conceive the intense and thrilling anxiety with
+which a true patriot would look for the first gray streak of morning,
+to see if the flag of his country was still flying, while the heart
+involuntarily asks the question--
+
+ "O, say, can you see by the dawn's early light,
+ What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming?
+ Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight
+ O'er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming--
+ And the rocket's red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
+ Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there.
+
+ O, say, does that star-spangled banner yet wave,
+ O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
+
+ On that shore, dimly seen through the mists of the deep,
+ Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence reposes,
+ What is that which the breeze o'er the towering steep,
+ As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses;
+ Now it catches the gleam of the morning's first beam,
+ In full glory reflected, now shines in the stream?
+ 'Tis the star-spangled banner, O, long may it wave
+ O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave."]
+
+In the morning, Broke not deeming it prudent to assail those
+intrenchments, manned by brave and determined men,[7] while the
+heights around bristled with artillery, resolved to retreat. Waiting
+till night to take advantage of the darkness, he retraced his steps to
+the shipping.
+
+From the extreme apprehensions that had oppressed it, Baltimore passed
+to the most extravagant joy. Beaming faces once more filled the
+streets, and the military bands, as they marched through, playing
+triumphant strains, were saluted with shouts. The officers were feted
+and exultation and confidence filled every bosom.
+
+[Footnote 7: Senator Smith, who had been appointed general, commanded
+the 10,000 militia who manned the works.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Macomb at Plattsburg -- American and English fleets on Lake
+ Champlain -- Advance of Prevost -- Indifference of Governor
+ Chittenden -- Rev. Mr. Wooster -- Macdonough -- The two
+ battles -- Funeral of the officers -- British invasion of
+ Maine -- McArthur's expedition.
+
+
+The gallant defence of Baltimore was still the theme of every tongue,
+when tidings from our northern borders swelled the enthusiasm to the
+highest pitch, and extinguished for a moment the remembrance of the
+barbarities committed at Washington.
+
+The day before the British landed at North Point and received their
+first shock in the death of General Ross, the double battle of
+Plattsburg was fought.
+
+Izard, when he started on his tortoise-like march, to the relief of
+Brown, left Colonel Macomb in command of three thousand men, not more
+than half of whom were fit for service. Their defeat he considered
+certain, and the result would have justified his prognostications,
+had Macomb, like him, sat down to brood over his troubles and gaze
+only on the difficulties that beset the army, till his confidence was
+gone and his energies paralyzed. But he was made of sterner
+stuff--difficulties only roused and developed him. Were the well men
+under his command few? then his defences must be the stronger, and the
+labor of those able to work, the more constant and exhausting.
+
+Calling on New York and Vermont for militia, he toiled night and day
+at the works, and soon found himself strongly intrenched.
+
+In the mean time, Prevost, at the head of a disciplined army of twelve
+thousand men, began to advance on Plattsburg. The ulterior design of
+this invasion of the States has never been disclosed. It is hardly
+possible that the British General meditated a movement similar to
+Burgoyne's, hoping to reach Albany. The object may have been to get
+entire command of Lake Champlain; and, pushing his land forces as far
+as Ticonderoga, there wait the development of events on the sea-coast,
+or by conquests along the northern boundary, create a claim to the
+lakes, to be enforced in the negotiations for peace.
+
+Prevost marched slowly, cumbering the road with his heavy baggage and
+artillery trains as he advanced, and did not arrive at Plattsburg
+till the 7th of September.
+
+This town is situated on the Saranac River, a deep and rapid stream,
+crossed at the time by several bridges. Abandoning that portion of it
+on the north shore, as untenable, Macomb withdrew his forces to the
+southern bank. Prevost, after a sharp action with the advance of the
+American army, was allowed to erect his batteries at his leisure. It
+took him four days to complete his works, or rather that time elapsed
+before the arrival of the British fleet.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept. 1.]
+
+In the mean time Macomb had sent an express to Governor Chittenden, of
+Vermont, telling him that Prevost had commenced his march on
+Plattsburg, and beseeching him to call out the militia to his aid. But
+this Federalist Governor, acting on the rebellious doctrine of
+Massachusetts, coldly replied that he had no authority to send militia
+out of the State. On the 4th, Macomb sent another express saying the
+army was approaching, that his force was too small to resist it, and
+begging for assistance. General Newell, more patriotic than the
+Governor, offered to take his brigade over to the help of Macomb, but
+the former would not sanction the movement by his authority, though he
+advised him to beat up for volunteers. With every feeling of
+patriotism deadened by the poison of the spirit of faction--every
+generous sentiment and sympathy apparently extinguished--deaf to the
+piteous plea rising from a neighboring town, he coldly entrenched
+himself behind a party dogma, and let the ruin and devastation sweep
+onward. The cannonading on the 6th, by Majors Appling and Wool, who
+gallantly attacked the enemy's advance, did not rouse him from his
+apathy.
+
+One can hardly imagine that the call he issued for volunteers before
+the battle, and the stirring proclamation he made afterwards under the
+pressure of popular enthusiasm, emanated from the same person.
+
+The people, however, did not require to be stimulated into patriotism
+by their executive. As that sullen thunder came booming over the lake,
+it stirred with fiery ardor the gallant sons of that noble State, who
+never yet turned a deaf ear to the calls of their country, and before
+whose stern and valorous onset the enemy's ranks have never stood
+unbroken. Spurning the indifference of their Governor, and trampling
+under foot his constitutional scruples, they flew to their homes, and
+snatching down their muskets and rifles, and giving a short adieu to
+their families, rushed to the shore, and soon the lake was covered
+with boats, urged fiercely forward by strong arms and willing hearts
+towards the spot where the heavy explosions told that their brave
+countrymen were struggling in unequal combat. The face of young Macomb
+lighted with joy as his eye fell on those bold men, and a heavy load
+was taken from his heart.
+
+Among those who had previously volunteered, was the Rev. Benjamin
+Wooster, of Fairfield, Vermont. Responding to the call of Governor
+Tompkins, he put himself at the head of his parishioners and repaired
+to the American camp, where he endured all the privations of a common
+soldier. The aged members of his church and the women, when they saw
+him draw up his little flock on the village green, prior to their
+departure for the scene of conflict, assembled in the church and sent
+for him, saying, "We shall see you no more--come, go to the house of
+God and preach us a last sermon, and administer to us the holy
+sacrament for the last time." But fearing the effect of so touching an
+interview on his own decisions, he refused. Sending them an
+affectionate farewell, he embraced his weeping family, kissed his
+babes, and gently untwining their arms from his neck, turned away. On
+the day of battle this brave old shepherd led his fearless flock into
+the fire, with the serenity of a good man doing his duty.
+
+During the summer the English at the northern, and the Americans at
+the southern portion of the lake, had been busy in building ships to
+contest the supremacy of this sheet of water, whose head pierces so
+deep into the bosom of New York. The latter had at length assembled a
+flotilla consisting of four vessels--the largest carrying twenty-six
+guns--and ten galleys, the whole under the command of Macdonough.
+After some skirmishing, this little fleet, which early in the season
+lay in Otter Creek, was got into the lake and steered for Plattsburg
+Bay, to assist Macomb in his defence of the town. This bay opens to
+the southward, and instead of piercing the main land at right angles,
+runs north, nearly parallel with the lake itself. A narrow tongue of
+land divides it from the main water, the extreme point of which is
+called Cumberland Head. Just within its mouth, and nearly opposite
+where the turbulent Saranac empties into it, Macdonough anchored his
+vessels. [Sidenote: Sept 20.] Between him and the main land was a
+large shoal and an island which effectually blocked the approach of
+vessels on that side.
+
+The English fleet sent to attack him, consisted, also, of four
+vessels--the largest mounting 32 guns--and 13 galleys. The American
+force, all told, was 14 vessels, mounting 86 guns and carrying 850
+men, while that of the English was 17 vessels, mounting 96 guns and
+carrying 1000 men. The largest, the Confiance, "had the gun deck of a
+frigate," and by her superior size and strength, and her 30 long
+twenty-fours, was considered a match for any two vessels in
+Macdonough's squadron. Captain Downie, who commanded the British
+fleet, joined his gun boats at the Isle au Motte on the 8th of
+September, where he lay at anchor till the 11th. In the mean time,
+Prevost, whose batteries were all erected, remained silent behind his
+works waiting the arrival of the fleet before he should commence his
+fire.
+
+During those sleepless nights, and days of agitation, young Macdonough
+lay calmly watching the approach of his superior foe, while Macomb
+strained every nerve to complete his defences. Fearless, frank and
+social, the young General moved among his soldiers with such animation
+and confidence, that they caught his spirit, and like the Green
+Mountain boys and yeomanry of New York at Saratoga, resolved to defend
+their homes to the last.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept. 11.]
+
+At length, on Sunday morning, just as the sun rose over the eastern
+mountains, the American guard boat, on the watch, was seen rowing
+swiftly into the harbor. It reported the enemy in sight. The drums
+immediately beat to quarters, and every vessel was cleared for action.
+The preparations being completed, young Macdonough summoned his
+officers around him, and there, on the deck of the Saratoga, read the
+prayers of the ritual before entering into battle, and that voice,
+which soon after rung like a clarion amid the carnage, sent
+heavenward, in earnest tones, "Stir up thy strength, O Lord, and come
+and help us, for thou givest not always the battle to the strong, but
+canst save by many or by few." It was a solemn and thrilling
+spectacle, and one never before witnessed on a vessel of war cleared
+for action. A young commander who had the courage thus to brave the
+derision and sneers which such an act was sure to provoke, would fight
+his vessel while there was a plank left to stand on. Of the deeds of
+daring done on that day of great achievements, none evinced so bold
+and firm a heart as this act of religious worship.
+
+At eight o'clock the crews of the different vessels could see, over
+the tongue of land that divided the bay from the lake, the topsails of
+the enemy moving steadily down. These had also been seen from shore,
+and every eminence around was covered with anxious spectators. The
+house of God was deserted, and the light of that bright Sabbath
+morning, with its early stillness, flooded a scene at once picturesque
+and terrible. On one side was the hostile squadron, coming down to the
+sound of music--on the other, stood the armies on shore in order of
+battle, with their banners flying--between, lay Macdonough's silent
+little fleet at anchor, while the hills around were black with
+spectators, gazing on the strange and fearful panorama.
+
+As the British approached, Macdonough showed his signal, "_Impressed
+seamen call on every man to do his duty_." As vessel after vessel
+traced the letters, loud cheers rent the air.
+
+The English vessels, under easy sail, swept one after another round
+Cumberland Head, and hauling up in the wind, waited the approach of
+the galleys.
+
+[Illustration: Battle of Lake Champlain.
+
+Position of the two squadrons.]
+
+As Macdonough lay anchored with his vessels in line north and
+south--his galleys on their sweeps forming a second line in rear--the
+English fleet, as it doubled the head, was compelled to approach with
+bows on. The Eagle was farthest up the bay, the Saratoga second,
+Ticonderoga third, and Preble fourth. The impressive silence which
+rested on the American fleet was at last broken by the Eagle, which
+opened her broadsides. Startled by the sound, a cock on board the
+Saratoga, which had escaped from the coop, flew upon a gun slide and
+crowed. A loud laugh and three hearty cheers acknowledged the
+favorable omen, and spread confidence through the ship. Macdonough,
+seeing the enemy were at too great distance to be reached by his guns,
+reserved his fire, and watched the Confiance standing boldly on till
+she came within range. He then sighted a long twenty-four himself and
+fired her. The heavy shot passed the entire length of the deck of the
+Confiance, killing many of her men and shivering her wheel into
+fragments. This was the signal for every vessel to open its fire, and
+in a moment that quiet bay was in an uproar. The Confiance, however,
+though suffering severely, did not return a shot, but kept on till she
+got within a quarter of a mile, when she let go her anchors and swung
+broadside to the Saratoga. Sixteen long twenty-fours then opened at
+once with a terrific crash. The Saratoga shook from kelson to cross
+trees under the tremendous discharge. Nearly half of her crew were
+knocked down by it, while fifty men were either killed or wounded, and
+among them Lieutenant Gamble. He was in the act of sighting a gun,
+when a shot entered the port and struck him dead. The effect of this
+first broadside was awful, and the Saratoga was for a moment
+completely stunned. The next, however, she opened her fire with a
+precision and accuracy that told fatally on the English ship. But the
+latter soon commenced pouring in her broadsides so rapidly that she
+seemed enveloped in flame. The Eagle could not withstand it, and
+changed her position, falling in nearer shore, leaving the Saratoga to
+sustain almost alone the whole weight of the unequal contest. She gave
+broadside for broadside, but the weight of metal was against her, and
+she was fast becoming a wreck. Her deck soon presented a scene of the
+most frightful carnage. The living could hardly tumble the wounded
+down the hatchway as fast as they fell. At length, as a full broadside
+burst on the staggering ship, a cry of despair rang from stem to
+stern, "the Commodore is killed!--the Commodore is killed!" and there
+he lay on the blood-stained deck amid the dead, senseless, and
+apparently lifeless. A spar, cut in two by a cannon shot, had
+fallen on his back and stunned him. But after two or three minutes he
+recovered, and cheering on his men, took his place again beside his
+favorite gun that he had sighted from the commencement of the action.
+As the men saw him once more at his post, they took new courage.
+
+But a few minutes after, the cry of "the Commodore is killed," again
+passed through the ship. Every eye was instantly turned to a group of
+officers gathered around Macdonough, who lay in the scuppers, between
+two guns, covered with blood. He had been knocked clean across the
+ship, with a force sufficient to have killed him. Again he revived,
+and limping to a gun, was soon coolly hulling his antagonist. Maimed
+and suffering, he fought on, showing an example that always makes
+heroes of subordinates.
+
+At length every gun on the side of his vessel towards the enemy was
+silenced, but one, and this, on firing it again, bounded from its
+fastenings, and tumbled down the hatchway. Not a gun was left with
+which to continue the contest, while the ship was on fire. A
+surrender, therefore, seemed inevitable. Macdonough, however, resolved
+to wind his ship, so as to get the other broadside to bear. Failing in
+the first attempt, the sailing-master, Brum, bethought him of an
+expedient, which proved successful, and the crippled vessel slowly
+swung her stern around, until the uninjured guns bore. The Confiance,
+seeing the manoeuvre, imitated it, but she could not succeed, and lay
+with her crippled side exposed to the fire of the Saratoga.
+
+In a short time not a gun could be brought to bear. Further resistance
+was therefore useless, and she surrendered. She had been hulled a
+_hundred and five times_, while half of her men were killed and
+wounded. Captain Downie had fallen some time before, and hence was
+spared the mortification of seeing her flag lowered.
+
+The Eagle, commanded by Capt. Henley, behaved gallantly in the
+engagement, while the Ticonderoga, under Lieutenant Cassin, was
+handled in a manner that astonished those who beheld her. This
+fearless officer walked backward and forward over his deck,
+encouraging his men, and directing the fire, apparently unconscious of
+the balls that smote and crashed around him. His broadsides were so
+incessant, that several times the vessel was thought to be on fire.
+
+The surrender of the Confiance virtually terminated the contest, which
+had lasted two hours and a quarter; and as flag after flag struck the
+galleys took to their sweeps and escaped.
+
+In the midst of this tremendous cannonade, came, at intervals, the
+explosions on shore. The first gun in the bay, was the signal for
+Prevost on land, and as the thunder of his heavy batteries mingled in
+with the incessant broadsides of the contending squadrons, the very
+shores trembled, and far over the lake, amid the quiet farm-houses of
+Vermont, the echoes rolled away, carrying anxiety and fear into
+hundreds of families. Its shore was lined with men, gazing intently in
+the direction of Plattsburgh, as though from the smoke that rolled
+heavenward, some tidings might be got of how the battle was going.
+
+To the spectators on the commanding heights around Plattsburgh, the
+scene was indescribably fearful and thrilling. It was as if two
+volcanoes were raging below--turning that quiet Sabbath morning into a
+scene wild and awful as the strife of fiends. But when the firing in
+the bay ceased, and the American flag was seen still flying, and the
+Union Jack down, there went up a shout that shook the hills. From the
+water to the shore, and back again, the deafening huzzas echoed and
+re-echoed. The American army took up the shout, and sending it high
+and clear over the thunder of cannon, spread dismay and astonishment
+into the heart of the enemy's camp.
+
+The American loss in killed and wounded, was one hundred and ten, of
+whom all but twenty fell on board the Saratoga and Eagle--that of the
+English was never fully known, though it was supposed to be nearly
+double.
+
+The force of Macomb was so inferior, and the most of the volunteers
+were so recently arrived, that from the first he was advised to
+retreat, a course that Wilkinson and Dearborn and Izard would
+doubtless have taken, and defended it by rules laid down in books on
+military tactics. But Macomb had resolved to fight where he stood. The
+two forts of Brown and Scott, which he had erected and named, he
+designed should be symbolical of the defence he would make, and the
+battle he would fight.
+
+After the British batteries had been in fierce operation for some
+time, throwing shells, hot shot and rockets in a perfect shower upon
+the American ranks, three columns of attack were formed--two pressing
+straight for the bridges, the planks of which had been taken up, and
+the third for a ford farther up the river. The last was repulsed by
+the volunteers and militia. The other two steadily approached the
+bridges, but the artillery rained such a tempest of grape shot on the
+uncovered ranks of one, and the pickets and rifles so scourged the
+other, that they were driven back to their intrenchments for shelter.
+After Macdonough's victory, their fire slackened, not only from
+discouragement, but from the destructive effect of the American
+gunnery on their batteries, and at nightfall ceased entirely. As soon
+as it became dark, Prevost ordered a retreat. So rapidly and silently
+was it conducted, that the army had advanced eight miles before Macomb
+knew of it. He immediately ordered a pursuit, but this day of strife
+had ended in a storm of wind and rain, and it was soon abandoned.
+
+Prevost lost two hundred and fifty in killed and wounded, many of whom
+were left on the ground, drenched and beat upon by the storm. These he
+commended to the humanity of Macomb, and continued his rapid flight to
+the St. Lawrence. That British fleet, shattered and torn, lying at
+anchor under the guns of Macdonough, in the bay, and the army of
+twelve thousand men streaming through the gloom and rain, panic
+stricken, lest the feeble force behind should overtake it, present a
+striking contrast to their prospects in the morning, and show how
+changeful is fortune. Downie heard not the shout of victory, for he
+lay stiff and cold in the vessel he had carried so gallantly into
+action, and Prevost did not long survive his defeat.
+
+So large a hostile force had never before crossed the Canada line,
+while no such sudden and terrible reverse of fortune had befallen the
+feeblest expedition. Two such victories on one day, were enough to
+intoxicate the nation. The news spread like wildfire, and shouts and
+salvos of artillery, and bonfires, hailed the messengers, as they sped
+the glad tidings on. The campaign was closing gloriously. Instead of
+the defeats and failures of the last year, there were Chippewa and
+Lundy's Lane and Fort Erie, crowned by the victories of Baltimore and
+Plattsburgh. The news of the two last, approaching from different
+directions, set the land in a glow of transport, and lifted it from
+despondency and gloom to confidence and bright expectations.
+
+The Thursday following the battle of Champlain was devoted to the
+burial of the officers killed in the naval action. As the procession
+of boats left the Confiance, minute guns were fired from the vessels
+in the harbor. The artillery and infantry on shore received the dead
+and bore them to the place of burial, while the cannon of the forts
+responded to those from the fleet, blending their mournful echoes over
+the fallen in their prime and manhood. The clouds hung low and gloomy
+over lake and land, and the rain fell in a gentle shower, imparting
+still greater loneliness to the scene. On this very day, while friends
+and foes were thus paying the last tribute of respect to the fallen,
+Baltimore was shaking to the huzzas of the inhabitants, at the news
+that the British fleet was sailing down the bay, baffled and
+disappointed.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept 1.]
+
+Simultaneous with these two invasions of our territory, a British
+force was sent against Machias. The misfortune which befel the Adams,
+sloop-of-war, compelling her to take refuge at Hampden, in the
+Penobscot river, caused a change in the movements of the expedition,
+and it did not stop to take Machias, but seized Castine and Belfast,
+on the Penobscot bay, then pushed on with a sloop of war and small
+craft carrying in all 700 men, to capture this vessel. [Sidenote:
+Sept 9.] Machias was then seized, and all the country east of
+Penobscot taken possession of. [Sidenote: July 14.] The islands in
+Passamaquoddy bay had been seized and occupied two months previous.
+
+Our whole maritime coast was still threatened, and every seaport of
+any magnitude, was fortifying itself when Congress assembled again.
+
+The only other military movement of note during this fall, was an
+expedition which set out from Detroit, under the command of General
+McArthur. It consisted of 700 mounted men, seventy of whom were
+Indians, and for secresy, daring and skill was not surpassed during
+the war. Its object was to prevent the enemy from molesting Michigan
+during the winter, and if successful in its operations, eventually
+attack Burlington Heights, and form a junction with Generals Brown and
+Izard. This body of seven hundred bold and well-mounted borderers,
+left Detroit the 22d of October, and plunged at once into the
+wilderness. [Sidenote: Oct 22.] The long and straggling column would
+now be seen wading along the shallow shores of the lake, and then be
+lost in the primeval forest, to reappear on the bank of deep rivers,
+from whose farther shore the wilderness again spread away. The bivouac
+by night in the autumnal woods, or on the bank of a stream, presented
+a fine subject for a painter. Their seven hundred horses tied to the
+trees around, only half relieved by the ruddy fire that strove in
+vain to pierce the limitless gloom--the lofty trunks of trees receding
+away like the columns in some old dimly-lighted cathedral--the hardy
+and rough-looking frontiersmen, stretched with the half-clad savages
+around the fire--the sentinels scarcely discernible in the distance,
+all combined to form a picture which has a charm even for the most
+civilized and refined.
+
+It was, however, no holiday march--expedition was necessary to
+success, and the horses were kept to the top of their endurance.
+Straining up acclivities, floundering through swamps, struggling with
+the rapid currents of rivers, this detachment succeeded in penetrating
+more than two hundred miles into the enemy's country, and to within
+twenty-five miles of Burlington Heights. It marched more than four
+hundred miles, one hundred and eighty of it through an unbroken
+wilderness, defeated five hundred militia strongly posted, killed and
+wounded twenty-seven men, and took a hundred and eleven prisoners, and
+returned with the loss of but one man. [Sidenote: Oct 17.] In the
+discipline he maintained, the health of the troops, and their safe
+return, McArthur showed himself a skillful and able commander, while
+his subordinates deserve the highest commendation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ The Navy in 1814 -- Cruise of Captain Morris in the Adams --
+ Narrow escapes -- The Wasp and Reindeer -- Cruise of the
+ Wasp -- Sinks the Avon -- Mysterious fate of the Wasp -- The
+ Peacock captures the Epervier -- Lieutenant Nicholson.
+
+
+During the season of almost uninterrupted success on land and on our
+inland waters, we had but few vessels at sea, the greater part being
+blockaded, but those few nobly sustained the reputation won by the
+navy in the two previous years. The Guerriere 44, the Independence 74,
+and the Java 44, were launched during the summer, but remained in
+their docks till the close of the war. In the January previous Captain
+Morris, commanding the Adams, which had been cut down to a sloop of
+war, got to sea and took a few prizes. In the spring he captured an
+East Indiaman, but while taking possession of her an English fleet
+hove in sight, which compelled him to abandon the prize and crowd all
+sail to escape. Succeeding in throwing off his pursuers he gave chase
+to the Jamaica fleet which had passed him in the night, but failed in
+every attempt to cut out a vessel. [Sidenote: July 3.] Continuing
+eastward he at length made the Irish coast, but was soon after chased
+by an English frigate and pressed so closely that he found it
+necessary to throw overboard his anchors and two guns. This sacrifice,
+however, did not increase materially the distance between him and his
+adversary, and after dark, it falling a dead calm, Capt. Morris and
+his first Lieutenant Wadsworth, both of whom were on board the
+Constitution when first chased by the English fleet, got out their
+boats and by towing all night, succeeded in gaining two leagues by
+daylight. As soon as the commander of the English frigate discovered
+the trick that had been played him, he crowded all sail and kept in
+the wake of the Adams till ten at night, when the latter altering her
+course, escaped.
+
+But the ocean being filled with the enemy's cruisers, this persecuted
+solitary vessel was soon chased again by two frigates, for twenty-four
+hours, and only got off at last by the aid of a friendly fog. In
+August, however, she went ashore off the coast of Maine, while
+attempting to run the English blockade, as mentioned in the preceding
+chapter, and was so injured that Morris run her into the Penobscot
+River, where he was compelled to burn her to prevent her capture by
+the British.
+
+The Wasp put to sea, from Portsmouth, the first of May, and giving her
+canvass to the wind steered boldly for the English Channel. Leaving
+the British fleet blockading our ships at home, her commander, Captain
+Blakely, sought the English coast, resolved to strike at the enemy's
+commerce assembling there from every sea. It required constant
+watchfulness and great prudence to cruise on such dangerous ground as
+this, and had not all suspicion of an enemy in that quarter been
+removed, she would doubtless have been captured. The unexampled daring
+of the act alone saved her.
+
+On the 28th of June Blakely gave chase to a sail, which proved to be
+the English brig of war Reindeer, commanded by Captain Manners. The
+latter, though inferior in strength, showed no disinclination to
+close, and came down in gallant style. As they approached, the
+Reindeer by using a shifting twelve-pound carronade, was able to fire
+it five times before Blakely could get a gun to bear. At first within
+sixty, and afterwards within thirty yards, the crew stood for twelve
+minutes this galling fire without flinching. But when at length a
+favorable position was obtained, the broadsides of the American was
+delivered with such awful effect, that Captain Manners saw at once his
+vessel would be a wreck unless he run her aboard; and setting his
+sails he drove full on the Wasp. As the vessels fell foul he called
+to his men to follow him, and endeavored to leap on the deck of his
+antagonist. But coolly, as on a parade, the crew of the latter
+steadily repulsed every attempt to board.
+
+Captain Manners had been wounded early in the action, but still kept
+his feet, and just before boarding was struck by a shot which carried
+away the calves of both his legs. In this mangled condition he gave
+the orders to board, and leaping into the rigging of his own vessel in
+order to swing himself on that of his adversary, he was struck by two
+musket balls which entered the top of his head and passed out through
+his chin. Waving his sword above his head he exclaimed, "Oh, God!" and
+fell lifeless on the deck.
+
+After the enemy had been repulsed three times, the Wasp boarded in
+turn, and in one minute the conflict was over. The English vessel was
+literally a wreck, and had lost in killed and wounded sixty-seven out
+of one hundred and fifteen, constituting her crew, or more than half
+of her entire number. The Wasp had but five men killed and twenty-two
+wounded. [Sidenote: July 8.] Captain Blakely took his prize into
+L'Orient, where he burned her to prevent recapture. Up to this time he
+had taken eight merchantmen. [Sidenote: Aug. 27.] Remaining here till
+the latter part of August, he again set sail, and on the 1st of
+September cut out a vessel loaded with guns and military stores from
+a fleet of ten sail, convoyed by a seventy-four. Endeavoring to repeat
+the saucy experiment he was chased away by a man-of-war. The same
+evening, however, making four sail, he in turn gave chase to one,
+which immediately threw up rockets and fired signal guns to attract
+the attention of the other vessels. But Captain Blakely held steadily
+on, crashing along under a ten knot breeze, and as he approached the
+stranger fired a gun and hailed. His fire being returned he poured in
+a destructive broadside. Notwithstanding the swell was heavy and the
+night dark, his fire was terribly effective. For a night action it was
+remarkably short, and in forty minutes the enemy struck. But as the
+boat was about being lowered to take possession of her, Blakely saw
+beneath the lifting smoke a brig of war within musket-shot, and two
+more vessels rapidly closing. Ordering the boat to be run up again
+quickly, and the men to hasten to their posts, he filled away and
+catching the wind dead astern was soon out of sight. [Sidenote: Sept.
+1.] The enemy gave him one broadside and then turned to the captured
+vessel, whose guns of distress were echoing loudly over the sea. She
+soon sunk. This vessel was afterwards ascertained to be the Avon, of
+eighteen guns.
+
+Continuing his cruise, Blakely took three more vessels, among them a
+valuable prize, the Atalanta, of eight guns, which was immediately
+dispatched to the states.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept. 22.]
+
+This was the last direct tidings ever received from the gallant Wasp.
+Various rumors were afloat concerning her fate, but nothing certain of
+her after cruise, or the manner in which she was lost, was ever known.
+One report stated that an English frigate had put into Cadiz badly cut
+up by an American corvette, which had sunk in the night time, and so
+suddenly, that her name could not be ascertained. This was thought at
+first to be the Wasp, but no confirmation of this report being
+received, it was discredited. The spirited conduct of this little
+vessel had made her a great favorite with the nation, and a deep
+sympathy was universally felt for her mysterious fate.[8] Years passed
+by, when an incident occurred which awakened a fresh interest in her.
+Two officers on board the Essex, when she was captured at Valparaiso,
+had gone to Rio Janeiro, but were never after heard from. Inquiries
+were made by friends in every direction, but in vain. At last it was
+ascertained that they had taken passage in a Swedish brig for England,
+from which they had been transferred to the Wasp. The commander stated
+that on the 9th of October he was chased by a strange sail, which
+fired several guns, when he hove to and was boarded. The boarding
+officer, ascertaining there were two American officers on board, took
+them with him to his own ship. On their return, they told the Swedish
+captain that the strange sail was the Wasp, and they had determined to
+accept a passage in her. They did so, and nothing more was ever heard
+of them.
+
+[Footnote 8: She had been built to take the place of the vessel
+captured by the Poictiers, after she had taken the Frolic. She did not
+disgrace the name and character she bore.]
+
+This was sixteen days after the prize left her, and, according to the
+Swedish brig's reckoning, she was at the time nearly a thousand miles
+farther south, and where she very naturally might be. Added to this
+was another rumor, which seemed to throw still more light on her fate.
+Soon after her rencontre with the Swedish vessel, it was said that two
+English frigates chased off the southern coast an American
+sloop-of-war, and while in pursuit were struck with a heavy squall.
+After the squall was over, the sloop was no where to be seen. If the
+rumor be true, that vessel was no doubt the Wasp, for we had no other
+sloop-of-war in those seas at that time. Besides, when met by the
+Swedish brig, she was evidently bound in that direction, and should
+have arrived off the coast about the time mentioned in the rumor.
+Nothing is more probable than that she capsized and went down, while
+carrying a press of sail to escape her pursuers.
+
+At all events, whatever was her fate, the sea never rolled over a
+more gallant commander and crew. Watchful, full of resources,
+indefatigable and fearless, Captain Blakely was the model of a naval
+commander, and had he lived would no doubt have reached the highest
+rank in his profession.
+
+[Sidenote: March, 1814.]
+
+The Peacock, Captain Harrington, also started on a cruise in the
+spring, steering southward. On the 29th of April she made three sail,
+which proved to be merchantmen under convoy of the Epervier, a large
+brig-of-war. The former took to flight, while the latter bore up to
+engage. At the first fire the forward sails of the American were so
+cut up that they became nearly useless. There was, consequently, but
+little manoeuvering; the vessels moved off together, and a steady
+discharge of broadsides settled the contest. The force and weight of
+metal in this case were nearly equal, but the superior gunnery of the
+American was soon manifest, for in forty-two minutes the Epervier was
+so riddled that she had five feet of water in the hold. In this
+condition she struck, and with great difficulty was kept from sinking.
+Twenty-two of her crew were killed and wounded, while not a man in the
+Peacock was killed, and only two wounded. A hundred and eighteen
+thousand dollars in specie were found on board of her.
+
+Lieutenant Nicholson was sent home with the prize. He reached the
+American sea board in safety, but while running along the coast,
+steering for Savannah, was chased by an English frigate, and escaped
+capture only by one of those artifices so common among Yankee sailors.
+The wind being light, he crept close along shore, and kept in shoal
+water where the frigate dared not approach. The commander of the
+latter observing this, manned his boats and sent them forward in
+pursuit. The prize had but seventeen officers and men all told, and
+hence could make no serious resistance if boarded. As the boats came
+steadily on under sweeps, the fate of the Epervier appeared to be
+sealed, but Nicholson, putting the best face on the matter, took down
+his trumpet and thundered out his orders to yaw and pour in a
+broadside. The boats hesitated on hearing this dangerous command, and
+finally withdrew, leaving the prize a safe passage to the Savannah.
+
+[Sidenote: May 1.]
+
+Three days after, the Peacock also came in. The latter, however,
+remained in port but a short time, and again set sail, sweeping the
+seas to the bay of Biscay.
+
+Her cruise was conducted with great prudence and sagacity, and she
+returned in October, having captured fourteen merchantmen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ Third Session of the XIIIth Congress -- State of the
+ Treasury -- The President's Message -- Dallas appointed
+ Secretary of the Treasury -- His scheme and that of Eppes
+ for the relief of the country -- Our Commissioners at Ghent
+ -- Progress of the negotiations -- English protocol -- Its
+ effect on Congress and the nation -- Effect of its
+ publication on the English Parliament.
+
+
+[Sidenote: Sept. 19.]
+
+During the agitation and excitement preceding the bombardment of Fort
+McHenry, and the battles of Champlain and Plattsburg, the members of
+Congress were slowly gathering to the ruined Capital, and two days
+after Brown's gallant sortie from Fort Erie, assembled in the Patent
+Office, the only public building left standing by the enemy.
+
+Notwithstanding the glorious victories that had marked the summer
+campaign, a gloom rested on Congress. The Government, indeed,
+presented a melancholy spectacle, sitting amid the ashes of the
+Capital, while the fact could not be disguised that the Commissioners
+at Ghent gave no hope of peace. The war seemed far as ever from a
+termination, while England, released from the drains on her troops,
+navy and treasury, by the Continental war, was evidently making
+preparations for grander and more terrible exhibitions of her power.
+Her forces were gathering and her fleets accumulating upon our coast
+for the avowed purpose of demolishing our seaports, burning up our
+shipping, destroying our cities, and carrying a wide-spread desolation
+along our shores. To meet the expenses required to resist these
+attacks, a vast accession of funds was necessary, and yet the Treasury
+was worse than empty. The effort to borrow, in August, the paltry sum
+of six millions, a part of the $25,000,000 voted, had proved
+unsuccessful, not half the amount being taken and that at less than 80
+per cent. In May previous over nine millions and a half had been
+obtained at from 85 to 88 per cent, and yet while victories were
+illustrating our arms, not $3,000,000 would now be taken, and the
+offers for that all below 80 per cent.
+
+As the Treasury accounts stood at the close of the second quarter of
+the year 1814, Mr. Campbell, the Secretary, estimated that nearly
+twenty-five millions of dollars would be necessary to meet the
+expenditures of the remaining two quarters. The public revenue during
+that time would be nearly five millions, which the two loans and four
+millions of Treasury notes would swell to a little over thirteen
+millions, leaving about eleven millions to be obtained by some process
+or other. A foreign loan of six millions was recommended.
+
+Added to this the currency was thoroughly deranged. New banks had set
+a vast amount of paper afloat, while the specie was all drained off to
+pay for British goods, which surreptitiously got into the country. The
+banks of the District of Columbia suspended payment with the British
+invasion, and the panic spreading northward, there commenced a run
+upon the banks which in turn stopped payment, until out of New
+England, a large bank could scarcely be found that had not suspended.
+
+The expense of maintaining such a vast army of militia as was kept on
+foot, called for enormous disbursements, and many saw national
+bankruptcy in the future should the war continue.
+
+The burning of Washington furnished the President, in his message, an
+excellent occasion for making an appeal to the people. He was not
+constrained to fall back on the justice of the war, and persuade the
+nation that the invasion of Canada was both right and politic. The war
+had become defensive--men must now fight, not for maritime rights, not
+march to distant and questionable ground, but standing on their own
+hearth-stones, strike for their firesides and their homes. The Indian
+barbarities at the west, which inflamed to such a pitch of rage the
+Kentuckians, had been repeated by a civilized nation, and in speaking
+of them and the enemy, the President said: "He has avowed his purpose
+of trampling on the usages of civilized warfare, and given earnest of
+it in the plunder and wanton destruction of private property. *** His
+barbarous policy has not even spared those monuments of the arts and
+models of taste with which our country had enriched and embellished
+its infant metropolis. From such an adversary, hostility in its
+greatest force and worst forms may be looked for. The American people
+will face it with the undaunted spirit, which in our Revolutionary
+struggle, defeated his unrighteous projects. His threats and
+barbarities instead of dismay, will kindle in every bosom an
+indignation not to be extinguished but in the disaster and expulsion
+of such cruel invaders."
+
+The ardor and indignation of the people were easily roused, but these
+did not bring what just then was most needed, _money_.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept.]
+
+Campbell having resigned his place as Secretary of the Treasury,
+immediately after sending in his report, Alexander Dallas was
+appointed in his place, who brought forward a scheme for relieving the
+Government. Eppes, from the Committee of Ways and Means, also offered
+a project. He proposed to lay new taxes to the amount of eleven and a
+half millions, and make a new issue of Treasury Notes, redeemable
+after six months. Dallas agreed with him in the amount of taxes, but
+recommended also the creation of a National Bank with a capital of
+fifty millions, five of it in specie and the residue in government
+stock. This would regulate the currency by furnishing a circulating
+medium, and constitute a basis on which loans could be obtained.
+
+Bills were also brought in regulating the army.
+
+In the mean time unfavorable news arrived from our embassy at Ghent.
+They had been compelled to wait some time for the English
+Commissioners, spending the interval in a round of amusements and
+entertainments furnished by the people of Ghent and General Lyons,
+commanding the British troops in that place. At length, on the 7th of
+August, the Secretary of the English legation called at the American
+hotel, to arrange the place and day for commencing negotiations. No
+one but Mr. Bayard was in at the time, and he seeing no breach of
+diplomatic etiquette in the proposal of the English Secretary to meet
+next day at the hotel of the English legation, assented. But the other
+members when they returned and were told of the arrangements that had
+been made, were indignant. "What!" said Mr. Adams, "meet the English
+Ministers who have kept us here so long waiting the condescension of
+their coming, in the face of all Ghent--meet them at their bidding at
+their own hotel, to be the laughing stock of the city, of London, and
+of Europe?" "Never!" added Mr. Gallatin, "never!" Mr. Bayard replied,
+that the promise had been made, and they stood pledged. "No," said Mr.
+Adams, "_you_ may be, but we are not."
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 8.]
+
+Another place was therefore agreed upon, and the negotiations
+commenced. The city was filled with men, watching their progress, not
+only statesmen, but speculators eager to take advantage of the change
+in the price of stocks, which rose and fell with the wavering
+character of the proceedings.
+
+After expressing the pacific feelings of their government, the English
+ministers stated the three points which would probably arise, and on
+which they were instructed:
+
+1. The right of search to obtain seamen, and the claim of his
+Britannic Majesty to the perpetual allegiance of his subjects, whether
+naturalized in America or not.
+
+2. The Indian allies were to have a definite boundary fixed for their
+territory.
+
+3. There must be a revision of the boundary line between the United
+States and the adjacent British colonies.
+
+The question of the fisheries, it was intimated, would also come up.
+
+The American legation replied, that they had instructions upon the
+first and third propositions, but not on the second, nor on the
+subject of the fisheries. They also were instructed to obtain a
+definition of blockade, and to consider claims for indemnity in
+certain cases of seizure. After some discussion, the American embassy
+inquired if the pacification and settlement of a boundary for the
+Indians was a _sine qua non_. The reply was, yes. It was then asked if
+it was intended to preclude the United States from purchasing lands of
+the Indians, whose possessions clearly lay within the limits of their
+territory. An affirmative answer was given. The native tribes were to
+be kept simply as a barrier between the possessions of the two
+countries. On being told that no instructions had been given on this
+point, the English embassy expressed great surprise, and declared that
+they could do nothing until farther advices from their government. A
+messenger was therefore despatched to England that night, and the two
+embassies, after meeting next day to arrange a protocol, adjourned
+till the decision of the English cabinet could be received.
+
+Nine days after, Lord Castlereagh, elated with his success as English
+minister to the headquarters of the allied armies, on their way to
+Paris,--exulting over the downfall of Napoleon, and representing in
+himself the intoxication of the English people at the overthrow of
+their rival--haughty, unscrupulous, and overbearing, swept into Ghent
+with a train of twenty carriages, on his way to the great Congress of
+Vienna, where European diplomacy, in all its monstrous deformity and
+rottenness, was to be exhibited to the world.
+
+The next day the embassies met, and the reply of the English
+government was rendered. In the first place, the Indian boundary
+question was declared a _sine qua non_. The question then arose, what
+would become of the hundreds of American citizens residing at that
+time within the limits thus to be drawn. The reply was, they must
+shift for themselves.
+
+In the second place, the entire jurisdiction of the northern lakes,
+extending from Lake Ontario to Lake Superior, where our squadrons were
+riding victorious, must be surrendered to the British government, the
+United States not being permitted to erect even a military post on the
+southern shore, on their own soil, nor keep those already established
+there. As a backer to this insolent demand, the legation affirmed that
+the United States ought to consider it moderate, since England might
+justly have claimed a cession of territory within the States. Beyond
+Lake Superior, the question of boundary was open to discussion.
+Another item in this protocol required the surrender of that part of
+Maine over which a direct route from Halifax to Canada would
+necessarily pass. When asked what they proposed to do with those
+islands in the Passamaquoddy Bay, recently captured by the English,
+they replied, these were not subjects of discussion, belonging, of
+course, to Great Britain. They farther informed the American Legation
+that this extraordinary and magnanimous offer, on the part of his
+majesty, was not to remain open for any length of time--that if delay
+was demanded till instructions could be received from across the ocean
+on the one single question of Indian boundary, it would be considered
+withdrawn, and the English government feel itself at liberty to make
+other and less generous demands, as circumstances might indicate.
+
+To such arrogant claims but one answer could be given, and Gallatin,
+in sending them home, wrote that all negotiations might be considered
+at an end, and that no course was left for the United States but "in
+union and a vigorous prosecution of the war." Mr. Clay accepted an
+invitation to visit Paris, and Mr. Adams prepared to return to St.
+Petersburgh.
+
+While this news was slowly traversing the Atlantic in the cartel John
+Adams, the victories of Brown, Macomb, and Macdonough, were
+electrifying the nation.
+
+[Sidenote: Oct. 10.]
+
+On the 10th of October the President transmitted a message to
+Congress, with the despatches received from Ghent, and the protocol of
+the English legation. Their reading was listened to with breathless
+silence, and as the extraordinary claims set forth by England became
+one after another clearly revealed, the astonishment of the members
+exceeded all bounds, and they gazed at each other incredulously. The
+Federalists were paralyzed with disappointment. The party had never
+received such a blow since the commencement of the war. Their
+arguments were prostrated. They had always represented England as
+desirous of peace, fighting only because she was forced to by a
+reckless, unprincipled administration and party. Towards the nation at
+large she cherished no hostile feelings, and entertained no ultimate
+sinister designs. But the mask was now snatched away, and she stood
+revealed in all her arrogance and injustice. If any thing more than
+the ravages on our coast was needed to bind the nation together in one
+determined effort, it was furnished in these despatches. As the news
+spread on every side, the passions of men were kindled into rage.
+What, burn up our victorious war-ships on those great mediterraneans,
+the command of which had been gained by such vast expenditures and
+such heroic conduct--abandon forts standing on our own soil, around
+which such valiant blood had been shed? "Never, never," responded from
+every lip.
+
+Scarcely less excitement was produced by the discussion of the Indian
+boundary question. Stripped of its false pretences, it looked solely
+to the prevention of all settlement on our part, of the North-western
+territory, and designed to bar us forever from acquiring possessions
+in that quarter. To give some show of fairness to the transaction, it
+was proposed that both countries should be restricted from purchasing
+the land of the Indians, but leave the market open to the whole world
+beside. In short, that vast territory, including a large portion of
+Ohio, all of Michigan, Illinois and Indiana, must not only be
+surrendered by us, but placed under the complete control of the
+British government, whose ships of war were alone to sail the waters
+that washed its northern limits, and whose fortifications were to awe
+the inhabitants that occupied it. Never before had the cry of war rung
+so loudly over the land, and the nation began to prepare for the
+approaching conflict with an earnestness and determination that
+promised results worthy of itself and the cause for which it
+struggled. The Federalist journals came at last to the rescue,
+declaring that the terms offered were too humiliating and degrading to
+be entertained for a moment. Only one paper in Boston was besotted
+enough to assert that they were honorable and ought to be accepted.
+
+Congress, after the reception of this protocol and the accompanying
+despatches, took a different tone, and when the question of ways and
+means for the coming year was taken up, a spirit was exhibited, that
+since the declaration of war, had never been witnessed in its
+deliberations. The fear and hesitation which were weighing it down,
+vanished, and it began to assume the character and exhibit the
+qualities belonging to it, but which the spirit of faction had kept in
+abeyance. The Legislatures of the different states responded to the
+sentiments of the commissioners--declaring that the terms proposed
+were insulting and disgraceful, and called for a vigorous prosecution
+of the war. New York voted a local force of 12,000 men, and Virginia
+followed her example.
+
+It was a grand stroke of policy, on the part of the administration, to
+fling those despatches at once into Congress and thus before the
+nation. Their sudden publication took the British Ministry by
+surprise, for it exposed their extraordinary demands to the whole
+realm, and they remonstrated against such undiplomatic conduct.
+
+Before the Convention of Ghent the English press ridiculed
+concessions, declaring that punishment must be inflicted on the
+Americans, and they be chastised into humility and supplication. The
+war with us was a Lilliputian affair compared to the struggles out of
+which England had come victorious, and the Convention was not looked
+upon so much as the meeting of Commissioners to adjust things
+amicably, as furnishing the opportunity for the American government to
+make a request to have hostilities cease. But the disasters to
+Drummond, at Fort Erie, to Prevost at Plattsburgh, and the utter
+demolition of the British fleet on Champlain, together with the
+repulse from Baltimore, acted as a condenser on much of this vapor.
+[Sidenote: Nov. 4.] The vast expenditures wasted on the Canadian
+frontier were now all to be renewed, newer and stronger armies were to
+be transported to our shores, and when the Prince Regent opened
+Parliament he plainly hinted that it would be well to avoid all this,
+if possible. The arrival of the despatches which the President had
+laid before Congress, containing the protocol of the English Embassy,
+created a deep sensation in both houses of Parliament. The claims set
+up by the English government were loudly denounced by many of the
+members, and it was soon apparent that if the war was pressed to make
+them good, a large opposition party would be formed, not only in
+Parliament but in the country. Sixty manufacturing towns sent in
+petitions for peace. Cobbett, who had all along defended the conduct
+of the United States, was unsparing in his flagellations of the
+British government, and of those papers that advocated the war.
+
+While the war question was passing through these phases in England,
+and on the continent, Congress was preparing to call out the whole
+resources of the country. But a second despatch received from Ghent,
+stating that negotiations were resumed and that the British
+government had receded from the Indian boundary question, awakened
+lively hopes that peace would be secured.
+
+But the energy with which Congress had entered on the question of ways
+and means, began to expend itself in party strife. Monroe's plan for
+raising a standing force of 80,000 men to serve for two years; a bill
+authorizing the enlistment of minors; and Dallas' National Bank
+scheme, to relieve the finances of the country, after fierce
+discussions and many modifications, one after another fell to the
+ground. In the mean time, the treasury was compelled to subsist on the
+issue of Treasury notes, which as business paper were worth only 78
+per cent.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 15.]
+
+New tax bills were soon after passed--laying taxes on carriages
+according to their value; 20 cts. per gallon on distilled spirits;
+increasing a hundred per cent. the tax on auction duties, and 50 per
+cent. on postage. Heavy duties were also placed on most goods of
+domestic manufacture, with the exception of cotton, and a direct tax
+of six millions was levied on the nation.
+
+As time passed on, and no farther tidings was received from Ghent,
+Congress again took up and finally passed the bill for the enlistment
+of minors. The Legislatures of Connecticut and Massachusetts
+immediately passed acts requiring the judges of these respective
+states to discharge on habeas corpus all enlistments made under the
+provisions of the bill, and to punish with fine and imprisonment all
+who engaged in it, and removed minors out of the state to prevent
+their discharge.
+
+These acts of Congress, however, did not avail to help the government
+out of the troubles that were once more gathering thick about it.
+Everything was at a stand still for lack of funds--even the recruiting
+service got on slowly. In the mean time, negotiations for peace did
+not wear a very encouraging aspect, while the gain of the Federalists
+in some of the states, in the recent elections, and the Hartford
+Convention, helped to swell the evils under which the administration
+labored.
+
+The conscription scheme would not work in many of the states, and
+resort was had to the old system of raising 40,000 volunteers for
+twelve months, and the acceptance of as many more for local defence.
+
+[Illustration: Painful March of Volunteers.]
+
+The administration then turned its attention to the navy, the pride
+and glory of the country, and a bill was passed Congress authorizing
+the equipment of twenty small cruisers. Under its provisions two small
+squadrons of five vessels each, one to be commanded by Porter and the
+other by Perry, had been set on foot, whose object was to inflict on
+the British West Indies the havoc and destruction with which the enemy
+had visited our coast. But it was difficult to obtain seamen, as most
+of those who had enlisted during the last year had been sent to the
+northern lakes to serve on fresh water--a duty always unpalatable to a
+sailor. Our vessels of war being blockaded, we had no occasion for
+seamen on the coast, and could find employment for them on the lakes
+alone. Crowningshield, who had succeeded Jones as Secretary of the
+Navy, actually recommended a conscription of seamen.
+
+In the mean time, Great Britain had concentrated in Canada a larger
+force than she had ever before assembled there, ready to march on
+the states, while Cockburn, in possession of Cumberland island,
+threatened the coasts of Georgia and South Carolina with the same
+ravages that marked his course in the Chesapeake. Added to all this,
+a heavy force was known to be on its way to New Orleans, which the
+government had neglected to defend, and hence expected to see fall
+into the hands of the enemy. The prospect was black as night around
+the administration--not a ray of light visited it from any quarter
+of the heavens. Funds and troops and ships had never been so scarce,
+while overpowering fleets and armies were assembling on our coasts
+and frontiers. [Sidenote: Jan. 17, 1815.] In the midst of all this,
+as if on purpose to drive the government to despair, Dallas came out
+with a new report on the state of the Treasury, in which he informed
+it that the year had closed with $19,000,000 of unpaid debts, to
+meet which there was less than $2,000,000 on hand, and $4,500,000
+of taxes not yet collected. The revenue was estimated at
+$11,000,000, of which only one million was from imports, the rest
+from taxes. While he thus exhibited the beggared condition of the
+Treasury, he informed the administration that fifty millions would
+be needed to meet the expenditures of the coming year, and gravely
+asked where it all was to come from. The government looked on in
+dismay, and to what measures it would have been compelled to resort
+for relief it is impossible to say; but in reviewing that period one
+shudders to contemplate the probable results of another year of war,
+and another Hartford Convention. But like the sun suddenly bursting
+through a dark and ominous thundercloud, just before he sinks
+beneath the horizon, came at length the news of the great victory at
+New Orleans, and the conclusion of peace at Ghent. Never before was
+an administration so loudly called upon to ask that public thanks
+might be offered for deliverance from great perils.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+HARTFORD CONVENTION.
+
+1814.
+
+ Attitude of New England -- Governor Strong -- Views and
+ purposes of the Federalists -- Anxiety of Madison --
+ Prudence of Colonel Jesup -- Result of the Convention --
+ Fears of the people -- Fate of the Federalists.
+
+
+While Government was thus struggling to avert the perils that every
+day grew darker around it, and the negotiations at Ghent were drawing
+to a conclusion, serious events were occurring in the New England
+States.
+
+Although the ravages of the enemy along our coast during the summer,
+and our victories at the north in autumn, together with the insulting
+demands of England, had seriously weakened the Federalist power, and
+brought it into still greater disrepute with the mass of the people,
+and passing events admonished delay, still they resolved to carry out
+a favorite plan of calling a Convention of the disaffected States, to
+consult on the best mode of defending themselves, and of forcing the
+administration into the adoption of their measures, and to take steps
+towards amending the Constitution. New England had all along denied
+the right of the General Government to call out the militia, except
+for the defence of the States in which they resided, and demanded the
+control of her own troops, and consequently of a large portion of her
+own revenue. Heavy complaints were also made against the direct taxes
+levied, and many refused to ride in coaches, or use those things
+taxed, thus placing themselves beside the revolutionary patriots, and
+making the General Government resemble England in its oppression.
+
+Massachusetts, with Governor Strong as its Executive head, took the
+lead in all movements designed to carry out these projects.
+Resolutions had passed the Legislature, raising an army of ten
+thousand men, and a million of money to support it. This army was to
+be officered by Governor Strong, and its movements directed by
+Federalist councils. Such a large force, raised not to aid the
+administration to carry on the war, but for selfish ends, naturally
+awakened the gravest fears, and the President saw in it the first step
+towards armed opposition. All this may be defensible, but the gallant
+sons of Kentucky, with their gray-haired but chivalrous Governor at
+their head, streaming through the northern forests, to drive back from
+the feeble settlements of Ohio the savage hordes that were laying
+them waste, and Governor Strong, bidding the militia of his State stay
+at home and take care of themselves, present a contrast so widely
+different, that no sophistry can make them appear equally patriotic
+and unselfish.
+
+[Sidenote: Oct. 18.]
+
+In order to bring the whole eastern section into similar measures, and
+to give union to the opposition, a resolution was passed calling a
+Convention of the New England States, to meet at Hartford, December
+15th, to deliberate on the best method of defence against the enemy,
+and to take measures for procuring amendments to the Constitution,
+which the Federalists had ascertained, since the war began, to be a
+most worthless instrument. The letter accompanying this resolution
+being laid before the Connecticut Legislature, seven delegates were
+appointed to the Convention, to meet the twelve sent from
+Massachusetts; Rhode Island sent four, making in all twenty-three, to
+which three County delegates from New Hampshire were added. Vermont
+refused to have any thing to do with the matter. These resolutions did
+not pass without violent opposition in each of the Legislatures.
+Holmes, of Massachusetts, openly declared his suspicions that
+Massachusetts designed to head a combination for the dissolution of
+the Union. The raising of an army of ten thousand men, not subject to
+the orders of the General Government, confirmed his fears, and gave a
+practical character to opinions hostile to the confederacy.
+
+Harrison Gray Otis and John Cabot, were leaders of the Massachusetts
+delegation.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 15.]
+
+No body of men ever assembled under such universal execration and
+odium as did these delegates. Except the few Federalist journals in
+New England, the entire press of the nation denounced them, one and
+all, as traitors.
+
+George Cabot being elected President, and Timothy Dwight, Secretary,
+the Convention proceeded to deliberate on the momentous questions they
+had proposed to discuss, with closed doors. Madison was in trepidation
+and could speak of nothing but the Convention, and sent Colonel Jesup
+to watch it. To prevent his design from being suspected, he directed
+this gallant officer to make Hartford a recruiting station.
+
+Jesup had had interviews with Governor Tompkins, to ascertain what aid
+he could afford in case it became necessary to resort to force. He was
+satisfied that the treasonable designs of the delegates had been much
+exaggerated, but he wished to be prepared for any emergency, and
+having arranged his plans, quietly awaited the result of their
+deliberations. He was in constant correspondence with Monroe,
+Secretary of War, and did much towards allaying the fears of the
+President, and promised if open treason exhibited itself, to crush it
+and its authors, with one decisive blow. Ingratiating himself with
+some of the delegates of the Convention and with the authorities of
+Hartford by his conciliatory and agreeable manner; and winning the
+respect of all by his prudent conduct, he soon became convinced that a
+resolution for disunion, if offered, could not be carried.
+
+At length, after three weeks of secret session, this dreaded
+Convention, on whose mysterious sittings the eyes of the nation had
+been turned, adjourned, and every one waited with anxiety to hear the
+decision to which it had come. The shadowy forms of disunion and
+treason had so long been seen presiding over its labors, that some
+monstrous birth was expected. But nature moved on in her accustomed
+courses, and no shock was felt by the republic, and instead of a shell
+flung into the Union, rending it asunder, there appeared a long and
+heavy document containing the collective wisdom of these twenty-six
+men. After going over the transgressions of the administration, from
+first to last, it passed to the defects of the Constitution. It
+modestly remarked that the enumeration of all the improvements of
+which this instrument was susceptible, and the proposal of all the
+amendments necessary to make it perfect, was a task which the
+Convention had "not thought proper to assume." After paying this
+flattering testimony to the grand and glorious intellects who framed
+the Constitution, it proceeded to mention six amendments on which
+there should be immediate action. The first related to the
+apportionment of representation among the slave States. The second to
+the admission of new States, restricting the powers of Congress in
+this respect, in order to keep down western influence. The third, to
+the right to pass restrictive and embargo acts, and carry on offensive
+war. The fifth, to exclude foreigners from holding places of honor,
+trust or profit under Government, and the last to limiting the
+Presidential office to one term.
+
+Resolutions and recommendations in accordance with these sentiments,
+were sent to the separate states represented in that Convention.
+
+Delegates were also appointed to repair to Washington to remonstrate
+with the President, some say to threaten him, and insist on his
+resignation. No treason appeared in all this, but the serious
+discussion of the question of disunion in the preamble, and the
+hypothetical cases put, in which such a step would be justifiable,
+showed that it had been mooted and seriously entertained by some of
+the members.
+
+The tone of the paper was bad, egotistical, and mutinous. It
+endeavored to arraign the states of New England against the
+government--urged them to resist forcible drafts and conscriptions,
+and raise armies of their own to co-operate each with the other in
+time of need.
+
+This expose, however, did not satisfy the Democrats, who insisted that
+some deep-laid scheme was back of all this--that the secret records of
+the Convention would disclose blacker transactions than had yet seen
+the light, and from that time on, those twenty delegates have been
+stigmatized as traitors. They, on the other hand, have defended
+themselves from the aspersion, and declared that they were governed by
+the highest patriotic motives and love to the union.
+
+The truth lies, doubtless, somewhere between these extremes. The error
+of the accusers consists in making one, or two, or more delegates
+represent the Convention. There probably were men present whose
+political animosities had carried them so far beyond the limits of
+reason, that they would rather dissolve the union than live two years
+longer under the sway of Madison and his party. These views might have
+been expressed, but the Convention, in refusing to endorse them, was
+not responsible for them.
+
+But laying all this aside, there is no doubt that the Convention was
+called to organize one section of the republic against the other, and
+it depended on circumstances entirely to what extent that opposition
+should go, and what form it took. This may not be treason, and yet be
+nearly akin to it. It depends very much on the simple question whether
+the evils contemplated, as justifying open opposition, are _real_ or
+_imaginary_. A deliberate effort to ruin New England and deprive her
+of her constitutional rights, would certainly justify secession. All
+this the Federalists believed the government had done, and that party
+tyranny and oppression could no farther go. The light evils under
+which they suffered had become so magnified, in the heat of party
+strife, that many were prepared to act precisely as others would do
+under real wrongs.
+
+The obloquy that has fallen upon that Convention was merited. The time
+it chose for its session, when the country was staggering under the
+weight of a war which, however unjustifiably begun, it could not then
+close with honor or justice, and the lordly tone it assumed to
+Congress--the cold and unpatriotic feelings that characterized its
+deliberations, merit the deepest condemnation. Under a change of
+fortunes and a continuance of the war, it might, and probably would,
+have grown into a shape of evil. As events turned out, it has proved a
+blessing, for it stands as a beacon, warning all leaders of party
+factions of their fate, who, in national distress, cripple the
+government, and, by their hostility, help the enemy to inflict sorer
+evils and deeper disgrace upon a common country. It also shows how
+local interests, views, and feelings, however magnified at the time by
+peculiar circumstances, are derided or forgotten, in a movement that
+affects the fate of a hemisphere.
+
+
+
+
+THE INVASION.
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+ General Jackson appointed Major-General -- Hostility of
+ Spain -- Gallant defence of Fort Bowyer -- Seizure of
+ Pensacola -- Jackson at New Orleans -- Approach and landing
+ of the British -- Jackson proclaims martial law -- Night
+ attack on the British -- Jackson entrenches himself -- First
+ attack of the British -- Second attack -- Final Assault --
+ The battle and the victory -- Jackson fined by Judge Hall --
+ Arrival of the Treaty of Peace -- Great Rejoicings --
+ Delegates of the Hartford Convention -- Remarks on the
+ treaty.
+
+
+In the mean time, great anxiety was felt for the fate of New Orleans,
+towards which an imposing armament was hastening, bearing a veteran
+army fresh from the victorious fields of Spain. England had loaned
+this army to feudalism in Europe for the overthrow of free principles
+there, and intoxicated with success, resolved to use it to carry out
+here the same tyrannical system which has ever since been covering her
+with infamy and for which the final day of reckoning has not yet
+arrived.
+
+Jackson had been appointed Major-General in place of Harrison, who
+resigned, and given the command of the southern army to which was
+entrusted the protection of the coast near the mouth of the
+Mississippi. Pensacola, then under Spanish authority, was the resort
+of British emissaries, who stirred up the surrounding savages to
+massacre and bloodshed, and he determined as a first step to take
+active measures against it. [Sidenote: August.] He sent Captain Gordon
+to reconnoitre the place, who reported, on his return, that he had
+seen a number of soldiers and several hundred savages in British
+uniform under drill by British officers. Jackson immediately
+despatched this report to government. Under such a palpable violation
+of treaty stipulations there was only one course to be pursued, and
+Gen. Armstrong, the Secretary of War, issued an order authorizing
+Jackson to attack the town. This order was made out; but, by some
+mysterious process, was so long in getting into the post-office, that
+it never reached its destination till the 17th of January the next
+year. Jackson waited patiently for the sanction of his government to
+move forward, not wishing that his first important step as
+Major-General in the regular army should meet the disapproval of those
+who had entrusted him with power. But a proclamation, issued by a
+British officer named Nicholls, and dated Pensacola, calling on all
+the negroes and savages, nay, even the Americans themselves, to rally
+to the British standard, put an end to his indecision.
+
+In the mean time, Nicholls made an attempt on Fort Bowyer, a small
+redoubt, garrisoned by one hundred and twenty men, and defended by
+twenty pieces of cannon. This fortress commanded the entrance from the
+Gulf to Mobile. [Sidenote: Sept. 12.] To capture it, four British
+ships, carrying ninety guns, and a land force of over seven hundred
+men were despatched from Pensacola. On the 15th, the ships took up
+their position within musket-shot of the fort, and opened their fire.
+The land force, in the mean time, had gained the rear, and commenced
+an attack. Major Lawrence, with the brave little garrison under his
+command, met this double onset with the coolness of a veteran.
+Scattering the motley collection under Nicholls, with a few discharges
+of grape-shot, he turned his entire attention to the vessels of war.
+Being in such close range, the cannonading on both sides was terrific.
+The incessant and heavy explosions shook that little redoubt to its
+foundations; but at the end of three hours, the smoke slowly curled
+away from its battered sides, revealing the flag still flying aloft,
+and the begrimed cannoniers standing sternly beside their pieces.
+After the firing of the enemy ceased, the ship Hermes was seen
+drifting helplessly on a sand-bank, while the other vessels were
+crowding all sail seaward. The former soon after grounded within six
+hundred yards of the fort, whose guns opened on her anew with
+tremendous effect, and she soon blew up. Out of the one hundred and
+seventy who composed her crew, only twenty escaped. The other ships
+suffered severely, and the total loss of the enemy was one ship
+burned, and two hundred and thirty-two men killed and wounded, while
+only eight of the garrison were killed. Nicholls effected his retreat
+to Pensacola, where the governor received him as his guest, and threw
+open the public stores to the soldiers. On the flag-staff of the fort
+were "entwined the colors of Spain and England," as if on purpose to
+announce that all neutrality was at an end.
+
+These things coming to Jackson's ear, he resolved to delay no longer
+but get possession of the town and fort at once, "peaceably if he
+could, forcibly if he must." [Sidenote: Nov. 6.] He immediately
+hastened to Fort Montgomery, where he had assembled four thousand men,
+and putting himself at their head, in four days encamped within two
+miles of the place, and despatched a flag to the Spanish governor,
+disclosing his object and purpose. The messenger was fired upon from
+the fort, and compelled to return. Jackson's fiery nature was
+instantly aroused by this insult, yet remembering that he was acting
+without the sanction of government, he resolved still to negotiate.
+Having, at length, succeeded in opening a Correspondence with the
+governor, he told him that he had come to take possession of the
+town, and hold it for Spain till she was able to preserve her
+neutrality. The governor refusing entirely to be relieved from his
+charge, Jackson put his columns in motion and marched straight on the
+town. At the entrance, a battery of two cannon opened on his central
+column; but these being speedily carried by storm, together with two
+fortified houses, the troops, with loud shouts, pressed forward, and
+in a few minutes were masters of the place. The Spanish governor no
+sooner saw the American soldiers with loud hurrahs inundating the
+streets, than he rushed forward imploring mercy, and promising an
+immediate surrender. Jackson at once ordered the recall to be sounded,
+and retired without the town. The commandant of the fort, however,
+refused to surrender it, when Jackson ordered an assault. The former
+wisely averted the approaching blow by lowering his flag. The British
+fled, taking with them their allies, four hundred of whom being
+negroes, were carried to the West Indies, and sold for slaves.
+
+Having thus chastised the Spanish governor, and broken up the plans
+laid to renew the Indian war, Jackson took up his march for New
+Orleans, against which he had no doubt the large force that had left
+the eastern coast was directed. He established his headquarters there,
+on the first of December; and three days after, the news that a large
+British fleet was approaching the coast, spread through the city. The
+report was soon confirmed, and Jackson, whom danger always
+tranquilized, while it filled him with tenfold energy, began to
+prepare for the approaching shock.
+
+New Orleans, numbering at that time only thirty thousand inhabitants,
+was but recently purchased from France, and the population, being
+composed mostly of those in whose veins flowed Spanish and French
+blood, did not feel the same patriotic ardor that animated the Eastern
+cities. Many were known to be hostile, and were suspected of carrying
+on treasonable correspondence with the enemy. Feeling that he had but
+a slender hold on the city, and knowing that secret foes watched and
+reported all his movements, Jackson was compelled to act with extreme
+caution.
+
+This hostility, as it were, in his own camp, added immensely to the
+embarrassments that surrounded him. But calm, keen, resolute,
+tireless, and full of courage, he soon inspired the patriotic citizens
+with confidence. Resources they had not dreamed of, sprang up at his
+bidding. But it needed all the renown he had won, and all his personal
+influence, to impart the faintest promise of success.
+
+He had brought only a portion of his troops with him from Pensacola.
+But no sooner did he arrive, than he inspected narrowly the inlets,
+bayous, and channels, marked out the location of works, ordered
+obstructions raised, and then called on the different States to send
+him help. A thousand regulars were immediately ordered to New Orleans,
+while the Tennessee militia, under General Carrol, and the mounted
+riflemen, under General Coffee, hastened as of old, to his side.
+Concealing as much as possible the weakness of his force, and the bad
+appointments of many of the soldiers, he strained every nerve to
+increase the means of defence. The French inhabitants forgot their
+hostility to the Americans in greater hate of the English, while many
+others, who, hitherto, had taken little or no interest in the war,
+roused by the sudden danger that threatened them, flew to arms. The
+free negroes and refugees from St. Domingo, formed themselves into a
+black regiment, and were incorporated into the army. Jackson's energy
+and courage soon changed the whole current of feeling, and, day and
+night, the sounds of martial preparation echoed along the streets of
+the city. The excitement swelled higher and higher, as the hostile
+fleet gradually closed towards the mouth of the Mississippi. But one
+thought occupied every bosom--one topic became the theme of all
+conversation. Consternation and courage moved side by side; for while
+the most believed Jackson to be invincible, others, carefully weighing
+the force of the armament approaching, could not but anticipate
+discomfiture and destruction. Nor was this surprising; for a fleet of
+more than eighty sail, under the command of Admiral Cochrane, carrying
+on their decks eleven thousand veteran troops, led by men of renown,
+was advancing on the city. Besides this formidable land force, there
+were twelve thousand seamen and marines. The facts alone were
+sufficient to cause anxiety and alarm; but rumor magnified them
+fourfold. To resist all this, New Orleans had no vessels of war, no
+strong fortresses, no army of veteran troops. General Jackson, with
+his undisciplined and half-armed yeomanry, alone stood between the
+town and destruction. He was not ignorant of the tremendous force
+advancing against him; but still he was calm and resolute. To the
+panic-stricken women, who roamed the streets, filling the air with
+shrieks and cries of alarm, he said, "_The enemy shall never reach the
+city._"
+
+New Orleans, situated on the eastern bank of the Mississippi, was
+accessible not only through the various mouths of the river, but also
+with small vessels through lakes Borgne and Ponchartrain, and was
+therefore a difficult place to defend, for no one could tell by what
+way, or by how many ways the enemy would approach. Jackson saw that he
+would be compelled to divide his forces in order to guard every
+avenue. In the mean time, while he watched the approaching force, he
+kept his eye on the city. The press did not manfully sustain him, and
+the legislature, then in session, looked upon his actions with
+suspicion, if not with hostile feelings. Although a native of another
+State, and having no personal interest in the fate of the place, whose
+authorities treated him with coldness, he nevertheless, determined to
+save it at all hazards, and while apparently bending his vast energies
+to meet an external foe, boldly assumed the control of the municipal
+authority, declared martial law, and when Judge Hall liberated a
+traitor whom he had imprisoned, sternly ordered the Judge himself into
+confinement.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 9.]
+
+At length, the excited inhabitants were told that the British fleet
+had reached the coast; sixty sail being seen near the mouth of the
+Mississippi. Commodore Patterson immediately despatched Lieutenant
+Jones with five gun-boats to watch its motions. This spirited
+commander, in passing through Lake Borgne, discovered that the enemy,
+instead of approaching direct by the river, was advancing up the
+lakes. In hovering around them to ascertain their designs, he
+unfortunately got becalmed, and in that position was attacked by forty
+barges, containing twelve hundred men. Notwithstanding he had under
+him less than two hundred men, he refused to surrender, and gallantly
+returned the fire of the enemy. For a whole hour he stubbornly
+maintained the unequal conquest; but, at length, after killing nearly
+double his entire force, he was compelled to strike his flag.
+
+The British had now complete control of lakes Ponchartrain and Borgne,
+and advancing up the latter, entered a canal, and finally effected a
+landing on the levee, about eight miles from the city. This levee acts
+as a bank to keep the river from the inland, which is lower than the
+surface of the water. It varies in width from a few hundred yards to
+two or three miles, and is covered with plantations. Thus, now almost
+like a causeway, and again like an elevated plateau, it stretches away
+from the city, with the river on one side, and an impassable swamp on
+the other.
+
+The forts that commanded the river were, by this manoeuvre of the
+enemy, rendered comparatively useless, and an open road to the city
+lay before him. Jackson no sooner heard that the British had effected
+a landing, than he determined at once to attack them before their
+heavy artillery and the main body of the army could be brought
+forward. On the 23d, therefore, a few hours after they had reached the
+banks of the Mississippi, his columns were in motion, and by evening
+halted within two miles of the hostile force. His plans were
+immediately laid--the schooner of war, Caroline, commanded by
+Commodore Patterson, was ordered to drop quietly down the river, soon
+after dark, and anchor abreast the British encampment. General Coffee,
+with between six and seven hundred men, was directed to skirt the
+swamp to the left of the levee, and gain, undiscovered, the enemy's
+rear; while he himself, with thirteen hundred troops, would march
+directly down the river along the highway, and assail them in front.
+The guns of the Caroline were to be the signal for a general attack.
+She, unmolested, swept noiselessly down with the current, gained her
+position, dropped her anchors, and opened her fire. The thunder and
+blaze of her guns, as grape-shot and balls came rattling and crashing
+into the camp of the British, were the first intimation they received
+of an attack. At the same time, Generals Coffee and Jackson gave the
+orders to advance. Night had now arrived, and although there was a
+moon, the fast-rising mist from the swamps and river mingling with the
+smoke of the guns, so dimmed her light that objects could be discerned
+only a short distance, save the watch-fires of the enemy, which burned
+brightly through the gloom. Guided by these, Coffee continued to
+advance, when suddenly he was met by a sharp fire. The enemy, retiring
+before the shot of the Caroline, had left the bank of the river, not
+dreaming of a foe in their rear. Coffee was taken by surprise; but
+this brave commander had been in too many perilous scenes to be
+disconcerted, and ordering the charge to be sounded, swept the field
+before him.
+
+Again and again the British rallied, only to be driven from their
+position. At length they made a determined stand in a grove of orange
+trees, behind a ditch which was lined with a fence. But the excited
+troops charged boldly over the ditch, fence, and all, and lighting up
+the orange grove with the fire of their guns, and awakening its echoes
+with their loud huzzas, pressed fiercely after the astonished enemy,
+and forced them back to the river. Here the latter turned at bay, and
+for half an hour, maintained a determined fight. But being swept by
+such close and destructive volleys, they at length clambered down the
+levee, and turning it into a breastwork, repelled every attempt to
+dislodge them.
+
+In the mean time, Jackson had advanced along the river. Guided by the
+guns of the Caroline, and the rockets of the enemy, that rose hissing
+from the gloom, he pressed swiftly forward. He had given directions to
+move by heads of companies, and as soon as they reached the enemy, to
+deploy into line, which was to be extended till it joined that of Gen.
+Coffee, thus forcing the British back upon the river, and keeping them
+under the guns of the Caroline. But, instead of doing this, they
+formed into line at the outset. The levee being wide where the march
+commenced, no inconvenience was felt from this order; but, as it grew
+narrower, the left wing was gradually forced in, and being a little in
+advance, crowded and drove back the centre, creating confusion and
+arresting its progress. The whole, however, continued to press
+forward, and soon came upon the enemy, entrenched behind a deep ditch.
+Jackson, perceiving the advantage of their position, ordered a charge
+at once. The troops marched up to the edge of the ditch, poured one
+destructive volley over, then leaped after. The British retired behind
+another, and another, only to be again forced to retreat. At length,
+Jackson halted; the enemy had withdrawn into the darkness, the
+Caroline had almost ceased her fire, while but random volleys were
+heard in the direction of Coffee's brigade. He knew not where to renew
+the conflict, while the rapidly increasing fog shrouded everything
+in still greater darkness and uncertainty. Finding, too, that his left
+wing had got into inextricable confusion, and that a part of Coffee's
+troops were in no better condition, he determined to withdraw.
+
+While these things were passing on the banks of the Mississippi, and
+gloom and uncertainty hung over New Orleans, our commissioners at
+Ghent were wrapt in pleasant slumbers, for the next day was to witness
+the signature of a treaty of peace between the two countries, when
+the ravages of war should give place to the peaceful pursuits of
+commerce.
+
+Jackson had laid his plans with skill, and entertained no doubt of
+success; and but for the fact that the Caroline commenced her fire a
+little too early, and that the after false movement of his left wing
+prevented the rapid advance of the centre, he no doubt would have
+slain or captured nearly the whole three thousand opposed to him. But
+night attacks are always subject to failure through mistakes caused by
+the darkness, especially if the movements are at all complicated. A
+sudden, heavy onset, overturning every thing before it--a single,
+concentrated blow, like the fall of an avalanche--are best fitted for
+the night.
+
+Still, Jackson did not despair of success, and determined at daybreak
+to renew the attack. But it was soon ascertained, from prisoners and
+deserters, that by morning the enemy would be six thousand strong,
+making a disparity against him he could not hope to overcome. He
+therefore fell back to a deep ditch that stretched from the
+Mississippi, across the entire levee, to the swamp. Behind this he
+arrayed his troops, resolved, since nothing else could be done, to
+make there a determined stand. In his unsuccessful assault, he had
+lost, in killed, wounded, and prisoners, two hundred and forty men;
+while the enemy had been weakened by nearly double that number.
+
+Jackson's first plan having failed, all his hopes now rested on a
+successful defence of his position. The gun-boats had been destroyed,
+leaving the lakes open to the hostile fleet. All the passes to the
+city had been guarded in vain. Through an unimportant and almost
+unknown canal, the enemy had passed unmolested, and landed where
+nothing but undisciplined troops lay between him and the city. Too
+strong to be assailed, the British could now complete their
+arrangements and array their strength at leisure. Undismayed, however,
+and unshaken in his confidence, Jackson gathered his little band
+behind this single ditch, and coolly surveyed his chances. He knew the
+history and character of the troops opposed to him; he knew also how
+uncertain untrained militia were in a close and hot engagement. Still
+he resolved to try the issue in a great and desperate battle. No
+sooner was this determination taken, than he set about increasing the
+strength of his position with every means in his power. He deepened
+and widened the ditch; and where it terminated in the swamp, cut down
+the trees, thus extending the line still further in, to prevent being
+outflanked. The gallant Coffee was placed here, who, with his noble
+followers, day after day, and night after night, stood knee-deep in
+the mud, and slept on the brush they piled together to keep them from
+the water. Sluices were also opened in the levee, and the waters of
+the Mississippi turned on the plain, covering it breast-deep. The
+earth was piled still higher on the edge of the ditch; while cotton
+bales were brought and covered over to increase the breadth and depth
+of the breastwork.
+
+With a will unyielding as fate itself, tireless energy, and a frame of
+iron to match, Jackson no sooner set his heart on a great object, than
+he toiled towards it with a resolution--nay, almost fierceness--that
+amazed men.
+
+Night and day the soldiers were kept at work, the sound of the spade
+and pickaxe never ceased, while the constant rolling of wheels was
+heard, as wagons and carts sped to and from the city. Jackson, with
+his whole nature roused to the highest pitch of excitement, moved amid
+this busy scene, its soul and centre. Impervious to fatigue, he worked
+on when others sank to rest; and at midday and midnight, was seen
+reviewing his troops, or traversing the trenches to cheer the
+laborers; and for four days and nights scarcely took a moment's rest.
+
+In addition to the breastwork he was rearing on the east bank, he
+ordered General Morgan to take position on the right bank, opposite
+his line, and fortify it. To prevent the ships from ascending the
+river to co-operate with the army, he dispatched Major Reynolds to
+obstruct and defend the pass of Barataria--the channel through which
+they would in all probability attempt to approach.
+
+In the mean time, the British were not idle. They had deepened the
+canal through which they had effected a landing, and thus, assisted by
+the high waters of the Mississippi, been able to bring up larger
+boats, loaded with the heavy artillery.
+
+On the third day, a battery was observed, erected opposite the
+Caroline, which, after the good service she did in the night attack,
+had floated to the opposite shore, where she continued to annoy the
+enemy. Jackson knew her perilous position, but there had been no wind
+sufficiently strong to enable her to stem the rapid current; and, on
+the morning of the 27th, the battery opened on her with shells and
+red-hot shot. She was soon in a blaze; and the crew, seeing the
+attempt to save her useless, escaped to the shore. Soon after, she
+blew up.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 28.]
+
+The next day, Sir Edward Packenham ordered an attack on the American
+works. The columns advanced in beautiful order, and at the distance of
+half a mile opened their batteries, and, with bombshells and
+congreve-rockets, endeavored to send confusion among the American
+militia. But the guns of the latter were admirably served, and told
+with great effect on the exposed ranks of the enemy. The Louisiana
+sloop of war, that lay opposite the American line, swung her broadside
+so as to bear on the advancing columns, and raked them with such a
+deadly fire that the assault was abandoned, and the army returned to
+camp, with the loss of over a hundred men, while that of the Americans
+was but seven killed and eight wounded. But among the slain of the
+latter was Colonel Henderson of the Tennessee militia, a man deeply
+lamented.
+
+Events were now evidently approaching a crisis; and the anxiety and
+interest deepened daily and hourly. To add to the weight which already
+pressed the heart of Jackson, he was told that the legislature had
+become frightened, and was discussing the propriety of surrendering
+the city. He immediately sent a dispatch to Governor Clairborne,
+ordering him to watch its proceedings, and the moment such a project
+should be fairly formed, to place a guard at the door of the chamber,
+and shut the members in. In his zeal and warm-hearted patriotism, or
+through misconception of the order, the governor, making sure work of
+it, turned the whole of them _out_ of doors. Just before the execution
+of this high-handed measure, a committee of the legislature waited on
+Jackson, to inquire what he designed to do if compelled to abandon his
+position. "If," he replied, "I thought the hair of my head could
+divine what I should do, I would cut it off forthwith. Go back with
+this answer: say to your honorable body that if disaster does overtake
+me, and the fate of war drives me from my line to the city, _that they
+may expect to have a warm session_." To one who asked him afterwards
+what he would have done in such an emergency, he said, "I would have
+retreated to the city, _fired it_, and _fought the enemy amid the
+surrounding flames_." A more heroic speech never fell from the lips of
+a commander. New Orleans in flames and Jackson charging down its
+blazing streets, would have been one of the most frightful exhibitions
+furnished in the annals of the war.
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 1, 1815.]
+
+The British, after the attack of the 28th, occupied their whole time
+in landing heavier cannon. Having completed their arrangements, they
+resolved to make another attempt on the American works. The New Year
+opened with a heavy fog, which shrouded the whole plain and British
+encampment from sight. But, from its mysterious bosom, ominous,
+muffled sounds arose, which were distinctly heard in every part of the
+American line, and the troops stood to arms. At length, as the sun
+gathered strength, the fog lifted and parted--dimly revealing the
+whole plain. No sooner did the enemy, who had advanced their batteries
+within six hundred yards of the American intrenchments, see the long,
+black line of the latter, stretching through the haze, than a
+tremendous burst of artillery shook the solid levee on which it
+stood. A flight of Congreve rockets followed, crossing and recrossing
+the heavens in every direction, and weaving a fiery net-work over the
+heads of the astonished but undaunted Americans. The first heavy
+explosion sent Jackson to the lines; and luckily for him it did; for
+the British having been shown by a spy the house which he occupied,
+they directed a battery upon it, and in a few minutes it was riddled
+with balls. The American artillery replied, and it was a constant roar
+of cannon till noon, when most of the English batteries being beaten
+down or damaged, they ceased their fire. One, near the river,
+continued to play on the American works till three o'clock, when it
+also became silent, and the enemy, baffled at every point, retired
+sullenly to his camp.
+
+The two armies, each expecting reinforcements, now rested for a week
+from decisive hostilities. In the mean time, Jackson continued to
+strengthen his works and discipline his men. A Frenchman having come
+to him to complain of damage done to his property, the latter replied
+that, as he was a man of property, he knew of no one who had a better
+right to defend it, and placing a musket in his hands, ordered him
+into the ranks.
+
+During this week of comparative repose, New Orleans and the two
+hostile camps presented a spectacle of the most thrilling interest.
+The British army lay in full view of the American lines, their white
+tents looking, amid the surrounding water, like clouds of sail resting
+on the bosom of the river. At intervals were heard the sharp and
+rattling volleys of the pickets of the two armies, as they came in
+collision, while the morning and evening gun sent their stern
+challenge over the plain. There was marching and countermarching,
+strains of martial music, and all the confused sounds of a camp, when
+preparations are making for a grand and decisive blow. To the farmers,
+merchants, mechanics, and youths, who lay within the American
+intrenchments, the scene and the thoughts it awakened were new. Behind
+them stood their homes; before them, the veterans of Spain, whom, in a
+few days, they were to meet in final combat.
+
+In the city, the excitement kept increasing; but after the first
+battle, the patriotism of the population received a new impulse. In
+the night attack many of the troops had lost all their clothing except
+that which they wore on their backs, and hence soon began to suffer.
+No sooner was this known to the ladies than their fair hands were in
+motion; and in a short time the wants of the soldiers were supplied.
+
+In the mean time the long-expected Kentucky troops, upwards of two
+thousand strong, arrived. Courier after courier had been sent to hurry
+their march; and the last day had been one of incredible toil and
+speed. Only five hundred of them, however, had muskets; the rest were
+armed with fowling-pieces, and such weapons as they could lay hands
+on. Nor were there any means of supplying them, so that the accession
+of strength was comparatively trifling. Gen. Lambert, too, had
+reinforced the British with several thousand veteran troops.
+
+A canal in the mean time had been widened through the levee, by which
+boats were transported to the Mississippi for that portion of the army
+which was destined to act against the fortifications on the west bank,
+commanded by General Morgan. A long siege was out of the question, and
+now nothing remained to be done but to advance at once to the assault
+of the American intrenchments, or abandon the expedition. The latter
+alternative was not to be contemplated; and, on the night of the 7th,
+Jackson, surveying the encampment through his glass, discovered
+unmistakeable evidence that the enemy was meditating an important
+movement. The camp was in commotion; the boats which had been dragged
+through the canal, and now lay moored to the levee, were being loaded
+with artillery and munitions of war, and every thing betokened a hot
+to-morrow. Coffee still held the swamp on the left; Carroll, with his
+Tennesseans, the centre; while Jackson, with the regulars under him,
+commanded in person the right, resting on the river. Behind Carroll
+were placed the Kentuckians, under General Adair--in all, less than
+four thousand effective men. [Sidenote: Jan. 8.] This was the position
+of affairs as the Sabbath morning of the 8th of January began to dawn.
+The light had scarcely streaked the east, when the inhabitants of New
+Orleans were startled from their slumbers by an explosion of cannon
+that shook the city. The battle had opened. Under cover of the night,
+heavy batteries had been erected within eight hundred yards of the
+American intrenchments, and, the moment the fog lifted above them,
+they opened their fire. Directly after, a rocket, rising through the
+mist near the swamp, and another answering it from the shore,
+announced that all was ready. The next moment, two columns, each four
+or five thousand strong--one moving straight on Carrol's position, the
+other against the right of the intrenchments--swept steadily and
+swiftly across the plain. Three thrilling cheers rose over the dark
+intrenchments at the sight, and then all was still again.
+
+The levee here was contracted to four hundred yards in width, and as
+the columns, sixty or seventy deep, crowded over this avenue, every
+cannon on the breastwork was trained upon them by Baratarian, French
+and American engineers, and the moment they came within range, a
+murderous fire opened. Frightful gaps were made in the ranks at every
+discharge, which were closed by living men only the next moment to be
+re-opened.
+
+The Americans stood with their hands clenched around their muskets and
+rifles, gazing with astonishment on this new, unwonted spectacle. The
+calm and steady advance under such an incessant and crushing fire,
+carried with it the prestige of victory. As they approached the ditch,
+the columns swiftly, yet beautifully deployed, and under the cover of
+blazing bombs and rockets, that filled the air in every direction, and
+stooped hissing over the American works, pressed forward with loud
+cheers, to the assault. Nothing but cannon had spoken till then from
+that low breastwork; but as those two doomed columns reached the
+farthest brink of the ditch, the word "Fire!" ran along the American
+line--the next moment the intrenchments were in a blaze. It was a
+solid sheet of flame rolling on the foe. Stunned by the tremendous and
+deadly volleys, the front ranks stopped and sunk in their footsteps,
+like snow when it meets the stream. But high over the thunder of
+cannon were heard the words of command, and drums beating the charge;
+and still bravely breasting the fiery sleet, the ranks pressed
+forward, but only to melt away on the brink of that fatal ditch.
+Jackson, with flashing eye and flushed brow, rode slowly along the
+lines, cheering the men, and issuing his orders, followed by loud
+huzzas as he passed. From the effect of the American volleys, he
+knew, if the troops stood firm, the day was his own, and with stirring
+appeals and confident words he roused them to the same enthusiasm
+which animated his breast and beamed from his face. The soldiers of
+Gen. Adair, stationed in the rear of Carrol, loaded for those in
+front, so that there was no cessation to the fire. It was a constant
+flash and peal along the whole line. Every man was a marksman, every
+shot told, and no troops in the world could long withstand such a
+destructive fire. The front of battle, torn and rent, wavered to and
+fro on the plain, when Packenham galloped up, and riding bravely
+through the shaking ranks, for a moment restored order. The next
+moment he reeled from his saddle mortally wounded. Generals Gibbs and
+Keane, while nobly struggling to rally the men, were also shot down,
+and the maddened columns turned and fled. Lambert, hastening up with
+the reserve, met the fugitives, and endeavored, but in vain, to arrest
+the flight. They never halted till they reached a ditch four hundred
+yards distant, into which they flung themselves to escape the
+scourging fire that pursued them. Here he at last rallied them to
+another charge. The bleeding column, strengthened by the reserve,
+again advanced sternly but hopelessly, into the deadly fire, and
+attempted to deploy. It was a last vain effort--it was like charging
+down the mouth of a volcano, and the troops again broke and fled,
+smote at every step by the batteries.
+
+Col. Kennie led the attack against the redoubt on the right, and
+succeeded in entering, but found there his grave. Driven forth, the
+troops sought safety in flight; but the fire that pursued them was too
+fatal, and they threw themselves into a ditch, where they lay
+sheltered till night, and then stole away under cover of the darkness.
+
+The ground in front of the American intrenchments presented a
+frightful spectacle. It was red with the blood of men. The space was
+so narrow along which the enemy had advanced, that the dead literally
+cumbered the field.
+
+The sun of that Sabbath morning rose in blood, and before he had
+advanced an hour on his course, a multitude of souls "unhouseled,
+unanneled," had passed to the stillness of eternity. New Orleans never
+before witnessed such a Sabbath morning. Anxiety and fear sat on every
+countenance. The road towards the American encampment was lined with
+trembling listeners, and tearful eyes were bent on the distance to
+catch the first sight of the retreating army. But when the thunder and
+tumult ceased, and word was brought that the Americans still held the
+intrenchments, and that the British had retreated in confusion, there
+went up a long, glad shout--the bells of the churches rang out a
+joyous peal, and hope and confidence revived in every bosom.
+
+The attack on the right bank of the river had been successful, and but
+for the terrible havoc on the left shore, this stroke of good fortune
+might have changed the results of the day. The fort, from which Gen.
+Morgan had fled, commanded the interior of Jackson's entrenchments,
+and a fire opened from it would soon have shaken the steadiness of his
+troops. But Col. Thornton, who had captured it, seeing the complete
+overthrow of the main army, soon after abandoned it.
+
+The Americans, with that noble-hearted generosity which had
+distinguished them on every battle-field, hurried forth soon as the
+firing had ceased, to succor the wounded, who they knew had designed
+to riot amid their own peaceful dwellings. "Beauty and booty," was the
+watchword in an orderly-book found on the battle-field; and though
+there is not sufficient reason to believe that the city would have
+been given over to rapine and lust, yet no doubt great excesses would
+have been tolerated. The recent conduct of the English troops on the
+Atlantic coast, where no such resistance had been offered to
+exasperate them, furnished grounds for the gravest fears.
+
+The British in this attack outnumbered the Americans more than three
+to one, and yet the loss on the part of the latter was only
+_thirteen_ killed and wounded--seventy-one, all told, both sides of
+the river--while that of the former was nearly two thousand, a
+disparity unparalleled in the annals of war.
+
+The British were allowed to retreat unmolested to their ships, and the
+sails of that proud fleet, whose approach had sent such consternation
+through the hearts of the inhabitants, were seen lessening in the
+horizon with feelings of unspeakable joy and triumph. All danger had
+now passed away, and Jackson made his triumphal entry into the city.
+The bells were rung, maidens dressed in white, strewed flowers in his
+path, the heavens echoed with acclamations, and blessings unnumbered
+were poured on his head.
+
+But as there had been foes and traitors to the American cause from the
+first appearance of the British fleet, so there were those now who
+stirred up strife, and by anonymous articles published in one of the
+city papers, endeavored to sow dissensions among the troops. It would,
+no doubt, have been better for Jackson, in the fulness of his triumph,
+and in the plenitude of his power, to have overlooked this. But these
+very men he knew had acted as spies while the enemy lay before his
+entrenchments, causing him innumerable vexations, and endangering the
+cause of the country, and he determined as martial law had not yet
+been repealed, to seize the offenders. He demanded of the editor the
+name of the writer of a certain article, who proved to be a member of
+the legislature. He then applied to Judge Hall for a writ of habeas
+corpus, which was granted, and the recreant statesman was thrown into
+prison. Soon after, martial law being removed, Judge Hall issued an
+attachment against Jackson for contempt of court, and he was brought
+before him to answer interrogatories. This he refused to do, and asked
+for the sentence. The judge, still smarting under the remembrance of
+his former arrest by Jackson, fined him a thousand dollars. A burst of
+indignation followed this sentence, and as the latter turned to enter
+his carriage, the crowd around seized it, and dragged it home with
+shouts. The fine was paid immediately; but in a few hours the outraged
+citizens refunded the sum to the general. He, however, refused it,
+requesting it to be appropriated to a charitable institution. Judge
+Hall by this act secured for himself the fame of the man who, to
+figure in history, fired the temple of Delphos.
+
+The arbitrary manner in which Jackson disposed of the State
+legislature and judges of the court, became afterwards the subject of
+much discussion, and during his political life the ground of heavy
+accusations. If the question be respecting the _manner_ in which he
+assumed arbitrary power, it is not worth discussing. But if, on the
+other hand, the assumption of it at all is condemned, then the whole
+thing turns on the necessities of the case, and whether that use was
+made of it which the general good and not personal feelings required.
+That it was necessary, no one can doubt. He had a right, also, as
+commander-in-chief of the army in that section, to whom the defence of
+the southern frontier had been intrusted, to force the civil power
+into obedience to the orders of the general government. He was to
+defend and save New Orleans, and if the civil authority proved
+treacherous or weak, it was his duty to see that it did not act
+against him while plainly in the path of his duty. New Orleans so
+considered it; and six years after, the corporation appropriated fifty
+thousand dollars to the erection of a marble statue of him in the
+city. Congress thought so, when, thirty years after, it voted the
+repayment of the fine, with interest, from the date it was inflicted,
+and notwithstanding the whole matter was made a party question, it
+will not stand as such in history.
+
+Jackson remained in New Orleans till March, when he was relieved by
+General Gaines. On taking leave of his troops, who, by their cheerful
+endurance of hardships and their bravery, had become endeared to him,
+he issued an address full of encomiums on their conduct, and
+expressions of love for their character. He concluded by saying,
+"Farewell, fellow--soldiers! The expression of your General's thanks
+is feeble; but the gratitude of a country of freemen is yours--yours
+the applause of an admiring world." What a contrast does this man,
+covered with the laurels of his two recent campaigns, present to the
+captive boy in the revolutionary struggle whose hand was brutally
+gashed by a subordinate British officer, because he refused to black
+his boots! This world has changes. The lad with his eye to the
+knot-hole at Camden watching the defeat of the American army with
+anguish, and the hero gazing proudly on the flying columns of the
+veteran troops of the British empire, are the same in soul--but how
+different in position! They say, "Time sets all things even." In
+Jackson's case, the wrongs done to his family by an oppressive nation,
+and the outrages he himself had received, were terribly avenged.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 11.]
+
+At length the joyful tidings of peace reached our shores. The British
+sloop of war Favorite, chosen for her name, arrived at New York under
+a flag of truce, bearing an American and British messenger, with the
+treaty already ratified on the part of England. The unexpected news
+acted like an electrical shock on the city. It was late on Saturday
+night when the announcement was made, but in an incredible short space
+of time the whole city was in an uproar. That blessed word PEACE
+passed tremulously from lip to lip, and as if borne on the viewless
+air, was soon repeated in every dwelling. In a few minutes the
+streets were black with the excited, heaving multitudes, whose frantic
+shouts rolled like the roar of the sea through the city. In every
+direction bonfires were kindled, and as flash after flash leaped forth
+to the clouds, the deafening acclamations that followed, attested the
+unbounded joy of the people. Expresses were immediately hurried off
+north and south, and as the swift riders swept meteor-like through
+village after village, shouting "PEACE" as they sped on, the
+inhabitants sallied forth to hail the glad tidings with shouts. All
+day Sunday that electrical word "PEACE" passed like an angel of mercy
+over the towns and hamlets between New York and Boston. It swept like
+a sudden breeze through the congregations gathered for worship in the
+house of God. It imparted new fervor to the minister at the altar, and
+swelled the hymn of thanksgiving from tearful worshippers to its
+loudest, gladdest note. "PEACE," like a dove folded its wings on the
+thresholds of thousands of homes that night, turning the wintry
+fire-side into a scene of unbounded thankfulness and joy.
+
+Although news had never been carried over the country with such
+rapidity since the battle of Lexington and Concord, it did not reach
+Boston till Monday morning. The bells were at once set ringing, but
+their clamorous tongues were well nigh silenced by the louder
+rejoicings of the people. Messengers were immediately dispatched in
+every direction, sending the glad tidings on. Men forgot their
+employments--politicians their animosities in the general
+congratulation. The sea ports were suddenly gay with flags and
+streamers, and the song of the sailor blended with the sound of the
+hammer and the hum and stir of commerce. Men forgot to ask on what
+terms peace had been obtained--the joy at its unexpected announcement
+obliterated for the time all other thoughts and considerations.
+
+At Washington the pleasure was more subdued, for the politicians there
+knew that after the first enthusiasm had subsided every one would ask
+what were the terms of the treaty.
+
+But although the administration had provoked Fortune beyond all
+forbearance, she seemed resolved not to desert it, and brought, nearly
+at the same time, the news of the victory of New Orleans, to solace
+the national pride for an indefinite and unsatisfactory treaty.
+
+The delegates from the Hartford Convention arrived in Washington just
+in time to hear the confirmation of the victory and the peace, and
+without delivering their message, stole quietly back to New England,
+lighted by illuminated cities and towns, and stunned by acclamations,
+on their way. Their enemies were too full of happiness to attack them,
+still the National Advocate of New York, edited by Mr. Wheaton, could
+not refrain from indulging in a little pleasantry at their expense,
+and inserted an advertisement: "Missing--three well-looking,
+respectable men, who appeared to be travelling towards Washington, and
+suddenly disappeared from Gadzby's hotel, Baltimore, on Monday evening
+last, and have not since been heard from. They were observed to be
+very melancholic on hearing the news of peace, and one of them was
+heard to say, '_Poor Caleb Strong_,' &c. "Whoever will give any
+information of these unfortunate, tristful gentlemen to the Hartford
+Convention, will confer a favor on humanity." The National
+Intelligencer copied it, stating that those gentlemen had been seen in
+Washington, but their business was not known. One of them, however,
+was heard to groan, "_Othello's occupation's gone_."
+
+But after the first excitement passed away, men began to inquire in
+what way, and on what conditions, the government had delivered the
+country from the evils of war, and crowned it with the blessings of
+peace.
+
+We had apparently gained nothing. Our quarrel rested mainly on two
+points--first, the right of blockade as claimed and exercised under
+the orders in Council, and the right of impressment, as practiced on
+the high seas; yet no limits had been prescribed to the former, and
+no guarantees given against the latter. These great points of dispute
+were left untouched, and by the treaty the two countries stood
+precisely as they did at the commencement of the war; all (conquered
+territory on either side was to be restored) with the exception that
+for the surrender of a useless right--the navigation of the
+Mississippi--England deprived us of the valuable privilege heretofore
+conceded, of catching and curing fish on the coast of the Gulf of St.
+Lawrence. The title to the islands in the Passamaquoddy bay--the exact
+course of the boundary line running from the Atlantic coast to the
+river St. Lawrence--the line thence to the Lake of the Woods--were to
+be referred to three separate commissions, and in case of their
+disagreement, to some friendly power for final adjustment. The
+question of fisheries in the seas bordering on the British provinces,
+and the boundary line west of the Lake of the Woods were left without
+any provision for their settlement.
+
+One would naturally think that a treaty which in its stipulations thus
+silently passed over the very questions in dispute, and for which so
+much valiant blood had been shed and such a loss of life and treasure
+endured, would have been met with open condemnation, or at least with
+sullen acquiescence. On the contrary, however, its ratification was
+signalized by public rejoicings, and the most extravagant
+manifestations of delight. The astonishing victory at New Orleans
+required us to be generous, and a nation which had thus vindicated its
+rights on sea and land, could afford to drop an unpleasant subject
+just where the discussion had begun. Such seemed to be the general
+feeling. At first sight, this settlement of the difficulties between
+the two countries appeared contemptible. Abstractly considered it was,
+and if we had been a weak nation, sinking into degeneracy, it would
+have proved so.
+
+But in judging of it we must remember that treaty stipulations in
+continental diplomacy, like flags of truce in Mexico, depend almost
+entirely on circumstances whether they are regarded or not, and hence
+the _circumstances_ are more important than written stipulation.
+European treaties, like European diplomacy, have in the past, served
+only to illustrate the duplicity and faithlessness of monarchs. The
+question is, how events in their progress have settled the
+difficulties, as _fate_ settles them, and not as commissioners.
+
+Now it was evident, both to the English and American commissioners,
+that articles on neutral rights and the impressment of seamen, were
+useless. Our navy and privateers had disposed of those questions, for
+ever. Our broadsides furnished better guaranties than strips of
+parchment, adorned with impressions of regal seals.
+
+It was the fact that those two great causes of hostility, violation of
+neutral rights and impressment of seamen, were practically and
+permanently disposed of, which reconciled the nation to their omission
+in the treaty. Our people pay no attention to forms, only so far as
+they sanction their just claims. In this view, the acquiescence in the
+treaty, instead of exhibiting humility and fear on our part, indicate
+quite the reverse. Nothing can be more erroneous than to suppose that
+because those rights, for the protection of which we had gone to war,
+were not mentioned in the treaty, we therefore had concluded to waive
+them. On the contrary, we consented to leave them unnoticed, _because_
+we knew we had _obtained_ them forever. No one in England or the
+United States doubted that these were definitely settled, and those
+who sneeringly ask "what we gained by the war?" make the letter
+equivalent to the spirit, a form more important than a fact. The
+simple truth is, we got what we fought for, and it exhibits a narrow
+spirit to say, that because it was not engrossed on parchment it
+amounted virtually to nothing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ Cruise of the Constitution -- Action with the Cyane and
+ Levant -- Chased by a British fleet -- England's views of
+ neutral rights and the law of nations -- Her honor and
+ integrity at a discount -- Singular escape of the
+ Constitution -- Recapture of the Levant under the guns of a
+ neutral port -- Lampoons on the English squadron for its
+ contemptible conduct -- Decatur -- Capture of the President
+ -- The Hornet captures the Penguin -- Chased by a ship of
+ the line -- Narrow escape -- Cruise of the Peacock -- Review
+ of the American Navy -- Its future destiny.
+
+
+Naval warfare did not cease with the peace, for it was a long time
+before all our cruisers received notice of it.
+
+The old Constitution, when Bainbridge gave up the command of her in
+1813, was put on the stocks to undergo repairs, and did not get to sea
+again till 1814, when, under the command of Captain Stewart, she
+cruised southward, without meeting any vessel of her own size.
+[Sidenote: 1814.] She took the Nector, a war schooner of fourteen
+guns, and a few merchantmen, and returned to Boston. On the 17th of
+December she again put to sea, and cruised off the coast of Portugal.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 20, 1815.]
+
+Not meeting with the enemy, Captain Stewart, on the 20th of February,
+1815, stood off south-west towards Madeira, and in the afternoon made
+two strange sail. He immediately started in pursuit of the nearest,
+hoping to overtake her before she could join her consort. The moment,
+however, the stranger discovered the Constitution, he stood away under
+every stitch of canvass he could spread. The Constitution also "set
+studding sails alow and aloft," and under a perfect cloud of canvass,
+bowled along at a tremendous rate. At length the main royal mast of
+the latter gave way in the strain, which gave the stranger so much the
+advantage that he effected a junction with his consort. The two then
+hailed each other, "came by the wind, hauled up their courses," and
+cleared for action. They were the Cyane, carrying thirty-four guns,
+and the Levant, twenty-one--the crew of the former numbering one
+hundred and eighty men, the latter one hundred and fifty-six.
+
+They manoeuvered for some time to get to the windward, but finding
+this impossible they awaited the approach of the American, who had now
+set his colors. It was a bright moonlight night, and the two English
+vessels presented a beautiful spectacle, as they lay rising and
+falling on the long swell, gallantly turned at bay. As the
+Constitution approached, they cheered, and fired their broadsides. No
+answer was given. In stern and ominous silence the invincible frigate
+moved on, and ranging up about three hundred yards distant from the
+Cyane, delivered her broadside. So ready and eager were the men to
+fire, that when the order was given, the whole broadside was like the
+report of a single gun. She had taken her position to windward, and so
+as to form with the two vessels nearly an equilateral triangle, and in
+this masterly position flung her heavy metal against both alike. From
+the first gun the action became fierce and the cannonading incessant.
+After the lapse of fifteen minutes the fire of the enemy slackened,
+and Captain Stewart, unable to see their whereabouts, from the cloud
+of smoke that enveloped his ship, ordered the cannonading to cease
+till it passed off. In three minutes it lifted and rolled away before
+the wind, and he saw that the vessels had changed their position, the
+Levant being abeam, while the Cyane was evidently endeavoring to cross
+his wake and give him a raking fire. Instantly delivering a broadside
+to the vessel abeam, he by one of those sudden and prompt movements on
+which the fate of a vessel or an army often turns, threw his mizen and
+main sails flat aback, "shook all forward," let fly his jib sheet, and
+backed so swiftly astern[9] that the vessel was compelled to tack or
+be raked herself. While doing this the other ship attempted to cross
+his bows for the same purpose. The Constitution was again too quick
+for her, for as if by magic the yards swung round to the hearty "Yo,
+heave oh!" of the sailors--the sails filled, and bowing to the breeze,
+she shot ahead, compelling the vessel to ware under a tremendous and
+raking broadside, which cut her up so terribly that she had to run out
+of the action to repair damages. He had scarcely delivered this
+crushing blow when he was told the largest ship was waring. He
+instantly gave orders to ware also, and crossing the enemy's stern,
+raked her as he passed. He then ranged up alongside, when she struck,
+and Lieutenant Hoffman was put in command of her.
+
+[Footnote 9: Vide Cooper.]
+
+The Levant, in the mean time, having repaired her rigging, hauled up
+again to seek her consort, when she met the Constitution coming down.
+She immediately bore away, receiving as she did so, a raking
+broadside. The Constitution followed in her wake, firing, and
+following so close that the ripping of the enemy's planks, as the shot
+tore through them, could be distinctly heard on her decks. This, of
+course, could not be endured long, and a gun was soon fired to
+leeward, in token of submission.
+
+The loss of the enemy, in this action, was between sixty and seventy,
+while that of the Constitution was only fifteen. The latter, however,
+was hulled thirteen times, showing very accurate firing by moonlight.
+
+The masterly manner in which Captain Stewart handled his vessel, so
+that, large and unwieldy as she was, he thwarted every manoeuvre to
+rake him, and raked both his enemies successively, proved him to be a
+thorough seaman and an able commander.
+
+[Sidenote: 1815.]
+
+The Constitution proceeded with her two prizes to Port Praya, in St.
+Jago, where she arrived the 10th of March. The next day while
+Lieutenant Shubrick was walking the quarter-deck, he heard one of the
+prisoners, a midshipman, exclaim: "There is a frigate in the offing!"
+This was followed by a low subdued reprimand from an English captain.
+Shubrick's suspicions were awakened, and he looked earnestly seaward.
+A heavy fog lay close on the water, diminishing into a haze as it left
+the surface, so that the spars of a ship could be seen, while her hull
+was obscured. Through this he saw the dim outlines of the sails of a
+large vessel, evidently standing in, and immediately went below and
+reported the circumstance to Captain Stewart. The latter ordered him
+to call all hands and make ready to go in chase of her. Shubrick had
+scarcely given the orders when he saw the sails of two other vessels
+above the fog. Stewart gave them one glance and saw immediately they
+were heavy men-of-war. Though in a neutral port, and by the law of
+nations safe from attack, he was well aware that it would not avail
+him. So low had the honor of the English nation sunk in the estimation
+of independent States, that weak neutral powers knew they would not
+be allowed to afford the protection which it was their right and duty
+to extend, while our naval commanders had ceased to expect the
+recognition of those rights, guarantied by the usage of civilized
+governments. Captain Stewart immediately signalled the Cyane and
+Levant to put to sea, and cutting his own cables, not waiting even to
+take in his boats, he ordered the sails sheeted home. In ten minutes
+the gallant frigate was standing out of the roads, followed by her
+prizes.
+
+This silent declaration that men could no longer rely on the honor and
+good faith of his majesty's officers, in respecting the law of nations
+or the rights of neutral powers, was one of the most cutting rebukes
+that could have been uttered. It was well that Captain Stewart rated
+these qualities so low, or he doubtless would have been attacked and
+overcome, though, under the guns of the battery of the port. No doubt
+the Constitution would have fought worthy of her old renown, and like
+the Essex, in the Bay of Valparaiso, gained more honor in her death
+than in her life.
+
+As Stewart stood out to windward, the three vessels, which he
+afterwards learned to be the Leander and Newcastle of 50, and the
+Acasta of 40 guns, crowded all sail in chase. Stewart then cut adrift
+his cutter and gig, towing astern, and set every sail that would draw.
+Under the north-east trades that were then blowing, the Constitution
+was soon rushing along at a tremendous rate, outsailing all her
+pursuers but the Acasta. But Stewart, perceiving that the Cyane was
+steadily losing ground, and if she kept her course must evidently be
+captured, made signal for her to tack, which was instantly obeyed. Not
+a vessel, however, was detached in pursuit, as he had expected, but
+the whole three kept on after the Constitution and Levant. In an hour
+and a half the Newcastle got within gun-shot, and began to fire by
+divisions, rending the fog with flame, but leaving the Constitution
+unharmed. A half an hour after, Stewart, who with his glass in his
+hand had incessantly walked the quarter-deck, watching the movements
+of the enemy and their progress, saw that the Levant, if she held her
+course, would soon be captured, made signal for her to tack also.
+
+The foam rolled with a seething sound from the bows of the
+Constitution as she rushed rapidly through the water, but it was
+evident that the Acasta, which had fallen in her wake, could outsail
+her. An engagement with this vessel was apparently inevitable, and
+unless Stewart could prolong the chase till she was drawn so far from
+the others as to enable him to close with and carry her before they
+came up, he must be taken. But to his astonishment the whole three
+turned in pursuit of the Levant, leaving him to sail away unmolested.
+
+[Sidenote: April 10.]
+
+The Cyane, in the mean time, had disappeared in the fog, and finding
+that she was shut out of view, changed her course, and escaping the
+enemy, finally arrived safely in New York. The Levant, however, was
+not so fortunate. Seeing herself closely pressed, she put back to
+port, and though receiving the enemy's fire, stood on till she
+anchored within 150 yards of the shore, and under the very guns of a
+powerful battery. Disregarding her position which rendered her
+inviolable, the three vessels continued to approach, firing as they
+did so, throwing their shot even into the town, doing considerable
+damage. Lieutenant Shubrick, finding that the battery would not
+protect him, and that the enemy had no intention of respecting the
+neutrality of the port, struck his flag. The firing, however,
+continued for some time after.
+
+The English officer, when he came on board to take possession of her,
+supposed she was an American vessel, but to his great chagrin found
+that the whole squadron had succeeded, after a chase of several hours,
+in recapturing a prize in a neutral port.
+
+"Old Ironsides" swept proudly onward over the ocean, remaining
+unconquered to the last, the glory of the navy and the boast of the
+land.
+
+The news of the victory over the Cyane and Levant, and the after
+chase, reached New York from St. Bartholomews, without giving the
+results, and it was feared for a time that she had fallen into the
+hands of the enemy. When her safety was ascertained the exultation was
+great, for she was a great favorite, and had become deeply fixed in
+the affections of the people. As she came sweeping up Boston harbor,
+crowds gathered to the shore, answering with deafening cheers the
+thunder of her guns, as they broke over the bay.
+
+The abandonment of this frigate by the whole English squadron, to
+chase a single ship, furnished the occasion of many witticisms,
+levelled against the English officers. They reported that they lost
+her in a fog, but if either vessel had kept on alone, Captain Stewart
+would have been careful not to have been lost, and when a safe
+distance from the others had been obtained, allowed himself to be
+easily overtaken.[10]
+
+[Footnote 10: One "SQUIB" represented King George as walking his lawn
+one morning, anxiously waiting to hear the success of this squadron,
+which he had sent out expressly to capture the Ironsides, when the
+three captains of the vessels that chased her presented themselves.
+King George, in his peculiar manner, asks:--
+
+ "with sparkling eyes,
+ 'Hey! hey! what news? what news? hey! hey! he cries--
+ His Majesty to hear, was all agog;
+ When Stuart--Collins--Kerr--with crimsoned face
+ Thus spake--'We gave the Constitution chase,
+ And, oh! great sire, we lost her in _a fog_!'
+
+ "'Fog! fog! _what fog? hey! Stuart, what fog? say!_
+ _So then the foe escaped you, Stuart? hey!_'
+ 'Yes, please your Majesty, and hard our fate'--
+ 'But why not, Stuart, _different courses steer_?'
+ Stuart replied, (impute it not to fear,)
+ 'WE THOUGHT IT PRUDENT NOT TO SEPARATE.'"]
+
+[Sidenote: 1815.]
+
+The President, that did not get to sea till the middle of January, or
+just before the news of peace was received, was more unfortunate.
+Commodore Rodgers, during the summer, had been transferred from that
+vessel to the Guerriere, and Decatur took the command. The latter,
+with the United States and Macedonian, had been blockaded, as before
+stated, all summer at New London, where he had challenged Captain
+Hardy to meet him ship with ship, or to make a match between the
+United States and Macedonian, and the Endymion and Statira.
+
+Although he took command in the summer, he did not go to sea till
+mid-winter, when with the Hornet, which had run the blockade at New
+London in November, the Peacock, and store ship Tom Bowline, he
+prepared for a long cruise to the East Indies. [Sidenote: Jan. 14.]
+The President dropped down to Sandy Hook on the night of the 14th, but
+in attempting to cross the bar struck, and lay thumping for an hour
+and a half before she swung clear. She was evidently damaged by the
+shock, but Decatur thought it best to keep on, as a heavy storm the
+day before had driven the blockading squadron southward.
+
+Before daylight, next morning, he discovered a sail ahead, and two
+hours later two more, and when daylight made more distant objects
+visible, four vessels were seen, crowding all sail in chase. The
+President was heavily laden for a long voyage, which with the damage
+she had received on the bar, impeded very much her sailing. Still,
+with a stiff breeze, she might have distanced her pursuers, for with
+the wind light and baffling, the nearest vessel, the Majestic, a
+razee, was thrown astern. But the Endymion, forty, the next nearest
+vessel, evidently outsailed her, and was fast closing. Decatur then
+called all hands to lighten the ship. The anchors were cut away,
+provisions, cables, spars, boats, and every thing on which hands could
+be laid were thrown overboard, and the sails kept wet from the royals
+down, to hold the tantalizing wind. It was impossible in such hasty
+unloading to keep the vessel trim, and while it was being done she
+very probably sailed slower than before. The wind, however, was so
+light, that both frigates made slow headway, and it was not till the
+middle of the afternoon that the Endymion closed sufficiently to open
+her fire. The President answered with stern guns, and a running fight
+was kept up till five o'clock, when the former was within half
+gun-shot and on the quarter of the latter, which, of course, could not
+bring a gun to bear. Decatur, in this position, bore the fire of the
+frigate for half an hour, when he resolved to carry her by boarding,
+and escape. But the Endymion kept her advantageous position, so that
+he could not carry his bold and gallant resolution into effect, and
+as a last resort he determined at dusk to close, and so cripple her
+before the rest of the vessels arrived, that she must abandon the
+pursuit. Coming up abeam he poured in his broadsides, and for two
+hours and a half, running free all the time, the two vessels kept up a
+close and heavy cannonade. At half-past eight the Endymion was
+completely dismantled, while the President was under royal studding
+sails, and able to choose her own position. Twenty minutes more would
+have finished the English frigate, for she was too much cut up to be
+manageable; but the other vessels were now close at hand, and the
+President hauled up to resume her course. In doing this the vessel was
+exposed to a raking broadside, but not a gun was fired. She then
+crowded all sail, but at eleven o'clock was overhauled by the Pomone
+and Tenedos and Majestic, the former of which poured in a broadside
+within musket shot. Resistance, in the President's crippled state was
+hopeless, and the flag was struck. Decatur surrendered his sword to
+the commander of the Majestic, nearly four hours before the Endymion
+came up, and yet the captain of the latter claimed the victory, and to
+this day the arrogant assertion finds endorsers in England. One vessel
+goes out of an action with royal studding sails set and surrenders to
+a superior force, so far from the spot where it took place that it
+requires nearly four hours steady sailing for the other to get up,
+and yet the latter is declared the victor![11]
+
+[Footnote 11: Mr. Alison asserts that the President was completely
+beaten before the arrival of the other vessels.]
+
+This absurd pretence, however, was completely set at rest by a
+document signed by the officers of the Pomona, and published at
+Bermuda, whither the fleet sailed. After giving the details of the
+chase, they say the running fight between the President and Endymion
+ceased "at half-past eight, the Endymion falling astern--Pomona
+passing her at half-past eight. At eleven, being within gun-shot of
+the President," &c. "At _three-quarters_ past twelve the Endymion came
+up," &c.
+
+Both these vessels were dismasted in a hurricane before reaching
+Bermuda, six days after. The Peacock, Hornet, and Tom Bowline, put to
+sea and sailed for the island of Triston d'Acunha, the place of
+rendezvous appointed by Decatur. The Peacock and Tom Bowline arrived
+first. The Hornet having parted company in chase of a vessel, did not
+come in till the 23d of March. [Sidenote: 1815.] Just as she was about
+to anchor, the watch aft sung out "Sail ho!" The sails were
+immediately sheeted home again, and the Hornet bore swiftly down
+towards the stranger. The latter did not shun the combat, but coming
+to, set her colors and fired a challenge gun. The vessel was the
+Penguin, of the size and metal of the Hornet, with some additional
+equipments, which made her of superior force. There was not the
+difference of a dozen men in the crews. A more decisive single combat
+could not have been arranged, if the sole purpose of it had been to
+test the seamanship and real practical superiority of the American
+navy, for the Penguin had been fitted up and sent out for the sole
+purpose of encountering and capturing the Wasp, a heavier and newer
+vessel than the Hornet.
+
+There was no manoeuvring--from the first gun to the last, it was a
+steady broadside to broadside engagement, the vessels gradually
+drifting nearer as they fired. The Hornet was wrapped in flame from
+stem to stern, so incessant were her discharges, and in fifteen
+minutes the commander of the Penguin, finding that he would soon be a
+total wreck, put up his helm to board, and surged with a heavy crash
+full on the Hornet's quarter. The first lieutenant immediately called
+on his men to board, but they would not follow him. The American crew
+then wished to board, in turn, but Captain Biddle, seeing that his
+guns were rending the enemy in pieces, restrained their ardor, and
+recommenced firing. The sea was heavy, and as the two vessels rose and
+fell together on the huge swell, the strain was so great that the
+Penguin carried away the Hornet's mizen rigging and spanker boom, and
+swung round against her quarter. While in this position, an English
+officer cried out that he surrendered. Captain Biddle then ordered the
+firing to cease, and leaping on the taffrail, inquired if the vessel
+had struck. Two marines on the enemy's forecastle levelled their
+pieces at him and fired--the ball of one entering his neck, inflicting
+a painful wound. Enraged at this treacherous act, the crew of the
+Hornet poured in a sudden volley of musketry, which stretched the two
+marines dead on the deck. In the same moment the vessels parted, the
+Hornet forging ahead, carrying the enemy's bowsprit and foremast with
+her. The latter then wore, and was about to pour in a raking
+broadside, when twenty men rushed to the side of the ship, lifting up
+their hands and calling for quarter. It was with the greatest
+difficulty Captain Biddle could restrain his men, so excited were they
+at the attempt on their commander's life.
+
+The loss of the Penguin in this short action was forty-two killed and
+wounded, while the Hornet had but a single man killed and only ten
+wounded. Among the latter was Lieutenant (since Commodore) Conner,
+who, though helpless and bleeding, refused to leave the deck till the
+enemy struck. This disparity shows in a striking manner the superior
+gunnery of the American navy.
+
+The Penguin was dreadfully cut up, and Captain Biddle, unable to man
+her, scuttled and sunk her. Converting the Tom Bowline into a cartel
+to take the prisoners to St. Salvador, he, with Captain Harrington of
+the Peacock, waited the arrival of the President. But these two
+commanders soon received information which convinced them that Decatur
+had, in all probability, fallen into the hands of the enemy.
+[Sidenote: April 13.] They, therefore, soon as the time fixed by him
+had expired, proceeded on the original cruise, steering for the Indian
+Seas. On the 27th, the Peacock, which was ahead, made signal that a
+strange vessel was in sight, when all sail was set in chase. At night
+it fell calm, but a stiff breeze arising with the sun, the chase
+recommenced and continued till near three o'clock, when the Peacock,
+about six miles ahead, appeared to be moving cautiously, as if
+suspicious that all was not right. From the first, the chase was
+supposed to be a homeward bound East Indiaman, as they were now in the
+track of those vessels. The sailors of the Hornet were consequently
+very much elated with the prospect of so rich a prize, declaring that
+they would carpet the berth deck with India silk, and murmuring that
+the Peacock sailed so much faster, as she would have the first chance
+at the plunder.
+
+These pleasant anticipations suffered a sudden collapse when the
+Peacock, at half-past three, signalled that the stranger was an enemy
+and a line-of-battle ship. Notwithstanding the danger, there was
+something inconceivably ludicrous in the blank consternation that fell
+on the ship, exhibited in rueful countenances, the long-drawn whistle
+or laconic emphatic expression. The next moment, however, all was
+bustle and confusion--quick and sharp orders rung over the vessel, she
+was hauled upon the wind, and made off as fast as wind and sail could
+bear her. The Peacock, being a very fast sailer, soon left the enemy
+behind. Not so with the Hornet; although she spread every yard of
+canvass that would draw, it was evident by eight at night the
+man-of-war was gaining on her. An hour after all hands were turned to
+to lighten the ship. An anchor and cable first went over with some
+heavy spare spars and rigging. The ward-room was then scuttled to get
+at the kentledge, twelve tons of which were thrown overboard. Still
+the enemy gained, and his huge proportions loomed threateningly
+through the gloom, filling the crew of the gallant little Hornet with
+the keenest anxiety. It was a state of painful suspense to Captain
+Biddle and his officers, and they watched with sinking hearts the
+steady approach of their formidable foe. At day dawn he was within
+gun-shot, and soon after, hoisting to the mizen-top-gallant-mast
+English colors and a rear-admiral's flag, he opened with his bow
+guns. Captain Biddle then ordered the remaining anchors cut away, the
+cables heaved overboard, together with more kentledge, shot,
+provision, the launch and six guns. The firing was kept up for four
+hours, most of the shot overreaching the Hornet. Perceiving at length,
+that his firing deadened the wind, and hence his headway, the enemy
+ceased it at 11 o'clock, and soon again began to overhaul the chase.
+Captain Biddle then gave the reluctant order to throw over all the
+remaining guns but one, with the muskets, cutlasses, etc., in short,
+every thing above and below that could lighten the ship. Still his
+formidable antagonist steadily gained upon him, and at noon was within
+three quarters of a mile, when he opened with round and grape shot and
+shells, which dashed the spray about the little Hornet, yet most
+marvellously missed her. The water was smooth and it seemed that every
+shot would strike, yet only three hit the vessel. At this critical
+period of the chase the excitement of the crew was intense--the sails
+were watched with the keenest solicitude, while the sailors were
+ordered to lie down on the quarter deck to trim the vessel. It was
+impossible that the Hornet's spars and sails could long escape this
+close and incessant cannonade; and Captain Biddle, knowing that the
+first mishap to either must be the signal to strike his flag, called
+his fatigued crew about him, and after commending their good conduct
+in the long chase, expressed the hope they would still behave with the
+propriety which had always marked their character, now that their
+capture was almost certain. Those gallant tars saw the quivering lip
+of their noble commander when he spoke of capture, and scarcely a dry
+eye was seen on deck. He resolved, however, not to cease his efforts
+so long as a ray of hope remained, and held on his sluggish course
+amid the raining shot, his eye now turned aloft to see if the rigging
+and spars were still safe, and now towards the horizon that, to his
+delight, was getting black and squally.
+
+At length, after enduring this firing for two hours, expecting every
+moment to be crippled, he saw with irrepressible joy the wind change
+to a favorable quarter and freshen. His vessel then began to creep
+away from his pursuer. As the distance increased between them, joy and
+hope lighted up the countenances of all on board the Hornet, and the
+gathering squalls and rising sea were hailed as deliverers. At sunset
+the man-of-war was three miles astern. In the intervals of the squalls
+his huge proportions could be seen all night long against the sky,
+still crowding sail in pursuit. But the Hornet was now running nine
+knots an hour, and by daylight had gained so much that the stranger,
+a few hours after, abandoned the chase.
+
+Her escape seemed miraculous; for when the man-of-war opened his fire
+the second time upon her he was as near as the United States ever got
+to the Macedonian before the latter was a total wreck.
+
+Without guns or shot, stripped of every thing, Captain Biddle retraced
+his steps and reached New York the last day of July.
+
+The Peacock continued her course and cruised for some time in the
+straits of Sunda, where she made three captures. On the last of June
+she encountered the Nautilus, of 14 guns, which after a single
+broadside surrendered. Learning from the commander of the latter that
+peace had been declared, Captain Warrington immediately restored the
+vessel.
+
+This was the last vessel captured during the war, and the combat
+between the Hornet and the Penguin was the last regular action. Thus
+our little navy commenced and closed its career with a victory. In
+fact its history had been reports of victories. So constant and
+astounding had they become, that for a long time before the war closed
+England ceased to publish official accounts of her naval defeats. In
+the first flush of indignation at these reverses on the sea, the
+English repelled with scorn the implication that they had at last
+found a successful rival. Excuses and reasons for them were ample,
+and fairer experiments were demanded before so humiliating a thought
+should be entertained. Our ships, they said, were falsely rated, and
+in those first single contests the equality was merely nominal, not
+real. The ignorant and conceited maintained their arrogant, boastful
+tone to the end; but as the war advanced the more reflecting felt that
+the repeated victories gained by us could not be swept away by
+assertions that the world would not reason as they wished it to, and
+were compelled to admit that their "moral effect was astounding." Well
+it might be. We know of nothing in the annals of civilized warfare
+compared to the boldness and success of our little navy during the
+war. The battles of the Nile and Trafalgar, which had covered the
+English fleets with glory, had been for years ringing over our land.
+Flushed with victory and confident of success, they bore down on our
+coast. With only a handful of ships to offer against this overwhelming
+force, our commanders nevertheless stood boldly out to sea, and flung
+their flags of defiance to the breeze. The world looked with amazement
+on the rashness that could provoke so unequal a strife; but while it
+waited to hear that our little navy was blown out of the water, the
+news came of the loss of the Guerriere. Report after report of
+victories gained by us, followed with stunning rapidity. "The English
+were defeated on their own element," was the universal exclamation,
+and her indisputed claim to the seas was broken forever. The courage
+that could bear up against such fearful odds and pluck the wreath of
+victory from the English navy, has covered the commanders of that time
+with abiding honors. Our rights were restored--our commerce
+protected--and the haughty bearing of England towards us chastized
+from her forever. The British flag had been lowered so often to the
+"stars and stripes," that respect and fear usurped the place of
+contempt and pride.
+
+The true reasons of our success are to be found in our superior
+gunnery and the greater aptitude of the Americans for the sea. We are
+a maritime people, and have since outstripped England in the peaceful
+paths of commerce as much as we outmanoeuvred, outsailed, and beat her
+in the war. Whether the ships of the two countries dash side by side
+in fraternal feeling through the heavy floes of the northern seas, or
+in a spirit of rivalry press together across the Atlantic, or sweep
+where the monsoons blow, ours still lead those of England. The
+elements of such a maritime nation as ours is destined to be, have
+never existed since the creation. Let the rate of progress which her
+commerce has maintained for the last thirty-five years be as a rule to
+gauge where she will be thirty-five years hence, and the mind is
+amazed at the result.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+PRIVATEERS.
+
+ Character and daring of our Privateers -- Skill of American
+ seamen -- Acts of Congress relative to privateering -- Names
+ of ships -- Gallant action of the "Nonsuch" -- Success of
+ the Dolphin -- Cruise of the Comet -- Narrow escape of the
+ "Governor Tompkins" -- Desperate action of the Globe with
+ two brigs -- The Decatur takes a British sloop of war --
+ Action of the Neufchatel with the crew of the Endymion --
+ Desperate defence of Captain Reed against the crews of a
+ British squadron -- The Chasseur captures a British schooner
+ of war -- Character of the commanders of privateers --
+ Anecdote.
+
+
+Notwithstanding the navy won such laurels during the war, the chief
+damage done to British commerce was inflicted by our privateers. A
+history of that period is therefore incomplete without a record of
+their acts. Nothing ever brought out the daring seamanship, skill,
+fertility of resource and stubborn bravery, so characteristic of our
+sailors, as the management of those private armed vessels. Scarcely
+was war declared before they began to shoot one after another from
+out our ports, and disappeared in the distant horizon. Trade being
+prostrated, merchants fitted up their idle ships with picked crews and
+skillful commanders, and sent them forth to vex the enemy's commerce.
+Our vessels at that time, as now, being swifter sailers than the
+English, these bold rovers asked only an open sea and a gale of wind
+to outstrip their pursuers, or overtake those in flight. Their sails
+were seen skirting the horizon in every direction--now saucily looking
+into the enemy's ports to see what was going on there, and again
+sweeping boldly through the English channels. They seemed
+ubiquitous--every pathway of commerce was familiar to them, and they
+passed from sea to sea, appearing and disappearing with a suddenness
+and celerity that baffled pursuit. Sometimes one of these light armed
+vessels would slyly hover about a whole fleet of merchantmen, convoyed
+by a stately frigate, under whose guns they clustered for protection,
+until a favorable opportunity occurred, when she would suddenly dash
+into their midst like a hawk into a brood of chickens, and seizing
+one, man her and be off before the frigate could sufficiently recover
+from its astonishment at such audacity to attempt pursuit. It
+sometimes occurred that she would find herself alongside a frigate
+which she had mistaken for a large merchantman, when a seamanship and
+coolness would be exhibited in the effort to get clear, seldom
+witnessed in the oldest naval commanders. If unable to escape she
+would gallantly set her colors and fight a hopeless, yet one of the
+most desperate battles that occur in maritime warfare. The way in
+which these ships were handled, the daring manner they were carried
+into action, and the desperation with which they were fought
+astonished the English, who had never witnessed any thing like it on
+the sea. Sweeping waters covered with British cruisers, with scarcely
+a safe neutral port to enter in case of distress--shut out from their
+own harbors by blockade, they were compelled to exercise the most
+unceasing watchfulness, and keep in a state of constant preparation.
+
+It was a gallant sight to witness one of these little cruisers,
+apparently surrounded by an enemy's squadron, and yet dashing through
+its midst, fly away before the wind, while the water around was driven
+into foam by the shot that sped after her. Their conduct and success
+throughout the war, revealed the vast resources at the command of our
+navy. We have only to build ships, not educate sailors. Our commerce
+pierces to every clime, and our fisheries extend beyond the Arctic
+Circle; and, hardened by exposure and taught by experience and perils,
+our sailors are thoroughly trained in all the duties of their calling.
+Crews that the commanders of men-of-war might well be proud of, are
+at this moment afloat in every part of the world. On mere call we
+could man the navies of Europe with well instructed men. One great
+difficulty with the French navy is, that during war she has no where
+to go for recruits. Her sailors require a long training, while ours
+have been trained from boyhood.
+
+Privateering has been denounced as unworthy of civilized nations, but
+if the object of maritime warfare be to destroy the enemy's commerce,
+it is difficult to see why a private armed vessel should not be
+commissioned to do it as well as a national one. If it be plundering
+private property on the high seas, so is the capture of merchantmen by
+men-of-war. The sailors in both are stimulated by the same motives,
+viz., prize money. If maritime war was to be carried on between
+national vessels alone, and commerce be left untouched, there would be
+little use for a navy. Ports are blockaded to injure commerce and
+weaken the resources of the enemy; so are fleets of merchantmen
+captured, supplies cut off and nations distressed for the same
+purpose. And if this is to be done, it seems hardly worth quarrelling
+about who shall do it.
+
+Our fleet was so small at the commencement of the war, that the
+balance of injury and loss would have been heavy against us, but for
+our privateers. Our large vessels were soon blockaded in port, and the
+contest on the seas was for some time almost wholly carried on by
+privateers, and of the more than two thousand vessels captured during
+its progress, the greater part was taken by them. A single privateer
+would slip through a blockading squadron, stand out to sea, and in a
+few weeks destroy vessels and seize property to the amount of
+millions. At one time they cruised so daringly in the English waters,
+that sixty dollars was paid in England to insure five hundred across
+the Irish Channel. Some of them fought British national vessels and
+captured them, while it scarcely ever happened that an American
+privateer struck to an English vessel, when there was any
+approximation to an equality of force. Of the twenty-three naval
+engagements during the war, where either one or both were national
+vessels, the Americans were victorious in seventeen. A similar success
+marked the contests of private armed vessels.
+
+In 1800, the act regulating privateers gave to them the entire prize
+captured, but in March, 1812, another act was passed appropriating two
+per cent. to collectors, to be used as a fund for the support of the
+widows and orphans of those who fell in combat. This was afterwards
+modified so as to allow the disabled the benefit of the fund. On the
+19th of July the act Was amended, and two per cent. placed in the
+hands of the Secretary of the Treasury, and privateersmen put on the
+pension list with the navy. A few days after a bill passed the House,
+allowing twenty-five dollars bounty for every prisoner taken. This was
+increased the next session to one hundred dollars.
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 2.]
+
+The success attending our privateersmen, and the injury they inflicted
+on the enemy, gave them such a prominence in the country, that
+Congress increased as far as possible the inducements to fit out
+letters of marque, and in 1814 reduced the legal duties on goods
+captured by privateers thirty-three and a third per cent., and
+afterwards withdrew all claim of the government to prizes and their
+cargoes.
+
+Privateersmen had earned all these privileges for themselves by their
+activity, adroitness, and bravery; they had become the terror of the
+British commerce, and while England, proud of her naval strength, was
+blockading our entire coast, they were sweeping down upon her
+merchantmen in the chops of her own channels.
+
+The names of many of these vessels were very characteristic of the
+American sailor. "Catch me if you can," "True blooded Yankee," "Right
+of Search," "Bunker Hill," "Viper," "Rattlesnake," "Scourge," "Spit
+Fire," and "Teazer," exhibited not only the spirit that animated the
+commanders, but were well calculated to irritate and enrage the
+officers of English vessels of war, especially as their conduct
+corresponded so well with the titles they bore.
+
+In September, about three months after the war was declared, the
+"Nonsuch" privateer, of Baltimore, carrying only twelve pound
+carronades and eighty or ninety men, while cruising off Cape Vincent,
+fell in with an English ship carrying sixteen 18 and 24 pound
+carronades and two hundred men, and a schooner with six four pounders
+and 60 men. Notwithstanding this overwhelming disparity of force, the
+privateer determined to uphold the name she bore, and setting American
+colors bore gallantly down on the ship. Ranging up within close musket
+shot, she poured in her broadsides and volleys of musketry for three
+hours and a half, and maintained the unequal contest till her guns
+were all disabled and only musketry could be used. The vessels instead
+of taking advantage of the crippled condition of the ship, to capture
+her, were so amazed at her audacity and the desperate manner in which
+she was fought, that they turned and fled. The Nonsuch lost
+twenty-three killed and wounded in this engagement.
+
+Not long after, in the same waters, the Dolphin, of Baltimore, with
+only ten guns and sixty men, attacked at the same time a ship of
+sixteen guns and forty men, and a brig of 10 guns and twenty-five men,
+and captured them both.
+
+In December of this year the privateer Comet, fourteen guns, started
+on a cruise southward, and on the 14th of January gave chase to four
+sail, which were afterwards ascertained to be three English
+merchantmen, one carrying fourteen and the other two, ten guns,
+convoyed by a Portuguese brig-of-war mounting twenty thirty-twos, and
+having a crew of one hundred and sixty-five men. The privateer hailed
+the Portuguese, when the latter sent a boat aboard with her commander.
+In the conversation that followed, Captain Boyle, of the privateer,
+declared he should take those merchantmen if he could. The Portuguese
+commander replied, he must prevent him, though he should be sorry to
+have any thing disagreeable happen. The American reciprocated his good
+wishes, but told him he was afraid something unpleasant might occur if
+he undertook to interfere with his proceedings.
+
+It was dark when the Portuguese captain withdrew, and the Comet
+immediately crowded sail for the merchantmen, followed closely by the
+brig of war. Coming up with them, Captain Boyle began to pour in his
+broadsides. The vessels keeping heavy head way, firing as their guns
+bore, he was compelled to fight under a cloud of canvass. Now shooting
+ahead, he would tack, and come down on the enemy in a blaze of fire.
+But with every broadside, the Portuguese poured in his own. Captain
+Boyle, intent on capturing the English vessels, paid no attention to
+the latter, except occasionally to give him a passing salute. At
+length he compelled every vessel to strike, and succeeded in taking
+possession of and manning one. But the moon having gone down, and dark
+clouds, indicating squalls, rising over the heavens, the vessels got
+separated, except the privateer and man-of-war, which kept exchanging
+occasional broadsides till two in the morning. By daylight all
+succeeded in getting off, though dreadfully cut up, with the exception
+of the one manned the night before, which was safely brought into port
+through the squadron blockading the Chesapeake. This bold marauder
+afterwards engaged a ship of eight hundred tons burthen and carrying
+twenty-two guns, and maintained the contest for eight hours before he
+could be beaten off.
+
+The Governor Tompkins was another daring and successful cruiser,
+inflicting heavy damages on the English commerce. Her log book would
+read like a romance. [Sidenote: Jan. 1, 1813.] One morning as the sun
+rose over the sea, Captain Shaler saw in the distance three vessels
+and immediately gave chase. The wind was light and he approached
+slowly, examining the strangers narrowly. One of them appeared to be a
+large transport, so heavy that he was questioning the propriety of
+attacking her, especially as the other two were evidently determined
+to stand by her. Boats were rapidly passing to and fro, filled with
+men, and though the large vessel lay to, quietly waiting the approach
+of the privateer, she had studding-sail booms out as if prepared for a
+running fight. Her conduct looked suspicious, and while the captain of
+the Tompkins was deliberating whether to engage or haul off, a sudden
+squall struck his vessel carrying her directly under the guns of the
+stranger, which to his amazement he discovered to be a frigate. He had
+English colors flying, but instead of endeavoring with them to deceive
+the enemy till he could claw off, he hauled them down, and setting
+three American ensigns, poured a broadside into the man-of-war. The
+latter returned it with stunning effect, his balls crashing through
+the timbers, blowing up cartridges, tube boxes, etc., and strewing the
+quarter-deck with ruin. The Tompkins not daring to tack in the squall,
+kept on before the wind, passing the frigate and receiving its fire as
+she flew on. The frigate pursued, and sailing nearly as fast as the
+privateer, for a time made the water foam about him. But the latter by
+throwing over shot, lumber, etc., gradually drew ahead, and the wind
+dying away, Captain Boyle, with the aid of sweeps, got at dark beyond
+reach of the shot.
+
+About the same time the Globe had a desperate engagement off Madeira
+with two brigs, one of eighteen and the other of sixteen guns,
+compelling one to strike, though she afterwards made her escape.
+
+In August of this year, a gallant action was fought between the
+privateer Decatur, Capt. Diron, and a war schooner of the British
+navy. The Decatur had six twelve-pound carronades and one
+eighteen-pounder, and mustered 103 men. The schooner was thoroughly
+appointed, carrying _twelve twelve-pound carronades_, two long sixes,
+a brass four, a _thirty-two pound carronade_ and eighty-eight men.
+She, therefore, had but fifteen men less than her antagonist, while
+she threw more than twice the weight of metal. But, notwithstanding
+this overwhelming superiority of force, and though a packet
+accompanied the schooner whose conduct in the engagement could not be
+foretold, Captain Diron hoisted American colors to the peak, and
+closed at once and fiercely with the enemy. He knew from the outset
+that in a broadside to broadside engagement the Dominica, from her
+great superiority in metal, would soon sink him, and he determined to
+board her. The latter detected his purpose and bore away, pouring in
+her broadsides. Both commanders exhibited great skill in manoeuvering
+their ships; one to board, the other to foil the attempt. The schooner
+succeeded in firing three broadsides before the privateer could close.
+Captain Diron, who had previously got up all the ammunition, etc.
+which he wanted from below, and fastened down the hatches, the moment
+he saw from his course that the schooner could not avoid a collision,
+ordered the drums to beat the charge. Loud cheers followed, and the
+next moment the two vessels came together with a crash, the jib-boom
+of the Decatur piercing the main-sail of the enemy. In an instant they
+were lashed together. The fire from the artillery and musketry at this
+time was terrible. In the midst of it the crew of the Decatur sprang
+with shouts on the enemy's decks, when it became a hand-to-hand fight
+with pistols and cutlasses. The crew of the latter fought desperately,
+but at length, every officer being killed or wounded, with the
+exception of one midshipman and the surgeon, and only twenty-eight out
+of the eighty-eight left standing, the colors were hauled down. The
+combat, which lasted an hour, was one of the most bloody, in
+proportion to the number engaged, that occurred during the war.
+
+[Sidenote: 1814.]
+
+The privateer Neufchatel was another lucky ship. Once getting becalmed
+off Gray Head, within sight of the Endymion, she was attacked by the
+boats and launches of the latter containing over a hundred men. The
+Neufchatel carried 17 guns, but had at the time of the attack only
+thirty-three men and officers included. Although it was dark the
+captain observed the approach of the boats, five in number, and opened
+his fire upon them. They, however, steadily advanced till they reached
+the ship, when they attempted to board on bows, sides, and stern
+simultaneously.
+
+The action lasted twenty minutes, when one boat having sunk, another
+being emptied of its crew, and the others drifting away, apparently
+without men, the firing ceased. At its close the privateer found on
+her deck more prisoners than she had men in the combat. But few of the
+assailants ever reached the frigate again.
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 24.]
+
+In November of this year the Kemp privateer sailed out of Wilmington
+and two days after was attacked by a fleet of six small vessels,
+carrying in all forty-six guns and a hundred and thirty-four men.
+Enveloped in the fire of six vessels this gallant privateer maintained
+the unequal combat for half an hour, and finally succeeded in
+scattering them, when she fell on them in detail and carried three by
+boarding. She then ranged alongside the largest brig and poured in her
+broadsides and volleys of musketry. In fifteen minutes the latter
+struck. In an hour and a half the whole were taken, but while the
+prizes were being secured two hoisted sail and got away. The other
+four were secured and brought into port, the result of a six days'
+cruise.
+
+[Sidenote: 1814.]
+
+But the most desperate engagement probably during the war took place
+this year, between the privateer brig, General Armstrong, and the
+crews of an English squadron in the port of Fayal. This brig,
+carrying only seven guns and ninety men, entered that port to obtain
+water, and her commander, Captain Reid, seeing no sail on the horizon,
+dropped his anchor. A few hours after, the British brig Carnation came
+in and anchored near her. Soon after the Plantaganet, 74, and the Rota
+frigate arrived. Captain Reid, knowing how little regard English
+officers paid to the laws of neutrality, became very solicitous about
+the safety of his ship, and applied to the authorities of the place to
+know what course he should pursue. They told him he need entertain no
+fear, as the English officers knew the rights of a neutral port too
+well to molest him. Captain Reid, however, suspected it would be
+otherwise, and kept a close watch on the movements of the enemy. About
+nine o'clock in the evening, it being broad moonlight on the bay and
+not a breath of air breaking its glittering surface, he saw four boats
+rowing rapidly and silently towards him. When they came within hail he
+called out to know their purpose. The latter making no reply and
+keeping steadily on, he bade them stand off. They paid no heed to his
+repeated orders, and were about to board when he gave the command to
+fire. After a short but fierce contest the assailants were driven off
+and returned to their vessels. The news soon spread, and the
+inhabitants with the governor gathered on the shore to see the battle.
+About midnight fourteen launches, filled with four hundred men, were
+seen to put off and steer straight for the privateer. Captain Reid,
+who, in the mean time, had cut his cable and moored close in shore,
+knew he could not save his vessel; but indignant at this violation of
+the laws of neutrality he determined the enemy should pay dear for the
+conquest, and the moment the boats came within range opened a
+tremendous fire upon them. They staggered under it, but returning it
+with spirit continued to press on. But as they got nearer, the carnage
+became awful. Every gun on board that privateer seemed aimed with the
+precision of a rifle, and the discharges were so rapid and incessant
+that it was with the utmost efforts the boats could be pushed on at
+all. The dead cumbered the living, and the oars were continually
+dropping from the hands of the slain, crippling and confusing all the
+movements. At length, however, they succeeded in reaching the brig,
+and cheered on by their officers, shouting "no quarter," began to
+ascend the sides of the ship. In a moment its black hull was a sheet
+of flame rolling on the foe.
+
+Shrieks and cries, mingled with oaths and execrations, and sharp
+volleys of musketry rang out on the night air, turning that moonlight
+bay into a scene of indescribable terror. The bright waters were
+loaded with black forms, as they floated or struggled around the
+boats. The Americans fought with the ferocity of tigers and the
+desperation of mad men. Leaping into the boats they literally
+massacred all within. Several drifted ashore full of dead bodies--not
+a soul being left alive of all the crew--others were sunk. Some were
+left with one or two to row them. Overwhelmed, crushed and
+discomfitted, the remainder abandoned the attempt and pulled slowly
+back to the ships, marking their course by the groans and cries of the
+wounded that floated back over the bay. Only three officers, out of
+the whole, escaped, while scarce a hundred and fifty of the four
+hundred returned unwounded to their vessels. A hundred and twenty were
+killed outright. The loss could scarcely have been greater had the
+enemy fought a squadron equal to their own.
+
+Our Consul, after this, dropped a note to the Governor, who
+immediately sent a remonstrance to Van Lloyd, commander of the
+Plantagenet, saying that the American vessel was under the guns of the
+castle and entitled to Portuguese protection. To this Van Lloyd
+replied, that he was resolved on the destruction of the vessel, and if
+the fort undertook to protect her, he would not leave a house standing
+on shore.
+
+The next day the Carnation hauled in alongside and opened her
+broadsides on the privateer. Reid, still grimly clinging to his
+vessel, returned the fire, and in a short time so cut up his
+antagonist that he hauled off to repair. That little brig, half a
+wreck, lying under the walls of the castle fighting that hopeless
+gallant battle, vindicating her rights against such fearful odds, with
+none who dare help her, presented a sublime spectacle.
+
+At length his guns being dismounted, Captain Reid ordered his men to
+cut away the masts of the ship, blow a hole through her bottom, and
+taking out their arms and clothing, go ashore. Soon after the British
+advanced and set her on fire. Van Lloyd then made a demand on the
+Governor for Captain Reid and his crew, threatening in case of refusal
+to send an armed force and take them. Fearing that the Governor would
+not be able to prevent their arrest, this gallant band retired to an
+old convent, knocked away the drawbridge, determined to defend
+themselves to the last. The English commander had no desire to place
+his crews again under the deadly aim of those daring men, and
+abandoned the project.
+
+The American loss in this engagement was only two killed and seven
+wounded. Thus dearly did England pay for this violation of the laws of
+a neutral port. That brig, cruising successfully to the close of the
+war, could not have inflicted so heavy damage on the enemy as she
+caused in her capture.
+
+The gallant bearing and patriotic feeling that marked these little
+cruisers are worthy of record, while the hair-breadth escapes--the
+tricks employed to entice merchantmen within their reach--the wit and
+humor exhibited in hailing and answering the hails of vessels--the
+saucy and irritating acts committed on purpose to provoke--the
+good-natured jokes they cracked on those they had first outwitted,
+then conquered, would make a most characteristic and amusing chapter
+in American history.
+
+Captain Boyle, of the Chasseur, took great delight in provoking
+frigates to chase him, and when they abandoned the pursuit as
+hopeless, he would affect to chase in turn, teazing and insulting his
+formidable adversaries, who tried in vain to cut some spar out of the
+winged thing in order to lessen her fleetness. Cruising along the
+English coast, this vessel had some very narrow escapes. While here
+the captain overhauled a cartel, and sent by it a proclamation with
+orders to have it stuck up in Lloyd's coffee house, declaring the
+whole British Empire in a state of blockade, and that he considered
+the force under him sufficient to maintain it.
+
+This was probably one of the finest private armed vessels afloat
+during the war. Buoyant as a sea-gull, she sat so lightly and
+gracefully on the water, that it seemed as if she might, at will, rise
+and fly. Fleet as the wind, she was handled with such ease that the
+enemy gazed on her movements with admiration.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 26, 1815.]
+
+Her last exploit was the capture of his majesty's schooner St.
+Lawrence, carrying fifteen guns. The latter was on her way to New
+Orleans, with some soldiers, marines, and gentlemen of the navy as
+passengers. The Chasseur had only six twelve-pounders and eight short
+nine pound carronades, having been compelled a short time before, when
+hard pressed by an English frigate, to throw over nearly all her
+twelve pound carronades. Captain Boyle had no suspicion of the true
+character of the vessel when he gave chase, for her ports had been
+closed on purpose to deceive him. He therefore stood boldly on till he
+got within pistol-shot, when the schooner suddenly opened ten ports on
+a side and poured in a destructive fire. At the same time the men who
+had been concealed under the bulwarks leaped up and delivered a volley
+of musketry. Captain Boyle, discovering what a trap he had been
+beguiled into, determined at once to stay in it, and ranging alongside
+within ten yards, opened a tremendous fire with his batteries and
+musketry. The vessels were so near each other that the voices of
+officers and men could be distinctly heard, even amid the crashing
+cannonade. That little privateer exhibited a skill and practice in
+gunnery unsurpassed by any frigate, and superior to any vessel in the
+English navy. The enemy was completely stunned by the rapidity and
+destructive effect of her fire, and in eleven minutes was a perfect
+wreck. Captain Boyle then gave the command to board, when the flag was
+struck. In this short space of time the Chasseur had strewed the deck
+of that schooner with nearly half of her crew, killed and wounded.
+
+Our privateers had greatly the advantage of the English, not only in
+artillery but in musketry--our men firing with much surer aim than
+theirs.
+
+It would be impossible to give the names and details of all the
+vessels and their engagements; but, independent of the vast number of
+merchantmen captured by them, they took eight national vessels of the
+enemy, in single combat. They seemed to vie with each other in daring
+and the venturous exploits they would undertake. One of these vessels
+would shoot out of port within sight of a blockading squadron, start
+alone on a cruise, and scouring thirty or forty thousand miles of the
+ocean, return with a fleet of prizes. The commanders were almost,
+invariably humane men, treating their prisoners with vastly more
+kindness than British admirals and commodores did those Americans who
+fell in their hands. Many acts of kindness and generosity were
+performed, and a nobleness of spirit exhibited towards a fallen foe,
+which has ever been, and it is to be hoped ever will be, a
+distinguished trait in the American character. On one occasion a
+privateer captured in the channel a Welch vessel from Cardigan,
+freighted with corn. As the captain went on board he saw a small box
+with a hole in the top, in the cabin, marked "Missionary box." "What
+is this?" said he, touching it with a stick. "Oh," replied the
+Cambrian, "the truth is, my poor fellows here have been accustomed
+every Monday morning to drop a penny each into that box, for the
+purpose of sending out missionaries to preach the gospel to the
+heathen; but it's all over now." "Indeed," said the captain, and
+reflecting a moment, he added, "Captain, I'll not hurt a hair of your
+head nor touch your vessel," and immediately returned to his own ship,
+leaving him unmolested.
+
+Such conduct appears the more striking when contrasted with that of
+British officers. The murder of Mr. Sigourney, of the Alp, whose
+brains were beaten out; though when his vessel was taken possession of
+not a soul but himself was found on board--the confinement of Capt.
+Upton and his officers of the privateer Hunter, for three months in a
+filthy prison, and their after transfer to a prison ship--the cruelty
+shown to Capt. Nichols, who, after enjoying his parole for two months,
+was without the least reason thrown into a prison-ship and kept for
+more than a month in a room four feet by seven, and many other cases
+of extreme cruelty, were well known, for the facts had been sworn to
+and placed on record as state papers. Rumor aggravated all these a
+hundred fold, yet the English government can offset them with no
+retaliatory acts substantiated before courts of inquiry.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+DARTMOOR PRISON.
+
+ Impressed Americans made prisoners of war -- Treatment of
+ prisoners -- Prison Ships -- Dartmoor prison -- Neglect of
+ American prisoners -- Their sufferings -- Fourth of July in
+ Dartmoor -- Brutal attack of the French prisoners -- Fresh
+ arrivals -- Joy at the news of our naval victories --
+ Sufferings of the prisoners in winter -- American Government
+ allows them three cents per diem -- Moral effect of this
+ notice of Government -- Napoleon's downfall -- Increased
+ allowance of Government -- Industry of prisoners -- Attempts
+ to escape -- Extraordinary adventure of a lieutenant of a
+ privateer -- Number of prisoners increased -- A riot to
+ obtain bread -- Dartmoor massacre -- Messrs. King and
+ L'Arpent appointed commissioners to investigate it --
+ Decision -- The end.
+
+
+A short chapter is due to those who, though not engaged in battle,
+suffered equally for their country, and despite the oppression and
+want which drove them well nigh to despair, refused to be faithless to
+the land that had nurtured them. The conduct of the land and naval
+officers to a vanquished enemy, did not present a more striking
+contrast than that of the two governments towards prisoners who had
+never taken up arms. Those placed in confinement by us were never
+allowed to suffer through want of clothing or food, while a barbarity
+characterized the treatment of American citizens that reflects the
+deepest disgrace on the British empire.
+
+[Illustration: Dartmoor Prison.]
+
+When the declaration of war was made, the English vessels had a vast
+number of American seamen on board, most of them impressed, who flatly
+refused to fight against their country. Many of these, without having
+received the pay due them, were then sent to England as prisoners of
+war. Captures at sea swelled the number rapidly, which in the end
+amounted to nearly six thousand men. Officers of privateersmen and
+merchantmen on parole, were sent to Devonshire or Berkshire, where on
+thirty-three and a quarter cents per diem, they were allowed to
+subsist in comparative comfort; but the common sailors and merchant
+captains were scattered about in different prisons, the most, however,
+being collected and placed on board two old line-of-battle-ships in
+Portsmouth harbor. Hence, after a short imprisonment, characterized by
+a brutality not often found among half-civilized nations, they were
+transferred to Dartmoor prison, seventeen miles inland. This dreaded
+prison was situated high up on the side of a barren mountain,
+overlooking a bleak and desolate moor. It consisted of seven
+buildings, surrounded by two walls, the first a mile in extent and
+sixteen feet high; the second, thirty feet from the first, and
+surmounted by guards overlooking the spaces within. Each prison had
+but one apartment on a floor, around which, in tiers, six on a side,
+the hammocks were slung. Into one of these large cold apartments,
+nearly five hundred American prisoners were crowded during the year
+1813. Their own Government had not then provided any thing towards
+their expenses, and they were dependent entirely on the allowance of
+the British officials. The garments they brought with them, at length
+wearing out, they were reduced to the most miserable shifts to cover
+their persons. As soon as it was dark, this half-famished multitude
+was turned into their prison, and left without a light to pass the
+long and dreary winter nights. Filthy, ragged, covered with vermin,
+they strolled around the yard in the day time, or lay basking in the
+sun to obtain a little warmth, and moody and despairing, gradually
+sank, through degrading companionship and the demoralization of want
+and suffering, lower and lower in the scale of humanity. A single
+bucket, only, containing the food, was allowed to a mess, around which
+they gathered with the avidity of starving men, and each with his
+wooden spoon struggled to eat fastest and most. To add to their
+sufferings the small-pox broke out among them, carrying many to their
+graves. Faint and far echoes from home would now and then rekindle
+hope in their bosoms, to be succeeded only by blank despair.
+
+The better portion strove manfully to arrest the tendency around them
+to degradation, and constituted themselves a court to try offenders.
+When theft was proved on one, a punishment of twenty-seven lashes was
+inflicted. They also used every inducement to prevent the sailors from
+enlisting in the British service, to which last resort many were
+driven, to escape the horrors of that gloomy prison.
+
+When the 4th of July arrived, they determined to celebrate the
+national anniversary in their own prison, and so having by some means
+obtained two American standards, they placed them at the two ends of
+the building, outside the walls, and forming into two columns marched
+up and down the yard, singing patriotic songs, whistling patriotic
+tunes, and cheering the flag of their country. The keeper, hearing of
+it, ordered the turnkeys to take away the flags; but the prisoners
+sent to him, requesting as a particular favor that they might be
+allowed to celebrate the anniversary of their country's independence,
+adding if he insisted on attacking their colors he must take the
+consequences. The guards were then ordered in, when a scuffle ensued,
+in which one flag was taken, but the prisoners bore the other off in
+triumph to their room. At evening, when the guards came as usual to
+shut them up, a great deal of severe language and opprobrious epithets
+were used, stigmatizing the pitiful revenge in taking away their
+flags as mean and contemptible. Retorts followed, blows succeeded, and
+finally the guard fired on the crowd, wounding two men. Thus ended the
+4th of July, 1813, in Dartmoor.
+
+In the apartments above the Americans, were crowded nearly a thousand
+French prisoners, miserable outcasts, with scarcely any thing left of
+our common humanity but the form. Many of them were entirely naked,
+and slept on the stone floor, stretched out like so many swine. The
+moment clothing was given them they would gamble it away. These
+wretches formed a conspiracy to murder all the Americans. Arming
+themselves with whatever weapon they could lay hands on, they
+contrived one morning to get into the yard before the latter, and as
+the first group of Americans, a hundred and fifty in number, emerged
+into the open air, fell upon them with the ferocity of fiends. Passing
+between them and the prison, they blocked the entrance to prevent the
+others from coming to the rescue. A wild scene of confusion and tumult
+followed. The French succeeded in stabbing and knocking down and
+mangling nearly every American, and would doubtless have beaten the
+whole to death had not the guard, attracted by the cries for help and
+shrieks of murder, rushed in, and by a bayonet charge ended the fray.
+A great number of the Americans were more or less injured and twenty
+shockingly mangled.
+
+The succeeding months passed drearily away, with nothing occurring to
+break the weary monotony of life, except at long intervals the arrival
+of a fresh squad of prisoners. This was an event in their existence,
+and replaced them once more in communication with the outward world.
+The new comers were lions for the time. Eager groups gathered around
+each one, impatiently asking after the news, and how the war got on.
+The triumphs of our navy made them forget, for awhile, the gloom of
+their dismal abode. Every action had to be described over and over
+again, losing nothing by Jack's embellishments--the narration ever and
+anon interrupted with huzzas and acclamations. They would lie for
+hours awake in their hammocks, listening to the recital of the
+marvellous sea-fights in which "free trade and sailors' rights" were
+gallantly maintained, and cheers would burst out of the darkness,
+ringing down through the tiers of cots that lined the walls.
+
+During the autumn of 1813, a fresh arrival of prisoners brought the
+news of Perry's victory on Lake Erie, and the capture of the Boxer by
+the Enterprise. These were the occasion of great rejoicing, and while
+the more intelligent and respectable portion of the captives discussed
+the victories calmly, the hundreds of common seamen shook the prison
+walls with their uproarious mirth and unbounded exultation.
+
+[Sidenote: 1813.]
+
+The sufferings of the prisoners were the greatest during this
+winter. They were allowed no fire and no light, although the windows
+were not glazed; and locked within the cold damp stone walls at the
+close of the short winter days, were compelled to spend the long
+winter evenings in darkness, whiling away the time in telling
+stories--keeping warm by huddling together, or creeping to their
+hammocks with but a single tattered blanket to protect them from the
+cold. To make their wretchedness complete, the winter set in with a
+severity not felt before for half a century, and which has had no
+parallel since. The mountain on which the prison stood was covered
+with snow to the depth of from two to four feet. The stream running
+through the prison yard, and the buckets of water in the prisoners'
+room were frozen solid. Most of the prisoners being protected only
+by rags, and destitute of shoes, they could not go out into the yard
+at all, for it was covered with snow, but lay crouched in their
+hammocks all day and all night. The strong were bowed in gloom and
+despair, and the weak perished in protracted agonies. To fill up the
+measure of their sufferings, the commanding officer issued an order
+compelling them to turn out at nine o'clock in the morning, and
+stand in the yard till the guard counted them. This took nearly an
+hour, during which time the poor fellows stood barefoot in the snow,
+benumbed by the cold and pierced by the bleak December blasts that
+swept the desolate mountain, and hurled the snow in clouds through
+the air. Unable to bear this dreadful exposure, the prisoners cut up
+their bedding and made garments and socks for their feet to protect
+them from the frost, and slept on the cold floor. Morning after
+morning, hardy men overcome by the cold, fell lifeless in presence
+of their keepers, and were carried to the hospital, where they were
+resuscitated, only to be sent back to shiver and suffer on the icy
+floor of their prison. The better class remonstrated against this
+useless cruelty, but without effect.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec.]
+
+At length, in the latter part of the month, the agent was removed, and
+Captain Shortland took his place, who immediately revoked the order
+requiring the prisoners to be counted--represented strongly to the
+board of transport the condition they were in, and used all the means
+in his power to alleviate their sufferings and ameliorate the horrors
+of their confinement. Still, no clothing was furnished, and the cold
+was intense. The camp distemper also broke out, and many were not
+sorry to take it, in order to get in the more comfortable quarters of
+the hospital.
+
+Mr. Beasely was agent for American prisoners of war in England, to
+whom those at Dartmoor constantly appealed for help. Receiving no
+answers to their repeated appeals, they denounced him as unfeeling and
+indifferent to their distress. At last, enraged at the neglect of
+their own Government, as represented in Mr. Beasely, and maddened by
+suffering, they drew up a paper and sent it to him, in which they
+declared that unless relief was granted they would offer, _en masse_,
+their services to the British Government. To this no answer was
+received for about a month, when a letter arrived, announcing that the
+United States would allow them about three cents a day to buy soap and
+tobacco with. Slight as this relief was, it shed sunshine through that
+prison. True, it was not sufficient to purchase them clothing; it did
+more, however; it showed that they were recognized by their
+Government--they were no longer disowned, forgotten men, but stood
+once more in communication with the land of their birth, and
+acknowledged to be American citizens. The moral effect of this
+consciousness was wonderful, and notwithstanding their nakedness and
+forlorn appearance, the prisoners felt at once a new dignity. A
+committee was appointed to suppress gambling, and a petition got up to
+separate them from the blacks, who were irredeemably given over to
+thieving. Previous to this ninety-five had entered the British
+service; now every one spurned the thought. They never would desert
+the country that owned them as sons.
+
+In the spring the rigorous restrictions laid on them were relaxed, and
+they were allowed the privilege of the French prisoners. Free access
+to the other prisoners and to the market were given, and they
+established a coffee-house in their prison, selling coffee at a penny
+a pint. From French officers they learned the news of the day. The
+world was thus again thrown open to them, and though the prospect of
+exchange grew dimmer and dimmer, they resigned themselves with more
+tranquillity to their contemplated long confinement. In the mean time
+money began to arrive from friends at home, on which, as a capital,
+the recipients set up as tobacconists, butter and potatoe merchants,
+etc. Imitating the French, they learned to be economical, and invent
+methods of increasing their revenue. The bones left from their beef
+were converted into beautifully wrought miniature ships. Others
+plaited straw for hats, made hair bracelets, list shoes, etc., turning
+that gloomy receptacle of despairing, reckless men, into a perfect
+hive of industry. Soon after, another letter from Mr. Beasely arrived,
+stating that six cents a week, in addition to the former sum, would in
+future be allowed, per man. This little sum diffused new pleasure
+around, and filled every heart with animation and hope. They could now
+purchase clothing and other little articles, necessary to render
+their appearance becoming American citizens.
+
+Succeeding this came the news of Napoleon's downfall and termination
+of the continental war. The French prisoners were, of course,
+released, and the Americans purchased out their stock in trade,
+utensils, &c.
+
+Among the prisoners were gray-haired men, and boys from thirteen to
+seventeen years of age. For the latter a school was established, to
+instruct them in reading, writing, and arithmetic. Soon another
+welcome letter was received, announcing that the United States would
+hereafter clothe them. Clad in clean new, though coarse clothing, they
+now trod the yards of their prison with a manly bearing. The sense of
+inferiority was gone, and the characteristic boldness and independence
+of the American seamen again shone forth. They would argue with
+English officers on the war, repel insult, and denounce every act of
+cruelty or fraud as freely as if on their own soil.
+
+The English Government having resolved to make Dartmoor the general
+depot of the prisoners, fresh arrivals soon swelled the number to
+fourteen hundred. [Sidenote: 1814.] Being now in a better condition,
+they resolved to celebrate the approaching 4th of July with becoming
+pomp. American colors were obtained, two hogsheads of porter and some
+rum purchased, and a grand dinner of soup and beef prepared. Early in
+the morning the flag was run up, and as it flaunted to the wind, "ALL
+CANADA, OR DARTMOOR PRISON FOR EVER!" was seen inscribed upon its
+folds. At eleven the prisoners assembled, while the walls around were
+lined with the English soldiers and officers and clerks, curious to
+hear what kind of an oration a Yankee sailor would make. Mounted on a
+cask, the orator launched at once into the war, showed how we had been
+forced into it by the injustice of England, and dwelt with great
+unction on the separate naval victories the brave tars had gained.
+Dinner followed, the grog circulated freely, toasts were given, and a
+song composed expressly for the occasion sung. Mirth and hilarity
+ruled the hour, and the walls of that old prison shook to the
+deafening cheers and boisterous mirth of these sons of the ocean.
+
+Soon after a plan of escape was put in execution, and for a long time
+proceeded without detection. Every prisoner was sworn to secresy, and
+a court organized to try any informer, who in case of conviction, was
+to be hung. Shafts were sunk in the ground--the hole at the top being
+carefully concealed--and broad excavations began and worked towards
+the walls, beyond which they were to come to the surface. A traitor,
+however, was found, who for the price of his liberty revealed all.
+
+From time to time some of the prisoners made their escape, but most
+of them were retaken before they reached the sea-board.[12]
+
+[Footnote 12: A most daring and successful attempt was made by one of
+the lieutenants of the privateer Rattlesnake. Having bribed one of the
+sentinels with six guineas, to give him the countersign, he let
+himself down with a rope, eighty feet, to the ground, and was just
+about to pass the gate, when the villain who had received the six
+guineas, informed against him. Enraged at the act, the lieutenant
+sprung on him with his dagger, but was seized and bound before he
+could plunge it in his heart. Arraigned before Capt. Shortland, he was
+asked how he obtained the countersign. Lieutenant G---- replied, that
+if the sentinel had behaved honorably to him, death itself could not
+have wrested his name from him, for it was the character of Americans
+always to keep their engagements; but, as he had deceived him, he
+should suffer for it. The culprit's name was then given, and he
+received three hundred lashes. Shortland then told the lieutenant he
+was a brave man, and pledged his honor, if he would not again attempt
+to escape, he would procure his exchange. The latter replied, that he
+had seen too much of the honor of British officers, ever to take their
+word, and he should escape that very night. The keeper assured him the
+attempt would be fatal, as he should double the sentinels, and if he
+made it he would most certainly be shot. Lieutenant G---- said he did
+not care--death was preferable to that detestable prison. Having
+obtained the countersign again, for three guineas, he that very night
+lowered himself down, and though challenged seventeen times, passed
+safely out. Keeping the fields he made his way to the sea-coast, where
+he found a boat eighteen feet long, with one oar in it. In this frail
+vessel, without provision or water, he determined to put to sea, and
+cross the channel, one hundred miles, to France. Sculling it till he
+got off shore, he converted his umbrella and clothes into a sail, and
+stood boldly away. When about half way over, he discovered a
+brig-of-war. The sea was running high at the time, but he immediately
+took down the sail, and laid himself flat in the boat, to avoid being
+seen. After the brig had passed him, he again hoisted sail, and after
+a passage of thirty-six hours, landed safely in France.]
+
+The number of prisoners continued to increase, so that by autumn, over
+five thousand were congregated in the prison. Before they were
+released, the number was swelled to five thousand six hundred and
+ninety-three. Frequent collisions occurred between them and the
+officers, which embittered the animosity of the latter, and finally
+brought on a bloody catastrophe.
+
+With the approach of winter great suffering was experienced. The
+malignant small-pox again broke out, and raged with fatal violence
+amid this army of men.
+
+The news of the treaty of peace, however, dissipated, for a time, all
+their gloom, and diffused joy and hope through the prisons. The word
+"HOME," was on every man's lips, and a speedy release from that den of
+horrors and suffering was expected. But the gloomy winter passed, and
+spring came, without mitigating their condition or restoring them to
+freedom. The prisoners became exasperated. The two countries having
+been so long at peace, they felt themselves entitled to their freedom.
+They were no longer prisoners of war, but by the very act of the
+treaty, American freemen. They burnt Mr. Beasely, the American agent,
+in effigy, railed at their keepers, and swore they would make their
+escape by violence if not soon released.
+
+On the fourth of April, Captain Shortland having gone to Plymouth,
+they were not allowed any bread. Bearing the privation patiently, for
+thirty-six hours, they resolved to break open the store-house and
+supply themselves. So at dark as the officers entered the yard and
+cried out, "_Turn in! Turn in!_" a signal previously agreed on was
+given, and in an instant the excited thousands moved in one dark mass
+towards the gates. One after another gave way before the tremendous
+pressure, and these maddened hungry men rushed around the depot of
+provisions, their shouts and cries ringing over the alarm bells and
+beat of drums, that summoned the garrison to arms. The alarm spread to
+the neighboring villages, and the militia began to pour in. In a few
+moments the soldiers advanced with charged bayonets towards the
+multitude, when they were sternly ordered off by the prisoners, who
+swore that if they dared fire or charge, they would charge in turn,
+and level that store-house to the ground, and march out of prison. The
+officers, fearing the result of such a contest, prudently promised to
+give them their usual supply if they would retire to their respective
+prisons. They did so, and quiet was restored. The bold and successful
+manner in which the Americans had overawed the soldiery and coerced
+submission to their demands, irritated them highly, and made them wish
+for a good opportunity to retaliate. [Sidenote: April 6.] This was
+soon furnished. Two days after, Captain Shortland, who had returned,
+observed a hole in that portion of the inner wall which separated two
+of the prison yards from the barracks, and suspecting, or pretending
+to suspect it was made by the prisoners for the purpose of escaping,
+he immediately ordered the alarm bells to be rung and the drums to
+beat. The prisoners, surprised and excited, rushed towards the gates
+of the yard to ascertain the cause of the alarm. The thousands behind
+pushing forward the thousands before, they became packed in an
+impenetrable mass at the entrance, and the pressure was so great that
+some were forced out through one of the gates that gave way. In the
+midst of the confusion, Shortland entered the inner square with the
+whole garrison. The soldiers advanced close to the throng, when the
+prisoners retired towards their respective yards. Doubtless amid such
+a vast and motley collection of men, many taunted the soldiers,
+provoked them, and dared them to fire. Still they yielded before the
+bayonet, and entered their own yard. The gates were shut, but a large
+crowd remained in the passage, provoking the soldiers, from whom they
+were separated by an iron railing, and threatening them with
+vengeance. While in this position the order to fire was given.
+Immediately the massacre commenced. Volley after volley was poured
+into the terrified crowd, pushing down and trampling on each other in
+their haste to reach the shelter of the prisons. Men were killed in
+the act of supplicating mercy, others were shot down while struggling
+to enter the prison doors. It was cold-blooded murder, and before all
+the prisoners could get within the walls, over sixty were killed or
+wounded. When the living had all escaped to a place of shelter, and
+the carnage was over, the prison yard presented a ghastly spectacle.
+The man of sixty, the sailor in his prime, and the boy of fifteen, lay
+scattered around, while the groans of the wounded were borne to the
+ears of the enraged prisoners within. A sullen silence fell on those
+gloomy structures, the flags were raised half-mast, in token of
+mourning, and the prisoners assembled together and appointed a
+committee to report on the matter.
+
+Although the coroner's jury over the slain gave a verdict of
+justifiable homicide, our Government took up the matter, and appointed
+Charles King to meet Mr. Larpent, the English commissioner, and
+investigate it. In their report no one was declared culpable, though
+it was freely admitted wrong had been done. Mr. King was severely
+censured for his conduct, but it was not easy to come to a just
+conclusion, when the testimony of the two parties were so entirely at
+variance. Mr. Larpent was bound to believe the assertions of Captain
+Shortland and his troops, as much as Mr. King those of the prisoners.
+Capt. Shortland declared he never gave the order to fire, and
+attempted to arrest it after it had begun. This, of course, the
+prisoners denied, some of them swearing they heard him give the
+order. One thing, however, is certain; Mr. King never should have let
+this massacre of Americans pass, with so slight a condemnation as it
+received at his hands. In the first place, there is good reason to
+doubt whether Captain Shortland believed there was any great danger at
+all. A hole in a wall, only large enough to admit the passage of a
+single man at a time, could easily be stopped up without ringing alarm
+bells and beating drums, especially as that hole communicated with
+only two out of five of the yards, and when in three of these yards
+the prisoners were walking about in their usual quiet manner. Nor
+could he believe they meditated an escape, when they had just received
+word that preparations were nearly completed for their restoration to
+liberty. Where could they escape to without money or clothing?
+Besides, if they wished to free themselves by violence, why did they
+not do it two days before, when they had completely cowed the soldiers
+and had only to march forth without farther resistance.
+
+In the second place, he deserved disgrace and punishment, for
+allowing the soldiers to press on the multitude, when he saw them
+evidently, or the great mass of them, retiring to their prisons. To
+fire on a mob, unless they are pressing forward to assail authority
+and force, is brutal. If he gave the order to fire, he should have
+been hung. If he did not, he should be held responsible for having
+such undisciplined troops under his command. An act like this cannot
+be committed and nobody be deserving of reprehension. The commander
+of a garrison cannot so escape responsibility. The probability is,
+enraged at the conduct of the prisoners in forcing the soldiers to
+yield to their demands two days before, he resolved to punish the
+first attempt at insubordination, and irritated at the insolence and
+taunts of some of them, he in a fit of passion gave the order to
+fire. Conscience-smitten afterwards, and fearing disgrace and
+punishment, he endeavored to cover up the dark transaction.
+
+Mr. King had rather, at any time, smooth over a quarrel, than increase
+the exasperation by dealing sternly with its causes. With his thousand
+noble and excellent qualities, he lacked the energy of will and
+unflinching severity necessary to probe such a difficulty to the
+bottom, and see that justice was done at whatever cost. A great wrong
+was committed, though doubtless with good intentions and a patriotic
+heart.
+
+
+
+
+_The following_ TAX TABLES, _showing the relative amount of taxation
+during the last two years of the war, are extracted from voluminous
+tables found in the revenue department. The whole to be found in
+Ingersoll's History of the War of 1812._
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Stills and Boilers._
+
+ +----------------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
+ | | In 1814. | In 1815. |
+ | STATES OR |-------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+ | TERRITORIES. | Domestic | Foreign | Domestic | Foreign |
+ | | materials. | materials.| materials. | materials.|
+ +----------------------+-------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+ | New Hampshire | 3,982 50 | 213 90 | 888 69 | 3,015 90 |
+ | Massachusetts | 33,735 64 | 39,272 28 | 23,381 83 | 57,959 11 |
+ | Vermont | 31,836 54 | | 14,263 | |
+ | Rhode Island | 6,918 73 | 9,346 50 | 4,073 28 | 8,440 80 |
+ | Connecticut | 50,067 34 | 50,867 66 | 3,524 65 | |
+ | New York | 225,979 31 | 6,201 45 | 120,522 03 | 10,299 23 |
+ | New Jersey | 54,845 67 | 25,033 72 | 4,953 90 | |
+ | Pennsylvania | 392,536 23 | 56 70 | 228,042 13 | |
+ | Delaware | 4,457 64 | | 209 11 | |
+ | Maryland | 60,378 10 | | 28,910 87 | |
+ | Virginia | 264,135 97 | 3 50 | 87,702 63 | |
+ | North Carolina | 87,738 22 | | 13,353 81 | |
+ | Ohio | 75,596 85 | | 33,819 16 | |
+ | Kentucky | 141,157 50 | | 57,807 62 | |
+ | South Carolina | 66,941 37 | 1,425 00 | 12,615 84 | 2,550 77 |
+ | Tennessee | 77,091 59 | 34,244 77 | | |
+ | Georgia | 29,262 34 | 925 00 | 14,929 56 | 864 00 |
+ | Louisiana | 7,741 84 | | 6,109 72 | |
+ | Illinois Territory | 605 35 | | 214 91 | |
+ | Michigan " | | | | |
+ | Indiana " | 2,358 50 | | 923 20 | |
+ | Missouri " | 2,033 95 | | 1,631 08 | |
+ | Mississippi " | 1,862 41 | | 958 48 | |
+ | District of Columbia | 279 27 | | | |
+ +----------------------+-------------+-----------+------------+-----------|
+ | Total |1,621,542 86 | 57,444 33 | 760,804 22 | 91,608 36 |
+ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Spirits distilled in the United
+States._
+
+ +---------------------+-----------------------------------------+
+ | | In 1815. |
+ | +----------------------------+------------+
+ | STATES OR | Domestic materials. | Foreign |
+ | TERRITORIES. | | materials. |
+ | +--------------+-------------+------------+
+ | | At 20 cents | At 25 cents | At 20 cents|
+ | | per gal. | per gal. | per gal. |
+ +---------------------+--------------+-------------+------------+
+ | | | | |
+ |New Hampshire | 861 81 | 137 05 | 4,840 81 |
+ |Massachusetts | 29,877 84 | 1,548 14 | 110,147 27 |
+ |Vermont | 18,017 56 | 816 14 | |
+ |Rhode Island | 6,097 71 | | 12,185 97 |
+ |Connecticut | 52,996 04 | 3,692 09 | 5,645 20 |
+ |New York | 199,645 92 | 5,672 31 | 15,519 65 |
+ |New Jersey | 69,081 42 | 10,329 74 | 5,477 20 |
+ |Pennsylvania | 381,484 71 | 38,393 24 | |
+ |Delaware | 600 35 | 22,295 38 | |
+ |Maryland | 66,177 25 | 32,428 34 | |
+ |Virginia | 179,387 95 | 201,566 82 | |
+ |North Carolina | 21,961 11 | 175,922 07 | |
+ |Ohio | 56,653 68 | 15,128 83 | |
+ |Kentucky | 114,644 40 | 39,569 10 | |
+ |South Carolina | 19,640 77 | 68,107 41 | 3,391 30 |
+ |Tennessee | 55,284 66 | 56,573 59 | |
+ |Georgia | 17,563 00 | 65,162 75 | 2,021 60 |
+ |Louisiana | 12,756 54 | 177 35 | |
+ |Illinois Territory | 549 23 | 701 26 | |
+ |Michigan " | | | |
+ |Indiana " | 641 50 | 2,508 17 | |
+ |Missouri " | 833 50 | 622 89 | |
+ |Mississippi " | 583 37 | 1,045 90 | |
+ |District of Columbia | | | |
+ +---------------------+--------------+-------------+------------+
+ | Total | 1,305,340 39 | 742,398 57 | 159,229 00 |
+ +---------------------+--------------+-------------+------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Carriages._
+
+ +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+
+ | STATES OR | In 1814. | In 1815. |
+ | TERRITORIES. +--------+------------+--------+------------+
+ | | Number.| Duty. | Number.| Duty. |
+ +----------------------+--------+------------+--------+------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 3,279 | 6,895 51 | 3,337 | 4,514 09 |
+ | Massachusetts | 14,934 | 33,995 64 | 14,184 | 21,748 49 |
+ | Vermont | 1,227 | 2,890 24 | 1,628 | 2,443 09 |
+ | Rhode Island | 1,232 | 2,877 50 | 722 | 1,123 03 |
+ | Connecticut | 5,262 | 13,419 80 | 6,319 | 10,202 46 |
+ | New York | 6,499 | 22,834 15 | 7,715 | 18,675 91 |
+ | New Jersey | 4,502 | 16,781 26 | 7,892 | 14,790 02 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 7,848 | 26,800 80 | 8,361 | 20,076 29 |
+ | Delaware | 2,261 | 5,228 21 | 2,081 | 4,018 58 |
+ | Maryland | 5,014 | 17,676 78 | 4,550 | 13,283 87 |
+ | Virginia | 8,067 | 30,401 80 | 7,047 | 20,147 24 |
+ | North Carolina | 5,766 | 14,147 44 | 4,859 | 8,907 95 |
+ | Ohio | 160 | 628 36 | 219 | 732 45 |
+ | Kentucky | 610 | 3,025 77 | 546 | 3,192 86 |
+ | South Carolina | 4,560 | 15,411 58 | 4,178 | 11,345 94 |
+ | Tennessee | 209 | 778 22 | 154 | 781 43 |
+ | Georgia | 2,667 | 7,159 75 | 1,948 | 6,095 60 |
+ | Louisiana | 495 | 1,435 83 | 430 | 1,357 27 |
+ | Illinois Territory | 19 | 66 62 | 18 | 36 75 |
+ | Michigan " | 31 | 76 00 | 28 | 60 00 |
+ | Indiana " | 4 | 6 00 | 5 | 17 44 |
+ | Missouri " | 18 | 79 00 | 6 | 47 00 |
+ | Mississippi " | 78 | 371 00 | 73 | 371 98 |
+ | District of Columbia | 353 | 2,171 21 | 316 | 1,747 57 |
+ +----------------------+--------+------------+--------+------------+
+ | Total | 77,095 | 225,156 47 | 76,616 | 165,717 31 |
+ +----------------------+--------+------------+--------+------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Licenses to Retailers._
+
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | STATES OR | | |
+ | TERRITORIES. | In 1814. | 1815. |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 18,449 00 | 24,535 64 |
+ | Massachusetts | 86,211 12 | 113,906 95 |
+ | Vermont | 14,417 00 | 22,337 54 |
+ | Rhode Island | 16,058 00 | 10,093 53 |
+ | Connecticut | 32,820 26 | 42,616 04 |
+ | New York | 174,748 76 | 201,757 84 |
+ | New Jersey | 29,701 00 | 35,607 87 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 160,939 21 | 153,018 84 |
+ | Delaware | 10,102 88 | 8,093 12 |
+ | Maryland | 49,256 20 | 58,747 36 |
+ | Virginia | 52,038 68 | 69,620 64 |
+ | North Carolina | 23,985 00 | 32,967 98 |
+ | Ohio | 20,574 00 | 26,923 23 |
+ | Kentucky | 19,255 00 | 23,789 71 |
+ | South Carolina | 26,599 00 | 28,142 91 |
+ | Tennessee | 10,462 00 | 13,280 54 |
+ | Georgia | 13,908 00 | 24,454 33 |
+ | Louisiana | 7,497 00 | 9,773 09 |
+ | Illinois Territory | 1,115 00 | 1,248 80 |
+ | Michigan " | 1,405 00 | 1,817 10 |
+ | Indiana " | 2,191 00 | 3,139 59 |
+ | Missouri " | 1,540 00 | 1,861 46 |
+ | Mississippi " | 3,692 00 | 4,837 74 |
+ | District of Columbia | 10,140 00 | 14,872 62 |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | | 786,005 11 | 927,444 47 |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Sales at Auction._
+
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | STATUS OR | | |
+ | TERRITORIES. | In 1814. | 1815. |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 776 07 | 2,245 79 |
+ | Massachusetts | 35,359 04 | 87,643 63 |
+ | Vermont | 14 25 | 75 20 |
+ | Rhode Island | 6,274 82 | 452 01 |
+ | Connecticut | 283 89 | 635 55 |
+ | New York | 48,480 35 | 332,841 64 |
+ | New Jersey | 3,384 32 | 949 84 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 34,630 74 | 229,764 45 |
+ | Delaware | 116 25 | 453 82 |
+ | Maryland | 9,623 15 | 102,758 79 |
+ | Virginia | 4,079 37 | 20,003 64 |
+ | North Carolina | 1,237 62 | 3,734 47 |
+ | Ohio | 549 31 | 636 22 |
+ | Kentucky | 270 92 | 1,371 29 |
+ | South Carolina | 2,631 39 | 18,401 94 |
+ | Tennessee | 63 31 | 291 06 |
+ | Georgia | 1,346 34 | 4,133 92 |
+ | Louisiana | 4,832 24 | 13,504 09 |
+ | Illinois Territory | | |
+ | Michigan " | 80 04 | 71 05 |
+ | Indiana " | | |
+ | Missouri " | | |
+ | Mississippi " | 210 13 | 750 47 |
+ | District of Columbia | 385 65 | 4,413 96 |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+ | | 154,629 20 | 825,132 83 |
+ +----------------------+--------------+--------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Refined Sugars._
+
+ +-----------------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | STATES OR | | |
+ | TERRITORIES. | In 1814. | 1815. |
+ +-----------------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | New Hampshire | | |
+ | Massachusetts | 3,542 36 | 4,394 17 |
+ | Vermont | | |
+ | Rhode Island | | |
+ | Connecticut | | |
+ | New York | 7,468 12 | 40,279 69 |
+ | New Jersey | | |
+ | Pennsylvania | 157 03 | 6,127 41 |
+ | Delaware | | |
+ | Maryland | | 18,619 48 |
+ | Virginia | 23 40 | 980 32 |
+ | North Carolina | | |
+ | Ohio | | |
+ | Kentucky | | |
+ | South Carolina | | |
+ | Tennessee | | |
+ | Georgia | | |
+ | Louisiana | 479 00 | 408 05 |
+ | Illinois Territory | | |
+ | Michigan " | | |
+ | Indiana " | | |
+ | Missouri " | | |
+ | Mississippi " | | |
+ | District of Columbia | | 4,413 96 |
+ +-----------------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | | 11,669 91 | 75,223 08 |
+ +-----------------------+-------------+-------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Stamps and in lieu of Stamps by
+Banks._
+
+ +---------------------+------------------------+------------------------+
+ | | In 1814. | In 1815. |
+ | STATES OR +------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+ | TERRITORIES. |On paper and|Banks in |On paper and|By Banks in|
+ | |Bank Notes. |lieu of |Bank Notes. | lieu, &c. |
+ | | |Bank Notes.|Bank Notes. | lieu, &c. |
+ +---------------------|------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+ | New Hampshire | 773 02 | 130 21 | 646 70 | 1,020 78 |
+ | Massachusetts | 20,741 47 | 2,880 00 | 5,520 74 | 9,339 73 |
+ | Vermont | 19 60 | | 35 75 | |
+ | Rhode Island | 5,825 15 | 97 29 | 1,131 82 | 1,461 01 |
+ | Connecticut | 11,152 07 | 2,445 44 | 9,126 97 | 3,015 91 |
+ | New York | 87,971 51 | 8,289 31 | 57,725 72 | 18,661 48 |
+ | New Jersey | 5,905 82 | 1,609 04 | 4,868 90 | 2,105 66 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 80,580 65 | 2,874 80 | 74,470 96 | 15,638 22 |
+ | Delaware | 5,570 10 | 669 48 | 3,769 01 | 753 54 |
+ | Maryland | 35,364 67 | 7,716 21 | 47,590 18 | 8,166 19 |
+ | Virginia | 36,308 41 | 2,516 96 | 33,235 88 | 6,061 96 |
+ | North Carolina | 9,132 80 | 1,865 94 | 11,909 15 | 2,852 40 |
+ | Ohio | 6,781 47 | 273 79 | 8,964 82 | 1,870 65 |
+ | Kentucky | 8,238 69 | | 7,937 97 | 1,531 18 |
+ | South Carolina | 18,916 55 | 4,055 44 | 18,156 65 | 4,093 51 |
+ | Tennessee | 1,619 85 | | 2,118 92 | 347 77 |
+ | Georgia | 5,736 75 | 900 37 | 6,302 95 | 1,070 69 |
+ | Louisiana | 11,151 21 | 384 66 | 10,821 53 | 1,920 00 |
+ | Illinois Territory | 7 85 | | 4 50 | |
+ | Michigan " | 26 10 | | 16 35 | |
+ | Indiana " | | | | |
+ | Missouri " | 84 10 | | 1,191 02 | |
+ | Mississippi " | 983 03 | 138 36 | 93 90 | |
+ | District of Columbia| 18,053 90 | 2,713 95 | 28,569 31 | 4,507 92 |
+ +---------------------+------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+ | Total | 370,945 27 | 39,571 25 | 334,209 70 | 84,418 10 |
+ +---------------------+------------+-----------+------------+-----------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Household Furniture._
+
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | STATES OR | In 1815. |
+ | TERRITORIES. | |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 376 00 |
+ | Massachusetts | 677 50 |
+ | Vermont | 211 50 |
+ | Rhode Island | 782 50 |
+ | Connecticut | 807 00 |
+ | New York | 10,877 00 |
+ | New Jersey | 1,527 50 |
+ | Pennsylvania | |
+ | Delaware | 434 50 |
+ | Maryland | 580 50 |
+ | Virginia | 168 50 |
+ | North Carolina | |
+ | Ohio | 104 50 |
+ | Kentucky | |
+ | South Carolina | 2,854 50 |
+ | Tennessee | |
+ | Georgia | 1,050 00 |
+ | Louisiana | |
+ | Illinois Territory | |
+ | Michigan " | |
+ | Indiana " | |
+ | Missouri " | |
+ | Mississippi " | |
+ | District of Columbia | 1,174 00 |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | Total | 21,625 50 |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on Gold and Silver Watches._
+
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | STATES OR | In 1815. |
+ | TERRITORIES. | |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 3,377 00 |
+ | Massachusetts | 4,385 50 |
+ | Vermont | 2,765 00 |
+ | Rhode Island | 2,876 00 |
+ | Connecticut | 5,457 00 |
+ | New York | 30,449 50 |
+ | New Jersey | 7,784 00 |
+ | Pennsylvania | |
+ | Delaware | 2,943 00 |
+ | Maryland | 2,408 00 |
+ | Virginia | 33 00 |
+ | North Carolina | |
+ | Ohio | 3,104 00 |
+ | Kentucky | |
+ | South Carolina | 5,380 00 |
+ | Tennessee | 252 50 |
+ | Georgia | 2,472 00 |
+ | Louisiana | |
+ | Illinois Territory | |
+ | Michigan " | |
+ | Indiana " | |
+ | Missouri " | |
+ | Mississippi " | |
+ | District of Columbia | 1,636 00 |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+ | Total | 75,322 50 |
+ +------------------------+---------------+
+
+
+_Internal Duties which accrued on sundry articles manufactured in the
+United States._
+
+ +------------------------+----------------+
+ | STATES OR | In 1815. |
+ | TERRITORIES. | |
+ +------------------------+----------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 4,540 76 |
+ | Massachusetts | 56,784 89 |
+ | Vermont | 9,250 40 |
+ | Rhode Island | 910 00 |
+ | Connecticut | 20,504 80 |
+ | New York | 157,176 79 |
+ | New Jersey | 28,546 87 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 228,188 88 |
+ | Delaware | 10,803 31 |
+ | Maryland | 70,746 17 |
+ | Virginia | 88,154 31 |
+ | North Carolina | 12,801 23 |
+ | Ohio | 23,270 60 |
+ | Kentucky | 33,184 46 |
+ | South Carolina | 10,156 58 |
+ | Tennessee | 15,373 43 |
+ | Georgia | 8,993 25 |
+ | Louisiana | 1,283 03 |
+ | Illinois Territory | 220 14 |
+ | Michigan " | 39 46 |
+ | Indiana " | 1,064 44 |
+ | Missouri " | 162 68 |
+ | Mississippi " | 1,158 61 |
+ | District of Columbia | 10,309 97 |
+ +------------------------+----------------+
+ | Total | 793,625 06 |
+ +------------------------+----------------+
+
+
+_Aggregate of internal Duties which accrued._
+
+ +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | DUTIES ON | In 1814. | In 1815. |
+ +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | Stills, from domestic materials | 1,621,152 86 | 760,804 22 |
+ | " " foreign " | 57,444 33 | 91,608 36 |
+ | Spirits, from domestic materials | | 2,047,738 96 |
+ | " " foreign " | | 159,229 00 |
+ | Carriages | 225,158 47 | 165,717 31 |
+ | Retailers | 786,005 11 | 927,444 47 |
+ | Sales at auction | 154,629 20 | 825,132 83 |
+ | Stamps | 370,945 27 | 334,209 70 |
+ | " Bank notes, composition | 39,571 25 | 84,418 10 |
+ | Household furniture | | 21,625 50 |
+ | Gold and silver watches | | 75,322 50 |
+ | Refined sugar | 11,669 91 | 75,223 08 |
+ | Articles manufactured in the | | |
+ | United States | | 793,625 06 |
+ +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | Total | 3,266,576 40 | 6,362,099 09 |
+ +----------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+
+
+_Direct Taxes._
+
+ +------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | STATES. | Tax of Aug. 3, | Tax of Jan. 9, |
+ | | 1813. | 1815. |
+ +------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | New Hampshire | 97,049 21 | 193,755 99 |
+ | Vermont | 98,534 52 | 196,789 29 |
+ | Massachusetts | 318,154 84 | 632,065 00 |
+ | Rhode Island | 34,758 86 | 69,431 78 |
+ | Connecticut | 118,533 63 | 236,507 38 |
+ | New York | 435,028 35 | 860,283 24 |
+ | New Jersey | 108,871 83 | 218,252 77 |
+ | Pennsylvania | 365,479 16 | 733,941 09 |
+ | Delaware | 32,294 76 | 63,847 32 |
+ | Maryland | 152,327 64 | 306,708 81 |
+ | Virginia | 369,018 44 | 739,738 06 |
+ | North Carolina | 220,962 98 | 440,321 11 |
+ | South Carolina | 151,905 48 | 303,810 96 |
+ | Georgia | 94,936 49 | 189,872 98 |
+ | Kentucky | 168,928 76 | 341,316 24 |
+ | Tennessee | 111,039 59 | 221,567 44 |
+ | Ohio | 104,150 14 | 208,300 28 |
+ | Louisiana | 31,621 43 | 57,519 22 |
+ | District of Columbia | | 20,605 86 |
+ +------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+ | Total | 3,013,596 11 | 6,034,634 82 |
+ +------------------------+----------------+----------------+
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ A.
+
+ Adams the Elder, his view of the conduct of England in 1785, i. 24;
+ of the war, i. 66.
+
+ Adams, John Q., resigns his seat in Massachusetts Legislature, i. 31;
+ appointed commissioner to negotiate a peace, i. 328.
+
+ Adams, sloop of war, cruise of, ii. 165;
+ burnt, ii. 106.
+
+ Adair, General, commands the Kentuckians at New Orleans, ii. 221
+
+ Allen, Col., i. 179.
+
+ Allen, Captain of the Argus, his death, i. 285.
+
+ Allen, Lieutenant H., i. 258.
+
+ Appling, Major, captures the British detachment sent against
+ Lieutenant Woolsey, ii. 72.
+
+ Angus, Lieutenant, at Niagara, i. 113.
+
+ Argus chased by an English squadron, i. 155;
+ cruises in the English channel, i. 252;
+ captured by the Pelican, i. 254.
+
+ Armstrong, Secretary of War, i. 205;
+ plan of his campaign against Canada, i. 291;
+ his disgrace after the battle of Bladensburg, ii. 139.
+
+ Armstrong, General, Privateer, Capt. Reid, her desperate engagement
+ in Fayal Bay, ii. 270.
+
+ Armstrong, Lieutenant, heroism of, at the ford of Enotochopeo, ii. 34.
+
+ Armistead, Major, his gallant defence of fort McHenry, ii. 143.
+
+
+ B.
+
+ Backwoodsmen at Chippewa, ii, 83.
+
+ Berlin and Milan decrees, i. 20;
+ revoked, i. 41.
+
+ Beaver Dams, battle of, i. 221.
+
+ Blockade, rules of the Coast, i. 259, ii. 115.
+
+ Barlow, Joel, Minister to France, i. 41.
+
+ Barney, Captain, commands flotilla in the Chesapeake, ii. 116;
+ at Bladensburg, ii. 125.
+
+ Boestler, Col., i. 112;
+ defeated at Beaver Dams, i. 221.
+
+ Brock, General, i. 83;
+ his death, i. 102.
+
+ Broke, Commodore, chases the Constitution, i. 137;
+ captures the Chesapeake, i. 246.
+
+ Brown, General, at Ogdensburg, i. 116;
+ defends Sackett's Harbor, i. 215;
+ commands on Niagara frontier, ii. 75;
+ at Chippewa, ii. 77;
+ threatens English forts on the Niagara, ii. 88;
+ his victory at Lundy's Lane, ii. 91;
+ takes command of Fort Erie, ii. 107;
+ his successful sortie, ii. 109.
+
+ Brooks, Lieutenant, killed on Lake Erie, i. 279.
+
+ Brooke, Colonel, succeeds General Ross, ii. 143.
+
+ Bainbridge, Captain, remonstrates with the President against
+ laying up the navy, i. 128;
+ takes command of the Constitution, i. 151;
+ captures the Java, i. 162;
+ his character, i. 167;
+ singular dream of, i. 167.
+
+ Battle of Queenstown, i. 101;
+ of Lake Erie, i. 279;
+ of the Thames, i. 289;
+ of Chrystler's field, i. 298;
+ of La Cole Mill, i. 313;
+ of Talladega, ii. 20;
+ of the Horse Shoe, ii. 27;
+ of Chippewa, ii. 77;
+ of Lundy's Lane, ii. 88;
+ of Bladenburg, ii. 124;
+ of Plattsburgh, ii. 155;
+ of New Orleans, ii. 215, 217, 221.
+
+ _Bills_ in Congress, respecting minors, i. 225, ii. 187;
+ army, 226;
+ the navy, ii. 188.
+
+ Blakely, Captain, of the Wasp, ii. 167.
+
+ Boxer taken by the Enterprise, i. 250.
+
+ Boyd, General, i. 297.
+
+ Burrows, Lieutenant, commands the Enterprise, i. 248;
+ captures the Boxer, his death, i. 250.
+
+ Buffalo burned, i. 300.
+
+ Bowyer Fort, defence of, ii. 201.
+
+ Beasely, agent for American prisoners in England, ii. 286.
+
+ Biddle, Captain, of the Hornet, ii. 249;
+ narrow escape of, from a British man of war, ii. 253, 254.
+
+
+ C.
+
+ Cambria, British frigate, boards an American merchantman in
+ New York Bay, i. 19.
+
+ Canning, Prime Minister of Great Britain, i. 28.
+
+ Chesapeake and Leopard, i. 32;
+ Chesapeake captured, i. 236;
+ exultation in England, i. 247.
+
+ Campaign of 1813, plan of, i. 205;
+ Third into Canada, ii. 67.
+
+ Cabot, John, delegate to the Hartford Convention;
+ George elected President of, ii. 194.
+
+ _Congress_ revokes the restrictive system, i. 40;
+ the Twelfth, state of parties, i. 42, 43;
+ debates in, i. 45, 50, 52;
+ second session, i. 224;
+ Debates on bonds of Merchants, &c., i. 225;
+ on army bill, i. 226;
+ acts passed, i. 243;
+ Thirteenth, i. 319;
+ leaders of, i. 320;
+ first session and acts of, i. 325;
+ second session, i. 327;
+ acts of, i. 345;
+ third session, ii. 174;
+ embarrassments of, ii. 188.
+
+ Campbell, Secretary of Treasury, report, ii. 175;
+ resigned, ii. 177.
+
+ Campbell, General, destroys Indian villages, i. 178.
+
+ Cass, Col., i. 74, 82, 85.
+
+ Calhoun, sketch of, i. 238;
+ speech on repeal of embargo, i. 342.
+
+ Castlereagh, i. 53, 54;
+ arrival at Ghent, ii. 180.
+
+ Chauncey, Commodore, commands on Lake Ontario, i. 207;
+ forces Sir James Yeo into Burlington, i. 293.
+
+ Chippewa, battle of, ii. 77.
+
+ Clay, elected speaker of Congress, i. 43;
+ speech in reply to Randolph, i. 46;
+ on embargo, i. 51;
+ against Quincy, and on impressment in the war, i. 231;
+ sketch of, i. 240;
+ asks for investigation of British outrages, i. 262;
+ appointed commissioner to negotiate a peace, i. 328.
+
+ Clay, Col., relieves Harrison, i. 198;
+ his command destroyed, i. 199;
+ commands Fort Meigs, i. 199.
+
+ Coffee, General, defeats Black Warrior, ii. 14;
+ victory of Tallushatchee, ii. 17;
+ helps Jackson quell a mutiny, ii. 27;
+ gallantry at Emuckfaw, ii. 32;
+ at Enotochopeo, ii. 34;
+ at the Horse Shoe, ii. 39;
+ at New Orleans, ii. 205, 209, 220.
+
+ Chrystie Col., at Queenstown, i. 101.
+
+ Chrystler's Field, battle of, i. 298.
+
+ Creek Indians, i. 194;
+ war with, ii. 13-44.
+
+ Craney Island, defence of, ii. 262.
+
+ Constitution frigate sails from Annapolis, i. 136;
+ chased by an English squadron, i. 137;
+ captures the Guerriere, i. 146;
+ captures the Java, i. 162;
+ cruise of, in 1814-15, ii. 237;
+ captures the Cyane and Levant, ii. 238;
+ takes her prizes into St. Jago, ii. 240;
+ chased by an English fleet, ii. 242;
+ affection of the nation for her, ii. 243.
+
+ Commissioners appointed to negotiate a peace, i. 328;
+ their mortification at the arrival of the news of the burning
+ of Washington, ii. 117;
+ unfavorable news from, and their meeting at Ghent, ii. 178;
+ terms of the English ministers, &c., ii. 178-190.
+
+ Cochrane, Admiral, arrives in the Chesapeake, ii. 117;
+ bombards Fort McHenry, ii. 143.
+
+ Chandler, General, reinforces Winder in Canada, i. 218;
+ taken prisoner, i. 219.
+
+ Chittenden, Governor of Vermont, recalls a brigade, i. 321;
+ his apathy under the repeated calls of Macomb for aid, ii. 149.
+
+ Cockburn, i. 259;
+ plunders Hampton, i. 203;
+ his character, ii. 197;
+ conduct in the sack of Washington, ii. 128, 130.
+
+ Comet, privateer, Capt. Boyd, her engagement with three English
+ merchantmen and a Portuguese brig of war, ii. 265.
+
+ Covington General, killed at Chrystler's field, i. 298.
+
+ Cheves, Langdon, appointed Speaker of the Thirteenth Congress, i. 329.
+
+ Carroll, Colonel, bravery at Talladega, ii. 20;
+ at New Orleans, ii. 220.
+
+ Chasseur, privateer, Capt. Boyle, description of;
+ her engagement with the English war schooner St. Lawrence, ii. 275.
+
+ Cruelty of British naval officers, ii. 278.
+
+ Croghan, Major, bravery at Sandusky, i. 201.
+
+ Connecticut, action of her Legislature against the bill for the
+ enlistment of minors, ii. 187.
+
+ Clairborne, General, defeats the Indians under Weathersby, ii. 30.
+
+ Clairborne, Governor of Louisiana;
+ his support of Jackson, ii. 216.
+
+ Currency, deranged state of, in 1814, ii. 176.
+
+ Crowningshield, Secretary of navy, recommends a conscription of
+ seamen, ii. 189.
+
+
+ D.
+
+ Dearborn appointed Major General, i. 70;
+ enters into an armistice with Prevost, i. 99;
+ enters Canada, i. 117;
+ retires to winter quarters, i. 118;
+ review of his first campaign, i. 120;
+ second campaign, i. 205;
+ attacks Fort George, i. 213;
+ his inaction, i. 221;
+ his removal, i. 222.
+
+ Dartmoor prison, description of, ii. 280;
+ fourth of July in, ii. 282;
+ in 1814, ii. 289;
+ daring escape from, by a lieutenant, ii. 291.
+
+ Dacres, Captain, i. 148.
+
+ Dallas, Alexander, Secretary of the Treasury, ii. 177;
+ his scheme to relieve the government, ii. 178;
+ second report on state of Treasury, ii. 189.
+
+ Decatur commands the United States, captures the Macedonian, i. 152;
+ blockaded in New London, and challenges two English frigates, i. 311;
+ commands the President, ii. 245;
+ chased by an English fleet, ii. 246;
+ his capture, ii. 247.
+
+ Decatur privateer, Capt. Diron, captures a British war
+ schooner, ii. 268.
+
+ Dolphin, privateer, captures two English vessels, ii. 264.
+
+ Downes, Lieutenant, commands Essex Junior, ii. 48;
+ assists the Marquesas tribes, ii. 50;
+ wounded by the Typees, ii. 51.
+
+ Drummond, General, at Lundy's Lane, ii. 89;
+ assaults Fort Erie, ii. 100.
+
+ Drummond, Lieut.-Col, killed at Fort Erie, ii. 104.
+
+ Dudley, Colonel, killed at Fort Meigs, i. 199.
+
+ Downie, Captain, commands the British fleet in Lake Champlain, ii. 152.
+
+ Dwight, Timothy, Secretary of Hartford Convention, ii. 194.
+
+
+ E.
+
+ Embargo, its effect on the country, i. 26-29;
+ repealed, i. 32;
+ re-enacted, i. 50;
+ laid by Thirteenth Congress, i. 327;
+ repealed, i. 342.
+
+ Epervier, ii. 170.
+
+ Erie, Fort, assault of, by Gen. Drummond, ii. 103.
+
+ Erskine, English Minister, i. 36;
+ disavowal of his treaty, i. 38.
+
+ England, her conduct towards France and the world, i. 37;
+ astonishment at our naval victories;
+ her exultation over the capture of the Chesapeake;
+ her vast preparations for war in 1813, i. 259;
+ her rejoicing over the destruction of Washington compared
+ with her condemnation of the acts of Napoleon, ii. 136, 137.
+
+ Enterprise, brig, i. 248;
+ captures the Boxer, i. 250;
+ takes the Privateer Mars;
+ chased by a frigate, i. 251.
+
+ Eppes succeeds Randolph in Congress, i. 319;
+ his report on state of finances, i. 322;
+ his currency scheme, ii. 127.
+
+ Essex captures the Alert, i. 143;
+ her cruise in the Pacific, ii. 65, 66;
+ is captured at Valparaiso, ii. 66.
+
+
+ F.
+
+ Federalists, triumph of, in New England, i, 265;
+ leaders of in Massachusetts, their exultation over the failure
+ of Wilkinson's campaign, i. 301;
+ hostility of, i. 326.
+
+ Federalists and Democrats, i. 59-65.
+
+ Floyd, General, defeats the Indians at Autossee, ii. 31;
+ victorious over the Creeks, ii. 35.
+
+ Frederickton destroyed, i. 260.
+
+ Forsyth, Colonel, i. 116;
+ at York, i. 208.
+
+ Forsyth, John, speech of, in Thirteenth Congress, i. 337.
+
+ Fort George captured by the Americans, i. 213.
+
+
+ G.
+
+ Gamble, Lieutenant, ii. 51.
+
+ Gallatin opposes the employment of the navy, i. 130;
+ appointed commissioner to negotiate a treaty, i. 328;
+ letter to government advising war, ii. 181.
+
+ Gaines, General, takes command of the army stationed at Fort
+ Erie, ii. 100;
+ repels Drummond, ii. 103;
+ succeeds Jackson at New Orleans, ii. 228.
+
+ Generosity of Americans, i. 203.
+
+ Georgetown destroyed, i. 260.
+
+ Globe privateer, her action with two brigs, ii. 267.
+
+ Gordon, Captain, gallant adherence to Jackson, ii. 26.
+
+ Guerriere captured by the Constitution, i. 148;
+ blown up, i. 149.
+
+ Gunnery, superiority of American, i. 175.
+
+
+ H.
+
+ Harmar, General, i. 17.
+
+ Hammond, British minister in 1791, i. 25.
+
+ Harrington, Captain, ii. 172.
+
+ Harrison, General, supersedes Hull, i. 95;
+ at Fort Deposit and Fort Defiance, i. 96;
+ plans a winter campaign, i. 177;
+ at Fort Meigs, i. 196;
+ pursues Proctor, i. 286;
+ defeats him, i. 289.
+
+ Hartford Convention, History of, ii. 191-200;
+ delegates to Washington, ii. 231.
+
+ Hall, Judge, fines General Jackson, ii. 227.
+
+ Henry, John, his character and career, i. 49.
+
+ Hindman, Major, his gallantry at Lundy's Lane, ii. 94.
+
+ Hull, General, his campaign, i. 71;
+ tried by court-martial, i. 87;
+ character, i. 88.
+
+ Hull, Captain, commands the Constitution: his instructions, i. 136;
+ chased by an English squadron, i. 138;
+ captures the Guerriere, i. 139;
+ effect of the victory, i. 151.
+
+ Hopkins, General, i. 95.
+
+ Hardy, Commodore, remonstrates against the use of torpedos, i. 265.
+
+ Hamilton, Secretary of the navy, i. 68.
+
+ Hamilton, Lieutenant, is sent with the colors of the Macedonian
+ to Washington.
+
+ Hampton plundered, i. 263.
+
+ Hampton, General, commands at Plattsburgh, i. 292;
+ advances into Canada, i. 294;
+ retreats, i. 295;
+ refuses to join Wilkinson, i. 299;
+ goes into winter quarters at Plattsburgh, i. 300;
+ strictures on, i. 302.
+
+ Hornet captures the Peacock, i. 170;
+ takes the Penguin, ii. 249;
+ chased by an English man of war, ii. 252.
+
+ Holmes, Captain, his expedition into Canada, i. 315;
+ killed at Mackinaw, ii. 73.
+
+ Hillyar, Captain, captures the Essex, ii. 61.
+
+ Henderson, Colonel, killed at New Orleans, ii. 216.
+
+
+ I.
+
+ Impressment in 1796, i. 18;
+ cause of war, i. 19.
+
+ Indians, number in the Western States in 1812, and the
+ hostility, i. 190;
+ number of Choctaws, Chickesaws and Creeks, i. 193.
+
+ Izard, General, defeated under General Hampton, i. 295;
+ succeeds Wilkinson, ii. 106.
+
+
+ J.
+
+ Jay, treaty of, in 1796, i. 26.
+
+ Jefferson, proclamation against English vessels, i. 33.
+
+ Jackson, English Minister in place of Erskine, i. 39;
+ recalled, i. 40.
+
+ Jackson, General, ordered to Natchez, ii. 12;
+ made Major-General of the Tennessee Militia, ii. 12;
+ marches to Huntsville, ii. 15;
+ dispatches General Coffee against Black Warrior's town, ii. 17;
+ his conduct of the Creek war, ii. 12-44;
+ appointed Major-General, ii. 199;
+ seizes Pensacola, ii. 202;
+ marches to New Orleans, ii. 203;
+ his preparations for the defence of the place, ii. 204;
+ attacks the British, ii. 209, 210;
+ his final victory, ii. 221;
+ fined by Judge Hall, ii. 227;
+ review of his conduct, ii. 228.
+
+ Jessup, Colonel at Chippewa, ii. 80;
+ his heroism at Lundy's Lane, ii. 86-92;
+ watches the Hartford Convention, ii. 194.
+
+ Johnson, Colonel and Lieut.-Colonel, at battle of Thames, i. 288.
+
+ Jones, Captain of the Wasp, i. 155;
+ captures the Frolic, i. 156.
+
+ Jones, Lieutenant, his action with the British gun-boats on
+ Lake Borgne, ii. 207.
+
+
+ K.
+
+ King, Captain, at Niagara, i. 112.
+
+ Key, Francis, composes "The Star spangled Banner," while witnessing
+ the bombardment of Fort McHenry, ii. 145.
+
+ Kemp privateer captures a fleet of six vessels, ii. 270.
+
+ King, Charles appointed commissioner to investigate the massacre
+ of prisoners in Dartmoor, ii. 297.
+
+
+ L.
+
+ Lawrence, Captain, sails under Rodgers, i. 133;
+ challenges the Bonne Citoyenne, i. 160;
+ captures the Peacock, i. 170;
+ takes command of the Chesapeake, i. 244;
+ engages the Shannon, i. 245;
+ his death, i. 246.
+
+ Lawrence, Major, his defence of Fort Bowyer, ii. 201
+
+ Leavenworth, Major, gallantry at Chippewa, ii. 80;
+ gallantry at Lundy's Lane, ii. 87.
+
+ Lewis, Colonel, defeats the British at Frenchtown, i. 179;
+ captured, i. 181.
+
+ Lewistown burned, i. 306.
+
+ Lowndes, sketch of, i. 239.
+
+
+ M.
+
+ Madison, President, character of, i. 34, 35;
+ war messages, i. 55;
+ his conduct at the invasion of Washington, ii. 118-123;
+ his flight, ii. 129;
+ message to Congress, Sept. 1814, ii. 177;
+ message to Congress, accompanying English Protocol from
+ Ghent, ii. 182.
+
+ Madison, Mrs., her heroism at the burning of Washington, ii. 129;
+ refused admittance to a tavern, ii. 133.
+
+ Madison, Major, his bravery at Frenchtown, i. 182.
+
+ Madison Island, ii. 49.
+
+ Madison sloop of war, i. 207.
+
+ Marquesas Island, rendezvous of Porter, ii. 49.
+
+ Mackinaw taken by the English, i. 77;
+ expedition against, ii. 72.
+
+ Macomb, General, at Plattsburgh, ii. 148;
+ asks Governor Chittenden for aid, ii. 149;
+ defeats the British, ii. 155.
+
+ Massachusetts Legislature, action of, against the war, i. 268;
+ against the bill for the enlistment of minors, ii. 187;
+ raises an army to be under its own control, ii. 192.
+
+ Massacre at Frenchtown, i. 189;
+ effect of in Kentucky, i. 185;
+ at Fort Mimms, i. 196.
+
+ McLure, General, at Fort George, i. 303;
+ burns Newark, i. 304;
+ his proclamation and neglect to protect Fort Niagara, i. 304, 305.
+
+ Meigs, Fort of, i. 197;
+ invested by Proctor, i. 197.
+
+ Manners, Captain, death of, ii. 167.
+
+ Mitchell's speech in Congress, i. 52.
+
+ Mimm's Fort, i. 196.
+
+ Mackinaw Fort surrendered, i. 77.
+
+ Miller, Colonel, defeats British at Brownstown;
+ joins Harrison, i. 199;
+ heroic answer at Lundy's Lane, ii. 89, 90.
+
+ Mitchell, Colonel, gallant defence of Oswego, ii. 70.
+
+ McArthur, Colonel, i. 85;
+ his expedition into Canada, ii. 163.
+
+ McNeill, Major, bravery at Chippewa, ii. 78;
+ at Lundy's Lane, ii. 86.
+
+ McHenry, Fort of, ii. 142.
+
+ Madonough, Commodore, in Plattsburgh bay, ii. 152;
+ defeats the British squadron, ii. 155.
+
+ Macedonian, ship, taken by the United States, i. 153.
+
+ Montgomery, Major, killed at the battle of the Horse Shoe, ii. 38.
+
+ Monroe, Secretary of State, his conduct at Bladensburgh, ii. 123.
+
+ Morgan, Major, checks the enemy at Black Rock, ii. 101.
+
+ Morgan, General, at New Orleans, ii. 220.
+
+ Morris, Lieutenant, wounded in taking the Guerriere, i. 147;
+ commands the Adams sloop of war, ii. 165.
+
+
+ N.
+
+ Nash, Captain, base treatment of Commodore Porter, ii. 63.
+
+ Non-Intercourse law, i. 32.
+
+ Nautilus schooner captured, i. 138.
+
+ Napoleon, i. 85, 86, 258.
+
+ Navy, strength of, i. 125;
+ neglect of, i. 126;
+ saved by Captains Bainbridge and Stewart, i. 128;
+ increase of, i. 176;
+ history of, in 1814, ii. 165;
+ bill for increase of, ii. 188;
+ review of, ii. 256, 257.
+
+ Naval victories, effect of, at home and abroad, i. 171.
+
+ Naval force in 1814, i. 346.
+
+ Neufchatel privateer beats off the crew of the Endymion, ii. 269.
+
+ Nonsuch privateer engages two English vessels, ii. 264.
+
+ New England, her hostility to war, i. 58, ii. 191;
+ exempted from blockade, i. 259.
+
+ New Hampshire Legislature abolishes all the courts of the
+ State, i. 325.
+
+ New Orleans, description of, ii. 206;
+ feelings of the inhabitants, ii. 207.
+
+ Niagara Fort surprised, i. 304.
+
+ Nicholson, Lieutenant, escapes an English frigate, ii. 173.
+
+
+ O.
+
+ Orders in Council, British, i. 20;
+ repealed, i. 342;
+ effect of, in this country, i. 27-92.
+
+ Ogdensburg, attack of, i. 117.
+
+ Oneida sloop, i. 206.
+
+ Ontario, Lake, description of, i. 206;
+ naval superiority, i. 207;
+ cost of vessels in, i. 258.
+
+ Oswego attacked by Sir James Yeo, ii. 69.
+
+
+ P.
+
+ Packenham, Sir Edward, attacks the lines at New Orleans, ii. 215.
+
+ Parker, Sir Peter, killed, ii. 141.
+
+ Peacock, Captain Harrington, captures the Epervier, ii. 172;
+ chased by an English man of war, ii. 252.
+
+ Perry on Lake Erie, i. 271, 273, 274;
+ sets sail, i. 275;
+ engages the enemy, i. 278;
+ conduct after the battle, i. 283;
+ at the battle of the Thames, i. 287.
+
+ President frigate, affair with the Little Belt, i. 42;
+ puts to sea, i. 132;
+ chases the Belvidere, i. 134;
+ beats the Endymion, and finally captured by an English
+ fleet, ii. 247.
+
+ Pinckney, American Minister to England, i. 41;
+ commands Baltimore regiment at Bladensburg, ii. 118-124.
+
+ Pike, Colonel, incursion into Canada, i. 117;
+ captures York, i. 208;
+ his death, i. 210.
+
+ Pickering, Timothy, description of, his speech against loan
+ bill of Thirteenth Congress, i. 335.
+
+ Pitkin, i. 335.
+
+ Plattsburg, description of, ii. 149;
+ battle of, ii. 155.
+
+ Peace, tidings of, effect on the nation, ii. 229-230.
+
+ Porter, General, i. 114;
+ at Chippewa, ii. 77;
+ his gallantry and narrow escape at Fort Erie, ii. 109-111.
+
+ Porter, Captain, commands the Essex;
+ capture of the Alert, i. 143;
+ his cruise in the Pacific, ii. 45-66;
+ his daring escape and reception in New York, ii. 65, 66.
+
+ Proctor, Colonel, advances against Frenchtown, i. 180;
+ defeats the Americans, i. 181;
+ leaves the prisoners to be massacred, i. 182;
+ his character, i. 185;
+ invests Fort Meigs, i. 197;
+ abandons the siege, i. 199;
+ defeated at Sandusky, i. 201;
+ retreats from Malden, i. 286;
+ defeated at the Thames, i. 289.
+
+ Prescot, Governor-general of Canada, i. 99;
+ letter to Brooke, i. 121;
+ attacks Sackett's Harbor, i. 215;
+ advances against Plattsburgh, ii. 148;
+ his retreat, ii. 161.
+
+ Protocol, English, at Ghent, ii. 181;
+ transmitted to Congress, ii. 182;
+ its effect on the nation, ii. 183;
+ its reception in England, ii.
+
+ Privateering, account of, ii. 257;
+ defence of, ii. 261;
+ acts of Congress respecting, ii. 262, 263.
+
+ Privateers, characteristic names of, ii. 263;
+ superiority to English, ii. 277;
+ character of their commanders, ii. 277.
+
+ Prisoners, American, treatment of, in England, ii. 280;
+ sufferings in Dartmoor prison, ii. 281-285;
+ assailed by French prisoners, ii. 283;
+ denounce American agent for prisoners, ii. 287;
+ neglected by government, ii. 287;
+ their employments, ii. 288;
+ number of, ii. 292;
+ massacre of, ii. 294.
+
+
+ Q.
+
+ Queenstown, battle of, i. 101.
+
+ Quincy, Josiah, i. 225;
+ speech against army bill, i. 227.
+
+
+ R.
+
+ Revolution, French, i. 17.
+
+ Rose, English Minister, i. 33.
+
+ Rattlesnake, brig, captured, i. 252.
+
+ Randolph, speech in Congress, i. 45-51;
+ sketch of, i. 237;
+ succeeded by Eppes, i. 319.
+
+ Revenue, i. 292.
+
+ Retaliation acts, i. 307.
+
+ Rodgers, Commodore, his squadron at New York, i. 132;
+ his first cruise, i. 134;
+ attacks the Belvidere, i. 137;
+ second cruise, i. 151.
+
+ Riall, British General at Chippewa, ii. 76;
+ captured by Jessup at Lundy's Lane, ii. 86.
+
+ Russell, John, American Charge to England, i. 50;
+ despatch from, i. 53.
+
+ Ripley, Colonel, at Lundy's Lane, ii. 88;
+ his strange conduct after the battle, ii. 98;
+ surrenders his command to General Gaines, ii. 100;
+ wounded at Fort Erie, ii. 109.
+
+ Ross, General, marches on Washington, ii. 119-127;
+ fires the capitol, ii. 127;
+ his hasty retreat, ii. 133;
+ killed in the advance on Baltimore, ii. 143.
+
+
+ S.
+
+ St. Clair, General, cause of his defeat, i. 17.
+
+ Smythe, General, commands on the Niagara frontier, i. 71;
+ proclamation, i. 111;
+ failure and disgrace, i. 112-114;
+ review of his campaign, i. 119.
+
+ Shelby, Governor of Kentucky, i. 95;
+ commands Kentucky volunteers under General Harrison, i. 287.
+
+ Sandusky, Fort, defence of, i. 201.
+
+ Scott, Lieut.-Colonel, at Queenstown, i. 103;
+ taken prisoner, i. 108-110;
+ captures Fort George, i. 213;
+ joins Wilkinson, i. 299;
+ introduces French system of tactics into camp of instruction
+ at Buffalo;
+ chases the Marquis of Tweedsdale, ii. 76;
+ advances on Lundy's Lane, ii. 84;
+ wounded, ii. 94;
+ his journey to Baltimore and reception at Princeton, ii. 97-98.
+
+ Sackett's Harbor, naval depot at, i. 207;
+ attack of, i. 215.
+
+ Shortland, Captain, superintendent of Dartmoor prison, ii. 286;
+ massacres American prisoners, ii. 293.
+
+ Sheaffe, General, at Queenstown, i. 105.
+
+ Sinclair, Captain, commands the expedition against Mackinaw, ii. 73.
+
+ Stewart, Captain, remonstrates with the President against laying
+ up the navy, i. 128;
+ commands the Constitution, ii. 235;
+ captures the Cyane and Levant, i. 240.
+
+ Strong elected governor of Massachusetts, i. 265.
+
+ Stricker, General, defence at North Point, ii. 142.
+
+
+ T.
+
+ Talledega Fort, ii. 18.
+
+ Taylor, Captain, defence of Fort Harrison, i. 95.
+
+ Tax, direct, of Thirteenth Congress, i. 325;
+ on carriages, distilled spirits, auction duties, &c., ii. 187.
+
+ Towson, Captain of artillery, at Chippewa, ii. 79.
+
+ Treaty of 1783, i. 23;
+ of Pinckney and Monroe rejected by Jefferson, i. 27;
+ first Treaty of Peace at Ghent, its terms and how
+ received, ii. 232, 233;
+ review of, ii. 234.
+
+ Transportation, cost of, war materials to Sackett's Harbor, i. 257.
+
+ Tecumseh, i. 80;
+ his plan for restoring the Indians to their ancient rights;
+ his mission south, and character and eloquence, i. 191-193;
+ joins Proctor, i. 197;
+ killed, i. 290.
+
+ Torpedos, employment of, to destroy ships, i. 266.
+
+ Tompkins, Governor, privateer. Captain Boyle, her narrow escape
+ from an English frigate, ii. 266.
+
+ Treasury, state of, in May, 1813, i. 320;
+ state of during the third session of the Thirteenth Congress;
+ notes, reduced value of, ii. 187;
+ increased embarrassments of, ii. 189.
+
+ Tupper, General, defeated at the Rapids, i. 178.
+
+ Tuscarora village destroyed by the British, i. 306.
+
+ Truce, flag of, arrived in Annapolis, i. 328.
+
+ Typees, hostility to Commodore Porter, ii. 50, 51;
+ description of their country, ii. 52;
+ their towns destroyed, ii. 54.
+
+
+ V.
+
+ Van Rensselaer, General, i. 71-100;
+ resigns his command, i. 101.
+
+ Van Rensselaer, Colonel, invades Canada, and wounded, i. 100;
+ character of, i. 118.
+
+ Van Horne, Major, defeat of, i. 79.
+
+ Vincent, General, i. 214;
+ captures Generals Chandler and Hinder, i. 219.
+
+ Vermont, her patriotism when Plattsburg was attacked, ii. 150.
+
+ Volunteers, hardships of, i. 188.
+
+
+ W.
+
+ Wayne, General, i. 17.
+
+ Washington's opinion of British aggressions, i. 48;
+ city of, threatened by the British, ii. 117;
+ burned, ii. 128;
+ bad policy of, ii. 140.
+
+ War, declaration of, i. 56;
+ how received, i. 58;
+ unprepared state of the country for, ii. 67-69.
+
+ Ward, Artemus, speech of, against bill for military establishments
+ passed in Thirteenth Congress, i. 339.
+
+ Wadsworth, General, at Queenstown, i. 102.
+
+ Winchester, General, his march to the Rapids, i. 178;
+ marches to Frenchtown, i. 179;
+ taken prisoner, i. 181.
+
+ Winder, Colonel, i. 114;
+ General, pursues Vincent, i. 219;
+ surprised and captured by him, i. 219;
+ commands the troops around Washington, ii. 118.
+
+ Williams' speech in Congress, i. 225, 226.
+
+ Wasp, takes the Frolic, i. 155;
+ captured by the Poictiers, i. 159;
+ captures the Reindeer, ii. 167;
+ sinks the Avon, ii. 169;
+ her mysterious fate, ii. 170.
+
+ White, General, destroys the Hillabee towns, ii. 22.
+
+ West Point Academy, i. 124.
+
+ Webster, Daniel, elected to Congress, i. 320;
+ first speech, i. 323;
+ speech against the army bill, i. 330;
+ sketch of, i. 333;
+ speech on repeal of embargo act, i. 345;
+ contest between him and Calhoun, i. 344.
+
+ Woodward, Judge, of Michigan, his letter to Proctor on the
+ massacre at River Raisin, i. 184.
+
+ Wilkinson, General, seizes Fort Conde, i. 199;
+ takes charge of northern army, i. 292;
+ his progress down the St. Lawrence, i. 296-299;
+ goes into winter quarters at French Mills, i. 300;
+ review of his campaign, i. 302;
+ plans a winter campaign, i. 311;
+ attacks La Cole Mill, i. 312.
+
+ Woolsey, Lieutenant, i. 206;
+ transports war and ship materials from Oswego to Sackett's
+ Harbor, ii. 70-72.
+
+ Wooster, Rev., volunteers with his flock to aid General
+ Macomb, ii. 151.
+
+
+ Y.
+
+ Yarnell, Lieutenant, bravery in battle of Lake Erie, i. 279.
+
+ York captured by Americans, i. 208.
+
+ Yeo, Sir James, attacks Sackett's Harbor, i. 215;
+ attacks Oswego, ii. 69;
+ sends a detachment against Woolsey, ii. 71;
+ raises the blockade of Sackett's Harbor, ii. 72.
+
+ Youngstown burned, i. 301.
+
+
+
+
+J. T. HEADLEY'S WORKS.
+
+
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+
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+ 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."--_N. Y.
+ Courier and Enquirer._
+
+ "His descriptions are graphic, his history correct, and his
+ summing up character scarcely suffers by a comparison with
+ similar pages in Tacitus."--_N. Y. Evening Post._
+
+ "He speaks heartily, earnestly, truthfully; and the warm
+ heart answers to his voice."--_N. Y. Observer._
+
+ "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."--_Cincinnati Herald._
+
+ "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."--_Cleveland Herald._
+
+ 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.--_N. Y. Evangelist._
+
+
+LIVING ORATORS OF AMERICA. By Rev. E. L. MAGOON. 1 vol 12mo., with
+portraits. Price, $1.25.
+
+
+THE ORATORS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. By Rev. E. L. MAGOON. 1 vol.
+12mo., with portraits. Price, $1.25.
+
+ Mr. Magoon is a decided original. Both his thoughts and his
+ manner of expressing them, are peculiar and striking.--_N.
+ Y. Evangelist._
+
+ 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.--_Christian Secretary._
+
+ 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.--_Springfield Republican._
+
+ Every American will read these works with national pride,
+ and have his better feelings and sentiments enkindled and
+ strengthened.--_Western literary Messenger._
+
+
+THE WOMEN OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. By Mrs. E. F. ELLET. 8 vols.
+12mo., with portraits. Price, $3.50.
+
+ 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.--_Hunt's
+ Magazine._
+
+ 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.--_N. Y.
+ Tribune._
+
+ 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.--_N. Y.
+ Commercial._
+
+ 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.--_N. Y. Journal of Commerce._
+
+ 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.--_Charleston
+ Inquirer._
+
+ 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--_Albany
+ Atlas._
+
+ 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.--_N. B. Mercury._
+
+
+BRACE'S HUNGARY IN 1851: With an Experience of the Austrian Police. By
+CHARLES LORING BRACE. (Beautifully illustrated, with a map of
+Hungary).
+
+ "Upon the particular field of Hungary, this is by far the
+ most complete and reliable work in the language; a work that
+ all should read who would understand the institutions, the
+ character, and the spirit of a people who just now have so
+ urgent a claim on our sympathy."--_N. Y. Independent._
+
+ "There is probably not a work within the reach of the
+ English scholar that can afford him such a satisfactory view
+ of Hungary as it now is, as this work of Mr.
+ Brace."--_Christian Intelligencer._
+
+ "It will not disappoint public expectation. It bears the
+ strongest evidence of being most reliable in its
+ descriptions and facts."--_Boston Journal._
+
+ "We have seldom taken in hand a book which bears the reader
+ along with an interest so intense and sustained."--_Watchman
+ and Reflector._
+
+ "It is a graphic picture of the people and institutions of
+ Hungary at the present moment by one who writes what he saw
+ and heard, and who was well qualified co judge."--_Troy
+ Daily Post._
+
+ "He mingled much in the social life of every class of the
+ Hungarian people, and there can be no question that he has
+ presented a faithful picture of the condition, manners,
+ customs, and feelings of the Magyars."--_Portland
+ Transcript._
+
+ "The best and most reliable work that we possess, in regard
+ to Hungary as it now is, and the only one written from
+ personal observation."--_Phil. Evening Bulletin._
+
+ "It tells us precisely what the mass of readers wish to know
+ in regard to the condition of Hungary since the Revolution.
+ Having travelled over large portions of the country on foot,
+ and mingling freely with the inhabitants in their houses,
+ the author relates his various experiences, many of which
+ are sufficiently strange to figure in a romance."--_N. Y.
+ Tribune._
+
+ "This book is exceedingly entertaining. These are clear,
+ unambitious narratives, sound views, and abundant
+ information. We get a perspicuous view of the people, life,
+ and character of the country, and learn more of the real
+ condition of things than we could elsewhere obtain."--_N. Y.
+ Evangelist._
+
+ "Its narrative is fluent and graceful, and gives the most
+ vivid and complete, and the most faithful picture of Hungary
+ ever presented to American readers."--_Courier and
+ Inquirer._
+
+ "For graphic delineation, and extent of knowledge of the
+ subject described, Mr. Brace has no equal, at least in
+ print."--_The Columbian and Far West._
+
+ "We have read it carefully, and have no hesitation in saying
+ that it presents a complete idea of Hungary and her people
+ as they were and are. Mr. Brace has the happy and rare
+ faculty of making the reader see what he saw, and feel what
+ he felt."--_The Eclectic._
+
+ "He has succeeded in gathering the fullest and most
+ satisfactory amount of information in regard to Hungary that
+ we have seen. His description of the Hungarian Church and
+ the religious character of the people are especially
+ interesting, and the whole volume is a valuable addition to
+ our knowledge of the interior of Europe."--_Watchman and
+ Observer._
+
+ "This excellent work is not one of proesy details and dry
+ statistics, but is composed of the most familiar and
+ intimate glimpses of Hungarian life, written in the most
+ graceful style."--_Worcester Spy._
+
+
+RURAL HOMES; Or, SKETCHES OF HOUSES suited to American Country Life.
+With over 70 Original Plans, Designs, &c. By GERVASE WHEELER. 1 vol.
+12mo., Price, $1.25.
+
+ It commences with the first foot-tread upon the spot chosen
+ for the house; details the considerations that should weigh
+ in selecting the site; gives models of buildings differing
+ in character, extent, and cost; shows how to harmonize the
+ building with the surrounding scenery; teaches now
+ healthfully to warm and ventilate; assists in selecting
+ furniture and the innumerable articles of utility and
+ ornament used in constructing and finishing, and concludes
+ with final practical directions, giving useful limits as to
+ drawing up written descriptions, specifications and
+ contracts.
+
+
+ "In this neat and tasteful volume, Mr. Wheeler has condensed
+ the results of an accomplished training in his art, and the
+ liberal professional practice of it.
+
+ "We can confidently recommend this elaborate production to
+ the attention of gentlemen who are about building or
+ renovating their country houses, to professional architects,
+ and to all readers of discrimination, who wish to know what
+ is truly eloquent in this beautiful art, and to cultivate a
+ taste worthy to cope with "judgment of wisest censure."
+
+ "The cost of such establishments is carefully considered, no
+ less than the comforts they should afford, the display they
+ can (honestly) pretend to, and all the adjuncts that go to
+ complete the ideal of a convenient and elegant
+ mansion."--_N. Y. Mirror._
+
+
+ "It is extremely practical, containing such simple and
+ comprehensive directions for all wishing at any time to
+ build, being in fact the sum of the author's study and
+ experience as an architect for many years."--_Albany
+ Spectator._
+
+
+ "Mr. Wheeler's remarks convey much practical and useful
+ information, evince good taste and a proper appreciation of
+ the beautiful, and no one should build a rural house without
+ first hearing what he has to recommend."--_Philadelphia
+ Presbyterian._
+
+
+ "Important in its subject, careful and ample in its details,
+ and charmingly attractive in its style. It gives all the
+ information that would be desired as to the selection of
+ sites--the choice of appropriate styles, the particulars of
+ plans, materials, fences, gateways, furniture, warming,
+ ventilation, specifications, contracts, &c., concluding with
+ a chapter on the intellectual and moral effect of rural
+ architecture."--_Hartford Religious Herald._
+
+
+ "A book very much needed, for it teaches people how to build
+ comfortable, sensible, beautiful country houses. Its
+ conformity to common sense, as well as to the sense of
+ beauty, cannot be too much commended."--_N. Y. Courier &
+ Enquirer._
+
+
+ "No person can read this book without gaining much useful
+ knowledge, and it will be a great aid to those who intend to
+ build houses for their own use. It is scientific without
+ being so interlarded with technical terms as to confuse the
+ reader, and contains all the information necessary to build
+ a house from the cellar to the ridge pole. It is a parlor
+ book, or a book for the workshop, and will be valuable in
+ either place."--_Buffalo Commercial._
+
+
+ "This work should be in the hands of every one who
+ contemplates building for himself a home. It is filled with
+ beautifully executed elevations and plans of country houses
+ from the most unpretending cottage to the villa. Its
+ contents are simple and comprehensive, embracing every
+ variety of house usually needed."--_Lowell Courier._
+
+
+ "To all who desire a delightful rural retreat of "lively
+ cottagely" of getting a fair equivalent of comfort and
+ tastefulness, for a moderate outlay, we commend the Rural
+ Homes of Mr. Wheeler."--_N. Y. Evening Post._
+
+
+N. P. WILLIS'S SELECT WORKS, IN UNIFORM 12MO., VOLS.
+
+
+RURAL LETTERS, AND OTHER RECORDS OF THOUGHTS AT LEISURE, embracing
+Letters from under a Bridge, Open Air Musings in the City, "Invalid
+Ramble in Germany," "Letters from Watering Places," &c., &c. 1 vol.
+Fourth Edition.
+
+ "There is scarcely a page in it in which the reader will not
+ remember, and turn to again with a fresh sense of delight.
+ It bears the imprint of nature in her purest and most joyous
+ forms, and under her most cheering and inspiring
+ influences."--_N. Y. Tribune._
+
+ "If we would show how a modern could write with the ease of
+ Cowley, most gentle lover of nature's gardens, and their
+ fitting accessories from life, we would offer this volume as
+ the best proof that the secret has not yet died
+ out."--_Literary World._
+
+
+PEOPLE I HAVE MET, or Pictures of Society and People of Mark--drawn
+under a thin veil of fiction. By N. P. WILLIS. 1 vol., 12mo., Third
+Edition.
+
+ "It is a collection of twenty or more of the stories which
+ have blossomed out from the summer soil of the author's
+ thoughts within the last few years. Each word in some of
+ them the author seems to have picked as daintily, for its
+ richness or grace, or its fine fitness to his purpose, as if
+ a humming-bird were picking upon his quivering wing the
+ flower whose sweets he would lovingly rifle, or a belle were
+ culling the stones for her bridal necklace."--_N. Y.
+ Independent._
+
+ "The book embraces a great variety of personal and social
+ sketches in the Old World, and concludes with some thrilling
+ reminiscences of distinguished ladies, including the Belles
+ of New York, etc."--_The Republic._
+
+
+LIFE HERE AND THERE, or Sketches of Society and Adventure at far-apart
+times and places. By N. P. WILLIS. 1 vol., 12mo.
+
+ "This very agreeable volume consists of sketches of life and
+ adventure, all of them, the author assures us, having a
+ foundation strictly historical, and to a great extent
+ autobiographical. Such of these sketches as we have read,
+ are in Mr. Willis's happiest vein--a vein, by the way, in
+ which he is unsurpassed."--_Sartain's Magazine._
+
+ "Few readers who take up this pleasant volume will lay it
+ aside until they have perused every line of its
+ contents."--_Jersey Journal._
+
+
+HURRYGRAPHS, or Sketches of Scenery, Celebrities, and Society, taken
+from Life By N. P. WILLIS. 1 vol., 12mo., Third Edition.
+
+ "Some of the best specimens of Mr. Willis's prose, we think,
+ are herein contained."--_N. Y. Evangelist._
+
+ "In the present volume, which is filled with all sorts of
+ enticements, we prefer the descriptions of nature to the
+ sketches of character, and the dusty road-side grows
+ delightful under the touches of Willis's blossoming-dropping
+ pen; and when we come to the mountain and lake, it is like
+ revelling in all the fragrant odors of Paradise."--_Boston
+ Atlas._
+
+
+LECTURES ON ART--AND POEMS. By WASHINGTON ALLSTON. Edited by Richard
+Henry Dana, Jr. Contents--Lectures on Art, pages 3-167--Aphorisms,
+sentences written by Mr. Allston on the walls of his Studio, pages
+167-179--The Hypochondriac, pages 179-199--Poems, pages 199-317. 1
+vol. 12mo., Price, $1.25.
+
+ "There is a store of intellectual wealth in this handsome
+ volume. It is a book of thought. Its contents are the rich
+ and tasteful productions of the scholar and artist, who had
+ mind to perceive and skill to portray much that is unseen by
+ ordinary minds, as well as intelligence and power to exhibit
+ whatever is grand and beautiful both in the physical and
+ moral world."--_Christian Observer._
+
+ "These are the records of one of the purest spirits and most
+ exalted geniuses of which this country can boast. The
+ intense love of the beautiful, the purity, grace and
+ gentleness which made him incomparably the finest artist of
+ the age, lend their charm and their power to these
+ productions of his pen. *** There are in his poems feeling,
+ delicacy, taste, and the keenest sense of harmony which
+ render them faultless."--_N. Y. Evangelist._
+
+ "As a writer we know of no one who in his writings has
+ exhibited such an appreciation of what constitutes beauty in
+ art, correctness in form, or the true principles of
+ composition."--_Providence Journal._
+
+ "We commend them to the intellectual and the thoughtful, for
+ we know that no one can read them without being wiser, and
+ we believe the better."--_Albany State Register._
+
+ "The production of a most ethereal spirit instinctively
+ awake to all the harmonies of creation."--_Albany Argus._
+
+ "The exquisitely pure and lofty character of the author of
+ these lectures and poetic fragments is well expressed in
+ them. It gave their structure a freshness and calmness, and
+ their tone a purity that remain to charm us, and that are
+ equally admirable and delightful."--_The Independent._
+
+ "His lectures possess great attractions for every one aiming
+ at cultivation of mind and refinement of taste, while his
+ poems, which elicited so high praise when published singly,
+ are sure to receive it when as now embodied in a more
+ classic form."--_Natchez Courier._
+
+ "The lovers of American literature and art will rejoice in
+ the possession of these matured fruits of the genius which
+ seemed alike skilled in the use of the pen and
+ pencil."--_Newark Daily Advertiser._
+
+
+POEMS AND PROSE WRITINGS. By RICHARD HENRY DANA. 2 vols. 12mo., Price,
+$2.50.
+
+ "Mr. Dana's writings are addressed to readers of thought,
+ sensibility and experience. By tenderness, by force, in
+ purity, the poet paints the world, treading in safety the
+ dizziest verge of passion, through all things, honorable to
+ all men; the just style resolving all perplexities, a rich
+ instruction and solace in these volumes to the young and old
+ who are to come hereafter."--_Literary World._
+
+ "Mr. Dana is evidently a close observer of nature, and
+ therefore his thoughts are original and fresh."--_True
+ Democrat._
+
+ "In addition to the Poems and Prose Writings included in the
+ former edition of his works, they contain some short,
+ practical pieces, and a number of reviews and essays
+ contributed to different periodicals, some of them as much
+ as thirty years since, and now republished for the first
+ time--as the expression of the inmost soul, these writings
+ bear a strong stamp of originality."--_N. Y. Tribune._
+
+
+
+
+[Transcriber's notes:
+
+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.
+
+Some dates printed in the original book are most probably wrong, but
+have been left as it is (e.g. July 14, page 163).
+
+Some entries in the index do not have any page number.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Second War with England, Vol. 2 of
+2, by Joel Tyler Headley
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND ***
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