s^^^ ^^^ "a^ ,^"^ "^^ '^^ V^^ ^ ,<^ -^ .'.\ O / ■ >S1 .^\^\ •<. '"o 0^ « .<^' •^ -^, -^ ^^>.s^V^' . ^f\ >/v^' ■\ ^V' ; -t. v^ -^<>-, -^ x^ ,^^ ,<^ •'>. > ^^ V*' c,^ -% ^ N ^- y 1^\ > ,.0 ■ ^ '/ "'"J %^ ■i'^' *o. -.> .♦^^ a 0^ L <*^ MEMOIRS OF ANDREW JACKSON, MAJOR-GENERAL IN THB ARMY OP THE A3 KITED ^TATIiS-, AND COMMANDER IN CHIEF OF THE DIVISION OF THE SOUTH. BY S. PUTNAM WAL90, Esq. Compiler of " Bobbins* .TourndQ* and Author of the " Presidents Tour" THIRD EDITION ' HARTFORD: PUBtlSHED BY SILAS ANDRUSo 1819. DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT, SS. ^' ^' Be it remembered, That on the twenty-ninth day of September, in the forty-third year of the Independence of the United States of America, John Russell, jun. of the said district, liath deposited in this office the title of a Book,.the right whereof, he claims as proprietor, in the words following, to wit, — Memoirs of Andrew Jackson, Major-General in the Army of the United States, and Commander in Chief of the Division of the South, by S, Putnam Waldo, Esq. Compiler of *• Robbins' Journal," and Author of the " President's Tour/* In conformity to the act of Congress of the United States, entitled, " An Act for the encoui'- agement of learning, by securing the copies of Maps, Charts and Books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies, during the times therein mentioned." R. I. INGERSOLL, Clerk of the District of Connecticut. A true copy of Record, examined and sealed by me, R. I. INGERSOLL, Clerk of the District of Connecticut, TO THE OFFICERS AND SOLDIERS OP THE AMERICAN REPUBLIC. GALLANT COUNTRYMEN :^ WITH that frankness, which in your profession is a distinguishing characterestic, I offer this Volume to you, without apology. Tlie fame of the exalted Chief, who is the subject of it, how- ever imperfectly his civil and military character may be pourtraycd, will, I am confident, entitle it to a favourable reception from you. With admiration for your gallant achievements, I am your Oft, Serv^t. S, PUTNAM WALDO. TO THE READER. THE higTi estimation in which Maj. Gen. Andre^v Jackson, is justly holden by his countrymen, was the in- ducementto present them with the following Memoirs of his Life. Ever since his name became identified with the glory of his country, the author has assiduously sought for the most authentic information relative to his origin, and his progress from humble life to his present elevation. The facts relative to his parentage, his birth, education, and early pursuits, were derived from a Southern Corres- pondent, whose means of knowledge, entitles his commu- nlcations to the character of absolute verity. From the early entrance of Gen. Jackson into public life and from the laudable propensity of Americans to preserve, in the various periodical journals, detached inci- dents of the lives of American Worthies, it needs only in- dust.T and research to collate them. The manner m which they are arranged, and the style in which they are detailed, depends wholly upon the author. To give additional interest to the volume, a number ot Gen. Jackson's Official Reports, and some selections from his numerous Letters, and Addresses are incorpora- ted into the work. They not only give the most satis- factory account of the battles in which he fought, and the measures he pursued; but they show that he wields the pen of a Scholar, as well as the sword of a Soldier. Apologies for the defects of the work, cannot remove them, and will not be attempted. It is therefore submit- ted to the indulgence of the reader by, THE AUTHOR. Hartford, (Conn.) Oct. 1818. CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION. Adoption of American Constitution — Pursuits of Americans — Dim- inution of Military ardour — Declaration of War — Militia — Vol- unteers — Reg-ular Troops — Andrew Jackson. p. 9 CHx\P. I. His family, birth, and early pursuits — Enters into the army of the Revolution — is captured by the British — resists an illegal order of a British officer — receives a wound, and is committed to g'aol — loses his surviving brother — his mother dies of giief — he completes liis literary studies. p. 19 CHAP. II. Incidents of early life — of Andrew Jackson's — He commences and completes the study of law — Patriotism of American Lawyers — He commences the practice of law, and emigrates to the South-West Territory — is appointed Attorney -general — mem- ber of the Tennessee Convention — a Representative in Con- gress — a Senator in Congress — a Judge of the Suprame Court in Tennessee — and retires to private life. p. 31 CHAP. III. _Mr. Jackson's career in civil life — commencement of his Military career — Major-general of Tennessee Militia — Militia forces — American savages — reason for their hatred and vengeance against Anglo-Americans. Religious fanaticism among them— 'I'he Prophet Francis and his brother Tecamseh — Effect of their assumed divinity — Tender of Gen. Jackson, and his Volunteers to the government of the U. States. p. 40 CHAP. IV. Gen. Jackson and Tennessee Volunteers — Importance of the river Missisippi — Mr. Monroe's solicitude for the security of it, and the Western States — Volunteers rendezvous at Nashville, Tenn. descend the Ohio and Missisippi — encamp at Natchez — Order for their discharge, from Mr. Armstrong — disobeyed by Gen, Jackson — Volunteer return to Tennessee, and are discharged — Approbation of the government. p. 51 J # VI CONTENTS. CHAP. V. Approbation and censure of Gen. Jackson — implacable hostility of savages increased by British and Spanish emissaiies, and British ravages — Indian massacre of garrison, women and children, at Fort Mimms — Expedition from Tennessee against Creeks pre- pared — Gen. Jackson as'sumes the command — Colonel Coffee — difference between Militia, Volunteers, and Regular troops — Gen. Jackson proceeds to the frontiers — prepares for active service — Deficiency of provisions — Col. Dyer destroys Litta- flitches — First victory over Creeks at Tallushatches — Gen. Cof- fee's report of it to Gen. Jackson. p. 59 CHAP. VI. Tennessee forces — Collisions in armies — Establishment at Fort •Strother — Perilous situation of friendly Creeks — Dispatch to Gen. White — his conduct — Battle of Talladega — Gen. Jackson's account of it. p. 76 CHAP, VII. Consequences of Brig. Gen. White's conduct — Hillabees sue for peace to Ge)i. Jackson — Geji. White destroys their towns — Measures of the Georgia Legislature — Victory at Avtojtsee — Brig. Gen. Floyd's account of it — Gen. Jackson's situation in December, 1813 — Mutiny among his troops — also in Gen. Cof- fee's Brigade — Dismissal of both. p. 85 CHAP. VIII. Gen. Jackson's situation at the commencement of 1814 — his hopes revive — Victory at Eccanachaca, or Holy Ground — Witherford, the Indian Prophet — Col. Carroll joins Gen. Jackson — Victories at Emitckfaiv^ Jan. 22d — at E7iotachopco, the 24th — Gen. Jack- son's ofHcial report of them — Applause bestowed upon soldiers, p. 97 CHAP. IX. Gen. .Jackson prepares for a new expedition — receives an account of the victory at Chatahouchee — adopts a new mode to obtain supplies — Army Contractoi's — Energetic measures — Great vic- tory at Tohopeka — Savage warfare — British and Spanish emis- saries. P- 118 CHAP. X. (yonclusion of Creek W^ar — Return of Gen. Jackson and Volunteers — their reception, and separation — Gen. Jackson is appointed Bi'ig. Gen in U. S. army — also a Commissioner to treat with Creek Indians — concludes a treaty — Foreign emissaries — Indian Eloquence — Speech of Withertbrd—of Big W^an'ior — of Tecunir Beh, and his death. p. 131 CONTENTS. CHAP. XI. rfi Spanish agg-fessions and perfidy-'-Gen. Jackson's measures to de- tect Manrcquez, the Governour of Florida — his letter to him— Danger of the 7th Military district — Gen. Jackson's appeal to the g-overnment — Mr. Monroe's measures of defence — Attack upon Fort Bowyer — gallant defence of Major Lawrence — his official report of it. p. 148 CHAP. XII. Gen. Jackson is appointed Maj. Gen. in U. S. army-Fort Bowyer- its iiuportanee, and its-dang-er — Gen. Jackson determines to re- duce Pensacola — x\n'ival of Gen. Coffee with Tennessee Volun- teers and Missisippi Drag'oons — Capture of Pensacola — Gen. Jackson's account of it — Destruction of the Barancas — He returns to Mobile — Col. NicoU's proclamation — Remark. p. 166 CHAP. XIIl. Gen. Jackson's arrival at New Orleans — ^perilous situation of that place — reliance upon distant forces — his address to the people of Louisiana-timidity of the leg-islature-evidence of disaffection, and traitorous conduct — Declaration of Martial Law — Measures of defence— Arrival of reinforcements — Landing- of the enemy —Battle of the 23d. December— Official report of it. p. 180 CHAP. XIV. Benevolent exertions of the Ladies of New Orleans — Gen. Jack- son selects the final position of his army — Loss of the naval force — Capt. Patterson — Lieut. Jones — Harmony between land and naval forces — Defence at the mouth of the Missisippi — Ameri- can lines on the east and west side of the river described — Bat- tle of the 28th December — of the 1st January — Attempts up- on the left wing of the American army. p. 199 CHAP. XV. Oen Jackson's and Sir Edward Pakenham's armies from the 1st, to 8th January — Gen, Morgan's lines — Battle of the 8th Janua- ry — Gen. Jackson's report of it — Gen. Morgan's retreat — Gen. Jackson's address to the armies — he regains the right bank of the Missisippi — Bombardment, and attack upon Fort St. Philips — Maj. Overton s report to Gen. Jackson. p. 213 CHAP. XVI. Situation of the armies after the battle of the 8th January — Mel- ancholy and distressing scene — Operations at the mouth of the Missisippi — Departure of the enemy — Gen. Jackson's address to the American troops — Disparitv in the loss of the two armies. p. 235 via CONTENTS^ CHAP. XVII. Gen. Jackson appoints a day of Thanksg-iving and Praise, for the Victories obtamed, and for the preservation of the city, upon the 23d January — Doct. Dubourg's address — the general's an- swer — continues his exertions to render the country more se- cure — Surrender of Fort Bovvyer — Peace proclaimed — Dis- charge of troops — Gen. Jackson's address to them — Remark. p. 245 CHAP. XVIII. Recapitulation of facts relative to the proclamation of Martial Law, writ of habeas corpus, Louaillier, and Judge Hall — Arrest of Gen- Jackson — his defence, conviction, and fine — Trial by jury — Popular feeling — Moderation of Gen Jackson— he advises to a sacred regard for civil power. p. 257 CHAP. XIX. Gen. Jackson reth-es from New Orleans — anrives at Nashville, his place of residence — Reflection — He receives a message to re- pair to the seat of government, to assist in arranging the Peace Establishment of the U. S. army — Difficulty of that duty — Votes of thanks, 8cc. to Gen. Jackson — He repairs to the seat of gov- ernment — Civilities received upon his passage, and on his arri- val — Returns to his head-quarters at Nashville, and in 1816, re- pairs to New Orleans, and arranges tlie army. p. 271 CHAP. XX. Gen. Jackson negociates a treaty for extinguishment of Indian titles to land — Issues an order relative to tliis subject— Receives a silver vase from the Ladies of South Carolina, &.c. — Returns to Nashville — Issues an important general ordei" — Prepares to defend his Division — Commencement of Seminole War — Gen. Gaines attacks the Seminoles — Gen. Jackson addresses the "Tennessee Volunteers" — repairs to Georgia- — and enters with his army into Florida — Justification of that measure — he cap- tures St. Marks. p. 283 CHAP. XXI. General Jackson at Fort St. Marks, Florida — captures and exe- cutes Francis the Prophet, and an Indian Chief— at the same place, takes Arbuthnot and Ambristie— 'details a general court- martial for their trial — approves of the sentence and orders them to be executed — Remark — Gen. Jackson marches for Pen- sacola — captures it — appoints Col. King to the command of it, and retires to Nashville, Tenn. p. 301 CONCLUSION. Fncidents of Gen. Jackson's life— his cliaracter. p. 307 INTRODUCTION. Adoption of American Constitution — Pursuits of Americans- Diminution of Military ardour — Declaration of War — Militia— Volunteers— Regular Troops— Andrew Jackson. FROM the conclusion of the War for Ameri- can Independence, to the commencement of that war which secured it, the Americans were almost wholly diverted from the study of military tactics, and no opportunity had occurred to call into ope- ration the military science acquired in the revolu- tionary struggle. The mild arts of peace were sub- stituted for the ruthlees carnage of war ; and a rising people, who had severed the ligament that bound them to an European monarch, commenced the enjoyment of self-govern^uent. To organize a Republic, consisting of a confe(t- cracy of a number of distinct governments, having different, and in some respects contending interests, was a task which reqiiired, and called forth the science and the energies of the first statesmen which the world had produced. Upon the conclusion of that war, the people of the American Republic, as it regarded a form of government, were " in a state of nature^ Des- titute of a government of their own making, they had before them the lights of antiquity, and 10 INTRODUCTION. the practical knowledge of modern ages. With the scrutinizing research of statesmen, and the calm deliberation of philosophers, they proceeded to establish a constitution of Civil Government, as the supreme law of the land. The establishment of this constitution is, perhaps, without a parallel in the history of the civilized world. It was not the unresisted mandate of a successful usurper, nor was it a government imposed upon the people by a victorious army. It was digested by profound statesmen, who aimed to secure all the rights of the people who lidd acquired them, by their toil, their courage, and their patriotism. They aimed also to give to tlie government, sufficient energy to command respect. To the people of the American Republic, a Con- stitution was presented for i/ie// deliberation, and for their adoption. It was adopted, not with en- tire unanimity, but by a majority of the people, sufficiently respectable to give its operation a promising commencement The people, having emancipated themselves from the power of a British monarch — having successfully resisted his lords and his commons, looked with jealousy upon those who were called to the exercise of the pow- er which they had themselves delegated to their own countrymen. The excellency of the consti- tution was tested by the practical application of its principles ; and the patriotism and integrity INTRODUCTION. 1| of all the early officers who derived their power from it, were acknowledged by their admiring countrymen. The people, having witnessed the establishment of a republican government, of their own choice, relapsed from the energetic character of republican soldiers, to the more gentle ones of agriculturalists, merchants, and mechanics. Agriculturalists found a capacious field for the exercise of their pursuits in the widely extended and fertile regions of the Republic. Land specu- lation became the business of the few, who had adequate funds, and the conversion of the wilder- ness into fertile fields, the pursuits of those who had industry and enterprise. The Merchants found a world before them as the theatre upon which their energies were to be ex- erted. Enjoying peace with all nations, while other nations were contending with each other for dominion or wealth, the merchants of the Repub- lic became the carriers for the commercial world. Into their employ they drew thousands of their countrymen, and soon rendered the American States the second nation in the world, in point of commercial consequence. Manufacturers began to struggle for the rank which they hold in many of the countries in the old world. It was long an ineffectual struggle — But as the " restrictive system''^ was deemed neces- 12 INTRODUCTION. sary from the unceasing encroachments of Europe- an governments upon the commercial rights of America, they rapidly advanced in wealth, and gave employ to a numerous class of citizens. These three great objects of pursuit, embraced the whole American people, if we except those of the learned professions. These employments were all calculated to divert attention from military tac- tics, and to confine it rather to the accumulation of wealth, than to the advancement of national glory, by military achievements. In addition to this, the very nature of the American Constitution, was calculated to repress military ardour, being more calculated to make happy citizens^ than renowned soldiers. The surviving patriots of the revolution were following each other in rapid succession to the tomb, and the rising youth of America were sel- dom aroused to patriotism by the t^les of the revo- lutionary contest. Sudden wealth was the result of the exertions of the different classes of Americans. The voluptu- ousness and effeminacy, usually attendants upon the possession of it, were rapidly diminishing that exalted sense of national glory, for which the Sax- ons, the ancient stock from which Americans and Englishmen trace their origin, were always celebrated. As the collisions between the American Repub- lic, and the British empire, began to assume an INTRODUCTieN. tS hostile aspect, frequent negociations were commen- ced, and as often terminated in widening the breach between the two governments. The murder of Fierce^ by order of a British naval officer, although, from the tranquilized, and ahnost paralized state of public feeling, it did not excite the same indignation as the massacre of Boston citizens, by British troops, before the revolutionary war, yet it was no less an outrage upon humanity and national dignity, than that barbarous deed. The constant impressment of American seamen, although in its character a less sanguinary violation of national and individual rights, was a more wide- ly extended injury. *' The social body is oppressed, when one of its members is oppressed." That nation can hardly be said to be independent, who will acquiesce in an injury committed upon one of its citizens by another nation. It was an aphorism of the great Hollander, De Witt — " That no inde- pendent nation ought tamely to submit to a breach of equity and justice^ from another^ hoxvevcr line- qual the poiuers.'*^'^ Although an injury to indi- viduals^ is an injury to the nation; yet, in the attack upon the Chesapeake, a national vessel, the national dignity was directly insulted. To impress seamen from an U. S. frigate, belonging to an infant navy, whose gallantry in the Mediterranean, had excited the admiration, and even the jealousy of Nelson, • History of Holland. 1 4 INTRODUCTION, produced a ferment in the American Republic which could never subside until ample reparation was obtained. The orders in Council — new and unauthorised principles of blockade^ and an invasion of the rights of neutrals, added to the other injuries mentioned, and to which might be added many more, compel- led the great council of the Republic to resort to measures more efficient than non-intercourse -^ cynbar- goes, and negociations. Facts will justify the assertion, that upon the momentous question whether War or Submission should be resorted to by Americat, the American people were divided in opinion ; and this division of opinion was ascertained by a knowledge of the two great political parties in the Republic. The Republican party exclaimed, with an ancient Ro- man, *' Our voice is still for War,^^ The Federal party, with another Roman, exclaimed, " Our thoughts, we must confess, are turned to Feace.^^ The justice, necessity, or expediency of the se- cond war between the American Republic and the Kingdom of Great Britain, cannot be discussed in this place ; and it might be deemed arrogance to attempt it at all, at this period of time. The authorities who alone had power " to declare War^^ made the declaration ; and to the American people w ere they responsible for the great and important measure. INTRODUCTION. 15 It may not be inapposite to remark in this place, tliat a si/sternatic opposition to government is un- known in every part of the civilized world, except- ing in America and in England. This does not arise from any deficiency of national feeling ; for DO two nations on earth are more devoted to na- tional glory than Americans and Englishmen ; but it arises from that jealousy which intelligence and an exalted sense of liberty always produce in the governed towards their governoiirs. Having one common origin, but no longer any common inter- est, let the citizens of the American Republic, and the subjects of the British Monarch, judge for themselves which government most consults the happiness of the people, and upon which side of the Atlantic the greatest freedom is enjoyed. Until the declaration of the last war, the energy of the American constitution had never been test- ed. Under its benign influence the people had suddenly arisen, from infancy to manhood — from vassalage to freedom — from national penury to national wealth. Its provisions were found abun- dantly adequate for the government of a great and growing people in a state of peace. The jealousy or the fears of the framers of this inim- itable compact, had restricted the military pow- er. It permitted the Captain-general of the militia of the United States, after proper advice to call them into action, to " execute the laws of 16 INTRODUCTION. the tmion — suppress hisurrections — and repel invar sions;^' and even this Jimited power became the sub- ject of animated discussion. At the commencement of the war, wc had no- thing that gave any idea of a Standing Army. Six thousand troops dispersed over a country, half that number of miles in length and in width, presented nothing but a fractured skeleton of an arr jmy. The American militia, although perhaps the best in the world, were organized by the different states ; from the different state governments deri- ved their authority, and had different attachments and different interests. An hundred thousand of them were drafted by the national authority to hold themselves in readiness to take the field at a mo- ment's warning. But the history of modern tactics shows that the trade of war is not learned in a mo- ment. Fifty thousand Vokinteers were invited to enrol themselves for the public defence ; but the amount and efficiency of this species of force d©*- pended upon the opinion of the people in regard to the justice of the war, and of the rectitude of the administration. ErdistmentSy from which alone an efficient army, for any considerable length of time can be produced, were authorised. In some sec- tions of the country, the best blood in them was aroused to patriotism, and the most distinguished citizens flew to the standard of the Republic. In others, it was considered a disgrace to aid, either INTRODUCTION. 17 by men or 7nonei/, what was openly pronounced to be an " imjusi, unnatural^ wicked^ and cruel imr.^* From such discordant meterials, was the Ameri- can army of 1812, and 1813, composed. Although the melancholy catalogue of disasters in the cam- paigns of those years, was occasionally gilded by achievements of resplendent glory ; yet, until the commencement of the campaign of 1814, the Anie- rican armies had added but few laurels to those acquired in the war of the revolution. A new era in the military history of America the?i commenced. As the gathering storm, which had, for two years, hung over what was deemed in Europe the devoted Republic of America, increased in darkness and liorror, the character of the rising generation of Americans developed itself. A constellation of heroes suddenly arose and illuminated the Iiemis- phere of the western world. They conquered gen- erals who had become familiar with victory in the old world — secured for their country the indepen- dence acquired in the revolution, and for them- selves, fame, as lasting as immortality. Major General ANDREW JACKSON, the sub- ject of the following Mejvioirs, deservedly holds a distinguished rank amongst the veteran officers of the American Republic, in the last war. But while almost every American is anxious to join his indi- vidual note, to the harmonious concord of applause bestowed upon this distinguished chieftain, few 2* 18 INTRODUCTION. know the arduous toils, the severe privations, and the excessive fatigues, by which he acquired his fame. The writer will endeavour, in a manner as perspicuous as he is able, to do it ; and from mate- rials of unquestionable authenticity, to present the reader, in the following volume, a brief Biography of this American Hero. If the delineations will not be so minute as they might be in a more volu- minous work, it is hoped the prominent features of this great man's life and character, in his civil and military career, will be presented in their proper light and shade. MEMOIRS OP ANDREW JACKSON. His family, birth, and early pursuits — Enters into the army of the Revolution — is captured by the British — resists an illegal order of a British officer — receives a wound, and is committed to g'oal — loses his surviving brother — liis mother dies of grief — he completes his literary studies. THE birth places of statesmen, heroes, and poets, have often been subjects of historical investi*- gation, and not unfrequently of warm dispute. Seven cities of Greece claimed the honor of giving birth to Homer. The birth of illustrious men certain- ly imparts a consequence to the places of their na- tivity ; and oftentimes the only consequence they possess. An English civilian will visit the birth- place of Alfred— the 5oMer that of Mirlborough- thepoct those of Shakespeare and Milton. Amer- icans, although comparatively a new people, can scarcely travel in any section of their extensive Re- public, but they can point to the place where some of its great benefactors were born. The catalogue would swell the volume. Among the first Statesmen in the world, might be mentioned the members of the 20 MEMOIRS OF Old Congress — Among Heroes, the oiSicers of the Army of the Revolution. — Among Poets, a con- stellation of geniuses, to whom posterity will award the meed of praise. No sooner had ANDREW JACKSON began to achieve those deeds of valour which furnished a sure presage of future eminence, than Englishmen^ and Scotsmen, claimed him as a native-born subject. They once claimed Gen. Washington. Jrishmen omitted to assert their claim to his nativity ; but he was of Irish extraction although born in America. His grandfather was one of the victims at the siege of Carrie kfergus, in Ireland ; and all his an- cestors, being among the humbler classes of Irish- men, endured the sufferings which that ill-fated and oppressed people have long endured from some of the Irish nobility, born in the bosom of that coun- try *, and from English noblemen sent there to gov- ern tlieni. His father, Andrew Jackson, emigrated to Amer- ica with his wife and two sons in the year 1765. Desirous that his rising family should escape from the oppression of the English government in Europe, he came to this country as an asylum from the rod of abused power. He landed at Charleston in the state of South-Carolina, and soon after estab- lished himself at a settlement formerly called JFax- saw, now the district of Marion. His youngest son, and the subject of these Me- moirs, was born at that place upon the 15th March, J" ANDREW JACKSON. ' ^1 ] 767. He began to anticipate a happy close to the evening of his days, in his own domestic circle, in a land of freedom. But before the British gov- ernment commenced the same systematic oppres- sion of their subjects in their American colonies, as they long had exercised over its subjects in Ireland^ death removed him from the storm, which soon after began to hang over them. He left an unprotected wife and three young children to en- dure the buffetings of it. He died at near the close of the year 1767. His surviving children, Ilugh^ Robert^ and An- drew, became the objects of the tender solicitude of their mother. Having a small patrimony left them, their mother with unceasing assiduity, en- deavoured to procure for them the rudiments of an English education. Situated in a country where she could claim connection with no human being but her three sons ; the eldest but little ad- vanced from infancy, and the youngest an infant, her situation required the highest exercise of fe- male fortitude and vigilance. But having recent- ly emigrated from a country where the feio roll in splendour through life, and the many begin and end it amidst sufferings, she felt animated at the idea that she was in a country where the rod of the great, or what is worse, the rod of the jietty tyrant could not reach her or her offspring. For a number of years, no event happened to disturb the tranquility of this venerable matron or ^ MEMOIRS OF her children. By the judicious management of a small estate, she was enabled to aid her sons in the prosecution of their studies. She omitted no oppor- tunity to detail to them the tragical scenes througlv which their early ancestors had passed in Ireland, in the stubborn resistance they always maintained against oppression. The youthful reader of histo- ry^ may be made to glow with indignation at the tales of oppression. But the most pathetic des- cription of the historian is tameness itself when compared with the relations of those who have themselves passed through the scenes of sufferings inflicted by dying man upon dying men. The nar- rations of Mrs. Jackson, must have aroused the feelings of her sons to the highest pitch of enthu- siasm against the tyrants who had blasted the hopes, and destroyed the lives of their ancestors. She little thought, perhaps, while she was infusing into the tender bosoms of her sons the ardour of patriotism, that she would live to see two of them fall victims in its holy cause. Hugh and Robert, not being designed for either of the learned professions, obtained no other edu- cation than what the common schools at that pe- riod afforded. Andrew, the youngest son, was, by his excellent mother, designed for the ministry. In the Waoosaio settlement, about forty miles from Camden, was established an academical institution, in which the learned languages, and the higher branches of education were taught. As the in- ANDREW JACKSON. 23 structor of Andrew Jackson, if he be at this time in life, will rtjoice in the celebrity of his pupil, it is but justice to remark that this academy, at the time he commenced his literary pursuits, afforded the best means of instruction in the section of the country in which he was born. The preceptor of it was a Mr. Humphries, whose christian name is unknown to the writer. Under his tuition, the subject of these memoirs, having before enjoyed no other advantages than what the ordinary schools imparted, began the study of classics. He here continued assiduously to pursue his studies, until the Vandal progress of the British armies, in the revolutionary war, brought thera to that part of South Carolina in which the family of Jackson were situated. Mrs. Jackson once more beheld the arm of Brit- ish power uplifted in wrath over her adopted coun- try, as she had before beheld it raised over the land of her nativity. The American forces were com- pelled, in that section of the country, to retreat be- fore a power which they could not then resist. Her eldest son had before enrolled himself in the armies of the Republic, and lost his life in its cause at the battle of Stono, Andrew had arrived to the age of fourteen years ; and, with his surviving brother Rcibert, was impelled, by the exalted sentiments of liberty and independence which he had learned from his mother, to fly to tlie American standard. 24 MEMOIRS OF The scanty details which are yet received of the revolutionary contest, deprives me of the pleasure of mentioning the regiment and the commander of it, in which Andrew Jackson commenced his mili- tary career at the early age of fourteen. Suifice it to say, that at that age, with his only brother, Rob- ert, he entered into the American service ; prepar- ed, if such were the decrees of fate, to follow their elder brother into eternity in resisting tyrannical power. Effectual resistance, at that period, was impossible ; and the slender forces of America, in .S. Carolina, were compelled to retire before the formidable power of lord Cornwallis into the inte- rior of N, Carolina. This confident representative of British power, finding no force at that time to resist him, left the country — leaving behind him the wide-spread tracks of desolation in every part of it- The once tranquil and happy settlers of Waxsaw returned to a place which was once a home. The deep marks of British rapacity were visible in every part of the settlement ; and the effects of Vandal warfare were every where to be seen. Lord Rowden was in possession of Camden, and no sooner learned that the dispersed inhabitants of Waxsaio were again returned, than he availed him> self of the assistance of American tories to complete their extermination. A British major, by the name of Cojjln^ was the commander of this expedition. The inhabitants, who might all be said to belong to ANDREW JACKSON. 25 the forlorn hope, determined to make at least a shew of resistance. They assembled at the Wax- saw meeting-house, to which was attached the aca- demy of Mr. Humphries, in which Andrew Jack- son had devoted himself to literature. Here they awaited the augmentation of their force by the ar- rival of their friends, and the expected approach of the enemy. The h opes of this resolute and patriot- ic band of American heroes were elated atrthe dis- tant approach of a body of citizens. At this pe- riod, the American troops could hardly be said to have had an uniform ; but the well known insignia of the British troops enabled the people to designate them at sight. While the little phalanx of Waoc- saw, expected to be joined by their friends, what was their astonishment when they found themselves surrounded by a ferocious clan of American tories, covered at a little distance by British dragoons ? The conquest was an easy one— resistance would have been desperation. — Eleven of the Americans were captured, and the rest, among whom were An- drew Jackson and his brother, escaped, and conceal- ed themselves in the adjoining forests. Although this is no place for reflections, yet no opportunity should he unimproved to express the inefl'able contempt and utter detestation in which the tories, in the revolutionary struggle, ought for ever to be holden. Had they merely joined the British standard through fear of its power, they might at least have been entitled to contemptuous 26 MEMOIRS OF pity ; but when it is remembered that they imbru- ed their hands in the blood of their brethren, it would be a prostitution of charity to extend it to them. The next day after this affair at the JVnxsaw church, many of the wandering heroes who escap- ed from it, were captured by the British dragoons ; and among them were Andrew Jackson and his brother Robert. Immediately after they were taken prisoners, an event took place which devel- oped the future character of Jackson ; and shewed, that though a boy, he gave the world " assurance of the man." A British officer, having in pursuit of prisoners soiled his boots, ordered him to clean them. Flushed with indignation at the command, lie decidedly refused to obey, and demanded the treatment due to a prisoner of war. Enraged at what would have excited the admiration of a generous bosom, the of&cer, with a drawn sword, made a violent pass at Jackson^s head. Desti- tute of any weapon of defence, he parried the stroke with his hand, in which he received a se- vere wound. Thus early in life did Jackson be- come a soldier of the Republic and an unalterable enemy of Britain. It will be seen in the Sequel how essentially he has served the one, and how completely he has avenged the injuries he receiv ed from the other. The gallant Jackson forgot the wound he receiv- ed himself in his solicitude for his brother, who re ANDREW JACKSON. %% eeived at the same time a much severer one in the tiead after he was taken prisoner. They were both committed to gaol with their wounds undres- sed ; and, what would suffuse the cheek of a barba- rian with a blush, they were deprived of the only consolation that remained — that of sympathising with, and consoling each in their calamities — they were confined in different apartments ! They were here incarcerated until exchanged for British pris- oners, a few of whom were taken near Camden. The exchange of these gallant youths was a pre- sage to one of them to exchange worlds. The wound of Robert proved mortal ; not so much from its original severity, as from the barbarous neglect of it while in prison. It occasioned an inflamma- tion in the brain ; and very soon after he obtained his freedom, death relieved him from one of the greatest calamities incident to man. The venera- ble mother, having laboured incessantly for the re- lief of the American prisoners — having seen her prospects of temporal happiness totally blighted — disconsolate and broken hearted, she soon followed her second son into eternity. She died near Char- leston, S. C. Andrew Jackson, now a youth of fifteen, found himself alone in the world. With no being in the country in which he was born, could he claim affin- ity or relationship. His constitution was impaired by recent toil, and cruel imprisonment. The an- guish he felt at the fate of his whole family, must 2S MEMOIRS OF have been excruciating in the extreme. Tom ake the fall cup of human calamity overflow, he was vio- lently seized with the small pox, which brought him to the very jaws of death, and he narrowly escaped the grave to which all his family had been consigned. The estate of his father was now in his sole pos- session. Although not large, it was sufficient, with that careful attention, and prudent calculation which a man of mere monicd business always un- derstands, to have enabled him to complete his education, and to have had a competency remain- ing. But Andrew Jackson was not born for the coun- ting room ; and never thought of those day-book and ledger calculations which are within the reach of the most moderate capacity ; but which often, and almost invariably divert the mind from the no- bler pursuits of literary reputation and military fame. These had now become his objects. If he had had a discreet steward to manage his estate, it would have been a pecuniary advantage unquestion- ably ; but in his hands, it was a sort of incumbrance upon his mind : and until it was removed, operated as a check upon its excursions. At this period of his life, he thought little of that independence, in regard to money, which the younger Lyttleton em- phatically pronounces " the rock of life." With a profusion at which prudence would frown, and at which genius would smile, he reduced himself to a situation which compelled him to become — ANDREW JACKSON. 29 '* ^uhqiie^ sumfoTtunuefaber^^ — (in every situation, the builder of his own fortune.) At about sixteen years of age, he returned to his literary pursuits ; making them however, as it would seem from his subsequent course, secondary to his paramount desire for a military life. His second instructor was a Mr. M'Cidloch. With him he renewed the study of the languages, and other studies preparatory to his entrance at an uni- versity. His attention was by no meaus confined to the mere prescribed duty enjoined by his pre- ceptor. He was not one of those unambitious pupils who concluded that enough was done when his lesson was committed to memory ; and that he was a linguist and a mathematician, because he could distinguish between a dactyl and a spondee — be- tween a single d,n^ z. double tqndiUon. His studies were as diversified as the suggestions of his inclina- tion ; and he ventured to explore those regions of literature to which his native genius pointed out the avenues. Such a course of study would never have made him a popular tutor in an university j but it was calculated to make him a general, if not a particular scholar. He continued his literary pursuits until he arrived to the age of eighteen. Finding his patrimony diminished, from expendi- tures of it, he relinquished his intentions of enter- ing an university. At the same time he relinquished his intentions, if he ever had any, of entering into ^< holy orders." It was the wish of his deceased 3 * 30 MEMOIRS OF mother that he might become a minister of the gospel ; but he was fully aware that if he had been consecrated to that sacred profession, it would have rendered it incompatible with his duties, to avenge, with his sword, the injuries he and his family had sustained from it. Andrew Jackson was brought into existence to discharge other duties than those which belong to the sacred profession ; and al- though the church may regret that he had not brought liis splendid talents into its divine service -^ the state and the army may both acknowledge the services he has rendered them, not only with grati- tude, but with admiration. ANDREW JACKSON. 31 CHAPTER II. Incidents of early life — of Andrew Jackson's — He commences and completes the study of law — Patriotism of American Lawyers- He commences the practice of law, and emigrates to the South- West Territory — is appointed Attorney-general — member of the Tennessee Convention — a Representative in Congress — a Senator in Congress — a Judge of the Supreme Court in Ten- nessee — and retires to private life. IN the preceding chapter, thre eader has been made acquainted with the origin of Andrew Jack- son — his early pursuits, and the most interesting incidents of his juvenile years. It has been fre- quently remarked, and always with truth, that tliose who have distinguished themselves in the science of war, have discovered the bias of the mind to the profession of arms in the early stages of life. The biographies of the great military and naval charac- ters of Europe furnish numerous instances of the truth of this remark. At seventeen, Bonaparte, a cadet in the military academy, in resentment of an affront, thrust his sword into a balloon, ready to as- cend for the gratification of Louis XVI. whose throne he afterwards occupied. Nelson, at a still earlier period of life, encountered a bear upon the frozen ocean. So unhappily deficient are the bio- graphical sketches of American worthies, that the present generation know little of the gigantic states- men and heroes who lived in the last. The truth 32 MEMOIRS OP of the remark is established as it relates to Wash- ington and Putnam. The first in early life, dis- covered the cool and regulated courage of a great commander ; and the last, at twelve, when visiting Boston for the first time, encountered and conquer- ed an enemy double his age and size. He also in youth " carried the ring"" at gymnastic exercises, and destroyed a wolf, in his den, at the hazard of his own life. The incident mentioned of Jackson, is evincive of his whole character — he resisted the exercise of unauthorised power in a British officer, and demanded justice for himself and his fellow prisoners. When it is considered that the power of the British army was at that time irresistible-— that the tories were numerous — that they violated all the rules of civilized warfare, and tliat Jackson was less thau fourteen years of age, and subject to all their cruelty and ferocity, his firmness excites admiration. In 1784, he commenced the study of law, nnder the instruction and direction of Spruce M^Cay, Es- quire, at Salisbury, North Carolina. It is but jus- tice to the profession of law, to remark, that among its members in America and England, have always been found the most energetic advocates of the rights of the people. As a corrupt ministry have encroached upon the constitutional rights of the people, English and Irish advocates have thrown a shield before the designated victims of ministerial vengeance, and persuaded juries to save their fellow ANDREW JACKSON. 33 men from Botany- Bay and tlie gibbet. The names o£ £rski7ie 2Lnd G'lbbs are dear to Englishmen — Ciir- ran and Grattan to Irishmen. At the commencement of the revolution, the members of the American bar, almost without ex- ception, arranged themselves upon the side of their country ; and by their examples, as well as their eloquence, aroused the sacred flame of patriotism in the bosoms of their oppressed countrymen. Their conduct drew from the eloquent Burke, one of his finest encomiums, in the British house of commons. To their honor let it be said, that at the commencement of the last war, which secured the independence acquired by the army of the revolution, they again espoused the cause of the Republic. They not only thundered defiance to our inveterate enemy in the Senate, but many pla- ced themselves in the embattled ranks of their countrymen. A number of them fell victims to their courage, whose memories will forever be cherish- ed — a number of them still survive, and still grace the army of the Republic. A Jackson, a Macomb, a Gaines, a Scott, and a Ripley, will not sufler by a comparison with the first soldiers in the universe, and it is believed they were all members of the bar when they entered the army. Mr. Jackson com- pleted the study of law with t7bA?i Stokes, Esquire, and was licensed as a practitioner in 1786. He presented himself at the bar at an age when most students commence the study of law. The part of 34 MEMOIRS OF • the country in wliieh he was situated, afforded but a slender prospect of success ; but while it prevent- ed hira from enjoying the profits of the practice, it enabled him to become more familiar with the theory of the law. In 1788, the course of emigration was from the Atlantic states to the waters of the Missisippi. The present state of Tennessee was then a territo- rial government of the United States, called the South [Vest Territory, having been recently organ- ized by Congfress. The climate was sahibriv»us, the soil was fertile, and it was rapidly emerging from a wilderness state, to a state of civilization. Mr. Ja' kson, with that spirit of adventure which is in him a striking characteristic, resolvtd to leave a country which offered but few induce.uents to detain him in it. The honourable Judge M ^airy was appointed judge of this territory in 1788, and was accompa- nied by Mr. Jackson to Nashville, at which place they arrived in October of that year, when the first supreme court was holden. He here found himself among a people entirely different in manners, cus- toms, and habits, from those he had recently left In the older states, where one gen.eration of inhabitants have followed another in regular succession, there are always some distinguishing characteristics in the whole population. But in the new states, the traveller of observation can hardly discover any es- tablished character in the people, but that of energy ANDHEW JACKSON. 35 diid personal independence. In those parts of the Republic which have been settled for two centu- ries, a family, a monied, or a landed aristocracy, can always be discovered. The many become subservient to the few, and subjugate their minds to those, who by wealth or power, have obtained the ascendency over them. In such a state of so- ciety, an insulated being, like Andrew Jackson, without the influence of friends to aid hira, or with- out funds to procure them, can hardly hope, with the most gigantic powers, to place himself in eligi- ble circumstances. Far otherwise is the case in the new states. Drawn together from different sections of our extensive country, from motives of interest, of power, or of fame, each individual may almost be said to make a province by himself. In such a sit- uation, the most energetic character becomes the object of the greatest popular favour. In this sphere was Jackson exactly calculated to move. Without any extrinsic advantages to promote his ^sdvancement, he had to jrely solely upon intrinsic worth and decision of character, to enable him to rise rapidly with a rapidly rising people. The place of his nativity could not be recollected without the most distressing association of ideas. His whole family, ex(epting his father, wIjo may be said to have died a natural death, there fell vic- tims to the ruthless barbarity of British sr»ldiery, who carried on an unnatural war ai^ainst theirown colintrymen, in their own colunies. The attach- 36 MEMOIRS OF ment to home, which may be said to coDstitute a a part of our nature, must have been alienated from the bosom of Jackson. In the Waccsaio settlement, S. C. he had his birth — there he was a sad spectator of the extinction of his whole family ; and there he all but lost his own life. To him, the plain of WaxsaiOy with all its charms, must have been as cheerless as that of Golgotha to the ancients. He commenced the practice of law in the South West Territory, at the age of little more than twen- ty-one years ; and although the district contained many aspiring young men who had already em- igrated there to share the honours of the new gov- ernment, and the profits of business, Mr. Jackson, soon rendered himself distinguished among those who were *' themselves conspicuous there.'''* The unyielding integrity of his character, and his unceasing attention to business, soon introduced him to the notice of the government ; and he was ap- pointed Attorney- General of the territory. This office he continued to sustain with great reputation to himself, and with essential advantage to the dig- nified and impartial administration of justice for many years. In 1796, the South West Territory was admitted as a sovereign and independent state into the Amer- ican Union, by the name of the State of Tennessee ; being the sixteenth star that was added to the Amer- ican Constellation. The citizens were called upon to exercise the first great act of self-government — ANDREW JACKSON. 37 that of forming a constitution as the supreme law of the state. Mr. Jackson was chosen a member of the convention called to discharge this important duty. Although he had become known to the most distinguished citizens of the country, his exertions in this convention, brought him into more univer- sal notice, by the laborious part he took in the in- teresting discussions upon this momentous subject. The course of his studies had previously led him to investigate minutely the subject of government, from the earliest ages down to the close of the eigh- teenth century. With the rise, progress and ter- mination of the ancient Republics, he had made himself familiarly acquainted. He had witnessed the operation of the American Constitution, and those of the different states for a number of years. With a mind thus prepared to meet the important discussion, he took the lead in the debates upon the difi'erent articles of the proposed constitution. To those who are acquainted with the constitution of the state of Tennessee, it will be seerj. with what precision the Legislative, the Executive, and Judiciary powers are designa ted — with what care the civil rights of the people are secured — and with what unlimited freedom the rights of conscience may be enjoyed. The people of Tennessee, as a mark of the con- fidence they placed in Mr. Jackson, elected him their first representative in the Congress of the United States. He was a new member of the na- 4 38 MEMOIRS or tional legislature, and was surrounded by a body of statesmen who have scarcely been equalled, and certainly never have been excelled, since the adop- tion of the American Constitution. If, owing to that modesty which is always a concomitant with real greatness, he did not immediately shine, his constituents, the next year, (1797,) raised him to the high and responsible station of a Senator of Congress. It was during his congressional life, that the two great political parties of the Republic, were in array against each other. He was a Republican ; and of course in the minority. Although no man ever more cheerfully submitted to authority when properly exercised^ yet he never could be brought to be a minor actor in the plots of political intrigue — and to be a leader in political machinations, his habits and principles rendered him totally unqual- ified. He resigned his seat in the senate in 1799, and returned to Tennessee, with the government of which he had now become identified. He was now called upon to discharge the duties of an important ofiice under the constitution and laws of the state, in the establishmentof which, he had taken so important a part. In J 799, he was appointed a judge of the supreme court. This ap- pointment was bestowed upon him without his knowledge, contrary to his wishes, and very much opposed to his inclination. After discharging the duties of it for a short period, he resigned it, and retired to his delightful real estate upon the banks ANDREW JACKSON. 30 of the Cumberland river, where for a number of years he enjoyed, in the bosom of his family, that domestic fehcity which is always produced by at- tachment for private worth, mingled with respect for dignity of character. From the citizens with whom he was located, he invariable received every demonstration of respectful attachment, and grate- ful acknowledgment, which a people, in the enjoy- ment of temporal felicity, usually bestow upon the benefactor who had secured it for them. In Mr, Jackson, although he had scarcely reached the mid- dle age of life, the people recognized a political father, who had ever discovered more solicitude for their political rights, and individual happiness, than for his own emolument or aggrandizement. 4J(X JIEMOIRS OF CHAPTER III. MX- Jackson's career in civil life — commencement of his military career — Major-general of Tennessee Militia — Militia forces- American savages — ^Reason for their hatred and vengeance against Anglo-Americans — Religious fanaticism among them — The Prophet Francis, and his brother Tecumseh — Effect of their assumed divinity — Tender of Gen. Jackson, and his Vol- unteers to the government of the United States. AT the close of the last chapter, the reader found the subject of these memoirs in a situation, above all others the best calculated for the enjoyment of temporal felicity — with an estate abundantly competent, without being so overgrown as to excite solicitude — in a family circle, where every affection- ate sentiment was cordially reciprocated, and sur- rounded by extensive acquaintances who loved hina for his affability, respected him for his dignity, and venerated him for his exalted patriotism. Hitherto the attention of Mr. Jackson had been almost exclusively confined to the pursuits of civil life. Although the duties of it are oftentimes ar- duous, and the difficulties sometimes inextricable, yet he had moved through it with incalculable ben- efit to his country, and with undivided approbation to himself. The history of our country scarcely affords an instance of an individual, who has, so early in life, been called to fill so many important offices in such rapid succession. At twenty-two, At- torney-general of a district — at twenty-nine,* mem- ANDREW JACKSON. 4il ber of convention to form a constitution — at the same age, a representative in Congress — at thir- ty, a Senator in Congress, and at thirty-two a Judge of the Supreme Court of an independent State. Thus far in life, Mr. Jackson had reaped a rich reward for his devotion to his country, in the ap- plause bestowed upon him by his countrymen. Had he been disposed to have lived in his delight- ful retirement, and to have been a spectator of the sufferings his fellow-citizens were called to en- dure from a christian and a savage foe, he would indeed have ended his days without the splendid glory which is now attached to his name ; yet he would have also escaped from the acrimonious censure, and illiberal abuse of those who envy him his reputation, and vainly endeavour to rob him of his hard earned fame. However brilliant has been the career of Mr. Jackson in civil life, it is almost forgotten by the renown he has acquired by military achievements. To the great mass of his countrymen, he is known ojili/ as a distinguished military character. It will be the object of the remaining part of this work to present the reader with a view of his military career. The same year that the state of Tennessse w'as admitted into the union, (179G,) Mr. Jackson was '"appointed Major-general of the militia of that State. As the whole of its militia was then embraced in one division, Gen. Jackson was the actual com- 4, # 4)3 MEMOIRS OF mander in chief of the whole military force of the state ; as it is unusual for the governours of the states, who are ex officio, Captain -generals, to command in person. But for many years before the commenceiDent of the last war, the command of a Major-general was rather jwminal than real — a whole division being seldom called out together. But upon Gen. Jackson, the people depended for an efficient organization of iheir military force. Without derogating at all from the high reputa- tion of the militia of the American Republic, pro- bably the most efficient in the world, the history of our country will justify the remark, that it is a spe- cies of force that cannot be relied upon, excepting in sudden emergencies. In the revolutionary war, notwithstanding the imperfections of their organi- zation, they certainly aided essentially in establish- ing our independence. But how often, during that portentous period, was the Commander in Chief, and other commanders, left with an han^V il of " Continental Troops," to wander through a coun- try where a regiment of militia could scarcely be raised, to take the field for any length of time ? They might be brought, from the principles of self-preservation, to defend their home, and to re- pel an enemy from their immediate neighbourhood, but could with difficulty be brought to follow the apparently desperate fortune of the Chief to a dis- tant portion of the country. Had not the '' Con- tinental Army'' been organized, and been brought ANDREW JACKSON. 43 to consider themselves as soldiers of the zohole American liepublic — Cornioallis might have ulti- mately surrendered — but it is doubtful whether Washington would have conquered him in 1781. At the coinmencement of the last war, the mili- tia of the United States had enjoyed a period of peace for thirty years. The acts of Congress, and of the individual states, made every possible salu- tary provision to give to that force respectability and efficiency. This body then consisted of eight hundred thousand men ; an hundred thousand of wliom were drafted fur the service of the United States. The collisions between the state govern- ments and that of the Union— the jealousies between the officers of the army and those of the militia, are within the recollection of every reader ; hut the de- tail belongs more properly to The HistorT/ of the Se- cond War between the American Repitblic and tha Kingdom of Great Britain, than to The Memoirs of Major General Jackson, In 1812, Gen. Jackson, being still major-gene- ral of the Tennessee militia, was called by the dictates of patriotism, and his ardent love of his country, to espouse its cause in iht Jield, as he had spent much of his life in advocating its interests in the cabinet. With the sagacity of a statesman, and with the feelings of a patriot, he had long seen a storm gathering over his beloved country. He had seen one Republic after another fall in Europe, before the tremendous power of the " Allied Sove- 44j memoirs of reigns." He had seen the best and the last hopes of man blasted and almost annihilated in Europe, by the uplifted arm of despotic power. He had seen the British government, from the commence- ment of the Pitt administration, to that period, the head of this "holy alliance" olTensive and defen- sive against the rights of man. He had seen that power, from year to year, encroaching upon the in- dependence which the American Republic compel- led them to acknowledge in 1783. He had seen the pacific policy of the American government, resort- ing to negociation after negociation, met by the increasing insolence of the arrogant Court of St. James. He had not only seen, but he and the people of Tennessee had for many years, felt, the effect of British and Spanish influence over the Creek, the most ferocious and warlike tribe of In- dians upon the continent. For many years this tribe carried on a predatory warfare against the settlements of Tennessee, especially upon the Cum- berland river, upon which general Jacksen resided. He and the people, without any aid from the gen- eral government, had defended themselves from the frequent incursions of this insidious and barba- rous foe. In this way the people of Tennessee had learned the horrors of Indian warfare from their own sufferings. The history of the world scarcely furnishes a parallel with the sufferings of the Europeans upon the continent of America. Nor d£>es it furnish ANDREW JACKSON. 45 a parallel with the injuries which the native Amer- icans have sustained from Europeans. Tlie con- quest of South America, by the Spaniards, was marked with more sanguinary violations of the rights of humanity, than any conquest from that of Canaan to the nineteenth century of the christian era. As little as we know of its blood-stained histo- ry, we have, from infancy, wept over the calamities of the Lie as of Peru, and of the countless legions of their unhappy subjects. Through the eye of history, we see the powerful agents of his most Catholic majesty arrive among these happy natives. With an exterminating sword in one hand, and with the word of God in the other,' these early mission- aries demanded the immediate conversion of a whole people to Christianity. The artless sons of nature, who supposed the most splendid object was the fittest one to be adored, offered their ado- ration to the Sun. They could not adore an in- visible being, who made no impression upon their senses. An army with the weapons of destruction and death, was ready to aid the priest-hood in the work of conversion. One Inca, fell with his nation after another, with their inexhaustible treasures, into the hands of christian Spaniards, and at this time the aborigines of S. America scarcely have an existence. In North America, the acquisitions of Europeans were attended vvith circumstances less bloody ; but the natives were compelled by arms, or by 46 MEMOIRS OF contracts enforced by them, to retire as they ad- vanced in settlements. The tomahawk and the arrow, were feeble, compared with fire arms and bayonets. Although they were compelled to sur- render their territory, their native pride and heroic courage was never subjugated. They retired be- fore their conquerors ; and as their territory was wrested from them by fraud, or by force, and as their numbers were diminished by disease, and by war, their vengeance against their spoilers increas- ed. But one sentiment prevailed among them from the Isthmus of Darien to the North- West coast — from the Atlantic to the Western ocean. The broken remnants of some few tribes have indeed been brought to bury the hatchet ; but they never have been, and probably never will be, cordially reconciled to the white population. The hostile savages by privations the most severe, by tortures the most cruel, and by deaths the most horrible, still wreak their vengeance upon the descendants of those who first invaded their native soil. In about the year 1810, a blind religious fsi Mta- cism was added to the natural ferocity of the /liner- ican savages. A Prophet arose among them, and claimed divine power, derived directly from the Great Spirit. This immense accession to human power f was no less calculated to fascinate savages, than it ever has been to excite the veneration of that part of mankind who claim to be civilized. The ANDREW JACKSON. 4:7 American Savage, Francis^ had as many claims to the character and the inspiration of Prophet, as the Asiatic civilian Mahomet ; and had he possessed equal power to make conquests and converts, under the banners of divinity, he might hereafter have had as many followers. But Gen. Harrison dis- robed him of his divinity at Tippacanoe, in 1811, and his brother Tecumseh-, fled to the southern tribes upon the Alabama, early in the year J 812, to inspire the savages there to act in concert with their red brethren in the north. But nothing in- spired the Creek, Alabama, and Seminole Indians so much as British and Spanish gold, British muskets, and British promises. With their hereditary hatred against Americans, (or the citizens of the United States,) added to the enthusiasm excited by Tecum- seh, and the liberal aid of the British and Spanish governments, these powerful tribes, at the com- mencement of the last war, were prepared to spread havock, devastation, torture, and death, among the Americans who bordered upon their territory. '^\<^ states of Tennessee and Georgia, from their vic-.Mty to the immense country inliabited by the Creeks, were more immediately exposed to the horrid ravages of Indian warfare. Familiarized to their unrelenting barbarity, the citizens of Ge'^rgia and Tennessee were fully aware, that nothing but a .war of extermination against the Cn.*eks, would protect their own settlements on the frontiers fj om destruction, and their families from wanton barbari- 48 MEMOIRS OF ty. Tecuniseli had, by his art, his eloquence, and his assumed divinity, infused into the Creek nation^ the most implacable hatred against the Americans. Head dressed himself to their pride, by reminding them of the ancient power of the savages, and the boundless extent of their territory. He aroused their vengeance against Americans, as the people who had reduced their numbers, and diminished their greatness. He censured them for any con- formity, in any respect, to the Americans, and ex- horted them upon the dreadful penalty of the dis- pleasure of the Great Spirit, to return wholly to the savage state. The preaching of Saint Bernard and Peter the Monk^ had not a greater effect upon the Christians of Europe, when they exhorted them to raise a crusade against the infidels, than did that of Tecumseh upon the Creek, the Alabama, and Se- minole Indians. A complete concert was estab- lished between all the southern tribes, and a general concert between them and the northern ones. War clubs were every where distributed^ — but the most profound secrecy was enjoined. Tecumseh had warranted the interposition of the Great Spirit, and, what he had much better authority for doing, that of Great Britainy in favour of the savages. The confidence of the savages, in the success that would attend them and their christian allies, the British, was effectually confirmed. It was an established principle with them to give no quarters nor to ask any. Pursuant to this system, they had, ANDREW JACKSON. ^ before the commencement of the last war, murder- ed many families upon the frontiers of Georgia, and Tennessee, and seemed resolved to extripate the Americans, or be exterminated themselves. This brief sketch may be deemed a digression ; but I considered it necessary to prepare the mind of the reader for the succinct account which will follow, of the part taken by Gen. Jackson in the sanguinary war carried on by him and the gallant army under his command against the Creeks, The act of Congress, of 1812, authorizing the raising of a Volunteer Corps^ of fifty thousand men, to serve one year within tioo years after they were organized, induced Gen. Jackson to address the gallant sons of Tennessee belonging to his division. Perhaps no man in the American Republic could address his fellow-citizens, with more confidence of ouccess, than Gen. Jackson — certain it is that no one addressed them so successfully. In a very short time, he found his standard, at Nashville, sur- rounded by twenty-five hundred men, among whom were many of the first families and of the greatest fortunes. It was not that wordy and paper patri- otism which filled many of the journals of the day with inflated resolutions, pledging to the Republic the " lives, fortune, and honour,'*^ of those who pas- sed them. These men came in person to serve their country, rather than in a town-meeting, to resolve that they would do it. Gen. Jackson voluntarily ofi'ered his service to his country, instead of solicit- 5 50 MEMOIRS OF ing an office from its government. The General and his awny of Volunteers, made a tender of their ser- vices to government, and in November, 1812, were accepted, and became a part of the national force. When this corps of Volunteers was organized, they little thought, perhaps, what arduous duty would be allotted to them ; and had they anticipa- ted it, the glory they afterwards acquired, would hardly have been thought a sufficient reward for the excessive fatigues and hazards they endured in acquiring it. Their achievements shall be re- corded with scrupulous regard to accuracy, and their aberrations from duty shall be mentioned with all the delicacy that is consistejjt with truth. ANDREW JACKSON, 51 CHAPTER IV. Gen. Jackson and Tennessee Volunteers — ^Importance of the river Missisippi — Mr. Monroe's solicitude for the security of it, and the Western States—Volunteers rendezvous at Nashville, Tenn. — descend the Ohio and Missisippi — encamp at Natchez — Order for their discharge from Mr. Armstrong — disobeyed by Gen. , Jackson — Volunteers return to Tennessee, and are discharged — Approbation of the government. THE avidity and promptitude with which the large and respectable Corps of Tennessee Volun- teers resorted to the standard of their beloved and respected commander, Andrew Jackson, was a sure presage of the gallantry with which they would support the independence, rights, and honour of the Republic against a savage and implacable foe upon the borders of their native state, and against the most powerful and veteran nation in Europe, now in alliance with them. At the commencement of the last war, it was impossible for the government to determine upon what part of our extended sea- board the naval forces of Britain would first attempt to make a demonstration ; or upon what part of our frontier, its armies would attempt to invade our territory. The immense importance of the command of the Missisippi, and its tributary streams, could not es- cape the attention of either the American or British governments. Every exertion therefore of the one 03 MEMOIRS OF to retain, and of the other to acquire it, might welt be expected. The lower states and territories si- tuated upon this important river, attracted the ear- ly attention of government, and induced the most effi( ient measures lor their defence. Mr. Monroe, for some time previous, and during the whole war, was a member of the American Cabinet. As ambassador of the American Repub- lic, at the court of France, he had negociated the treaty for the accession of Louisiana to the United Stales ; and must have felt a deep solicitude in the rising importance of the Western States. He was aware, that without the command of the Missisippi, they would lose their future importance, and be at present subjected to the rapacity of British sol- diery, and the horrors of savage warfare. Although the war department, until the campaign of 1814, was not under his immediate control, and although he was not directly implicated in the disasters of those of 1812, and I8l3; he nevertheless, as one of the first officers in the Cabinet, felt a high de- gree of responsibility. In regard to the Missisippi river, as he may almost be said to have acquired it for his country, he must have felt a deep interest in securing the incalculable benefits arising to the Re- public, especially to the Western States, from the exclusive command of it. The Tennessee Volunteers, under the command of Gen. Jackson, at the close of the year 1812, were ordered to proceed down the Ohio and Missi- ANDREW JACKSON, 53 sippi, for the defence of the lower states against an expected attack of the British forces. The deep laid plot of the Indians already mentioned, was not yet ready for execution ; nor were the American settlers exposed to their immediate ravages, excited to make any but the orrlinary preparations of de- fence against these insidious, cruel, and infernal enemies. The Creeks were apparently indiflerent spectators to the contest which had now commen- ced between the American Republic, and the king- dom of Great Britain. At the beginning of the year 1813, Gen. Jackson and his fine corps of Tennessee Volunteers, having previously rendezvoused at Nashville, in Tennes- see, situated upon the south bank of Cumberland river, prepared to execute the orders received to descend the Ohio and Missisippi. Although situat- ed in a mild and salubrious climate, enduring but little severity in comparison with the more frigid regions of the northern states, the country at this time was covered with snow, and the navigation of the Ohio and Missisippi was obstructed and render- ed difficult and hazardous by ice. The Volunteers had thus far enjoyed the anima- ting splendour of military life, but were j'et unac- quainted with its toils, fatigues, and privations. Upon the 7th January, 1813, headed in person by a leader whom they esteemed as an accomplished commander, and an affectionate guardian, they com- menced an expedition, in which they hoped to ren- 5 ^ 54 MEMOIRS Ol- der esseiiiiai service to their country, which they Joved better than tliey did their lives, and to acquire for themselves tlie reputation of patriotic soldiers. Animated by the example of Gen. Jackson, they endured the hardships of a long and tedious passage, without a murmur, and submitted to the discipline indispensably necessary in an array, v/itliout the least appearance of insubordination. They arriv- ed at Natchez^ about three hundred miles above New Orleans, where they were ordered to rendez- vous until further orders. Gen. Jackson having selected the most judicious situation for the encampment of his army, here commenced the arduous and difficult duty of chang- ing citizens to soldiers. The Tennessee Volunteers had seen nothing of military life, except the easy and pleasurable duty usually performed by militia in time of peace, and occasional excursions against small parties of savages. Had tliey enlisted into the army of the Ilepublic, received a liberal bounty from its treasury, and been certain of regular pay- ment of wages while in service, and a valuable tract of land when discharged ; a cheerful submission to military discipline might have been expected, and a necessary one enforced. These patriotic Volun- teers thought little of a pecuniary reward •, but were inspired, by the impulse of patriotism, to be- come disciplined soldiers out of principle. But no sooner had they began to learn the duties of tlfe camp, and to acquire the science of war, ANDREW JACKSON. 55 than an order from the ^var department was re- ceived by Gen. Jackson, commandinq: him " to dis- mUs /lis Volunteers^ and deliver all public property in Ms possession to Major-general WUkinson,^^ then commanding the military district in which they were stationed. Mr. Armstron^^ was then Secretary at VYar. It is not for the historian or the bio- grapher to inquire into motives-, or to impeach them ; but when th^fact is stated that this order ])ore date tlie 5th of January, 18 [3, two days before Gen. Jackson moved with his forces from Nashville, and was not received until sometiLne after he estab- lished his cantonment at Natchez, almost five hun- dred miles below, tlie reader may well exclaim, in the language of the Prince of the Drama, — '■^there is a spirit in the affairs of state, which nor tongue^ nor pen, can give eapressure to." A compliance with this order would have been an abandonment of his corps. Although among them were many men, possessed of ample funds and adequate means, to travel half a thousand miles to their homes, yet they little thought, when they enter- ed the service of their country, that they should be so soon compelled to expend their wealth, as well as expose their lives and health in its defence. A very great number were wholly destitute of the means of subsistence, and depended wholly upon the public stores in their possession for the support of life while in camp, and upon their return march through a country, either very thinly inhabited or a wilderness. 5G MEMOIRS OP A third class were in a situation still more deploras- ble ; indef d, in a state of absolute destitution — dastitute of health, destitute of resources, and, as a general consequence, destitute of hope. The sick list numbered between one hundred and fifty, and two hundred •, many of whom were languish- ing under extreme debilit3\ It is difficult to conceive of a situation more dis- tressing and responsible than that in which Gen. Jackson was placed by this order from Mr. Arm- strong. Obedience to it would have been casting most of his patriotic followers upon a pity less world in an inclement season and destitute of resources — disobedience of the order would subject him to mil- itary punishment, unless the peculiar circumstan- ces of the case should be deemed sufficient to excuse him from the operation of military law. Af- ter consultation with his officers, who, at first, ac- corded with him in opinion, he assured the Secre- tary at War, that the order would be disregarded ; and that a sufficient quantity of the public stores W'ould be retained, to aid his Volunteers in return- ing to their homes. General Wilkinson was advised of the order of the war department, and of the determination of Gen. Jackson in regard to it. Clothed with the authority of the government — commanding one of the most extensive military districts in the Republic —anxious to augment his stores, and increase the number of his own troops, he endeavoured to inti- ANDREW JACKSON; 07 midate Gen. Jackson into obedience of the order, by fore- warning him of the alarming consequences to himself, of disobedience. Some of his own offi- cers retracted their first decision, and advised a compliance with the order. Even the quarter- master endeavoured to compel him to the measure, by omitting to take the necessary steps preparatory to the commencement of the return march. Cool, collected, and unembarrassed, Gen. Jackson now took counsel from his own judgment, and the respon- sibility of his conduct upon his own head ; knowing, that if called to do it, he could justify himself be- fore any forum, excepting one that had prejudged his case. He gave orders for breaking up the en- campment, and for commencing the movement which was to conduct his Volunteers to the place of original rendezvous ; and gave it in such a man- ner, and accompanied it with such acts, as to con- vince all, that from this decision there was no appeal. The gloom and dejection which pervaded this corps, when the order from the war department was received, was converted to the exhilaration of joy when the determination of their general was made known. The waggons were used for the trans- portation of the sick ; and even the horses of the general and his staff, were cheerfully surrendered for that purpose when necessary. During a march of nearly five hundred miles. Gen. Jackson evinced, by his uniform conduct, that although his situa- tion compelled him to act as a soldier, " he felt 58 MEMOIRS OP like a 7nan.^^ To the high respect which was at aii times felt by the Tennessee Volunteers for Gen. Jackson, was now added the most ardent attach- ment. They almost forgot the dignity of the gen- eraly in the more amiable and endearing qualities of tht patron and the friend. This corps, having en- dured the privations of the camp, and the fatigues of marching and counter-marching, without having 1/et acquired any of the laurels which are reaped in the field of battle, were discharged about the 1st of May, 1813. But the ardent patriotism, regula- ted by a spirit of subordination, which they shewed in this first scene of military life, justified the high expectation which was entertained of them, and which was afterwards so amply gratified by their splendid military achievements. The course pursued by Gen. Jackson in regard to Mr. Armstrong's order, and the Volunteers, may meet with the animadversion of the mere officer, who acquired his knowledge of tactics from books-, and his ideas of subordination from reading the ar- ticles of war 'y but his conduct was approbated by the administration, and the whole expenses of the expe- dition paid out of the public treasury. The military ardour of Gen Jackson was not damped by the crit- ical, and even dangerous circumstances in which he had recently been placed — dangerous, more from the machinations of official intrigue, than from the open enemies of the country. The first he had too much magnanimity even to suspect — the last he had rourage enough to face in every possible situation. ANDREW JACKSON. 50 CHAPTER V. Approbation and censure of general Jackson — Implacable hostility of savages increased by British and Spanish emissaries, and British ravages — Indian massacre of garrison, women and chil- dren, at Fort Mimms — Expedition from Tennessee against Creeks prepared — General Jackson assumes the command — Colonel Coffee — Difference between Militia, Volunteers, and Regular Troops — General Jackson proceeds to the frontiers — prepares for «,ctive service — Deficiency of provisions m his camp — Colonel Dyer destroys Littafutclws — First victory over Creeks at Tallushatches — Gen. Coffee's report of it to Gen. Jackson. THE superficial reader of biography, feels im- patient to arrive at the developenient of the dis- tinguished character who is the subject of it. The more critical examiner, traces the progress of the Statesman, the Soldier, and tlie Scholar, from the first dawn of his greatness, to the meridian of his glory. The untutored imagination will utter vo- ciferous hosannas to the memories of the great ; but they are as destitute of meaning, as were the enthu- siastic praises bestowed by the Ephesians, upon the geddess Diana. That applause which is offered by intelligence to.merit, is the only commendation which a great and a good man wishes to receive when in life, and it is the only sentence which will embalm his memory after his death. The same remarks may be applied to the censure which the v/orld generally bestows with more liberality than GO MEMOIRS OP it does its praise. It has been shewn that Gen. Jaclison had scarcely entered the threshold of his military life, before the cheering voice of approba- tion, as well as the dissonant notes of censure, met his ear. But he was then, and is now, a man whom merited praise cannot enervate, and whom unjust censure cannot intimidate. In the third chapter of this work, the reasons were briefly stated why the Aborigines of America* are so implacably hostile to the Anglo-Americans, especially to the citizens of the American Republic. They have been taught to believe that their Great Fathers, beyond the great waters, occupying the thrones of Britain and Spain, are their friends and protectors ; while the Americans are their enemies and destroyers. The emissaries of these great pot- entates themselves, will always disseminate and en- courage this sentiment, as long as they have colo- nies bordering upon the United States ; and as long as they need savages, as allies ^ to aid them in their Quixotic views of recoloniziiig them. Lest this fact may, by some be thought to be too confidently stated, I quote the following from the Report of the Committee on Foreign Relations^ to whom was referred the Manifesto of President Madison, of the 1st June, J8l2,— " It is known that symptoms of British hostility towards the United States, have never failed to produce corresponding symptoms among those tribes. {*' Savage tribes on our frontiers, ^^1 It is also well known, that on all ANDREW JACKSON. 61 such occasions, abundant supplies of the ordinar^ munitions of war, have been afforded by the ageri' of British commercial companies, and even ^r )m British garrisons, wherewith they were enabled to commence that system of savage warfire on our frontiers, which has been, at all times, indiscrimi- nate in its effect, on all ages, sexes, and conditions, and so revolting to humanity." This is confined to British emissaries. Before the reader reaches the close of these brief Memoirs, he will be furnished with evidence " strong as proof of holy writ" of the more aggravated injuries of the emissaries of Fer- dinand VII. of Spain. It was not until the British fleets had commen- ced their ravages upon our then defenceless sea- ports ; and the British armies had began the work of devastation upon our then unprotected frontiers, that the Creek Indians, as a tribe, advanced for a similar purpose, to the borders of the states of Georgia, Tennessee, and Missisippi. The last men- tioned state, then a territorial government, felt the first disastrous shock from a concealed storm that had long hung in awful silence upon its borders. The Spanish government, the consummate du- plicity of which is equalled only by the horrors of its despotism, had long furnished the Creeks with arms and ammunition, the better to enable them to destroy the rapidly increasing settlements of the states bordering upon Florida. As before men 6 62 MEMOIRS OF tioned, these states had defended themselves with but little aid from the general governmetit. Ill August 1813, a garrison of an hundred and fifty men, was stationed in a settlement called />«- saw,m the state o^Missisippi. They occupied an incomplete fortress, called Fort Mimms, at TcnsalOf to which many females and children had resorted for protection against the enkindled wrath of the Creek Indians, who had before, in small parties, wantonly murdered a number of families. The whole amounted to nearly 400 at the fort. But the garrison and the inhabitants were unsuspicious of a general movement of these ftrocious sons of the forest. Upon the 30th of August, the furious storm of savage warfare burst upon them with all its appal- ing horrors. From six hundred to a thousand sa- vages commenced an assault. The most veteran courage was imbecility itself against such an over- whelming superiority of force. The tragical scene that followed the possession of Fort Mimms, by the Creeks, no mind can conceive — no tongue can ex- press — no pen can describe ! The savages, having long before resolved to ask no quarters, nor to grant any, began and completed the dreadful work of human carnage. The demand of the soldier for quarters, was as ineffectual as the heart-piercing entreaties of the mother, to spare her life and that of her child. A general slaughter was made ; and out of about three hundred and seventy persons, ANDREW JACKSON. ^ G3 Soldiers, women and children, in and about the fort, but seventeen escaped. The Indians entered one of the gates of the fort, and set fire to an old building within it. Major Beasly commanded ; and with a band, tkat reminds the reader of the Spartan band^ of Leonidas at Therraopolie, maintained a conflict with more than four times their force, until they slew more than their own numbers. While this forlorn hope were selling their lives in the fort, the aged men, the helpless woijien, and shrieking children, were per- ishing in the flames in the upper story of the burn- ing building. To use the impressive language of one who was near this scene of carnage — " Under the double influence of British gold, and furious fa- naticism, the savages fought in a manner scarcely to be credited. The fight was so obstinately main- tained for a long time, that the opponents, overcome by fatigue and exertion, loaded their pieces delibe- rately, and shot each other down, or were mutually , dispatched by the bayonet and tomahawk." The solicitude which this direful catastrophe pro- duced, in all the exposed settlements upon the Mo- bile, Torabigbee, and in many other places, can better be imagined than expressed. Although the state of Tennessee was not immediately in danger, * I find in many of the official reports during* the last M'ar, a brave body of Ainencansy is called " a Spartan Band.'* I cannot see how an AinericanhAnd should be a band of Spartans, however brave they may be. 64) MEMOIRS OF yet the most energetic and elBEicient measures were taken to protect the frontiers, and avenge the mas- sacre at Fort JMinims. The legislature of that state convened toward the close of September — authorised Governour Blount to call into immedi- ate service, three thousand five hundred of the mil- itia, — and voted three hundred thousand dollars, for their support. The legislature, and indeed, the whole popula- tion of Tennessee, fixed their hopes upon General Jackson. Tiie confidence of all in him was un- bounded. Ii had long been his opinion that the only eflTectual mode of warfare against savages, was- to carry war iuto the heart of their country. Gen. Way/ie, man)^ years since, and Gen. Harrison more recently, had evinced the correctness of this opin- ion. The legislature accorded with him in senti- ment, and the command of an intended expedition devolved upon him. Gen. Jackson, had recently received a fracture in his arm, and a wound in his body, in the settle- ment of an affair of honour, in an honourable man- ner. Under any other circumstances, the severity of the wounds, and the consequent debility, would have detained him in his domestic circle. But he was born for his country — his country demanded his services ; and the ardent patriotism of his soul, made him forget the debility of his body. He was ordered by governour Blount to call out two thousand militia, and to rendezvous at Fayette- ANDREW JACKSON. 65 vide. A part of this detachment consisted of the Tennessee Volunteers, who had the preceding spring returned from Natchez. Upon the 44h of October, 18 13, the day appointed, the troops prompt- ly repaired to tlie place of rendt zvous. Colonel, soon after general, Co fee, in the mean time, had raised five hundred mounted Tokmteers, and was authorized to auis^ment his force, by adding to it the volunteer mounted riflemen who might offer their services. It would be a task highly grateful to the author, would the prescribed limits of this work permit, to give a brief sketch of this accom- plished and patriotic officer. It is enough to say, that he commenced his active miiitary life, with Andrew Jackson ; and that in the most disastrous periods of the Creek war, wlien, by the jealousy of some, the treachery of others, the intrigues of many, and the apprehensions of all, his general was left almost alone in a wilderness of blood seeking bar- I)arians, he remained '•'-faithful (wiong thefaithless^^^ till the last conctuering stroke was given. He fol- lowed the no less desperate fortune of Gen Jackson to NeivOrlccms, where he, with his general, and Iuf gallant army, acquired laurels which will never fade, until men cease to appreciate exalted patriotism. Upon the 7ih October, Gen. Jackson repaired to the rendezvous at Fayetteville ; and although in a stale of indisposition which required the repose of the hospital, rather than in that vigorous health which, is necessary to endure the fatigues of the 6 ^ 06 MEMOIRS Oi — camp, and a march through the wilderness, he as- sumed the command of the array designed to avenge the blood of their countrymen, and to con- quer the most warlike tribe of barbarians in the universe. It might be deemed presumptuous to say, that Gen. Jackson was the only man in Ten- nessee, who could successfully command an array destined to accomplish this arduous and perilous duty ; but it ma} , without hesitation be said, that no man at that time, had so completely secured the confidence, and raised the hopes of the civil and military power of that state, as he. He found the troops assembled, deficient in num- bers, and was aware that few of them had *« seen service." The difi'erence between drafted militia, volunteer troops, and enlisted soldiers has been slightly alluded to. It will be readily acknowledg- ed by every officer and every soldier in the late war. It does not arise from a difference of patri- otism oj courage, for both are inherent with all true Americans. It may probably be imputed to the difference in their organization. The Militiay in times of peace, consider the performance of military service rather as a pastime, than a duty ; and cannot be brought, suddenly, to submit to the rigid discipline of the camp. The Volunteers^ are impelled by love of country, and a thirst for fame, to fly, unasked to the standard of the Repub- lic ; but when the impulse that led them there has subsided, and they find that glory is to be acquired ANDREW JACKSON. 67 by a long coarse of severe duty, apathy often suc- ceeds to aniinatioii ; and many are ready to exclaim with Byron, *' / zoant no other Paradise but rest'''' The soldiers^ enter the army to make a trade of war. They study discipline as a business ; and courage with them is not only a principle, but it is a system. To conquer, to be captured, or to die, is a matter of course and of necessity ; and if disas- ters are remediless, when they happen, they en- dure them without a murmur. Gen. Jackson, at the time he commenced his second expedition, and his first against the Creeks, had no United States* troops under his command ; indeed he had no authority himself under the gen- eral government, being senior major general of Tennessee militia. He commenced the arduous duty of converting citizens to soldiers, and resorted to every possible expedient which a prudent as well as an intrepid commander could devise to en- sure success. The previous character — The pres- ence and example of the general, inspired the sol- diers with confidence, and gave them victory in anticipation. Colonel CoiTee had penetrated with his cavalry and mounted volunteers towards the frontiers, and was stationed near Huntsville. In the Creek na- tion Vv'ere many natives in amity with the United States. From them, important information was obtained, and by them, essential service was ren- dered. Upon the 8th, colonel Coffee informed 68 MEMOIRS Of Gen. Jackson, by express, that froai infornaatioii derived from Indian runners, the hostile Creeks were in great force, and intended, simultaneously to attack the frontiers of Georgia and Tennessee. U^ion the 10th, Gen. Jackson, in an unprepared state, took up the line of march ; and what is per- haps without a parallel for the first day's march, reached Huntsviile the same evening, a distance of from thirty to forty miles. Colonel Coffee had reached the Tennessee river, and Gen. Jackson, the next day, overtook him, and united with his re- giment upon the bank of that river. Aware that <' procrastination is the thief of time," and that the ardour of rau- and undisciplined troops was soon cooled, he dispatched coldnei Coffee with his mounted corps, to explore the river Big Warrior, and Etomb-igaby^ commonly called Tombigbee. He encamped his own division upon the Tennes- see, and was indefatigable in preparing them for active service. He remained here but a week ; and what will excite the astonishment of those who have witnessed the slow progress of raw troops to the character of veteran soldiers, he made his ar- my such in that time. The mystery is explained when it is said, in this corps, at this time, they found pleasure in the performance of duty, and the per- formance of duty, was the enjoyment of pleasure. In the camp of Gen. Jackson, there could hardly be said to be a commissary department at this time ; and he depended upon various contractors for ca- ANDREW JACKSON. JQS^ sual rather than regular supplies of provisions. An alarming deficiency was found to exist, and an uncertainty of supplies was made known. Nothing could be so much calculated to repress military ardour as this discovery. Men who would face death in its most horrible forms, will turn to chil- dren at the approach of famine. Gen. Jackson, by measures the most efficient, and by entreaties the most urgent, endeavoured to secure a supply. Un- dismayed himself, he set an example of cheerful- ness before his followers, that for a time dispelled their apprehensions. At this critical period, information was received that the Creeks were embodied near the Ten Islands on the Coosa, Collecting what provisions could be obtained, but a few days' supply, he commenced his march upon the iSth for Thompson's Creek. His route led through a mountainous country, which would seem to have defied the passage of an army and the appendages of it. Upon the 22d he ar- rived there, where he remained until certain infor- mation was received that the Creeks would soon commence active operations upon the Coosa. The warriors, to an amount whoHy unknown, but who were supposed to be very numerous, had assembled? in warlike array at Talhishatches. Col. Dyer had before been dispatched to attack, and if possible, destroy the Indian town oi Littcifut- ches. He destroyed the place ; and upon the SSth, returned to camp with twenty-nine prisoners of the 70 MEMOIRS OF hostile Creeks, extending that mercy to them b> sparing their lives, which their system of warfare prohibited them from extending to Americans. The main body was encamped about thirteen miles from Tallushatches ; and upon the 1st of November, a small supply of provision was brought into camp. Col. Coffee had been promoted to a brigadier- general ; and was dispatched early upon the 2d, with 900 cavalry, and mounted riflemen, to attack the Creeks in their encampment. Gen. Jackson, although convalescent, was at this time, extremely debilitated from long indisposition, ex- cessive fatigue, and extreme solicitude, and had no use of one arm ; but in Gen. Cofifee, he bad an offi- cer to whom he might safely entrust an expedition of any importance, and of any danger. The result of this first important engagement, I present to the reader in the language of " Official Beports.^^ Deeming this altogether the most pre- ferable mode of furnishing the reader with the de- tails of battles, I shall adopt it through the work, when they can be obtained. Gen. JACKSON, to Gov. BLOUNT. I Cajnp at Ten Islands, Nov. Wi^ 1813, GOVERKOUR BXOUNT, Sir — We have retaliated for the destruction of Fort Mimms. On the 2d, I detached Gen. Coffee with a part of his brigade of cavalry and mounted riflemen, to destroy Tallushatches, where a consid- ANDREW JACKSON. 7X erable force of the hostile Creeks were concen- trated. The General executed this in style. An hundred and eighty-six of the enemy were found dead on the field, and about 80 taken prisoners, 40 of whom have been brought here. In the number left, there is a sufficiency but slightly wounded to take care of those who are badly.' I have to regret that 5 of my brave fellows have been killed, and about 30 wounded ; some badly, but none I hope mortally. Both officers and men behaved with the utmost bravery and deliberation. Captains Smith, Bradley, and Winston are wound- ed, all slightly. No officer is killed. So soon as Gen. Coffee makes his report, I shall enclose it. If we had a sufficient supply of provisions, we should in a very short time accomplish the object of the expedition. I have the honour to be, with great respect, yours, &.C. ANDREW JACKSON. P. S. Seventeen Cherokees, under the command of Col. Brown, acted with great bravery in the action. Two of Chenubby's sons, and Jim Fife, of the Natchez tribe, also distinguished themselves. One of the Creek prophets is killed. A. J. It will be noticed that Gen. Jackson, merely alludes to the subject of provisions ; but from 72 MEMOIRS OJ* numerous sources of correct information, it is cer- tain at that time, that a very scanty supply was on hand. The following is general Coffee's report of the Battle of Taieushatches, alluded to in the letter to Gov. Blount. Brig. Gen. COFFEE, to Mu. Gen. JACKSON. Camp at Ten Islands, Nov. 4ith, 1813. Maj. Gen. Jackson, Sir — I had the honour yesterday, of transmitting you a short account of an engagement that took place between a detachment of about 900 men from my brigade, with the enemy at Tallushatches town ; the particulars whereof I beg leave herein to recite you. Pursuant to your order of the 2(1, I detailed from my brigade of cavalry and mounted riflemen, 900 men and officers, and proceediiig di- rectly to the Tallushatches towns, crossed Coosa river at the Fish Dam ford, 3 or 4 miles above this place. I arrived within one and a half miles of the town, (distant from this place southeast 8 miles,) on the morning of the 3d, at which place I divided my detachment into two columns, the right compo- sed of the cavalry commanded by Col. Allcorn, to cross over a large creek that lay between us and the towns : the left column was of the mounted riflemen under the command of Col. Cannon, with whom I marched myself. Col. Allcorn was order- ed to march up on the right, and encircle one half ANDRE\V JACKSON. f$ of the town, and at the same time the left would form a half circle on tlie left, and unite the head of the columns in front of the town : all of which was performed as I could wish. When I arrived within half a mile of the town, the drums of the enemy began to beat, mingled with their savage yells, preparing for action. It was after sunrise an hour when the action was brought on by Capt. Ham- mond and Lieut. Patterson's companies, who had gone on within the circle of alignment for the pur- pose of drawing out the enemy from their build- ings, which had the most happy effect. As soon as Capt. Hammond exhibited his front in view of the town, (which stood in an open woodland) and gave a few scattering shot, the enemy formed and made a violent charge on him ; he gave way as they advanced, until they met our right column, which gave them a general fire, and then charged ; this changed the direction of charge completely ; the enemy retreated firing, until they got around, and in their buildings, where they made all the resist- ance that an overpowered soldier could do ; they fought as long as one existed, but their destruction was very soon completed ; our men rushed up to the doors of the houses, and in a few minutes killed the last warrior of them ; the enemy fought with savage fury, and met death with all its horrors, without shrinking or complaining : not one asked to be spared, but fought as long as they could stand or sit. In consequence of their flying to their hou- 7 74s MEMOIRS 01' ses and mixing with the families, our meu, In kil: ling the males, without intention, killed and wound- ed a few of the squaws and children, which was regretted by every officer and soldier of the de- tachment, but which could not be avoided. The number of the enemy killed, was 186, that were counted, and a number of others that were killed in the weeds not found. I think the calcu- lation a reasonable one, to say 200 of them were killed, and 84 prisoners of women and children, were taken ; not one of the warriors escaped to carry the news, a circumstance unknown hereto- fore. We lost 5 men killed, and 41 wounded, none mor- tally, the greater part slightly, a number with ar- rows ; this appears to form a very principal part of the enemy's arms for warfare, every man having a bow with a bundle of arrows, which is used after the first fire with the gun, until a leisure time for loading offers. It is with pleasure I say that our men acted with deliberation and firmness — notwithstanding our numbers were superior to that of the enemy, it was a circumstance to us unknown, and froai the parade of the enemy we had every reason to suppose them our equals in number : but there appeared no visible traces of alarm in any, but on the con- trary all appeared cool and determined, and no doubt when they face a foe of their own, or superi- ANDREW JACKSON. 75 or number, they will show the same courage as on this occasion. I have the honour to be, very respectfully, sir, your obedient servant, JOHN COFFEE. Brig. Gen. of Cavalry and Riflemen. Maj. Gen. Andrew Jackson. Killed^ 5 privates. Wonndedi 4i captains, 2 lieutenants, 2 cornets, 3 sers^eants, 5 corporals, 1 artificer, 24 privates. Total killed and wounded, 46. In this report, the reader will readily see, that while general Coffee is gratified at communicating an account of victory, he is grieved at some of the circumstances attending it. '' Not one," he says, *' asked to be spared" — and without asking quarter, and continuing to fight, they could Jiot be spared. The regret expressed at killing and wounding some of the women and children, min- gled with the warriors, and which could not be avoided, shews that brave men are always humane. 7^^ MEMOIRS OF CHAPTER VI. Tennessee forces — Collisions in armies — Establishment of Foit Strother — Perilous situation of friendly Creeks — Dispatch to Gen. White — his conduct— Battle of Talladega — Geh. Jack- bon's account of it. AT the commencement of the campaign, in the Creek nation, in 1813, the Tennessee forces, Mili- tia and Volunteers, that were called into service, consisted of two divisions — one of West Tennes- see, commanded by Maj. Gen. Jackson, the oth- er of East Tennessee, commanded by Maj. Gen. Cocke. The division of the Tennessee forces seemed to be governed by the division which na- ttire has made of this state by the range of the Cumberland mountains, running from north to south. Maj. Gen. Thomas Pinckney, of the Uni- ted States' array, was commander in chief of the military district in which these troops were raised and organized. Whether 14. was designed by the executive of Tennessee that the two divisions of its forces should act in concert, or remain two distinct corps, acting independently of each other, cannot positively be determined by the writer. The first is altogether the most probable ; indeed it is rendered almost certain from the course pursued by Gen. Jack- son. It cannot for a moment be supposed, that a man who had so long been in public lifC'— filling ANDREW JACKSON. 77 exalted and highly responsible stations in the civil and military departments, would arrogate to him- self an authority which was not expressly, or by the fairest implication, bestowed upon him. He is- sued orders to the division under Gen. Cocke. The unfortunate collisions, misunderstandings, and jealousies which for a time obstructed, and nearly thwarted the important and hazardous expedition into the country of the Creeks, though reluctantly, must necessarily, be alluded to, to shosv the course pursued by Gen. Jackson. Although the patriot will lament the exist en e of feuds in a patriotic army, let it be remem!)ertd they were not confined to the militia in the last war, nor to those between the militia of the staies, and the national forces ; but that they existed in some departments of the United States' army itself. The northern campaign of 18 13, is not forgotten, nor the ' Failure of our arms on the Northern Frontier^ erased from recollection. Gen. Wiikuison declares in a General Order — '* The Commander in Chief is compelled to retire, [from the Canadian shore,] by the extraordinary, unexampled, and it appears^ unwarrantable conduct of Maj. Gtn. Hampton, In refusing to join this army with a division of 4000 men under his command, agreeable to posi- tive orders from the Commander in Chief." The brilliant victory at Tallr.shatches, and the total defeat of the savages, from which, to use the language of Gen. Coffee, " not one of the warriors 7 ^ 78 MEMOIRS OF escaped to tell the news^^ induced Gen. Jackson to take the most efficient measures to follow up the encouraging success the army had met with, by more important operations. To accomplish this, he sent an express upon Nov. 4th, (the date of his first official account,) to Brig. Gen. White of Gen. Cocke's division, who was only twenty-five miles distant, ordering him with the troops in his com- mand, to form a junction with him at Fort Strother, which he had established as a depot. His object in forming this junction, was to augment liis forces to such an amount, as to enable him to go forward with confidence in attacking the enemy, and leave a force in the rear sufficient to protect the sick, and guard the baggage. Althougli he had twice before sent similar orders, not a word of intelligence was received from him. Upon the 7th, he dispatched another express. Upon this day information was received by Gen. Jackson, that a fortress of friendly Indians at Talladega, thirty miles distant from Fort Strother, was in imminent danger of total destruc- tion, and the natives to indiscriminate massacre, by the hostile Creeks. They had espoused the cause of the Americans ; and of course had incurred all the vengeful malice which natural ferocity, increas- ed by religious fanaticism, could feel towards them. They were surrounded by a numerous body of infu- riated Creeks. Their runners beseeched Gen. Jack- son to relieve them from their perilous situation. The same sentiment that induced the general to hazard his reputation in protecting his countrymen ANDREW JACKSON. 79 at Natchez, induced him, without hesitation, to ex- tend protection to those faithful natives, whose fate was identified with the success or defeat of the American arms. He commenced his march, com- manding in person, at 12 o'clock in the evening. He dispatched another express to Gen. White, to repair that night to Fort Strother and protect it in his absence. To his inexpressible surprise, in a short time he received a message from him that he had, agreeable to his order, commenced a march to Fort Strother, bat that he had received counter or- ders from Maj. Gen. Cocke, to join him at Chatuga creek ! — and that he should obey him ! A situation more embarrassing can hardly be imagined. His sick and baggage in his rear, liable every moment to destruction — the friendly Creeks in his front in momentary danger of annihilation. The hour of decision had come. Relying upon the gallantry of his troops — knowing the justice of his cause, and hoping for the protection of heaven, he rapidly advanced upon the enemy, ignorant of their force. The result 1 give in the general's own lan-r guage. Maj. Gek. JACKSON to Gov. BLOUNT. Camp Strother, near Ten Islands of Coosa. Nov. nth, 1813. Sir — I am just returned from an excursion which I took a few days ago, and hasten to acquaint yon with the result. 80 MEMOIRS OP Late on the evenhij^ of the 7th inst a runner arrived from the friendly party iuLashley's Fort, (Talladega) distant about thirty miles below us with the information that the hostile Creeks, in great force, had encamped near the place, and were preparinsj to destroy it ; and earnestly entreated that I would lose no tim^ in affording them relief. Urged by their situation, as well as by a wish to meet the enemy so soon as an opportunity would oflTer, I determined upon commencing my march thither with all my disposable force, in the course of the night ; and immediately dispatched an .ex- press to Gen White, advising: him of my intended movement, and urged him to hasten to this encamp- ment by a forced march, in order to protect it in my absence* I had repeatedly written to the general, to form a junction with me as speedily as practica- ble, and a few days before had received his.assurance, that on the 7th he would join me. I commenced crossing the river at the Ten Islands, leavini^ be- hind me my baggage waggons and whatever might retard my progress ; and encamped that night with- in six miles of the fort 1 had set out to relieve. At midnight I had received by an Indian runner, a letter from Gen. White, informing me that he had received my order, but that he had altered his course, and was on his march backwards to join Major Gen. Cocke, near the mouth of the Cliatuga. I will not now remark upon the strangeness of this manoeuvre: but it was now too late to change my ANDREW JACKSON, ^ plan, or make any new arrangements ; and be- tween 3 and 4 o'clock, I recommenced my march to meet the enemy, who were encamped within a quarter of a mile of the fort. At sunrise we came within half a mile of them, and having formed my men, I moved on in battle order. The Infantry were in three lines — the militia on the left, and the volunteers on the right. The cavalry formed the two extreme wings, and were ordered to advance in a. curve, keeping their rear connected with the ad- vance of their infantry lines, and enclose the enemy in a circle. The advanced guard whom I sent for- ward to bring on the engagement, met the attack of the enemy with great intrepidity ; and having pour^ ed upon them four or five very galling rounds, fell back as they had been previously ordered, to the main army. The enemy pursued, and the front line was now ordered to advance and meet him ; but owing to some misunderstanding, a few companies of militia, who composed a part of it, commenced a retreat. At this moment a corps of cavalry, com- manded by Lieut. Col. Dyer, which I had kept as a reserve was ordered to dismount, and fill up the vacancy occasioned by the retreat. This order was executed with a great deal of promptitude and ef- fect. The militia seeing this, speedily rallied : and the fire became general along the front line, and on that part of the wings which was contiguous. The enemy, unable to stand it, began to retreat ; but were met at every turn, and repulsed in every 82 MEMOIRS OF direction. The right wing chased them, with a most destructive fire, to the mountains, a distance of about three miles — and had I not been compelled by the faux pas of the militia in the outset of the battle, to dismount my reserve, I believe not a man of them would have escaped. The vicjtory, how- ever, was very decisive — 290 of the enemy were left dead — and there can be no doubt but many more were killed who were not found. Wherever they ran, they left behind traces of blood ; and it is believed that very few will return to their villages in as sound a condition as they left them, I was compelled to return to this place to protect the sick and wounded, and get my baggage on. In the engagement, we lost 15 killed, and ^^ wounded — 2 of them have since die d. All the offi- cers acted with the utmost bravery, and so did all the privates, except that part of the militia who re- treated at the commencement of the battle — and they hastened to atone for their error. Taking the whole together they have realized the high ex- pectations I had formed of them, and have fairly en- titled themselves to the gratitude of their country. ANDREW JACKSON. His Excellency Willie Blount, Nashville, The following additional dispatch completes the account of the B\ttle of Talladega. Camp SlrothcTy near Fen Islands ^ 1 5th N$v. 1813. You will perreive from a draft which I shall send you, that had tliere been no departure from the ori- ANDREW JACKSON. 83 ginal order of battle, not an Indian could have es- caped ; and even as the battle did terminate, I believe that no impartial man can say that a more splendid result, has, in any instance attended our arras on land, since the commencement of the war. The force of the enemy is represented by them- selves to have been 1080 ; and it does not appear from their fire and the space of ground which they occupied, that their number can have been less. Two hundred and ninety-nine were left dead on the ground ; and no doubt many more were killed who were not found. It is believed that very few esca- ped without a wound. In a very few weeks, if I had a sufficiency of supplies, I am thoroughly con- vinced I should be able to put an end to Creek hostilities. Too much praise cannot be bestowed upon the advance, led on by Col. Carrol, for the spirited man- ner in which they commenced and sustained the attack ; nor upon the reserve, commanded by Lieut. Col. Dyer, and composed of Capt's. Smith's Morton's, Axum's, Edwards', and Hammond's com- panies, for the gallantry with which they met and repulsed the enemy. In a word, officers of every grade, as well as the privates, realized the high expectations I had formed of them, and merit the gratitude of their country. I should be doing injustice to my staff, composed of Majors Reidand Searcy, my aids, Col Sitler and Major Anthony, Adjutant, and assistant Adjutant- 84} MEMOIRS OT General ; Col. Carrol, Inspector-General ; Major j Strother, topographer ; Mr. Cunningham, my Sec- I retary ; and Col. Stokey D. Haynes, Quarter-Mas- \ ter-General ; not to say that they were every where inthemidstofdanger,circulatiDg my orders. They j deserve and receive my thanks. I have the honour to be, &c. ANDREW JACKSON. i In reading this account of the second victory ob- ; tained over the Creeks, it cannot have escaped the ! notice of the reader, with what delicacy the gene- i ral mentions the retreat of a part of his force, and ; with what readiness he endeavours to exculpate ' them from censure, by saying — ** thei/ hastened te \ atone for their error?"* This retreat, however, had a '■ most pernicious efiect. It tended to excuse subse- j quent retreats, and to encourage the desponding \ hopes of the Indian warriors. When they once saw \ an assailing enemy shrink from a sanguinary com ' bat, they expected to see it again. \ ANDREW JACKSON. 85 CHAPTER VII. Consequences of Brig. Gen. White's conduct — Hillahees sue for ^ peace to Gen. Jackson — Gen. White destroys their towns- Measures of the Georgia Legislature^ Victory at Autoussee—- Brig. Gen. Floyd's account of it — Gen. Jackson's situation in December, 1813 — Mutiny among his troops — also in Gen. Cof- fee's brigade — dismissal of both. IN consequence of the refusal of Brig. Gen. White to form a junction with Gen. Jackson, or to repair to Fort Strother in his absence, he was com- pelled to relinquish his intentions of carrying the war forward into the Indian territories, and to re- turn hack with his wounded to that fortress. This conduct of Gen. White, acting under Maj. Gen. Cocke, was productive of a double disadvantage, and a double injury — it prolonged the war with the Creeks, and compelled those of them who wish- ed for peace, to continue to fight. The Hillabee tribes, after the signal victory at Talladega^ were solicitous to make peace \yith Gen. Jackson and the United States. He was as ready to negociate as to conquer ; but before any terms could be made, Gen. White attacked them — and, while they were preparing to bury the tom- ahawk, they were compelled to wield it. Suppos- ing^ that the forces under Gen. White, were a part of Gen. Jackson's army, and that while they were sueijig for peace, to be assailed by a superior force, 8 SG> MEMOIRS Of was unjustifiable duplicity, they became more en- raged than ever. Desperation took the place of timidity, and, during the remainder of the war, the HiJlabees never asked quarter, nor granted it. They fought with the raging fury of maniacs ; and each one seemed to have become a " Son ofAlkno- fnockf who scorned to cotnplain''^ — they asked no favours, and extended no mercy. Gen. White destroyed the Hillabee towns as he enterd them by conflagration. The first town was Little Oakfiiskie^ of thirty houses ; the second Genalga, of ninety-three houses. Nittt/ Choptoa, to use his own language, he " considered it most prudent not to destroy, as it might possibly be of use at some future period.'' Upon the iSth No- vember, he entered an Hillabee town, " consisting" as he says, " oi about 3J6, (hostile Creeks,) of which number, about 60 warriors were killed on the spot, and the rest made prisoners." This town he also destroyed. In his report he says — " We lost not one drop of blood in accomplishing this enter- prize." It is without a parallel, in Indian warfare, that so many warriors should be slain and captu- red, and " not one drop of blood" should be lost by the force assailing thera ; and can be accounted for^ perhaps upon no other principle, than that the Hill' abees scorned to shed the blood of those to whom they were, at the very time, supplicating for peace ! The facts are before the reader — he must make his own inferences. It will surely be recollected that ANDREW JACKSON. sir Gen. Jackson, however sanguinary necessity com- pelled him to make the war after this period, had hitherto exercised a lenity towards the Creeks, al- most inconsistent with energy. He had acted like an humane conqueror, who chose rather to concili- ate a ruthless foe by mercy, than to exterminate them by the sword. It has previously been stated, that the Creeks, had determined to attack the frontiers of Georgia and Tennessee, simultaneously. Measures equally efficient with those adopted by the executive and legislature of Tennessee were adopted by the ex- ecutive and legislature of Georgia. His Excel- lency Peter Early ^ governour of that state, upon the 8th November, 18 1 3, communicated to the Senate and House of Representatives, the informa- tion he had received of savage depredations and murders upon the frontiers. The legislature im- mediately authorized the governour, to cause the frontiers to be put in a state of defence, and to send a sufficient force into the heart of the Creek country. As the executive and military powers of Georgia acted in concert with Gen. Jackson, the measures pursued by them must necessarily be al- luded to. Brig. Gen. John Floyd^ commanded the Georgia militia. The victory obtained by him at Autoussee upon the Talapoosa river, was a signal advantage to the American arms. It tended to increase the fears of the Creeks, and to hasten the conquest of 38 MEMOIRS Olr their country. Sensible that no description of tills battle will be so gratifying to the reader, as that given to the accomplished commander of the gal- lant troops who achieved the victory, I present it in the language of the general to Gov. Early. " Having received information that numbers of the hostile Indians were assembled at Autoussee,^ town on the southern bank of the Talapoosa, about 18 miles from the Hickory Ground, and 20 above the junction of that river with the Coosa, I proceeded to its attack, with 950 of the Georgia militia, accompanied by between 3 and 400 friend- ly. Indians. Having encamped withiai nine or ten miles of the point of destination the preceding evening, we resumed the march, a few minutes before one on the morning of the 29th, and at half past six were formed for action in front of the town. Booth's battalion composed the right column, and marched from its centre. Watson*s battalion composed the left, and marched from its right Adams' rifle company, and Mcrriwether's under Lieut. Hendon, were on the flanks—Capt. Thomas' artillery marched in front of the right column in the road. It was my intention to have completely surroun- ded the enemy, hy appaying the right wing of my force, on Canleebee Creek, at the mouth of which I was informed the town stood, and resting the left on the river bank below the town, but to ANDREW JACKSON. S^ our surprise, as the day dawned, we perceived a second town about 500 yards below that which we had first viewed, and were preparing to attack. The plan was immediately changed — three com- panies of infantry on the left were wheeled into echelon^ and advanced to the low town, accompa- nied by Merriwether's rifle company, and two troops of light dragoons under the command of Captains Irwin and Steele. The residue of the force approached the upper town, and the battle soon became general. The Indians presented themselves at every point, and fought with the desperate bravery of real fanatics. The well directed fire, however of the artillery, added to the charge of the bayonet, soon forced them to take refu2;e in the out-houses, thickets, and copses, in rear of the town; many, it is believed, concealed themselves in caves, previously formed for the purpose of secure retreat, in the high bluff of the river, which was thickly covered with reed and brush wood. The Indians of the friendly pat- ty who accompanied us on the expedition, were di- vided into four companies, and placed under the command of leaders of their selection. They were, by engagement entered into the day previous, to have crossed the river above the town, and been post- ed on the opposite shore during the action, for the purpose of firing on such of the enefwy as might attempt to escape, or keep in check any reinforce- ment which might probably be thrown in fi:om the 8 ^ [)0 ilKMOmS OF neighbouring town; but owing to the difficulty o£ the ford, aiid coldness of the weather, and the lateness of the hour, this arrangement failed, and their leaders were directed to cross Canleebee creek, and occupy that tlank, to prevent escapes from the Tallassee town. Some time after the ac- tion commenced, our red friends thronged in disor- er in the rear of our lines. The Cowetaws under M'Intosh, and Tookaubatchians under the Mad Dog's Son, fell in on our flanks, and fought with an intrepidity worthy of any troops. At 9 o'clock, the enemy was completely driven from the plain, and the houses of both towns wrap- ped in flames. As we were then 60 miles from any depot of provisions, and our five days' rations pretty much reduced, in the heart of an enemy's country, which, in a few moments, could have poured from its numerous towns, hosts of the fiercest warriors — as soon as the dead and wounded were properly disposed of, I ordered the place to be abandoned, and the troops to commence their march to Chata- houchie. It is difiicult to determine the strength of the en- emy, but from the information of some of the chiefs, which it is said can be relied upon, tliere were as- sembled at Autoussee, warriors from eight towns, for its defence, it being their beloved ground on' which they proclaimed no white man could approach ■without inevitable destruction. It is difficult to give a precise account of the loss of the enemy ; ANDREW JACKSON. ' 91 but from the number which were lying scattered over tJie field, together with those destroyed in the towns, and the raany slain on the bank of the river, which respectable efficers affirm they saw iaying in heaps at the waters' edge, where they had been precipitated by their surviving friends, their loss in killed, independent of their wounded, must have been at least 200 [among whom were the Autoussee and Tallassee kings] and from the cir- cumstance of their making no efforts to molest our return, probably greater. The number of buildings burnt, some of a superiour order for the dwellings of savages, and filled with valuable articles, is sup- posed to be 400. Adjt. Gen. Newman rendered important services during the action, by his cool and deliberate cour- age. My aid, Major Crawford, discharged with promptitude the duties of a brave and raeritorous officer. Maj. Pace, who acted as field aid, also distinguished hijuself ; both these gentlemen had their horses shot under them, and the latter lost his. Dr. Williamson, hospital surgeon, and Dr. CloptoD, were prompt and attentive in the dis- charge of their duty towards the wounded, during the action. Major Freeman, at the head of Irwin's troop of cavalry, and part of Steele's, made a furious and successful charge upon a body of Indians, sabred se- veral, and completely defeated them ; Capt. Thom- as and his company, Capt. Adams and Lieut. Hen- 92 MEMOIRS OF don's rifle companies, killed a great many Indians, and deserve particular praise : Capt. Barton's com- pany M'as in the hottest of the battle, and fought like soldiers. Capt. Myric, Capt. Little, Capt- King, Capt. Broadnax, Capt. Cleaveland, Capt. Jo- seph T. Cunningham, anvl Capt. Lee, with their companies, distinguished themselves. Brig. Gen. Shackleford was of great service in bringing the troops into action ; and Adjt. Broadnax, and Major Blontgomery, who acted as assistant Adjutant, show- ed great activity and courage. Major Booth used his best endeavours in bringing his battalion to ac- tion, and Maj. Watson's battalion acted with con- siderable spirit. Irwin's Patterson's, and Steele's troops of cavalry, whenever an opportunity present- ed, charged with success. Lieut. Strong had his horse shot, and narrowly escaped, and Quarter Master Tennell displayed the greatest heroism., and miraculously escaped, though badly wounded, after having his horse shot from under him. The topo- graphical engineer was vigilant in his endeavours to render service. The troops deserve the highest praise for their fortitude in enduring hunger, cold, and fatigue, without a murmur, having marched 120 miles in seven days. The friendly Indians lost several killed and wound- ed, the number not exactly known. Capt. Barton, an active and intelligent officer, (the bearer of these dispatches) can more particularly explain to your ANDREW JACKSON. 98 excellency the conduct, movements, and operations of the army." The importance of this victory may be duly ap- preciated, when it is considered, that besides the death of two kings, and two hundred warriors — double that number wounded — and four hundred superiour Indian residences destroyed ; the reli- gious charm that had led them on to desperation, was dissolved. Upon " their beloved ground on which they proclaimed no lu/iite man could approach^ tdthout inevitable destruction,^'' they saw their cliiefs and warriors fall — their houses consume, and the whites lose but eleven men. It is a little singular that Gen. Floyd should mention every officer that was wounded, and even every officer's horse that was killed, and omit to mention, that he was very badly wounded himself. A brave man is always modest in regard to his own merits ; but the general seemed to have that modes- ty, which may be denominated, false, in omitting this in his official report. While these interesting events were taking place in one part of the Creek country, Gen. Jsckson was placed in a most unpleasant, not to say peril- ous, situation, at Fort Strother. His volunteers, who had become familiar with service, by descend- ing the Missisippi the preceding campaign, and who, with the Tennessee militia, had become famil- iar with victory over the Creeks, began to look toward home^ for the ease and tranquillity of private 04 MEMOIRS OF life, and to the ordinary pursuits of private business, as the means of advancing private interest. No man in the service had more reasons to wish and pant for retirement, than Gen. Jackson. His so- licitude as commander — his extremely debilitated state of health — the disaffection of his men — the deficiency of supplies for his arm}'— the conduct of the East Tennessee militia, under Gen. Cocke, and the open mutiny of some part of his army? presented a tissue of discouraging considerations, which would have disheartened a man of more than ordinary fortitude. Had he retired from the ser- vice of his country at this time, he would have re- tired with honour and with approbation. But he believed, ami tc acted upon the principle, that until '* all was done, nothing loas done.^^ He kiiew that the hopes of the frontier settlers of Tennessee and Georgia were fixed upon him ; he knew that they had derived encouragement from his successes, and that from his exertions they hoped to be placed in a state of permanent security. Having encoun- tered and overcome diflaculties before, he resolved to encounter them again, for he was now in the midst of them. The '' Tennessee Volunteers," claimed to be discharged on the ground of having served one year out o{ txvo, from the time they were organized. Many of the officers, who belonged to this corps, deserted the ground they ought to have maintained as soldiers, and resorted to arguments which would ANDREW JACKSON. 95 have disgraced pettifoggers. Although they had not served a year, they had for that period been organized, and they were very much disposed to give weight to arguments which coincided with their inclinations. They resolved to leave a wil- derness where they were surrounded by implacable enemies ; exposed to severe privations, and in ex- pectation of enduring the dreadful horrors of fa- mine. Gen. Jackson exerted every faculty to arouse their desponding spirits. He appealed to the pride of the volunteers, by reminding them of the expedition to Natchez, and of the victories which they, and the militia, had gained over the Creeks. He appealed to the sensibility of them all, by rep- resenting the danger of their fathers and mothers, their wives and children. He alluded to the mas- sacre at Fort Mimms, in Missisippi, and endeavour- ed to arouse their revenge. H6 endeavoured to excite their vanity, by speaking of the fame the " Tennessee Volunteers" had acquired at Tallns- hatches and Talladega. But every avenue to per- suasion was closed. The cogent addresses of the general, were lost upon the apathy of the soldiers, and the volunteers became mutineers. The gene- ral laid aside the language of entreaty and assumed that of command. He prevented, at the hazard of his life, the departure of the troops ; but soon found that an array which nqnired one half of it to guard the other, had no efficiency. He ordered them to be marched home, and to be disposed of by the President, or the Governour of Tennes&ee- 9G MEMOIRS OF It was now about the middle of December. Gen. Cocke, had for the first time joined Gen. Jackson ; but upon finding the time for which Ms men were enlisted, had nearly expired, and that he could not hope from patriotism, what he could not enforce by power, he ordererl Gen. Cocke to march his troops home. But few troops now remained with Gen. Jackson. Soon after the battle of Tal- ladega, Brig. Gen. Coffee's mounted volunteers and cavalry, were permitted to retire into the set- tlements, to recruit the^Jr horses. They were fo rendezvous at Huntsville, in Missisippi, upon the 8th December, where Gen. Coffee was dangerously sick. Upon this excellent officer and his gallant men, Gen. Jackson placed the most confident reli- ance. They rendezvoused upon the 8th ; but they had caught the infection that pervaded the infantry — the fever of private life. They however pro- ceeded toward head quarters ; but they were no longer *^ the men they ivere.'*^ It must always b^ admitted, that they had already rendered essential service to their country, and it was the reputation they liad acquired, that rendered it desirable to have them continue in the service. Gen. Jackson, seconded in al! his views by the gallant Coffee, and by many patriots of the first water, exerted again 'lis great powers ; but exerted them in vain. Gov. Blount ordered the volunteers to be dumissed, and they returncfl home. ANDREW JACKSOX. 9? CHAPTER VIII. General Jackson's situation at the commencement of 1814 — his hopes revive — Victory at Eccanachaca, or Holy Ground — With- erford, the Indian Prophet — Col. Carroll joms Gen. Jackson — Victories at Emuckfa-w^ Jan. 22d — at EnotachopcOf the 24th — Gen. Jackson's official report of them — ^Applause bestowed upon soldiers, GEN. JACKSON was now in a situation which required all the fortitude of the man — all the nerve of the soldier, aud all the sagacity of the statesman. Fie held frequent communications with Gov. Blount of Tennessee, Gov. Early of Georgia, and Maj. Gen Pinckney; and his opinion seemed to be a guide for their'* s. Certain it is, that Gov. Blount, toward the close of 1813, owing to the disaflectiou of the Tennessee troops, and the reluctance with which volunteers appeared, recommended an aban- donment of the expedition into the Creek country. The urgent and cogent expostulations of Gen. Jackson, induced him to change his opinion, and to resort to the most energetic measures to prosecute the war which had been so successfully commenced by hirn. Perhaps the situation of Gen. Jackson, at this time, cannot be better described than it is in the following lett€r,nvritten by a gentleman, known by the author to be of the first respectability. 9 98 MEMOIRS OF Huntsville, M. T.Dec, 23, 1818. « Since the battle of Tallushatches and Tallade- ga, the army of Gen. Jackson has crumbled to pie- ces. The whole of bis volunteer infantry are returning home — insisting that their time of service expired on the lOthof this month, being the anniver- sary of their rendezvous at Nashville. The general, however, did not discharge them ; the decision is left with the governour of Tennessee. What be will do, is not yet known. The universal impression, however, is, that they will be discharged. Yet nothing is more clear than that they have not ser- ved 12 months — and they were, by law, to serve 12 months in a period of 2 years, unless sooner discharged. The general's force now at fort Stro- ther. Ten Islands of Toosa, may amount to about 1600 men, chiefly drafted militia. Of these, nearly the whole will be entitled to discharge about the 4th of the ensuing month. It is supposed that not more than 150, or 200 (who are attached to the general personally, and will remain through motives of afl'cction,) will be left with him after that day. Doubtless you know that the brigade of cavalry volunteers and mounted riflemen under the com- mand of Gen. Coffee, were some time since ordered into the settlements to recruit their horses for a few days, and procure new ones. About half, perhaps 800, appeared at the day and place of rendezvous ; but of these not more than 600 would consent to go on after the 10th. About half of this last num- ANDREW JACKSON. 99 ber were of the old volunteer cavalry, the rest mounted men newly raised. The first will cer- tainly return with the vohniteer infantry, their term commencing and expiring together. The last claim a discharge at the expiration of three mouths from the day they were mustered into service ; which must be nearly out. We may say, then, that all these are gone too. Yet Gen. Jackson has very recently received an order from Gen. Pinckney, to garrison and maintain every inch of ground he gains. And although all active exertions of the campaign seem to be paralised, I still hope this may, and will be done. Gen. Cocke is now in East Tennessee, en- deavouring to collect a new levy ; as to his success we know nothing. But Gen. Roberts, from West Tennessee, passed through our country three days ago, and has just crossed the river with about 250 men. Col. Carrol, inspector-general of this army, arrived to day with a force of 5 or 600, and 4 com- panies are proposed to be sent from this county. How long these men are to serve, I know not- not longer I fancy than three months. I trust, however, that this system of short service, wretched as it is in- efficient, and expensive above all others, will yet enable Jackson to occupy till spring the ground he has won. Perhaps the return of moderate weather, and great efforts meanwhile, may collect around his banner, an army sufficient to effect the complete dis- comfiture and prostration of the Creek power. This, however, will be every day a work of greater diffi- 100 MEMOIRS 01 culty. The English have already appeared in force at Pensacola, 7 sail having troops on board, besides two bomb vessels. Orleans will be mena- ced. Mobile is considered in great danger. The force on the Tombigbee waters, and the 3d regiment ascending the Alabama, will be called to its defence. This gives the Creeks breathing time, and lessens the force destined to crush them. Augustine, too, will doubtless be occupied by British troops ; and from these points, arms, ammunition, and perhaps men and leaders, will be pushed to the aid of the Upper and Middle Creeks. The Seminoles and the runaway negroes among them, may be turned loose upon the sea coast of Georgia." To experienced olTicers and soldiers, who know the importance of efficient authority in a com- mander, and the necessity of strict obedience in an army, the circumstances in which Gen. Jackson was placed, would be considered as calculated to excite apprehensions, if not discouragement. His army Nvas an anomaly in military tactics. It would remind a spectator of a board of actors at a theatre, who individually entered the stage — performed the part of a comedian or a tragedian, and made each one his exit, as whim or fancy dictated — and returned at call of the manager, or disappeared forever. The firmness, the constancy, and the courage of Gen. Jackson, increased as the prospects of suc- cess diminished. As to his enemies, the Creeks. ANDREW JACKSON. 101 he was ready to meet them with almost any dispar- ity of force. To meet them was to conquer them. But to see his friends disheartened, and his secret enemies plotting his discomfiture, was " the unkind- est cutofalW* and would have justified him in ex- claiming, with a most pathetic bard— "The shaft that deepest in my bosom went, " Flew from the bow pretended friendship bent.*- General Jackson found every appeal he made to the patriotism of the troops, when the day of dis- charge arrived, wholly fruitless, and he no longer attempted to detain them. It was to him a source of real consolation, however, that a number of per- sonal friends, and accomplished officers, remained true to him, to their country, and to their God* From them, he knew he should derive every assist- ance in preparing the new recruits, who were as- sembling at Huntsville, in Missisippi, and who had not become infected with mutiny. As the most impervious darkness, is said to per- vade the horizon immediately before the dawn of day, so when the darkest clouds of adversity en- veloped Gen. Jackson, and his few patriotic asso- ciates, the most cheering reverse of fortune was at hand. Although there was no immediate connection be tween the volunteers upon the Alabama river, under the command of Brig. Gen. Claiborne, yet the for° -es under each, as well as those under the gal- 9# (02 MEMOIRS OF lant Gen. Floyd, all acted in concert. Gen. Jack- son was constantly advised of their movements, and constantly exerting himself to relieve them. He had no wish to monopolize the glory of con- quering the most warlike tribe of barbarians in the universe. He wished for no laurels, but the grati- tude of his countrymen, for tke protection which he and other gallant officers and soldiers migh se- cure for them. About the Ist of January, J 8 14, he received the animating intelligence that Gen. Claiborne had achieved an important victory upon the Alabama, more than one hundred miles above Fort Stoddart, his head quarters. The town ^vhere the battle was fought, was called Ecccmachaca, or IToIj/ Ground. It was the residence of Witherford, Francis, and Sinqidster^\)r\\\c\^^\ prophets. It was built since the commencement of hostilities as a place of secu» rity for the natives, and as a depot for provisions. Like Autonssc€y it was deemed the grave of white men. Upon the 23d December, it was attacked; betv.'cen thirty and forty warriors were slain ; the whole town, of 200 houses, destroyed, and an im- mense quantity of provisions taken. The town being surrounded by swamps and deep ravines, facilitated the escape of the savages from the pur- suit of the Americans. The next day, a town of sixty houses, about eight miles above the holy ground, was destroyed ; together with three dis- tinguished Indians, and all the Indians' boats. ANDREW JACKSON. 103 Witherford, the Indian Prophet just mentioned, was the commander of the Indians, in their furious and murderous attack upon FortlMimms, at Tcn- saio settlement, in Missisippi. He narrowly escaped capture, and continued to fight with the rage of a fanatic, the fury of a d«mon, and the diabolical ferocity of a devil incarnate, until, saturated with the blood of Americans, and witnessing the almost total extinction of his own tribe, he voluntarily and dauntlessly, flung himself into the hands of Gen. Jackson, and demanded his protection. He will again be mentioned. While these interesting events were transpiring upon the Alabama, a newly organized corps were raising in Tennessee and Missisippi, to resort to the standard of Gen. Jackson, who were designed, with those who should follow them, to put an end to the most sanguinary war which savage ven- geance, aided by British gold, and Spanish perfidy, ever prosecuted. A gallant officer now commenced his military career, which was consummated at New-Orleans, by a crown of unfading laurels — Col. Carrol. He proceeded to Fort Strother upon the 2d Jan- uary, 1814, to concert measures with Gen. Jack- son. They were concerted and executed with a celerity which may well astonish the veteran mar- shals of Europe. It would be unpardonable in the author to at- tempt to detail them in his own language, since he 104 MEMOIRS OF has it ill his power, to present the reader with the deeply interesting official report which follows. Maj. Gbn. JACKSON, of Tennessee Foliinteers, to Maj. Gen. PINCKNEY, of the U. S, Army, Head Quarters, Fort Strother, Jan. 29, 1814. Maj. Gen. Thomas Pinckmy, Sir — I had the honour of informing you in a let- ter of the 31st ult. [express] of an excursion I contemplated making still further in the enemy's country, with the new raised volunteers from Ten- nessee. I had ordered those troops to form a junction with me on the 10th inst. but they did not arrive until the 14th. Their number, including officers, was about 800, and on the iSth, I marched them across the river to graze their horses. On the next day I folJowed with the remainder of my force, consisting of the artillery company, with one six pounder, one company of infantry of 48 men, two companies of spies commanded by Capts. Gordon and Russell, of about 30 men each, and a company of volunteer officers, headed by Gen. Coffee, who had been abandoned by his men, and who still remained in the field awaiting the orders of the government ; making my force, exclusive of Indians, nine hundred and thirty. The motives which influenced me to penetrate still farther into the enemy's country, with this force, were many and urgent. The terms of ser- vice of the new raised volunteers was short, and a ANDREW JACKSON. 105 considerable part of it was expired ; they were ex- pensive to the government ; and were full of ardour to meet the enemy. The ill effects of keeping soldiers of this description long stationary and idle, I had been made to feel but too sensibly already— other causes concurred to make such a movement not only justifiable, but absolutely necessary. I had received a letter from Capt. M'Alpin, of the 5th inst. who commanded at Fort Armstrong in the absence of Col. Snodgrass, informing me that 14 or J 5 towns of the enemy, situated on- the waters of the Tallapoosa, were about uniting their forces, and attacking that place, which had been left iu a very feeble state of defence. You had in your let- ter of the 24th ult. informed me that Gen Floyd was about to make a movement to the TaKapoosa, near its junction with the Coosa ; and in the same letter, had recommended temporary excursions against such of the enemy's towns, or settlements, as might be within striking distance, as well to prevent my men from becoming discontented, as to harass the enemy. Your ideas corresponded exactly with my own, and I was happy in the op- portunity of keeping my men engaged, distressing the enemy, and at the same time making a diver- vsion to facilitate the operations of Gen. Floyd. Determined by these and other considerations, I took up the line of march on the 17th inst. and on the 18tli, encamped at Talladega Fort, where I was joined by between 2 and 300 friendly Indians : G5 105 MEMOIRS OP i of whom were Cherokees, the balance Creeks. Here I received your letter of the 9th inst. stating ; that Gen. Floyd was expected to make a movement , from Cowetau the next day, and that in 10 days i thereafter he would establish a firm position at \ Tuckbatchee ; and also a letter from Col. Snod- grass, who had returned to F.)rt Armstrong, infor- j ming me that an attack was intended to be soon j made on that Fort, by 900 of the enemy. If 1 1 could have hesitated before, I could now hesitate : no lons^er. I resolved to lose no time in meeting j this force, which was understood to have been col- ; iectedfrom New Yorcau, Oakfuskie, and Ufauleyl towns, and were concentrated in a bend of the) Tallapoosa, near the mouth of a creek, called Eaauckfau, and on an island below New Yorcau. On the morning of the 20th your letter of the 10th inst. forwarded by M'Candles, reached me at the Hillabee Creek ; and that night I encamped at Enotachopco, a small Hillabee village, about twelve miles from Emuckfau. Here I began to perceive very plainly how little knowledge my spies had of the country, of the situation of the enemy, or of the distance I was from them. The insubordina- tion of the new troops, and the want of skill in most of their officers, also became more and more apparent. But their ardour to meet the enemy was not diminished ; and 1 had sure reliance upon the guards, and upon the company of old volunteer officers, and upon the spies, in all about 125. My 4NDREW JACKSON. 107 wishes and my duty remained united, and I was determined to effect, if possible, the objects for which the excursion had been principally under- taken. On the morning of the 21st, I marched from Eno- tachopco, as direct as I could for the bend of the Tallapoosa, and about 2 o'clock, P M. my spies having discovered two of the enemy, endeavoured to overtake them, but failed. In the evening I fell in upon a large trail, which led to a new road, much beaten, and lately travelled. Knowing that I must have arrived within the neighbourhood of a strong force, and it being late in the day, I determined to encamp, and reconnoitre the country in the night. I chose the best scite the country would admit, en- camped in a hollow square, sent out my spies and pickets, doubled my sentinels, and made the neces- sary arrangements before dark, for a night attack. About 10 o'clock at night, one of the pickets fired at three of the enemy, and killed one, but he was not found until the next day. At eleven o'clock the spies whom I had sent out, returned with the information, that there was a large encampment of Indians at the distance of about three miles, who from their whooping and dancing, seemed to be ap- prized of our approach. One of these spies, an Indian in whom I had great confidence, assured me that they were carrying off their women and chil- dren, and that the warriors would either make their escape, or attack me before day. Being prepared 103 MEMOIRS OF ; ' i at all points, nothing remained to be done but to await their approach, if they meditated an attack, \ or to be in readiness, if they did not, to pursue and ; attack them at day light. While we were in this \ state of readiness, the enemy about six o'clock in 1 the morning commenced a vigorous attack on ray ; left flank, which was vigorously met ; the action ] continued to rage on my left flank, and on the left I of my rear, for about half an hour. The brave j Gen. Coflee, with Col. Sitler, the Adjt. Gen. and ; Col. Carroll, the Inspector-General, the moment j the firing commenced, mounted their horses and • repaired to the line, encouraging and animating j the men to the performance of their duty. So soon as it became light enough to pursue, the left wing having sustained the heat of the action, and being somewhat weakened, was reinforced by Capt. Fer- rill's company of infantry, and was ordered and led on to the charge by Gen. Coffee, who was well supported by Col. Higgins and the Inspector-Gene- ral, and by all the officers and privates who com- posed that line. The enemy was completely rout- ed at every point, and the friendly Indians joining in the pursuit, they were chased about two miles with considerable slaughter. The chase being over, I immediately detached Gen. Coffee with 400 men, and all the Indian force, to burn their encampment ; but it was said by some to be fortified. I ordered him in that event, not to attack it until the artillery could be sent forward ANDREW JACKSON. 109 to reduce it. On viewing the encampment and its strength, the general thought it most prudent to re- turn to my encampment, and guard the artillery thither. The wisdom of this step was soon discov- ered — in half an hour after his return to camp, a considerable force of the enemy made its apear- ance on my right flank, and commenced a brisk fire on a party of men, who had been on picket guard the night? before, and were then in search of the In- dians they had fired upon, some of whom they be- lieved had been killed. Gen. Coffee immediately requested me to let him take 200 men, and turn their left flank, which I accordingly ordered ; but, through some mistake, which I did not then observe, not more than 54 followed him, among whom were the old volunteer ofiicers. With these, however, he immediately commenced an attack on the left flank of the enemy ; at which time I ordered 200 of the friendly Indians, to fall in upon the right flank of the enemy, and co-operate with the general. This order was promptly obeyed, and on the moment of its execution, what I expected was realized. The e«emy had intended the attack on the right as a feint, and expecting to direct all my attention thither, meant to attack me again, and with their main force on the left flank, which they had hoped to find weakened and in disorder — they were dis- appointed. I had ordered the left flank to remain firm in its place, and the moment the alarm gun was heard in that quarter, I repaired thither, atxl iO J 10 MEMOIRS OF ordered Capt. Ferrill, part of my reserve, to sup- port it. The whole line met the approach of the enemy with astonishing intrepidity, and having given a few fires, they forthwith charged with great vigour — the effect was immediate and inevitable. The enemy fled with precipitation, and were pur- sued to a considerable distance, by the left flank and the friendly Indians, with a galling and des- tructive fire. Col Carroll, who ordered the charge, led on the pursuit, and Col. Higgins and his regi- ment again distinguished themselves. In the mean time, Gen. Coffee was contending with a superiour force of the enemy. The Indians who I had ordered to his support, and who had set out for this purpose, hearing the firing on the left, had returned to that quarter, and when the enemy were routed there, entered into the chase. That being now over, I forthwith ordered Jim. Fife, who was one of the principal commanders of the friend- ly Creeks, with 100 of his warriors, to execute my first order. So soon as he reached Gen. Coffee, the charge was made, and the enemy routed ; they were pursued about three miles, and 45 of them slain, who were found. Gen. Coffee was wounded in the body, and his aid- de-camp, A. Donaldson, killed, together with three others. Having brought in and buried the dead, and dressed the wounded, I ordered my camp to be fortified, to be the better prepared to repel any attack which might be made 'Q the night, determined to make a return march ANDREW JACKSON* 111 toFortStrpther the following day. Many causes concurred to make such a measure necessary, as I had not set out prepared, or with a view to make a permanent establishment. I considered it worse than useless to advance, and destroy an empty en- campment. I had, indeed, hoped to have met the enemy there, but having met and beaten them a little sooner, I. did not think it necessary or prudent to proceed any further — not necessary, because I had accomplished all I could expect to effect by marching to their encampment ; and because if it was proper to contend with and weaken their forces still farther, this object would be more certainly attained, by commencing a return, which having to them the appearance of a retreat, would inspirit them to pursue me. Not prudent^ — because of the number of my wounded ; of the reinforcements from below, which the enemy might be expected to receive ; of the starving condition of my horses, ihey having had neither corn nor cane for two days and nights ; of the scarcity of supplies for my men, the Indians who joined me at Talladega having drawn none, and being wholly destitute ; and be- cause if the enemy pursued me, as it was likely they would, the diversion in favour of Gen. Floyd would be the more complete and effectual. Influ- enced by these considerations, I commenced ray return march, at half after ten on the 23d, and wa?? fortunate enough to reach Enotachopco before night having passed without interruption, a dangerou' 112 ' MEMOIRS OF defile occasioned by a hurricane. I again fortified my camp, and having another defile to pass in the morning, across a deep creek, and between two hills, which I had viewed with attention as 1 passed on, and where I expected I might be attacked, I de- termined to pass it at another point, and gave di- rections to my guide and fatigue men accordingly. My expectcition of an attack in the morning was hicreased by the signs of the night, and with it, my caution. Before I moved the wounded from the interior of my camp, I had my front and rear guards formed, as well as my right and left columns, and moved off my centre in regular order, leading down a handsome ridge to Enotachopco creek, at a point where it was clear of reed, except immediately on its margin. 1 had previously issued a general order, pointing out the manner in which the men should be formed in the event of an attack on the front or rear, or on the flanks, and had particularly cau-^ tioned the officers to halt and form accordingly, the instant the word should be given. The front guard had crossed with part of the , flank columns, the wounded were over, and the ar- tillery in the act of entering the creek, when an alarm gun was heard iu the rear. I heard it with- out surprise and even with pleasure, calculating with the utmost confidence on the firmness of my troops, from the manner in which I had seen them act on the 22d. I had placed Col. Carroll at the head of the centre column of the rear guard ; its ANDREW JACKSON. 113 right column was commanded hy Col. Perkins, and its left by Col. Stump. Having chosen the ground, I expected there to have entirely cut off the enemy, by wheeling the right and left columns on their pi- vot, recrossing the creek above and below, and fall- ing in upon their flanks and rear. But to my aston ishment and mortification, when the word was given by Col. Carroll to halt and form, and a few guns had been fired, I beheld the right and left columns of the rear guard precipitately give way. This shameful retreat was disastrous in the extreme ; it drew along with it the greater part of the ceu- tre colum, leaving not more than 25 men, who be- ing formed by Col. Carroll, maintained their ground as long as it was possible to maintain it, and it brought consternation and confusion into the cen- tre of the army, a consternation which was not ea- sily removed, and a confusion which could not be soon restored to order. There was then left to re pulse the enemy, the few who remained of the rear guard, the artillery company, and Capt. Russell's company of spies. They however, realized, and exceeded my highest expectations. Lieut. Arm- strong, who commanded the artillery company in the absence of Capt. Deaderick, (confined by sick- ness,) ordered them to form and advance to the top of the hill, whilst he and a h\v others dragged up the six pounder. Never was more bravery displayed than on this occasion. Amidst the most galling fire from the enemy, more than ten times their num- 10 ^ ii4i MEMOIRS. Ui her, they ascended the hill, and maintained their position until their piece was hauled up, when hav- ing levelled it, they poured upon the enemy a fire of grape, reloaded and fired again, charged and repulsed tbe:?i. The most deliberate bravery was displayed by Constantine Perkins and Craven Jackson, of the artillery, acting as gunners. In the hurry of the moment, in separating the gun from the limbers, the rammer and picker of the cannon was left tied to the limber. No sooner was this discovered, than Jackson, amidst the galling fire of the enemy, pulled out the ramrod of his musket and used it as a picker ; primed with a cartridge and fired the cannon. Perkins having pulled off his bayonet, used his nmsket as a rammer, drove down the car- tridge ; and Jackson using his former plan, again discharged her. The brave Lieut. Armstrong, just after the first fire of the cannon, with Capt. Ham- ilton of E. Tennessee, Bradford and M'Gavock, all fell, the Lieut, exclaiming as he lay, " mt/ brave fellows, some of 1/ou maT/ fall, but you must save the ^annon.'^'' About this tiine, a number crossed the reek and entered into the chase. The brave 1 -apt. Gordon of the spies, who rushed from the front, endeavoured to turn the flank of the enemy, "n which he partially succeeded, and Col. Carroll, CoL Higgins, and Capt. Elliot and Pipkins, pursu- ed the enemy for more than two miles, who lied in i.'onsternation, throwing away their packs? and lear- ANDREW JACKSON, 115 ing 26 of their warriors dead on the field. This last defeat was decisive, and we were no more disturbed by their yells. I should do injustice to my feelings if I omitted to mention that the venera- ble Judge Cocke, at the age of G5, entered into engagement, continued the pursuit of the enemy with youthful ardour, and saved the life of a fellow soldier by killing his savage entagonist. Our loss in this affair was — killed and wounded, among the former was the brave Capt. Hamilton from E. Tennessee, who had with his aged father and two others of his company, after the period of his engagement had expired, volunteered his servi- ces for this excursion, and attached himself to the artillery company. No man ever fought more bravely, or fell more gloriously ; and by his side fell with equal bravery and glory, Bird Evans of the same company. Capt. Quarles, who command- ed the centre column of the rear g'uard, preferring death to the abandonment of his post, having ta- ken a firm stand in which he was followed by 25 of his men, received a wound in his head of which he has since died. In these several engagements, our loss was 20 killed and 75 wouded, 4 of whom have since died. The loss of the enemy cannot be accurately ascer- tained ; 189 of their warriors were found dead ; but this must fall considerably short of the number really killed. Their wounded can only be guessed at. 116 ^ MEMOIRS OF Had it not been for the unfortunate retreat of the rear guard in the affair of the 24!th inst. I think I could safely have said, that no army of militia ever acted with more cool and deliberate bravery : un- disciplined and inexperienced as they were, their conduct in the several engagements of the 22d, could not have been surpassed by regulars. No men ever met the approach of an enemy with more intrepidity, or repulsed them with more energy. On the 24)th, after the retreat of the rear guard, they seemed to have lost all their collectedness, and were more ditHcult to be restored to order, than any troops I had ever seen. But this was no doubt, owing in a great measure, or altogether, to that very retreat, and ought rather to be ascribed to the want of conduct in many of their officers, than any cowardice in the men, who on every occasion, have manifested a willingness to perform their duty, so far as they knew it. All the effects which were designed to be produ- ced by this excursion, it is believed have been pro- duced. If an attack was meditated against Fort Armstrong, that has been prevented. If Gen. Floyd is operating on the east side of the Tallapoo- sa, as I suppose him to be, a most fortunate di- version has been made in his favour. The number of the enemy has been diminished, and the confi- dence they may have derived from the delays I have been made to experience, has been destroyed. Discontent has been kept out of my army, while ANDHEW JACKSON. 117 the troops who would have been exposed to it, have been beneficially employed. The enemy's coun- try has been explored, and a road cut to the point where their force will probably be concentrated, when they shall be driven from the country below. But in a report of this kind, and to you who will immediately perceive them, it is not necessary to slate the happy consequences which may be ex- pected to result from this excursion. Unless I am greatly mistaken, it will be found to have hastened the termination of the Creek war, more effectually than any measure I could have taken with the troops under my command. I am. Sir, with sentiments of high respect, Your Obedient servant, ANDREW JACKSON, Maj. Gen. When it is considered what troops Gen. Jackson had to command, and what enemies he had to fight, the tivo victories at Emuckfaw, on the 22d, and the signal one of Enotachopco^ on the 24jth, will bear a comparison with any in modern warfare. The liberal applause the general bestows upon the brave, and the excuse he finds for those whose '* retreat ought rather to he ascribed to the loant of conduct in many of their officers^ than to any cowardice in the vien,^^ must endear him forever to the soldier. The " venerable Judge Cocke,'* (who survived,) and « the brave Lieut, Armstrong,'" and Capts. Hamilton and Quarles, (who all fell,) are placed, by the gen erai's report, upon the rolls of fame* 118 MEMOIRS OF CHAPTER IX. Gen. Jackson prepares for a new expedition — ^receives an account of the victory at Chatahouchee — adopts a new mode to obtain supplies — Army Contractors — Energetic measures — Great vic- tory at Tohopeka — Savage warfare— British and Spanish emis- saries. THE solicitude evinced by Gen. Jackson, in his report incorporated in the last chapter, for the safety, security, and success of Gen. Floyd, could not have escaped the attention of the reader. It must have been greatly diminished by the signal victories he therein so perspicuously describes ; but this did not indfice him to remit any of his cus- tomary vigilance, or to omit any measure necessary to secure the advantage he had gained. He had '' scotched the snake — not killed himy Gen. Jackson had now with him, his beloved associates, Brig. Gen. Coffee, Col. Dyer, Col. Carroll, Maj Reid, (his aid,) and many other ac- complishad and patriotic officers. The disaffected officers had either retired to that obscurity which was their only safety, or remained envious specta- tors of that excellence which they could, not reach, and detractors of those great men, whose gallant exploits they had not the courage to achieve. He had a band of new volunteers, who had suddenly become veterans, and familiarized with victory. But still his force was inadequate to the complete accomplishment of his primary object — the effectu- ANDREW JACKSON, 119 al subjection of the Creeks. He knew that the government of the American Repiibh'c had invio- lably regarded all treaties made, and performed every stipulation entered into with them. He knew, and he lamented, the infatuation under which they acted, and regretted that a race of be- ings, possessing the most exalted courage, should become victims in subserving the cause of the British and Spanish monarchs. But his duty to his country was, with him, paramount to every other consideration ; and he was resolved, as long as the last glimmer of hope remained unextinguish- ed, not to despair of the commonwealth. After the victories of the 22d and 24tb, he and his officers, were incessantly engaged in disciplin- ing the forces with them, and incorporating into the little army, such recruits as arrived. These duties were entirely different, from those belonging to officers in the regular army, at a well appointed cantonment. There, the commanding and subor- dinate officers have specific duties to perform ; and the soldiers, so far from thinking of disobedience, or plotting mutinies, scarcely utter a complaint. Gen. Jackson had never yet commanded such a body of men, in such a situation. His subordinate officers had been his companions, and his volun- teers had been his fellow citizens. He had de- pended more upon the weight of his character, and his devotion to the service, than upon military authority, to accomplish what he had done. He 1^ MEMOIRS OF had, in many instances, fpund that the most urgent entreaties, and the most energetic remonstrances, were ineffectual, and was now resolved to exercise the authority which was vested in him. While he was exerting every faculty which na- tive energy and military authority, enabled him to call into operation, to prepare for more imx)ortant measures, he was highly gratified at receiving the most favourable intelligence from the Georgia for- ces under Brig. Gen. Floyd. That officer was stationed, with his troops, at Camp Defiance, fifty miles west of Chatahouchee. Upon the 27th January, he was assailed very early, by a numerous horde of savages. The sentinels were suddenly driven in, and a most desperate attack was commenced upon the lines. Gen. Floyd thus describes the engagement. " The steady firmness and incessant fire of Capt. Thomas' artillery, and Capt. Adams' riflemen^ pre- served our front line : both of these suffered g^eatl3^ The enemy rushed within 30 yards of the artillery, and Capt. Broadnax, who commanded one of the picket guards, maintained his post with great brave- ry, until the enemy gained his rear, and then cut his way through them to the army. On this occasion, TimpoocMe Barnncl, a half breed, at the head of the UcA/c5, distinguished himself,and contributed to the retreat of the picket guard : the other friendly In- dians took refuge within our lines and remained in- active, with the expepiion of a few who joined our ANDREW JACKSON. 121 ranks. So soon as it became light enough to dis- tinguish objects, I ordered Majors Watson's and Freeman's battalions, to wheel up at right angles, with Majors Booth's and Cleveland's battalions, (who formed the right wing, to prepare for the charge. Capt. Duke Hamilton's cavalry, (who had reached me but the day before,) was ordered to form in the rear of the right wing, to act as cir- cumstances should dictate. The order for the charge was promptly obeyed, and the enemy fled in every direction before the bayonet. The signal was given for the charge of the cavalry, who pursued, and sabred 15 of the enemy ; who left 37 dead on the field. From the efi'usion of blood, and the num- ber of head-dresses and war clubs found in various directions, their loss must have been considerable, independent of the wounded. I directed the friendly Indians, with Merri weth- er's and Ford's rifle companies, accompanied by Capt. Hamilton's troop, to pursue them through Callibee Swamp, where they were trailed by their blood, but succeeded in overtaking but one of their wounded. Col. Newnan received three balls in the com- mencement of the action, which deprived me of the services of that gallant and useful officer. The as- sistant Adjt. Gen. Narden, was indefatigable in the discharge of his duty, and rendered important ser- vices : his horse was wounded under him. The whole of the staff was prompt, and discharged their 11 123 MEMOIRS OF duty with courage and fidelity : their vigilance, the intrepidity of the officers, and the firmness of the men, meet my approbation, and deserve the praise of their country. I have to regret the death of many of my brave fellows, who have found honour- able graves in the voluntary support of their coun- try. My aid-de camp, in executing my orders, had his horse killed under him. Gen. Lee and Maj. Pace, who acted as additional aids, rendered me essential services, with honour to themselves, and usefulness to the cause in which they have embarked. Four waggon, and several other horses were killed, and two of the artillery horses wounded. While I de- plore the losses sustained on this occasion, I have the consolation to know, that the men who I have the honour to command, have done their duty." The loss of the Americans in this battle, was 17 killed, and 132 wounded. Gen. Jackson found that one great object of his last brilliant expeditioD, was effected— the relief of the Georgia militia. It was now the first of February-, 1814. Gen. Jackson's forces were at Fort Strother, where, al though in no immediate danger of famine, there was by no means a supply for any length of time. Geri. Jackson, ever since he had commanded the array in the Creek country, had had his attention diverted from the great object of a general — the organization of his array — the introduction of cor- rect discipline, and preparation for active service. ANDREW JACKSON. 123 Indeed, he had to perform the duty of Commis- sary, Quarter-master, and Commander. Wash- ington was often in his situation in the war of the Kevoiution. He could find an excuse for his coun- trymen, in the then destitute state of the country; but for the contractors for the southern army in 18 14, there was no excuse. In a country abound- ing in beeves, swine, and bread stuffs, an army had often been driven to mutiny and desertion through the apprehension of want. There is, probably, not an officer in the American service, but who will con- demn the mode of supplying an army by contrac- tors. They make the best terms they can with the government for themselves ; the hardest pos- sible terms for the seller of provisions, and often furnish the war-worn veteran with rations deficient in quantity, and miserable in quality. They think of nothing but gaining a fortune, while the gallant soldiers who are suffering by their frauds, and fam- ishing by their avarice, are gaining victories for their country. Gen. Jackson, who may emphatically be called the vSoldier's Patron, had suffered too much, with his brave soldiers, for longer endurance. He sup- plied his army by his own agents, leaving the con- tractors to pay the expense. When no longer any cause existed for complaints in his camp, he silen- ced them. He caused a mutineer to be tried by a court martial *, and when condemned to die, he approved of the sentence, and he suffered death, lie ordered every officer to be arrested within his 134 MEMOIRS OF command, who should be found exciting mutiny or disobedience. He knew that a crisis had arrived when a great blow must be struck, or the expedi- tion abandoned. The Creeks had assembled in very great force at the bend of the Tallapoosa, at a place called by the savages, Tohopeka — by the Americans, The Horse Shoe, At this place, the most desperate re- sistance was expected ; and every measure, within the limited means of Gen. Jackson, was resorted to, to meet it. The 39th Regiment U. S. infantry, under the command of " the intrepid and skilful Col. WilliamSy^ had been ordered to join the army under Gen. Jackson. It* did not exceed 600 men. By the middle of March, his whole force amounted to be- tween 3, and 4000. He then commenced his march. Upon the 21st, he established a fort at the mouth of Cedar Creek, and named it Fort Williams, Leav- ing a sufficient force to protect it, he renewed his march upon the 24th. Upon the 2rth, a day which will be remembered in the traditional annals of the brave, the infatuated, the blood-thirsty Creeks, un- til they become extinct, Gen. Jackson and his ar- my reached Tohopeka. The events of that day, are thus briefly detailed by the commander. Battle Ground^ bend of Tallapoosa, 2Sth March, 18 J4. Maj Gen. Pinckney : — Sir — I feel particularly happy in being able to communicate to you, the fortunate eventuation of ANDREW JACKSON. 125 my expedition to the Tallapoosa. I reached the head, near the Emuckfau, called by the whites the Horse Shoe, about ten o'clock, on the forenoon of yesterday, where I found the strength of the neigh- bouring to\v us colleciid. Expect liig our approach, they had gathered in from Oakfuskie, Oakelioga, New Yorcau; Hillabees, the Fish Pond, and Eufau- lee towns, to the number, it ib said, of 1000. It is difficult to conceive a situation more eligible for defence than the one tuey had chosen, or one ren- dered more secure by tl.osed to a double fire, while they lay in perfect security behind. A cannon planted at one extre- mity could have raked it to no advantage. Determining to exterminate them, I detached Gen. Coffee with the mounted men, and nearly the whole of the Indian force, early on the morning of yesterday, to cross the river about two miles below their encampment, and to surround the bend in such a manner, as that none of them should escape by attempting to cross the river. With the infantry, I proceeded slowly and in order, along the point of [and which led to the front of their breast work ; having planted my cannon, one 6 and one 3 poun- der, on an eminence at the distance of 150 to 200 yards from it, 1 opened a very brisk fire, playing upon the enemy with the muskets and rifles whene- 11^ 120 . MEMOIRS Oi" ver they shewed themselves beyond it. This wa§ kepi up with short interruptions for about 2 lioursy xvhen a part of the Indian force, and Capt. Russell's and Lieut. Bean's companies of spies, who had ac- companied Gen. Cofi'ee, crossed over in canoes to the extremity of the bend, and set fire to a few of the buildings which were there situated ; they then advanced with great gallantry towards the breast- work, and commenced a spirited lire upon tlie en- emy behind it. Finding that this force, notwithstanding the bravery they displayed, was wholly insufficient to dislodge them, and that Gen. Coffee had entirely secured the opposite bank of the river, I now deter- mined to take it by storm. The men by whom this was to be effected, had been waiting with impatience to receive the order, and hailed it with acclamation. The spirit which animated them, was a sure augury of the success which was to follow. The history of warfare, I think furnishes few instances of a more brilliant attack. The regulars led on by their intrepid and skilful commander, CoL Williams, and by the gallant Maj. Montgomery, soon gained possession of the works, in the midst of a most tre- mendous lire from behind them ; and the militia of the venerable Gen. Doherty's brigade, accompa- nied them in the charge with a vivacity and firm- ness which would have done honour to regulars. The enemy were completely routed. Five hundred and fifty-seven were left dead on the peninsulaj ANDREW JACKSON. 127 and a great number were kilJed by the horsemen in attempting to cross the river : it is believed that not more than 20 have escaped. The fighting continued with some severity about 5 hours, but we continued to destroy many of them who had concealed themselves under the banks of the river, until we were prevented bythcDight. This morning we killed 16 who had been concealed. We took about 250 prisoners, all women and chil- dren, except two or three. Our loss is 160 woun- ded, and 25 killed ; Maj. M'Intosh, (the Cowctau,) who joined my army with a part of his tribe, great- ly distinguished himself. When I get an hour's leisure, I will send you a more detailed account. According to my original purpose, I commenced my return march to Fort Williams to day, and shall, if I find sufficient supplies there, hasten to the Hickory Ground. The power of the Creeks is, I think, forever broken. I send you a hasty sketch, taken by the eye, of the situation on which the enemy were encamped, and of the manner in which I approached them, I have the honour to be, &c. ANDREW JACKSON, Maj. Gen, 3Iaj, Gen. Pinckney. The loss of the Americans, added to the whole loss of the friendly Indians, was 54 killed, and 15G wounded. In communicating the result of this victory, with- out a parallel, to the War Department. Gen. Pinck^ 12S MEMOIRS OF ney elegantly and impressively observes, — <* While the sigh of humanity will escape, for this profuse effusion of human blood, whicli results from the savage principle of our enemy, neither to give nor j accept quarter ; and while every American will deeply lament the loss of our meritorious fellow soldiers who have fallen in this contest, we have ample cause of gratitude to the giver of all victory, for thus continuing his protection to our women and children, who would otherwise be exposed to the indiscriminate havock of the tomahawk, and all the horrors of savage warfare.'* The aged soldier who has been familiarized through life with civilized warfare, can form but an imperfect idea of war, as carried on by savages. Those who have passed their lives in the tranquil scenes of civil life, are still more incompetent to form a conception of its horrors. We can read its history and weep; but were we to witness its tragical scenes, even tears would be stopped, by the ghastly and apalling forms, in which death is presented to the view of its victims. The writer has seen nothing of savage warfare, and but little of savage life in a state of peace ; but he can yet al- most realize its horrors from impressions, never to be eradicated, made upon his mind in the earliest stages of life. His venerated grandfather, Israel Putnam, " seam\l xiuth many a scar,'^^ by the knives and tomahawks of savages, as he was treading the last steps that carried him to his tomb, related to ANDREW JACH&ON. 129 his listening grand-children, the tortures he had borne from savages, and his " hair-breadth ^capes'''* from savage death. His accomplished A id- de- camp, Gen. Humphreys, has left them upon the page of Biography.* The severity of Gen. Jackson with the Creeks, has been a subject of severe animadversion with many who sympathize with savages, but who can readily forget the indiscriminate slaughter at Ten- sail). Let such remember that at Fort Mimms, in that settlement, the unoffending citizen was con- sumed by fire — his beseeching wife and helpless children were, by the same tomahawk, in the same moment, inhumanly murdered. And to make them withdraw their ill-placed sympathy, let them re- member that the fate which there swallowed up the whole of the citizens, and the whole of their defenders, was declared to be the destiny of every American, within the reach of savage vengeance. Whatever injustice the Aborigines of America may have endured from Europeans in the early set- tlements of North America, they have no cause of complaint against the present generation of Anglo- Americans, who are citizens of the United States, nor against the government of the American Re- public. Mildness has marked the policy of indi- viduals in their intercourse with the natives, and lenity and justice has characterized every measure of the American administrations in regard to them, * Vide Humphreys' Life of Putnam, pages 67, 68, 69, 82, 130 MEMOIRS OP from the commencement of the government under the sainted Washington, to this period. While the state has protected them in the enjoyment of their temporal rights, the church has, with unceas- ing exertions, endeavoured to convert them to Christianity. But every measure to introduce among them the^ arts of civilized life and the benign influence of Christianity, " to soothe the savage breast,'*^ has been thwarted by the poisonous influence of British and Spanish emissaries. Upon them, let a double por- tion of indignation be poured, as the guilty causes of the miseries inflicted by savas^es upon Ameri- cans, and of the almost total extinction of the In- dians by the arm of power. Indubitable testimony will support the assertion, that every Indian war in North America, from the Treaty of Peace in j 1783, to this period, has been occasioned by for- i eign emissaries. Although the British govern- j ment was compelled to acknowledge the Indepen- ! dence of the American Repjiblic, it has always i endeavoured to check its rising greatness. They still hope to subjugate it to their dominion, by the '\ power of their navy upon the seaboard, and of j their savage allies upon the frontiers. It would ' be a handsome accession to the power of the *< le- i gitimate sovereigns" of Europe, to behold George ] III. or (IV.) wielding the sceptre of power over j North, and Ferdinand VII. over South America. I ANDREW JACKSON. 131 CHAPTER X. Conclusion of the Creek War — Return of Gen. Jackson and Vol- unteers — their reception, and separation — Gen. Jackson is ap- pointed Brig. Gen. in U. S. army — also a Commissioner to treat with Creek Indians — concludes a treaty — Foreign emissaries Indian eloquence — Speech of Witherford — of Big Warrior of Tecumseh, and his death. HAYING accomplished the object of the expe- dition to the l^dlapoosa, by the victory at Toho- peka. Gen. Jackson returned with his army to Fort Williams, about the 1st of April. Incessant fa- tigue and arduous duty, had retarded the recovery of his health, and reduced him almost to a skele- ton ; but the animation he felt at having effected, in a few months, what, from every former prospect, would have been supposed to need the exertion of years, made him forget his debility ; and his mind arose in majesty, as his body was emaciated by toil. Proud of the title? " Conmiander of Tennessee Vol- tinteers" he rejoiced that they had retrieved the reputation they had recently tarnished, by mutiny and disaffection. <^ His object now was to form a junction with the forces of the state of Georgia, and either complete the extermination of the Creeks, or compel them to bury the tomahawk, and sue for peace. The Hil- labees, a clan of them, for reasons before mentToned, were the last to supplicate for mercy. The attack 132 MEMOIRS OF made upon them on the 18th November, 1813, by Gen. White, when they were urgent to make peace with Gen. Jackson, rendered them desperate. — The remnants of all the tribes had assembled at Hothlewaleey in the Hickory Ground. Gen. Jackson, with his forces, went in pursuit of them. But despair had now succeeded to fury, and the savages dispersed. The general prosecuted his march to the Hickory Ground, and, on or about the 15th April, established a fort upon the Coosa^ near its confluence with the Tallapoosa, which was named Fort Jackson, This completed a line of posts through Tennessee, Georgia, and the Alabama Territory. The Georgia forces had formed a junction with the conquering general; and, upon the 20th April, Maj. Gen. Pinckney, commander in chief of Mili- tary Districts No. 6 and 7, arrived at Fort Jackson, and assumed the command of the whole forces in the Creek country. Gen. Pinckney invited Gen. Jackson to his head quarters, where a splendid en- tertainment had been prepared. This emaciated and vvar-worn veteran, with some of his principal officers, partook of it with the Commander in Chief. To reciprocate the civility, the Conqueror of the Creeks, invited the Commander to dine with him at his marquee the next day. The simple diet that had sustained him and his gallant associates for months, was the bill of fare. It called to mind gloo- my and proud recollections — the dish of rice, and ANDREW JACKSON. 133 draught of whiskey, had supported them in times of peril — they were now enjoyed iu safety. Never, since the discovery of America, did an American officer leave the command of an array, to his superiour officer, under circumstances more au- spicious, than did Maj. Gen. Jackson, of Ten- nessee Volunteers, to Maj. Gen. Pinckncy of the U. S. army. He assumed the command of the troops, only to disband them. Their work was done, and well done. Gen. Jackson, for a number of weeks previous, had moved with his army, with the celerity of lightning, and like that, had pros- trated every thing that opposed them. He might have said with Cccsar, " Veni^ vidi, vicV — I came— I saw — I conquered ! The panic- struck savages, who had been led by the wild incantations of their prophets, and tlie more guilty encouragement of foreign emissaries, to spread devastation, havock, carnage, and deatli, among the unoffending American settlers, humbly prostrated themselves before their conquerors, and begged for that sparing mercy, wliich it had been enjoined upon them never to extend. Fearing to raise a hand against a white man, these infatuated demons of the forest, preyed upon each other ; and seemed to delight in bearing and inflicting tortures. The Creeks massjacred every one of their tribe who were known to have attacked Fort Mimms. Upon the 21st, the next day after Gen. Pinckney 12 134j memoirs of assumed the command, lie ordered the Tennessee troops to be marched home, and discharged ; retain- ing, however, sufficient to garrison the establish- ed posts. Gen. Jackson immediately took mea- sures to comply with the order. The following is Gen, Jackson's last communica- tion, as an officer in the military forces of Tennessee, Fort Williams^ Jpril 25^/?, at night. Sir — Gen. Pinckney joined me at Fort Jackson on the 20th. The enemy continuing to come in from every quarter, and it being now evident that the war was over, I received an order at 3 o'clock, P. M. on the 21st, to march my troops back to Fort Williams, and after having dispersed any bo- dies of the enemy who may have assembled on the Cahawba, or within striking distance, and provided for the maintainance of posts between Tennessee and Fort Jackson, to discharge the remainder. Within two hours after receiving this order, I was on the line of march ; and reached this place last evening, a distance of about sixty miles. To Brig. Gen. Doherty, I shall assign the duty of keeping up the posts, which form the line of communication between Tennessee and the conflu- ence of the Coosa and Tallapoosa, making the ne- cessary arrangements to enable him to do so. About 400 of the E. Tennessee militia, will be left at this place, 250 at Fort Strother, and 75 at Fort Arm- strongand New Deposit. Old Deposit will be main tained by Gapt. Hammond's company of rangers^ ANDREW JACKSON. ]35 To-morrow I detail 500 of the militia under the command of Brig. Gen. Johnson, to the Cahawba, with instructions to unite with me at Fort Deposit, after having dispersed any bodies of the enemy they may find there assembled. The commissioners who have been appointed to make a treaty witli the Creeks, need have nothing to do but assign them their proper limits. Those of the friendly party, who have associated with me, will be easily satisfied ; and those of the hostile party, they consider it a favour that their lives have been spared them, and will look upon any space that may be allowed them for their future settlement, as a bounteous donation. I have taken the liberty to point out what I think ought to be the future line of separation, with which I will hereafter make you acquainted. Tfihey should be established, none of the Creeks will be left on the west of the Coosa. Accompanying this, I send you a report made by the Adjutant General, of the killed and wounded, at the battle of Tohopeka, which was omitted to be sent by the former express. I have the honour to be, &c, ANDREW JACKSON. His Excellerwy Gov. W. Blount. At the expiration of a few days he commenced a return marcli to his home, after an absence of eight months. If the sense of obligation bears 1^ MEMOIRS OF 3ny proportion to the benefits received, it may well be concluded that the people of Tennessee and Missisippi, must have been deeply impressed with the obligations of gratitude to Gen. Jackson and his gallant Volunteers. For twenty years, the fron- tier settlers had Jived in a state of insecurity ; and since the eomtnencement of the second war be- tween tlie American Republic and the kingdom of Great Britain, in the most alarming apprehensions. Their danger was now removed, and their safety was secured. The spontaneous bursts of admira- tion and applause that were every where uttered, was more grateful to the feelings of Gen. Jackson, than all the studied encomiums that could be be- stowed. Upon reaching Camp Blount, at Fayetteville^ (Tenn.) tlie bond of union, which had been ce- mented by common danger, and common toils, be- tween the general and the volunteers, was dissolved. Having learned and discharged the duty of vete- ran soldiers, they now reverted back to industrious citizens ; ready, at no distant period, to follow their beJoved chief, to conquer a civilized, as they already had done, a barbarous foe. While tears of pungent grief were shed at the recollection of their brave associates, who were left to moulder in the graves of the wilderness, those of exquisite joy flowed at the safety of their fathers, and the securi- ty of their homes. Gen. Jackson, having very much exceeded the ANDREW JACKSON. J 37 time for which he volunteered his service^ and hav'- accoraplished vastly more than the most sanguine expectations could have anticipated, was about to retire to the repose of private life, which his debil- itated state of health imperiously demanded. But the portentous clouds of war which were constant- ly augmenting upon the southern borders of the Republic, rendered his services, if possible, more necessary than they had already been. About the 1st June, 1814, he was appointed Brigadier Gene- ral in the army of the United States, Before he was called upon to commence his mil- itary career in his new capacity, he was appointed a commissioner, to secure by negociaiion what he had already acquired by arms. To make a treaty, however, with Indians, can hardly be called negociaiion^ as it is considered among civilized powers. The law of nations, which requires " good faith" between the contrac ting parties, is a code not recognized by American savages. It is rather a contract of bargain and sale? with a penalty annexed for a breach of cove^ uant. Col. Hawkins, who was appointed Indian Agent by Gen. Washington, and who has been in the agency ever since, was associated with Gen. Jackson in this mission. By the American forces, a complete conquest had been made of the whole Creek country ; and this conquest had been occasioned by flagrant breaches of treaty, and outrageous violations of 12=* 138 JVlEMOmS OF humanity b}^ the Creeks. Had the American gov ernment felt the cupidity, or exercised the power which the Jarger kingdoms of Europe manifest towards the smaller ones, the Creeks must either have fled from their country, or been reduced to vassalage, and their country itself would have been annexed to the Republic. But its existence commenced upon the broad principles of national and individual justice, and in the progress of its government, it has never deviated from them. The object of Gen. Jackson and the other com- missioners, was not so much to obtain new territo- ry, as to secure the acknowledged territory of the Republic, from the future depredations of Indian hostility. Upon the 10th August, 1814, a Treaty was executed, which is before the public. It cut off the savages from all communication with the perpetual disturbers of our tranquillity, and secu- red to the government such privileges in their coun- try, as will hereafter place the frontiers out of dan- ger from the Creeks. It will be seen in the sequel what measures were adopted by the government and Gen. Jackson, to secure our country against other powerful tribes, who were incited by our arch and implacable ene- mies, to raise the tomahawk against our country- men, as they had already induced the unfortunate Creeks to do. Having often been obliged, from the nature of the subject, to allude to the unjustifiable and ANDREW JACKSON. J39 reprehensible conduct, of British and Spanish emissaries, I am confident the reader will be gratified, in seeing the evidence furnished by the savages themselves. In presenting this evidence, I furnish at the same time specimens of Indian Eloquence, which have never been equalle(l, unless by the speech of Logaih as found in Jefferson's Notes on Virginia. The first I ofler, is the speech of the ferocious Witherford^ previously mentioned. His surrender to Gen. Jackson, reminds the histo- rian of Coriolanus and Aufidius — of Themiatocles and a tcrsian king. Magnanimity in each over- came vengeance. WITHERFORD's speech to general JACKSON. " I am in your power — do with me as you please. I am a soldier. I have done the white people all the harm I could ; I have fought them, and fought them bravely : If I had an army, I would yet fight, and contend to the last: but I have none ; my peo- ple are all gone. I can now do no more than weep over the misfortunes of my nation. Once I could animate my warriors to battle; but I cannot ani- mate the dead. My warriors can no longer hear my voice : their bones are at Talladega^ Tallus- hatches^ Emiickfmi^ and Tohopeka. I have not sur- rendered myself thoughtlessly. Whilst there were chances of success, I never left my post, nor sup- plicated peace. But my people are gone, and I now ask it for my nation, and for myself. On the 14:0 MEMOIRS OP miseries and misfortunes brought upon ray country, I look back with deepest sorrow, and wish to avert still greater calamities. If 1 had been left to con- tend with the Georgia army, I would have raised my corn on one bank of the river, and fought them on the other ; but your people have destroyed my nation. You are a brave man — I rely upon your generosity. You will exact no terms of a conquer- ed people, but such as they should accede to : whatever they may be, it would now be madness and folly to oppose. If they are opposed, you shall find me amongst the sternest enforcers of obedience. Those who vvould still hold out, can be influenced only by a mean spirit of revenge ; and to this they mtist not, and shall not sacrifice the last remnant of their country. You have told us where we might go, and be safe. This is a good talk, and ray nation ought to listen to it. ' They shall listen to it." The second evidence, is the speech of*' The Big Warrior,''^ before Gen. Jackson, Col. Hawkins, &c. It is with all the pleasure of delight, that I incor- porate this eloquent appeal to the magnanimity of our government, into this work. While it eulogi- zes the memory of our immortal political saviour George Washington, it also places Mr. Madison, in the most exalted station — the protector of the weak. It also repels the many insinuations which have been made against the long tried and faithful Indian agent, Col. Hav/kins. It is but an ill requit- ANBREW JACKSON. 1^4*1 a) for the long seclusioii in which the Agent has lived ; and the pacific and salutary policy which he has pursued in the Creek agency, to have it hintedy ** that his agency had lasted too long to hope that he would steadily pursue that course ivhich the safety, and interest of the country required^ But such is the fate of public functionaries in our Republic. James Monroe, and Andrew Jackson, than whom, more devoted patriots were never enrolled upon the records of worth, have shared in public oblo- quy, as well as in public applause. Even this is not without its benefits. Jealousy is the shield of freedom, and results from the solicitude Americans feel for their sacred rights and liberties. These censures serve the same purpose in our Republic, as the dust that was, by order, cast by lictors upon the heads of the returning conquerors of the Ro- man Republic, when they were passing under tri- umphal arches. / BIG WARRIOR'S SPEECH TO THE AMERICAN COMMISSIONERS. " THE President, our father, advises us to hon- esty and fairness, and promises that justice shall be done ; I hope and trust it will be ! I made this war, which has proved so fatal to my country, that the treaty entered into, a long time ago, with father Washington, might not be broken. To his friend- ly arm I hold fast. I will never break that chain of friendship we made together, and which bound us to stand to the United States. He was a father I4i% MEMOIRS OP to the Muscoga people ; and not only to them, but to all the people beneath the sun. His talk I now hold in my hand. There sits the agent=* he sent among us. Never has he broken the treaty. He has lived with u's a long time. He has seen our children born, who now have children. By hU direction, cloth was wove, and clothes were made, and spread through our country ; but the Red Sticks came, and destroyed all — we hare none now. Hard is our situation, and you ought to consider it. I state what all the nation knows ; nothing will I keep secret. There is the Little Warrior, whom Col. Haw kvis knows. While we were giving satisfaction for the murders that had been committed, he proved a mischief-maker ; he went to the British on the lakes ; he came back, and brought a package to the fron- tiers, which increased the murders here. This conduct ha§ already made the war party to sufl'er greatly : but, although almost destroyed, they will not yet open their eyes, but art btijl led away by the British at Pcjisacola, Not so with us ; we were rational, and had our senses — we yet are so. In the war of the rcvolutionv our father beyond the waters, encouraged us to join him, and we did so. We had no sense then. The promises he made were never kept. We were young and foolish, and fought with him. The British can no more per- suade us to do wrong : they have deceived us once, and can deceive us no more. You are two great * Col. Hawkins. ANDREW JACKSON. i4S people. If you go to war, we will have no concern in it ; for we are not able to fight. We wish to be at peace with every nation. If they oifer me arms, I will say to them, You put rae in clanger, to war against a people born in our own land. They shall never force us into danger. You shall never sec that our chiefs are boys in council, who will be forced to do any thing. I talk thus, knowing that father Washington advised us never to interfere in wars. He told us that those in peace were the happiest people. He told us that if an enemy at- tacked him, he had warriors enough, and did not wish his red children to help him. If the British advise us to any thing, I will tell you — not hide it from you — If they say we must fight, I will tell them, No !" I now present the reader with a speech of one of the greatest warriors of any age, of any nation, or of any colour — Tecumseh. It was this Sachem and Prophet, who had been educated at an English seminary in Canada^ who first infused into the Creeks the murderous principles he had learned from English Christians. He returned to his own tribe, and prepared them for the crusade they were to make with their English "fathers" against Ameri- cans. Infatuated chief ! ! thy blood calls aloud from the ground for revenge against thy perfidious mis- leaders. The cowaniice of Proctor was as base as his perfidy. The simple eloquence of this child of 14A MEMOIRS Of the forest, is the bitterest satire, and the most vin- i dictive judgment against the British nation. The ; Indians of the East, as well as of the West, form a | « paramount inquest," whose sentence will reverse ; the judgment of the House of Lords in favour of I Lord Hastings J and raise indignation at the eulo- j gies bestowed upon Sir George Prevost, { SPEECH OF TECUMSEH, | In the name of the Indian Chiefs and Warriors^ to i Maj, Gen, Proctor, as the representative of their \ Great Father^ the King, i Father — listen to your children ! You have ^ them now all before you. The war before* this, our British father gave the hatchet to his red chil- dren, when our old chiefs were alive. They are now dead. In that war, our father was thrown on his back by the Americans, and our father took them by the hand without our knowledge ;•)* and we are afraid that our father will do so again at this time. Summer before last, when I came forward with my red bsethren, and was ready to take up the hatchet in favour of our British father, we were told not to be in a hurry — that he had not yet de- termined to fight the Americans. Listen ! — When war was declared, our father stood up and gave us the tomahawk, and told us that he was now ready to strike the Americans ; * The revolutionary war. f The British made peace without any stipuktioa for their In= ^dian alUes. ANDREW JACKSON. 145 that he wanted our assistance ; and that he certain- ly would get us our lands back, which the Ameri- cans had taken from us. Listen ! — You told us at (hat time, to bring for- ward our families to this place, and we did so ; and you promised to take care of them, and that they should want for nothing, while the men would go and fight the enemy ; that we need not trouble ourselves about the enemy's garrisons ; that we knew nothing about them ; and that our father would attend to that part of the business. You also told your red children, that you would take good care of your garrison hefe, whicli made our hearts glad. Listen /-^When we were last to the rapids, it is true we gave you little assistance. It is hard to fight people who live like ground hogs.* IJsten Father ! — Our fleet has gone out — we know they have fought — we have heard the great guns, but know nothing of what has happened to our father with one arm.f Our ships have gone one way, and wc are very much astonished, to see our father tying up every thing and preparing to run away the other, without letting his red chil- dren know what his intentions are. You always told us to remain here and to take care of our lands — it made onr hearts glad to hear that was your wish, * During the siege of Fort Meigs, the troops covered them- selves from the enemy's fire, by throwing up traverses and ditch- es of earth. f Commodore Barclay, 13 146 MEMOIRS OP Our great father, the King, is the head, and you re- present him. You always told us, you would never draw your foot off British ground ; but now, father, we see you are drawing back, and we are sorry to see our father doing so, without seeing the enemy. We must compare our father's conduct to a fat an- imal that carries its tail upon its back, but when affrighted, it drops it between its legs, and runs off. Listen Father I^-The Americans have not yet defeated us by land ; neither are we sure that they have done so by water : we there/ore wish to remain here and fight our enemy^ should they make their appearance. If they defeat us, we w'lWthen retreat with our father. At the battle of the Rapids, last war, the Ameri- cans certainly defeated us ; and when we retreated to our father's* fort at that place? the gates were shut against us. We were afraid that it would now be the case, but instead of that, we see our British father preparing to march out of his garrison. Father! — You have got the arms and ammuni- tion which the great father sent for his red children. If you have any idea of going away, give them to us, and you may go, and welcome, for us. Our lives are in the hands of the Great Spirit — we are determined to defend our lands, and if it is his will, we wish to leave our bones upon them. Amherstburgh, 18th Sept, 1813. • Fort Miami, near Wayne's battle ground. ANDREW JACKSON. I'^f I present the reader with Maj. Thomas Rowland's T(of the 27th U. S. infantry,) account of the death of this great chief — « Tzcumseh is certainly kil- led — I saw him with my own eyes — it was the first time I had seen this celebrated chief There was something so majestic, so dignified, and yet so mild in his countenance, as he lay stretched on his back, on the ground where a few minutes before he had rallied his men to the fight, that while gazing on him with admiration and pity, I forgot he was a savage. He had received a wound in the arm, and had it bound up before he received the mortal wound. He had such a countenance as I shall never forget," Major Rowland might have exclaimed, over the corpse of Tecumseh, as Henry "V. did over that of Per CI/ — - " Lie tliere great heart — the earth that bears thee dead, ^ ' "Bears not afive so stout. »♦*»**» 148 MEMOIRS OF CHAPTER XI. Spanish aggressions and pei-fidy— Gen. Jackson's measufes t® de„ tect Manrequez, the Govemour of Florida— his letter to him— Danger of the 7th MiUtary district — Gen. Jackson's appeal to the government — Mr. Monroe's measures of defence — Attack upon Fort Bowyer— gallant defence of Major Lawrence — ^his official report of it. THE writer has attempted to shew the reader, the prominent features of Gen. Jackson's life, from his birth to the conclusion of the Creek war. It is but a miniature, and if the figure is not finely touch- ed, the delineations are confidently pronounced, correct. To crowd a biogaphical sketch with mi- nute details of events, in which the subject of it has acted a conspicuous part, may swell a volume with a wilderness of ** tyorcf^, words ^ luords,^^ and hide the hero of it, in the rubbish that entangles him. I certainly have a wish, (it may be an una- vailing one,) to keep Andrew Jackson in sights through this little volume ; and although the deep- ly interesting scenes, in which he was the principal actor, must necessarily be adverted to, it is hoped the attention of the reader will not be diverted from the subject of these memoirs, by blending with his life, those descriptions which more proper- ly belong to the voluminous historian, than to the brief biographer. Gen. Jackson, having conquered the most war- like tribe of savages within, and perhaps, without ANDREW JACKSON. 149 the Republic, by the sword, and having secured to his government the benefit of the conquest by trea- ty, he was led, not into regular negociation, but into singular intercourse with a power that calls it- self c/rJiVe^e-fi / It is painful to see a nation, which once held an elevated rank among European powers, sunk to the lowest state of degradation. Spain, in the reign of Philip, menaced, by its armada, the same BritisTi power, which has recently dragged its ira- becile, but tyrannical monarch from the humblest exile, and placed him upon the Spanish throne. Struggling to regain the power of his pre^clecessors, and trembling under the rod of his imperious mis- tress, he lends all his little aid in Europe and America, to subserve the interest of the British government. Knowing that the '* holy alliance'' entered into in 1814, by the " Allied Sovereigns,'* guarantees to each other their ancient colonies, Ferdinand Vll. covertly gave every aid and facili- ty to the British forces, in their last war against the American Republic, once British colonies. This, Gen. Jackson full well knew during the prosecu- tion, and at the close of the Creek war. He knew that the governour of the Spanish province of Flo- rida, although Spain was in a state of professed neutrality, either through fear of Britain, or hatred to America, had given every assistance to the In- dians in their sanguinary war against our frontier'^, 13^ 150 iJEMOlRS OF The peace he had conquered from the Creeks^ he was aware would not be a permanent one, nor the treaty lie had made regarded, so long as their hostile chiefs and warriors, were fostered, protected, and encouraged to further hostilities, by the gover- nour of Florida, acting under his « adored master," Ferdinand YII. He was determined, if possible, to secure to his country the benefit of the victories which he had acquired, by the loss of some of his valiant countrymen, and by the death of hundreds of Creeks, who fell victims to religious fanaticism, and British and Spanish machinations. Gen. Jackson, is too cautious as a statesman, and too generous as a soldier, to trust to vague reports, and unsupported assertions, as grounds of impor- tant measures. While making a treaty with the Creeks, he dispatched some of his confidential offi- cers to Pensacola^ to observe the course pursued by Gonzalez Manreguezy the Spanish governour. From the Creeks also, he was receiving almost daily information of the perfidious conduct of this obsequious minister of the faithless Ferdinand. Upon the return of his officers, tiiat which was before believed upon the strongest presumptive evidence, was now reduced to absolute certainty. Gen. Jackson, at this time, (Sept. 1814;,) had received no instructions from the War Department, relative to the course to be pursued with the Span- ish authorities in Florida. He sent a direct mes- sage to Gov.- Manrequez, requesting him to point ANDREW JACKSON. 15 1 out the course he was about to pursue. The cor- respondence that followed betMeen him and Gen. Jackson, has long been before the public, and is too lengthy to be here inserted. The governour was less equivocal, and more explicit than he had previously been. He began to feel a strong assu- rance that the British government, which had res- tored his master to the throne, would support hiiu in all his measures against the Republic. He knew that the legitimate sovereigns of Europe were safe- ly enthroned, and that pride as well as interest, would induce them to secure to Ferdinand VII. his South American colonies, and to endeavour to regain for George III. the colonies he had lost in North. His language was confident, not to say imperious. He repelled the charges against Aiw, by criminating the American government. The correspondence was closed by the following letter to him, from Gen. Jackson. ^' Were I clothed" says the general, " with diplo- matic powers, for the purpose of discussing the to- pics embraced in the wide range of injuries of which you complain, and which have long since been ad- justed, I could easily demonstrate that the United States have been always faithful to their treaties ; steadfast in their frindships ; nor have ever claim- ed any thing that was not warranted by justice. They have endured many insults from the govern- ours and other officers of Spain, which if sanction- ed by their sovereign, amounted to acts of war, 152 MEMOIRS OF without any previous declaration on the subject. They have excited the savages to war, and afforded them the means of waging it. The property of our citizens has been captured at sea, and if compensa- tion has not been refused, it has at least been withheld. But as no such powers have been dele- gated to me, I shall not assume them, but leave them to the representatives of our respective gov- ernments. I have the honour of being entrusted with the command of this district. Charged with its pro- tection, and the safety of its citizens, I feel my ability to discharge the task, and trust your excel- lency will always find me ready and willing to go forward, in the performance of that duty, whenever circumstances shall render it necessary. I agree with you, perfectly, that candour and polite lan- guage should, at all times, characterize the com- munications between the officers of friendly sove- reignties ; and I assert, without the fear of con- tradiction, that my former letters were couched in terms the most respectful and unexceptionable. I only requested.^ and did not damand, as you asser- ted, the ring leaders of the Creek confederacy, who had taken refuge in your town, and who had viola- ted all laws, moral, civil, and divine. This I had a right to do, from the treaty which I sent you, and which I now again enclose, with a request that yon will change your translation ; believing, as I do, that your former one was wrong, and has deceiv ed you. ANDREW JACKSON. 158 What kind of an answer you returned, a reference to your letter will explain. The whole of it breath- ed nothing but hostility, grounded upon assumed facts, and false charges, and entirely evading the inquiries that had been made. I can but express my astonishment at your pro- test against the cession on tlie Alabama, lying within the acknowledged jurisdiction of the United States, and which has been ratified, in due form, by the principal chiefs and warriors of the nation. But my astonishment subsides, when, on comparing it, I find it upon a par with the rest of your letter and conduct ; taken together, they afford a suffi- cient justification for any consequences that may ensue. My government will protect every inch of her territory, her eitizens, and her property, from insult and depredation, regardless of tlie political revolutions of Europe : and altliough she has been at all times sedulous to preserve a good understand- ing with all the world, yet she has sacred rights, that cannot bo trampled upon with impunity. Spain had better look to her own intestine commo- tions, before she walks forth in that majesty of strength and power, which you threaten to draw down upon the United States. Your excellency has been candid enough to admit your having sup- plied the Indians with arms. In addition to this, I have learned that a British flag has been seen flying on one of your forts. All this is done whilst you are pretending to be neutraL 154 MEMOIRS OF ] You cannot be surprised, then, but qu the con- j trary will provide a fort in your town, for my sol^ I diers and Indians, should I take it in my head to i pay you a visit. In future, I beg you to withhold your insulting i charges against my governraeut, for one more in- clined to listen to slander than I am ; nor consider ^ me any more as a diplomatic character, unless so | proclaimed to you from the mouths of my cannon." ! It is with the highest pleasure I incorporate the j foregoing letter into these memoirs ; and the reader i will feel an exultation at knowing, that we have j not only one, but many generals in the army of ' the Republic, who unite the Statesman and the S(.ldier. Although Gen. Jackson, at the time he j wrote it, was not clothed with diplomatic powers, -; he shews, in a few paragraphs, that he perfectly j understands the points in controversy between the ; imbecile, yet haughty government of Spain, and \ the American Republic. Had he been a negocia- i tor ten ijears ago, it would probably not noio be ' said that America has been thirteen t/ ears in trying] to settle our differences with Spain, and that she i may from thence infer that we shall continue to be very moderate, in bringing the controversy to an amicable adjustment. The divine dictate that re- quires men to '* render good for evili^ has not yet been added to the code of th€ Law of Nations ; and if our Republic is disposed to act upon that princi- ple with the allied sovereigns of Europe, every one ANDREW JACKSON. 155 of whom arc anxious to destroy it, we may as well surrender our independence at once, and revert back to a tame, and submissive colonial state. Gen. Jackson was now commander in chief of the 7th military district, including the most impor- tant part of the southern section of the union. It was now altogether the most endangered part of it. The splendid victories at Chippewa^ Bridgwater, Fort Erie, and Flattsburgh, had allayed all appre- hension from British armies in the north. The de- fence of New London and Stonington, New York and Baltimore^ had robbed British " naval demon- strations" of their terrors, upon the eastern sea- board. The British admirals and British generals, were concentrating their forces, with a determina- tion to wipe ofi' the disgrace, which had with jus- t»ice been attached to them—not so much from the defeats they had suffered, as from the Vandalism they had displayed in the Chesapeake Bay, upon the Niagara frontier, and at the city of Washing- ton. The utmost confidence was expressed by the British in America, of the success of this great and united effort of the armies and navies of Britain ; and a British commissioner at Ghent, who at this time was negociating a peace with American com- missioners, tauntingly remarked, that before they had time to conclude a peace, New Orleans and the states upon the Missisippi, would be in posses- sion of Sir Edward Packenham ! 156 MEMOIRS OF It is no more than candid to admit, that very ae- ; rious apprehensions were entertained by Americans j themselves, in regard to the safety of the south- \ ern section of the union, or that part of it situated \ upon the Gulf of Mexico, and near the mouth of | the Missisippi. A very great proportion of the | troops of the Republic and of the munitions of war, \ were in the northern, eastern, and middle states, at \ an immense distance from New Orleans. The whole sea-board, from Castine to that place, was I commanded by a superiour naval force of the ene- ] my, who could by that command, in a very short time approach any *' assailable point'' upon the j ocean. Sir George Prevost's army of 14,000, were, in Lower Canada, burning to revenge the defeat j they met v?ith at Plattsburgh. Large reinforcements ' were known to have arrived from England in the West Indies, under command of some of the most renowned generals in Wellington's army, and every indication evinced the determination of the whole land and naval forces of the enemy, upon the American station, to make a descent near the mouth of the Missisippi. Many British officers had already arrived at Pensacola, about 70 miles east of Mobile bay, on which Fort Bowyer is situated. Here they were received with great cordiality by the governour, and suffered to embody and train savages. Gen. Jack- son, about the first of September, addressed the War Department in the most pressing terms* In ANDREW JACKSON. J 57 one of his letters, he says — *' How long will the United States pocket the reproach and open in- sults of Spain ? It is alone by a manly and digni- fied course, that we can secure respect from other nations, and peace to our own. Temporizing pol- icy is not only a disgrace, but a curse to any na- tion. It is a fact, that a British captain of marines is, and has been, for some time, engaged in drilling and organizing the fugitive Creeks, under the eye of the governour ; endeavouring, by his influence and presents, to draw to his standard, as well the peaceable, as the hostile Indians. If permission had been given me to march against this place, (Pensacoia,) twenty day ago, I would ere this, have planted there the American Eagle ; now wc must trust alone to our valour, and the justice of our cause. But my present resourses are so lim- ited — a sickly climate, as well as an enemy to con- tend with, and without the means of transporta- tion, to change the position of my army, that, resting on the bravery of my little phalanx, I can only hope for success." The Secretary at War, Mr. Monroe, incessantly exerted himself to second the measures of Gen. Jackson. Having acquired Louisiana, and the ex- elusive command of the Missisippi by negociation, Jie was now called upon to defend it as the head of the War Department. As there was, within the 7th military district, but a very small amount of regular troops, the Secretary made a requisition 14 J58 MEMOIRS Oi* upon the executives of the stales of Louisiana, Mis- sisippi, and Tennessee, to have their full quota of militia in readiness for immediate service, at the command of Gen. Jackson. Volunteers were again invited hy Gen. Jackson to resort to his standard* under which they had always conquered. The whole civilized region of the Missisippi, was " wide awake." The unbounded popularity of Gen. Jack- son induced the militia not only with promptness^, but with animation, to repair to the rendezvous; and the *' Tennessee Volunteers" under their gallant, accomplished, and beloved leader, Gen. Cofi'ee were again in motion. They had almost in- variably formed the van of Gen. Jackson's army ; and of their immediate commander, it may be said, " he dared to lead where any dared to follow." Gen. Jackson, before the middle of September, had established his head quarters at Mobile, wait- ing the arrival of the militia and volunteers, some of whom had to travel more tlian 450 miles. Upon the I4th he received a message from Maj. IVii- Ham Lawrence, commander of Fort Bowyer at the mouth of Mobile bay, rec|ue.sting immediate assis- tance in the defence of that important post, as the enemy had landed in the vicinity of that place, with a force probably ten times the amount of his own. Maj. Lawrence had but 158 men fit for duty- He took immediate measures to succour this ex- posed garrison ; but before reinforcements could reach that place, it was simultaneously attacked ANDREW JACKSON. 159 upon the ISth, by the British and Indian forces, by land, and by a large naval force in ihe bay. The defence of this place is described in the finish- ed style of Gen. Jackson, and Maj. Lawrence. GEN. JACKSON, TO HON. JAMES MONROE. H. Q. 7th Military District, Mobile, Sept. 17th, 1814. Sir — ^yith lively emotions of satisfaction, I communicate that success has crowned the gallant efforts of our brave soldiers, in resisting and repul- sing a combined British naval and land force, which on the 15th instant, attacked Fort Bowyer, on the Point of Mobile. I enclose a copy of the official report of Maj. Wm. Lawrence, of the 2d infantry, who comman- ded. In addition to the particulars communicated in his letter, I have learned that the ship which was destroyed, was the Hermes, of from 24 to 28 guns, captain, the Hon. Wm. H. Percy, senior officer in the Gulf of Mexico -, and the brig so consider- ably damaged, is the Sophie, 18 guns, Capt. Wm. Lockyer, the other ship was the Carron, of from Si to 28 guns, Capt. Spencer, son of Earl Spen- cer ; the other brig's name unknown. On board of the Carron, 85 men were killed and wounded ; among whom was Col. Nicholl, of the Royal Ma- rines, who lost an eye by a splinter. The land force consisted of 110 marines, and 200 Creek Indians, under the command of Capt. Woodbine, iCO MEMOIRS OF of marines, and about 20 artillerists, with one four and an half inch howitzer, from which they dis- charged shells and nine pound shot. They re-ein- barked the piece, and retreated by land towards Pensacola, whence they came. By the morning report of the J 6th, there were present in the fort, fit for duty, officers and men, 158. The result of this engagement has stamped a character on the war in this quarter, highly favour- able to the American arms ; it is an event from which may be drawn the most favourable augury An achievement so glorious in itself, and so im- portant in its consequences, should be appreciated by the government ; and those concerned are en- titled to, and will, doubtless, receive the most grat- ifying evidence of the approbation of their coun- trymen. In the words of Maj. Lawrence, " where all be- haved well, it is unnecessary to discriminate." But all being meritorious, I beg leave to annex the names of the officers, who were engaged and pre- sent ; and hope they will, individuallj, be deem- ed worthy of distinction. Maj. Wm. Lawrence, 2d infantry, commanding ; Capt. Walsh of the artillery ; Capts. Chamberlain, Brownlow, and Bradley of the 2d infantry ; Capts. Sands, deputy-commissary of Ordnance ; Lieuts. Villard, Sturges, Conway, H. Sanders, T. R. San- ders, Brooks, Davis, and C. Sanders, all of the 2d infantry. ANDREW JACKSON. 161 I am confident that your own feelings will lead you to participate in my wishes on this subject. Permit me to suggest the propriety and justice of allowing to this gallant band, the value of the vessel destroyed by them. I remain, &c. ANDREW JACKSON, Brig, Gen. Com. The Hon. Secretary of War. The following is " the official report of Maj. Wil- liam Lawrence," alluded to \y Gen. Jackson, \\\ his letter to the Secretary of War. MAJ. LAWREilCE TO GEN. JACKSON. Fort Bo-wyer, Sept. 15th, 1814, 12 o'clock at nighto Sir — After writing the enclosed, I was prevented by the approach of the enemy, from sending it by an express. At meridian they were under full sail, with an easy and favourable breeze, standing di- rectly for the fort, and at 4 P. M. we opened our battery, which was returned from two ships, and two brigs, as they approached. The action be- came general at about 20 minutes past 4, and was continued without intermission on either side un- til 7, when one ship and two brigs were compelled to retire. The leading ship, supposed to be the Commodore, mounting twenty- two 32 pound car ronades, having anchored nearest our battery, was so much disabled, her cable being cut by our shot, that she drifted on shore, within GOO yards of the 14 # m2 MEMOIRS OF battery, and tlie other vessels liaving got out of our reach, we kept such a tremendous lire upon her, that she was set on fire, and abandoned by the few of the crew who survived. At 10 P. M. we had the pleasure of witnessing the explosion of her mag- azine. The loss of lives on board must have been immense, as we are certain no boats left her ex- cept three, which had previously gone to her as- sistance, and one of these I believe was sunk ; in fact one of her boats was burned along side of her. The brig that followed her, I am certain was much damaged both in hull and rigging. The oth- er two did not approach near enough to be much injured, but I am confident they did not escape, as a well directed fire was kept on them during the whole time. During the action, a battery of a 12 pounder and a howitzer, was opened on our rear, but without doing any execution, and was silcHced by a few shot. Our loss is four privates killed, and five privates wounded. Towards the close of the action the flag-staff was shot away ; but the flag was immediately hoisted on a sponge staff over the parapet. While the flag was down, the enemy kept up their most incessant and tremendous fire ; the men were with- drawn from the curtains and north east bastion, as the enemy's own shot completely protected our rear, except the position they had chosen for their battery. ANDREW JACKSON. 1G3 Where all behaved well, it is unnecessary to dis- criminate. Suflice it to say, every officer and man did liis duty ; the whole behaved with that cool- ness and intrepidity which is characteristic of the true American, and which could scarcely have been expected from men, most of whom had never seen an enemy, and were now for the first time, expo- sed for nearly three hours, to a force of nearly or quite, four guns to one. We fired during the action between 4 and 500 guns, most of them double shotted, and after the first half hour but few missed effect. September 16th, 11 o'clock A. M. Upon an examination of our battery this mor- ning, we find upwards of 300 shot and shot holes, in the inside of the north and east curtains, and north-east bastions, of all calibres, from musket ball to 32 pound shot. In the north-east bastion, there were three guns dismounted ; one of which a four pounder, was broken off near the trunnions by a 32 pound shot, and another much battered. I re- gret to say that both the 34 pounders are cracked ia such a manner as to render them unfit for service. I am informed by two deserters from the land force, who have just arrived here, and whom 1 send for your disposal, that a reinforcement is expected, when they will doubtless endeavour to wipe off the stain of yesterday. If you will send the Amelia down, we may pro- bably save most or all of the ship's guns, as her wreck is lying in six or seven feet water, and some IG4 MEMOIRS OF of them are just covered. They will not, however, answer for the fort, as they arc too short. By the deserters, we learn that the ship we have destroyed, was the Hermes, but her commander's name they did uot recollect. It was the Commo- dore, and he doubtless fell on his quarter-deck, as we had a raking fire upon it, at about two hundred yards distance, for some time. To Capt. Sands, who will have the honour of handing you this dispatch, I refer you for a more particular account of the movements of the enemy than may be contained in ray letters ; his services both before and during the action, were of great importance, and I consider fully justify me in hav- ing detained him. Capt. Walsh and several men were much burned in the accidental explosion of two or three cartridges. They are not included in the list of the wounded heretofore given. The enemy's fleet this morning at daybreak, were at anchor in the channel, about 4 miles from the fort ; shortly after, it got under weigh and stood to sea ; after passing the bar, they hove too, and boats have been constantly passing between the disabled brig and the others. I presume the for- mer is so much injured as to render it necessary to lighten her. Fifteen minutes after 1, P. M. The whole fleet have this moment made sail, and are standing to sea. I have the honour to be, &c. WILLIAM LAWRENCE.' Maj. Gen. Andrew Jackson, &c. ANDREW JACKSON. J 65 When it is considered that this fort was in a very incomplete state, having been almost totally aban- ^onfcd, until Gen. Jackson had recently discovered its importance to the surrounding country in time of war — that it was only in a progressive state of improvement — that it was garrisoned by only an hundred and fifty new recruits, who had never before faced a veteran enemy — and that it was as- sailed on every side by land and naval forces, pro- bably amounting to 1500 men, and an hundred pieces of cannon, its defence may be ranked among the most gallant achievements in the last, or any previous war in America. When the defences of Stonhigtoti, Fort M^IIenry^ Fort Boun/er, and Fort St. FMllips are remembered, the " naval de- monstrations" of the haughty mistress of the ocean, lose the terrour which our countrymen formerly at- tached to them ; and shews that independent and valiant freemen, defending their homes against modern hired Vandals, sent to destroy them, ivill ha victorious. 166 . MEMOIRS OF CHAPTER Xn. Gen. Jackson is appointed Maj. Gen. in U. S. army — FcrtBowyer ; — its importance, and its danger — Gen. Jackson determines to j reduce Pensacola — Arrival of Gen. Coffee with Tennessee i Volunteers and Missisippi Dragoons — Capture of Pensacola — | Gen. Jackson's account of it — Destruction of the Barancas— ' He returns to Mobile — Col.*Nicoll's proclamation — ^Remark. | PREVIOUS to this period, (Oct. 1814,) Gen. ; Jaf:kson had been appointed a Major GeneraJ in the | army of the United States, and commander of the i 7th military district. He had been Major-general, \ by brevet, some time antecedent to this appoint- \ ment, and commander of the same district. The importance of Fort Bowyer as a military i post, became more and more apparent to him, as he ' discovered the immense preparation of the enemy, j to assail the wliole American sea board, from Pen- [ sacola to New Orleans. This fort was but three i days' march for land forces from Pensacola, where j the British had already hoisted their flag ; and from j thence to New Orleans, but ten days' march. By ■ the possession of this fort at the mouth of the ca- | pacious bay of Mobile — the bay itself, and the ad- joining country, the British land and naval forces ] would derive incalculai)le advantages. To secure \ it, therefore, was, in the view of the commanding ! general, of the utmost importance. .But however^ ANDREW JACKSON. JG7 important the measure, the means to accomplish it were altogether beyond his reach. Without a na- val force to cover the fort, or to assist in its defence, with but a small regular force under his command at Mobile, and wholly uncertain when the forces from the distant state of Tennessee, and other pla- ces, would arrive, it would seem to have been the dictate, not only of the cardinal virtue oi prudence, but oi fortitude itself, to have evacuated the fort and the country at once. The gallant defence of this place, upon the 15th Sept. although a severe mortificatioti to the enemy, would induce them to send a force against it, absolutely irresistible. So insufficient were his means of defence, from the middle of September, to about the 20th October, and so overwhelming was the superiority of the enemy's force, and constantly augmenting, that had he at this time, retired to New Orleans, with his little army, an unanimous sentence of approbation must have been pronounced by his countrymen. But his language was " resting on the bravery OF MY LITTLE PHALANX, I HOPE FOR SUCCESS." Not- withstanding the discouragiug aspect of airairs,''it was at this period that he resolved, on his own res- ponsibility, to march for Pensacola ; and with his arm}" — '•'• to carry our arms where we find our ene- J7ries.^^'^ Having been educated as a jurist, he was * Had it not been for some unaccountable neglect or desig-n in the War Department, in July, 1814, Gen. Jackson would not have been reduced to this dilemma. Upon Ja7ma/'tf ITth, lolS, he received a letter from Mr. Armstrong-, dated Juty lyth, 1814, as i68 MEMOIRS OE versed in the principles of the Law of Nations. He had a knowledge of the obligations which one government owes to another— he was aware of the acts which this code would justify in a belligerent power, and the duty it enjoined upon a power that was professedly a neutral one. The Spanish gov- ernment at this time, in regard to the American Republic, was of the latter character hy profession^ and of the former one by practice. He determined to place himself within striking distance of the enemy, whether he found them devastating the ter- ritory of the Republic, or preparing to do it in the adjoining territory of another power. The propri- ety and legality of this measure will more properly be considered, when we have traced the life of Gen. Jackson to the year 18 i8, when he, a second time, carried the American arms to the capital of Florida. About the 25th October, the exhilarating intelli- gence was received at Mobile, that Gen. Coflee had arrived at Fort St. Stevens, with nearly 3000 * Tennessee Volunteers,' and Missisippi Dragoons. The news operated upon the ** little phalanx," like a shock of electricity upon the human system. Though previously resolved to follow their corn- Secretary of War, which says — " If all the cifcumstances stated by yoxt, unite, the conchision is irresistible. It becomes oxir duty to car- ry our arms ivhere ive Jind our enemies" Mr. Armstrong, not long" after this date, was succeeded in the war department, by Mr. Monroe. The whole of this letter may be seen by recurrence to the publications of that period- ANDREW JACKSON. 169 mander to the cannon's mouth, and force their way into the fortress of the enemy, though bristled with bayonets, they became enthusiastic when they knew they were reinforced by veterans, to many of whom victory had become familiar, and who were ignorant of the name of fear. Gen. Jackson hastened to the encampment of his companion in arms. He might have said of Gen. Coffee, as Nel- son said of Gapt. Hardy — ^'•He is my right arm.'''' They had travelled hand in liand, in the high road to conquest over savages, and were now again united in a desperate effort to save their country from subjugation and slavery, by the vaunting conquerors of the rights of man in Europe. Many of the troops who arrived from Tennessee, and Missisippi, had seen no service, but they saw their beloved country endangered, and they imme* diately became practical, if not theoretical soldiers. Parts of the 3d, 39th, and 44th infantry of U. S. soldiers, were mingled with them. In a few days, they were all ready for an expedition to Pensacola, to " plant the American Eagle^^ in the place of the British Lion.'^ Upon the 3d November, the army took up the line of march. Gen. Jackson commanded in per- son. Upon the Cth, he approached the place, and sent forward a flag to tlie governour at Fort St. George. In open violation of every principle of * A British flag had, for many days, been hoisted at the Spanish fort in Pensacola. 15 170 MEMOIRS OP civilized warfare— in flagrant contempt of the rights even of contending armies, Maj. Pierre, who bore the flag, was fired on by a cannon from the fort ! It was courtesy alone, that induced Gen. Jackson to send the flag. His wish was, notwith- standing the previous insolence of governour Man- requez, to save the eflfusion of human blood, by a pacific interview, explaining the object of his visit ; and had he immediately stormed the fort, and put the garrison to the sword, the laws of war would have justified the procedure. He encamped his troops for the night, and upon the morning of the 7th, " proclaimed his diplomatic character from the mouths of his cannon.^^ The general hastily and briefly describes the battle in the following letter, having subsequently made his Report to the Secretary of War. GEN. JACKSON TO GOV. BLOUNT. H. Q. 7th Military District, Tensa-w, Nov. 1814. Sir — On last evening I returned from Pensacola to this place. I reached that post on the evening of the 6th. On my approach I sent Major Pierre with a flag to communicate the object of my visit to the Governour of Pensacola. He , approached Fort St. George, with his flag displayed, and was fired on by the cannon from the fort ; be returned and made report thereof to me. I imrnediatly went with the Adjutant-General and the Major, with a ANDREW JACKSON. 171 small escort, and viewed the fort, and found it de- fended by both British and Spanish troops. I im- mediately determined to storm the town ; retired and encamped my troops for the night, and made the necessary arrangements to carry my determination into effect the next dav. On the morning of the 7th, I marched with the effective regulars of the 3d, 39th, and 44ith infantry ; part of Gen. Coffee's brigade; the Missisippi dra- goons, and part of the West Tennessee regiment, commanded by Lieut. Col. Hammonds, (Col. Low- ry having deserted and gone home,) and part of the Choctaws, led by Maj. Blue, of the 39th, and Maj. Kennedy, of Missisippi Territory. Being en- camped on the west of the town, I calculated they would expect the assault from that quarter, and be prepared to rake me from the fort, and the British armed vessels, 7 in number, that lay in the bay. To cherish this idea, I sent out part of the mounted men to show themselves on the west, whilst I pass- ed in rear of the fort undiscovered to the east of the town. When I appeared within a mile, I was in fall view. My pride was never more heightened than in viewing the uniform firmness of my troops, and with what undaunted courage they advanced with a strong fort ready to assail them on the right; seven British armed vessels on the left; strong block-houses and batteries of cannon in their front : but they still advanced with unshaken firm- ness, entered the town, when a battery of two can= 172 MEMOIRS OP non was opened upon the centre column, eomposed of regulars, with bail and grape, and a shower of musketry from the houses and gardens. The bat- tery was immediately stormed by Capt. Levall and company, and carried, and the musketry was soon silenced by the steady and well directed fire of the regulars. The governour met Cols.. Williamson and Smith, who led the dismounted volunteers, with a flag, begged for mercy, and surrendered the town and fort, unconditionally. Mercy was granted and pro- tection given to the citizens and their property, and still Spanish treachery kept us out of posses- sion of the fort, until nearly 12 o'clock at night. Never was more cool, determined bravery dis- played by any troops ; and the Choctaws advanced to the charge with equal bravery. On the morning of the 8th, I prepared to march and storm the Barancas, but before J could move, tremendous explosions told me that the Barancas, with all its appendages, was blown up. I dis- patched a detachment of tw^o hundred men to ex- plore it, who returned in the night with the infor- mation that it was blown up ; all the combustible parts burnt, the cannon spiked and dismounted, except two. This being the case, I determined to withdraw my troops ; but before I did, I had the pleasure to see the British depart. Col. NicoII abandoned the fort on the night of the 6th, and ANDREW JACKSON. 173 betook himself to his shipping, with his friend Capt. Woodbine, and their red friends. The steady firmness of my troops has drawn a just respect from our enemies. It has convinced the Red Sticks, that they have no strong hold or protection, only in the friendship of the United States. The good order and conduct of my troops whilst in Pensacola, has convinced the Spaniards of our friendship and our prowess, and has drawn from the citizens an expression, that our Choctaws are more civilized than the British, In great haste, I am, &c. ANDFtEW JACKSON. In this engagement not an American lost his life. The gallant Capt. Levall, mentioned in the gene- ral's letter commenced the attack, and fell despe- rately wounded at the head of his command, in storming the enemy's battery. The conduct of Gov. Manrequez, in the midst of tlie engagement. Is a volume of commentary upon his prcviour. conduct. " With a Hag, he begged for mercy, and surrendered the town and fort, iinconditionalhj /" Gen. Jackson might have said to him, as a gallant chieftain of antiquity did to a trembling and sup- plicating foe-~.'* Be not as extreme in sitbrnission as in offence,^'* This generous commander felt a conteaiptuous pity for the humbled governour. He was aware that he was not a free agent, and of course, hardly an accountable being. He acted 174 MEMOIRS OP under duress from the imperious Col. Nicoll and Capt. Woodbine, who, no less terrified than the governour, fled in consternation to their shipping, before a gun was fired ; in which, if they could no^^ withstand, they could flee from the vengeance of Republican Soldiers, Soon after the terms of capitulation were agreed upon, the governour agreed also to surrender the Barancas, about fifteen miles to the westward. But in perfect consistency with Spanish faith, and British honour, it was blown up and completely de- molished before it could be possessed by the Amer- ican forces. Gen. Jackson, having struck this important blow; having convinced the hostile Indians, that Spaniards could not protect them ; and Spaniards, that the con- fident security they had placed in British protec- tion only exposed them to destruction, he immedi- ately prepared to throw himself and his army, into the more exposed parts of the country. It excites astonishment that he should have left Mobile upon the 3d, arrived at Pensacola upon the 6th, captured it upon the fth, agreed upon the surrender of the Barancas, upon the 8th, and upon the 9th, have taken up the line of march for Mobile to defend Fort Bowyer. To this celerity of movement, and impor- tance of measures, modern warfare scarcely fur- nishes a parallel. Gen. Jackson possesses one of the most essential attributes of a warrior — promptitude. He decides promptly, he executes promptly. He ANDREW JACKSON. 175 diso possesses the rare quality of infusing into the hearts of his soldiers, the ardour that inspires his own. While these events were transpiring in the eas- tern section of the 7th military district, the solici- tude of the commander and of the whole adjoining country, was encreased for the safety of New Or- leans, emphatically the key of the whole Western States and Territories. Col. Nicoil, soon after his arrival at Pensacola, confident of success, and swelling with the '* un- gc^thered laurels" of anticipated victories, endeav- oured to prepare the minds of Louisianians, Ken- tuckians, Tennesseeans, and the citizens of Missi- sippi, for the blessings of Britisli dominion, to which they would shortly be subjected. Although his celebrated Proclamation has long been before the indignant reader, to hold that and hiai up again to contempt, X insert it in this work. COL. NICOLL, TO LOUISIANIANS, KENTUCKIaNS, &C. " Natives of Louisiana I On you the first call is made, to assist in liberating from a faithless, imbe- cile government, your paternal soil : Spaniards, Frenchmen, Italians, and British, whether settled, or residing for a time in Louisiana, on you, also, I call, to aid me in this just cause. The American usurpation^ in this country must be abolished, atid the Icmiful owners of the soil put in possession. I aDi at the head of a large body of Indians, well arm- ed, disciplined, and commanded by British offi- 176 MEMOIRS or cers— a good train of artillery, with every requisite, seconded by the powerful aid of a numerous British and Spanish squadron of ships and vessels of war. Be not alarmed, inhabitants of the country, at our approach ; the same good faith and disinterested- nessjwhich has distinguished the conduct of Britons in Europe, accompanies them here ; you will have no fear of litigious taxes imposed on you, for the purpose of carrying on an unnatural and unjust war ; your property, your laws, the peace and tranquillity of your country, will be guaranteed to you by men, who will sufler no infringement of their's. Rest as- sured, that these brave red men only burn with an ardent desire of satisfaction, for the wrongs they have suffered from iht Americans ; to join you, in liberating these southern provinces from their yoke ^ and drive them into those limits, formerly prescri- ])ed by my sovereign. The Indians have pledged themselves in the most solemn nanner, not to injure, in the slightest degree, the persons or properties of any, but enemies. A ilag over any door, whether Spanish, French, or British, will be a certain pro- tection ; nor dare any Indian put his foot on the threshold thereof, under penalty of death from his own countrymen ; not even an enemy, will an In- dian put to death, except resisting m arms ; and as for injuring helpless women and children, the red men, by their good conduct, and treatment to them, will (if it be possible) make the Americans blush for their more inhuman conduct lately on the Escam- bia ; and within a neutral territory. ANDREW JACKSON. 177 Inhabitants of Kentueky! you have too long borne with grievous impositions — the whole brunt of the war has fallen on your brave sons : be im- posed on no longer, but either range yourselves under the standard of your forefathers, or observe a strict neutrality. If you comply with either of these offers, what- ever provisions you send down, will be paid for in dollars^ and the safety of the persons bringing it, as ibell as the free navigation of the Missisippi, guar- anteed to you. Men of Kentucky ! let me call to your view, (and I trust to your abhorrence,) the conduct of those factio7is, which hurried you into this civil, unjust, and unnatural loar, at a time when Great Britain was straiuinj^ every nerve, in defence of her own, and the liberties of the world — when the bravest of her sons were fisjhting and bleeding in so sacred a cause — when she was spending millions of her treasure, in endeavouring to pull down one of the most formidable and dan- gerous tyrants, that ever disgraced the form of man — when groaning Europe was almost in her last gasp — when Britons alone showed an iindauntcd front — basely did those assassins endeavour to stab her from the rear ; she has turned on them, reno- vated from the bloody, but successful struggle. Europe is happy and free, and she now hastens, justly, to revenge the unprovoked insult. Show them that you are not collectively unjust ; leave that contemptible few to shift for themselves : let 78 MEMOIRS OP those slaves of the tyrant send an embassy to Elba, and implore his aid ; but let every honest, upright American spurn them with united contempt. After tlie experience of twenty-one years, can you longer support those brawlers for liberty, who call it free* dom, when themselves are free ? Be no longer their dupes— accept of my ofl'ers — every thing 1 have promised in this paper, I guarantee to you, on the sacred honour of a British officer. Given under my hand, at my head -quarters, Pensacolai this 29th day of August, 1814. EDWARD NICOLL. It would be difficult to determine whether weak- ness, iguorance, arrogance, or falsehood predomi- nates in this British state paper ; and whether it was the production of a cabinet council at London, or of the individual labour of the redoubted Col. NicolL It would be *' stale, flat, and unprofitable," to ana- lyze or criticise it. It evinces the weakness of the author, his ignorance of the American character, the arrogance of a coward, and the baseness of a scoundrel. The conduct of Nicoll at Pensacoia, is a sufficient commentary upon his proclamation. Having duped the governour of Florida, and expos- ed his capital to destruction, he basely deserted hina, in his utmost need, and shewed, that with an ancient British Knight, he thought " the better part of valour is — discretion." Maj. Lawrence at Fort Bowyer, taught him, for the rest part of his life, to ANDREW JACKSON. 179 look with a single eye*^ No proclamation could be better calculated to call the gallant sons of Ken- tucky, Tennessee, Louisiana, and Missisippi to the standard of the American Hero, than this. They knew well how to distinguish between his patriot- ism and courage, and '^ the sacred honour of a Brit- ish officer,''^ It will be remembered that another British officer, Gen. Brisbane, invited the citizens of New-York and Vermont, to flee to the standard of Sir Geo. Prevost, at Plattsburg. They preferred that of Gen. Macomb ; and there taught the vaunt- ing conquerors of Napoleon the same lesson at the North, which Gen. Jackson afterwards repeated to them at the South, * See Gen. Jackson's account of the defence of Fort Bowyer. 180 MEMOIRS OI CHAPTER XIII. Gen. Jackson's arrival at New Orleans — perilous situation of that place — reliance upon distant forces — ^his address to the people of Louisiana — ^timidity of the legislature — evidence of disaffec- tion, and traitorous conduct — Declaration of Martial Law — Measures of defence — Arrival of reinforcements — Landing* of the enemy — ^Battle of the 23d December— Official report of it- THE solicitude which Gen. Jackson felt for the safety of Mobile bay and Fort Bowyer, was now almost forgotten in the overwhelming anxiety he endured for the most important place in his district, and in some respects, in the Union — New Orleans, For a considerable period there had been no gen- eral officer in the 7th military district but himself, who was attached to the array of the United States, although with him there had long been one general officer who would adorn any service. At length Brig. Gen. Winchester, of U. S. army, arrived, and to him Gen. Jackson assigned the command of the eastern section of his district, and immediately re~ paired to New Orleans. He arrived at this place upon the 2d December, J814. A mere casuist may wonder why the pre- sence of a single individual at an exposed place, is an augury of its safety ; but it is in vain for casu- ists, philosophers, or stoics, to laugh at a sentiment that is common to our nature. TJie presence of ANDREW JACKSON. 181 Washington at Trenton^ and of Putnam at Bun- ker'' s Hill, had the same effect upon citizens and soldiers, as that of Jackson at New Orleans, At no period since the declaration of American Independence in July 1776, to December 1814, had an American commander a duty of more impor- tance and difficulty to discharge than had Gen. Jackson at this portentous period. At.Mobile, with means apparently wholly insufficient, (to use his own language,) he had '*a sickly climate, as well as an enemy to contend with." At New Orleans he had to contend with the consternation of the citi- zens, the insolence of judicial power, and the timor- ous policy of the legislature of Louisiana ; as well as against the most powerful land and naval force, that had, for forty years, menaced any one place in the Republic. lie had also to contend with the prejudices, the favouritism, and the perfidiousness of foreigners, a vast number of whom had migrated to Louisiana before its accession to the Republic, by Mr. Monroe's treaty. Although the Proclamation of Nicoll, excites in fhe mind of an intelligent American reader, no feeling but that of ineflable contempt ; yet with the mixed population of Louisiana, its effects might be essentially diilerent. Although amongst that pop--- Illation, where many native Americans of distin- guished talents and patriotism, it is without a doubt the fact, that in I8l4, a majority of its inhabitants were of foreign extraction ; and that much the 182 MEMOIRS O? 1 1 most numerous class of foreigners were Frenchmen, J They saw the same fomidable power, that had re- I cently taken the lead in conquering the conqueror | of Europe, driving him into exile, and restoring Louis XVI II. to the French throne, now menacing \ i Louisiana with a force, that seemed to be irresisti- t ble. Spaniards^ in the same power, recognized j the restorer of Ferdinand VI I. Englishmen^ dared ) not take up arras against their own countrymen un- ^i less certain of victory. Gen. Jackson was aware 1 that in this discordant mass of people, there would be many who would not only neglect to repair to 1 the American standard, but who would " give aid and comfort" to the enemy. He was also aware I that energetic and coercive measures to detect do- mestic traitors, or to conquer a powerful foe, would meet with resistance from that undefined, and fre_ quently unrestrained spirit of liberty, which for- eigners, recently settled in the Republic, almost in- variably manifest. But it was in vain for him to wish for a different state of things, or to pursue a course of conduct which a different state would have rendered judicious and expedient. He was compel led to actas circumstances dictated, without the pow- er of changing them. Like a great man in danger, described by a great poet, with elegance—^* Serene^ and master of himself, he prepared far what might come, and left the rest to heaven^ Commander in chief of the extensive and im- portant military district No. 7, he knew that the ANDREW JACKSON. 18S eyes and the hopes of the American people were fixed upon him, and *' the little phalanx" who had followed him to victory. With many who knew the peril of his situation, these hopes were mingled with despair ; but despair never produced its par- alizing efiiects in the bosom of the general. In Gov. Claiborne of Louisiana, Gov. Blount of Tennes- see, and Gov. Shelby of Kentucky, he felt a safe* a certain reliance, as he knew them to be patriotic statesmen of the first water. In Gen, Coffee and Gen. Carroll, and the gallant men who he knew would fullow him to victory or to death, he could recognize officers and soldiers who would cheerful- ly unite with him and the small regular force he had under his command, at New Orleans. From Mis- sisippi, he also felt the strongest assurance that his force would be augmented by many of its gal- lant soldiers, who had followed him in taking am- ple vengeance upon the Creeks, for the massacre at Tensaw, in their territory. It was still, however, wholly uncertain how soon an effective force, which would give any hopes of a successful delibnce of the place would arrive. His first reliance was upon the Louisiana militia, upon whom, from circum- stances already mentioned, he could place the least. He had a faithful coadjutor in Gov. Claiborne ; and from Mr. Edward Livingston, derived every assis. tance which liis great talents and influence enabled. him to afford. Gen. Jackson addressed the citizens and soldiers of Louisiana, in the following impres- ive manner : — j84 memoirs of <« Natives of the the United States! the enemy you are to centend with, are the oppressors of your infant political existence — they are the men your fathers fought and conquered, whom you are now to oppose. Descendants of Frenchmen! natives of France! tliey are English, the hereditary, the eternal ene- mies of your ancient country, the invaders of that you have adopted, who are your foes. Spaniards ? remember the conduct of your allies at St. Sebas- tian, and recently at Fensacola, and rejoice that you have an opportunity of avenging the brutal injuries inflicted by men who dishonour the human race. Louisianians ! your general rejoices to wit- ness the spirit that animates you, not only for your honour but your safety ; for whatever had been your conduct or wishes, his duty would have led, and yet will lead him, to confound the citizen, un- nimdfuJ of his riglits, with the enemy he ceases to oppose. Commanding men who know their rights, a; d are determined to defend them, he salutes you as brethren in arras ; and has now a new motive to exert all his faculties, which shall be strained to t! e "itmost, in your defence. Continue with the energy you have begun, and he promises you not only safety, but victory over an insolent foe, who has insulted you by an affected doubt of your at- taciiPjent to the constitution of your country. Your enemy is near ; his sails already cover the lakes : but the brave are united ; and if he find us con- ANDREW JACKSON. 185 tending among ourselves, it will be for the prize of valour — and fame, its noblest reward.*' Considering the nature of the people and of the troops he had to address, it is difficult to conceive of an appeal more appropriate. The native Amer- icans are pointed to *' the oppressors of their infant political existeivce^'^ — The natives of France to the " eternal enemy of their ancient country — the invaders of the one they had adopted*'' — Spaniards too, arc reminded of *' the brutal injuries inflicted'*'' upon their country, *' by men who dishonour the human race^ It was argumentum ad hominum — an appeal to men ; which is generally more effectual thaa arguments d^diWc^iX ivom principle. But excepting with the American part of the pppulation, it had no effect. Indeed, from Euroi)ean Spaniards but little exertion could be expected in the cause of (he Republic, whtn they shortly expected to see the country they inhabited return to the Spanish yoke *, and the Frenchmen there, who, a short pe- riod before, were vociferating, Vive VEmptreur ! were now sending in their adhesions to Louis XVXII. and exclaim, Five le Roil — So far from volunteering, they refused to comply with the mil- itary drafts that were made. The disaffection of the few is easily checked, when the public functionaries discharge the neces- sary duties devolved upon them ; but so far were the legislative and juf'iciary powers of the stale, rem calling in the power of law to check the 18G MEMOIRS OF growing discontent, that they encouraged it by conniving at it. Governour Claiborne did every thing which a patriotic and vigilant executive could discharge ; but a majoriti/ of tlie legislature, nerve- less, timorous, and desponding, hung upon him like an incubus^ and paralized all his exertions. In re- gard to this house of assembly, the governour might have said, *' mine enemies are those of my own household." From the Police of the city of New Orleans, no more hopes could be derived than from the major- ity of the legislature of the state ; and some of its inliabitants were carrying on a treacherous inter- course with the enemy. The writer would not so confidently have stated the facts contained in this chapter, unless he had in his possession indu- bitable evidence of their accuracy. From the mass of testimony, the following is selected from the correspondence between Gov. Claiborne and Gen. Jackson. In one letter the governour says, " On a late occasion \ had the mortification to acknowl- edge my inability to meet a requisition from Gen. Flournoy ; the corps of this city having for the most part resisted my orders, being encouraged in their disobedience by the legislature of the state, then in session; one branch of -which, the senate, having declared the requisition illegal and oppressive, and the house of representatives having rejected a proposition to approve the mea- sure. How far I shall be supported in my late ANDREW JACKSON. JSf orders remains yet to be proved. I have reason to calculate upon the patriotism of the interior and western counties. I know also that there are many faithful citizens in New Orleans ; but there are others, in whose attachment to the United States I ought not to confide. Upon the whole, Sir, r cannot disguise the fact, that if Louisiana should be attacked, we must principally depend for security upon the prompt movements of the regu- lar force under your command, and the militia of the western states and territories. At this moment we are in a very unprepared and defenceless condi- tion; several important points of defence remain unoccupied, and in case of a sudden attack, this capital would, I fear, fall an easy sacrifice." In another letter, he most impressively remarks, — " Inclosed you have copies of my late general orders. They may, and I trust will be obeyed ; but to this moment, my fellow citizens have not mani- fested all that union and zeal the crisis demands, and their own safety requires. There is in this city a much greater spirit of disaffection, than I had anticipated ; and among the faithful Louisianians, there is a despondency which palsies all my prepa- rations ; they see no strong regular force, around which they could rally with confidence, and they seem to think themselves not within the reach of seasonable assistance, from the western states. I am assured, Sir, you will make the most judicious disposition of the forces under your command ; but iSS MEMOIRS OF excuse me for suggesting, that the presence of the seventh regiment, at or near New Orleans, will have the most salutary effect. The garrison here at present, is alarmingly weak, and is a cause of much regret : from the great mixture of persons, and characters, in this city, we have as much to ap- prehend from within as from without. In arresting the intercourse between New Orleans and Pensacola, you have done right. Pensacola is in fact, an en- emy's post, and had our commercial intercourse with it continued, the supplies furnished to the en- emy, would have so much exhausted our own stock of provisions, as to have occasioned the most serious inconvenience to ourselves. I was on the point of taking on myself, the pro- hibition of the trade with Pensacola : I had prepa- red a proclamation to that effect, and would have issued it the very day I heard of your interposition. Enemies to the country ma}^ blame you for your prompt and energetic measures ; but, in the person of every patriot you will find a supporter. I am very confident of the very lax police of this city, and indeed throughout the state, with respect to the visits of strangers. I think with you, that our country is filled with spies and traitors. I have written pressiugly on the subject, to the city author- ities and parish judges— I hope some efficient regula- tions will speedily be adopted by the first, and more vigilance exerted for the future, by the latter" ANDREW JACKSON. 189 In a third letter, the governour observes, — ♦* The only difficulty I have liitherto experienced in meeting the requisition, has been in this city, and exclusively frona some European Frenchmen, who, after giving their adhesion to Louis XVIIF. have, through the medium of the French consul, claimed exemption from the drafts, as French sub- jects. The question of exemption, however, is now under discussion, before a special court of in- quiry, and I am not without hopes, that tJiese un- grateful men, may yet be brought to a discharge of their duties. You have been informed of the contents of an intercepted letter, written by Col. Coliel, a Span- ish officer, to Capt. Morales, of Pensacola. This letter v^as submitted for the opinion of the attorney general of the state, as to the measures to be pursu- ed against the writer. Tlie attorney general was of opinion, that the courts could take no cognizance of the same ; but that the governour miglit order the writer to leave the state, and in case of refusal, to send him off by force. I accordingly, Sir, or- dered Col. Coliel to take his departure, in forty- eight hours, for Pensacola, and gave him the ne- cessary passports. I liope this measure may meet your approbation. It is a just retaliation for the conduct lately observed by the governour of Ptn- sacola, and may induce the Spaniards residing among us, to be less communicative upon those subjects which relate to our military movements." 190 MEMOIRS OF In another letter, this patriotic chief magistrate says to Gen. Jackson, "If Louisiana is invaded, I « shall put myself at the head of such of ray militia as will follow me to the field, and on receiving, shall obey your orders.'* It will be remembered that the venerable Gov. Shelby, of Kentucky, served under Maj Gen. Harrison, when he obtained his signal victory over Gen. Proctor. In addition to this explicit evidence, furnished by Gov. Claiborne, Charles K Blanchard, Esq. writes to G^en. Jackson thus — '* Quarter- master Peddie of the British army, observed [to me] that the commanding officers of the British forces, were daily in the receipt of every information from the city of New Orleans, which they might require in aid of their operations, for the completion of the objects of the expedi- tion ; — that they were perfectly acquainted with the situation of every part of our forces, the manner in which the same was situated, the number of our fortifications, their strength, position, &c. He fur- thermore stated, that the above information was re- ceived from persons in the city of New Orleans, from whom he could at any hour^ procure every in- formation necessary to promote his majesty's in- terest ! !" I have been thus particular in describing the situation in which Gen. Jackson found the citizens of Louisiana, its legislature, and its capital, upon his arrival there early in December, 1814, because it induced, and indeed compelled him to resort to a ANDREW JACKSON, ]9l measure which had never before been resorted to in the Republic, since the adoption of the Consti- tution THE DECLARATION OF MARTIAL LAW. This took place upon the I6th of the montli, twenty- three days l)efore the splendid victory, which secu- red the city of New Orleans and the states border- ing upon the Missisippi, from the rapacity of an enemy whose principles of warfare had been de- monstrated, upon the western frontier, at Havre dc Grace, at Hampton, and at Washington .' The proceedings of the legislature were suspen- ded. But let the majority of the members, who then constituted it, remember, that the suspension of their civil power, was occasioned by their resis- tance of a legal military power. Gen. Jackson had been too long in the discliarge of the highest civil functions, not to acknowledge the superiority of the civiU over the military power. He had been too long in military life, to be ignorant of the duties of an American General, to whom was com- mitted the defence of a district, the safety of which was paramount to every other consideration. The citizens of New Orleans, and its environs, were, for a few days deprived of their accustomed privileges. But the patriotic part of them, endu- red the deprivation with pleasure, since i; prohi- bited the perfidious and traitorous part of them, from holding an intercourse with the rnemy, calcu- kted to aid them in the subjugation of it. 192 MEMOIRS or Gen. Jackson had been incessantly engaged, since his arrival, in selecting the most comman- ding scites for fortifications, near the mouth of the Missisippi. Fort St. Philips, was selected as the most eligible one, and Maj. W, H. Overton was appointed to the command of it. His gallant de- fence of it, will constitute a subsequent article in these memoirs. The naval force near New Orleans, consisted of small gun vessels, under the command of Capt. Patterson. The gallantry, not to say des- peration, with which they were defended, more properly belongs to the naval chronicle than to this work. From the l6th, to the 22d December, the gen- eral, by his animation, vigilance, and exertions, seemed to magnify his little phalanx into a host, and to dissipate the despondency that pervaded the citizens, by the confidence his presence excited. Upon the last mentioned day, the reinforcements from Tennessee, under Generals Carroll and Coffee had arrived. Those under Gen. Coffee, were, the most of them, the same men who had encamped at Fort St. Stephens, two months previous, and who were present at the capture of Pensacola, upon the 7t\\ November. From the time they left Tennes- see, to the time they encamped at New Orleans, they had marched over 800 miles ! The troops under the command of Gen. Carroll, were those recently raised by order of Gov. Blount, and but ANDREW JACKSON. 193 few of them had seen any service. They had sud- denly repaired to their rendezvous at home ; im- mediately entered the water craft in the Missisippi, and had no opportunity to study even the first principles of military tactics, before they were called to face a veteran foe whose prowess was acknowledged through the world. The Missisippi Dragoons had also arrived, under the command of their accomplished leader, Maj. Hinds ; and this heterogenous mass of citizen-soldiers, was conver- ted, as by magic, into an army, whose achievements under their great leader, Gen. Jackson, will now be detailed. At this period, the Kentucky troops, raised by order of Gov. Shelby, and commanded by Maj. Gen. Thomas, had not arrived at New Orleans. ^ Previous to the 23d, the gun vessels had been captured by the enemy, with an overwhelming force, after a defence by Lieut. Thos. Ap. Catesby Jones, which " reflects additional splendour on our naval glory, and diminishes the regret felt by their loss."* Upon the 23d, Maj. Gen. Keene landed nine miles below New Orleans, with 3000 men, inured to arms, and Gen. Jackson, with less than half that number of men, mostly militia, immediately march- ed to give him battle. His account of the contest follows. • vide Capt. Patterson's, and Lieut. Jones* official reports, 17 194* MEMOIRS OF MAJ» gen. JACKSON TO HON. JADIES MONROE. Camp, below New Orleans, Dec. 27, 1814. Sir — The loss of our gun boats near the pass of the Rigolets, having given the enemy command of lake Borgne, he was enabled to choose his point of attack. It became therefore an object of impor- tance, to obstruct the numerous bayous and canals, leading from that lake to the highlands on the Mis- sisippi. This important service was committed, in the first Instance, to a detachment of the 7th reg- iment, afterwards to Col. De Laronde, of the Louisiana militia, and lastly, to make all sure, to Maj. Gen. Villere, commanding the district be- tween the river and the lakes, and who being a native of the country, was presumed to be Ijest ac- quainted with all those passes. Unfortunatel}^, however, a picquet which the general had estab- lished at the mouth of the bayou Bienvenu, and which, notwithstanding my orders, had been left unobstructed, was completely surprised, and the enemy penetrated through a canal leading to his farm, about two leagues below the city, and suc- ceeded in cutting clT a company of militia station- ed there. This intelligence was communicated to me about 12 o'clock of the 23d. My force at this time, consisted of parts of the 7th and 44th regi- ments, not exceeding six hundred together, the city militia, a part of Gen. Coft'ee's brigade of mounted gunmen, and the detached militia irom the wes- tern division of Tennessee, under the command of ANDREW JACKSON. 19S Maj. Gen. Carroll. These two last corps were sta- tioned 4 miles above the city. Apprehending a double attack by the way of Chief-Menteur, I left Gen. Carroll's force and the militia of the city, pos- ted on the Gentilly road ; and at five o'clock P. M. marched to meet the enemy, whom I was resolved to attack in his first position, with Maj. Hind's dra- goons, Gen. Coffee's brigade, parts of the 7th and 44th regiments, the uniformed companies of mili- tia, under the command of Maj. Planche, 200 men of colour, chiefly from St. Domingo, raised by Col. Savary, and acting under the command of Maj. Dagwin, and a detachment of artillery under the direction of Col. M'Rhea, with two 6 pounders, under the command of Lieut. Spotts ; not exceed- ing in all, 1500. I arrived near the enemy's en- campment about seven, and immediately made my dispositions for the attack. His forces amounting at that time on laud, to about 3000, extended half a mile on that river, and in the rear nearly to the wood. Gen. Coflee was ordered to turn their right, while with the residue of the force, I attack- ed his strongest position on the left, near the river. Com. Patterson, having dropped down the river in the schooner Caroline, was directed to open a fire upon their camp, which he executed at about half past seven. This being a signal of attack. Gen. Cof- fee's men, with their usual impetuosity, rushed on the enemy's right and entered their camp, while our right advanced with equal ardour. There can i98 MEMOIRS OF bf but little doubt, that we should have succeeded on that occasion, with our inferior force, in destroy- ing or capturing the enemy, had not a thick fog which arose about 8 o'clock, occasioned some con- fusion among the different corps. Fearing the con- sequence, under this circumstance, of the further prosecution of a night attack, with troops then acting together for the first time, I contented my- self with lying on the field that night ; and at four in the morning assumed a stronger position, about two miles nearer the city. At this position I re- mained encamped, waiting the arrival of the Ken- tucky militia and other reinforcements. As the safety of the cily will depend on the fate of this army, it must not be incautiously exposed. In this affair the whole corps under my command , deserve the greatest credit. The best compliment I can pay to Gen. Coflfee and his brigade, is to say, they have behaved as they have always done, while under my command. The 7th led by Maj. Pierre, and i4th, cornxoanded by Col. Ross, distinguished themselves. The battalion of city militia com- manded by Maj. Planche, realized my anticipations, and behaved like veterans. Savary's volunteers manifested great bravery ; and the company of city rifliemen, having penetrated into the midst of the enemy's camp, were surrounded, and fought their way out with the greatest heroism, bringing with them a number of prisoners. The two field pieces were well served by the ofHcers commanding them. ANDREW JACKSON. 107 ' All my officers in the line did their duty, and I have every reason to be satisfied with the whole pf my field and staff. Cols. Butler and Piatt, and Maj. Chotard, by their intrepidity, saved the artil- lery. Col. Haynes was every where that duty or danger called. I was deprived of the services of one of my aids, Capt. Butler, whom I was obliged to station, to his great regret, in town. Capt. Reid, my other aid, and Messrs. Livingston, Duplissis, and Davizac, who had volunteered their services, faced danger wherever it was to be met, and carri- ed my orders with the utmost promptitude. We made one Major, two subalterns, and sixty- three privates prisoners ; and the enemy's loss in killed and wounded must have been at least . My own loss I have not as yet been able to ascer- tain with exactness, but suppose it to amount to 100 in killed, wounded and missing. Among the former, I have to lament the loss of Col. Lauder- dale, of Gen. Coffee's brigade, who fell while bravely fighting. Cols. Dyer and Gibson of the same corps, were wounded, and Maj. Kavcnaugh taken prisoner. Col. DeLaronde, Maj. Villere, of the Louisiana militia, Maj. Latour, of engineers, having no com- mand, volunteered their services, as did Drs. Kerr and Hood, and were of great assistance to me. I have the honour to be, &c. ANDREW JACKSON. Hon. James Monroe, Secretary of War- 17 * 198 MEMOIRS OF Since the civilized world have made the trade of war a science, perhaps no two armies ever met and separated, with opinions so different of each, as those of Gen. Jackson and Gen. Keene, on the 23d. The first, consisting of a small number of regular troops, and the rest of gentlemen and yeomen, who had spent their days amidst the scenes of peace, the whole amounting only to 1500, must have met a veteran army of 3000, in field fight, with fore- bodings bordering upon despair. The second, con- scious of great superiority in numbers, in discipline, and in experience, marched to the contest with contempt for their enemy, and a certainty of making them their prey. The battle gave to the first, confidence — to the second, it taught cant km. As the general, in his ofticial report, does not mention the number the enemy lost, I extract from Insp. Gen. Ilaynes' report, " Killed^ left on the field of battle, IQO-^Wounded, left on the field of battle, 2m~-Prisoners, 70-— total, 400.*' The losr, in tlie American forces, were — Killed, 21' — Woun- ded, 115 — missing, 74 — total, 213, ANDREW JACKSON, 199 CHAPTER XIV. Benevolent exertions of the Ladies of New Orleans—Gen. Jack son selects the final position of his army — Loss of the naval force — Capt. Patterson — Lieut. Jcnes — Harmony between land and naval forces — Defence at the mouth of the Missisippi — American hnes on the east and west side of the river described — Battle of the 28th December — of the 1st January — Attempt upon the left wing" of the American arm}-. THE battle of the 23(1 December, althougli by no means a decisive one, produced those effects which led to ultimate victory. The despondency of the citizens was converted into hope, and the undisciplined troops of the Republic, presented " a rampart of high-minded and brave men.^^ From the romantic age of chivalry, to this period of the world, the defence of the fair sex has been the pride of the warrior, and their approving- sen- tence, one of his highest rewards. The ladies of New Orleans, not content merely to bestow their applause and their smiles upon their defenders, ex- erted all their faculties to ameliorate the hardships they endured, and to relieve them from the priva- tions they suffered. Clothing of a necessary kind, %vas furnished to a large amount for the troops, who, from long service and absence from home, found it a most seasonable supply. Almost constant ex- posure to the inclemency of the season, rendered 200 MEMOIRS OF an additional supply of clothing, a comfort to the war-worn veteran, which he knows well how to ap- preciate. Imitating the exalted benevolence of the American matrons and daughters, in the glooniy period of the revolution, the females of the city became ministering angels to the wants of their heroic protectors. The historian will immediately recollect, that the women of ancient Carthage, in a time of danger, divested themselves of their flow- ing locks^ and converted them into cordage to aid the common defence. While the achievements of female Amazons, rather excite disgust than ap- plause, the refined benevolence of the tender sex, commands the admiration of men ; and even angels must witness it with a smile of complacency. Notwithstanding the rigorous execution of mar- tial law, over citizens as well as soldiers, the sullen murmurs of the disaffected were drowned by the applause of the patriotic. All was animation in the camp — all. was confidence in the city. Gen. Jack- son was in daily, indeed in hourly expectation of a renewed attack from the enemy. Although the American troops remained upon the field of battle antil the 24th, yet the disadvantages of the situa- tion, and the continuance of the enemy in their first position where they landed, with nearly treble his force, induced him to fall back nearer to the city. Ofiensive operations, under these circum- stantes, would have been rashness bordering upon desperation* ANDREW JACKSON. 201 Although from the gallant achievements of his troops upon the 23cl, Gen. Jackson had every thing to hope from them, yet he did not, as has often been the case in modern warfare, consider men as ammunition^ to be expended at pleasure, to grace the commander with laurels. His lan- guage to Mr. Monroe was — '* As the safety of this city^ will depend on the fate of this army., it must not be incautiously exposed.'''* He selected the most advantageous position, upon the east bank of the Missisippi, and commenced a system of defence, which will forever give him an exalted rank among the great commanders of the nineteenth century. Although to use his own expressions, for which our copious language can with difficulty furnish a substitute—" The surest defeme.^ thai seldom fails of success, is a rampart of highviinded and brave men^^ — he acted in every situation, as if he was accountable to his country and his God, for the life of every man that was lost, who fought under liis standard. After the loss of the small flotilla under Lieut. Jones, there was no naval defence but the schooner Caroline, and she was placed in a situation, which, owing to the current of the Missisippi, and the course of the winds, rendered her an easy prey to the enemy. Her gallant crew, however, defend- ed her until the red hot balls thrown from the enemy's battery, set her on fire and blew l;tr up, upon the 27th. Capt. Patterson and all his offi- 902 MEMOIRS 0¥ \ cers and men, immediately placed themselves un- i der the- command of Gen. Jackson, and by their ^ consummate skill in gunnery, rendered most essen- i tial service in the land batteries. I cannot omit a j brief extract from Capt. Patterson's letter to the ^ navy department, dated 27th Jan. 18 15. — '* I have '■ received from all the officers whom 1 have the hon- { our to command, every aid and support which could ' possibly be rendered. They have been exposed | to extraordinary hardships, both by day and night, i to all the changes of this unstable clime, in this! inclement season of the year ; performing the must | arduous duties on shore, out of the line of their i profession, independent of their ordinary duties ; • and all has been done and executed, with a cheer- 1 fulness and alacrity that reflects upon them the j highest credit ; and that the unwearied exertions of i the small naval force on this station, from the first j appearance of the enemy, has contributed, in a< great degree, to his expulsion, is freely acknowl- edged by the gallant general, commanding the land forces." The officers mentioned in this letter, are Capt. Henley, Lieuts. Alexis, Thompson, Norris, and Cunningham ; Mr. Purser Shields, Dr. Morrell, sailing-master Dealy, surgeon Heerman, navy-agent Smith, Maj. Cormick, commanding the marine corps, Mr. Sbephard, aid de-camp, Lieut. Nevitt, volunteer ; acting Lieuts. Speddin and M^Keever. He further says — « my petty officers, seamen, and \ marines, performed their duties to my entire satis^ faction." ANDREW JACKSON. 203 ' It has already been mentioned that the guti boats, commanded by Lieut. Jones, were captured upon the l4th, and the commander severely wounded. His force was, Gun Boats, Nos. 5, 23, 156, 162, and 163 — the whole mounting 23 guns, and having 183 men on board. The British force that attacked this little gallant flotilla, consisted of 45 boats 42 guns, and 1200 men, commanded by Capt. Lock- yer, whose Joss in killed and wounded exceeded 300 men ; and he received three severe wounds himself. Upon Lieut. Jones, Capt. Patterson he- stows the highest applause ; and most deservedly loo; for considering the species of force he had under his command, and the immense superiority of the enemy, his gallantry is scarcely exceeded by any officer in our navy. It ought to be mentioned, whenever an opportu- nity occurs, as a fact which entitles the commanders of the land and naval forces of the Republic, to in- finite credit, that in every instance, excepting one, where they could act in conjunction in conquering the enemy, the utmost harmony prevailed. Gen. Harrison and Capt. Perry — Gen. Macomb and Capt. Macdonough — Gen. Jackson and Capt Pat- terson, went hand in hand to victory. Although in the last instance, the captain was compelled to leave his chosen element, with his gallant crews, he joined the army, and aided in the final victory. The various passes at the mouth of the Missi- sippi were guarded in the best possible manner, by 30i MEMOIRS or different forts ; and considering the short time al- lowed to construct them, and the few men only, who could be spared to garrison them, their defen- ces entitle the garrisons to the highest applause. Maj. Overton, at Fort St. Philips, determining, never to surrender, actually nailed the American flag to his standard, and resolved that it should triumphantly wave over that of Britain, as long as a living man remained in the fort to defend it. The troops at the mouths of the river, were as much inspired with fortitude by the addresses and examples of Gen. Jackson, as those under his imme- diate command. Having these forts, as well as the current of the Missisippi to oppose, the British admiral was prevented from bringing any of his larger vessels, to co-operate with the land forces, in their various attacks upon the American lines. Had he been enabled to effect this, it is difficult to conceive how the city could have been saved. Upon the 24th, Gen. Jackson took his final po- sition. It extended in a direct line from the east bank of the Missisippi, into the edge of the Cy- press Sioamp^ a distance exceeding a mile. For the whole distance, the troops almost incessantly laboured, and with a vigour worthy of the cause that called forth their laborious exertions, in throw- ing up a> strong breast work, under tlie protection of which they were to be intrenched. From the bank of the river to the edge of the Cypress Swamp, a distance of very near a mile, the country was ANDREW JACKSON. 205 a perfect plain. The small force under Gen. Jack- son, were in full view of the vastly superiour force in the British camp. Although they had received a check in the brilliant affair of the 23d, it would seem to be the result of infatuation itself, that they remained unmoved spectators of the measures of defence, the American commander was taking, which, if prosecuted to completion, would render them hopeless of success. It is haz- ardous judging from appearances, without a knowl- edge of motives ; but the conduct of the British army, at this time, would seem to justify the appli- cation to them, of a position maintained forages — ^' Client Dens perdere vulCf prills dementat''' — (whom Grod wills to destroy, he first makes mad.) Adjoining the river, and in advance of the main work, a redoubt was formed to protect the right wing of the army, upon which were mounted a number of pieces of heavy artillery. Through the whole line were mounted, at proper distances, can- non from six to thirty two pounders. The breast- work was extended from 450 to 500 yards into the swamp, to prevent the enemy from turning the left wing of the army. This part of the intrenchment, was constructed with extreme difficulty, and with excessive fatigue; being erected in a morass, almost impassable from the depth of the mud and water. It was wisely supposed that the British commander would conclude that the American intrenchment, reached only to the edge of the swamp ; and that 18 306 MEMOIRS OF he would endeavour to force a passage through it, and gain the rear of the American array. At the immediate edge of the swamp, an angular indent was made in the intrenchment, upon which heavy pieces of artillery were placed so as to rake the enemy in the swamp, from one side of it, and in the open field, from the other. Every hour's labour increased the strength of the intrenchment, and every event that transpired, augmented the confi- dence of the troops. Notwithstanding the rapidly increasing security of his small, and to a very con- siderable amount, unarmed troops, Gen. Jackson endeavoured to provide against every event, that could endanger their safety, or that of the city. Admitting the possibility that the British army, from their great superiority in numbers, and from the numerous pieces of heavy ordnance they were constantly transporting in barges, from their ship- ping to their encampment, might force his lines, he dispatched the whole of his unarmed men two miles in his rear, to erect another breast work, as a rallying point, at no great distance from the city. In tliis way, he furnished constant employ for all his men, prevented their despondency, and arous- ed their courage. Gen. Jackson was aware that the enemy's main army had not yet, (Dec. 24,) landed, and wholly uncertain where they would make a descent, he took the same measures to fortify the country on the west, or right bank of the river, as he had \NDREW JACKSON. 207 upon the east, or left bank. An intrenchmcnt was there tlirown up from the bank of the river, eztend> ing west to a swamp, which approaches nearer to the river than that upon the east side. Gov. Clai- borne and the Louisiana militia, being more per- fectly acquainted with the country, were stationed on the right bank of the river. The gallant Capt» Patterson and his crew had erected a battery near the bank of the river, and to the main in- trenchmcnt. This intrenchment was about three quarters of a mile below that on the left bank ; and being supported by Patterson's battery and his crew, whose skill in gunnery was evinced in the battle of the 23,d, it was supposed as capable of sustaining and repelling an assault, as that on the left. The command of the right bank of the river, was entrusted to Gen. Morgan, and a force placed under his command sufficient to render it as secure as tlie left. The description of the situation of the American forces after the 23d, and the measures then resorted to for future safety, may be deemed too minute ; but it will shortly be shewn that more than two thirds of the loss sustained by the Republican army in all the severe engagements before New Orleans, was suffered in that engagement in the open field. Had Gen. Jackson, like a rash commander, led his few undisciplined, and badly armed forces, to field fight, against the immensely superionr force of Sir Edward Fai:enham, furnished with 208 MEMOIRS OF every material and munition of war, it is almost a certainty, that he and his army, would have been prostrated upon the same plain where that gallant general, and so many of his veteran troops were mingled with the dust. The great and good Gen Jackson, knew that the men he commanded, were not mercenary troops, hired by a sanguinary mon- arch, to fight and to die at the pleasure of an am- bitious commander. His array, though small, con- tained the best blood in the adjoining states. Fathers were there, exposing their lives for their families, and sons were there fighting for their fathers. To return them home to a country de- fended by their valour, and to restore them to blessings secured by their toils, was far more grate- ful to his heart, than laurels obtained hy their blood, to decorate his brows. From the 245th to the 2Bth, the two armies re- mained in the position each had taken. Excepting the destruction of the schooner Caroline, and oc- casional skirmishiDg, nothing was heard but "dread- ful notes of preparation. '' Having blown up this vesael, which committed such ravages among their troops upon the 23cl, and having been reinforced.- Sir Edward Pakenham, in person, attacked the American lines upon the 28th. The commander thus describes tliis engagement, in his report to the Secretary of War, ANDREW JACKSON. 209 GEN. JACKSON TO HON. JAMES MONROE. Head Quarters, 7th military district. Camp below JVew Orleans^ 29th Dec. 1814. Sir — The enemy succeeded on the 27th, in blow- ing up the Caroline, (she being becalmed)by means of hot shot from a land battery which he had erect- ed in the night. Emboldened by this event, he marched his whole force the next day, up the level, in the hope of driving us from our position, and with this view, opened upon us, at the distance of about half a mile, his bombs and rockets. He was repulsed, however, with considerable loss — not less, it is believed, than 120 in killed. Oiir^s was inconsiderable — not exceeding half a dozen in killed, and a dozen wounded. Since then he has not ventured to repeat his at tempt, though lying close together. There has been frequent skirmishing between our picquets. I lament that I have not the means of carrying on more ofTensive operations. The Kentucky troops have not arrived, and my effective force, at this point, does not exceed 30(X). Tlieir*s must be at least double — both prisoners and deserters agreeing in the statement, that 7000 landed from their boats. ANDREW JACKSON. In this brief account, it is mentioned that rockets and bombs were sent from the British army into the American lines. Bombs have long been known 210 MEBIOJRS OF to our countrymen ; and although they sometimes occasion accidents, they never excite terror. \ Rockets are of recent invention ; and the glory of i having invented them is forever secured by royal \ favour, to an English statesman by the name of ] Congrcvc. They are called " Congreve rockets ;" | and as long as Englislimen are permitted to spread • havock and devastation through the world, tlie name oi i\\t humaiic inventor will sound and shine \ through it. ^lon?>\t\xx Gidllotin is entitled to the \ same kind of glory for having invented an imple- i ment of death, which bears his name, and to whicli '\ he fell a victim himself. JMr. Congreve may die a \ natural death. Gen. Jackson's intrenchraent had ; already acquired too much strength, and his " ram- ? part of high minded and brave men," too much \ confidence to be affected with any thing but solid | iron or lead. Sir Edward found in this, his first esssay, in the western world, that he had to contend witli otli- er soldiers than tliose of despots, who detest the power they fight for. He had to contend with Re- publican Freemen, each of whom had sacred rights to defend ; and who were ready to sacrifice their .'ives, In defence of their beloved Republic. From the 28th to the Jst January, the enemy were incessantly engaged in strengthening their force by transporting heavy pieces of artillery from their shipping to their lines. The Americans were no less industriously engaged in preparing to de- ANDREW JACKSON. 211 fend their's against the most furious onset that could be made. Upon the 1st January, the enemy pushed for- ^vard the whole of their heavy artillery, and at the same time, with bombs and rockets, commenced an attack upon the whole line, from the Missisippi to the Cypress Swamp. They were immediately an- swered by the heavy messengers of death that were planted upon the extensive intrenchment, and by the rifles and muskets that were wielded by the troops who were secured behind it. The battle raged until the approach of darkness induced the British assailants, to retire to their lines for safety. The enemy were repulsed with great loss ; but having carried their dead and wounded from the field, the number could not be ascertained. The loss of the Americans was — killed 11 — wounded 23 —Total 34. Convinced that an attack in line, could not be made with any hopes of success, they next attempt- ed to turn the left wing of the army, by means of a battery they had erected in the night season, and in a foggy morning, in the edge of the Swamp. Con- fident of accomplishing this object— as the sun ap- peared through the fog, to their utter astonishment and consternation, they found the American in- irenchraent completed 300 yards beyond their bat- tery in the Swamp, and the gallant Gen. Coffee and his Tennessee Volunteers ready to repel them. Their battery was destroyed— many lives were lost. 212 MEMOIRS OP and the assailants precipitately retreated to their camp. By these repeated attempts, and as often unsnc- cessful ones, the British commander was experi* mentally convinced, that some mode yet unessayed, must be adopted to gain a victory which his coun- trymen expected, and everj Americans feared, he would obtain. No British commander in chief, since the capture of Lord Cornwallis and his army, by VV^ashington, which terminated the war of the Revolution, had a duty of more peril and impor- tance to perform, than had Sir Edward Pakenhara, before New Orleans. Had he gained a victory over Gen. Jackson, as Wellington did over Napo- leon, he would as well have been entitled to a dukedom. He resolved not to despair, but to make another desperate effort, to acquire equal glory in the western, as Arthur Wellesley has in the eastern world. ANDREW JACKSON. 2l3 CHAPTER XV. Gen. Jackson's, and Sir Edward Pakenham's armies from the 1st, to the 8th January — Gen. Morgan's lines — Battle of the 8th January — Gen. Jackson's report of it — Gen. Morgan's retreat — Gen. Jackson's address to the armies — he regains the right bank of the Missisippi — Bombardment, and attack upon Fort St. Philips — Maj. Overton's report to Gen. Jackson. THE rival armies — the one under the standard of the Eagle, the other under that of the Lyoji, for a short period gazed at each other in silent majesty. The armies of the Prince Regent, having met with nothing but disasters, during the whole campaign of J8I4, had concentrated their forces with the navy, before New Orleans, with a determination to wipe olT the disgrace they had incurred, by a series of almost uninterrupted defeats. The histo- ry of some of their achievements thus far, has ne- cessarily been blended with the Memoirs of Gen. Jackson. From no army sent to America, since the commencement of the war of the revolution, to this period, had sanguinary Englishmen expect- ed so much, as from this. One of the first officers under Wellington, Sir Edward Pakenhara, was selected as its commander. Major-generals Keane, Gibbs, and Lambert, were generals of divisions. Most of the troops were those who had followed them, in their victorious career through the Pyren- oees, into the heart of France, and who had assist^ 214 MEMOIRS or ed iu gaining victories over the first Marshals in Eu- rope. In these considerations, may be found the reasons for the desperation, not to say infatuation, of the British officers, after they landed in Louisia- na They seemed to have adopted the sentiment of Napoleon, in the days of his glory, that " troops who had always conquered, will continue to conquer." Gen. Jackson, undismayed, and apparently un- concerned, instead of concealing himself in his head quarters in the rear of his intrenchmcnt, was constantly with his officers and troops, encour- aging them by his example, animating them by his presence, and arousing their patriotism by the most impassioned eloquence. Upon the 4th, the Kentucky militia arrived, under Gen. Thomas and Gen. Adair. They amounted to about twen- ty three hundred ; but they brought very little with them, excepting hearts glowing with patriotic ardour. But little disciplined, and almost without arms, as the general remarked to the Secretary of War — " My forces, as to number had been cncreased — my strcngthy had received but very little addi-1 tion." The city of New Orleans had been almost; completely stripped of arms, to furnish the Louisia- na militia, and the United States' arms which were ; known to be in the Missisippi, by some unaccoun- table neglect, had not yet arrived. The unarmed troops, however, were immediately placed in situa- tions to be the most serviceable in strengthening the main intrenchment, and forwarding the one two miles in the rear. ANDREW JACKSON. 2l5 The reader is referred to the description of the American intrenchments on each side of the Mis- sisippi, in the preceding chapter. Gen. Jackson, had so divided his forces, as to render the one as se- cure as the other. The British commander, resol- ved, as appeared from an order found in the pocket of a slain British ofEcerj and by his subsequent measures, to attack both lines simultaneously. This was anticipated by Gen. Jackson, and mea- sures were taken accordingly. Gen. Morgan, on the right bank of the river, was aided by the consum- mate skill and courage of Capt. Patterson, whose battery was so situated as to protect his iines, and annoy the enemy in the most effectual manner. A detachment of choice Kentucky troops was also passed over the river, to give him additional strength. Gen. Jackson's forces were thus sta- tioned — The regular troops in the redoubt, and on the right next to the river — Gen. Carroll's Tennes- see militia, and Gen. Adair's Kentucky militia, in the centre — and Gen. Colfee's brigade upon the left, which penetrated some distance into the Cy- press Swamp. The British army had been reinforced by the landing of Maj. Gen. Lambert's division. It has been ascertained to be an undoubted fact, that from the time the British commenced the landing of troops below New Orleans, the full amount of 14,000 men, had been placed under the command of Sir Edward Pakenham. It is impossible to deter- 216 MEMOIRS OF mine how many had been lost in the several en- gagements, from the 23d December, to the 8th January, or how many, upon that day, were upon the sick list. It would not however, be deemed improbable, to conclude that from 10 to 12,000, were engaged, about double the effective force of Gen. Jackson. Early upon the morning of the 8th January, 1815, a day which will forever be memorable in Ameri- can and British annals, a tremendous " shower of bombs and Congreve rockets," from the British army, announced the battle begun. The result will be found in the following reports, of the American Conqueror. GEN. JACKSON TO HON. JAMES MONROE. Camp 4 miles below Aew OrleanSf 9th January, 1815. Sir — During the days of the Gth and 7th, the ene- my had been actively employed in making prepara- tions for an attack on my lines. With infinite la- bour, they had succeeded on the night of the 7th, in getting their boats across from the lake to the river, by widening and deepening the canal on which they had effected their disembarkation. It had not been in my power to impede these opera- I tions by a general attack : added to other reasons, i the nature of the troops under my connnand, mostly J militia, rendered it too hazardous to attempt exten- i sive offensive movements in an open country, against ANDREW JACKSON. 217 a numerous and well disciplined army. Although my forces, as to number, had been increased by the arrival of the Kentucky division, my strength had received very little addition ; a small portion only of that detachment being provided with arras^ Compelled thus to wait the attack of the enemy, I took every measure to repel it, when it should be made, and to defeat the object he had in view. Gen. Morgan, with the New Orleans contingent, the Louisiana militia, and a strong detachment of the Kentucky troops, occupied an intrenched camp on the opposite side of the river, protected by strong batteries on the bank, erected and superin- tended by Com. Patterson. In my encampment, every thing was ready for action, when, early on the morning of the 8th, the enemy, after throwing a heavy shower of bombs and Congreve^ rockets, advanced their columns on my right and left, to storm my intrenchments. lean- not speak sufficiently in praise of the firmness and deliberation, with which my whole line received their approach — more could not have been expec- ted from veterans inured to war. For an hour, the fire of the small arms was as incessant and severe as can be imagined. The artillery, too, directed by officers who displayed equal skill and courage, did great execution. Yet the columns of the enemy continued to advance, with a firmness which re- flects upon them the greatest credit. Twice, the column which approached me on my left, was re- 19 "218 MEMOIRS OF pulsed by the troops of Gen. CarroH, those of Geo. Coffee, and a division of the Kentucky militia, and twice they formed again and renewed the assault. At length however, cut to pieces, they fled in con- fusion from the field, leaving it covered with their dead and wounded. The loss which the enemy sustained on this occasion, cannot be estimated at less than 1500 in killed, wounded, and prisoners. Upwards of three hundred have already been de- livered over for burial ; and my men are still en- gaged in picking them up within my lines, and car- rying them to the point where the enemy are to receive them. This is in addition to the dead and wounded, wdiora the enemy have been enabled to carry from the field, during, and since the action, and to those who have since died of the wounds they received. We have taken about 500 prison- ers, upwards of 300 of whom are wounded, and a great part of them mortally. My loss has not ex- ceeded, an4 I believe has not amounted to, ten kil- led, and as many wounded. The entire destruction of the enemy's army was now inevitable, had it not been for an unfortunate occurrence, which at this moment took place on the other side of the river. Simultaneously with his advance upon my lines, he had thrown over in his boats, a considerable force to the other side of the river. These having landed ■.v^ere hardy enough to advance against the works of Gen. Morgan ! and what is strange and difficult to account for, at the very moment when their en- ANDREW JACKSON. 219 tire discomfiture was looked for with a confidence approaching to certainty, the Keiituciiy reinforce- ments, ingloriously fled, drawing after them, by their example, the remainder of the forces ; and thus yielding to the enemy that most fortunate po- sition. The batteries which had rendered me, for many days, the most important service, though bravely defended, were of course now abandoned ; not however, until the guns had been spiked. This unfortunate route, had' totally changed the aspect of aflairs. The enemy now occupied a position from which they might annoy us without hazard, and by means of which they might have been enabled to defeat, in a great measure, the effects of our success on this side the river. It became therefore, an object of the first consequence to dislodge him as soon as possible. For this object, all the means in my power, which I could with any safety use, were immediately put in pre- paration. Perhaps, however, it was somewhat owing to another cause, that I succeeded, beyond my expectations. In negoeiating the terms of a temporary suspension of hostilities, to enable the enemy to bury their dead, and provide for thsir wounded, I had required certain propositions to be acceded to as a basis ; among which this was one-— that although hostilities should cease on this side the river until 12 o'clock of this day, yet it was not to be understood, that they should cease on the other side; b^it that no reinforcements should be 220 MEMOIRS OF sent across by either army, until the expiration of that day. His excellency Maj. Gen. Lambert, begged time to consider of those propositions until 10 o'clock of to-day, and in the mean time re-cross- ed his troops. I need not tell you with how much eagerness I immediately regained possession of the position he had thus hastily quitted. The enemy having concentrated his forces, may again attempt to drive me from my position, by storm. Whenever he doeSi I have no doubt my men will act with their usual firmness, and sustain a character now become dear to them. I have the honour, &c. ANDREW JACKSON. It will be noticed in this account, that Gen. Jack- son, while he bestows the most unqualified appro- bation upon his own brave troops, does not omit to declare, that the " columns of the enemy continued to advance with a firmness which reflects upon them the highest credit." A brave man is always generous to a brave foe ; and although a fallen one, withholds from him no credit that is justly his due. The general estimates the loss of the enemy, at scarcely half what it really was ; for although the Inspector-general . makes it 2,600, subse- quent acknowledgments from British prisoners, make it exceed 3000, The agitation felt by the general, at the loss of the important post, on the right bank of the river. ANDREW JACKSON. "" 221 under Gen. Morgan, is clearly discoverable in the language he uses ; and it has been said that he was too severe in saying, " The Kentucky rein- forcements ingloriously fled." He immediately delivered to them the following elegant address, in which he gives them the fullest credit, for courage, except in this instance. " While, by the blessing of heaven, one of the most brilliant victories was obtained by the troops under my immediate command, no words can ex- press the mortification I felt, at witnessing the scene exhibited on the opposite bank. I will spare your feelings and my own, nor enter into a detail on the subject. To all who reflect, it must be a source of eternal regret, that a few moments' ex- ertion of that courage you certainly possess, was alone wanting to have rendered your success more complete, than that of your fellow citizens in this camp. To what cause was the abandonment of your lines owing ? To fear ? no ! You are the countrymen, the friend, the brothers of those who have secured to themselves, by their courage, the gratitude of their country ; who have been prodi- gal of blood in its defence, and who are strangers to any other fear than disgrace — to disaftection to our glorious cause. No, my countrymen, your gen- eral does justice to the pure sentiments by which you are inspired. How then could brave men, firm in the cause in which they were enrolled, ne- glect their first duty, and abandon the post commit 19 ^ 222 MEMOIRS OF ted to their care ? The v/ant of discipline, the want of order, the total disregard to ohedience, and a spi- rit of insubordination, not lessdestructive thancovt'- ardice itself, are the causes which led to this dis- aster, and they must be eradicated, or I must cease to command. I desire to be distinctly understood, that every breach of orders, ail want of discipline, every inattention of duty, will be seriously and promptly punished ; that the attentive officers, and u;ood soldiers, may not be mentioned in the dis- grace and danger, which the negligence of a few may produce. Soldiers ! you want only the will? in order to emulate the glory of your fellow-citizens on this bank of the river — You have the same mo- tives for action — the same interest — the same coun- try to protect : and you have an additional interest, from past events, to wipe off reproach, and show that you will not be inferior, in the day of trial, to any of your countrymen. But remember, without obedience, without order, without descipline, all your efforts are vain. The brave man^ inattentive to his duty, is worth little more to his country, than the coward who deserts her in the hour of danger. Private opinions, as to the competency of officers, must not be indulged, and still less expressed, tt is impossible that the measures of those who vcommaud, should satisfy all who are bound to obey ; and one of the most dangerous faults in a soldier, is a disposition to criticise and blame ANDREW JACKSON. 233 the orders and characters of his super iours. Sol- diers ! I know that many of you have done your duty ; and I trust in future, that I shall have no reason to make any exception. Officers ! I have the fullest confidence that you will enforce obedi- ence to your commands ; but above all, that by subordination in your different grades, you will set an example to your men ; and that hereafter, the army of the right will yield to none, in the essential qualities which characterize good soldiers — that they will earn their share of those honours and rewards, which their country will prepare for its deliver ers.^^ Gen. Jackson, took immediate measures to re- gain by force, the important post on the right bank of the Missisippi ; but ever anxious to spare the effusion of human blood, he obtained it by ne- gociation^ as mentioned in his letter to the Secretary ofAVar. Therelinquishraent of this post, seems to be the result of that infatuation which evinced itself in every measure of the British commanders, after they landed in Louisiana. Had they aban- doned the east side of the river, and concentrated their forces upon the west, with the immense quan- tity of heavy artillery in their possession, they would have had the exclusive command of the country to Nev/ Orleans ; and what could then have saved the city, must be left to conjecture. Hence the solicitude of Gen. Jackson, to regain it ; hence too, his excessive mortification at it.s temporary loss. 224 MEMOIRS OF Notwithstanding this unparalleled victory obtain- ed, it appears from the following letter, that the general acted as if the enemy were preparing '* to make a still mightier ejj'ort to attain his first object.^'* GEN. JACKSON TO HON. JAMES MONROE. Head Quarters, Camp 4 miles below JVew OrleanSy Jan. 13th, 1815. Sir At such a crisis, I conceive it my duty, to keep you constantly advised of my situation. On the 10th instant, I forwarded you an account of the bold attempt made by the enemy, on the morning of the 8th, to take possession of my works by storm, and of the severe repulse which he met with. That report having been sent by the mail which crosses the lake, may possibly have miscar- ried ; for whicli reason, I think it the more neces- sary, briefly to repeat the substance of it. Early on the morning of the 8th, the enemy hav- ing been actively employed the two preceding days, in making preparations for a storm, advanced m two strong columns on my right and left. They were received however with a firmness which it seems they little expected, and which defeated all their hopes. My men, undisturbed by their ap- proach, which indeed they long anxiously wished for, opened upon them a fire, so deliberate and cer- tain, as rendered their scaling ladders and fascines, as well as their more direct implements of warfare, perfectly useless. For upwards of an hour it was ANDRKW JACKSON, 225 continued with a briskness of which there have been but few instances, perhaps, in any country. Injustice to the enemy, it must be said, they with- stood it as long as could be expected, from the most determined bravery. At length, however, when all prospect of success became hopeless, they fled in confusion from the field, leaving it covered with their dead and wounded. Their loss was immense. I had at first computed it at 1600 ; but it is since ascertained to have been much greater. Upon information, which is believed to be correct. Col. ":., the Inspector-general, reports it to be in total 2600. His report I enclose you. My loss was inconsiderable, being only 7* killed, and 6 wounded. Such a disproportion in loss, when ,we consider the number and the kind of troops en- gaged, must, I know, excite astonishment, and may not every where be fully credited ; yet I am per- fectly satisfied that the account is not exaggerated on the one part, nor underrated on the other. The enemy having hastily quitted a post, which they had gained possession of, on the other side of the river, and we, having immediately returned to it, both armies at present, occupy their former po- sitions. Whether, after the severe losses he has sustained, he is preparing to return to his shipping, or to make still mightier efforts to attain his first object, 1 do not pretend to determine. It becomes • This was in the action on the line — afterwards a skirmishing' \yas kept up, in which a few more of our men were lost. ,326 MEMOIRS OF me to act as though the latter were his intentioii« One thing however, seems certain, that if he still calculates on effecting what he has hitherto been unable to accomplish, he must expect considerable reinforcements ; as the force with which he land- ed must be undoubtedly diminished, by at least 3000. Besides the loss which he sustained, on the night of the 23d ult. which is estimated at 400, he cannot have suffered less between that period, and the morning o^ the 8th inst.than 3000 — having, within that time, boen repulsed in two general attempts to drive us from our position, and there having been continual cannonading and skir- mishing, during the whole of it Yet he is still able to shew a very formidable force. There is no doubt that the commanding general, Sir Edward Pakenham, was killed, in the action of the 8th, and that Major generals Keane, and Gibbs, were badly wounded. Whenever a more leisure moment shall occur, I will take the liberty to make and forward you a more circumstantial account, of the several ac- tions, and particularly that of the 8th, in doing which, my chief motive will be to render justice to those brave men I have the honour to command, and who have so remarkably distinguished them- selves. I have the honour, &c. ANDREW JACKSON. ANDREW JACKSON. 227 The rival armies upon the 9th, were restored to tlicir former positions ; and both were ignorant of the intentions of each other. Sir Edward Paken- ham being slain, and Generals Keane and Gihbs, being, the one mortally, and the other severely wounded, were compelled, the one to languish and die, the other to languish and barely survive. The command devolved upon Maj Gen. Lambert. The deep penetration of Gen. Jackson, might well lead him to suppose that Gen. Lambert, and Col. Thornton, (who had once conquered on the right bank of the river) would unite their " mightier efjorts," to conquer on the east. Ever vigilant, and never remiss, he relaxed not in the least from his former energy. The plains of Capita^ after a victory, and the luxurious Indulgence of the fruits of conquest upon them, proved to be the destruction of Hannibal and his array. Gen. Jackson was resolved, that the banks of the Mis- sisippi should not prove so to him, and his pat- riotic companions. While every exertion was made to prepare for another attack, the distant thunder of cannon, an- nounced to the armies, the operations of the pow- erful British naval force at the mouth of the Mis- sisippi. From the official report of Maj. Overton, to Gen. Jackson, it may be concluded that Admiral Cochrane, and Sir Edward Pakenham, had agreed to commence final operations at the same time — the one to capture New Orleans, the other, to des- MEMOIRS OF troy the American forts at the mouth of the river. Upon the memorable 8th January, a squadron of the British naval force appeared before Fort St. Philips. Gen. Jackson, thus writes to the Secretary at War — *« I have the honour to inclose you Maj. Overton's report, of the attack of Fort St. PhiJips, and of the manner in which it was defended. The conduct of that officer, and of those who acted under him, merits, I think, great praise. They nailed their own colours to the standard, and placed those of the enemy underneath them, deter- mined never to surrender the fort." The following is the report alluded to by the general. MAJ. W. H. OVERTON TO GEN JACKSON. Fort St. Philips, January 19, 1815. Sir — On the first of the present month, I receiv- ed the information, that the enemy intended pas- sing this fort, to co-operate with their land forces, in the subjugationof Louisiana, and the destruction of New Orleans. To effect this with more facility, they were first, with their heavy bomb vessels, to bombard this place into compliance. On the grounds of this information, I turned my attention to the security of ray command. I erected small magazin2s in different parts of the garrison, that i f one blew up, I could resort to another ; built covers for my men, to secure them from the explo- sion of the shells, and removed the combustible matter without the work. Early in the day of the 8th inst. I was advised of their ap^iroach, and ANDREW JACKSON. 229 on the 9th, at a quarter past 10, A. M. hove in sight, two bomb vessels, one sloop, one brig, and one schooner ; they anchored two and one quarter miles below — at half past eleven, and at haJf past twelve, they advanced two barges, apparently for the pur- pose of sounding within one and a half miles of the fort. At this moment, I ordered my water battery, under the command of Lieut. Cunning- ham of the navy, to open upon them ; its well di- rected shot, caused a precipitate retreat. At half past three o'clock, P. M. the enemy's bomb vessels opened their fire, from four sea- mortars, two of thirteen inches, two of ten, and to my great morti- fication, I found they were without the effective range of my shot, as many subsequent experiments proved. They continued their fire, with little in- termission, during the 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, ICth, and i7th. I occasionally opened my bat- teries on them with great vivacity, particularly when they showed a disposition to change their position. On the 17th, in the evening, our heavy mortar was said to be in readiness. I ordered that excel- lent officer, Capt.. Wolstoucroft, of the artillerists, who previously had charge of it, to open a fire, which was done with great effect, as the enemy from that moment became disordered, and at day- light on the 18th, commenced their retreat, after having thrown upwards of a thousand heavy shells, besides shells from howitzers, round shot and grape, 2^0 230 MEMOIRS OF which he dicharged from boats, under cover of the uight. Our loss in this affair has been uncommonly small, owing entirely to the great pains that were taken by the different officers, to keep their men under cover ; as the enemy left scarcely ten feet of this garrison untouched. The officers and soldiers through this whole af- fair, although nine days and nights under arms, in the different batteries, the consequent fatigue and loss of sleep, have manifested the greatest firmness and the most zealous warmth to beat the enemy. To distinguish individuals, would be a delicate task, as merit was conspicuous every where. Lieut. Cun- ningham of the navy, who commanded oiy water bat- tery, with his brave crew, evinced the most determin- ed bravery, and uncommon activity throughout ; in fact. Sir, the only thing to be regretted, is, that the enemy was too timid to give us an opportunity of destroying him. I herewith enclose you, a list of the killed and wounded. 1 am Sir, very respectfully, W. H, OVERTON. The loss of the Americans, from ihe official report, was killed 2 — wounded 7 — Total 9 Nothing but the immense importance of the post he commanded, can justify Maj. Overton in nailing his colours to his standard. Even the praise of Gen. Jackson, cannot wholly exculpate a commander for an act, which might have led to the sacrifice of his whole garrison by a force, to contend with w^hich, would have been desperation. ANDREW JACKSON. ^3l CHAPTER XVI. Situation of the armies after the battle of the 8tU January — Melan- choly and distressing scene — Operations at the mouth of the Missisippi — Departure of the enemy — Gen. Jackson's address to the American troops — Disparity in the loss of the two armies. ALTHOUGH the American array under Gen. Jackson, and the British arniy under Gen. Lambert, remained in full view of each other, from the 9th, to the 18th, no hostile military operations took place between them, during that time. The first were preparing for a renewed attack, enjoying the re- pose their valour had rendered secure, and which many days of excessively hard labour, and a num- ber of severe fighting, rendered peculiarly neces- sary. The last were employed in discharging the most melancholy duties of the camp. The sol- diers were engaged in depositing in the bosom of the earth, their slain comrades, who had for many days previous, fought by their sides upon its sur- face, and assuaging the distresses of the woun- ded who yet survived. Humanity must weep over such a scene ; and in the death and anguish of the gallant, and comparatively innocent soldiers of England, for a season forget the wicked cause in which they fell— the cause of tyranny against freedom. Even the patriotic soldiers of our belov- ed Republic, in beholding tke banks of the majestic Missisippi, converted into an outspread sepulchre 232 MEMOIRS OF for veteran foemcn, who had one common origin with themselves, must have dropped a manly tear. But how soon will reflection compel them to pour forth the most indignant imprecations against the British Government, whose systematic injustice first occasioned the war, and against the Britisli officers, whose Vandalism and barbarity, even char- ity itself can never forgive. It must crimson with a blush every Englishman, who reads the history of the nineteenth century, when he finds it re- corded, that an oflicer, the pride of England, con- fident of capturing one of the finest cities in Amer- ica, gave as a countersign, upon the day his army was to ^nter it — " Booty and Beauty ! !" The hard earnings of patient industry, were to be ra- vished from the defenceless citizens, and their wives and daughters to be subjected to the diabolical lust of a full-gorged soldiery. The innocent and ac- \:ompIished females, of New Orleans, who had spent days of labour, and nights of watchfulness, in alle- 7iating the toils of their valiant coutrymen, while stationed under the banners of the Republic, were to suffer more than ten thousand deaths could in- flict, before the very eyes of those who had blessed them for their bounty, but who could no longer extend to them protection. Well may the English reader exclaim with an ancient poet — *' ^uis tent- peret a lachrymis, talia fando,^ (who can refrain from tears in relating &^Jch deeds ;) and well may ANDREW JACKSON. 23S the patriotic sons of Columbia, when thinking of their implacable enemy, resolve to be, ** Fire to fire, flint to flint, and to outface " The brow of brag-ging horror." It would seem that Gen. Lambert, had determi- ned to maintain his position upon the Missisippi, until he learned the result of the naval operations at its mouth. Upon the I7th, Capt. Wolstoncroft, of the artillerists, having taken a position which brought the British shipping within the range of his mortar, immediately threw them into disor- der, and compelled them to retire. Upon the 18th, Gen. Lambert, having had time to receive this discouraging intelligence, decamped in the night season, as appears from the following official com- munication. GEN. JACKSON, TO HON. JAMES MONROE. Camp below JVevy Orleans^ 19th Jan. 1815. Last night at 12 o'clock, the enemy precipitate ly decamped and returned to their boats, leaving behind him under medical attendance, eighty of his wounded, including two officers, 14 pieces of his heavy artillery, and a quantity of shot, having destroyed much of his powder. Such was the situa- tion of the ground he abandoned, and of that through which he retired, protected by canals, re- doubts, i n trench me nts, and swamps on his right, and the river on his left, that I could not without encountering a risk, which true policy did not seem 20* 234) MEMOIRS OP to require, or to authorize, attempt to annoy him much on his retreat. We took only eight prisoners. Whether, it is the purpose of tlie enemy to aban- don the expedition altogether, or renesv his efforts atsomeother point, I do not pretend to determine with positiveness. In my own mind, however, there is but Jittle doubt, that his last exertions have been made in this quarter ; at any rale for the pre- sent season, and by the neat^ I hope we shall be ful- 1}^ prepared for him. In this belief, lam strength- ened not only by the prodigious loss he has sus- tained at the position he has just quitted, but by the failure of his fleet to pass Fort St. Thilips. His loss on the ground, since the debarkation of his troops, as stated by the last prisoners and desert- ers, and as confirmed by many additional circum- stances, must have exceeded four thousand ; and was greater in the action of the 8th, than was esti- mated, from the most correct data, then in his pos- session, by the inspector general, whose report has been forwarded to you. We succr.eded, on the 8th, in getting from the enemy about 1000 stand of arms of various descriptions. Since the action of the 8th, the enemy have been allowed very little respite — -my artillery from both sides of the river, being constantly employed, till the night, and indeed until the hour of their retreat, in annoying them. No doubt they thought it quite time to quit a position in which so little rest could be found. ANDREW JACKSON. 235 I am advised by Maj. Overton, who commands at Fort St. Philips, in a letter of the 18th, that the enemy having bombarded his fort for 8 or 9 days, from 13 inch mortars, without effect, had, on the morning of that day, retired. I have little doubt that he would have been able to liave sunk their vessels, had they attempted to run by. Giving the proper weight to all these considera- tions, I believe you will not think me too sanguine in the belief, that Louisiana^ is now clear of its enemy. I hope, however, I need not assure you, that wherever / command^ such a I^elief shall never occasion any relaxation in the measures for resist- ance. I am but too sensible, that the moment when the enemy is opposing us, is not the most proper to provide for them. I have the honour to be, &c. ANDREW JACKSON. P. S. On the ISth, our prisoners onshore were delivered us, an exchange having been previously agreed to. Those who are ©n board the fleet, will be delivered at Petit Coquille — after which, I shall still have in my hands an excess of several hundred. 20th — Mr. Shields, purser in the navy, has to- day taken 54 prisoners ; among them are four offi- cers. A, J. Thus ended the expedition of the British army, against the city of New Orleans— thus ended the demonstration of the British naval force, against i36 MEMOIRS OF the forts at the mouth of the Missisippi. The de- tail of events which took place in this interesting and important section of the Republic, have ne- cessarily been blended with the Memoirs of Gen. Jackson. Indeed, they are identified with each other — he was the first motion of every movement. The deeply interesting scenes through which Gen. Jackson, his army, and the citizens of New Orleans were called to pass from the IGth Decem- ber, 1814, to the 18th January, 18 J 5, would furnish subjects for a volume far more extended than the whole of this little work. In a few pages I have endeavoured to present the reader with the promi- nent facts connected with these great events. That they were derived from sources indisputably accu- rate, I have the most confident assurance. A brief recapitulation would be attempted, were it not in my power to furnish the reader with the elegant and impressive address of Gen. Jackson to his troops upon the 2lst January, which follows. ADDRESS, Directed by Maj. Gen. Jackson, to be read at the head of each of the corps composing" the line below New Orleans, Jan. 21, 1815. Citizens, and fellow soldiers J The enemy has retreated, and your general has now leisure to pro- claim to the world what he has noticed with admi- ration and pride — your undaunted courage, your patriotism, and patience, under hardships and fa- ANDREW JACKSON. 331^ iigues. Natives of different states, acting/together for the first time in this camp ; differing in habits and in language, instead of viewing in these cir. cumstances, the germ of distrust and division, you have made them the source of an honourable emu- lation, and from the seeds of discord itself, have reaped the fruits of an honourable union. This day completes the fourth week, since fifteen hun- dred of you attacked treble your number of men, who had boasted of their discipline and their ser- vices under a celebrated leader, in a long and eventful war — attacked them in their camp, the moment they had profened the soil of freedom, with their hostile tread, and inflicted a blow which was a prelude to the final result of their attempt to con- quer, or their poor contrivances to divide us. A few hours was sufficient to unite the gallant band, though at the moment they received the welcome order to march, they were separated many leagues, in different directions from the city. The gay ra- pidity of the march, and the cheerful countenances of the officers and men, would have induced a belief that some festive entertainment, not the strife of battle, was the scene to which they hastened with so much eagerness and hilarity. In the conflict that ensued, the same spirit was supported, and my communications, to the executive of the U. States, have testified the sense I entertained of the merits of the corps and officers that were engaged. Rest- ing on the field of battle, they retired in perfect or- 238 MEMOIRS OP der on the next morning to these lines, destined to become the scene of future victories, which they were to share with the rest of you, my brave com- panions in arms. Scarcely were your lines a pro- tection against musket shot, when on the 28th, a disposition was made to attack them with all the pomp and parade of military tactics, as improved by those veterans of the Spanish war. Their batteries of heavy cannon kept up an Incessant fire ; their rockets illuminated the air ; and under their cover, two strong columns threat- ened our tianks. The foe insolently thought that this spectacle was too imposing to be resisted, and in the intoxicatien of his pride, he already saw our lines abandoned without a contest — how were these menacing appearances met ? By shouts of defi- ance, by a manly countenance, not to be shaken by the roar of his cannon, or by the glare of his firework rockets ; by an artillery served with su- perior skill, and with deadly efiect. Never, my brave friends, can your general forget the testimoni- als of attachment to our glorious cause, of indignant hatred to our foe, of affectionate confidence in your chief, that resounded from every rank, as he pass- ed along your line. This animating scene damped the courage of the enemy ; he dropped his scaling ladders and fascines, and the threatened attack dwindled into a demonstration^ which served only to shew the emptiness of his parade, and to inspire you with a just confidence in yourselves. ANDREW JACKSON. 239 The new year was ushered in with the most tre- mendous fire his whole artillery could produce : a few hours only, however, were necessary for the brave and skilful men, who directed our own, to dismount his cannon, destroy his batteries, and ef- fectually silence his fire. Hitherto, my brave friends, in the contest on our lines, your courage had been passive only ; you stood with calmness, a fire that would have tried the firmness of a veteran, and you anticipated a nearer contest with an eager- ness which was soon to be gratified. On the 8th of Jan. the final eflbrt was made. At the dawn of day the batteries opened, and the co- lumns advanced. Knowing that the volunteers from Tennessee, and the militia from Kentucky, were stationed on your left, it was there they di- rected their chief attack. Reasoning al^^ays from false principles, they ex- pected little opposition from men, whose officers even were not in uniform, who were ignorant of the rules of dress, and who had never been caned into discipline. Fatal mistake ! a fire incessantly kept up, directed with a calmness and unerring aim, strewed the field with the bravest officers and men, of the column which slowly advanced, according to the most approved rules of European tactics, and was cut down by the untutored courage of Ameri- can militia. Unable to sustain this galling and unceasing fire, some hundreds nearest the inirench- ment called for quarter, which was granted — 240 MEMOIRS OF the rest retreating, were rallied at some distance, but only to make them a surer mark for the grape and cannister shot of our artillery, which, without exaggeration, mowed down whole ranks at every discharge : and at length they precipitately retired fron the field. Our right had only a short contest to sustain with a few rash men, w ho fatally for themselves, forced their entrance into the unlinished redoubt on the river. They were quickly dispossessed, and this glorious day terminated with the loss to the enemy, of their commander in chief and one major-general killed, another major-general wounded, the most experienced and bravest of their officers, and more than three thousand men killed, wounded and mis- sing, while our ranks, my friends, were thinned on- ly by the loss of seven of our brave companions kil- led and six disabled by wounds — wonderful interpo- sition of heaven ! unexampled event in the history of war ! Let us be grateful to the God of battles, who has directed the arrows of indignation against our in- vaders, while he covered with his protecting shield the brave defenders of their country. After this unsuccessful and disastrous attempt, their spirits were broken, their force was destroy- ed, and their whole attention was employed in pro- viding the means of escape. This they have affec- ted i leaving their heavy artillery in our power, and many of their wounded to our clemency. The ANDREW JACKSON, 21efore the public, I cannot omit to enrich this volume by inserting a part of it, together with the impressive answer of Gen. Jackson. While they will be read with rapture by the Chris- ANDREW JACKSON. 24i7 tian, they cannot fail to excite the adaiiration of the patriot. The venerable minister of the gospel thus ad- dressed the Hero of New Orleans, and the gallant officers and soldiers who had followed him to vic- tory, and now joined him in adoration — " Gene- ral — While the state of Louisiana, in the joyful transports of her gratitude, hails you as her deliv- erer, and the assertor of her menaced liberties while grateful America, so lately wrapped up in anxious suspense, on the fate of this important city, is re-echoing from shore to shore, your splen- did achievements, and preparing to inscribe your name on her immortal rolls, among those of her Washingtons — While history, poetry, and the mon- umental arts, will vie, in consigning to the admira- tion of the latest posterity, a triumph, perhaps, unparalleled in their records — while thus raised by universal acclauaation, to the very pinnacle of fame, how easy had it been for you, General, to ferget the Prime Mover of your wonderful suc- cesses, and to assume to yourself a praise, which must essentially return to that exalted source, whence every merit is derived. But, better ac- quainted with the nature of true glory, and justly placing the summit of your ambition, in approving yourself the worthy instrument of heaven's merci- ful designs, the first impulse of your religious heart, was to acknowledge the interposition of Provi- dence — your first step, a solemn display of your 248 MEMOIRS OF humble sense of His favours. Still agitated at the remembrance of those dreadful agonies, from which we have been so miraculously rescued, it is our pride to acknowledge, that the Almighty has truly had the principal hand in our deliverance, and to follow you, general, in attributing to His in- finite goodness, the homage of our unfeigned grati- tude. Let the infatuated votary of a blind chance, deride our credulous simplicity ; let the cold heart- ed atheist look for the explanation of important events, to the mere concatenation of human causes : to us, the whole universe is loud in proclaiming a Supreme Ruler, who, as he holds the hearts of men in his hand, holds also the thread of all contingent occurrences. To Him, therefore, our most fervent thanks are due, for our late unexpected rescue. It is Him we intend to praise, when considering you, general, as the man of his right hand, whom he has taken pains to fit out for the important commission of our de- fence. We extol that fecundity of genius, by which, under the most discouraging distress, you created unforeseen resources, raised, as it were, from the ground, hosts of intrepid warriors, and provided every vulnerable point with ample means of de- fence. To Him we trace that instinctive superior- ity of your mind, which at once rallied around you universal confidence ; impressed one irresistible movement to all the jarring elements of which this political machine is composed ; aroused their slum- ANDREW JACKSON. 249 bering spirits, and diflfused through every rank, the noble ardour which glowed in your bosom. To Him, in fine, we address our acknowledgments for that consummate prudence, which defeated all the combinations of a sagacious enemy, entangled him in the very snares which he had spread for us, and succeeded in effecting his utter destruction, without exposing the lives of our citizens. Immortal thanks be to his Supreme Majesty, for sending us such an instrument of His bountiful designs ! A gift of that value, is the best token of the continuance of His protection— the most solid encouragement, to sue for new favours. The first, which it emboldens us humbly to supplicate, as nearest our throbbing hearts, is that you may long enjoy the honour of your grateful country ; of which you will permit us to present you a pledge, in this Wreath of Laurel, the prize of victory, the symbol of immor- tality. The next, is a speedy and hoDourable ter- mination of the bloody contest, in which we are engaged. No one has so efficaciously laboured as you, general, for the acceleration of that blissful period : may we soon reap that sweetest fruit of your splendid and uninterrupted victories.'^ The general thus replied to this solemn and im- pressive address. His allusion to the " cypress leaf," a symbol of grief and woe, is inimitably fine. Cypress groves were constantly in view of the rival armies, during their sanguinary conflicts, and they will hereafter remind Englishmen of the 250 MEMOIRS OP carnage committed amongst his infatuated country- men, invading our soil, by the gallant armies of the Republic in defending it. " Reverend Sir — I receive, with gratitude and pleasure, the symbol crown, which piety has pre- pared. I receive it, in the name of the brave men who so effectually seconded my exertions — they well deserve the laurels which their country will bestow. For myself, to have been instrumental in the deliverance of such a country, is the greatest bles- sing that heaven could confer. That it has been effected with so little loss — that so few tears should cloud the smiles of our triumph, and not a cypress leaf be interwoven in the wreath which you pre- sent, is a source of the most exquisite pleasure. I thank you, reverend Sir, most sincerely, for the prayers, which you offer up for my happiness. May those your patriotism dictates for our beloved country, be first heard : and may mine, fur your individual prosperity, as well as that of the con- gregation committed to your care, be favourably received — the prosperity, wealth, and happiness of this city, will then be commensurate with the courage and other qualities of its inhabitants." Gen. Jackson, although he felt as if Louisiana and its capital were safe, did not remit any of his exertions to render the country still more secure. With the assistance of his beloved associates. Generals Coffee, Carroll, Adair, &c. and the troops ANDREW JACKSON. 251 under their immediate command, he continued to augment the strength of his lines on each bank of the Missisippi. From his uniform language and conduct at this period, it would appear that he sup- posed the negociations at Ghent, would not ter- minate amicahly. In one of his letters to Mr. Monroe, the Secretary of War, he says — " In my own mind, there is but little doubt, that his [the British commander's] last exertions have been made in this quarter, at any rate for ih^ present sea- son ; and by the next, I hope we shall be fully pre- pared for him " In another one he says — " Where- ever I command, such a belief, [that the enemy would retire,] shall never occasion any relaxation in the measures of resistance. I am but too sensi- ble that the moment when the enemy is opposing us, is not the most proper to provide for him." By the 24ith of January, every hostile foot was driven from the soil of Louisiana, and Gen. Lam- bert and his army^ were compelled to seek for safe- ty in i\\t fleet of Admiral Cochrane, and even that was compelled to keep at a respectful distance from the shores of the Republic. Before the 8th February, the British forces had positive and certain intelligence, that a treaty of peace between America and Great Britain, had been signed by the commissioners of the two gov- ernments at Ghent, They were aware, however, that it was not binding until ratifications were ex- changed. Anxious to wipe off the indelible dis- 252 MEMOIRS OP grace they had incurred at New Orleans, upon the 8th of January, they assailed Fort Bowyer, at the mouth of the Mobile, upon the 8th February, with their whole land and naval forces. The gallant l^awrence was still there ; but resistance would have been the sacrifice of his " little phalanx." He surrendered the fort ; but one condition was, that the iVmericans should march out of it " with colours flyings and drums beating — the officers retain- ing their swords.'''' The " commanders in chief of his Britannic ma- jesty^s land and naval forces vpon the American statioHy'^ are welcome to all the little glory they claim, for taking this little fort, only to surrender it up again. Upon the I3th February, Gen. Jackson was ad- vised of the ratification of the Treaty of Peace, by an express from the War Department. The following address to his troops, upon orderins^ them to be marched home, will always be read with de- light. '* The major-general is at length ena])led to per- form the pleasing task, of restoring to Tennessee, Kentucky, Louisiana, and the territory of the Mis- sisippi, the brave troops who have acted such a distinguished part, in the war which has just termin- ated. In restoring these brave men to their homes, much exertion is expected of, and great responsi- bility imposed on, the commanding officers of the different corps. It is required of Maj, Gens, Car- ANDREW JACKSON. 253 roll, and Thomas, and Brig. Gen. Coffee, to march their commands, without unnecessary delay, to their respective states. The troops from the Mis- sisippi Territory and state of Louisiana, both mili- tia and volunteers, will be immediately mustered out of service, paid, and discharged. The major-general has the satisfaction of an- nouncing the approbation of the President of the United States, to the conduct of the troops under his command, expressed in flattering terms, through the honourable the Secretary of War. In parting with these brave men, whose destinies have been so long united with his own, and in whose labours and glories it is his happiness and his boast to have participated, the commanding general can neither suppress his feelings, nor give utterance to them as he ought. In what terras can he bestow suita- 3)le praise on merit so extraordinary, so unparallel- ed ? Let him, in one burst of joy, gratitude, and ex- ultation exclaim — these are the saviours of their country — these the patriot soldiers who triumphed over the invincibles of Wellington, and conquered the conquerors of Europe ! With what patience did you submit to privations — with what fortitude did you 'endure fatigue — what valour did you display in the day of battle ! you have secured to America a proud name among the nations of the earth — a glory which will never perish. Possessing those dispositions, which equal- ly adorn the citizen, and the soldier, the expecta- 22 254 MEMOIRS OF tions of your country will be met in peace, as her wishes have been gratified in war. Go then, my brave companions, to your homes ; to those tender connexions, and blissful scenes, which render life so dear — full of honour, and crowned with laurels which will never fade. When participating, in the bosoms of your famil ies, the enjoyment of peace- ful life, with what happiness will you not look back to the toils you have borne — to the dangers you have encountered? How will ail your past expo- sures be converted into sources of inexpressible delight ? Who, that never experienced your suffer- ings, will be able to appreciate your joys? The man who slumbered ingloriously at home, during your painful marches, your nights of watchfulness^ and your days of toil, will envy you the happiness which these recollections will afford — still more will he envy the gratitude of that country, which you have so eminently contributed to save. Con- tinue, fellow-soldiers, on your passage to your sev- eral destinations, to preserve that subordination, that dignified and manly deportmetit, which hav-e so ennobled your character. While the commanding general is thus giving indulgence to his feelings, towards those brave companions, who accompanied him through diffi- culties and danger, he cannot permit the names of Blount, and Shelby, and Holmes, to pass unnoticed. With what generous ardour and patriotism, have these distinguished goveruours contributed all their ANDREW JACKSON. 356 exertions ; and the success which has resulted, will be to them a reward more grateful than any which the pomp of title, or the splendour of wealth, can bestow. What happiness it is to the commanding general, that while danger was before him, he was, on no occasion, compelled to use towards his compan- ions in arms, either severity or rebuke. If, after the enemy had retired, improper passions began their empire in a few unworthy bosoms, and render- ed a resort to energetic measures necessary for their suppression, he has not confounded the innocent with the gulty — the seduced with the seducers. Towards you, fellow-soldiers, the most cheering recollections exist, blended, alas ! with regret, that disease and war should have ravished from us, so many worthy companions. But the memory of the cause in which they perished, and of the virtues which animated them, while living, must occupy the place where sorroio would claim to dwell. Farewell, fellow-soldiers. The expression of your general's thanks is feeble, but the gratitude of a country of freemen is yours — yours the applause of an admiring world." In this address to the troops, the solicitude of Gen. Jackson, for the reputation of the army, is clearly evinced. Aware that the exultation /hey felt from the victories they had obtained, and the animation that aroused them to enthusiasm, at the " wreath of laurel" bestowed upon them by ^56 MEMOIRS OF their countrymen, might occasion aberrations from the regular walk of sober citizens, he exhorted them not to tarnish in peace, the glory they had acquired in war. The troops thus dismissed by their commander, had to march from five to eight hun- dred miles, before they reached their homes. The citizens, inhabiting the country through which they passed, so far from treating them with distant cold- ness, and extorting from them the pittance they had obtained for defending the Republic, (conduct not unknown to some parts of America,) received them with unbounded hospitality, and congratulated them as the gallant defenders of American Inde=* pendence. ANDREW JACKSON. 257 CHAPTER XVIII. Recapitulation of facts relative to the proclamation of Martial Law, writ of habeas corpus^ Louaillier, and Judge Hall — ArsMt of Gen. Jackson — his defence, conviction, and fine — Trial by- jury— Popular feehng" — Moderation of Gen. Jackson — ^he advi- ses to a sacred regard for civil power. IT will be recollected by the reader, that upon the I6th December, Gen. Jackson proclaimed 7nflr- tial law in New Orleans, and in the environs of it. The reasons of that measure, have already been briefly givc'n, and the imperious necessity of adopt- inij it demonstrated. Next to the efficient mea- sures of defence below the city, the people arc Indebted to the temporary execution of this system, of government, for their salvation from the horrors of British invasion. That the military power, must be secondary to the civil, is an axiom in our Republic generally assented to. That they are both, on great emer- gencies, to support the honour, dignity, and inde- pendence of the States, is a sentiment no less gen- erally prevalent. It is a principle, that may be said to be coeval with the formation of civil gov- ernment, that laws are silent in the midst of arms, or as the Romans had it, ''^ leges silent inter arvia.*^ These principles are each to have an influcHce up- on the mind, in forming an opinion of the propriety of Gen. Jackson's conduct, in regard to the suppres- 99 * 2dS MEMOIRS OP sioii of the civil authority at New Orleans, and the legislature of Louisiana, at that time in session there. Nothing but the agitation produced at the ap- proach of imminent danger, upon fearful minds, can furnish the least palliation for the extraordina- ry course pursued by the city police of New Orleans, and the legislature of Louisiana, during the most portentous period of their history, i. e. from the 16th Dec. 1814, to the middle of Feb. 1815. These confident assertions would not be made, wer€ they not susceptible of the clearest proof. The existence of that state of things which led to the declaration of martial law, by Gen. Jackson, has been partly unfolded by presenting the reader, in a preceding chapter, with what was deemed appro- priate extracts, from the correspondence of Gov. Claiborne with him. This evidence must be com- pletely satisfactory, as it was derived from a dis- tinguished civil officer, who must, with distressing reluctance, have detailed to the world, the melan- choly confession of facts so derogatory to the dignity and to the patriotism of the legislature, over whom he presided, and of the city, where they were in session. It will never, however, be for- gotten that the police of New Orleans, at this per- ilous period, was not in accordance with the wishes of a great proportion of its patriotic citizens ; nor did the timorous, and vacillating policy of the legis- lature, coincide with the ardent desires, of a great ANDREW JACKSOA. 259 number of its members. A number of them follow- ed the governour from the house of legislation, to the camp of Gen. Jackson, and shewed that they felt more solicitous to preserve their state IVom the contaminating footsteps of a barbarous enemy, tlian to remain in conclave, debating upon ques- tions of punctilious etiquette, between the civil and military powers. It has already been stated, that a majority of tlie senate and house of representatives-, in the state legislature of Louisiana, were opposed to the re- quisitions which Gov. Claiborne had made upon the Louisiana militia. The patriotism of the mili- tia, however, was not to be damped by a legisla- tive veto^ and they followed their patriotic govern- our to the field ; and while they were repelling the tremendous assault of the enemy, upon the 28th Dec. with their brave countrymen from Tennessee, Kentucky, and Missisippi, the legislature were actually engaged in del)ating the question, whether they should not surrender the capital and state, to the British army — and make the best terms they could with Sir Edward Pakenham I J Gen. Jackson ordered Gov. Claiborne, to repair to the city with a requisite number of troops, to preserve it from the danger of their own legislature, while he would defend it from the enemy hanging upon its borders. This order was promptly executed, and the legisla- ture, by their own governour, was prevented from sacrificing the city as a victim to their own fears. i60 MEMOIRS OP To see a state legislature gravely taking measures to iiegociate with the enemy of the whole Re- public, evinced almost a complete deterioration of intellect. The commander of the forces, so far as his power extends, is the representative of the na- tional power — he only must be the judge of what will conduce to the safety of the country, he com- mands ; and he only is accountable for the measures that may be adopted. If New Orleans had been sacrificed by the commander, in a manner as das- tardly as was Detroit, the same disgrace would now have been attached to the name of Jackson, as there is to that of Hull ; but by defending it against the power of the enemy ; the intrigues of some of its citizens, and the feverish agitation of the legislature^ he has placed himself beyond the reach of rivalship, upon the rolls of fame. Without pursuing this subject farther, the rea- der is now called to leave the legislature of Louisia- na, in 1814 — 15, where facts have left it, and follow Gen. Jackson from the solemn scene of thanks- giving to heaven, and the acclamations of a preserv- ed people for victories obtained, to answer for his military conduct before a judicial tribunal. To a believer in the doctrine of decrees, it would seem to fiave been fore-ordained, that Andrew Jackson should be the instrument of procuring the greatest temporal blessings for his country ; and that the ingratitude of republics should have made him, in some respects, a signal instance, to show that they are still ungrateful. ANDREW JACKSON. 261 • Gen. Jackson found himself under the imperious necessity of continuing the execution of martial law, until the enemy had totally abandoned his hos- tile views against New Orleans and Mobile ; or un- til the rumours of peace were coniBrmed by official communications from the War Department. Upon the first circulation of these rumours, the troops evinced the utmost impatience, and a spirit of in- subordination pervaded the army before New Or- leans. From his knowledge of the innumerable stratagems of the enemy, to gain by the policy of war, what they despaired of acquiring by the force of arms. Gen. Jackson was apprehensive that they had devised this report, to lull the soldiers and cit- izens into a fatal security, and to take the first fa- vourable opportunity that offered, to invade the country, and subject it to British dominion. A member of the legislature, by the name of Louaillier, had published in a New Orleans' Ga- zette, an article calculated to excite rebellion in the American army, and to encourage the enemy i;o renew their attack. Gen. Jackson immediately ordered him to be arrested and confined. Mr. Dominic A. Hall, judge oi the district, immediately issued a writ of habeas corpus, directed to Gen. Jackson, commanding him to show reasons for the detention of this legislator. The general, knowing that his appearance before his troops, in a time of danger, was of more consequence to his country, than his appearance before a judge, who was eK= 2Q2 MEMOIRS OF deavouring, by the exercise of judicial power, to pro- tect a domestic enemy, immediately ordered Judge Hall to be arrested and sent out of the city. The trial W2is postponed until the country was secured. In a very few days after this commencement of war between the military power of the American Republic,and the judicial authority at New Orleans, peace was officially announced to Gen. Jackson, from the War Department, " between his Britaimic Majesty and the United States^ and between their res- pective countries, territories, cities, towns, and peo- pie, of every degree, without exception of places or persons,"^"* The joy that filled every heart at the return of peace, was mingled with gratitude to Gen. Jackson, his long tried, brave, and patriotic officers, and gallant soldiers, for theii^ protection in time of war. But amidst this exhilarating scene, the sullen murmurs of disappointed faction, were heard in discordant notes ; and the very men who were indebted to Gen Jackson and his army, foi* the preservation of their lives, fortunes and fami- lies, seemed to be actuated by the bitterest malice against him. It was upon the lith March, that Judge Hall, was removed from New Orleans — upon the 1 3th, the ratification of the treaty of Ghent, was officially announced there — upon the l9th, military ©pera- tions were brought to a close bet\veen the two armies— and upon the 3 1st, Gen. Jackson was arrested and brought before the same Judge Haiti ANDREW JACKSON. 263 to answer for his contempt of the courts for not answering, instanter^ to the habeas corptts^ and for imprisoning the Jwfi^e who issued it ! J From the nature of the subject, and the mode of proceeding, this may be pronounced by the legal profession, to be causa primce impressionis. Called thus suddenly from the encampment of an army, before a court of Jaw, Gen. Jackson di- vested himself of the stern character of the soldier, and resumed the more gentle one of the advocate — not to defend a client, as he often had done, against groundless ohare^es ; but to save himself from the vengeance of infuriated malice. The defence he made, has been before the public, ever since he made it. It is a source of regret, that the insertion of it entire, cannot be made. It comprises not only the facts upon which it was grounded, but a i)rofound disquisition upon the civil and military power, in a time of imminent danger. The follow- ing selections from it will show the reasons, in addi- tion to those already given, why he proclaimed and enforced martial Jaw — imprisoned a legislative scribbler — neglected to regard a writ of habeas cor- pusy and compelled the judge who issued it to leave the city of New Orleans. In this defence, the gen- eral says — " A disciplined, and powerful army was on our coast, commanded by officers of tried valour, and consummate skill ; their fleet had already destroyed the feeble defence, on which, alone, we could rely, to prevent their landing on our shores. 264i MEMOIRS OF Their point of attack was uncertain — a hundred inlets were to be guarded, by a force not sufficient in number for one ; we had no lines of defence ; treason lurked amongst us, and only waited the mo- ment of expected defeat, to show itself openly. Our men were few, and of those few, not all were armed ; our utter ruin if we failed, at hand, and inevitable ; every thing depended on the prompt and energetic use of the means we possessed, in calling the whole force of the community into ac- tion ; it was a contest for the very existence of the state, and every nerve was to be strained in its defence. The physical force of every individ- ual, his moral faculties, his property, and the ener- gy of his example, were to be called into action, and instant action. No delay — no hesitation — no inquiry about rights, or all was lost ; and every thing dear to man, his property, life, the honour of his family, his country, its constitution and Jaws, were swept away by the avowed principles, the open practice of the enemy, with whom we had to contend. Fortifications were to be erected, supplies procured, arms sought for, requisitions made, the emissaries of the enemy watched, lurking treason overawed, insubordination punished, and the contagion of cowardly example to be stopped. In this crisis, and under a firm persuasion that none of those objects could be efi'ected by the exercise of the ordinary powers confided to him — under a solemn conviction that the country com- ANDREW JACKSON. 265 mittcd to his care, could he saved by that measure only, from utter ruin — under a religious belief, that he was performing tlie most important and sacred duty, the respondent proclaimed martial LAW. He intended, by that measure, to supersede such civil powers, as in their operation, interfered with those he was obliged to exercise. He thought, in such a moment, constitutional forms must be suspended, for the permanent preservation of c(m~ stitutional rights, and that there could he no ques- tion, whether it were best to depart, for a moment, from the enjoyment of our dearest privileges, or have them wrested from us forever. He knew, that if the civil magistrate were permitted to exer else his usual functions, none of tlie measures neces sary to avert the awful fate that threatened us, could be expected. Personal liberty cannot exist It a time when every man is required to become a soldier. Private property cannot be secured, wlien ;is use is indispensable to the public safety. Unlimited liberty of speech is incompatible with the discipline of a camp ; and that of the press, more dangerous still, when made the vehicle of conveying intelligence to the enemy, or exciting mutiny among the troops. To have suffered the uncontrolled enjoyment of any of those rights, during the time of the late invasion, would have been to abandon the defence of the country. The civil magistrate is the guardian of those rights ; but no further." 23 2C6 MEMOIRS OF In perusing the preceding extract, the reader must feel a pride in reliecting, that Gen. Jackson, and many other officers in the army of the Re- public, have acquired the science of Statesmen, as well as the fame of Soldiers. The General, in his masterly defence, minutely and forcibly assigns the reasons for the course he pursued in regard to Louillier, the writ of habeas corpKSi a.nd Judge }I?iU ; and proceeds — " To have silently looked on such an offence, without making any attempt to punish it, would have been a formal surrender of all discipline, all order, all personal dignity, and public safety. This could not be done ; and the respondent immediate- ly ordered the arrest of the olTcnder. A writ of habeas corpus was directed to issue for his enlarge- ment. The very case which had been foreseen ; the very contingency on which martial law was intended to operate, had now occured. The civil magistrate seemed to think it his duty, to en- force the enjoyment of civil rights, although the consequences which have been described, would probably have resulted. An unbending sense of what he seemed to think his station required, indu- ced him to order the liberation of the prisoner. This, under the respondent's sense of duty, produ- ced a conflict, which it was his wish to avoid. No other course remained, than to enforce the principles which he had laid down as his guide, md to suspend the exercise of the judicial power ANDREW JACKSON. 267 whenever it interfered with the necessary means of defence. The only way effectually to do this, was to place the judge in a situation, in which his interference could not counteract ^the measures of defence, or give countenance to the mutinous dis- position that had shown itself in so alarming a degree. Merely to have disregarded the writ, would have increased the evil, and to have obeyed it was wholly repugnant to the respondent's ideas of the public safety, and to his own sense of duty. The judge was therefore confined, and removed beyond the lines of defence." After denying the jurisdiction of the court, and claiming, as a constitutional right, a trial by jury, he thus concludes a defence, which the jurist may read with advantage, and the patriot with admira- tion. " This was the conduct of the respondent, and these the motives which prompted it. They have been fairly and openly exposed, to this tribunal, and to the world, and would not have been ac- companied by any exceptions or waver of jurisdic- tion, if it had been deemed expedient to give him that species of trial, to which he thinks himself entitled by the constitution of his country. The powers whicli the exigency of the times forced him to assume, have been exercised ez clusively for the public good ; and, by the bles sing of God, they have been attended with un- paralleled success. They have saved the country; 268 MEMOIRS OF and whatever may fc* the opinion of that country, or the decrees of its courts, in relation to the means he has used, he can never regret that he employed them." The treai hy jury, however much it may be sneer- ed at, by the possessors and advocates of undefined- power, has secured to Englishmen the few rights remaining to them. To Americans, it is secured by our inimitable Constitution ; but in the in- stance before the reader, it was refused to Gen. Jackson, by calling in the aid of the common law of England, to insure the conviction of the respon- dent for contempt of court ! ! Dominic A. Hall, was the judge whose dignity was alledged to be affected by contempt of court — Dominic A. Hall was the man who was said to have sustained an individual injur}^ by the operation of martial law — Dominic A. Hall was the judge who icoidd have jurisdiction of the case — who deprived Gen. Jackson of a trial by jury, and who amersed him in a fine of a thou- sand dotlars I Half of this sura must have been ex- pended in delays, costs of prosecution, and in the expenses of making defence, and the whole fifteen hundred dollars, was drawn out of the pocket of the man whose indefatigable exertions, consummate wisdom and gallant courage, had secured to the judge the privilege of convicting him. The records of Judge Jefiery himself, scarcely furnished a parallel with this proceeding. An English jim/y saved Penn and Meadc'-^d.^t^rw^vd^ ANDREW JACKSON. 260 the Dean of St. Asaph^ and ia the present reign, Tooke, Hardy and Thelwell^ from the grasp of a vindictive ministry, and subservient judiciary ; and had Gen. Jackson been arraigned before an impar- tial and an independent jury of Americans, allowed to consider his whole case, with what readiness would they have pronounced a verdict of ** not guilty," and changed the indignant murmurs of the audience at his conviction, into joyous acclama* tions at his acquittal. Gen. Jackson immediately satisfied the judg- ment, and retired from the court to his carriage. The throng that surrounded the hall of justice, could not repress their feelings. The horses were unharnessed — the carriage elevated upon their shoulders, and the Hero of New Orlean, was, in this manner, borne through the streets to his lodg- ings, by its protected and secured citizens. Flat- tering as was this demonstration of respect and admiration for Am, the general was apprehensive that it was evincive of some disrespect for cwil pow- i??*, and addressed them, in the most pathetic man- ner. This address is before the writer ; but its length forbids its insertion. He acknowledged the civility of the people, not with the studied formali- ty of fashionable etiquette, but with the impassion- ed eloquence of the heart. He exhorted the people whom he loved, and v/ho almost adored him, not to suffer the ebullitions of passion, to make them for- get the respect due to civil authority. They of- 270 MEMOIRS OF fered to pay the. amount of the fine inflicted upoii him, but he declined receiving it ; and retired to his lodgings with the unassumed dignity of conscious integrity. It is with pride, mingled with veneration, that the writer is enabled thus to famish the reader with conchisive evidence, of the dignified modera- tion of a conqueror, who conquered, not to ag- grandize himself, but to render secure that inde- pendecce acquired by his countrymen. Although by mllitar!) poiuer, he had saved an important section of the Republic, and secured the enjoy- ment of civil powei'fhe was conscious that the Jirst was, and must be, in a free government, superior tX) the Zas^;and if, by a civil or judicial functiona- ry, he had sustained what his countrymen deemed an injury, he was conscious that it was far prefera- ble to suffer himself, and to have errors of judgment overlooked, than to have the civil institutions of hi? country disre2:arded. ANDREW JACKSON. 271 CHAPTER XIX. Gen. Jackson retlves from New Orleans— arrives at Nashville,' Ris. place of residence — Reflection — He receives a message to re. pair to the seat of government, to assist in arranging the Peace Establishment of the U. S. army— Difficulty of that duty— Votes of thanks, &c. to GLen. Jackson — He repairs to the seat of gov- ernment — Civilities received upon his passage, and on his arri- val — Returns to his head-quarters at Nashville, and in 1816, re- pairs to New Orleans, and arranges the army, GEN, JACKSON, having preserved the military district assigned to his command, from invasion- having defended it against a force which the enemy supposed irresistible, and his countrymen alarm- ingly formidable — having restored his gallant army to the fire-sides rendered safe by their valour — having submitted to the adjudication of a civil tribunal, and complied with its decision, he had an opportunity to enjoy that repose to which he had long been a stranger, and which was now rendered secure from the disturbance of savage and civilized foes. He beheld an immense por- tion of the Republic, which was recently in danger of sul JLigation, by a power whose ambition is as boundless as its cupidity, enjoying in security, the blessings of the American Constitution. It is utterly impossible to describe by language, ilie emotions of the heart upon this occasion — des- cription lags far behind reality, and its povyer, ir. 272 MEMOIRS OF impotency itself. Surrounded by a recently alarm- ed, and now a secured people, whose hearts were swolleji with gratitude and whose eyes were swimming in tears of joy, he stood amidst the citizens of New Orleans, like a father in the midst of a family, who owed their temporal feli- city to his assiduous labours. The females of the city, who owed their lives, and what was dearer, their honour, to his courage, in impressive silence, evinced their gratitude to their " Patron and Friend." " A glance sends volumes to the heart, " "While -words impassion'd die.'* Gen. Jackson had a family eight hundred miles distant, from which he had long been separated, and to which he was impelled, by the most affec- tionate attachment, to return- He left New Or- leans with the blessings of its citizens for his wisdom and courage in defending them, and with their prayers for his happiness. In the long dis- tance of country through which he passed to his residence at Nashville, he was every where receive ed by the people, with the most enthusiastic de- monstrations of respect ; and greeted as the great instrument in the hands of heaven, of preserving their country from British outrage, and British do- minion. It was the only reward they could bestow, and the most grateful one he could receive. In every heart a monument was erected to his glory upon the foundation of gratitude, which will ntiti ANDREW JACKSON. 27S be shaken ; but which will be transmitted from the bosom of the sire to the son, through all the dis- tant ages of posterity. He arrived at Nashville upon the 15th May, 18J5, Tweuty-seven years before, he arrived here at the age of twenty-four years, an insulated being, rely- ing solely upon his own exertions and the smiles :of heaven, for his establishment in life. He ra- pidly advanced in fame, as the country withrapidi- ty,advanced to civilization — he literally *' grew with the growth, and strengthened with the strength" of the people of Tennessee. He had gone hand in hand with his fellow citizens, in protecting the ierritory and the siatCj from the barbarous carnage of savages, and securing the rude cottage of the early settler from conflagration, and his family from massacre. He had seen an expandescej^.es of cordial congratula- tion were passed, he immediately reviewed the troops — examined minutely into the police of the camp, and finding the troops unhealthy, resolved to have them removed to the Alabama Territory, which was soon after eflfected. Although the health and comfort of troops, is a primary object with a commander, yet in addi- tion to this consideration. Gen. Jackson, consider- ed, from former experience, that the most endan- gered part of the " Division of the South,'' was that which bordered upon the Spanish provinces of Florida, in which the Alabama and Seminole Indians were embosomed. He was aware that the stationing of American troops upon their borders, would tend to restrain their barbarity ; and that they could more promptly be punished when com- mitted. Subsequent events, shewed the wisdom of this measore. ANDREW JACKSON. 283 CHAPTER XX. Gen. Jackson negoclates a treaty for extinguishment of Indian titles to land — Issues an order relative to tliis subject — Receives a silver vase from the Ladies of South Carolina, &c. — Returns to Nashville — Issues an important general order — Prepares to defend his Division — Commencement of Seminole War — Gen, Gaines attacks the Seminoles — Gen. Jackson addresses th^ "Tennessee Volunteers" — repairs to Georgia — and enters with his army into Florida — Justification of th^it measure — he cap- tures St. Marks. GEN. JACKSON, having discharged the impor- tant duty of regulating and stationing the army, in the southern section, of the Division of the South, he entered into negociation with the Chickasaw, Choctaw, Cherokee, and Creek Indians. The object of the negociation, was to obtain from them, the absolute relinquishment of all the claim they pretended to have to lands, within the limits of the United States, and which had previously been ceded by them. This measure evinced, in a sig- nal manner, the moderation of the American gov- ernment toward the natives. Although the ter- ritory had before been obtained, first by conquest, after a sanguinary war, occasioned by the savages themselves, and afterwards by treaty with them, by which they acknowledged their gratitude to the government for permitting them to retain any territory, yet, to pacify them completely, for the diminution of their limits, and to extinguish their 284j MEMOIRS OP title, Gen. Jackson, engaged, in behalf of his gov- ernment, to pay the Creeks, $ 10,000 a year, for ten years ; and the Cherokees, % 10,000 a year, for eight years. Having accomplished this important measure, Gen. Jackson repaired to Huntsville, in the State of Missis ippi, and upon the 8th of October, pub- lished an order which was sanctioned by the gov- ernment, by which all citizens of the United Slates, were enjoined to abstain from all encroachments upon Indian lands, and ordered such as had, to be removed in a limited number of days. Although this might operate hard upon individuals who had acted under misapprehension, yet it was doing that justice and equity to savages, which the Amer- ican government has always extended to them ; and it rendered still more secure the frontiers of Missisippi, Tennessee, and Georgia. During this season, Gen. Jackson received a manifestation of respect from the " Ladies of South Carolina," his native state, which must have been peculiarly grateful to his feelings. They presented him, through Coi. Haynes, and Maj. Gadsden, with a splendid silver tase, elevated upon a pedestal. The figures attached to it, are emblematical of the country's glory, and of the glory of *'the man of NEW ORLEANS.'* Upon oue side of it, is a striking representation of the great battle, and an inscrip- tion, *' EIGHTH JANUARY, 1815" — upou thc Other '* PRESENTED BY THE LADFES OF SOUTH CAROLINA, TO ANDREW JACKSON. 285 aVIAJOR-GENERAL ANDREW JACKSON.'' The gift WaS worthy of the receiver — worthy of the givers — worthy of the descendants of the patriotic matrons of South Carolina, who, in the gloomy period of the revolution, added lustre to their characters, by ex- ercising a benevolence, as boundless as the wants of their assailed countrymen. The toils, the grief, and the death, of the venerable mother of Andrew Jackson, cannot be forgotten.^ At about the same time, the general received another present, although less splendid, equally appropriate. A boot manufacturer of Pittsburgh, j)resented him with an elegant and superb pair of military boots. He received them with great affa- bility, and reciprocated the civility with his usual cordiality. The presentation of a pair of tooolle?i stockings, to the Emperor Alexander, when at Lon- don, suitable for the frigid climate in which he reigns, was received with all the condescension which the head of the allied sovereigns could bestow upon a peasant. In October, 1816, Gen. Jackson returned to his liead.quarters at Nashville, Tenn. It has long been his happiness, when returning to the place of his residence, from the discharge of civil and mili- tary duties abroad, to have, in his absence, raised an additional claim to the gratitude and admiration of his fellow citizens. The treaty he had recently * Vide Chap. I. Page 27. ^QQ MEMOIRS OP made with the Indians, was most peculiarly advan- tageous to the people of Tennessee, as it diminish- ed, and almost allayed the apprehensions of the people, from all future fears of Indian warfare. Having become [)erfectly familiarized with the necessary regulation and police of an army, his at- tention was almost exclusively devoted to the in- troduction of them, into the American army. In tlie spring of 1817, he issued the following general older, which has been the subject of severe ani- madversion, from some distinguished officers in the armj, and of approbation from others- DIVISION ORDER. Adj\itant-GeHeral*s Office, H. Q Division of the Soutli. JVashville, April 22, l^lT^ The commanding general considers it due to the principles of subordination, which ought, and must exist in an army, to prohibit the obedience of any order emanating from the Department of War, to officers of this division, who have re- ported and been assigned to duty, unless coming through him, as the proper organ of communica tion. ' The object of this order, is to prevent the recurrence of a circumstance, which removed an important officer from the division without the knowledge of the commanding general, and in- deed, when he supposed that officer, engaged in his official duties, and anticipated hourly the re- ceipt of his official reports, on a subject of great ANDREW JACKSON* 287 importance to his command ; also to prevent the topographical reports from being made public through the medium of the newspapers, as was done in the case alluded to, thereby enabling the enemy to obtain the benefit of all our topographical researches, as soon as the general commanding, who is responsible for the division. Superiour offi- cers, having commands assigned them, are held res- ponsible to the government, for the character and conduct of that command ; and it might as well be justified in an officer, senior in command, to give or- ders to 2i guard on duty, without passing that order through the officer of that guard, as that the Department of War, should countermand the ar- rangements of commanding generals, without giving their order through the proper channel. To ac- quiesce in such a course, would be a tame surren- der of military rights and etiquette ; and at once subvert the established principles of subordination and good order. Obedience to the lawful com- mands of superiour officers, is constitutionally and morally required : but there is a chain of commu- nication that binds the military compact, which, if broken, opens the door to disobedience and disrespect, and gives loose to the turbulent spirits, who are ever ready to excite mutiny. AH physi- cians, able to perform duty, who are absent on furlough, will forthwith repair to their respective posts. Commanding officers of regime its and corps, are ordered to report specially, all officers absent ^8 MEMOIRS OF from duty, on the 30th of June next, and their cause of absence. The army is too small to tole- rate idlers, and they will be dismissed the service. By order of Maj, Gen. Jackson. ' (Signed) ROBERT BUTLER, Adjutant General, Until the commencement of the last war, the American Republic could hardly be said to have Iiad ^practical military system. From the conclu- sion of the war of the revolution, to that period, it had, indeed, a small military force ! but they were scattered, in small sections, through an im- mense country, and but little of a systematic or- ganization, or ©f regular subordination, was to be discerned. The collisions that unhappily subsist- ed in the army, and between the army and the War Department, in the campaigns of 1812, and 1813, evince the justice of the remark. It requir- ed the energy of a Monroe, in the last, and of a Jackson, Brown, Macomb, Gaines, Scott, Rip- ley, &c. in the first, to give efficiency and system to the physical powtrof the country, when called into action. The preceding general order of the Commander in Chief of the Division of the South, is inserted, not for the purpose of discussing its merits. It would be arrogance in the writer to attempt it. That subject more properly belongs to the accomplished officers of the army, than to the unassuming biographer. ANDREW JACKSON. 289 ^ Gen. Jackson, with that vigilance which always characterizes a great commander, extended his views through the whole of his immensely extensive division ; but he was fully aware from whence the greatest, or rather, the most immediate danger was to be apprehended He was well acquainted with Spanish perfidy, and had once carried the Ameri- can arms to the capital of their North American possessions, and terrour into the heart of an effemi- nate, though vindictive minister of the imbecile,' though tyrannical Ferdinand VII. The sparing mercy of the American government, was extended to him and to his nation, from the most solemn as- surances, that the treaty existing between the Amer- ican and Spanish governments, should be inviola- bly kept, and faithfully executed. Without allu- ding to other articles, and other violations, it is sufficient for the present purpose to state, that one article of this treaty provides, that the Spanish gov- ernment, shall wholly restrain the savages within the limits of their possessions in North America, from depredations of every kind upon the citizens of the United States. In the preceding parts of this work, the conduct of Manreqiiez^ the then Spanish governour, has been unfolded. Conduct equally flagrant in outrage, was pursued by the Spanish authorities, after the conclusion of peace between America and Great Britain, as was pursued during the last war. So far from restraining the hosti'e savages from committing depredations upon liie 2b too MEMOIRS 0*" territory, and murder upon the persons of American citizens, they were encouraged to the perpetration of these deeds, by the officers and emissaries of Spain. No thanks are due from Americans to the Span- ish authorities of Florida, for the peace which has subsisted for a considerable period, between the government and people of the American Republic ; and the Choctaw^ Czeek^ Cherokee^ and Chickasaw tribes of Indians : nor will these brave and infatu- ated sons of the forest, thank them for stimulating them to warfare, against a magnanimous nation, whose prowess, directed by the courage and wisdom of Gen. Jackson, has conquered them iuto a peace, advantageous to themselves — advantageous, because the sacred regard to justice, which is the leading characteristic of the American government, will inviolably regard it. These tribes, from the most correct information, could bring into the field, in 181 r, 10,000 warriors : but none of them, except the disaffected, who had, by the seduction of for- eign emissaries, joined the Seminoles^ raised the hatchet against Americans. The Seminole Indians are not a *' legitimate''^ tribe of native Americans. They are an associa- tion of desperados, who have been banished from other tribes, and who havedrawn into their confede- yaoy, many runaway negroes, whose African^ sul- lenness, has been aroused to indiscriminate ven- geance, by the more frantic fury of the American ANDREW JACKSON. 29^1 fiatives. It was from this desperate clan of out- laws, from civil, and even from savage society, that the Spanish authorities expected to see the Ameri- can 'settlements, upon the borders of Florida, de- vastated, and the settlers slain » The British government, since the treaty of peace negociated at Ghent, had been more cautious in arming, disciplining, and driving savages into war with Americans, than it had previously been : but two of its subjects by the names of Arbuthnot and Ambristie, had long been executing, under the specious pretext of carrying on merchandize^ the wishes of the enemies of the American Republic. To conceal their depravity, they may have furnish- ed the Seminole Indians with some few articles of clothing : but the principal articles of their traffic, were knives^ hatchets^ muskets, rifles, halls, and powder. From the year 1814 to 1817, this ferocious clan of American savages, and African negroes, com- mitted many depredations and wanton murders, in the American settlements. Gen. Edmund P. Gaines, the next in command to Gen. Jackson in the Divi- sion of the Soutli, was stationed in the vicinity of these outrages. In a communication which would grace this, or any other volume, but which is re^ luctantly omitted, he pourtrayed the open violences of the savages, and the insidious wickedness of Spanish and British emissaries, in a manner not to be disregarded. He was stationed at Fort Scott : 292 SIEMOIRS OF and had with him but part of the 7th Regiment of U. S. infantry. He however immediately put his forces in motion against them, although wholly in- competent, from deficiency in amount, to cope with the imm-ense host of savages that surrounded him, and his little gallant force. He demanded a sur- render of the murderers of American citizens. No answer was given but savage defiance. No com- punciions were manifested for the innocent blood that stained them. G^n. Gaines, aware that patient sufferance of injuries from savages, forever in- creases their ferocity, proceeded against them — crossed the Flint River— dispersed them— destroy- ed Fowlioimy and returned to Fort Scott. A nu- merous horde of desperate warriors, red and blacky surrounded the fort, and entirely cut off the com- munication of the American forces. Appearan- ces indicated a repetition of the tragical scenes of Fort Mimms in Missisippi. The signal ven- geance inflicted upon the Creeks, by Gen. Jack- son, and his invincible army, probably occasioned the Seminoles to pause, before they '^ cast their lives upon a die,*^ Gen. Gaines had called upon the executive of Georgia, whose state was more immediately endangered than any other, for immediate suc- cour. The miserable system of temporary draft- ing, had been adopted ; and before the troops eould be brought to act efficiently, their term of service expired, and the small regular force was the ANDREW JACKSON. 293 only reliance the frontier settlers had, as a protec- tion from devastation and massacre. A boat with 40 passengers was taken upon Flint River, and every soul on board slain. Universal consternation prevailed ; and Gen. Gaines once more called upon the Georgia forces, 2000 of whom were de- tailed, and rendezv^oused at Hartford, Geo. Gen. Jackson, as commander in chief, was again called upon, from a sense of duty to take the field. Again were the " Tennessee Volunteers," by their beloved and almost adored general, exhorted to resume the armour of war, in the following ad- dress, — '* Volunteers of West Tennessee — Once more, after a repose of three years, you are summoned to the field. Your country, having again need for your services, has appealed to your patriotism, and you have met it promptly. The cheerfulness with which you have appeared to encounter the hard- ships and perils of a winter s campaign, affords the highest evidence of what may be expected of you, in the hour of conflict and trial. The savages on your borders, unwilling to be at peace, have once more raised the tomahawk to shed the blood of our citizens, and already they are assembled in considerable force, to carry their mur- derous schemes into execution. Not contented v/ith the liberal policy that has from time to time been shewn them, but yielding themselves victims to foreign seducers, they vainly think to assail and conquer the country that protects them. Stupid 294 MEMOIRS OF mortals ! They have forgotten too soon the streams of blood their ill fated policy heretofore cost them. They have forg:otten too, that but a short time since, conquered, and almost destroyed, they were only preserved by the mildness and humanity of that country, which they now oppose. They must now be taught, that however benevolent and humane that country is, she yet has sacred rights to protect, and with impunity, will not permit the butchery of her peaceable and unoffending citizens. Brave Volunteers — The enemy you are going to contend with, you have heretofore met and fought. You have once done it, and can again conquer them. You go not to fight, but to be victorious ; remem- ber then, that the way to prove successful, is not by being inattentive to the first duties of a soldier, but by bearing and executing with cheerfulness, the or- ders of superiours, and being constantly mindful of the obligations you are under to your country and to yourself. Subordination and attention to disci- pline, are ail-important and indispensable ; witht)ut them, nothing like system can be preserved, and this being wanted, nothing favourable can result. But in you, every confidence is reposed. Your general will not believe that brave men, who have so promptly oome forth at the call of their country, will withhold their assent to regulations which can alone assure them safety and success. Hardships and dangers are incident to war ; but brave men win bear them without murmuring or coraplaiaiug. ANDREW JACKSON- 295 Knowing you to be such, no fears are entertained but that every duty imposed on you, will be met with promptness and cheerfulness. Your general goes before you to open the way, and prepare for your reception. Confiding in your diligence and exertions, he will expect your arrival at your destined point, without unnecessary delay— led by Col. Arthur P. Haynes, an officer in whom he has every confidence. This being eflected, he will place himself at your head, and with you share the dangers and hardships of the campaign." The proud title and unfading laurels which these gallant sons of tlie Republic had acquired, would not suffer them to remain unmoved at an address from a chieftain, under whom they had acquired them. With a promptness that had ever signalized them, they repaired to their rendezvous, and, under the command of Col. Arthur P. Haynes, so often mentioned before, repaired to the point of destina- tion, at Fort Scott. Gen. Jackson, in January, 1818, had repaired to Georgia, and had placed himself at the head of the Georgia militia. Situated in a country which affords but few materials for the subsistence of an army, he actually commenced a march of ten days through a wilderness, with only Q. pint of corn. to'each man per day! He was also conscious, that a supply could not be relied upon at Fort Scott. But he knew the importance of celerity in the movement of an army, and the brilliancy g96 MEMOIRS OP of his achievements had hitherto depended much upon it. At Fort Scott, he formed a junction with the regular forces ; and upon the arrival of the Tennessee Volunteers, M'as prepared to make a sudden termination of the Seminole war. This tribe had not a solitary claim to compas- sion, excepting what arises from the consideration, that they were willing victims to Spanish and British machinations. Even their principal chief, Fepiticoccy^ when asked the reason of his hostility against the American Republic, replied — *' The government toere alivays ready to do him justice, and to make peace zoith him ; hit that war was a. fine manly exercise, in which he wished to practise his young men ! .'" Their " foreign seducers," were ever ready to make them victims to their own in- fatuation. The same CoL Nicoll, of proclamation memory, and the same Capt. Woodbine, of no mem- ory, but that of infamy, were found to be skulk- ing among the Seminoles, as they sneaked from Pensacola in the last war, after having exposed the feeble and impotent Manrequez, to the just vengeance of a magnanimous but Insulted govern- ment. By the first week in March, 1818, the measures of Gen. Jackson, were determined upon ; and when fixed, Indian hostility, Spanish intrigue, and British perfidy, might as well divorce the sun from the ecliptic, as to divert him from their accom- plishment. He had been compelled, in avenging ANDREW JACKSON. 297 the injuries of his country, to make the brave, infatuated, and misguided Creeks bleed at every pore. Although the Seminoles had less claim to compassion, yet this great commander was aware that they were also misled; but upon them, as open aggressors, his power was first to operate, and then, upon their misleaders. He was deter- mined to strike at the root of the evil j and, if pos- sible, to remove it. ! Minute details might be entered into, and they might gratify minute curiosity ; but it is sufficient to say, that Gen. Jackson, marched with his for- ces through a country, in which the savages had every advantage, from their acquaintance with it, and from its better adaption to savage, than to civ- ilized warfare. Like the powerful representative of a ,8;reat people, he determined to punish the guilty wherever found, and to spare the innocent? where innocence was evinced. He passed through that part of the American territory, occupied by the Seminoles: and they either fell, or retired before him and his gallant followers. He reached the borders of Florida, upon lOth March. Know- ing that geographical boundaries, were not the boundaries of right and wrong, and determining to penetrate the darkest recesses of guilt, and pun- ish its instigators, he entered the Spanish province of Florida with his forces. Many of the countrymen of Gen. Jackson, have bestowed a liberal portion of censure upon him? 2^ MEMOIRS OP for entering the territory of a power, with an ar- my, with whom the Republic was a peace. While it is admitted, that Spain was ostensibly at peace with Americans, it must not be denied that the Spanish authorities in FJorida, were palpably vio- lating the treaty, by omittinsf to restrain the savages m their territory, from acts of hostility against them, and by encouraging the savages in commit- ting thetn. Should it be said that they were un- able to restrain them, from their own weakness, and from the superiority of the savasfes, it may be an- swered — every nation must perform their own treaty-stipulations, or suffer the consequences of a violation. Is not the plea of weakness, a fal- lacy, as it regards the Si:dnish treaty with Ameri- ca ? Is it to be said tiiat one of the " Allitd Sove- reigns" of Europe, cannot restrain a single tribe of Indians from breaking his treaties ? A tenth part of the forces he has, for years, maintained in South America, vainly endeavouring to enslave the Patriots, and subject them to Spanish tyranny, the torture, and the Inquisition, might easily have restrained the Semiuok* Indians from depredations and murders, in the American settlements. Gen. Jackson had under his command, and of course, under his military protection, all that por- tion of the Republic which bounds upon the exten- sive province of Florida. He held himself, in a degree, accountable for every inch of territory, that was invaded, and every limb and life that was ANDREW JACKSON, 299 lost by the encDiics of his country. He felt his ability to defend his extensive Division ; he knew it to be his duty ; and was conscious that his country expected it from him. He saw his countrymen mur- dered upon the frontiers, and the murderers protect- ed by a government which was solemnly pledg- ed to restrain the savagjes, who had committed them, from every act of hostility. It would have been but a pastime for these blood- seeking, despe- rate Seminoles, to have saturated themselves with the blood of American women and children, and merely to be driven to their homes in the forests of Florida, only to prepare to glut their vengeance by repeated feasts of innocent blood. Are tlie swamps and ravines of Florida, like the horns of ancient altars, a protection for murderers? Ask the parents of slain innocents, whether this is the protection their government is pledged to extend to thejn. No matter what might have been the in- structions of the government to Gen. Jackson — No matter what may be the opinion of the fastidious civilian upon abstract questions of international law. The Spanish government had palpably vio- lated their treaty with America ; and if thirteen years more, of negociation were to he spent, the Alabama Territory, the frontiers of Georgia, Ten- nessee, and Missisippi, will have presented a wide spread scene of desolation, in which the bones of American citizens would be found mingled with the ruins of their habitations, and the devastations of the country. 300 MEMOIRS OP Gen. Jackson, like an ancient patriot, described by an ancient historian, is *' a man — a high-minded maih ivho knows his duty, and knowings dares perform it.^^ He might have said, as his great and exalted friend, President Monroe did, >vhen he entered the highest station filled by an human being — "from A. JUST RESPONSIBILITY I SHALL NEVER SHRINK.'? He led his army into Florida. The confidence of the wretched Seminoles was converted to despair, and they fled in consternation before the avenger of their inhuman murders. He penetrated into the interiour of Florida, and captured Fort St Marks, the dark sce'ie of Spanish and British machinations, and the primmn mobile of Indian carnage, and mas- sacre The Spanish authorities protested against it, but conscious guilt unnerved their arms, and they dared not defend it by force. ANDREW JACKSON. CHAPTER XXI. 301 Gen. Jackson at Fort St. Mju-ks, Florida— captures and executes Francis the Prophet, and an Indian Chief— at the same place, takes Arbuthnot and Ambristie — details a general court-martial for their trial — approves of the sentence and orders them to be executed — Remark — Gen. Jackson marches for Pensacola — captures it — appoints Col. King to the command of it, and re- tires to Nashville, Tenn. GEN. JACKSON was now, (April, 18i8,) in pos- session of the most important post in Florida, (if Pensacola be excepted,) — Fort St. Marks, It is situated far in the interiour of that province, upon the river St. Marks ; has long been the theatre of the most nefarious designs, and the starting point from which marauders, depredators, and murderers have taken their departure — certain of being wel- comed home, when plunder and scalps were brought with them. From this place, Gen. Jackson direct- ed his operations against the Seminoles, yet unsub- dued. An important town of their's, hy the name of Suwannei/, thirty miles distant, was taken by a detachment of the army. The savages dispersed or surrendered, in every part of the country, and the war of defence against the Sem.inoles, was sud- denly brought to a close. By hoisting a British flag upon the fort, many hos- tile Indians entered th€ water-craft in the river, and were captured. Among them, were a ferocious chief, and the Prophet Francis, whose murlers, com- mitted and instigated, cannot all he mentioned. They suffered the reward of their diabolical wick- edness upon the gallows. The rest of the savages were discharged. Francis had recently visite^l 26 30S MEMOIRS OF England ; and there was found in his possession, a general's commission in the British army. At the same place were taken the two British subjects before mentioned — Arbuthnot and Ambris^ tie. The most conclusive evidence was furnished Gen. Jackson, that these men Avere, and for a long time had been, in open hostility against the Re- public. That they had furnished the Seminoles and negroes, with every species of deadly weapons, the better to enable them to carry on war against the Americans. That they had stimulated them to the commission of many of the murders that had been perpetrated by them, upon the defenceless citizens upon the frontiers ; and that they had rendered themselves subject to the most rigorous execution of vengeance against them, as violators of the acknowledged principles of the law of nations. Gen. Jackson, imitating the dignified moderation of the government, whose power he represented, detained them for triaU to give them an opportuni- ty to evince their innocence. A general court- martial was detailed, of thirteen members. The President of this court, was Maj. Gen. Edmund P. Gaines^ one of the most distinguished and accom- plished officers in the American, or any other service. The members consisted of officers of high reputation in the regular army, and in the corps of volunteers. Every indulgence, consistent with the dignity of the proceeding, was extended to the arrested men ; and every opportunity af- forded them to make a full defence. After the ANDREW JACKSON. 303 most solemn deliberation, the court found them guilty of the articles and specifications exhibited against them, and ordered them to be executed. Gen. Jackson approved of the sentence ; and Ar- but h?cot a.nd Anibristie atoned with their lives, so far as two guilty lives could atone, for the murder of many innocent and worthy men ; many lovely and helpless women—many weeping and beseech- ing children which had been instigated by them, and perpetrated by the most ferocious clan of infu- riated desperados that infest the earth.* These trials, these condemnations, and these executions have excited unmeaning clamour from i some, and perhaps, as unmeaning applause from others. The wise advice " first hear, and then judge," seems to have been totally disregarded up- on this subject. After the most assiduous endeav- ours, the writer could not procure the trial of these misguided, and, on the strength of the sentence of a distinguished court, we may say guilti/ men. It is in the department of the government ; and will be divulged when the wisdom of the government sees tit. It may be proper, however to state, that the whole proceedings and the record, have been sub- mitted to an eminent man, who thus speaks of it — *' I have been favoured wi*h the perusal of the trial of Arbuthnot and Amhristie,by a military tri- Uunal, upon the 28th April, 18 IS. The charges preferred against them, were so completely cstab- * To shew the unparalleled barbarism of the Seminole clan, it need only be mentioned, that in June, 1818, Bull Head, Chief oi the lower Seminoles, died ; and that, four of his finest plundered horses, and his-favourite negro, were burned on the occasion. 304} MEMOIRS OP Jished, as not to " leave a loop to hang a dotibt,^^ as to the justice of the sentence. When the facts connected with the execution of these men, shall be spread before the world, they will be satisfac- tory and conformabie to the law of nations. When the letters of Arbulhnot to Mr. Bagot, and the governours of the Bahama, Havanna.i &c. are laid before the American people, they will then see the *' cloven foot" of British influence, as plain as the noon day's sun." An officer of intelligence and veracity, who attended the whole trial, corro- buraJes this statement ; and even a leading Gazette, published in London, as late as 1st July, says — " If Arbulhnot and Ambristie, were really guilty of the crime with which they stood accused, their fate was such as the law of nations warrants." Many British prints, hov/ever, and what excites rather pity than indignation, many American prints, have bestowed upon the administration, and Gen. Jackson, the most opprobious epithets, for their proceedings in relation to the capture of St. Marks and Pensacola, and the execution of Arbuthnot and Ambristie ! The justice of heaven is often re- cognized in bringing the solitary murderer, to jus- tice ; and although it is ever a solemn scene, hu- man tribunals are justified in inflicting it. Is it. because these miscreants occasioned blood to flow from hundreds of bosoms, that they are to be screen- ed from punishment? They were murderers, in the strictest sense of the word. Britain and Spain.^ were both at peace with America ; they therefore. ANDREW JACKSON. • ^^^ could not claim the rights of prisoners of war. They lived by the knife, the tomahawk, and the musket, and they justly expiated their crimes upon the gibbet. The Serainoles had been conquered; their pow- er broken ; their warriors dispersed; and their in- stigators punished. At the very moment when Gen. Jackson, was about to discharge his army, in- formation was received by him, that many recent murders had been ''committed on the Alabama, bij a party of the enemy from Pensacola, where they zvere furnished ivith provisions and ammunition by a friendly power r~^^ Governour Joseph MasoU l^ad succeeded Gon^ zalez Manrequez, in the gubernatorial authority of Florida ; but although there was a change oimen, there was no alteration m measures. The hostile savages were still fostered, armed, and instigated to war, in the capital of Florida. Gen. Jackson re- solved again to " carry our arms where he found our enemiesr\ Encountering hardships and privations which he and the Tennessee Volunteers, had for years encountered, they moved towards Fensacola Conscious of having incurred the j ist vengeance of the American government and army, the governour remon^rated against the procedure, in order to lay a foundation for a little more negociation with his u adored master ;" but Gen. Jackson had no other powerofnegociating with il/«.o^than he had with * Vide Gen. Jackson's address to his army, 29th May, 1818. t Vide Chap. xii. oOO MEMO! IIS or Manrequez-^^^froni the mouths of his cannon''^ He eniered tensacola, without opposition. Tiie governeur, his retinue, and his forces retired to the fortress of Baramas, which had been repaired, at nnmeiise expense, since the explosion in the last war. It was here, that the American forces ex- pected the most determined opposition, from the superiour advantages that the Spaniards possessed. But " he is doubly ariii'd who hath his quarrel just.'' The garrison held out but on« day, and surrender- ed upon the 28th May. The articles of capitula- lion are before the public, and are t(X) long to be here inserted. Upon the 29th May, Gen. Jackson commences his orders-" Head Quarters, divmon of the South ;v«««co/«."_Speaking of the possession of this place, he says— « /,e has not been prompted to this measure from a msh to extend the territorial limits of the United States.^' Alluding to the Spanish treaty and the Spanish violation of it, he says—" helpless women have been h.itchered, and tlie cradle stained with the blood of innocence !" He assigned the command of Pensacala to Col. King, " as military and civil governour," and prepared to retire to his old head quarters at Nashville. He arrived there, lat^ in June, and was received by adeputation of citizens, among whom was his gallant associate. Gen. Carroll. From that time to the present, (Nov. 1818,) Gen Jackson has been assiduously engaged in the im- portant duties devolved upon him, as « comman-bbr iN CHIEF OF THE DIVISION OF THE SOUTH." "^'^ ' VwJe Ch.ip. X). ANDREW JACKSON. 307 CONCLUSION. Incidents of Gen. Jackson's Ufe — ^lirs character. IN concluding these Memoirs, I cannot omit to insert a few incidents of Gen. Jackson's life, which are not yet embraced in them. When sitting as judge of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, an atrocious culprit escaped from the custody of the sherifT; seized a loaded musket with a bayonet ; placed himself in the angle of two stone walls, and swore he would shoot the first, and bayonet the second man that attempted to take him. The sheriff ordered ten men, as assistants, but they dared not approach him. The sheriff reported the fact to the judge. *^ Summon 100 men then," said judge Jackson. It was done ; but they also feared to arrest him. Upon a second report — *' Summon 7?ze then," said the judge. It was done. He descended from the bench — ap- proached the culprit with a stern countenance, and dignified firmness — seized the musket with one hand, the culprit with the other, and handed him to the sheriff. In the most gloomy period of the Creek war, when Gen. Jackson's little army was in imminent danger from the savages, and still more alarmed at the almost certain prospects of famine ; when an alarming despondency pervaded the hearts of those brave men, who would face death in its most 308 MEMOIRS OF horrible forms, the general invited a number of his officers to breakfast with him. Tliey repaired to his marquee, and found him sitting, with digni- fied composure, under a wide spreading oak, which had produced an abundant crop of acrous. " Sit down, gentlemen,'* said the general, " this is my breakfast, and it is all 1 have to serve yott with; but a soldier never despairs. Heaven will bless our cause — will preserve us from famine, and re- turn us home conquerors." The officers return- ed to their tents with encreasiug admiration of their general ; adhered to him to the end of the war ; and saw his predictions verified. The troops before New Orleans embraced many of the first young gentlemen, in point of talents, education, family, and fortune, in the states of Kentucky, Tennessee, Louisiana, and Missisippi : and among them were, of course, many of a rougher character. The pleasant raillery, which is the very zest of life, when played oif by one gentle- man upon another, was unfortunately practised upon a captain of a company, who took it in high dudgeon. In imitation of the names of Indian chiefs, his men called him Capt. Flat-foot. He re- monstrated against it to Gen. Jackson, who plea- santly remarked — *' Pteally Captain, it is difficult getting along with these gay young fellows ; but so long as they toil at the lines with such vigour, and fight the enemy with such courage, we officers must overlook a jittle innocent levity. Why, Captain, ANDREW JACKSON. 309 they call me Old Hickory ; and if you prefer my title to your's I will readily make an exchange." The Captain retired, proud of the title of Capt. Flatfoot, Pages might be filled in relating interesting anecdotes, and incidents of Gen. Jackson, which would clearly show, that although austere dignity is his predominating characteristic, he still posses- ses the most amiable and benevolent heart. But the work is already extended much beyond the original design of it. One subject, however, must not be omitted ; that of duelling. That Gen. Jackson has a number of times, entered the field of aingle com- bat, is not disputed ; but that he ever entered it the aggressor, is most unequivocally denied. That he has that susceptibility which is always a con- comitant with genius and greatness is admitted ; but that he ever wantonly provoked an honourable man to resort to the sword or pistol for redress, is inadraissil'le. Gen. Jackson respects his fellow m^n, according to their merits ; and he respects^ himself according to his own. He is never guilty of insulting with wantonness, and will never be Insulted with impunity. . If Gen. Jackson, in repelling and punishing the rude attacks that have been made on his fame and his honour, has resorted to a mode of redress, not sanctioned by the laws of his country, it is a mode which legislatures have hitherto been unable to restrain. 310 MEMOIRS OF In concluding these memoirs, I attempt with deep solicitude, briefly to pourtray the exalted character who is the subject of them. ANDREW JACKSON was born a great man- he was born free. The first dawning of his intellect, eh'cited the independence of his spirit. As if his youthful bloodinstinctively glowed with indigna- tion, at the miseries his ancestors had sustained from abused power, the first signal act of his life was performed in resisting it. Intuitively great, he explored the regions of science with the rapidity of thought. Acute in observatii)n, he stu., ^"> 0^^ "'rr. oS -^c* % V^' •f^ ,. ■*bo'< x^-^ %- '>^r. .c\^^ <^\.^ .0. ^. V V V ^ ,t- ' O , -^ -1^ ,• c > s ■* ■* ' '• .^ %. 3" -^ c5 -^c^ "^A v^' ilii nW'' lliiii ■}imm(