;) i i 392 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^l^^^l Copy ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^H Class lH- 39 2- l: / f c Wnf^c/i'sLi^-A . lf6'ZUa//i/a'}}J'A * 15- ^:^ hi_a.^li 'NOioIEl AlBiJlTSOI^. THE LIFE II OF AJOR-GENERAL. WILLIAM HEIVRY HARRISON: COMPRISING A BRIEF ACCOUNT OF HIS IMPORTANT CIVIL AND MILITARY SERVICES, AND AN ACCURATE DESCRIPTION OF THE Otoimctl at l!!^tncennts iuttii Eccumseh, AS WELL AS THE VICTORIES OF TIPPECANOE, FORT MEIGS AND THE THAMES. PHILADELPHIA: PUBLISHED BY GRIGG & ELLIOT, 9 NORTH FOURTH ST. AND T. K. & P. G. COLLINS, No. 1 LODGE ALLEY. 1840. Entered according to Act of Congress, in tlie year 1840, by T, K. & P. G. Collins, in the Office of tlie Clerk of the District Court of the Eastern DfetricS of Pennsylvania. STEUEOTYPliD BV L JOUXSOM. FRINTED BY T. K. & P. O. C0U.IXS, PHILA.DELrHlA. LIFE OF GENERAL WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. CHAPTER I. 8ketch of the Life of the Father of Harrison — Services in the House of Burgesses — Takes a decided part with the Whigs in the American Revolution — Elected a member of the Continental Congress — Anecdote — Important services in Congress — Calls up Resolutions declaring America independent — Reports and signs De- claration of Independence — Revolutionary anecdote — Birth of William Henry Harrison — Educated by the immortal Morris, the Financier of the Revolution, and Dr. Rush, both Signers of the Declaration of Independence — Determines to enter the Army, then struggling with the Indians on the Frontier — -Commissioned by Wash- ington — Hardships and dangers of the Service — Defeat of St. Clair — Appointment of Wayne — Victory — Gallantry of Harrison elicits the admiration and praise of Wayne — Victory of Maumee Rapids — Harrison again distinguished, and again publicly complimented by his Commander — Peace with the Indians— Harrison promoted — Appointed to the command of Fort Washington. William Henry Harrison was born in Virginia, on the ^th day of February, 1773, at Berkley on the James River, about twenty-five miles below Richmond. He was the third son of, Benjamin Harrison, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, and subsequently Governor of Virginia. Benja- min Harrison* was one of the earliest and most conspicuous patriots, and the most active, devoted, and fearless political leaders of the Revolution, His services during and after that eventful period, were inferior in importance to those of but few of his compatriots. Before he had attained his twenty-first year, he was elected to represent his native county in the House * The facts connected with the life of Benjamin Harrison are taken from Sander son's " Lives of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence." Vide Life of Benjamin Harrison. 3 4 THE LIFE OF of Burgesses, of Virginia. This he did with so much abiUty and effect, as to attract immediately the attention of the British government In order to rid themselves of the opposition of one who had already proved himself a stanch and powerful friend of the People, they proposed to introduce him, notwith- standing his immature age, into the Executive Council of the State— a body corresponding in character with the English Privy Council. The oppression of the King of Great Britain having been aheady felt throughout the colonies, this proposal, notwith- standing its advantages, was promptly rejected, and Mr. Har- rison TOOK SIDES WITH THE PEOPLE IN THE APPROACHING STRUGGLE BETWEEN THEM AND THE CrOWN. On the 14th of November, 1764, he was one of the commit- tee to prepare a remonstrance against the odious Stamp Act, which the British Cabinet at that time contemplated. From this time forward, in company with such men as Lee, Henry, Nichols, and others, his whole energies were directed towards a vindication of the rights of the People against the ENCROACHMENTS OF THE CrOWN. He was a member of the first Continental Congress, which assembled in Philadelphia on the 5th of September, 1774. It is well known that the proceedings of this body were conciliatory and pacific in their character. They adopted an address to the Crown, and resolved to await quietly its efi"ect. In the year 1775, Mr. Harrison again appeared as a delegate from Virginia, in the Continental Congress. Shortly after Congress had met, the chair, which had been before occupied by Mr. Harrison's brother-in-law, Peyton Ran- dolph, became vacant. Congress was divided in the choice of his successor, between Mr. Harrison and the patriotic John Han- cock. Mr. Harrison promptly yielded to Mr. Hancock; and when the latter, through distrust in his experience and capacity to discharge the duties of a situation so trying, for a moment hesitated to take the chair, Mr. Harrison, with practical good humour ''seized the modest candidate in his athletic arms, and. placed him in the presidential chair ;" then turning to the members, he exclaimed, " We will show Mother Britain HOW LITTLE WE CARE FOR HEB, BY MAKING A MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HARRISON. 5 MAN OUR President, whom she has excluded from pardon BY a public proclamation." On the 4th of Jui)6, this year, Mr. Harrison was appointed on a committee to place America in a state of defence ; and, after a month's deliberation, the committee made a report, which formed the basis of the present miUtia system of the United States. In September of this year, he was one of a committee who, in conjunction with the immortal Washington, arranged a plan for the future support of the army. He was the Chair- man of the committee through whose agency the gallant La- fayette and his companions were induced to enter into the struggle for independence ; and shortly after, he was appointed a member of the Board of War. On the 10th of June, 177G, Harrison called up the resolutions by which the colonies were declared independent, and which authorized a Declaration of Independence to be prepared ; and on the ever memorable 4th of July, 1776, he reported that instrument, (our present glorious Declaration of Independ- ence,) as having received the approbation of Congress. His NAME will be FOUND AFFIXED TO IT, AMONG THOSE OF THE OTHER DELEGATES FROM VIRGINIA. A curious anecdote is on record, illustrative of the cheerful temper and intrepidity of the man whom we thus find iden- tified with every turn in the fortunes of his country ; at a period when that country was convulsed by a struggle in which all its rights and very existence were involved. Elbridge Gerry, a delegate from Massachusetts, as slender and spare as Mr. Harrison was vigorous and portly, stood beside Har- rison, whilst signing the Declaration. Harrison turned round to him with a smile,, as he raised his hand from the paper, and said, " When the hanging scene comes to be exhibited, I shall have all the advantage over you. It will be over with me in a minute, but you will be kickmg in the air half an hour after I am gone." Mr. Harrison continued in Congress until the year 177S, when he retired, and afterwards filled some of the most im- portant offices in his native state. In the year 1782, on the resignation of Mr. Nelson, he was elected Governor of Virginia, and was afterwards re-elected until he became constitutionally a2 6 THE LIFE OF ineligible. He continued to serve his country until the year 1791, This year he was unanimously elected to the Legisla- ture. The day following he died, full of years and full of honour. William Henry Harrison, as we have before stated, was born on the ninth of February, in the year 1773.* His youth, when impressions are the deepest and most indelible, was passed amid the scenes and patriots of our glorious Revolution; and it was then and there that he imbibed that devotion to free- dom and his country, which has since ranked his name among the most illustrious of America's champions. His father died before he had attained his seventeenth year, leaving him no in- heritance but an untarnished name and a virtuous example. Whilst he has imitated the latter, he has added resplendent lustre to the former. The care of his education, which had been commenced at Hampden Sydney College, was committed to his guardian, the illustrious Robert Morris, a signer of the Declaration of Inde- pendence, the financier of the Revolution, and one of his father's most intimate friends. Of the patriots of '76, no one (Washington alone excepted) made sacrifices so great, or effected so much for his country, as Robert Morris. He fed our famished soldiers out of his private purse ; and at the darkest era of the contest, saved the cause of liberty from impending destruction. Such was the patriot sage who contributed to form the mind of Harrison. From him was received, by example and precept, inculcations of that love of liberty, courage, devotedness and patriotism, whichhaveevercharacterizedthelatter. Under the guardianship of the illustrious Morris, and the instruction of the distinguished Dr. Benjamin Rush, also a signer of the De- claration of Independence, Harrison commenced the study of medicine in Philadelphia, which he prosecuted until he arrived at his nineteenth year. At this early period in life, with a dis- interested and ardent devotion, for which history has few pa- rallels, he determined to abandon the peaceful walks of science, and cast his fortunes with the army of his country, at that time * See Hall's " Memoir of the Public Services of William Henry Harrison," for these facts. GENERAL HARRISON. 7 warmly engaged in defending our frontier from tiie invasion of the Indians. His wishes were opposed, not only by Mr. Morris, but by his other friends ; and finding it in vain to solicit their interposition, and resolved to devote his life to the cause of his bleeding country, he applied in person to the Immortal Wash- ington. The Father of his Country, seeing in young Harrison the germ of future greatness, cheerfully complied with his re- quest, and in November, 1791, when but nineteen years of age, conferred on him the rank of Ensign in the United States army. Immediately on receiving his commission, he repaired to the west, and joined his regiment then stationed at Fort Washing- ton, shortly after the defeat of the gallant but ill-starred St. Clair. The first tour of duty he performed, was in the succeeding winter, when he marched through sleet and snow at the head of his detachment, with his knapsack on his back, to the fatal battle-field of St. Clair, to inter the bonet* of the slain ! It will hardly be imagined that this transition from the full enjoyment of the comforts and luxuries of a city life, to a win- ter's campaign against a savage foe, amid the pathless wilder- ness of the western frontier, could be accomplished without great sacrifice of ease and imminent jeopardy of life. How few are there, at this day, of the pampered sons of fortune re- siding in our great cities, who would willingly encounter the same hardships and privations for the pi election of their de- fenceless countrymen from the fire-brand, the tomanawk, and scalping-knife of the savage ! The youthful Harrison had been accustomed to live amidst the most refined society ; his only employment had been the pursuit of knowledge. He aban- doned the former for the rude fare of a frontier camp, and ex- changed his books for the sword. No period of our history has been more gloomy than that in which Harrison joined the army. The British, in defiance of the treaty of peace, still held possession of some of cur most important frontier posts. Among others, Detroit, Niagara, and Mackinaw were still in their hands. From these, the agents of the British Government supplied the hostile Indians along our border, with the munitions of war, and continually stirred them up to the massacre of the defenceless white popu- lation. There appeared to be no security but m the rifle. The 8 THE LIFE OF hatchet was iinburied, and the cakimet of peace extinguished. The population of the west, scattered over an immense extent of country, which rendered intercourse difficult, and mutual aid impossible, fell, one by one, bleeding victims of savage ferocity. Things had remained in this state, with little intermission, since the treaty of peace. At the period spoken of, the contest had assximed an aspect of appalling importance. The various savage tribes had con- solidated their forces, under the justly renowned chief. Little Turtle, into a confederacy so formidable, as to call forth the utmost energies of the government, to protect the frontier in- habitants from indiscriminate slaughter. The spirit of the hardy yeomen of the west, promptly responsive to every call, and equal to every danger, began to shrink beneath continued defeat. To die by the tomahawk or scalping knife, had been the lot of all who had gone forth : no wonder then that the hardiest avoided^ a war, in which victory brought no laurels? and defeat came accompanied by death, prolonged by all the ingenuity of savage torture. Such was the field into which young Harrison entered at nineteen years of age, in obedience to the dictates of patriotic duty ; we say patriotic duty, for to no other motive can we ' ascribe the voluntary sacrifices which he made. Those who served on the frontiers, fought for their homes ; to protect their families whilst living, or avenge them when dead. Those who comm,anded had already acquired laurels in the field, which were to be increased or withered by the con- flict. Harrison had neither y«??^^73/ nox possessions on the fron- tier. He had no laurels to guard. Did he seek ivealth? The wilderness has seldom offered it to the soldier. Fame ? A juvenile subaltern's portion is small indeed, and held by a pre- carious tenure. Ease ? The home and friends he had left were a paradise to the camp of Auglaise. Safety? It has never been found beneath the reeking tomahawk and scalping knife of a merciless foe. For him at least, the war was one against hope : a bosom fired with less patriotism had never en- tered it. The spirit which impelled him to this sacrifice on the altar of his country's good, will be found to pervade his whole GENERAL HARRISON. 9 Hfe. He has never been betrayed into selfishness or seduced into weakness. The crisis to which we have alluded, was one worthy the sagacity of the great Father of his Country. In his choice of a commander whose genius could master these difficulties, he balanced, for a while, between George Rogers Clarke -mid the renowned Anthony Wayne; and, at length, decided to appoint the latter. Early in the year 1792, General Wayne arrived at the seat of war and assumed the command. The United States Legion, as Wayne's army was called under the new organization after St. Clair's defeat, was at this time alike destitute of confidence in themselves, skill in the use of their weapons, and knowledge of their foe. He revived their con- fidence, drilled them in rifle shooting, and instructed them in the artifices of the enemy. About this time Harrison was pro- moted by General Washington, to a lieutenancy, and shortly after joined Wayne's Legion. His fearlessness and energy, with his strict attention to discipline, soon attracted the notice of his commander, himself a bold and daring soldier and a rigid disciplinarian, and General Wayne, not long after his arrival, selected him as one of his aides-de-camp. It is thus seen at how early an age, and in what trying scenes, young Harrison was thought worthy of honourable distinction, and how soon too he drew upon himself the attention and especial notice of a man and a soldier like Wayne, whose well known independence of character was such, that no influence save that of intrinsic merit was ever known to prevail with him, and whose daring, and almost reckless intrepidity, had won for him in our Revolutionary war, the peculiar appellation of "Mad Anthony." At one period, during the darkest hour of the Revolution, he proposed to General Washington that a limited number of men be selected from the British and American ar- mies — that the command of the Americans should be given to him, and let the contest between the two nations be thus decided. Though Washington had the greatest admiration for his bold- ness and military skill, and Wayne expressed the utmost con- fidence in the result — and no doubt would have gained an easy victory — the Father of his Country regarded the hazard too 2 10 THE LIFE OF great to submit the vast interests of America to a pitched battle or single contest. Lieutenant Harrison acted as aid to General Wayne, during the whole of the ensuing campaigns, and his bravery and gal- lant conduct throughout were such, that he w^as repeatedly officially noticed by his commander in terms of the highest encomium. The war was conducted by Wayne, with all the cool daring of a veteran soldier, and the sagacity of a prudent general. Negotiations with the Indians failing, he had recourse to mili- tary operations; and, on the 23d of December, a small de- tachment of infantry and artillery were ordered to re-possess themselves of the field of battle of the 4th of November, 1791, the scene of St. Clair's defeat. After a sharp conflict it was done ; and in a general order, issued after the battle, the gallant Wayne, publicly tendered his thanks to Lieu- tenant Harrison, for the Courage and Good Conduct ma- nifested by him during the contest.* If any thing could inflame the passions of a young soldier, it must be such a notice, by such an officer, as the patriotic and chivalrous Wayne. This action, in which Harrison bore so distinguished a part, turned the tide of war against the foe. In the July following, Wayne moved into the heart of the Indian country, and took up a position at Grand Glaise. The Little Turtle here urged his red brethren to accept the terms offered by General Wayne. They however rejected them, and the two armies immediately encountered each other in battle, on the 20th of August, 1794, at the Maumee Rapids. A bloody and desperate conflict ensued. Harrison was by turns in every part of the field ; and such was his bravery, that the commander, in his general orders, a second time thanked his " faithful and gallant Aid-de- camp, Lieutenant Harrison, for having rendered the MOST essential SERVICE, BY COMMUNICATING HIS ORDERS IN every DIRECTION, AND BY HIS CONDUCT AND BRAVERY ENCOU- RAGING THE TROOPS TO PRESS FOR VICTORY." Had nOt his whole career — a career marked with uniform success, and * Hall's Memoir, page 87. GENERAL HARRISON. 11 abounding in instances of unexampled heroism — attested the energy and dauntless intrepidity of Harrison's character, such testimony would, of itself, be conclusive. Thus do we find Harrison, a second time the theme of eulogy with a commander who rarely praised at all, and never but when it was deserved. He had hardly arrived at the age of twenty-one years ; but whilst yet a boy he had performed deeds of daring, and earned, with his sword, a distinction which few attain throughout a long life. By the sequel it will be found that the laurels thus acquired, were never suffered to fade. The fruit of this victory, so decisive in its character, was the conckision of a treaty of peace with all the hostile Indians, on the 1st of January, 1795, at Greenville, on such terms as our victorious commander dictated. Harrison took an active part, under the direction of Wayne, in the formation of this important treaty. The savages had learned the power of our government to punish; they had also been taught the inability of Great Britain to protect them. On the conclusion of this treaty, Harrison, now promoted to the rank of Captain, by the sagacious Wayne, was intrusted with the command of Fort Washington — a station of more consequence than any other on the western frontier — and the management of the public property, chiefly collected at that post, in charge of which he continued until the death of Gene- ral Wayne.* • Hall's Memoir, page 54. 13 THE LIFE OF CHAPTER 11. Marriage of Harrison — Anecdote — Resigns his Commission — Is appointed by Wasli- ington Secretary of the Northwestern Territory — His well earned popularity — Is elected Delegate to Congress at the early age of twenty-five — His patriotic course in dividing the public Lands — Important results of that measure — Gratitude of the West — The People apply for his appointment as Governor of the Piorthwestern Territory — He declines from patriotic motives — Is appointed Governor of Indiana — Unbounded power of the office — Unexceptionably exercised by Harrison — Illus- tration of his republican purity — Treaties with the Indians — Tecumseh and the Prophet — Council at Vincennes — Notice of Tecumseh — Decision and gallantry of Harrison. While in command of Fort Washington, which occupied the present site of the city of Cincinnati, Captain Harrison married the daughter of John Cleves Symmes, the celebrated founder of the Miami settlements — a lady whose estimable social and domestic virtues llave endeared her to a large circle of friends. An anecdote is related of his marriage, which illus- trates the admirable self-reliance that has ever characterized Harrison, and the entire absence of the advantages of fortune with which he entered the busy scenes of life. On applying to Mr. Symmes for his consent to the marriage of his daughter, Harrison wa;s asked what were his resources for maintaining*a wife. Placing his hand upon his sword, he replied, " This, sir, is my means of support !" It is hardly necessary to add, that Mr. Symmes was so much delighted with the daring chivalry and undaunted confidence of the young soldier, as at once to yield him an unqualified assent to his proposal of marriage. Anthony Wayne died in the year 1797. Immediately after this event, there being no prospect of further hostilities, Captain Harrison left the army and retired to his farm. In this step he exhibited the same regard for the best interest of his country, which has ever distinguished the career of this great and good man. He had encountered her enemies and had subdued them; and although his services, acknowledged and applauded by ali, gave him the strongest claim on her for support, and fully justi- fied his retaining a situation under her, equal to his mainte GENERAL HARRISON. 13 nance, yet he refused to occupy that station one hour after it had become a sinecure. He was unwilling to be paid WHEN HE RENDERED NO SERVICE, OR NOT AN ADEQUATE ONE. As a reward for his fidehty, the immortal Washington APPOINTED him SECRETARY OF THE NORTHWESTERN TERRI- TORY, and ex officio Lieutenant Governor. Let it be borne in mind, that at this period he was only twenty-four years old. Yet, at this early age, his merit, and merit alone, secured him a place in the confidence of that wise and virtuous man, which at this day thousands would regard as an ample recom- pense for a life of labour. Washington, the wise and revered Washington,* made the appointment. If any are disposed to doubt the propriety of conferring this high honour upon one so young, they must first call in question the soundness of judg- ment, or purity of heart, of the Father of his Country. Har- rison possessed the merit to attract the attention of Washington, and Washington had the discernment to perceive, and the justice to reward it. % In this situation, Harrison mingled with the people in all the varied tasks, toils, and amusements which characterize frontier life. In their company he wielded the axe; with them he held the stilts of the plough, or scattered the seed over the bosom of the virgin soil ; with them he shouldered his ritie to expel the howling panther, or to guard them against the subtle Indian. The farmer, the trader, and the hunter, were his companions. In the school of experience he learned their wants; in the same school they had been taught to look to him for relief. His political economy was drawn from the book of nature itself. In this way he became the favourite of the people ; and in .the ensuing year, when the Territory was admitted to send a delegate to Congress, he was the first man to fill that office, though only twenty-five years old.t He had just arrived at that age v/hen, by the Constitution, he was able to hold a seat in that body. He was, without doubt, the youngest man in Congress; yet we shall shortly see him grappling v/ith the most experienced and able, with signal credit and eminent success. * Hall's Memoirs, p. 56. f Ibid. p. 58. B 14 THELIFEOF The domestic condition of the settlers of the West was peculiarly distressing, owing to the abuses which had crept into the mode of disposing of the public lands. These abuses were twofold : First, the disposal of land in tracts of not less than four thousand acres ; and secondly, the granting of large tracts of the best land to individuals or com- panies. The effect of these measures was to exclude the needy settlers from the benefits offered by the sale of land. In gene- ral, they were poor and unable to buy such quantities. The wealthy speculator had it in his power to demand for them what price he chose. There was left to the settler no alterna- tive but compliance with these hard conditions, or to become an impoverished tenant of some lordly landholder. Thus, those who had conquered the forest, and subdued the savage, who had purchased the soil with their blood, and witnessed its fer- tilization by the bodies of their compatriots, friends, or relations, as a reward for their sacrifices and sufferings, were delivered to the TENDER MERCIES of a lieartlcss speculator, whose only supe- riority was the possession of wealth which he was either unable or unwilling to defend. Shortly after taking his seat at the session of the sixth Con- gress, in December, 1799, Captain Harrison directed his attention to this subject. He moved "for the appointment of a committee to inquire into the existing mode of selling the public lands," and was himself placed at the head of that com- mittee. In due time, he introduced a bill regulating the sale of the public domain. By this bill, the size of the tracts was reduced to sections of six hundred and forty acres,.and these were subdivided into half and quarter sections. To speak of the influence of this measure on the interests of the people of the West, and on those of the government, would be superfluous. The FARMER, instead of being the tenant of a wealthy land- lord, toiling for his benefit and liable to be dispossessed at his pleasure, became the independent owner of the soil, and trans- mitted it to his offspring. Emigrants poured into the West; the population expanded; the forest gave place to smiling, cul- tivated fields ; and the great valley of the Mississippi, instead of being the haunt of the savage, has (thanks to Harrison !) GENERAL HARRISON. 15 become the abode of millions of intelligent men, prosperotjs, HAPPY, FREE AND INDEPENDENT. The government has sold land to the amount of millions, which, under the old system, would have cost it millions to defend. The debts of the nation are paid ; her treasury has been overflowing ; and, by a recent act of Congress — the benefits of which have been precluded for a time by gross mismanagement — every State in the Union may reap the advantages of this wise foresight of Wil- liam Henry Harrison. It may appear strange, that such a measure should have been opposed. It was however opposed by the eloquent Lee, of Virginia, who brought to any cause he espoused, as great a weight of character, as great a fund of knowledge, and as brilliant talents as any man who held a seat in Congress. Harrison, however, by his eloquence, and practical knowledge of the wants of the people, bore down all opposition. At that session of Congress, some of the ablest and most enlight- ened statesmen, and some of the most eloquent men our country has ever produced, were members. Yet in this severe ordeal, the abilities and irrepressible energies of Captain Harrison com- manded universal respect. His report on the subject of the public lands, has always been regarded as one of the most masterly productions ever presented by any pen to the attention of Con- gress. But not with his pen only, did he enforce the claims and rights of the poor emigrants. His eloquent voice was raised on repeated occasions, and with great effect, in their vindication. He united to a ready and fluent elocution, an earnestness and honesty of manner, and great familiarity with all the details of his subject, which rendered him one of the most powerful and invincible orators on the floor of Congress. The justice and true policy of this measure, for reducing the size of the tracts of public lands offered for sale, having been at last universally admitted, subsequent legislators have found it not only an expedient but a most popular measure, and have followed up the principle of Harrison's bill. Our public lands may now be bought in tracts of but eighty acres each, and at a price of only one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre ; whereas, but for the destruction of the old system, accomplished by Harrison, and but for the wise and just principle, first intro- 16 THELIFEOF duced by him, that aristocratic and monopolizing system might still have continued. In that case the well known limited means of the early settlers, and consequently the entire absence of those inducements to emigrate, which are indispensable to the peopling of a new and uncultivated region of country, justify the belief that the great valley of the Mississippi, the mighty empire of the West, would not at this day have num- bered one half the population, nor boasted a moiety of the great wealth of cultivated fields, prosperous towns and permanent and substantial improvements, which it now contains. The success of Harrison was viewed with enthusiasm in the West. The people immediately petitioned for his appointment as Governor or the North Western Territory. To this, how- ever, Harrison himself offered the only objection. He refused to accept the office out of respect to the aged St. Clair, who still held it. A nobler instance of disinterestedness has rarely been recorded. Harrison is not the man to deprive a veteran sol- dier of his laurels. He could not j)luck one leaf from the wreath that adorned St. Clair'' s broiv to place it on his own I In the year 1800, the North Western Territory was divided. That part of it included within the present boundaries of Ohio and Michigan, retained its former name ; and the immense extent of country north-west of this, was erected into a separate government and received the name of Indiana. The office of Governor was instantly conferred on Harrison,* a merited tribute to his great worth and talents, and as some slight re- compense for the services he had rendered the territory in the field and on the floor of Congress. We have now traced his career from the hour, when he en- tered into the service of his country under Washington, up to the time of his appointment as Governor of Indiana. It will be our duty to present the reader with a delineation equally rapid of his conduct and services in this capacity. We have hitherto found him vigilant and brave in the field ; * " I nominate William Henry Harrison to be Governor of the Indiana Territory, from the 13th day of May next, when his present commission as Governor will ex- pire. Signed, Tuomas Jefferson." Executive Journal of the United States Senate, page 441. GENERAL HARRISON. 17 faithful and wise in council : still the querulous may say, that in the former, he acted under the orders of his superiors ; that in the latter, his course might have been controlled by his associates. As Governor of Indiana, his situation was perfectly inde- pendent. While he held it, he was invested with immense powers — greater perhaps than had ever before been intrusted in the hands of one man under our government, excepting only Washington during the Revolutionary war. In the exercise of most of these powers, he was, in fact, responsible only to God and his conscience. We will briefly state what these powers were, and how they were exercised. The territory thus committed to his charge, embraced the immense and fertile region of country known as Indiana Ter- ritory. It included what now constitute the great states of In- diana, Illinois, and Michigan, and the territories of Wisconsin and Iowa. But the small population it then contained was thinly scattered through a vast wilderness, and only three white settlements of any note existed within its boundaries. One of these was at the seat of government, Vincennes, a small town originally built by the French, and beautifully and advantage- ously situated on the banks of the Wabash; the second, known as Clark's Grant, was at the Falls of the Ohio, nearly opposite Louisville, about one hundred miles from Vincennes ; and the third was the French settlement on the banks of the Mississippi, near St. Louis, and more than two hundred miles distant from the seat of government. The communication between these remote points was, at all times, difficult and toilsome, and often attended with great danger. There existed no practicable roads, and nearly all the intermediate country was occupied by the Indians, or over-run by their hunting-parties. Most of these savage tribes, though professing to be friendly, were rest- less and dissatisfied; and their leading chiefs still nursed a moody hope of revenge for the mortifying defeat they had sus- tained, six years before, at the battle of the Maumee Rapids, in which Harrison had acted so conspicuous a part. Artful and treacherous, numerous, warlike and thirsting for plunder, they kept this remote frontier in continual excitement and alarm. The angry feelings of our hardy borderers were fre- 3 b2 18 THE LIFE OF quently roused by some robbery or atrocious aggression, com- mitted by the more evil-disposed among their savage neighbours, and quarrels often ensued, which threatened the peace of the entire community. Whole families were sometimes murdered in their sleep, and their humble cabins burnt to the ground ! Such was the existing state of things in Indiana Territory, when Captain Harrison was appointed to the administration of its government. As governor of a frontier territory so pecu- liarly situated, and beset by so many perils, he was invested with civil powers of the most important nature, as well as with military authority. He was invested, in company with the Judges, with full legislative powers. He had the appointment of all civil officers within the Terri- tory, and all military officers inferior to a General. He was Commander-in-chief of the Militia. He possessed the absolute and uncontrolled power of pardon- ing all offences. He was ex officio Superintendent of Indian affairs, and was appointed by the wise and virtuous Thomas Jeffekson, sole Commissioner of treaties with the Indians, with un- limited poxoers.'* He had the power of confirming, at his option, the titles of all grants of land. In fact, his signature constituted a title to the lands of the Territory, without revision or inquiry from any quarter whatever. These are the powers with which he was invested — powers which are not surpassed, if equalled, by those confided to any other individual, since the organization of our government, Washington alone excepted. Let us inquire how they were exercised. * "1 ' I nominate William Henry Harrison, of Indiana, to be a Commissioner to enter into ANY treaty or treaties which may be necessary, with any Indian tribes, north- west of the Ohio, and within the territory of the United States, on the subject of the boundary, or lands. ^ , „ "Signed, Thomas Jefferson. The message containing these nominations was transmitted to the Senate of the United States, on the 3d day of February, 1803, read on the 4th, and on the 8th taken up for consideration, when the nomination of William Henry Harrison, above recited, received the unanimous sanction of that honourable body. GENERAL HARRISON. 19 They remained in his hands for thirteen years; during which time he administered the affairs of the Territory with so much wisdom, justice and disinterestedness, that a vigilant and Iceen- sighted political opposition has been unable to point out a single act of wrong or abuse, of any kind whatever. The power of granting titles to land was one peculiarly liable to abuse. A dexterous, selfish man, would have con- verted it into the instrument of amassing thousands, perhaps millions, for himself and his family, and then defied, as he could have done, all inquiry. Harrison, on the contrary, was as poor on the day he left the Territory as he was when he entered it. As a disciple of the school of Jefferson, he could not, like some who claim popular favour, make his public situation sub- serve the purpose of private gain ; as an officer, he could not prostitute his power ; as a patriot, he could not sacrifice his country's good on the altar of an unhallowed cupidity. At the time of our writing, he is eating the bread of honest industry, on the banks of the Ohio, with no solace save that of a heart strong and cheerful in the consciousness of unyielding in- tegrity. Had he been avaricious or ambitious, he also might have ridden in his coach and four, covering with the dust of the highway, and spattering with the slaver of his steeds, his less fortunate democratic brethren. He also' might have purchased, from the corrupt, with gold, those plaudits which the dema- gogue cannot wring from the admiration of the honest. He also might have bowed or knelt in a foreign court, among kings and dukes — been greeted by lords, and smiled on by ladies. But no ! he preferred simple fare and laborious em- ployment to wealth, rank and power, when purchased at the sacrifice of his honour. So rigid has been his honesty, that he has always refused to avail himself of his intimate knowledge of the country to speculate fn lands ; and to his honour be it said, he has never owned an acre of land the title of which could be traced to himself as Governor of Indiana. As Com- missioner of treaties, he effected thirteen of the most import- ant treaties ever made. By them upwards of sixty millions OF ACRES of the finest land ever owned by the United States, were ceded to the government, and the aboriginal title finally extinguished. They are now worth at least ONE HUNDRED 20 THE LIFE OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS TO THE GOVERNMENT, and, in the hands of farmers, at least TWENTY TIMES THAT SUM. These acres are far more valuable than bars of gold or j&hhy rags! By one of these treaties with the Sacs and Foxes, he ob- tained the cession of the whole of that extensive and valuable region lying between the river Illinois and the Mississippi, with a northern boundary, stretching from the head of Fox river, to a point on the Wisconsin, thirty-six miles above its mouth, .^nd ivho has done more than this? There lives not one who has effected a tenth part as much for his country ! The wisest regulations of commerce, ever effected by one man, in point of national benefit, cannot be compared to these acts of William Henry Harrison. Through his wisdom and prudence, the West was settled. He drew around our frontier a chain of hardy, intelligent, brave and enterprising spirits, which afforded a better security against the incursions of the savage, than would the famed iron defence of Louis XIV. His speeches and messages, as Governor, whilst they display his wisdom and forecast, furnish the most finished and brilliant specimens of eloquence and composition. If collected with his other productions, they would fill several volumes. In their frequent intercourse with Governor Harrison, the Indians had learned to respect his undaunted firmness, and were, at the same time, conciliated by his kindness of manner and considerate forbearance. This, with his intimate knowledge of the Indian character, is the true secret of the remarkable success that has uniformly attended every treaty he has at- tempted to negotiate. The various and arduous duties of the Governor of Indiana, required for this office, a man of very superior abilities and qualifications, and of a rare tem^Derament ; one possessed of stern integrity and prudent moderation, with wisdom in the exercise of the extensive powers intrusted to him, accompanied by the most unwavering firmness. Such a man Governor Harrison, in the long course of his administration, fully proved himself to be. The plainest evidence that can be presented to those who are not familiar with the history of Indiana, during this eventful period, of the peculiar fitness of Governor Har GENERAL HARRISON. 21 rison for this important station, of the confidence reposed in him, and of the great popularity he attained while in the ex- ercise of so delicate a trust, is the unquestionable fact, that, for thirteen years, at every successive expiration of his term of office, he was re-appointed at the earnest solicitation of the people of the Territory, and with the public expression of the most flattering approbation on the part of our chief Executive. And this too, notwithstanding the changes which had taken place within that time, in the administration of the government. He was twice appointed by the immortal Jefferson, " the father of Democracy," and the author of the glorious Declaration of Independence, and again by Mr. Madison, the " champion of the Constitution." The following extract from a resolution, mianimously passed by the House of Representatives of Indiana, in the year 1809, requesting the re-appointment of Governor Harrison, will show the estimate which a long acquaintance had taught them of his worth : — " They (the House of Representatives) cannot forbear recommending to, and re- questing of, the President and Senate, most earnestly in their own names, and in the names of their constituents, the re-appointment of their present governor, William Henry Harrison, — because he possesses the good wishes and affection of a great majority of his fellow citizens, — because they believe him sincerely attached to the Union, the prosperity of the United States, and the administration of its govern- ment, — because they believe him, in a superior degree, capable of promoting the interest of our territory, from long experience and laborious attention to its concerns, from his influence over the Indians, and wise and disinterested management of that department; and because they have confidence in his virtues, talents, and he- PUBLICANISM." One of the leading objects in the view of Harrison, whilst Governor, was the conciliation of the Aborigines. Jealousies and heart-burnings had grown out of the intercourse between the two races, differing as they did in every important charac- teristic and quality. The complaints of the Indians were con- stantly recurring. If the traders supplied them with rum, they furnished the means of destruction. If they withheld it, it was denounced as an arbitrary act, at once unjust and oppres- sive. The traders were denounced as cheats and liars ; and the ministers of the Gospel of Peace, as invaders of their heredi- tary customs. This state of irritation continued until the year 22 THELIFEOF 1806, and as the transactions of this period led to the war of 181 1, it may be proper to give a very brief account of them. The plan of uniting the savage tribes, along the whole fron- tier, against the whites, had been repeatedly tried previous to this, but had always been defeated by the wisdom of Harrison. Tecumseh and the Prophet, who were brothers, and chiefs of the Shawanoese tribe, renewed the attempt with a better pros- pect of success. Tecumseh was a savage of the first order of abilities. He was as wary and sagacious in council, as he was bold and impetuous in the execution of his designs — ^and to this was added a capacity for command of a very superior order. As an orator, he was fluent in expression, subtle in al- lusion, and acute in reasoning. He was accurately informed of the grievances and complaints of every tribe, familiar with all their passions and sympathies, and he used them with the utmost skill to subserve his ends. The Prophet was remarkable for nothing but a low cunning, which sometimes distinguishes the savage character. He was not renowned in arms, nor had he accomplished any feats as a hunter. His name would have passed into oblivion, but for the lofty and daring character of his brother. Tecumseh found it necessary to enlist the superstition of the tribes in the pro- motion of his purpose. With this view, he affected to treat his brother as a being of a superior order, and by this artifice^ succeeded completely in deceiving them. Tecumseh advised the tribes to abstain from using the sup- plies furnished by the United States. This led to illicit trading accompanied by fraud, cheating, violence, and sometimes mur- der. Hostile incursions, on the part of the Indians, at length became frequent. Things remained in this state until the year 1811. In September, 1809, Harrison concluded a treaty with the Delawares, Miamies, and Patawatamies, for the cession of a large tract of land on the Wabash. Tecumseh was absent Avhen this treaty was ratified, and on his return refused to ac- knowledge it, alleging that the ceded land belonged to the Shawanoese. He threatened to kill the chiefs who had signed it, and declared his determination to prevent the lands from being surveyed and settled. GENERAL HARRISON. 23 Governor Harrison, on being apprised of his proceedings, sent him a message, informing him " that any claims he might have to the lands which had been ceded, were not affected by the treaty ; that he might come to Vincennes and exhibit his pretensions, and if they were fomid to be valid, that the land would either be relinquished, or an ample compensation made for it."* Accordingly, in the month of August, 1810, he came down to Vincennes, attended by several hundred war- riors, although Harrison, having no confidence in the savage- had restricted the number to thirty. The meeting took place in front of the Governor's house, on a day appointed to hear the statement of Tecumseh, which it took him many hours to make. He alleged that the Great Spirit had made this con- tinent for the use of the Indians exclusively; that the white people had no right to come here and take it from them ; that no particular part of it was given to any tribe, but that the whole was the common property of all ; and that any sale of lands made without the consent of all, was not valid. In his reply, the Governor observed, that the Indians, like the white people, were divided into different tribes or nations, and that the Great Spirit never intended that they should form but one nation, or he would not have taught them to speak different languages, which precluded them from understanding each other ; and that the Shawanoees, who emigrated from Georgia, could have no claims to the lands on the Wabash, which had been occupied far beyond the memory of man by the Miamies. The Governor having proceeded thus far, sat down for the purpose of giving the interpreters time to explain what he had said, to the different tribes that were present. As soon as it was interpreted in Shawanoese, Tecumseh interrupted the interpreter, and said that it was " all false ;" and giving a sig- nal to his warriors, they seized their knives, tomahawks and war-clubs and sprang upon their feet. For some minutes the Governor was in the most imminent danger. He, however, preserved that presence of mind for which he has ever been so much distinguished, and disengaging himself from an arm-chair in which he was seated, drew hi,s * See McAfee's History of the' Late War, p. 12, from which these facts are obtained. 24 THELIFEOF sword and met the grim savages with an undaunted front. The friendly chief Winnemack, cocked a pistol which he held in his hand. A considerable number of the citizens of Vincennes were present, all unarmed. Close at hand, however, there was a guard, composed of a sergeant and twelve men, Avho were immediately brought up by an officer. The savages quailed beneath the prompt and steady valour of Harrison. Tecumseh had ex- pected an easy victim ; but he found the Governor, although surrounded and surprised, as immovable as the earth on which he stood — equally incapable of rash violence or cowering fear. The moral influence of Harrison's position, and his unblenching front, subdued this wild son of the woods. He told Tecumseh that he was a bad man, and he would have no further inter- course with him ; and directed him to retire to his camp, and set out immediately on his return home. As the Indians with Tecumseh greatly outnumbered the citizens of the town and the regular troops there, two compa- nies of militia were brought in during the night, and a large number the next day. Early, however, on the following morn- ing, Tecumseh sent for the interpreter, apologised for his trea- chery, and earnestly requested that he might have another conference with the Governor. His request was at length granted; but the Governor took care to be attended by a num- ber of his friends, well armed, and to have the troops in the town ready for action. In his speech on this occasion, Tecum- seh said that he had been advised by some white persons to act as he had done at the former interview; but that it was not his intention to offer any violence to the Governor. Harrison then inquired whether he had any other grounds for claiming the lands. He answered that he had not. Governor Har- rison then remarked to him, that so great a warrior should disdain to conceal his intentions; and desired to know whether he really designed to wage a war against the United States, if the lately purchased lands were not relinquished by them. He answered, that it was decidedly his determination, and that he would never bury the hatchet or intermit his labours, until he united all the tribes upon the continent into one grand confede- racy, and the pale faces were compelled to yield to his de- mands. The council here ended, and Tecumseh withdrew. GENERAL HARRISON. 25 CHAPTER HI. Combination of Hostile Indians on the Western Frontier— Insidious policy of Great Britain — Approach of war, and opposition to it — Harrison prepares for the contest — Embodies a force and marches into the Indian Territory-J-Reaches the Prophet's town — Treachery of the Prophet — Anecdote of General Harrison — Battle of Tippecanoe — Heroism of Harrison in the Battle — Testimonials of popular gratitude— Testimony of the illustrious Madison, &c. — Eflects of the victory of Tippecanoe — Difficulties between England and the United States. Immediatelv after the council of Vincennes, the sagacious and blood-thirsty Tecumseh entered vigorously on the fulfil- ment of his menace made to Governor Harrison. It was his intention to avoid all hostilities with the whites, until he should effect a combination strong enough to resist them, or until the expected war with Great Britain should commence.* For this purpose he visited all the Northern and Southern tribes. His purpose was thwarted, however, by the watchful and gallant Harrison. In the year IS II, it became obvious that the cloud of war which had so long darkened our Western frontier, must shortly burst, and pour its contents of fury and desolation upon the unprotected settlers. The insidious enmity of the Indians, which had been kept alive and nourished so long by the sinister policy of England, began \o assume a bolder aspect. Their murmurs were changed into threats, their complaints to vows of vengeful re- tribution. Great Britain also had strengthened the posts which she had retained in her possession, contrary to all good faith, and had placed Canada in a state of defence. Her outrages upon our commerce had become such as a brave nation could no longer palliate or excuse. The patience of the American people became at length exhausted ; and throughout, her wide domain, the Democracy of the land demanded a vindication of their rights. The prospect of war was viewed with enthu- siasm in the West. * McAfee's History of the Late War, p. 15. 4 C 26 THELIFEOF Opposed to the Democracy or the country, were a few discontented and restless spirits, who did every thing to weaken and cripple the administration of Mr. Madison, that a stub- born enforcement of their fallacious objections to a redress of our National Wrongs, could accomplish. They stigmatised such men as JEFFERSON, MADISON, HARRISON, and JACKSON, as paid emissaries of Napoleon — sought to excite popular prejudice against them — to create a sympathy in be- half of England, whom they styled our "kind mother" and the "bulwark of our religion," and to precipitate the nation into a war with France, our ancient ally, who had come to our aid in the dreariest hour of the Revolution. And when our country, roused by a sense of accumulated wrongs and injuries, became engaged in the second war of independence, struggling for her honour and her rights with a powerful foe, Martin Van Buren was found associated with those who endeavoured to distract and divide the democratic parly, by introducing De Wilt Clin- ton as a candidate for the Presidency, in opposition to the patriotic Madison. ' But all these efforts proved unavailing. The People, lashed into phrensy at the accumulated outrages of Britain, demanded of their Representatives an immediate commencement of hostilities. Governor Harrison, always foremost in the hour of his country's danger, applied to President Madison for authority to prepare the Frontier for the approaching contest, stating to him the efforts of Tecumseh who was leagued with the British, and what would be the disastrous consequences if his design was permitted to be matured. An armed force was instantly furnished him from Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana, but he was ordered " to abstain from hostilities, of any kind whatever, and to any degree not indispensably required^ A more disadvantageous and trying position than that which Harrison occupied, cannot well be conceived. Before him, was arranged his enemy in open preparation for battle; behind him, lay a defenceless population, from which all the able-bodied men had been drafted, or had volunteered to form the army : on the right and left, stretched the forest, which it was impos- sible to guard, and through which the foe could, at any mo- GENERAL HARRISON. 27 ment, fall back upon the unprotected settlers in the rear, and carry the torch and knife to the home and throats of every family. General Harrison had not the authority to attack. Until blood had stained the tomahawk, or the victim had writhed beneath the torture, he could not even unsheath his sword. Every advantage was conferred upon the enemy. In the defile of the mountain, on the plain, by night or by day, in detach- ments, or en masse, he might come on, when, where, and as he chose. But a brief period elapsed before the grossest out- rages upon the settlers, afforded abundant cause to strike. The genius of Harrison — " the man who never lost a BATTLE," who has never yielded to his country's foes, was equal to this crisis ; and by a master stroke of policy, he conquered every disadvantage, and moved down with an army of eight hundred men, upon the Prophet's town, where all the hostile Indians were assembled, and before Tecumseh had returned from his visit to the Southern Tribes. As soon as it was known in Kentucky, that Harrison was authorized to march with an army against the Indians, a num- ber of volunteers were eager to join his standard. Many of them were men of high standing at home, as military, civil and literary characters. Of tIi|B number were Samuel Wells, a Major General in former Indian wars ; Joseph H. Davies, an eminent lawyer of great military ambition ; Col. Owen, a veteran in the Indian war. Colonel Keiger and Messrs. Croghan, O'Fallon, Thipp, Chum and Edwards, who afterwards distinguished themselves as officers of the army of the United States. In the latter part of September, 1811, Governor Harrison commenced his march up the Wabash, with a force of about eight hundred efficient men. The militia, who were all volun- teers, had been trained with great assiduity and labour by the Governor in person. Conformably to his orders from the Pre- sident, he halted within the boundary of the United States, and endeavoured, by the intervention of the Delaware and Miami tribes, to induce the Prophet, Tecumseh's brother, to deliver up the murderers, and the many horses which had been stolen from the white settlers. These messengers of peace were received and treated with great insolence by the Prophet and his council, and their demands rejected with disdain. To put 28 THELIFEOF an end to all hopes of accommodation, a small war party was detached by the Prophet, for the purpose of commencing hos- tilities. This party fired upon the American sentinels, and wounded one of them severely. The Delaware chiefs informed the Governor that it was in vain to expect that any thing but force could obtain satisfaction for injuries committed, or secu- rity for the future. He learned also from the same source, that the strength of the Prophet was daily increasing by accessions of the ardent and giddy young men from every tribe. So soon, therefore, as his little army had recovered from their sickness, occasioned by the exclusive use of fresh food, without vegetables and a sufficient quantity of bread, Harrison deter- mined to proceed on to the Prophet's town. And here it is no more than justice that an incident should be related illus- trative of the generous conduct of Governor Harrison, which endeared him so much to his troops, and rendered him the most popular commander ever engaged in the American service. Finding that his flour was inadequate to supply the army for any considerable period, he was compelled, in the early part of October, to put them on a half-allowance of that article. While the soldier in the line, however, was subjected to this privation, the Governor's table was not foundl supplied with luxuries. He required all the ofiicers rigidly to conform to the same regu- lation, and he was Imnself the first to adopt it. The Indians being perfect masters of ambuscading, every precaution was necessary during the progress of the army, to guard against surprise, and to prevent them from being attacked in a disadvantageous position. Our limits forbid us to accom- pany him on his dreary march through the wilderness, or to recount the many perils and adventures of the route. Com- pelled to ford streams, swollen by heavy rains, and in some instances filled with floating ice, and this too, on foot — for fre- quently did the Governor relinquish his horse to the sick or infirm soldier — to lie at night on the snow-covered earth, with his clothes and accoutrements on, or sit with his back against a tree, sleeping, with the reins of his horse clenched in his hand, momentarily expecting an attack; — these form but an imperfect sketch of the toils and privations to which the chivalrous Har- rison and his gallant army were exposed. GENERAL HARRISON. 29 On the 6th of November he discovered the Prophet's town, about five miles in advance of him. Captain Dubois was de- spatched with a flag to the Indians, accompanied by an inter- preter, to ascertain from the Prophet whether he would now comply with the terms that had been so often proposed to liim. The army was moved slowly after, in the order of battle. In a few moments a messenger came from Captain Dubois, inform- ing the Governor that the Indians were close to him, in great numbers, but that they would return no answer to the inter- preter, although they were sufficiently near /to hear what was said to them ; and that upon his advancing, they persisted in their attempts to cut him off from the army. Governor Harri- son, after this last effort to open a negotiation, which was suffi- cient to show his wish for an accommodation, resolved to hesitate no longer in treating the Indians as enemies. He therefore recalled Captain Dubois, and moved on with a deter- mination to attack them. He had not proceeded far, however, before he was met by three Indians, one of them a principal counsellor of the Prophet. They were sent, they said, to know why the army was advancing upon them ; that the Pro- phet wished, if possible, to avoid hostilities ; that he had sent a pacific message by the Miami and Pottawatomie chiefs, who had come to him on the part of the Governor ; and that those chiefs had gone down on the south side of the Wabash, being the opposite shore of that traversed by the Governor and his army. A suspension of hostilities was accordingly agreed upon ; and a council was to take place the next day between Harrison and the chiefs, to concert terms of peace. The Governor further informed them that he would go on to the Wabash and encamp for the night. As soon as they were gone, he told his officers that he knew, from their language and behaviour, that they intended to at- tack him before morning. Confident that this was the "com/ic//" they meditated, he encamped his army, as we shall presently see, in the order of battle, and directed his men to lie down with their clothes on, and their arms by their sides. His predic- tions soon became history. After marching a short distance further, he came in view of the town, which was seen at some distance up the river, upon c2 30 THELIFEOF a commanding eminence. The ground below the town being unfavourable for an encampment, the army marched on in the direction of the town, with the view of obtaining a better situa- tion beyond it. A halt was soon ordered, and some officers sent to examine a creek that ran near the town, as well as the river above it. In half an hour Brigade Major Clarke and Major Taylor returned, and reported that they had found on the creek " every thing that could be desirable in an encampment — an elevated spot, nearly surrounded by an open prairie, with wa- ter convenient, and a sufficiency of wood for fuel. This place, Avith the concurrence of the Governor, was chosen by Majors Taylor and Clarke, after examining all the environs of the town ; and when the army of General Hopkins was there in the following year, they all united in the opinion that a better spot to resist Indians was not to be found in the whole country."* The army now proceeded to the place selected, near the mouth of the Tippecanoe, from which the subsequent battle derived its title, and encamped, late in the evening, on a dry piece of ground which rose about ten feet above the level of a marshy prairie. The two columns of infantry occupied the front and rear. The right flank, being about eighty yards wide, was covered by Captain Spenser's company, of eighty men. The left flank was composed of three companies of mounted riflemen, under Major Wells. The front was composed of one battalion of United States Infantry, under the command of Major Floyd, flanked on the right by two companies of militia infantry ; and on the left, by one company of the same troops. The rear consisted of a battalion of United States infantry, un- der Captain Baen, commanding as Major, and four companies of militia infantry under Colonel Decker. The cavalry, under Daviess, were encamped in the rear of the front line. The en- campment was not more than three-fourths of a mile from the town. The order given to the army, in the event of a night attack, (which his intimate knowledge of the Indian mode of warfare induced Governor Harrison to anticipate and provide against,) was for "each corps to maintain its ground at all hazards until * McAfee's History of the Late War. GENERAL HARRISON. 31 relieved."* The dragoons were directed, in such a case, to parade dismounted, with their swords on and their pistols in their belts, and to wait for orders. The guard for the night consisted of two Captain's commands of forty-tv/o men and four non-commissioned officers eacli ; and two subaltern's guards of twenty men and non-commissioned officers : the whole under the command of a field officer of the day. Before proceeding to a description of the celebrated battle which followed, we will pause to relate an incident which occurred the night before the victory that conferred so much glory upon American arms, and which happily illustrates the humanity and benevolence of Harrison's heart. Ben, a negro who belonged to the camp, deserted and went over to the Indians, and entered into a conspiracy to assassinate Governor Harrison, at the time the savages commenced their attack. Being apprehended whilst lurking about the Govern- or's marquee, waiting an opportunity to accomplish his fell pur- pose, he was tried by a court martial and sentenced to be shot. The execution of this sentence was delayed for a short time, in consequence of the troops being engaged in fortifying the camp. In the mean time, the negro was put into Indian stocks, that is, a log split open, notches cut in it to fit the culprit's legs, the upper piece then laid on, and the whole firmly staked into the ground. The Governor interposed, and pardoned the culprit. The reason assigned by the Governor for his clemency was as follows: "The fact was, that I began to pity him, and could not screw myself up to the point of giving the fatal order. If he had been out of my sight, he would have been executed. The pooi^ wretch lay confined before my fire, his face receiving the rain that occasionally fell, and his eyes constantly turned upon me as if imploring mercy. I could not withstand the appeal, and I determined to give him another chance for his life." This act of magnanimous lenity displays, in bright colours, the goodness of Harrison's heart ; and proves that no elevation of rank can cause him to forget the feelings of his fellow men: resentment, if it dwelt in his bosom, yielded to the pleading of mercy. • McAfee's History of the Late War, p. 28. 32 THELIFEOF The men now busied themselves in fortifying the camp, This done, they retired to rest. Throughout the multitude who had lately been so active and busy, not a sound was heard save that of the sentinel as he paced his lonely round. The night was dark and cloudy; the moon rose late, and was overcast with clouds, which discharged a drizzling rain, *"Itwas the Governor's invariable practice to be ready to mount his horse at a moment's warning. On the morning of the 7th, he arose at a quarter before four o'clock, and sat by his fire conversing with the gentlemen of his mess, who were reclining on their blankets, waiting for the signal which in a few moments would have been given for the troops to turn out. The orderly drummer had been already roused for the reveille. The moon had risen, but afforded little light in consequence of being overshadowed by clouds. It was the uniform usage of Governor Harrison to call up the troops an hour before day, and keep them under arms until it was light. After four o'clock, General Wells, Colonel Owen and Colonel Daviess had all risen and joined the Governor, who was on the point of issuing his orders for raising the army, when the treacherous Indians had crept up so near the sentries as to hear them challenge when relieved. They intended to rush upon the sentries and kill them before they could fire: but one of the sentries discovered an Indian creeping towards him in the grass, and fired. This was immediately followed by the Indian yell, and a desperate charge upon the left flank. The guard in that quarter gave way and abandoned their officer, without making any resistance. Captain Barton's company of regulars and Captain Keiger's company of mounted riflemen, forming the left angle of the rear line, received the first onset. The fire there was excessive ; but the troops who had lain on their arms, were immediately prepared to receive, and gallantly re- sist the furious savage assailants. The manner of the attack was calculated to dis- courage and terrify the men ; yet as soon as they could be formed and posted, they maintained their ground with desperate valour, though but very few of them had ever before been in battle. The fires in the camp were extinguished immediately, as the light they afforded was more serviceable to the Indians than to our men. " As soon as the Governor could mount his horse, he proceeded towards the point of attack, and finding the line much weakened there, he ordered two companies from the centre of the rear line to march up and form across the angle in the rear of Barton's and Keiger's companies. General Wells immediately proceeded to the right of his command ; and Colonel Owen, who was with him, was proceeding di- rectly to the point of attack, when he was shot on his horse near the lines, and thus bravely fell among the first victims of savage perfidy. A heavy fire now commenced all along the left flank, upon the whole of the front and right flank, and on a part of the rear line. " In passing through the camp, towards the left of the front line, the Governor met with Colonel Daviess and the dragoons. The Colonel informed him that the Indians, concealed behind some trees near the line, were annoying the troops very * See McAfee's History of the Last War, published in 1816, from which this de- scription is taken ; pp. 29 — 36. GENERAL HARRISON. 33 severely in that quarter ; and he requested permission to dislodge thetn, which was granted. He immediately called on the first division of his cavalry to follow him, but the order was not distinctly heard, and but few of his men charged with him. Among those who charged, were two yoinig gentlemen who had gone with him froiH Kentucky, Messrs. Mead and Sanders, who were afterwards distinguished as captains in the United States' service. They had not proceeded far out of the lines, when Daviess was mortally wounded by several balls and fell. His men stood by him, and repulsed the savages several times, till they succeeded in carrying him into camp. j " In the mean time the attack on Spencer's and Warwick's companies on the right, became very severe. Captain Spencer and his lieutenants were all killed, and Cap- tain Warwick was mortally wounded. The Governor, in passing towards that flank, found Captain Robb's company near the centre of the camp. They had been driven from their post ; or rather, had fallen back without orders. He sent them to the aid of Captain Spencer, where they fought very bravely, having seventeen men killed during the battle. Captain Prescott's company of United States' infantry, had fdled up the vacancy caused by the retreat of Robb's company. Soon after Colonel Da- viess was wounded. Captain Snelling, at the head of his company, charged on the same Indians and dislodged them with considerable loss. The battle was now main- tained on all sides with desperate valour. The Indians advanced and retreated by a rattling noise made with deer hoofs : they fought with enthusiasm, and seemed de- termined on victory or death. " As soon as daylight appeared. Captain Snelling's company, Captain Posey's, under Lieutenant Albright, and Captain Scott's, were drawn from the front line, anil Wilson's from the rear, and formed on the left flank ; while Cook's and Baen's com- panies were ordered to the right. General Wells took command of the corps formed on the left, and with the aid of some dragoons, who were now mounted and com- manded by Captain Park, made a successful charge on the enemy in that direction, driving them into an adjoining swamp, through which the cavalry could not pursue them. At the same time Cook's and Lieutenant Laribie's companies, with the aid of the riflemen and militia on the right flank, charged on the Indians and put them to flight in that quarter, which terminated the battle. " During the time of this contest, the Prophet kept himself secure, on an adjacent eminence, singing a war song. He had told his followers, that the Great Spirit would render the army of the Americans unavailing, and that their bullets would not hurt the Indians, who would have light, while their enemies were involved in thick darkness. Soon after the battle commenced, he was informed that his men were falling. He told them to fight on, it would soon be as he had predicted, and then began to sing louder. " Colonel Boyd commanded as a Brigadier General in this engagement ; and the Governor in his letter to the war department, speaks highly of him and his brigade, and of Clarke and Croghan who were his aids. Colonel Decker is also commended for the good order in which he kept his command : and of General Wells, it is said, that he sustained the fame which he had acquired in almost every campaign since the first settlement of Kentucky. " The officers and soldiers generally, performed their duties well. They acted with a degree of coolness, bravery, and good order, which was not to be expected from men unused to carnage, and in a situation so well calculated to produce terror 5 34 THELIFEOF and confusion. The fortune of war necessarily put it in the power of some officers and their men, at the expense of danger, wounds, and death, to render more service, and acquire more honour, than others : but to speak of their particular merits, would be to detail again the operations of the conflict. " Of Colonels Owen and Daviess, the Governor speaks in the highest terms. Owen joined him as a private in Keiger's company at Fokt Harrison, and accepted the place of volunteer aid. He had been a representative in the legislature of Ken- tucky. His character was that of a good citizen and a brave soldier. He left a wife and a large family of children, to add the poignancy of domestic grief to the public regret for his loss. " Captain Baen, who fell early in the action, had the character of an able officer and a brave soldier. Captain Spencer was wounded in the head — he exhorted his men to fight on. He was then shot through both thighs and fell — still he continued to encourage his men. He was then raised up, and received a ball through his body which immediately killed him. His lieutenants, McMahan and Berry, fell bravely encou- raging their men. Warwick was shot through the body, and was taken to the sur- gery to be dressed : as soon as it was over, being a man of much bodily strength and still able to walk, he insisted on going back to his post, though it was evident he had but a few hours to live. Colonel White, formerly United States agent at the Saline, was also killed in the action. The whole number MUed, with those who died soon of their wounds, was upwards of fifty : the wounded were about double that number. Governor Harrison himself narrowly escaped, the hair on his head being cut by a ball. " The Indians left thirty-eight warriors dead on the field, and buried several others in the town, which with those who must have died of their wounds, would make their loss at least as great as that of the Americans. The troops under the command of Governor Harrison of every description, amounted on the day before the battle, to something m6re than eight hundred. The ordinary force, that had been at the Pro- phet's town, through the preceding summer, was about four hundred and fifty. But they were joined a few days before the -action, by all the Kickapoos of the Prairie, and by many bands of Pottawatamies from the Illinois river, and the St. Josephs of Lake Michigan. They estimated their number after the battle, to have been eight hundred ; but the traders, who had a good opportunity of knowing, made them at least fourteen hundred. However it is certain, that no victory was ever before ob- tained over the Northern Indians, where the numbers were any thing like equal. The number of killed too was greater than was ever before known. It is their cus- tom always to avoid a close action, and from their dexterity in hiding themselves, but few of them can be killed, even when they are pouring destruction into the ranks of their enemy. It is believed that there were not ten of them killed at St. Clair's de- feat, although one thousand Americans were massacred, and still fewer at Braddock's. At Tippecanoe, they rushed up to the bayonets of our men, and in one instance, re- lated by Captain Snelling, an Indian adroitly put the bayonet of a soldier aside, and clove his head with his war-club — an instrument on which there is fixed a triangular piece of iron, broad enough to project several inches from the wood. Their conduct on this occasion, so different from what it usually is, was attributed to the confidence of success, with which their Prophet had inspired them, and to the distinguished bravery of the Winebago warriors. « The Indians did not determine to attack the American camp till late at night GENERAL HARRISON. 35 The plan that was formed the evening before, was, to meet the Governor in council the next day, and agree to the terms he proposed. At the close of the council, the chiefs were to retire to the warriors, who were to be placed at a convenient distance. The Governor was then to be killed by two Winebagoes, who had devoted themselves to certain death to accomplish this object. They were to loiter about the camp after the council had broken up ; and their killing the Governor and raising the war-whoop, were to be the signal for a general attack. The Indians were commanded by White Loon, Stone-eater, and Winemac, a Pottawatamie chief, who had been with the Governor on his march, and at Fort Harrison, making great professions of friend- ship. " The 4th regiment was about two hundred and fifty strong ; and there were about sixty volunteers from Kentucky in the army. The rest of the troops were volunteers from the Indiana miUtia. Those from the neighbourhood of Vincennes had been trained for several years by the Governor, and had become very expert in the manoeu- vres which he had adopted for fighting the Indians. The greater part of the territo- rial troops followed him as well from personal attachment as from a sense of duty. Indeed, a greater degree of confidence and personal attachment has rarely been found in anx armt towards its commander, than existed in this ; nor has there been manx battles in which the dependence op the ARMT ON ITS LEADER WAS MORE DISTINCTLY FELT. During the wholc action the Governor was constantly on the lines, and always repaired to the point which was most hardly pressed. The reinforcements drawn occasionally from the points most secure, were conducted by himself, and formed on the spot where their services were most wanted. The oflScers and men, who believed that their ultimate success depended on his safety, warmly remonstrated against his so constantly exposing himself. Upon one occasion, as he was approaching an angle of the line, against which the Indians were advancing with horrible yells. Lieutenant Emerson of the dragoons, seized the bridle of his horse, and earnestly entreated that he would not go there ; but the Governor putting spurs to his horse, pushed on to the point of attack, where the enemy were received with firmness and driven back. " The army remained in the camp on the 7th and 8th of November, to bury the dead and dress the wounded ; and to make preparations for returning. During this time. General Wells was permitted with the mounted riflemen to visit the town, which he found evacuated by all, except a chief whose leg was broken. The town was well prepared for an attack, and no doubt but the Indians fully expected it; for they had determined to agree to no terms which could be offered. The wounds of the chief being dressed, and provision made for him, he was left with instructions to tell his companions that if they would abandon the Prophet and return to their respective tribes, they should be forgiven." The victory of Tippecanoe was one of the most important conflicts which ever occurred between the Indians and the whites. The Indian forces far excelled the American army in number ; yet notwithstanding this, and their attempted surprise, they were totally routed by the gallantry, courage and consum- mate generalship of Harrison. The high sense entertained by the government of the ira- 36 THELIFEOF portance of this victory, is emphatically expressed in a message from the President to Congress, dated December ISth, 1811. " While it is deeply to be lamented," says Mr. Madison, " that so many valuable lives have been lost in the action which took place on the 9th ult., Congress will see with satisfaction the dauntless spirit and fortitude victoriously displayed by every description of troops engaged, as well as the collected firmness which distinguished their commander, on an occasion requiring the utmost exertion of valour and discipline." Resolutions were also passed by the Legislatures of Indiana and Kentucky of a similar import. The following is the reso- lution of the latter body, on motion of the Hon. J, J. Crittenden, now a distinguished member of the United States Senate. " Resolved, That in the late campaign against the Indians on the Wabash, Governor William Henry Harrison has, in the opinion of this Legislature, behaved like a hero, a patriot and a General,- and that for his cool, deliberate, skilful and gallant con- duct in the late battle of Tippecanoe, he deserves the warmest thanks of the nation." The panegyric thus conferred was richly merited, as nothing could exceed the daring with which he exposed his person, at those points where the battle raged most hotly. Well known to many of the Indians, and the object of their peculiar attack, his fearlessness and unshrinking exposure, make it appear almost a miracle that he should have escaped unwounded. In some instances, as stated by McAfee in the extract we have before made from his work, this exposure was so great as to demand the urgent interference of his officers — a circumstance which has occurred to no other officer of whom we have ever read, except Washington, at Long Island. In referring to the per- sonal intrepidity of Governor Harrison, we cannot refrain from making the following extracts from a private journal published in Keene, New Hampshire, by Adam Walker, a private soldier who fought in this battle, and who could have had no interested motives for his publication. " General Harrison," he says, " received a shot through the rim of his hat. In the heat of the action, his voice was frequently heard, and easily distinguished, giving his orders in the same calm, cool and collected manner, with which we had been used to receive them on drill or parade. The confidence of the troops in the General was unlimited." The same intelligent writer, in speaking of Harrison's kind- ness to the soldiers, and his influence over them, remarks, " He appeared not disposed to detain any mari against his inclination ; being endowed by nature with a heart as humane as brave, in his frequent addresses to the militia, his eloquence was formed to persuade ; appeals were made to reason as welJ as to feeling, and never were they made in vain." GENERAL HARRISON. 37 On the return of Governor Harrison, the Speaker of the • Legislature of Indiana, General William Johnson, thus addressed him : — " The House of Kepresentatives of the Indiana territory, in their own name, and in behalf of their constituents, most cordially reciprocate the congratulations of your Excellency on the glorious result of the late sanguinary conflict with the Shawnee Prophet, and the tribes of Indians confederated with him ; when we see displayed in behalf of our country, not only the consummate abilities af the General, but the heroism of the man,- and when we take into view the benefits which must result to that country from those exertions, we cannot, for a moment, withhold our meed of applause." The gallant Colonel Daviess, who, as has been already men- tioned, fell at the battle of Tippecanoe, stated in a letter written a short time before his death, — " I make free to declare that I have imagined there were two military men in the West, and General Harrison is the first of the two." Soon after the battle, thirteen of the principal officers of the army, issued an address, in which they declared, that " Should our country again require our services to oppose a civilized or savage foe, WE SHOULD MARCH UNBER GENERAL HaRRISON WITH THE MOST PERFECT CON- FIDENCE OF VICTORY AND FAME." The VICTORY OF Tippecanoe was hailed throughout the country with joy, and every demonstration of gratitude to the invincible Harrison. The hardy yeomanry of the West per- mitted no limits to be imposed on their rejoicing. It was ce- lebrated in every town, village, bar-room, and hamlet, in the valley of the Ohio, and there were few firesides but burnt brighter and more cheerfully, as the honest housewife congra- lated herself and children on their escape from the fagot, the vengeful scalping knife, or reeking tomahawk, of the grim monsters of the woods. The eftect of the victory of Tippecanoe, was the immediate dispersion of the hostile bands of barbarians, who had hereto- fore hung on the Western frontier. The various tribes de- nounced Tecumseh, and disclaimed all connexion with him, and shortly afterwards sent eighty deputies* to Governor Har- * These deputies promised to deliver the Prophet into the hands of the United States, as soon as they could catch him, and went away, resolved, as McAfee remarks, " not to commit hostilities again, until a favourable opportunity offered." Tecumseh appeared at Fort Wayne during the following winter, (1811-12,) and by his com- plaints against General Harrison, bore an unwilUng but sincere testimony to his D 38 THE LIFE OF rison, to treat for peace, on the terms of total submission. Far different would have been the scene had the Prophet triumphed ; towns would have been sacked, hamlets burned, and the peaceful tenement of the settler offered up a sacrifice to savage fury. During the time the events which we have just related, were transpiring, a crisis had arisen in the national intercourse be- tween Great Britain and the United States. We have elsewhere stated that she still continued to hold some of the most important fortresses on the frontier ; that she had placed the Canadas in such a situation as to use them for offensive or defensive ope- rations, as circumstances might require; she had also committed unprovoked depredations on our commerce. The hour for re- tribution was now fast approaching. The spirit of the people had been aroused, and nothing short of an open declaration of war could allay it. Of the circumstances which led to the De- claration of War, Tecumseh was doubtlessly apprized. Accord- ingly we find that he instantly renewed those intrigues among the Indians for which he had been so celebrated. The result was, that their minds, at all times fickle, became again influ- enced with a sanguinary desire for slaughter. The aid which had been afforded, and the alliance which was now tendered to them, by their British brethren, settled the wavering, and determined the doubtful ; and we find them, in the war which followed, at all times companions with the latter in arms, and scarcely excelling them in their bloody vengeance. greatness. He then demanded ammunition, which the commandant refusing, he threatened to " go to his British father" for it: after spending a few moments, in a moody silence, he uttered the war-whoop and disappeared in the forest. GENERAL HARRISON. sa CHAPTER IV. Declaration of War — Reliance on Harrison — Treason of Hull — Disastrous state of the contest — Harrison appointed to the command of the Kentucky forces — Arrival of Harrison at Fort Wayne — Indians retire at his approach — General Winchester appointed — Discontent of the army — Winchester superseded — Harrison commis- sioned by Madison — Great powers conferred on him — Attachment and devotion of the troops to Harrison — Commences vigorous operations — Massacre at the River Raisin — Occasioned by a disobedience of Harrison's orders — Renewed efforts of defence — The army encamped at Fort Meigs — Investment of Fort Meigs by the British and Indians — Anecdotes of Harrison — Gallant defence of Fort Meigs — Admirable and successful military stratagem — Heroism of Harrison — The enemy repulsed. War against Great Britain was declared on the 18th of June, 1812. The interval between the battle of Tippecanoe, and the declaration of war, was spent by Governor Harrison in putting the frontier in a state of defence. Interviews with him were solicited by the governors of most of the Western States, in which measures were projected for enrolling and equipping troops, and preparing the munitions of war for the approaching conflict. Conscious of his great abilities and experience, and the uni- versal confidence reposed in his military skill, by the entire population of the West, they placed the utmost reliance on his counsels, and looked to him as the only leader under whom they could confidently expect success against the common enemy. Having aided Governor Edwards in. placing the fron- tier of Illinois in a posture of defence, he was soon after invited by Governor Scott of Kentucky, a distinguished revolutionary officer, to a conference in relation to the Kentucky troops, which had been raised for the defence of the frontier. He complied with tlie invitation, and met Governor Scott at Frank- fort; where he v/as received with enthusiastic and tumultuary acclamations by the people, and with the highest civil and military honours. These signal marks of the ardent attach- ment and unbounded confidence of the people whom he had so triumphantly defended from the hostile savages, who me- 40 THELIFEOF naced all t^e frontier settlements with destruction by the fagot or the scalping knife, were soon after followed by still more flattering proofs of their high admiration and regard for his patriotism, abilities and military prowess. It was obvious that the first blow of the enemy would fall on the West, but with a chivalry truly characteristic, it neither murmured nor faltered, but equipped for the field. We will not pause to narrate the disasters of the campaign under Hull. Chicago and Mackinaw were taken by the enemy. Detroit shortly after fell by treason, and throughout the whole frontier, the mortification of defeat was rendered more poignant by the prospect of a wide-spread savage slaughter. Shortly before the fall of Detroit, letters were received from the army, stating their total want of confidence in the capacity and integrity of Hull. (See McAfee's History of the War, pages 84 and 85. Letter from Cass, the late Secretary of War.) " These letters," says McAfee, " also declared it to be the common wish of thb AKMT THAT GoTERNOU HaRRISON SHOULD ACCGMPANT THE EXPECTED REIIf- rORCEMENT." Harrison was justly regarded at the time as the most capa- ble, as well as the most popular General in the West. His courage and daring at Tippecanoe, had given him a high place in the affections of the people. -i. Governor Scott had levied an armed force of more than five thousand miUtia and volunteers, commanded by some of the ablest men and most experienced ofiicers in the state. Two thousand of these troops were ordered for immediate service j and they had no sooner learned that they were destined to march to the aid of their countrymen on the frontier, than they at once unanimously expressed the most earnest desire to be placed under the command of Governor Harrison. This feel- ing was responded to by the great mass of the people through- out the state. The laws of Kentucky, however, would not permit any other than a citizen to hold a command in the state militia. In this dilemma, Governor Scott consulted with the venerable Shelby, (the governor elect,) and other dis- tinguished citizens of the state,* and by their unanimous advice • A caucus was called on the subject of the appointment. " At this caucus, com- posed of General Shelby, the Honourable Henry Clay, Speaker of the House of GENERAL HARRISON. 41 he gave Harrison a brevet commission of Major-General in the Kentucky miUtia, with express authority to take command of the gallant troops about to march to the frontier. This was a bold and unprecedented measure, but one that gave unbounded satisfaction to both soldiers and citizens, and one fully justified by the peculiar exigencies of the case. This unexpected pro- ceeding on the part of Governor Scott and the authorities of Kentucky, conveyed a eulogy on the various military acts of the chivalrous Harrison such as no words can express. It speaks volumes in favour of his unexampled popularity and high military reputation, enjoyed among a bold and gallant people, boasting an unusual proportion of distinguished and able men. Shortly afterwards he marched for the seat of war, at the head of seven thousand Kentuckians — as gallant and chivalric a band as ever rallied beneath the banner of freedom. It was composed of men of the greatest intelligence and influence in the state. The hardy yeoman marched shoulder to shoulder with the lawyer who had aided in the administration of justice, or the physician whose skill had relieved the diseases of his children. Even the sacred ministers of God closed the volume of gospel news, extinguished the fire on the altar, and bidding the army " God speed !" swept on to meet the foe. Such were the men who had enrolled themselves beneath the flag of Har- rison. Harrison had not proceeded far in his march when he was informed that Winchester had been appointed by the War Department, who were ignorant of the proceedings in Ken- tucky, to the command of the troops. This information was received with murmurs of indignation throughout the army. The revolutionary veteran, Shelby, immediately wrote to the Representatives in Congress, the Honourable Thomas Todd, Judge of the Federal Court, &c. &c., it was unanimously resolved to give Harrison a brevet commission of Major-General in the Kentucky militia, and authorize him to take command. The appointment received the general approbation of the people, and was hailed by the troops of Cincinnati with the utmost enthusiastic joy." — McAfee's History of the Lnst War, p. 108, General Harrison appointed the Hon. R. M, Johnson, now Vice-President of the United States, one of his aids. — lb, p. 109. ' 6 p2 42 THE LIFE OF Secretary of War, remonstrating against any change by which Harrison should be superseded, as destructive of the objects of the campaign. Harrison, however, yielding up his own eleva- tion, and the appointment of Brigadier-General in the service of the United States, which was at the same time tendered him, a sacrifice to his country's good, submitted to the dictate of authority, and pressed forward with haste to the relief of Fort Wayne, which had been for ten days besieged by the Indians. The news of his approach had gone before him ; and on his arrival, the savages dispersed without hazarding a battle. Such indeed was his reputation for invincible skill and gallantry, that a writer of that day observes, " Harrison's presence inspires EVERY PERSON WITH COURAGE, AND MAKES EVEN COWARDS BRAVE." This reputation alone spared the effusion of human blood at Fort Wayne. Shortly after Harrison arrived at Fort Wayne, General Winchester, an old and meritorious revolu- tionary officer, came to take command of the troops. But the reputation of Winchester did not satisfy them with him as a substitute for their favourite General. Loud murmurs ran through the camp, and some openly refused to submit to the change. So great was the discontent, that nothing short of Harrison's disinterested and magnanimous efforts could recon- cile them to their new commander : they finally submitted, but under a promise that Harrison should be restored to them as soon as the War Department could be heard from. McAfee, in his History of the Last War, remarks : — " The troops had confidently expected that General Harrison would be confirmed in the command ; and by this time he had completely received the confidence of every soldier in the army. He was affable and courteous in his manners, and inde- fatigable in his attention to every branch of business. His soldiers seemed to anti- cipate the wishes of their General : it was only necessary to be known that he wished something done, and all were anxious to risk their lives in its accomplishment. His men would have fought better and suffered more with him, than with ant othek Gekehal in America : and whatever might have been the merits of General Win- chester, it was certainly an unfortunate arrangement which transferred the command to him at this moment. It is absolutely necessary that militia soldiers should have great confidence in their General, if they are required either to obey with great promptness, or to fight with bravery. The men were at last reconciled to march under Winchester, but with a confident belief that Harruon would be placed in the command; which accordingly was done, as soon as the War Department was GENERAL HARRISON. 43 informed of his appointment in the Kentucky troops, and his popularity in the vrestern country." For no sooner was President Madison made aware of the discontent in the army, and of the almost unanimous wishes of the western people, than he immediately appointed Harri- son, in the place of Winchester, commander of the North- West- ern army. A letter was addressed to General Harrison by the immortal Perry, about the time of the appointment of Winchester to the command, from which we make the following extract: " You know what has been my opinion as to the future commander-in-chief of the army. I pride myself not a little, I assure you, on seeing my predictions so near being verified. Yes, my dear friend, I expect soon to hail you as the chief who IS TO BESEEM THE HONOUR OF OUR ARMS IN THE NORTH." General McArthur, who had also served under General Har- rison, addressed his friend and old commander on the subject, in which he remarked : — "You, SIB, STAND THE HIGHEST WITH THE MILITIA OF THIS STATE OF ANT General in the service, and I am confident that no man can fight them TO so GREAT AUVANTAGE ; and I think their extreme solicitude may be the means of calling you to this frontier." On retiring from the army, after Winchester's appointment, General Harrison hastened homeward to resume his duties as Governor of Indiana. He had proceeded part of the way, when he received a despatch from the Secretary of War, of which the following is an extract. "War Depart3ient, September 17, 1812. « Sir, — The President is pleased to assign to you the command of the north-western army, which in addition to the regular troops and rangers in that quarter, will con- sist of the volunteers and militia of Kentucky, Ohio, and three thousand from Vir- ginia and Pennsylvania, making your whole force ten thousand men." After having stated the objects of the campaign, the despatch proceeds : "With these objects in view, you will command such means as may BE practicable, EXERCISE YOUR OWN DISCRETION, AND ACT IN ALL CASES according to your own JUDGMENT. Very respectfully, &c. « W. EUSTIS. " Brig. Gen. William Henry Harbison." The power thus conferred on General Harrison was greater than had ever been exercised by any commander, excepting only Washington and Green. It was equalled only by that which he had exercised in a civil capacity, with so mucli «.; edit to himself and advantage to the government. 44 THE LIFE OF President Madison, in communicating to Congress, Novem- ber, 1812, the preparations for defence, which had been made, stated that "an ample force from the States of Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, is placed, with the addition of a few regulars, under the command of General Harrison, who POSSESSES THE ENTIRE CONFIDENCE OP HIS FELLOW SOLDIERS, among whom are citizens, some of them volunteers in the ranks, not less distinguished by their political stations than by their personal merits." This EXTENSIVE COMMAND WAS CONFERRED BY JaMES Madison, a democrat of the Jefferson school, and one of the purest patriots that ever breathed. Nor was it given without a full knowledge of the merits of the recipient. Mr. Madison entered upon the duties of Secretary of State under Thomas Jefferson, in the year ISOl, shortly after Harrison had been appointed Governor of Indiana. They had served together through the whole of Jefferson's administration; and the Se- cretary of State must have been familiar with the manner in which the duties of Governor of Indiana had been discharged. Nothing but an exalted sense of Harrison's worth and abilities, could have induced the appointment. We will only add that he remained in office under Mr. Madison, till near the expiration of his term of service. Immediately on receiving this appointment. General Harrison proceeded at once to the command of the army, which he found in a state of almost open rebellion. His arrival, which occurred at night, was unknown to the army. Early in the morning he had them paraded, and unexpectedly presented himself before them. The effect was electrical. Every voice was raised in long and loud applause, and a general enthusiasm pervaded the camp. With characteristic happiness he seized this moment to reconcile them to their duty, and made them a patriotic and spirit stirring speech, in which he reminded them of their obliga- tions to themselves, their families, and their country. Their in- stant return to duty proved that they were dissatisfied with their former Commander, and not the service in which they had engaged. The universal and devoted personal attachment en- tertained for General Harrison, by every species of troops who served under him — their unlimited confidence in his courage. GENERAL HARRISON. 45 skill, and great capacity for command — will remind the reader of the same peculiarity in the career of the immortal "Father OP HIS COUNTRY." It was this feeling among the People throughout the valleys of the Ohio and Mississippi, and the services and ennobling traits in the character of Harrison, which won for him the proud title of "The Washington OF THE West." During the whole period of his military services, amidst all the privations, toils and sufferings of a war carried on in an uninhabited country, covered with swamps and woods, he never caused a soldier to be punished. Yet no General ever commanded the confidence, admiration and obedience of the militia to a greater extent. When asked by a fellow officer how he managed to gain the control over his troops which he possessed, he answered, " By treating them with affection and kindness— by always recollecting that they were my fellow-citizens, whose feelings I was bound to respect, and sharing, on every occasion, the hardships they were obliged to undergo." Harrison now commenced exertions to forward supplies for the expedition against Maiden. It was at this time he suggested to Mr. Madison the creation of a navy on the Lakes ; and to him, as the author of this measure, is to be ascribed, the sub- sequent victories, by which the fame of our gallant navy has been rendered immortal. The project of a fleet on Lake Erie, was at once undertaken at his instance, in consequence of the unbounded confidence of Mr. Madison in the great military talents and prudence of Harrison. Owing to the advanced state of the season, nothing of im- portance was effected during this campaign. Harrison, how- ever, spent every hour of his time in laborious preparations for the ensuing summer, — in erecting forts, creating depots and cutting roads through the wilderness ; in fine, in preparing the face of the country for active operations. The duties that now devolved on General Harrison were arduous beyond description. The troops under his command, though brave, were either volunteers for a limited period of time, or inexperienced and undisciplined recruits ; and the army was badly equipped, and nearly destitute of baggage and military stores. With these inadequate means, and under these unfavourable circumstances, he was required to defend an im 46 THELIFEOF mense extent of frontier, stretching along the shores of the great northern lakes, whose numerous harbours and rivers were easy of access to the enemy. In addition to this, the roads leading to those points which most required defence, were nearly im- passable, and lay, for hundreds of miles, through a wilderness swarming with hostile Indians, and through gloomy and dan- gerous swamps, where the troops, though little encumbered with baggage, could advance but slowly and with great labour. But under all these difficulties, the spirits of the soldiers were sustained by the presence and example of their favourite com- mander, who animated them in their fatigues, and cheerfully endured the same hardships and privations which they en- countered. The published accounts of our recent war with the Seminoles in Florida, the disastrous details of which have been made but too familiar to us, will convey to our readers some idea of the peculiar dangers and difficulties of this campaign, and of the skill and fortitude required to overcome them. In either case, we were opposed by the same savage foe, and the country was almost inaccessible from the same causes — its unhealthiness at that season of the year, and its extensive and treacherous swamps, the passes through which were known only to the hostile Indians, by whom they were occupied ; — with perhaps, in the two cases, but this difference only, that the northern Indians are well known to be much fiercer and more formida- ble warriois than their southern brethren; and that, during the whole of this campaign, they were kept constantly supplied by the British with more effective arms and ammunition. It was at this time that the massacre at the river Raisin, so memorable in the annals of blood, occurred. Winchester, who was now subordinate to Harrison, had been ordered by the General to fall back to Fort Jennings, as the latter had received information that Tecumseh was in his vicinity, with an over- whelming force of Indians. Instead of obeying this order, Winchester sent Colonel Lewis with six hundred men forward to the river Raisin, to protect the farms. Lewis in turn exceeded his orders, and pushed forward to Frenchtown, only eighteen miles from Maiden. He there attacked and routed the combined British and Indian forces, and with the greatest gallantry drove GENERAL HARRISON. 47 them two miles at the point of the bayonet. Had he now- retired, all would have been well; but he resolved to hold Frenchtown, and of this resolution Winchester unfortunately- approved. The British, hearing of the defeat of their men, seht down large reinforcements from Maiden. Winchester also came up to the aid of Lewis. The British commenced a furi- ous assault, by which Winchester's line was broken and scat- tered. The Indians, taking advantage of this, gained the flank, overpowered the remaining forces, and commenced a most horrible butchery. One hundred and twenty prisoners were slaughtered in one spot. Graves, who commanded the remain- ing division of the army, surrendered, on Proctor's pledge of security for himself and men. A few men were marched to Maiden; the remainder were delivered over to the TENDER MERCIES OF THE REMORSELESS SAVAGES, AND WERE ALL BUTCHERED, WITH THE KNOWLEDGE AND APPROBATION OP Proctor. For this courageous and humane act, Proctor was promoted.* The defeat of Winchester, and the foul massacre at the river Raisin, produced great excitement throughout the western country. It was the result of General Winchester's departure from the express commands of General Harrison. Had the former fallen back on Fort Jennings, as he was directed by Harrison, the immense effusion of innocent blood, and the dis- credit of a surrender, would have been spared. Lewis, who in turn disregarded Winchester's orders, by marching to French- town, was also in part responsible for the lamentable conse- quences. The efforts of General Harrison to correct the errors of Winchester, and avert the catastrophe which followed, were almost superhuman, and displayed the irrepressible energies and dauntless spirit of a matchless soldier. On the evening that General Harrison received— not from Winchester, but indirectly— the intelligence of General Win- chester's contemplated movement against the enemy on the river Raisin, he immediately despatched an express to the Rapids for further information. Apprehensive of some dis- aster, and fearing that it was too late to prevent the design of See McAfee, Niles' Register, and the Journals of the day, for particulars. 48 THE LIFE OF Winchester from being attempted, he gave orders for a corps of three hundred men to hasten on with the artillery, and for escorts to advance without delay, with provisions and military stores. Not satisfied, however, with these arrangements, the next morning he jiroceeded himself to Lower Sandusky, at which place he arrived the following night ; having travelled a distance of forty miles in seven hours and a half, over roads requiring such exertion to pass them, that the horse of his aid. Major Hakill,fzll dead, from fatigue and exhaustion , on their arrival at the fort. He found there, that General Perkins had prepared to send a battalion to the Rapids, in conformity with a request from General Winchester, The battalion was despatched the next morning, the 18th, with a piece of artillery; but so bad were the roads, that it was unable, by its utmost exertions, to reach the river Raisin, a distance of seventy-five miles, before the fatal defeat. General Harrison now determined to proceed to the Rapids himself, to learn personally from General Winchester, his situ- ation and views. There was but one regiment and a battalion at Lower Sandusky. The regiment was immediately put in motion with orders to make forced marches for the Rapids, while General Harrison himself immediately proceeded to the same place. His anxiety to push forward, and either prevent or remedy any misfortune which might occur, as soon as he was apprized of Ihe advance to the river Raisin, was so great, that he started in a sleigh, with General Perkins, to overtake the battalion under Cotgreve, attended only by a single servant. As the sleigh went very slowly, from the roughness of the road, he took the horse of his servant and pushed on alone. Night came upon him in the midst of the swamp, which was so im- perfectly frozen, that his horse sank to the saddle-girths at every step. He had then no resource but to dismount and lead his horse, jumping himself from one sod to another! When almost exhausted with the cold and fatigue, the General over- took one of Cotgreve's men, by whose assistance he was en- abled to reach the camp of the battalion. This is but one of many similar incidents in the eventful and GENERAL HARRISON. 49 glorious career of that truly great man, which evinced, not by empty and high sounding words, but by personal sacrifices and perils, his devoted love of country, its interests, honour, and glory. While the puny aspirants for the applause of the city ball-room, who now affect to sneer at the mighty deeds of valour performed by Harrison, were luxuriously reclining in their arm-chairs before a blazing fireside, thus was the veteran whom they pretend to ridicule, ranging the forests of the fron- tier, alone and on foot, at night, and in the dead of winter, in pursuit of the enemies of his country. While the highly- scented fopling — whose highest ambition is to "caper nimbly in a lady's chamber," but who essays to jeer and laugh at the gray hairs of the aged soldier, and to denounce him as " the tenant of a log cabin, drinking his cup of hard cider," — was hugged closer to his mother's breast, as the scenes of horror enacting on the frontier were recounted, the gallant Harrison was baring his breast to the tomahawk of the savage, who, but for his arm, would have carried death, prolonged by torture, and desolation, aggravated by atrocities at which the heart shudders, to every fireside in the west ! Very early on the morning of the 26ih, General Harrison arrived at the Rapids, from which place General Winchester had gone, on the preceding evening, with all his disposable force, to the river Raisin. On the same day, by a forced march Cotgreve's battalion reached the Rapids, and was without de- Jay, hurried on with two pieces of artillery to the aid of Win- chester. On the evening of the 21st, three hundred Kentuckians, who had been left behind by Winchester, as a garrison, were Hkewise ordered to march to Frenchtown. The next day in- telligence reached the Rapids of Proctor's attack on Winches- ter's camp, and General Harrison instantly ordered the whole force at that station to be pushed on with all possible expedition, and himself hastened forward to the scene of danger. Th(!y were soon, however, met by fugitives from the field of battle, from whom they learned the total defeat of Winchester's forces. A council was held of general and field officers, by whom it was decided that it would be imprudent and useless to advance any further. Strong parties were sent out to protect the fugi- 7 E 50 THELIFEOF tives from the field of battle and from Frenchtown, and the remainder of the troops returned to the Rapids. Thus was every thing done by General Harrison to avert the fatal dif^aster which he had apprehended from the disobedi- ence, by Winchester, of his orders. This expedition of General Winchester to the river Raisin, was highly imprudent, not to say absolutely culpable, since he advanced within eighteen miles of the head-quarters of the enemy, whose forces were strong and daily increasing, and he, at the same time, removed more than thirty miles from the Rapids — the nearest point from which he could possibly receive any assistance. Still the calamity that ensued would no doubt have been avoided, had he adopted the ordinary precautions of fortifying his camp, and stationing videttes to give him timely warning of the enemy's approach. His troops could then have defended themselves, at least, until the arrival of reinforcements from the Rapids, when the enemy would have been compelled to retreat, or, had they fought, the battle would, in all probability, have ter- minated in our favour. After Winchester's defeat, our troops at the Rapids amounted to less than nine hundred effective men. General Harrison called a council of war, who, supposing that their position would be attacked by the enemy in overwhelming force, unanimously recommended that the army should fall back to the Portage River, eighteen miles distant. The next morning, therefore, our troops abandoned the Rapids, and re- tired to the designated point, which they strongly fortified. But on the 1st of February, the army again marched to the Rapids, having been reinforced by the arrival of General Left- wich, with the Virginia brigade and a part of the artillery, . augmenting their number to eighteen hundred men. Instead of the severe cold and intense frosts, that usually prevailed in this northern region at this season, and which would have enabled General Harrison to move his forces, mili- tary stores and supplies, with comparative ease and celerity, warm rains broke up the roads, and were followed by heavy falls of snow, which rendered the march of the troops exceed- ingly fatiguing and dangerous, as well as slow, and the con- veyance of provisions and heavy munitions of war almost im- GENERAL HARRISON. 51- possible. The unavoidable exposure, too, of the troops to the heavy rains, which kept the encampment almost constantly in- undated, the deficiency of proper tents to shelter them, and their want even of sufficient food and clothing, produced pleu- risies and much other severe sickness in the camp, and greatly reduced the number of effective men. The General's tent, placed in the centre, happened to be in one of the lowest parts of the encampment, and consequently suffered most from the rain; but when entreated by his officers to change its position, he refused to do so, declaring that it was necessary that every military man should be satisfied with the situation which in the course of his duty, fell to his lot. Under these circumstances. General Harrison prepared to go into winter quarters at the Rapids. He accordingly selected a good position on the south side of the river, which he strongly fortified, and called Camp Meigs, in honour of the patriotic Governor of Ohio. Leaving the army at that station, he pro- ceeded to Cincinnati, to procure reinforcements of men, and sup- plies of provisions and military stores. We should here mention, that, while engaged in the various and arduous services of this campaign, General Harrison organ- ized several distinct expeditions against the Indian towns, to keep the hostile savages in check, and protect our extended frontier. One of these expeditions, consisting of a detachment of six hundred men, under the command of Colonel Campbell, was sent against the towns on the Mississineway, from which our scattered settlements had suffered much annoyance. This enterprise was conducted with great skill, and proved signally successful. The principal town was attacked in the most gal- lant manner, and, after a desperate action of more than an hour, was carried at the point of the bayonet. From the general order issued by Harrison, on the return of this expedition, we make the following extract, which will convey some idea of the humane and generous feelings that have always characterized both his public and private conduct. After awarding these gallant troops the high meed of praise which their bravery had won, he goes on to say: — "But the character of this gallant detachment, exhibiting as it did, perseverance, fortitude and bravery, would, however, be incomplete, if in the midst of vie 52 THE LIFE OF tory they had forgotten the feehngs of humanity. It is with the sincerest pleasure that the General has heard that the most punctual obedience was paid to his orders, in not only saving all the women and children, but in sparing all the warriors who ceased to resist ; and that even when vigorously attacked by the enemy, the claims of mercy prevailed over every sense of their own danger, and this heroic band respected the lives of their prisoners. Let an account of murdered innocence be opened in the records of heaven against our enemies alone. The Ameri- can soldier will follow the example of his government ; and the sword of the one will not be raised against the fallen and help- less, nor the gold of the other be paid for the scalps of a mas sacred enemy." What a contrast do these noble sentiments present to the atrocious conduct of the British General, Proctor, who, at the cruel massacre at Raisin river, and at the Rapids, basely permitted unresisting prisoners of war to be unsparingly butchered by his savage and remorseless allies ! The pride of Kentucky fell in the massacre of the Raisin ; and so wide- spread was' the woe, that there was scarcely a family in the state that did not mourn a butchered friend or relative. The temper of the American people seldom yields^ long to useless lamentation ; grief was succeeded by indigna- tion ; and the very day after that on which the news of this inhuman slaughter was received at Frankfort, the Governor signed a bill to raise three thousand volunteers for the army. The Legislature proposed a resolution requesting the Executive (Governor Shelby) to take command of the forces of the state in person, whenever he should deem it necessary. Instead of fabricating the weeds of mourning, the mothers and sisters of the slain, shaped out the tents and wove together the stars and stripes, for this new band of patriot warriors. Early in the spring, intelligence was received that the British were making extensive preparations, and concentrating a large force of regular soldiers, Canadians and Indians, to besiege Fort Meigs. On obtaining this information, General Harrison hast- ened to his camp, and exerted the most strenuous efforts to prepare for the threatened attack of the enemy. His presence cheered the troops, and he inspired them with fresh ardour by an eloquent address, in which he alluded modestly, but in the GENERAL HARRISON. 53 most animating manner, to the neighbouring battle-field, where General Wayne had gained the brilliant victory of the Mau- MEE Rapids, and where he himself had won the brightest of his earlier laurels. At this time the garrison of Fort Meigs was much reduced in numbers, and the period for which those who still remained had enlisted, was about to expire. General Harrison therefore looked with great anxiety for the arrival of the strong rein- forcement of Kentucky troops, who were approaching with all possible despatch under General Clay ; but whose march had been greatly impeded by the wretched condition of the roads. On the morning of the 2Sth of April, the scouts brought in intelligence of the near advance of the enemy. And soon after, on the same day, the British troops were discovered from the fort, ascending the river in vessels and boats, while the In- dians, in strong force, were seen approaching, at the same time, by land. The British disembarked and encamped at the old station on the Maumee, nearly two miles below Fort Meigs ; and on the night after they landed, they commenced the con- struction of three powerful batteries, on the north side of the river, directly opposite our camp. It was on this occasion that General Harrison resorted to a measure of defence which, while it displayed in a new light his transcendent military genius, in its success has been rarely equalled, and was not surpassed by that of the gallant Jackson with the cotton bags of New Orleans. Whilst the British were busy in constructing their forts, Har- rison had moved all the tents of the army to the side of the Fort next to them, thus forming a screen to his operations within the works. Behind these tents he threw up a traverse or bank of earth, twelve feet high, and twenty feet wide at the base, in such a manner as to form the most perfect protec- tion to the garrison against the enemy's guns. The tents con- cealing the embankment, the British were unapprized of its existence. On the 30th of May, the enemy's batteries being completed, preparations were made for bombarding. Their troops were beat to quarters, the guns loaded, the fusees lighted, the want of the word "Fire," alone suspended the attack. At this )r/iient Harrison gave orders to "Strike the tents." e2 54 THE LIFE OF It was done in an instant, and Proctor \vas thus taught how fruitless had been all his labour, when opposed by the superior SAGACITY AND GENERALSHIP OF HarRISON. Not a man not a tent could he behold, nothing but a high shield of earth, and McAfee observes, " the prospect of smoking them outy which the British had threatened to do, was very faint /" Colonel McKune, of Ohio, a veteran of the last war, states that, « In the first attack by the British upon Fort Meigs, the Americans fought out- side the fort. I commanded at one of the gates of the fort, and personally helped General Harrison over the pickets, and saw him commanding his men in person and on foot, regardless of the most imminent danger." Proctor, however, resolved to hear the music of his guns, and accordingly opened a heavy fire on the Fort. So perfect was Harrison's defence, that although he endured this attack for eight days, he lost only two men. The army of Harrison amounted to about a thousand men, while the enemy's force comprised six hundred regulars, eight hundred Canadian mili- tia and eighteen hundred Indians. During the first three days the fire of the enemy was incessant and tremendous. Five and eight inch shells and twenty-four pound shot fell in show- ers in the camp.* On the 3d of April, Proctor's men appeared to work un- willingly, and Harrison's troops repeatedly mounted the ram- parts, AND cheered them ON ! This was almost the only return they could make for their favours, as our troops were almost destitute of ammunition. Harrison was often seen upon the ramparts, sword in hand, and the shot falling around him, to use the words of one who served under him, " as thickly as hail," pointing the cannon and defying the enemy. It is worthy of remark, that on the second day of the attack, Proctor sent an officer with a flag, to demand the surrender of the post. The grounds of this demand were, that the Ameri- can force was too iveak to defend the works against the over whel7ni7ig numbers of the besiegers, and that General Proctor was anxious to save the effusion of blood ! The intrepid Har- rison promptly replied : * McAfee, p. 203. GENERAL HARRISON. 55 " If General Proctor knows the usages of war, as I am bound to believe he does, he must either have considered me ignorant of them, or he must have intended an insult. It was his duty to make the demand before he commenced firing on the works. But, sir, said he, go back and tell your General that I know my own force, and his, and that I shall defend the works to the last extremity. Tell him farther, THAT IF HE EVER POSSESSES THE FoET, HE SHALL OBTAIN IT IN A WAT THAT "WILL LIVE HIM MORE HONOUR IN THE ESTIMATION OF HIS GOVERNMENT,^ THAN HE CODID PEHIVE FROM A THOrSAND SURRENDERS !" Another incident is also worthy of notice : After the enemy- had retired, a number of the Indians who had left them came into the fort and stated that a contract had been entered into between Proctor and Tecumseh, that as soon as the fort surren- dered, which they considered inevitable, Harrison should be given up to the Indians, to be disposed of as they might see proper. Harrison replied; " Then General Proctor can be neither a soldier nor a man. But if it shall ever be his fate to surrender to me, his life shall be protected, but I will dress him in a petticoat, and deliver him over to the squaws, as being unworthy to associate with men." On this story was founded an infamous slander on General Harrison, and a base insult to the ladies of Chilicothe, fabricated by a person whose name we will not stoop to mention. Colonel Wood remarks, "With a plenty of ammunition, we should have been able to blow John Bull almost from the Miami. It was extremely diverting to see with what pleasure and delight the Indians would yell, whenever, in their opinion, considerable damage was done in the camp by the bursting of a shell. Their hanging about camp, and occa- * sionally pretty near, kept our lines almost constantly in a blaze of fire ; for nothing can please a Kentuckian better than to get a shot at an Indian ; and they must be indulged." During the night, the approach of General Clay on the river, with twelve hundred Kentuckians, was announced to General Harrison. He immediately despatched Captain Hamilton with orders to Clay, directing him to divide his corps and to send eight hundred men to the west side of the river, to get possession of the enemy's batteries. The remainder were to land on the east side, and fight their way into the fort. It was Harrison's intention to destroy the British fort on the south side, whilst Clay was cutting his way through the Indians. The troops to whom was confided the duty of cairying the enemy's batteries on the west side of the river, were commanded by Dudley. By the swiftness of the current, General Clay was 56 THELIFEOF separated from his command. Colonel Boswell, at the head of this division, landed, formed and attacked the enemy. General Harrison, who stood on a battery exposed to the fire of the enemy watching their operations, observing an effort on the part of the Indians to gain his flank, resolved on a sortie from the garrison, to relieve him and carry the batteries on that side of the river. The forces for this purpose were placed under the command of Colonel Miller, who, with Major Todd, says McAfee, "led on his command with the most determined bravery, charged upon the British, and drove them from their batteries ; spiked their cannon, and took forty-one prisoners, including an officer; having completely beaten and driven back the whole force of the enemy. That force consisted of two hundred British regulars, one hundred and fifty Canadians, and five hundred Indians; being considerably more than double the force of the brave detachment that attacked them : but our troops charged with such irresistible impetuosity that nothing could withstand them." In no instance during the war was there harder fighting than in this brilliant sortie. It lasted but forty-five minutes, during which one hundred and eighty men were killed and wounded on our side. In the mean time Dudley had gained the opposite shore, and approached the batteries erected there. When about three hundred yards from them, the troops could no longer be restrained, but, with a yell, rushed on to the attack, charging the batteries "at full speed." The enemy, panic stricken, abandoned the forts and fled, leaving them an easy prey in the hands of the gallant Kentuckians, who at once pulled down the British flag. The troops under Dudley were mostly raw mili- tia, brave, hardy and enterprising, but destitute of discipline. After taking the forts, they amused themselves with examining the defences, instead of destroying them. Harrison, observing this, repeatedly called to them to retire, and come into the fort. Unfortunately they neglected his warning. The Indians and British reinforced, returned, and in an hour their fate v/as decided. They nearly all fell or were taken prisoners. Death was the easier fate of the two. Some of them were shot by the Indians. " Those/' says Colonel Wood, " who preferred to GENERAL HARRISON. 57 inflict a still more cruel and savage death, selected their victims, and led them to the gateway, and there, under the eye of Gene- ral Proctor, and in the presence of the whole British army, tomahawked and scalped themP This horrid work of de- struction continued until the arrival of Tecumseh from the batteries. No sooner did the savage warrior behold the mas- sacre, than he exclaimed, " for shame ! it is a disgrace to kill a defenceless prisoner ;" and stopped the carnage. After the close of the action of the 6th, Proctor formally summoned Harrison to surrender; which request the latter declined with indignant contempt. Proctor finding Harrison unwilling to be either cajoled or beaten into submission, resolved to quit so unaccommodating a foe ; and accordingly he decamped on the 8th, retreating with disappointment and disgrace, leaving Harrison in full possession of the field of battle. Harrison then repaired to Cleveland and Lower San- dusky, to put those places in a state of defence ; and shortly after set out for the interior, leaving General Clay in command of Fort Meigs.* The defence of Fort Meigs was one of the most admirably conducted and brilliant efforts of skill and valour united, that is recorded in the annals of military operations. It was not less distinguished by the personal courage of the commander and his troops, than their rare fortitude, perseverance and skill. In itself, it conferred immortal honour on Harrison, and gave him an additional hold on the affections and confidence of the West, the admiration of the country and the applause of the govern- ment. * See 5th Niles's Register. 58 THE LIFE OF CHAPTER V. Successful efforts of Harrison for the construction of a fleet on the Lakes — Second attack on Fort Meigs — The enemy retreat — They assail Fort Stephenson, and are repulsed by the garrison — Slanders against Harrison — His triumphant vindication — Preparations for the reduction of Maiden — Perry's victory — Harrison embarks his army for Canada — Takes possession of Maiden — Harrison pursues Proctor — Battle and victory at the Thames — Brilliant conduct of Harrison — Death of Te- cumseh — Testimony in favour of Harrison — Langdon Cheves — James Madison — Simon Snyder — Resolution of Congress — Thomas Eitchie. We have already stated that General Harrison had suggested to Mr. Madison, the construction of a fleet on the Lakes, to co-operate with the army under his command. In his letters to the War Department he had repeatedly urged the great im- portance of obtaining the command of Lake Erie, and of the immediate necessity of creating a navy for that purpose. In one of his communications he remarked — " Should our offensive operations be suspended until spring, it is my decided opinion that the cheapest and most effectual plan will be to obtain command of Lake Erie. This being once effected, every difficulty will be removed. An army of four thousand men, landed on the North side of the lake, below Maiden, will soon reduce that place, retake Detroit, and, with the aid of the fleet, proceed down the lake to co-operate with the army from Niagara." In several subsequent letters, he again strenuously urged his plan of a Fleet on the Lakes, until the government were at length convinced of the importance of the measure. Being founded on a practical knowledge of the condition and re- quirements of the frontier, the suggestion of this remarkable man, prevailed over the government, and Mr. Madison author- ised the equipment of a fleet by the immortal Perry, under THE command of General Harrison. ■ No effort of activity or skill was spared to hasten the completion and equipment of the vessels, and early in August, Commodore Perry had the satisfaction of finding that he had a fleet fitted for sea, and ready for action, nearly equal in force to that of the enemy. In the mean time Harrison was engaged in the interior, pro- secuting his various and arduous duties and preparing to repel GENERAL HARRISON. 59 a second attack on Fort Meigs, which he learned on reaching Frankhnton, was contemplated by the combined British and Indian forces. The unceasing efforts of the British, and the restless spirit of Tecumseh, allowed our troops bnt little time to recover from their severe fatigues. In less than two months after the siege of Fort Meigs, the Indians assembled a formi- dable body of more than five thousand warriors, under their most noted chiefs, and again threatened an attack on that fort- ress. On receiving this intelligence, General Harrison instantly repaired to its succour, by forced marches, with three hundred men, and fortunately arrived there before the enemy. Leaving a reinforcement with General Clay, he returned without delay to his more active duties. ' Just before General Harrison was called to Fort Meigs by the impending attack, he held a council at Frankhnton, with the chiefs of the friendly Indians, consisting of the Delaware, Shawanoese, Wyandot, and Seneca tribes. He informed them that circumstances had come to his knowledge which induced him to suspect che fidelity of some of the tribes, who seemed disposed to join the enemy in case they succeeded in capturing Fort Meigs — that a crisis had arrived, which required all the tribes who were then neutral, but were willing to engage in the war, to take a decided stand either for us or against us. He told them that the President wanted no false friends — that the proposal of General Proctor to exchange the Kentucky militia who were his prisoners, for the tribes in our friendship, seemed to indicate that he had received some hint of their willingness to take up the tomahawk against us. He informed them that to afford the United States a proof of their good disposition, they must either remove with their families into the interior, or the warriors must accompany him in the ensuing campaign, and fight for the liberties of the United States. To the latter proposition the chiefs and warriors unanimously agreed. They said they had long been anxious for an invitation to fight for the Americans. Tahe, the oldest Indian in the western country, who represented all the tribes, professed in their name the most indissoluble friendship for the United States. General Harrison then told them that he would give them the earliest information when they would be wanted in the service; "but," 60 THE LIFE OF said he, " you must conform to our mode of warfare. You are not to kill defenceless prisoners, old men, women or children.'''' He added, that by their conduct he would be able to determine whether the British could restrain their Indians from such hor- rible atrocities as they were in the practice of committing. For if the Indians fighting with him would forbear from the perpe- tration of such cruelty, it would prove that Proctor could re- strain his, if he desired to do so. He humorously told them that he had been informed that General Proctor had promised to deliver him into the hands of Tecumseh, if he succeeded against Fort Meigs, to be treated as that warrior might think proper. " Now if I can succeed in taking Proctor," he added, "you shall have him for your prisoner, provided you will agree to treat him as a squaiv, and only put petticoats upon him ; for he must be a coward who would kill a defenceless prisoner !" During the whole of this laborious and perilous campaign, the vigilance and intrepidity of General Harrison, with the bravery of his soldiers, enabled him to keep a far superior force of the enemy in check, and to protect the wide extent of our exposed frontier. Our forts were ably defended, and our troops gallantly repelled every attack of the enemy, except in some few instances, when they were assailed by an over- whelming force. Shortly after General Harrison had gone to the aid of Fort Meigs, he placed Major Croghan, with one hundred and sixty men, at Fort Stephenson, a temporary depot at Lower San- dusky, and established his head-qaarters at Seneca, nine miles lower down on the Sandusky river. From this place, chosen with peculiar judgment, he could either protect Upper San- dusky, or cut his way into Fort Meigs, as occasion might require. Fort Stephenson, in command of Croghan, was a mere out-post, and not considered worthy of much exertion. Indeed it never would have been heard of, but for the heroic gallantry of the youthful hero whom Harrison, with his usual sagacity, had placed in command of it. In the month of July, the British under Proctor and Dickson, and the "allies" under Tecumseh, appeared before Fort Meigs, to the number of five thousand. They remained there GENERAL HARRISON. 61 without any active operations until the 28th, when they aban- doned Fort JNIeigs and moved down by the lake to Lower San- dusky. The post of Fort Stephenson had been unmumovsly declared worthless and untenable, by a council of officers, of which the Hon. Lewis Cass, late Secretary of War, and General McArthur were members.* Accordingly Croghan had been ordered to set fire to it and march to head-quarters, before the enemy could reach it. This order, however, was not received by Major Croghan, in consequence of Mr. Connor and the Indians, by whom it was sent, getting lost in the woods, until the fort was surrounded by Indians, and retreat rendered impossible. Croghan then addressed the following note to Harrison : "Sir, — I have received yours of yesterday, ten o'clock, p.m., ordering me to destroy this place and retreat, which was received too late to be carried into execu- tion. We have determined to maintain this place ,• and by Heavens, we can." This note was written with the expectation that it would be intercepted by the enemy, and was designed to leave on them an impression of his strength. Harrison, not knowing this, regarded it as a refusal to obey, and accordingly on the evening of the 31st of July, he sent Colonel Wehs to Fort Stephenson with a squadron of dragoons, to supersede Croghan and send him to head-quarters. When Croghan arrived and made this explanation, the General, pleased with the good policy which he exhibited, instantly reinstated him, with orders to evacuate the fort as soon as he safely could. The next day, the enemy, under Proctor, landed and summoned the post to surrender; at the same time humanely informing the besieged that if they did not, the fort should be stormed and themselves given up to the tomahawk and scalping-knife ! Dickson, in person, accompa- nied the flag which bore the summons, and was met by Ensign Shipp on the part of the garrison. Dickson begged Shipp to surrender for God's sake, as in the event of Proctor's taking the fort, they would all be massacred. Shipp replied, " that ivhen the fort was taken there would he none left to vias- sacre.'^ At this juncture an Indian came up to Shipp and endeavoured to wrest his sword from him. Shipp drew it on * McAfee's History of the Last War, p. 322. F 62 THE LIFE OF him and was about despatching him, when Dickson interposed and restrained the savage. Croghan, who had been standing on the ramparts, and had observed the insult offered to Shipp, called to him, ^^ Shipp, come in, and we'' II blow them all to hell.'''' Shipp went in, bidding Dickson "good-bye." The cannonading then commenced, and in twenty-four hours up- wards of five hundred shot struck the works, though with little effect. Croghan had but one piece of artillery, a six-pounder, which by his order was removed to the block-house and loaded with musket balls. On the evening of the next day the enemy deter- mined to carry the works by storm. They advanced in two columns; one led on by Lieutenant-Colonel Short, the other by Colonel Chambers. Under cover of the smoke of the fort, the men advanced until they came to the ditch, where they paused. Colonel Short rallied them, crying out to push on, "and give the damned Yankees no quarters." The six-pounder, v/hich had been placed at a masked embrasure in the block-house, at thirty feet distance from them, now opened, pouring death and destruction among them. Of those in the ditch few escaped. A precipitate retreat commenced. The column under Colonel Chambers was also routed by a severe fire from Captain Hunt- er's line ; and the whole fled into an adjoining wood. Lieu- tenant Short and twenty-five privates were left dead in the ditch, and twenty-six were afterwards taken prisoners. The total loss of the enemy was one hundred and fifty killed and wounded. When night came on, the wounded in the ditch suffered indescribably. Croghan conveyed them water over the pickets, and opened a ditch through the ramparts, by which they were invited to enter the fort. Let the reader compare this act of magnanimity with the conduct of Proctor at the river Raisin ! In the night the combined force of the "allies" commenced a rapid and disorderly retreat, leaving part of their baggage and wounded behind them. For his act of gallantry on this occasion, Croghan was promoted to the rank of Brevet Lieu- tenant-Colonel. Shortly after the retreat of Proctor, he sent a flag with his surgeon, Dr. Banner, to inquire into the condition of the GENERAL HARRISON. 63 wounded. After an examination of them, the doctor expressed himself highly gratified with the tenderness and skill with which they had been treated. When introduced to Croghan, he could not but express his astonishment that such a post had been held in such a manner by such a boy. It appears to be the invariable fortune of great men to be libelled. Even Washington, the Father of his Country, was calumniated and denounced. Jefferson was opprobriously stig- ma,tised, and every act of his career tortured to suit the base purposes of faction. Simon Snyder, the Father of Democracy in Pennsylvania, was accused even of theft, and are we to be surprised that the great and good Harrison has not been exempt from the stings of malice and falsehood? These reflections are awakened by a recollection of the flagrant injustice which has been attempted against General Harrison, by some of his political enemies, in the grossest misrepresentations in reference to the defence of Fort Stephenson. This has been ventured, upon the presumption of the ignorance of the public in regard to the events of that period. A simple statement, founded on facts which NONE CAN QUESTION, wiU put thcsc slanderers to flight. At the date of the attack on Fort Stephenson, the enemy had nearly seven thousand men in the field — two thousand of whom were British regulars and Canadians, and the remainder were warriors of the fiercest Indian tribes. The army under General Harrison was greatly inferior in numbers, and it be- came his duty, as a skilful commander, to withdraw his unim- portant outposts, to avoid risking unnecessarily the loss of a single soldier, and to enable him, by concentrating his forces, to hold the enemy in check, at least, if he should not prove strong enough to give him battle. Fort Stephenson was a temporary and unimportant station, and so commanded by the high ground in its neighbourhood, as to be utterly indefensible against heavy artillery — and such, from their command of the lake, the British could easily transport to its attack. Fully aware of this, from having reconnoitered the ground in person, General Harrison, on learning that this station was about to be assailed, thought it expedient to withdraw the garrison of Fort Stephenson. The order which was accordingly sent to Croghan, the con- demnation of the Fort by a Council of Officers, as worthless 64 THELIFEOF and untenable, the reason why Croghan could not obey the order, and the subsequent result, have been already detailed. The gallant defence of a position which General Harrison had ordered to be abandoned, with the unanimous approbation of a Council of his Officers, was seized upon by the malicious among his political opponents, who industriously circulated the falsest statements and most unfounded cliarges in relation to it. But fortunately the plain truth soon became so well known, that his fair fame suffered no injury from the unfounded calum- nies. So many gallant officers bore witness of their own ac- cord, to the military foresight and wisdom of his measures, that no slander which even the malice of his calumniators could devise, ever darkened for a moment his vmsullied reputation. The following short extracts are from an address to the pub- lic, relative to this affiiir, which was voluntarily published by the general, field, and staft-officers of General Harrison's army; among whom were Col. Cass, late Secretary of War, General Wells and others scarcely less distinguished in the army and the councils of their country. After expressing their " Regret and surprise, that charges, as improper in form as in substance, should have been made against General Harrison, during the recent investment of Lower Sandusky, they go on to say : — " On a review of the course then adopted, we are decidedly of the opinion, that it was such as was dictated by military wisdom, and by a due regard to our circum- stances and to the situation of the enemy. And with a ready acquiescence, beyond the mere claims of military duty, we are prepared to obey a general, whose measures meet our most deliberate approbation, and merit that of his country.'" The chivalrous and noble-spirited Croghan, who was one of the signers of the above address, about the same time pub- lished another paper on this subject, dated from Lower San- dusky, in which he says : — " I have with much regret seen in some of the public prints such misrepresentations respecting my refusal to evacuate this post, as are not only calculated to injure me in the estimation of military men, but also to excite unfavourable impressions as to the propriety of General Harrison's conduct relative to this affair. " His character as a military man is too well established to need my approbation or support. But his public service entitles him at least to common justice. This affair does not furnish cause of reproach. If public opinion has been lately misled respecting his late conduct, it will require but a moment's cool, dispasionate reflection, to convince them of its propriety. The measuren recently adopted by him, so far from deserving censure, are the clearest proof s of his penett-ution and able generalship GENERAL HARRISON. 65 "•It is true that I did not proceed immediately to execute his orders to evacuate this fort, but this disobedience was not (as aome would wish to believe) the result of a fixed determination to maintain the post contrary to his most positive order. " I desire no plaudits which are bestowed upon me at the expense of General Harrison. " / have felt the warmest attachment for him as a man, and my confidence iti him as an able comm,ander remains unshaken, I shall not hesitate to unite with the array in bestowing upon him that confidence which he so richly merits, and which has on no occasion been withheld."* We have dwelt on this passage in the life of General Har- rison, somewhat longer than is consistent with the brevity of this sketch; but the political opponents of General Harrison can find so few points in his whole life that afford them the slightest apology for censure, that they have been driven to pervert and misrepresent an affair of so simple a nature as this, and one that in truth entitled him, as the gallant Croghan justly says, "/ie expendi- tures of the government, it would soon be enabled to dispense with the odious monopolies, and the duly of the Mkovtila, which have operated with so malign an efre( t upon cnmmerce atid agriculture, and, indeed, upon the revenues which they were intemled toaugmetit. Nolonger oppressed by these shackles, industry would everywhere revive: the farmer and the artisan, cheered by tlie prospect of ample reward'for their labour, would redouble their exertions ; foreigners, with thi-ir capital and skill in the arts, wouhl crowd hither. lo enjov the advaiitages which could scarcely, elsewhere, be found: and Columbia would soon exhibit Ihe'reality of the beautiful fiction of Fenelon— f>alcntum rising from misery and oppression, to prosperity and happiness, under the councils and direcliou of the concealed goddess. What objections can he ursed against this course i C'tn any one, acquainted with the circumstances of the country, doubt its success, in restoring and mainlaiuing trauiinillity ■? The people would certainly not revolt against themselves; and none of the chiefs who are supposed to be factifuisly inclined, would think of opposing the strensth of the iiaiion, when directed by ycuir talents and authority. Bui it is said, that the want of intelligence amongst the people unfits them for the governuient. Is it not right, however, tliat the experiment should be fairly tried ? I have already said that this has not been done. For myself, I do nol'hesilaie to declare my firm belief that it will succeed. The people of Co- lombia possess many traits of character suitable for a republican governmenl. A more orderly, for- bearing, and well-dis[)Osed people are nowhere to be met with. Indeed, it may safely he asserted, that their faults and vices are aflrilmtable to the cursed government to whiih they have been so long subjected, and to the intolerant character of the relicion, whilst their virtu. -s are all their own. But, arimiltiiig fheir present want of intelligence, no one has ever dtuibled their capacity to accjiiire knnw- ledce. and under tlie strong motives^v.'hich exist, to obtain it, supported by the influence of your Excellency, it rt'ould soon he obtained. To yourself the advantage would be as great as to the country; like acts of mercy, the blessings would be reciprocal ; your personal happiness secured, and your fnue elevated to a height which would leave hut a single competiti.ui in the estimation of posterity. In bestowing the palm of merit, the world has become wiser than formerly. The successful warrior is no longer regard d as entitled to the first pla<:e in the temple of fame. Talents of this kind have become too coiiunon, and too often used for mischievous purposes, to be regarded as Ihev once were. In this enlightened age, the mere hero of the field, an