■y'^^^^ > .3 ^.. v-^^ .o< c"^ ^ r^: 00 0" ^ * ,*^ v: ^t. v^^ :^, iv '=t A^ ■^^ oH vO 00^ ■V,-^ •^.-^77;^^G^ Oo. A -f. ?: -%.%^ °-'>^i^'.' ■'If, . -vV ^>- .''■^ - 1 "■'r-t/t/'*^ "i" v^ «^r "^ /^ ^ *<, s^ ^0 ^ ^ s}> -r;^. ^^. .- .>r-^. «iy' c ^ '^ « '^. ,^^ . ..s^J^ O. i^ ,,$^ 'V. » ^ o * s ^ , O , ^ y 0" .. aN^' -. °^ :f' .1 / BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN; WITH A CTJllTlCAli ATTEXmX, &c BY EBENEZER HARLOW CUMMINS, A. M. BALTIMOBE: riinted by Benja. Edes, corner of Second and Ga/.streets 1820. ADVERTISEMENT. Since the late hostilities with Great Britain, several books have been published in the United States purporting to be histories of tiie war. No one of tliem, it is believed, can be received as generally authentic: the whole adding little to the literary char- acter of the country. Of those most g-en'^rally circulated, we can speak the least favourably, as specimens of history, which means something more than compilations from newspapers, or a tirade of epithets stigmatising our adversaries. Two or three stipendi- aries occupied the fore ground in the race of the booksellers for the market of the United States, producing interesting though coarse compilations; which, while the feelings created by the war were still in Hvely existence, were read with sensations of pleas- ure. But no one now will ascribe to their works, the name, much less the character of history. Weems' life of Marion, in which the author has collated and embellished many interesting events, with the view to a popular book, has greatly superiour pretensions to either. With enough of fact to challenge, at this late day, the credence of most readers, it excels in all kinds of jest and fancy; and administers abundantly of the finest entertain- ment to the lovers of fun. Not so the works we have noticed. Eaton, Latour, and McAffee have furnished books of a differ- ent character. They are useful; containing a great mass of im- portant information, necessary to the historian who shall come after them. We do not design to bring up for criticism, or any thing else, the many other histories, sketches, and biographical memoirs, published in different parts of the country. They ap- pear to have been sheltered from animadversion, by their own demits, and naturally reposed in oblivion. Great Britain, too, has had her histories of the war. We have seen three: Nicholson's, Clarke's, and Baines'. In addition to the EngUsh histories there has been one published in Canada, by a Mr. James, cooked and seasoned exactly for the palate of John Bull. The first and secondare echoes of the reports of Brit- ish commanders, and British ministerial newspapers and maga- , zines. The third, which is contained in this volume, differs from IV them as macli in composition as in cliaracter. It is, as a speci= men of history, ver}' superiour to any thing we have, on the same subject, in the United States; and on the whole a Uberal and mag- nanimous production. It was not expected that the dominions of his late majesty, George IH. contained a British subject, who, in writing a history of the war with the United States, would dare tell John Bull to his teeth, that brother Jonathan had broken his nose and spilled his claret: but the reader will find in the history of Mr, Baines man)^ instances of this daring. We have derived infinite satisfaction from the contents of many chapters in this book; because they were writen by a British subject; and because the compliments and concessions of a rival are greatly more valuable than the plaudits we bestow on ourselves. The American reader must excuse the historian for many things which we would call errors, when he reflects upon his relation to the parties, and the sources from which he has most naturally drawn his information. In the end, he has fully compensated the pain his mistatements excite, by the honorable admissions to the American character, of gallantry, intelligence, and virtue. Where we have supposed the historian in error, from the want of just information, or from the bias of his feelings in favour of his countrymen, we liave corrected liim by a series of notes appended to this volume; and where he has indulged too freely in praise of British commanders, at the expense of the Amer- ican character, we have extended our criticismiS to a just re- taliation. W^e have left untouched the original, and have not interfered at all witli the notes and references; except to correct typographical mistakes and the occasional misnomer of American officers. The numerical figures, to be found interpei'sed through- out ihe history, refer to the Appendix, where all our animadver- sions are inserted. It is not pretended that all occasions for crit- icims have been fully improved. This woiild have swelled our commentary to an unreasonable size. We have seized only on the most important, leaving those merely venial to be occupied by the reader; in doing which he will have a full share of amuse- ment. On the capture of Washington, and several oilier top- ics, we have not enlarged, because we have been unwilhng to revive discussions and renew animadversions, which now sleep in the calm that has so happily succeeded the tempest of war. We feel now as much disposed to forgive and forget the blunders and misfortunes of the unsuccessful, as we are qualified more justly to appreciate the achievements and exploits of those on whom victory was pleased to bestow laurels. To the former we would not give a new pang; and from the latter we have not re- moved a wreath, though accorded by tlie people transported with joy in the moments of triumph, wlien honours were distributed without dJscriminalionsand too frequently without regard to merit. BALTIMORE, 1820. air®^#BW(Pii#sr* The relations subsisting between Great Brrtaia and tlie United States of America had for raany years exliibited a singular aspect. The nations were not indeed in a state of open war, but the conflict of opposite pretensions, the angry discussion of many intricate questions of international law, the charges and recriminations whicli had for a num- ber of years formed the only subject of their diplo- matic intercourse, had diffused over both countries a spirit of distrust and animosity, which seemed likely to find in war alone its natural gratification. In Great Britain an idea prevailed, and seemed in a considerable degree to influence the ministry, that America liad displayed a very unjustifiable spirit of hostility towards this country, while she had manifested a decided leaning and partiality towards the interests and views of France. This opinion appeared to justify those who were decid- edly for war with the United States, in giving cur- rency to their hostile feelings. But another cir- cumstance also operated towards the same end. A A VI »ar with America, it was ai'gued, would be not only just but of short continuance, and would ex- hibit a scene of uninterrupted and splendid succes- ses on our part, and of defeat and disgrace on theirs. The Americans, on the other hand, were galled and irritated by the attacks made on tlieir commerce; by the riglit of search, as claimed and exercised by England, not always on the best grounds, or in the least offensive manner; and by the impressment and detention of their seamen; and to these motives for war was probably added the hope of conquering Canada, and of enriching themselves by the capture of our merchant ships. As no doubt could be entertained, that in the event of a war between the two countries, Canada would be attacked. Sir James Craig, the governor of that province, very judiciously took every mea- sure which he thouglit could be effectual or condu- cive to its protection and defence. Had lie conrni- ed himself to this line of conduct alone, no blame could have been imputed to him; but he thought himself justified in sending a person, of the name of Henry, into the United States on a very ambig- uous and reprehensible errand. This man was seized (I) by the American government, who ob- tained possession of his instructions, as well as co- pies of the communications which he had made to Sir James Craig; and according to the statements submitted to congress, the object of captain Henry was to ingratiate himself with the fedei-al party; to asccrti'.ui its strength, its wishes, and its views, in the different states; and more particularly to en- Vll courage, witli tlic promise of Bi'itisli assistance, any design they might be disposed to form for a separation of the states. This conduct on the part of Great Britain, originating in one of her highest authorities in North America, the president, in a message to congress, represented as a flagrant breach of public faith, committed at a time when Great Britain and America were employed in dis- cussions of amity and reconciliation. When the subject of the mission of Capt. Henry was brought •before the British parliament, ministers refused to produce the correspondence and papers connected with these mysterious transactions, nor did they give a very clear and satisfactory account of the business. They denied, however, that captain Henry was accredited by them, or that they were acquainted with the intention of Sir James Craig to employ him. Notwithstanding this disavowal, the British government had all the disgrace of having acted contrary to the law of nations, and at the same time, the mortification to perceive tli at the American people were more closely united by this most injudicious and unjustifiable attempt to divide them. Before the intelligence of the assassination of Mr. Percival (3) reached America, that govern- ment had determined on war with Great Britain; and early in the month of June, a message was sent to the senate and house of representatives, containing a recommendation to that cflect. In this state paper, the president complains of the violation which the American flag has so repeated- VIU ly suffered from British vessels <0 4t 44 44 44 Ordinary. 32 Corveti 26 Capt, Ludlow. Ships 0/ C Wasp •war. '^Hornet __ 18 18 Capt. Jones. Lawrence. Brigs Siren — 16 Lieut. Carroll. Argus Oneida z 16 IG Crane. Com. Woolsey. Sch'rs. Vixen -— 12 Lieut. Gadsden. Nautilus — 12 Sinclair. Enterprise — 12 Blakeley. Viper — 12 I3ainbridge Bonibi — Vengeance, Spitfu-e, Etna, Vesuvius. AND GREAT BRITAIN. 15 I midable,* was principally of an irregular kind, •without discipline, unaccustomed to the hardships of war, and destitute of that patient endurance and subordinate spirit, without wliich armies, however j strong, arc always liable to become the mutinous I depositories of panic. i The United States of America have always had their full share of party spirit — the inseparable * MILITARY FOKCE. Near!}' the whole of the session of congress preceding the de- claration of war by America, was occupied in preparations for hostilities: on the 11th of January, 1812, an act was passed for raising" ten regiments of infantry, two regiments of artillery, and one regiment of light dr^igoons; to be enhsted for five years; the infantry to avnount to 20,000, the artillery to 4,000, and the cavalry to 1,000 men. On the 6th of the following month, an act, autlioi-i/.ing the president of the United States to accept the service of certain volunteer corps, not exceeding 50,000, passed into a law; and by an act of congress, passed the 1 0th of April, detachments from the militia to the amount of 100,000 were voted in the following proportions: — Xewhampsliire - - - 3,500 Virginia 12,000 Massiicluisetts - - - 10,000 North Carolina - - - 7,000 Connecticut - - - - 3,000 South Carolina ... - 5,000 Rhode Island - - - - 500 Georgia 3,500 Vermont 3,000 Kentucky 5,500 New York , - - - 13,000 Ohio 5,000 New Jersey - - - - 5,000 Tennessee 2,500 .Pennsylvania - - - U,000 Delaware 1,000 Total - - - 100,000 Maryland - . - . C,000 The regular army of the United States, upon the declaration of war, consisted of eleven regiments of the old peace establish- ment, estimated at five hundred men each. In the naval department, acts were passed for repairing and buildiiig frigates, and for making the necessary appropriations 16 THE UNITED STATES concomitant of a free government; and a war so differently affecting the different parts of the union, could not fail to call forth those violent political contentions for which that republic is so much dis- tinguished. At Boston, the declaration of war was made the signal of a general mourning; all the ships in the harbour displayed flags half mast high; and in that, as in other cities of the northern states, public meetings of the inhabitants were held, at which a number of resolutions were passed, stigmatizing the approaching contest as unneces- sary and ruinous, and as tending to a connection with France destructive to American liberty and independence. Immediately after the declaration of war a party was foi-med, called the "peace par- ty," wliich combined nearly the whole of the fede- ralists throughout the United States, and by whom a steady, systematic, and energetic opposition, principally directed against the national finances, was maintained to the latest period of the war. The demands of this party for the restoration of peace were as loud and imperious as had been their cry for war in the years 1806-7, and their conduct at the two periods appears totally irreconcilable to any principle of patriotism and consistency. For the defence of the maritime frontier; other acts, apportion- ing the sums to be appHed to the support of the army, the navy, and the irreg-ular troops, all passed in succession; to meet which demands, Mr. Gallatin, the minister of finance, in submitting- the budget to cong-ress on the l^th of January, recommended a loan of ten millions of dollars for the current year. AND GREAT BRITAIN. 17 With the democratic paFty, and in the southern states, in particular, where swarms of privateers were preparing to reap a rich harvest among the West India islands, the popular sentiment was de- cidedly in favour of war; (3) and of all the cities of America in this interest, Baltimore perhaps stood in the first rank in zeal and in violence. A journal, puhlished in that place, entitled the <«Fed- eral Republican," had rendered itself obnoxious by its opposition to the measures of government, and menaces had been repeatedly thrown out against its conductors. On the niglit of the 27th of July a mob assembled before the house of the editor, which was defended by his friends Mith so much gallantry that the assailants from without were several times repulsed. At length, towards mid- night, a party of military, attended by the mayor, were brought to the spot, under the command of general Strieker, to whom generals Lee and Lingan, wlio had both assisted in defending the editor's house, surrendered themselves, along with four and twenty other persons, and were conducted to the town gaol as a place of security. The mob now dispersed, and this ebullition of popular piiren- zy would probably have subsided, had not a jour- nal, opposed in principle to tlie Federal Republican, had the baseness to fan the dying embers, by call- ing upon the insurgents not to let their victims es- cape without executing vengeance upon them. — Roused again to action by this incendiary publica- tion, the mob re-assembled, broke open the g«ol, and attacked the objects of their fury. In Uie B 18 THE UNITED STATES, 6cC. midst of the commotion several of the prisoners succeeded in escaping from the hands of their per- secutors; but others, less fortunate, were assailed with clubs and knives, and left without signs of life at the outside of the prison. General Lingan, a veteran, upwards of seventy years of age, who had fought the battles of his country by the side of his friend general Washington, was dragged to the door of the prison, and inhumanly butchered on the spot. General Lee, a distinguished parti- san officer in the revolutionary war, was danger- ously wounded; and several others of his federal companions shared a similar fate. It is due to the Americans to add, that this outrage, which in atro- city exceeded the horrors perpetrated by the mobs of Birmingham and Manchester about the period of the breaking out of the war between Great Bri- tain and France, was regarded with indignation in every other part of the United States. (4) •s^Ai^im 11^ X HE first military effort made by America was directed against the British province of Upper Canada. Early in the year a body of militia, amounting to two thousand five liundred men, had been i^laced under the command of general Hull; and on the 12th of July the American army cross- ed the river Detroit, and erected the standard of the United States in Upper Canada. The general of the invading army, on his arrival at Sandwich, issued a proclamation to the British colonists, in- viting the militia tp return to tlieir homes, and pro- mising to the peaceable inhabitants the ^'blessing of peace, liberty, and security,'* TROCLAMATION. *^ Head-quarters f Sandxvich_ July 12, 1812. ''inhabitants of Canada! "After thirty years of peace and prosperity, the United States have been driven to arms. The injuries and aggressions, the insults and indigni- ties of Great Britain, have once more left them no alternative but manly resistance or unconditional submission. I'hc army under my command has invaded your country. The standard of the union now waves over the territory of Canada. To the peaceable, unoffending inliabitants it brings neither 20 THE UNITED STATES danger nor difficulty. I come to find enemies, not to make them. I come to protect, not to injure you. <* Separated by an immense ocean and an exten- sive wilderness from Great Britain, you have no participation in her councils, no interest in her conduct. You have felt her tyranny; you have vseen her injustice; but I do not ask you to avenge the one, or to redress the other. The United States are sufficiently powerful to afford every se- curity, consistent with their rights and your ex- pectations. I tender you tlie invaluable blessing of civil, political, and religious liberty, and their ne- cessary result, individual and general prosperity; that liberty which gave decision to our councils, and energy to our conduct, in a struggle for inde- pendence, which conducted us safely and trium- phantly through the stormy period of the revolu- tion — the liberty which has raised us to an elevated rank among the nations of the world; and which afforded us a greater measure of peace and securi- ty, of wealth and improvement, than ever fell to the lot of any people. In the name of my country, and the authority of government, I promise you protection to your persons, property, and rights. Remain at your homes; pursue your peaceful and customary avocations; raise not your hands against your brethren. Many of your fathers fought for the freedom and independence we now enjoy. — Being children therefore of the same family with us, and heirs to the same heritage, the arrival of an army of friends must be hailed by you with a AND GiREAT BRITAIN. gl cordial welcome. You will be emancipated from tyranny and oppression, and restored to the digni- fied station of freedom. Had I any doubt of event- ual success, I might ask your assistance: but I do not. I come prepared for every contingency — I have a force which will break down all opposition, and that force is but the van-guard of a much greater. If, contrary to your own interest, and the just expectations of my country, you should take part in the approaching contest, you will be considered and treated as enemies, and the horrors and calamities of war will stalk before you. If the barbarous and savage policy of Great Britain be pursued, and the savages are let loose to murder our citizens, and butcher our women and children, this w^ar will be a war of extermination. The first stroke of the tomahawk — the first attempt with the scalping-knife, will be the signal of one indiscrimi- nate scene of desolation. No white man found fighting by the side of an Indian will be taken pri- soner — instant death will be his lot. If the dic- tates of reason, duty, justice, and humanity, can- not prevent the employment of a force which re- spects no rights, and knows no wrong, it will be prevented by a sevei'e and relentless system of re- taliation. I doubt not your courage and firmness — • I will not doubt your attachment to liberty. If you tender your services voluntarily, they will be accepted readily. The United States offer you peace, liberty, and security. Your choice lies be- tween these, and war, slavery, and destruction. Choose then; but choose wisely; and may he who B 2 22 THE UNITED STATES knows the justice of our cause, and who holds iii his hand the fate of nations, guide you to a result the most compatihle with your rights and interests, your peace and happiness. By the general, <*A. P. HULL." This proclamation, whicli expressed the utmost confidence of success, threatened a war of extermi- nation in case of the employment of the Indian trihes, which appear to have heen the ohjects of general Hull's peculiar dread and apprehension. The Indians were however already engaged in hostilities with the subjects (5) of the United States; and on the 17th of July intelligence was received of the capture of Fort Michilimachinack, the most northern military post in the United States, by a combined operation of the British, the Canadians, and the savages. After passing the line of demarkation, by which the British settlements in North America are se- parated from the territory of the United States, general Hull advanced against Fort Amherstburg, or Maiden, the garrison of which consisted of about six hundred men, under the command of Lieut. Col. St. George. Here the American gene- ral received his first check, and was three times repulsed in his attempt to cross the Canard ri- ver. (6) General Sir George Prevost, the British governor in chief, with a laudable display of promp- titude and skill, had made all the arrangements in his power for the defence of Upper Canada, and the command of the force destined for this purpose, AND GREAT BRITAIN. 23 consisting of tliirty royal artillery men, two Lun- dred and fifty regular troops of the 41st regiment, four hundred Canadian militia, and six hundred Indians, was conferred on major-general Brock. It might have been supposed that sucli a foice would have proved totally inadequate to meet tlic American army; but the defective composition of the enemy's troops, and the want of energy and skill in their commander, soon displayed them- selves in a manner that portended their final over- throw. The talents of general Hull were totally unequal to the enterprise he had undertaken. Ig- norant of the situation and movements of the Bri- tish force, which were coming to relieve the fort to which he had laid siege, and continually harassed and bewildered with various and contradictory re- ports concerning the different tribes of the hostile Indians, indecision and distrust began to prevail in the camp. The plan of attacking Amherstburg w^as abandoned, and on the 8th of August the Ameri- cans retreated to Detroit, the capital of the Michi- gan territory, without even tiic appearance of an enemy to pursue thera.*= On the arrival of major-general Brock at Am- herstburg, on the 13th, he found that colonel Pro- tor had begun to erect batteries opposite Fort De- troit, and although opposed by a well directed fire from seven twenty-four pounders, the works were continued without intermission. The force at the disposal of the British general being all collected • Dispatch from colonel Cass to the Hon. William Eustice, the American Secretarv at War. £4 THE UNITED STATES ill the nejglibourhoorl of Sandwicli, tliey passed the river in tiie course of the 15th without molestation, and advanced on the following morning to Spring Well, an advantageous position three miles west of Detroit. The Indians, who had in the mean time effected their landing two miles below, moved for- wards and occupied the woods, about a mile and a half to the west of the British position. Having learned that general Hull had dispatched colonel M« Arthur, one of his best officers, with a detach- ment of five hundred men, to escort a supply of provisions from the river Raisin, general Brock decided on an immediate attack, and advanced with a resolution to carry Detroit on the land side, while the Indians penetrated the camp. When the head of the Britisli column had arrived within ^bout five hundred yards of the American lineso orders were given by general Hull for the whole of his troops to retreat to the fort, and for the ar- tillery not to open on the assailants. A white flag, hung from the walls, indicated the wish of the American general to capitulate; and the terms were soon agreed upon. By this capitulation, so glorious to the arms of Great Britain, but so dis- graceful to the American army, not less than two thousand five hundred men became prisoners of war, and thirty-three pieces of brass and iron ord- nance fell into the hands of the victors. In endeavouring to appreciate the motives, and to investigate the causes, which led to this decisive but bloodless victory, it is impossible to find any solution of the mysterious surrender of genera! AND GREAT BRITAIN. 25 Hull ill the relative strength of the contending ar- mies. In numbers, the Americans were far supe- rior to their enemies; and their supply of ammu- nition, and provisions, was by no means exhaust- ed.^ General Hull, the commander-in-chief, in following the course he pursued, acted entirely up- on his own responsibility; and when his conduct came to be investigated before a court-martial, he was found guilty of neglect of duty, unofficer-like conduct, and cowardice, and adjudged to be shot; but in consideration of "his revolutionary services, and his advanced age," the court recommended him to mercy; and the president, while he express- ed his approbation of the sentence, thought proper to remit its execution. The British arms were destined to attain yet higher honors in the defence of Canada. The sea- son was far advanced before tlie Americans could collect a suiRcient force upon the Niagara frontier to attempt offensive operations; but in the month of October, general Van Rensselaer, of the New- York militra, fixed his head-quarters at Lewis- town, between the Lakes Ontario and Erie, with a force under his command amounting to about four thousand men, of which fifteen hundred were regular troops, and the remainder the militia con- tingents of the neighbouring states. Early on the morning of the 13th, a division of the enemy's troops, under general Wadsworth, embarked near the falls of Niagara, and made an attack upon the • Picport of colonel Cass to the Secretary at War. 26 THE UNITED BTATES British position of Queenstown. Although tlie day had not yet dawned, tliis post was defended with undaunted gallantry hy the two flank companies of the 49t]i regiment, animated hy tlie presence of their gallant chief, major-general Brock, whose valuable life was on this occasion devoted to his country's service. The British position fell with their ever -to-be-lamented general; but reinforce- ments of regular troops, militia, and Indians, hav- ing been sent up from Fort George, under the di- rection of major-general SheafFe, who now assum- ed the command of the army, a movement was made on the enemy's left, while a body of artillery, under the able direction of captain Ilolcroft, sup- ported by a body of infantry, engaged him in front. This operation was further aided by the judicious position which Norton, the Indian chief, had taken on the woody high ground above Queenstown. A communication being thus opened with Chippaway, a junction was formed with farther succours which had been ordered from that station. The crisis of the battle was now approaching, and a powerful reinforcement dispatched to the aid of general Wadsworth, from the American side of the river, might have secured the victory; but to the utter astonishment of the commander-in-cliief, he found that the ardour of tlie "unengaged troops'' liad en- tirely subsided, and all liis solicitations, tlior.gh seconded by the efforts of lieutenant-colonel Bloom, and Mr. Justice Peck, could not prevail upon liis insubordinate levies to embark to the assistance cf AND GREAT BRITAIX. 27 their companions in arms.* Finding that no rein- forcements would pass the river, and being well aware that the brave men on the heights were ex- hausted, and nearly out of ammunition, boats were sent (7) by general Van Rensselaer to cover the retreat of the troops under general Wadsworth, but the boats were dispersed, and so many of the boat-men had lied panic-struck, that only few of the vessels quitted the shore. '♦^ At three o'clock in the afternoort a vigorous attack was made upon tlie enemy's lines, and after a short, but animated con- flict, victory again ranged herself under the Bri- tish banners, Tlie surrender of general Wads- worth, with a force of nine hundred men, to an army inferior in numbers, is the best eulogium that can be pronounced upon the plan of attack adopted by major-general Sheaflfe, and upon the zeal and undaunted gallantry that animated every officer and soldier in his army. The loss of the British army in tlie battle of Queenstown, althougli continued for upwards of eight hours, did not ex- ceed one hundred men in killed, wounded and mis- sing; while the loss of the Americans, including deserters, may, without exaggeration, be estimated at two tliousand. (8) The other operations on the Canadian frontier, and upon the lakes of North America, during the present year, were attended by no decisive results, nor are they of sufficient importance to claim a place in general history. During the campaign of • Letter from general Van Rensselaer to general Dearborn, th instant, as being on various grounds ab- solutely inadmissablc. In making this communi- cation, his lordship announced that measures had already been taken to authorize the British admi- ral on the American station to propose to the United States an immediate and reciprocal revoca- tion of all hostile orders, with the tender of giving 48 THE UNITED STATES full effect, in the event of hostilities being discon- tinued, to the provisions of tlie edict for repealing the orders in council, upon conditions therein spe- cified. On the proposition submitted by Mr. Rus- sell, relating to impressment, his lordship observ- ed; that he could not refrain from expressing his surprise, that the government of the United States should have thought fit to demand that the British government should desist from its ancient and ac- customed practice of impressing British seamen from the merchant ships of a foreign state, prelimi- nary even to the suspension of hostilities, and sim- ply on the assurance that a law should hereafter be passed to proliibit the employment of British seamen in the public or commercial service of that state. His lordship further remarked, that' the "British government now, as heretofore, was ready to receive from the government of the United States, and amicably to discuss any proposition which professed to have in view, either to check abuse in the practice of impressment, or to accom- plish, by means less liable to vexation, the object for which impressment had hitherto been found necessary; but they could not consent to suspend the exercise of a right, upon which the naval strength of the empire mainly depends, until they were fully convinced that means could be devised, and would be adopted, by which the object to be attained by the exercise of that right could be eflfec- tually secured." On the receipt of lord Castlereagh's letter an- nouncing the determination of the prince regent AND GREAT BRITAIN. 49 not to accede to the proposition for a suspension of bostilities on the conditions proposed in Mr. Rus- sell's note of the 21st of August, the American ambassador signified to the British government his intention to embark immediately, in the ship Lark, for the United States; and on the following day an admiralty order for the protection of that vessel, as a cartel on her way to America, with the requi- site passports for his free embarkation, were trans- mitted to Mr. Russell from the office of the secre- tary of state. While tbis diplomatic correspondence was pass- ing in England, a negotiation contemplating a similar object was commenced in America. On the 30th of September, Sir John Borlase Warren, the British admiral on the Halifax station, address- ed a letter to Mr, Monroe, apprising him of the revocation of the orders in council, and informing the American secretary that he had the commands of the prince regent to propose, on the one hand, "that the government of the United States should instantly recall their letters of marque and repri- sal against British ships, together with all orders and instructions for any act of hostility whatever against the territory of his majesty, or the persons or property of his subjects;" and to promise, on the other, if the American government acquiesced in the preceding proposition; «that instructions should be issued to all the officers under his com- mand to desist from corresponding measures of war against the ships and property of the United States, and that he would transmit without delay 50 THE UNITED STATES corresponding instructions to the several parts of the world where hostilities might have been com- menced." This overture was subject to the quali- fication, that should the American government ac- cede to the proposal for terminating hostilities, the British admiral was authorized to enter into an arrangement with the United States, for tlie revo- cation of the laws interdicting the commerce and ships of war of Great Britain from the harbours and waters of the United States; and was accom- panied by an intimation that, in default of such re- vocation within a reasonable period to be agreed upon, the British orders in council, repealed con- ditionally by an edict of the 23d of June last, would be revived. In reply to this dispatch, Mr. Monroe, in a letter dated from Washington, the seat of government, on the 23d of October, after adverting to the fail- ure of Mr. Russell's negotiations, states that, "ex- perience had sufficiently evinced that no peace be- tween the two countries could be durable unless the question regarding the important interest of impressment were settled." < and two hundred cavalry, with ten field pieces; while the British advanced force, actually engaged, did not exceed three hundred!^ The entire loss of both armies, in killed, wounded, and missing, according to the official dispatches transmitted to their governments by the hostile generals, was esti- mated at seventy-five men, of which the British lost only twenty- five; and the Americans not more than double that number. After this memorable repulse, the American commander called a council of war, at which it was determined, with more calculating prudence than military enterprize, that under existing circumstances, it was not prudent to renew the attack; but that on the contrary, the army should ^^immediately return, by orderly marches, to such a position as would secure their communication with the United States, either to retire into winter quarters, or to be ready to strike below." (21) * Despatch from Sir George Prevost to Earl Bathurst^ dated Montreal, October 30, 1813. AND GREAT BRITAIX. 89 The American troops, engaged in the expedition inuler general Wilkinson, were not more fortunate in the entej'prize npon whicli they liad now enter- ed than their compatriots of the northern army. Early in the month of Octoher, general AVilkinson, at the head of an army of ten thousand men, em- barked at Fort George, on board the Ontario flotilla, consisting of upwards of three hundred vessels, and Iiaving entered the St. Lawrence, on the 2d of November, arrived on the 6th within a few miles of the port of Prescot. The powder and stores were here landed on the Canadian side of the river, to be transported by land, under cover of the niglit, beyond the British batteries; and all the troops were debarked to march at the same hour to a bay two n»ilcs below Prescot. The vigi- lance of the Britlsii troops, to which the enemy bears repeated testimony, was not to be surprised; and in this attempt to pass the fortress of Prescot, the Ameiican armada was doomed to sustain a heavy and destructive cannonade;=^ while tiie army on shore, under tlic command of brigadier-general Boyd, was briskly assailed by the garrison with shot and shells. Tlie advance of the enemy, sub- sequent to the passage of Prescot, was retarded by the menacing i)ositian of the British army, whidi hung uj)on his reai*, and by the difficulties of the navigation of the St. Lawrence, which expcsctl his flotilla to continually increasing dangers. Having anticipated the probability of the American gov- * Despatches from Sir Gcorg-e Prevost. H 90 THE UNITED STATES ernmcnt sending its wliole force from Lake Ontario towards Montreal, the British governor-general had ordered a corps of observation, consisting of the remains of the 49th regiment, the second bat- talion of the 89th, and three companies of volti- geurs, with a division of gun-boats, the whole un- der the command of lieutenant-colonel Morrison, of the 89th regiment, to advance from Kingston, and to follow the movements of general Wilkinson's army. On the 11th, this corps of observation was attacked at Williamsberg by a part of the Ameri- can force, under general Boyd, consisting of two brigades of infantry, and a regiment of cavalry. About half past two the action became general, when the enemy endeavoured, by moving forward a brigade from the riglit, to turn the British left, but was repulsed by the 89th forming in potence with the 49th, and both corps moving forward, occasionally firing by platoons. Finding himself unsuccessful on the left, the next efforts of the ene- my were directed against the right, but he was re- ceived in so gallant a manner by the companies of the 89tlj, under captain Barnes, and by a well di- rected fire from the ai'tiliery, tliat he quickly re- treated, leaving one of liis guns in the hands of the British. Colonel Morrison, in his turn, now became the assailant, and the enemy concentrated his force to prevent his advance; but such was tlie steady countenance, and well directed fire of the troops, and the artillery, that about half past four, the Americans gave way on all sides, and aban- doned their strong position. By a jr.dicious move- AND GIISAT BRITAIN. 91 mcnt made at this moment by lieutenant-colonel Peai-son, their U^Ut infantry, which had been left to cover their retreat, was dislodged, and the Bri- tish detaciiment for the night occupied the ground from which the enemy had ignobly suffered them- selves to be driven. Colonel Morrison, in l»is re- port of the battle of Williamsberg, very justly re- marks, that every man did Ins duty; and that no stronger evidence can be given of their merits than that which is found in the fact, that the army of the victors did not exceed eight hundred men; while that of the vanquished amounted to from three to four thousand.^ The loss of the Americans in kill- ed and wounded, amounted to three hundred and thirty-nine,f including upwards of one hundred prisoners. On the side of the British, the loss, in relation to the number engaged, was iieavy, and amounted to one hundred and eighty, including twelve missing.:): Sir George Prevost, in his des- patches relating to the repeated attempts of the Americans to invade his majesty's Canadian domin- ions, dwells with exultation on the loyalty and ac- tive zeal displayed by all classes of tiie inhabitants; and general ^YiIkinson bears ample testimony to the same important fact, by asserting, that the hos- * General Wilkinson, in his despatch to the Secretary at War, flated French Mills, November 16, 1813, states, rather loosely, that the American force eiigag-ed, did not exceed one thousand eight hundred men; while the strength of the British is estimat- ed at one thousand five hundred, or one thousand six hundred, exclusive of the militia. f General Wilkinson's despatches. t Colonel ^Morrison's official report. 9^ THE UNITED STATES tiiity of the male inhabitants of the country was ac^ tive and universal. (22) The American army, depressed by their disas- ters, re-embarked the whole of their forces on the 13th, and crossed the St. Lawrence to St. Regis and Salmon River, on their own shores, not leaving a man on the Canadian territory, except such as were prisoners. On the preceding day, general Wilkinson, who had been confined to his bed dur- ing the principal part of the voyage down the St. Lawrence, received a despatch from general Hamp- ton, in which that officer declined to join his troops to the army of the centre, on account of the limit- ed supply of provisions, intimating, however, that he should retire to Plattsburg, with the intention of opening a communication between the two armies lower down the river. This letter general Wilkin- son considered as a refusal on the part of general Hampton to co-operate,* and at a council of war, consisting of the principal officers of his army, it was determined, "that the attack on Montreal should be abandoned for the present season," and that the army should go into winter quarters. It would be an useless expenditure of time to enter into the controversy between these two generals; but it was strongly surmised in the United States, that the battles of Chateaugay and \^ illiamsb' rg had abated their military ardour, and that in reality ilicir dissensions might be traced to this cause. (22) The signal defeats, experienced by the American armies in Canada, having relieved both provinces from the pressure of the invaders, the attention of AND GREAT BRITAIN. 93 the Britisli army, under major-general Vincent, land lieutenant-general Drummond, was directed to t!ie Niagara frontier; and on the 10th ot* De- cember, colonel Murray was ordered to advance, for the purpose of checking a system of plunder organized by the enemy against the loyal inhabi- tants of that district. Notwithstanding the inclem- ency of the weather, the Britisli force arrived in the neighbourhood of fort George, in time to com- pel the enemy, under general M*CIure, to abandon the whole of the British side of the Niagara fron- tier; but not till that general had stained the char- acter of liis country, by the wanton conflagration of the town of Newark, which, under the pretence of securing the American frontier, but in violation of the laws of nations, he reduced to a heap of ashes. The enemy, no longer secure within his own do- minions, abandoned Lewistown on the advance of major-general Riall, leaving in the place a consid- erable supply of small arms and ammunition, with about two hundred barrels of flour. Early in the morning of the 19th of December, colonel Murray, at the head of a detachment of the lOOtli regiment, the grenadier company of the royals, and the flank companies of the 41st regi- ment, advanced to fort Niagara, where, having surprised the centries on the glacis of the fortress, the watch-word was obtained, and the place carried in a few minutes, with the trifling loss of six men killed, and five wounded. The loss of the garri- son was much more considerable. Sixty-five of their H 2 ^4 THE UNITED STATES number were killed, fourteen wounded, and three hundred and forty-foar made prisoners. =^ By this gallant achievement, twenty-seven pieces of cannon, three thousand stand of arms, a number of rifles, and the store-houses, well stocked with clothing', and camp equipage of every description, fell into the hands of the victors. Captain Leonard, of the artillery service, to whom the command of the gar- rison had been intrusted by general M*Clure, had, on the evening before the assault, retired to his country residence, at a distance of two miles, and a royal salute, announcing the surrender of the fortress, gave this officer the first intimation of the surrender of the garrison committed to his charge. On the same day that the fortress of Niagara was carried by colonel Murray, Lewistown sur- rendered witliout resistance to the forces under major-general Riall. During the night of the 30th, that general crossed the Niagara, for the purpose of attacking the enemy at Black Rock and Buffalo, at the head of a detachment, consisting of four companies of the king^s regiment, the light compa- ny of the 89th, two hundred and fifty of tlie 41st regiment, and the grenadiers of the 100th regi- ment; with a small body of militia volunteers, and a number of Indian warriors. At day-break on the following morning, the king's regiment, and light company of the 89th, moved forward; the grenadiers of the 41st and the 100th regiments being in reserve. On the approach of the British troops, * Colonel Murray's report to general Drummond, dated fort T^Iiagara, December 19;, 1819. ABTD GREAT BRITAIi'f. 95 the enemy opened a very heavy fire of canncwi and musketry on the royal Scots, under lieutenant- colonel Gordon, who was directed to land above Black Rock, for tlie purpose of turning his posi- tion, but who, owing to the boats in which the troops were embarked having grounded, was not able to land in sufHcient time to accomplish that object. The king's and the 89th, having, in the mean time, gained the town, commenced a spirited attack up- on the Americans, under general Hall. The posi- tion, which was strong, was for some time sup- ported with much bravery; but such was the gal- lant and determined advance of the Britisli troops, that he was at lengtli di-iven from his batteries, and pursued to the town of Buffalo, about two miles distant. General Hall, finding his force now swell- ed to upwards of two thousand men, again attempt- ed to arrest the progress of the advancing columns; but finding all his efforts ineffectual, his troops fled in disorder, and betook themselves to the woods. Eight pieces of ordnance, and one hundred and thirty prisoners, fell into the hands of the British, and the enemy's loss in killed and wounded, was estimated at from three to four hundred. General Riall now proceeded to execute the ulte- rior objects of the expedition; and colonel Robin- son was detached to destroy a sloop and two schooners, part of the Ontario flotilla, wliich lay a little below the town. The town itself, the inhabi- tants having previously abandoned it, and the whole of the public stores, consisting of a consid- erable quantity of clothing, spirits, and flour, which 96 THE UNITED STATES, &C. the British army hail not the means of conveying away, were then set on fire, and totally consumed. A similar fate awaited Black Rock; and on the evenin.^ of the same day that village was consigned to the flames. These terrihle inflictions were not deemed suffi- cient to retaliate the destruction of the town of Newark; and in ohedience to the further instruc- tions of general Drummontl, Lieut, colonel Gordon, with a detachment of the 19th and 89th regiments, moved down the river to fort Niagara, and des- troyed the remaiiung cover of the enemy upon this frontier.* A dreadful scene of desolation now^ presented itself. All the towns and villages on the American side of the communicating river between lakes Erie and Ontario were destroyed, and the concluding scenes of the campaign, of the present year, assumed tltc character of a war of extermi- nation — a species of contest abhorrent to every civilized mind, and fit only for the savage auxilia- ries of the two exasperated belligerents. (23) * Report made by general Riall to general Drummond, dated near fort Erie, January 1, 1814. ©MA^^Mm Wl% Amidst partial reverses, the campaign of the pre- sent year had proved glorious by land to Great Britain. On the ocean, the skill and bravery of the hostile nations were more equally balanced, but the ascendancy inclined, unquestionably, to that power who had so long reigned the unrivalled mistress of the waves. Her successes were, however, by no means unchequered, even on this element j and the first action on the ocean between British and Ameri- can vessels, in the year 1813, terminated decidedly in favour of the latter power. On the 24th of March, the American brig Hornet, captain Lawrence, and the English brig Peacock, captain William Peake, met at sea off Demarara, and at half past five o'clock in the afternoon they passed within range of each other's guns, and exchanged broadsides. Observing the British captain in the act of wearing, captain Lawrence bore up and received his starboard broad- side, after which he approached close on tlie star- board quarter, and in that position kept up such a heavy and well-diiected fire, that in less than fifteen minutes, the Peacock, being rendered unmanagea- ble, was obliged to strike her flag. With much diffi- culty, the Americans succeeded in bringing their prize to anchor; but before the prisoners could be removed, she went dowM, carrying with her thir- 98 THE UNITED STATES teen of her own crew, and three of the Americait sailors. Captain Peake, and four of his crew were found dead on board the sinking vessel, and thirty- three others were wounded. Tii 3 loss of the Amer- icans was trifling in comparison; and in the return made by captain Lawrence to the Secretary of the Navy, it is stated, that the number of killed and wounded did not exceed five men, of whom one on- ly was killed. The Peacock is represented as one of the finest vessels of her class in the British na- vy; and in size, guns, and crew, the combatants were nearly equal. On the return of captain Law- rence to America, he was received with every pos- sible mauk of distinction; and as a testimony of the estimation in which his talents and bravery were held by his government, he was appointed to the command of the Chesapeake frigate, then lying in the port of Boston. The time now approached in which the British flag was to recover a large share of its accustomed honours from that foe with whom its glories had suffered a temporary eclipse. Ever since the month of February, captain Broke, of the Shannon, had been cruising in the bay of Boston, in company with the Tenedos, in hopes that the Chesapeake would come out of the harbour; but tlie enemy not choos- ing to encounter two British frigates, captain Broke directed the Tenedos to cruise at a distance from the coast, and not to rejoin him till after the the expiration of a month. In order that captain Lawrence might be informed of the separation of the vessels, and be induced, in consequence, to AND GREAT BRITAIN. 99 put to sea, the Shannon stood close into Boston light-house, and hoisted the British colours. The challenge, conveyed by this posture of defence, cap- tain Lawrence was not slow to accept; and at mid- day, on the 1st of June, the Chesapeake weighed anchor, and stood out of tlie harbour, to decide, as it were, by single combat, the contest between the two nations in maritime prowess. About twenty-five minutes after five o'clock, tlie two frigates were within musket shot of each other; and it is scarcely possible to conceive a more in- teresting and awful moment. The engagement, wliich was about to commence, had few features in common witli the usual routine of sea fights; there was, on the contrary, something chivalrous in the situation of tlie combatants; each commander, as well as the respective crews, had offered tiiemselves as tlic ciiampior.s of their country's glory and hon- our; and by tiiis feeling, it may be supposed, tliat the Americans were morc-piU'ticulariy influenced, as the engagement was about to coiTJmence within sight of their own shores, which were lined by the inhabitants, w'no could observe, witii ease, all the vicissitudes of a combat so interesting. Captain Bi'oke and his crew, on their j)art, iuust Ijave ex- perie;iced feelings little less stimulating to heroic enterprise; they had sought an oj)portunity of prov- ing to the world, that the sun of England's naval glory was not yet set. They had not merely to sus- tain, they had, in some measure, to retric\e and win back the glory and honour of tijcie country. They had to pi'ove themselves worthy of that coun- 100 THE UNITED STATES try which had given birth to Nelson; and they di^ prove themselves worthy of this high distinction. The Chesapeake frigate, on her advance, was ma- noeuvred with so much skill as to call for the admi- ration of the British captain; and three American ensigiis waved from her masts, on one of which was inscribed, <*Free Trade and Sailors' Rights.'* At half past five, the enemy placed himself on the vStar- board side of the Shannon, and the battle began. After the exchange of two or tliree broadsides, the enemy's frigate fill on board the Shannon, and they became locked in each other's ri2:ging. Captain Broke, observing that the enemy were flinching from their guns, determined to bi-ing the battle to an immediate and gloiious issue, and gave orders to prepare for boar.Ung. Placing himself at the head of his gallant bands, a]>pointed to that ser- vice, they instantly rushed upon tlie enemy's decks, impelling every thing before tljem with irresistible fury. The enemy made a desperate, but disorder- ly resistance; and the firing was continued at all the gangways, and between the tops; but in two min- utes they were driven, sword in hand, fiom evei-y post. Tlie American flag was hauled down, and the proud old British union floated tiiumphantly over it. In another minute tlie enemy ceased firing from below, and called for quorter; and the wliole ser- vice >\as achieved in fifteen minutes from the com- mencement of the action. No tori?:S can adequately ex})ress the merits of the vaUant olTuers and crew of the S!;r.!>v.nn; the cahn courage they displayed during the cannonade, AND GREAT BRITAIN. 101 and the tremendous precision of their fire, could on- ly be equalled by the ardour with which they rush- ed to the assault. Nor was the courage of the Americans much less conspicuous; their brave cap- tain, who received a musket ball through his body, in the heat of the action, exclaimed, as lie was car- ried below, "Don't give up the ship;" and his prin- cipal solace, while suffering the most excruciating pain from his wounds, was derived from tlie hope that his colours should never be struck. But at the moment when these orders were sent up by the sur- geon, every officer on the upper deck was either killed or wounded, and the struggle had ceased. In the very moment of victory. Captain Broke was se- verely wounded in his head by a sabre, while exert- ing himself to save two Americans from the fury of liis men. Of his gallant seamen and marines, he had twenty "three slain, and fifty-six wounded; while the loss of the enemy amounted to forty-seven kill- ed, and ninety-three wounded. From a comparative view of the strength of the two frigates, it appears that the Shannon mounted fifty-three guns, while the Chesapeake had only forty nine; but if the su- periority in guns was on the side of the English, the Americans enjoyed a still higher advantage in her number of men; and the Chesapeake had to op- pose her full compliment of four hundred and forty seamen against the three hundred and thirty with which the Shannon entered the action. The wounds of captain Lawrence proved mortal four days after the battle; when his body was shrouded in the colours of his ship, and conveyed 102 THE UNITED STATES to Halifax for interment. His funeral obsequies; were celebrated with appropriate ceremonials. His pall was supported by the oldest captains in the British service tlien at Halifax, and the naval offi- cers crowded to yield the last honors to a man whom they considered now no longer in the light of a foe, but as an honour to his profession. There is a generous sympathy in the brave that knows no distinction of clime or nation. They honour in each other that of which they feel proud in them- selves. The group, tliat congregated round the grave of Capt. Lawrence, presented a scene worthy of the heroic days of chivalry. It was a complete triumph of the nobler feelings over the savage pas- sions of war. The conflict of arms is ferocious; and triumph frequently does but engender more deadly hostilities; but the contest of magnanimity calls forth the nobler feelings of the soul, and the contest is over the affections. The capture of the Chesapeake, under such ani- mating and glorious circumstances, could not fail, in some degree, to re-establish in tlie minds even of the desponding their confidence in British na- val valour and skill; and an engagement which took place in the month of August, though not of so brilliant a nature, nor brought to so speedy an issue, contributed to the same effect. On the morn- ing of the 14th of x'^ugust, captain Maples, of his majesty's sloop Pelican, while cruising in St. George's Channel, for the protection of the trade, observed an American vessel in full sail, which slackened on her approach, and prepared for ac- I AND GREAT BRITAIN. 103 "5 lion. As soon as the Pelican came alongside oi' her antagonist, the seamen gave three cheers, and the action commenced. For forty-three minutes the engagement was kept up with great spirit on both sides; and though during this time the Pelican evidently had the advantage, it was by no means of a decisive nature. Captain Maples, finding liis crew anxious to come to close quarters, laid the Pelican alongside of his adversary, and gave or- ders to board her; but when the crew were in tlie act of executing the commands of tlieir captain, the American struck her colours. The vessel prov- ed to be tlie Argus sloop of war, captain Allen, of twenty guns, and a complement of oi^.c hundred and twenty -seven men. Her commander fought his ship nobly, and was wounded early in the ac- tion so severely, that he w-as obliged to suffer am- putation of his left thigh, and died the djiy after the battle. In point of force, the two sloops were nearly equal, and perhaps the circumstance which most strongly indicated the relative skill with which the battle was fought, was the loss on each side: on board the Pelican there were only two men killed, and six wounded; while on board the Argus, t!ic killed and wounded amounted to about forty. ^ * Despatch from Capt. Maples to vice-admiral Thornborough. In a letter from John Hawker, esq. ma.ny years American vice- consul in England, dated from PI3 mouth, August 19, 1813, and addressed to general Allen, the father of the captain, it is stated, that the loss on board the Argus, amounted only to six killed, and twelve wounded. 104 THE UNITED STATES But the absolute superiority of the British by sea was not yet placed on so firm a footing as not to be liable, in their engagements witli the Ameri- cans, to vicissitudes; and those who, from the re- sult of the action between the Shannon and the Chesapeake, looked for victory as a matter of course, wliencver the vessels were of equal force, were doomed to be disappointed. On the 5th of September, the American brig Enterprize, lieuten- ant Burrows, and his Britannic majesty's brig Boxer, caplain BIythe, met at the entrance of Ports- mouth bay, off the coast of the United States. — The English captain, when he observed the Ameri- can vessel standing towards him, fired a shot as a challenge, and hoisted three British ensigns, which he ordered to be nailed to the mast. About two o'clock, the American captain, having obtained the weather-gage, hoisted, in his turn, three ensigns, and fired a shot at the Boxer; this she did not deign to return till she came within half pistol shot, when her crew gave three cheers, and commenced the action by firing her starboard broadside. The action now became most obstinate; and at twenty minutes past three, the American captain received a ball in his body, and fell. He refused to be carried below, but raising his head, requested, even in the agonies of death, that his flag might never be struck. Nor was his adversary less dis- tinguished for his heroic bravery. About ten min- utes after the American commandant received his mortal wound, lieutenant M'Call, on wiiom the command of the vessel devolved, ordered his ship A\D GP.CAT BRITAIN. 105 to be laid on board the Boxer, for the purpose of raking Iier with a starboard bi'oadside. Ca»^)taiii Blythe had now fallen^ and the situation of the ves- sels was such, that the Enterprize could command any situation which it might be deemed advisable to take; while the Boxer couid neither be manoeu- vred with skill, nor fought with advantage. The raking fire to wliich she was exposed, continued to be poured into her till forty-five minutes past three, ulien her crew, finding further resistance unavail- ing, called for quarter; as their colours, being nail- ed to the mast, could not be hauled down. The loss of the Boxer was much more considerable than that of the American brig; and the hull, sails, and rigging of the former were nearly cut to pieces; while the latter, though injured in her spars and rigging, was left in a condition to have commenc- ed another action of the same kind immediately.— Soon after the arrival of the Enterprize and Boxer at Portland, the bodies of the two comiiianding officers, captain Blythc, and lieutenant Burrows, were brought on shore in barges, rowed at minute strokes by the masters of ships, accompanied by most of the boats and barges in the harbour, while minute guns were fired from the two vessels. A grand procession was then formed on shore, and the interment took place with all the honours that the civil and military authorities of the place, and the great body of people, could bestow. 1 2 ©MAi»^im Taia. In the early part of the year 1813, the Chesa- peake and Delaware bays were declared by the British government to be in a state of blockade, and a squadron, under the command of admiral Warren, was stationed off the American coast, to seal up these great inlets of the United States. In the month of May, rear-admiral Cockburn, with a light squadron under his command, was sent up the Chesapeake, to carry on a coasting warfare, and to render the government and the inhabitants of America sensible of the danger of rousing the indignation of the British nation. The villages of Frenchtown, Havre-de-grace, Georgetown, and Fredericktown, situated near the head of the Ches- apeake, were seized upon and destroyed, and con- siderable injury was done to the enemy by these operations^ but no vital point was reached, nor were any of the great objects of the war materially promoted. This desultory and piratical species of warfare, though always a favourite topic of British declamation, seldom leads to any important result. Its successes are superficial and transient; and though the suffering and alarm it inflicts may in some measure dispose the minds of the people of a district to peace, even this effect must be greatly counteracted by the hatred and irritation which it is always sure to excite. 108 THE UNITED STATES The Indian tribes in tlie Mississippi territory availed themselves of the riipture between Great Britain and America to indulge once more their strong j)ropensity for war, and endeavour to re- gain those territories which the events of former contests had wrested from them. Deaf to the warn- ing voice of their most experienced chiefs, the Creek Indians procured supplies of arms and am- munition from the Spaniards in West Florida, and declared war against the United States. The first operations of the war took place near the Georgia frontier, and on the 30th of August fort Mims Wiis surprised by a large body of the savages, and the garrison, with about two hundred and sixty of the inhabitants, fell a sacrifice to their merciless hos- tility. Of the whole number of persons in the place, not more than thirty* escaped the scalping knife, the flames, and the tomahawk. To revenge this massacre, and to strike terror into the savages, a brigade of the Georgia militia was detached, under the command of brigadier- general Floyd; and the militia and volunteers of Tennessee, under the command of general Jackson, were employed in the same service. In the month of November, battles were fought at Tallushatches, Talledega, Hillibeetowns, and Autossee, in all of which, according to the accounts of their enemies, the Indians were defeated; numbers of their chiefs and warriors were killed; and their villages con- signed to the flames. In all these engagements * Letter from judge Toulmin, dated September 7, 1813. AND GREAT BRITAIN. 109 they fought with a fury peculiar to savages, and met and inflicted death without giving or receiving quarter.'^ The sanguinary details of this war of extermi- nation, present little hut a repitition of successes on the part of the Americans, and of misery and desolation in the devoted country of their adversa- ries. A contest so unequal could not he of long duration, and tlie hattle of Tallapoosa, fought on the 2rth of March, 1814, hrought the war to a close, by the destruction of almost all the warri(»rs of the nation against which it was waged. On the morning of tliis decisive engagement, general Jack- son reached the crescent of the Tallapoosa, on the southern extremity of New Yonka, where the In- dians had formed a kind of fortress, covering about a hundred acres of ground, and rendered, as they conceived, impregnable, by the benedictions of their prophets, and the skill of their warriors. The breast-work, of this fortified peninsula, was from five to eight feet in height; and the congregated warriors of Oakfuska, Oakehagu, New Yonka, Hillabeea, the Fish Ponds, and Eufatua, formed its garrison. Having despatched general Coffee to place himself in the rear of the enemy by securing the opposite banks of the river, the commander of the American army determined to take possession of the breast-work by storm. The regular troops, led on by colonel Williams and major ^lontgomery, were soon in possession of the advanced part of the * See the official reports of the American generals. 110 THE UNITED STATES works, when an obstinate contest, through the port holes, musket to musket, took place, and in which many of the Indian bullets became transfixed upon the bayonets of their adversaries. At length the assailants succeeded in scaling the works, and the event was now no longer doubtful. The Indians, although they fought to the last moment of their existence, and displayed that kind of bravery which desperation inspires, were entirely routed and cut to pieces. The margin uf the river was strewed with their slain. Five hundred and fifty dead bodies laid upon the field, and from two to three hundred others were buried in the water. Not more than twenty escaped^ and among the dead was found their famous prophet, Monahell, with two other prophets of less celebrity. The loss of the Americans in killed and wounded, amounted to about two hundred, among the former of whom was major Montgomery, and lieutenants Sommer- ville and Moulton, This action, which was continued for five hours, and till the exterminating sword could find no more victims, terminated the Creek war. The Talla- poosa king was made prisoner. Tostahatchee, king of Hickory, afterwards surrendered himself; and Wetherford, their speaker, seeing that all further resistance was vain, ranked himself voluntarily among the captives.^ In tlie month of April, a * In a private interview with g-eneval Jackson, after the battle, the intrepid Wetherford thus addressed his conqueror; "l fought at fort Mims— I foug-lit the Georgian army— I did you all the injury I could.— Hiid I been supported, 1 would have done AND GREAT BRITAIN. 1 1 1 peace was concluded, and general Jackson with- drew his forces. The terms of the treaty were dictated by the United States, and proceeded upon the principle of indemnity for the past, and securi- ty for the future. The victors were to retain as much of the Creek country as would hy its sale defray the expenses of the war; and to guard against future incursions from the tribes, the right of establishing military posts along the line of the whole frontier was conceded to them. It does not appear hy any means clear, notwithstanding the confident assertions to the contrary, that this war, so disastrous to the Creeks, was instigated by the British government, and it is certain that not a single British officer or soldier was found in the Indian ranks. The message of the American president, at the opening of the congress, on the 7th of November, 1813, announced, that Great Britain had declined tlie offer made by the emperor Alexander, to medi- ate the existing differences between that power and the United States; and under such circumstances, the president conceived, that a nation proud of its rights, and conscious of its strength, Iiad no choice but in exertion of tlie one in support of the other. Tlie door of negotiation was not, however, finally closed; for while Great Britain was disinclined to commit the decision of the question at issue, to the mediation of a power that, in common with Amcri- you more. Bat my warriors are all killed — lean fight no longer. I am sorry fo'' the destruction of my nation— 1 am now in your power— do with me what you please— I am a soldier." il2 THE UNITED STATES, &:C. ca, might be disposed to circumscribe her maritime claims, she professed a readiness to nominate pleni- potentiaries to treat directly with the plenipoten- tiaries of the American government, and expressed an earnest wish that their conferences might result in establishing, between the two nations, the bless- ings and reciprocal advantages of peace.* This proposal, wliich was communicated by lord Castle- reagh to the American secretary of state, on the 4th of November, was accepted by the government of the United States without hesitation, and Got- tenburg, being neutral territory, was fixed upon as the place at which the plenipotentiaries should as- semble. • Despatch from lord Cathcart to the count Nesseh'ode, dated Toplitz, September 1, 1813. ©MA^a^im i: The slow operations of diplomacy, combined with the great crisis in Europe, which had now arrived, and which absorbed the principal attention of the British government, doomed the United States of America to suffer, for another year, all the horrors of war. After the fall of Napoleon, it was held in this country, with a lamentable ignorance of the rerJ state of the feelings and energies of the United States, that Britain, so long tlie undisputed mis- tress of the ocean, would soon be able to sweep from the seas, the ships of America; and that those troops which had acquired so mucli glory when contending with tlie veteran armies of Europe, would no sooner show themselves on tlie western side of the Atlantic, than the panic-struck soldiers of the United States, would be driven far within their own frontiers. These pleasing illusions were height- ened by the hope that England would soon be able to dictate peace in the capital of the republic; or at least, that the splendour of British triumphs, and the pressure of American embarrassments, would induce and encourage the inhabitants of the north- ern states to form a separate government, under the protection of the crown of Great Britain, if not actually under the sway of her sceptre. During the early part of the year 1814, the war with America, was suffered to languish; but no K 114 THE UNITED STATES sooner was Europe restored to peace, by tlie de- thronement of Bonaparte, than the British govern- ment resolved to prosecute the contest v^ith in- creased vigour, and to obtain in the field, a recog- nition of those maritime rights, which had hitherto been so strenuously resisted in the cabinet. Two distinct modes of prosecuting the war seem to have been determined upon by the British ministry; first, an invasion of the coasts of the United States; and, second, after the protection of Canada had been secui^d, the conquest of so much of the adjoining territory, as might, in the event of a future war, effectually guard that province from all danger. The peace of Paris was scarcely ratified, before fourteen thousand of those troops, which had gain- ed so much renown under the duke of Wellington, were embarked at Bordeaux, for Canada; and about the same time, a strong naval force, with an ade- quate number of troops, was collected, and des- patched for the purpose of invading different parts of the coast of the United States. So early as the month of March, some move- ments had taken place in the American army of the north, under general Wilkinson, indicative of an intention to try once more tlie fortune of war on the Canadian territory; and on the 30th of that month, the position of Odell-town, under the com- mand of major Hancock, was attacked with con- siderable vigour; but the resistance made by the British commander was so spirited and judicious, that the assailants were repulsed with considerable AND GREAT BRITAIN. 113 loss, and obliged again to retreat to tlieir position at Plattsburg. Before tiie reinforcements from Europe arrived in America, an expedition was undertaken, under the command of general Drummond and commo- dore sir James Yeo, against the fort of Oswego, on Lake Oiitai-io. On the 6th of May, preparations were made for commencing tiie attack, but it was soon discovered that the garrison had made tlieir escape, and general Drummond took possession of the town and fort without opposition. After the barracks had been destroyed, and all the damage inflicted upon the works that was found practica- ble, the troops re-embarked, bringing away seven lieavy guns, and a quantity of stores. Another attempt, on a small scale, made on Sandy Creek, by captain Popjjam of the navy, in concert with captain Spilsbury, proved unfortunate, and was at- tended with a loss of cigliteeii men killed, and fifty dangerously wounded, exclusive of prisoners. A lai'ge American force, under major-general Brown, crossed the Niagara river, on the 3d of Ju- ly, and advancing against fort Eric, demanded the surrender of the garrison. Major Buck, lowborn the command of the fort was confided, appears to have been very ill-informed of tlie hostile movement by which he was assailed: and, instead of his aton- ing for his want of vigilance, by a gallant defence, surrendered the fort at the first summons, himself, and one hundred and forty men, being made pris- oners of war. After the fall of fort Erie, general Brown advanced towards the British lines of Chip- 116 THE U:S^ITED STATES paway; but no sooner was major-general Riall, who commanded the British troops in the neigh- bourhood, made acquainted with this movement, than he ordered the immediate advance of five companies of royal Scots to reinforce the garrison, while a detachment of the 100th rcgiment^^ with a body of militia, and a few Indians, moved forward for the purpose of reconnoitring the position, and ascertaining the number of the enemy. Early in the morning of the 5th, several affairs of posts took place, and at four o'clock in the afternoon, both armies were drawn up in battle array on a plain, about a mile to the west of Chippaway. The ene- my, in expectation of being attacked, had taken up a position, with his right, under general Scott, resting on an orchard, close to the river Niagara, and strongly supported by artillery; his left, under general Porter, rested on a wood, with a body of riflemen and Indians in front; and general Rip- ley's brigade placed in reserve. In a few minutes the British line advanced in three columns, the light companies of the royal Scots, and the 100th regiment, with the £d Lincoln, forming the ad- vance, under lieutenant-colonel Pearson, while the Indian warriors, posted on the right flank, occu- pied the woods. About half past four, the Cana- dian militia and the Indians, were sharply engaged with the enemy's riflemen and Indians, who at first checked their advance; but the light troops being brought to their support, the division under general Porter, consisting principally of the New- York and Pennsylvania volunteers, gave way, and AND GKEAT BRITAIN. IIT fled in every direction. After this success, gener- al Riall ordered tlie king's regiment to move to the right, while the royal Scots, and the 100th regi- ment, were directed to charge the enemy in front. The steady bravery witli which this cliarge was received by general Scott's brigade, gave the first intimation, that tlie Americans had found, in the in- creased gallantry of their armies, a counterpoise against the veteran troops whicli Great Britain was at this moment pouring upon their shores. Two battalions of general Scott's brigade, with an en- larged interval between them, received the assail- ants in open plain, and prepared to take them in front and flank at the same time, while captain Towson, advanced to the front of the British left with three pieces of artillery, and took post on the river. The fire of the enemy's corps, accompanied by their artillery, produced a visible impression upon the British ranks, and the explosion of an ammunition wagon, silenced the most efficient of their batteries. A heavy discharge of canister shot was now poured on the British infantry, and general Riall, being no longer able to sustain this accumulated fire, ordered the attack to be abaiv- doned, and the troops to retire behind their works at Cliippaway. In this engagement, which closed only with the day, lieutenant-colonel Gordon, of the royal Scots, and lieutenant-colonel the Marquis of Tweedale, late aid-de-camp to the Duke of Wel- lington, were both wounded, as were most of tJie officers belonging to their respective regiments* The loss on both sides was nearly equal, and may K 2 118 THE UNITED STATES be estimated, in round numbers, at five hundred each. The nurriber of British regulars eng-a^ed in the battle of Chippaway, is stated by their general, at fifteen hundred, exclusive of militia and Indians; and on the same authority, it is said, that the ene- my^s force amounted to about six thousand men. (25) Emboldened by the success which had attended their first operations, the enemy looked forward to still greater advantages. After the action of the 5th, general Riall retreated to a position near fort Niagara; and the American army took post at Chippaway. On the arrival of general Drummond at Niagara, on the morning of the £5th of July, he advanced at the head of a considerable force to- wards the Falls; and scarcely had he formed a junction with general Riall, when intelligence ar- rived that the American army, under Gen. Brown, was again advancing. The British general imme- diately proceeded to meet the enemy, whom he found strongly posted oii a rising ground at Bridge- water, near the Falls of Niagara, and within the sound of the thunders of that stupendous cataract. Without a moment's delay, the 89th regiment, the royal Scots detachments, and the light companies of the 41st, formed in the rear of the hill, their left resting on the great road to Queenstown; and two twenty-four pounder brass field guns were placed a little advanced in front of the centre, on the summit of the rising ground; while the Glen- gary light infantry, the battalion of incorporated militia, and a detachment of the king's regiment. AND GllEAT BRlTAir^T. 119 occupied the left of the road, supported in the rear, by a sqiiadrjn of the 19tli light dragoons, under the command of major Lisle. This disposition of the British forces was no sooner completed, than they were attacked by brigadier-general Scott, and before the remainder of the American army had crossed the Chippaway, the action became close and general between the advanced corps. On the arrival of general Brown upon the field, he found that the first brigade had passed the wood, near the Falls, and tliat the 9th, 11th, and 52d re- giments, with Towson's artillery, were engaged on the Queenstown road, directing their principal ef- forts against the left and centre of the British. — The eminence occupied by the British artillery, supported by the 2d battalion of the 89th regiment, under lieutenant-colonel Morrison, was conceived by general Brown, to be the key of tlie whole posi- tion, and colonel Miller was ordered to advance and carry the height at tlie point of the bayonet. The struggle at this point was arduous in the ex- treme; and the British troops, finding themselves severely pressed, formed round the colours of the 89th, and fought with invincible bravery. About the same time, major Jessup succeeded in turning the British left flank; and general Riall, having received a severe wound in his arm, was intercept- ed by captain Ketchum's detachment as he was passing to the rear, and made prisoner. In the centre, the repeated and determined attacks of the Americans were met with the most perfect steadi- ness and intrepid gallantry, and they were con- 120 THE UNITED STATES stantly repulsed with very lieavy loss. These at- tacks were directed against the guns of the British w ith so much vigour and determination, that the artillerymen were bayoneted in the act of loading their cannon, and the muzzles of the enemy's guns- were advanced within a few yards of those by wliich they were opposed. The night, which had now closed in upon the combatants, failed to put an end to the battle, and during this extraordinary conflict, the two armies, mistaking each other's guns, actually made an exchange, by which the enemy obtained one, and the British two pieces. — The battle, having raged three hours, w^as sus- pended about nine o'clock, by mutual consent; during which time the enemy was employed in bringing up his reserves. In a short time the ac- tion was renewed; and general Porter, at the head of his New York and Pennsylvania volunteers^ made a gallant charge, which retrieved the charac- ter of the corps, and called forth the praises of the cammander of the American army. About this period, general Drummond received a reinforce- ment of troops, under colonel Scott, consisting of the 103d regiment, the head quarter divisions of the royal Scots, and king's, and the flank compa- nies of the 104th regiment. This seasonable supply of troops seems to have decided the fortune of the dayj and at midnight, the enemy, finding all his ef- forts to obtain possession of the hill unavailing, gave up the contest, and retreated to his camp be- yond Cliippaway, carrying with him the wounded and artillery. On the day following, he abandon- AND GREAT BRITAIN. 121 ed his camp, throwing the greater part of his hag- gage, camp equipage, and provisions, into the rap- ids; and having destroyed thehridge at Chippaway, continued his retreat towards fort Erie. "Tlie loss sustained hy the enemy in this severe action, can- not," says general Drummond in his despatches, <yhilc the vessels were engaged upon the lake, the land forces, under general Robinson and gen- eral Power, had succeeded in effecting a passage across the Saranac; but no sooner were the shouts of victory heard from the enemy's works, in con- sequence of the success of their squadron, than sir George Prevost arrested the course of his troops, and ordered them to retreat. In the evening of the same day the British batteries were dismantled; and at two o'clock the next morning the army re- treated, leaving a large proportion of the sick, wounded, and stores, in tlie hands of the enemy. The estimate of the loss of every kind sustained by the British in their expedition against the United 1S2 THE UNITED STATES States, as made by the Americans, is enormous; but the return transmitted by sir George Prevost, to his government, of the loss in action between the 6th and the 14th of September, does not amount to two hundred and fifty men. The desertions how- ever, swelled this number to a large amount, and every idea of penetrating into the enemy's coun- try, from the side of Lower Canada, was aban- doned. It is scarcely possible to conceive the degree of mortification and disappointment created in Great Britain, hy the arrival of this disastrous intelli- gence. Troops, which had been victorious in Spain, and France; which had not only fought and conquered under the Duke of Wellington, but wliich had received his particular commendation for their steadiness and bravery; l)ad now been bafiicd and defeated by an American army, less than one-third their number; by men, to whom veteran troops would scarcely award the name of soldiers; and who, but a few mont'us before, liad fled before the Canadian militia. In Canada, the complaints were loud and general against Sir George Prevost. The flotilla, it was said, had been sacrificed by his pre- cipitancy; and the officers of his army were of opinion, that even without naval co-operation, Plattsburgh might have been carried, had not the peremptory orders of the governor-general obliged them reluctantly to retreat within their own fron- tier. (28) ©MAll^^m ^1. The operations on the banks of lake Champlain terminated the principal events of the war on the Canadian frontier. Neither of the belligerent states had, in the course of the contest, gained any ex- tension of territory in this quarter; and of the numerous attempts made by the contending armies to alter the line of demarkation, not one of them had been attended with permanent success. The well-balanced skill and prowess of the maritime subjects of the two countries continued to vibrate; and alternate success and disaster left the question of naval ascendency to be decided probably by fu- ture wars. In the autumn of the year 1812, the United States' frigate Essex, captain Porter, had proceeded to sea from the Delaware, and, after making several valuable prizes on the coast of Brazil, shaped her course for the Pacific ocean, where she inflicted great injuries on British com- merce, particularly upon the shipping employed in the spermaceti whale fishery. The numerous cap- tures made by the Essex, having at length attract- ed the attention of the British board of admiralty, captain Hillyar was despatched in the Phoebe fri- gate, accompanied by Capt. Tucker, in the Cherub sloop of war, for the purpose of protecting the trade, and putting an end to the depredations to 134 THE UNITED STATES which it had become exposed. After a quest of nearly five months, the American frigate was dis- covered, along with a corvette, of twenty guns, riding at anchor on the coast of Chili, in the Span- ish port of Valparaiso. The great inferiority of the American vessels deterred them for some time from venturing to sea in the face of the Phoebe and her consort, but after suffering a blockade of six weeks, captain Porter slipped his cable in the morning of the 28th of March, 1814, and attempt- ed to escape out of the bay. On rounding the point of the harbour, the main-top mast of the Es- sex was carried away by a squall, and not being able to regain the limits of the neutral port, she bore up, and anchored to the leeward of the shore. After some distant firing, the Phoebe closed with the Essex, at thirty-five minutes past five o'clock in the afternoon, when a sanguinary but unequal contest ensued, during which the Cherub, having placed herself under the enemy's stern, contributed materially to her annoyance. The decks of the Essex soon became strewed with her dead, and her cock-pit filled with the wounded. Many of her guns were rendered useless, and several of them had the whole complement of their men des- troyed. Still her commander, with an obstinacy bordering on desperation, persisted in the unequal conflict, and every expedient that a fertile mind and a determined spirit could suggest, was resort- ed to, in the hope that some of the fortunate changes incident to naval warfare might rescue him from the hands of his antagonists. Several times dur- AND GREAT BRITAIN-. 135 ing the engagement his ship had taken fire; and towards its close, the flames burst out at the hatch- ways both fore and aft. Thus surrounded by hor- rors, captain Porter advised such of liis crew as could swim, to jump overboard and make for the shore; while those that remained in the ship, were employed in extinguislii ng the flames. All this time, the smoothness of the water, and the secure distance of the Phoebe and the Cherub, enabled them to keep up a deliberate and constant fire at the enemy; and captain Porter, finding his crew extremely weakened, determined to summon a con- sultation of his oflicers; but to his surprise he found that only one, lieutenant M*Knight, remained, all the others having been either killed or disabled. — At length, after one of the most obstinately con- tested actions on naval record, ^'humanity tore down the colours which valour had nailed to the mast," and the American captain was compelled, at twenty minutes past six o'clock, to give the painful order to strike.* The loss of the Essex is a sufficient testimony of the desperate bravery with wluch she was defended. Out of two hundred and fifty-five men who composed her crew, fifty-eight were killed, thirty-nine wounded severely, twenty- seven slighty, and thirty-one were missing; con- stituting an aggregate of one hundred and fifty- four. The British ships, on the contrary, had only five killed, and ten wounded, among the for- • Captain Porter's letter to the Secretary of the American Kavy. 136 THE UNITED STATES mer of whom was lieutenant Ingham, of the Phoebe; and among the latter, Capt. Tucker, of the Cherub. In the official account of this engagement, trans- mitted to his government, captain Hillyar, with the spirit of a brave man, bestowed a liberal share of praise on the gallantry of the enemy; and on the return of captain Porter to America, he was hailed as one of the most distinguished naval he- roes of his country. A severe action, issuing unfortunately to the British flag, took place on the esth of June, near the entrance to St. George's Channel, between the English brig Reindeer, Captain Manners, and the American sloop of war Wasp, Captain Biakeley. Perceiving an enemy to leeward, on the morning of that day, captain Manners gave chase, and about three o'clock in the afternoon, the two hostile vessels were yard arm to yard-arm. For five and twenty minutes the engagement was maintained with the most determined bravery, when the Rein- deer, having lost her gallant commander, her pur- ser, and twenty-seven men killed, besides forty wounded, and having been repulsed in two at- tempts to board, was under the necessity of stri- king her colours. The proportion between the two ships, in size, weight of metal, and comple- ment of men, was greatly in favour of the Wasp, and so completely was her adversary dismantled, that she could not be kept afloat, but was, on the following day, set on fire and destroyed. (29) On the 8th of July, the Wasp, after making a number of other captures, put into L'Orient, which AND GREAT BRITAIN. 157 port she left on the 27tl» of August, and resumes her cruise. Four days after her departure from the French port, she was met at sea by tlie Biitish sloop of war Avon, of twenty guns, commanded by captain Arbuthnot. An obstinate action immedi- ately commenced, wliich continued for forty-five minutes, and wliich terminated in the surrender of the British sloop; but before the boats of the Wasp could be lowered for the purpose of taking posses- sion of her prize, three other sail of British ships hove in sight, and captain Blakelcy was not only obliged to abandon his prize, but to seek his own safety in flight. The Wasp afterwards continued her cruise, making great havoc among the mer- chant vessels, of which she captured and destroyed no fewer than fifteen. Nor was the success of the enemy on the ocean confined to their national ves- sels, tlieir privateers made many rich captures, not merely on their own coats, and among the West India Islands, but on the coast of England and Ireland; and thus, with a navy of nearly one thou- sand ships, and without any other enemy than the American states, Great Britain had the mortifi- cation to see lier commerce interrupted, and the property of her merchants captured even in their own seas. It is true indeed that the balance of captures was in favour of England; but the pro- portion of prizes made by this country was far below the proportional superiority of her navy; jior did it seem too much to expect, from the means placed at the disposal of the board of admiralty, that every American vessel that put to aea should be made to swell the number of British captures. (29) M ©MAi^im sii. X HE oj)crations of the British armaments on the coast of the United States, had Iiitherto been on a small scale, and calculated rather to alarm and irritate than to promote any permanent effect^ but during the present year the resolution was taken to "destroy and lay waste such towns and dis- tricts upon the coast as miglit be found assail- able,"^ and for this purpose, a large naval arma- ment was employed, under the command of vice- admiral sir Alexander Cochrane, having on board a powerful land force, commanded by major gene- ral Robert Ross. On the 17th of August, admiral Cochrane entered the Patuxent, with the intention to co-operate with rear-admiral Cockburn; in an attack upon a flotilla of the enemy's gun boats, under the command of commodore Barney, and with the ulterior object of striking a decisive blow against the capital of the United States. On the 19th, the army landed at Benedict, on the right bank of the Patuxent, without opposition; and on the 22d the expedition reached Pig Point, where admiral Cockburn descried the broad pendant of the American flotilla. No time was lost in the British boats in advancing to the attack; but on their near approach, it was discovered that ail the * Admiral Cochrane's Letter to JMr. Monroe, dated on board the Tonnant, August 18th, 18-0. 140 THE UNITED STATES enemy's vessels were abandoned, and before they could be taken possession of, sixteen out of the se- vejiteen, of which the flotilla consisted, were blown into the air. The British commanders now resol- ved to proceed against Washington, from which they were distant only sixteen miles. Late in the evening of the 22d, the American general Winder^ to whose command the army appointed to cover the capital was confided, was joined by the presi- dent of the United States, the secretary at war, the secretary of the navy, and the attorney-ge- neral; and in the morning of the 2Sd, the troops were drawn up at Battalion-Old-Fields, within five five miles of the capital, and passed in review be- fore the president. On the 24th, the British troops, resumed their march, and about twelve o'clock, the enemy was discovered formed in two lines, strong- ly posted on commanding heights, on the opposite side of tlie eastern branch of the Potowmac, his ad- vance occupying a fortified house, which, with ar- tillery, covered the bridge over which general Ross had to pass; while a broad and direct road, leading from the bridge to Washington, ran through the enemy's position, which was carefully defended by artillery and riflemen. The proper dispositions being made, the attack was commenced with so much impetuosity by tlie light brigade, consisting of the 85th light infantry, and the light infantry companies, under the com- mand of colonel Thornton, that the fortified house was shortly carried, and the enemy obliged to re- AXD GREAT BRITAIx^. 141 tire to the heights. In support of the light brigade, general Ross ordered up a brigade under colonel Brooke, who, with the 44th regiment, attacked the enemy's left, under general Smith; tlie 4th regi- ment pressing his right, under general Stansbury with sucli effect, as to cause him to abandon his guns. Tlie first line having given way, was driven upon the second, which, yielding to the irresistible attack of the bayonet, and the well directed dis- charge of rockets, was thrown into confusion, and fied, leaving the British masters of the field. The rapid flight of the enemy, and his perfect know- ledge of the country, precluded the possibility of making many prisoners; and the fatigue to which the troops had been exposed by a march of eleven miles before the battle commonced, on a sultry day, prevented the pursuit from being followed up with vigour. The enemy's army amounted to from eight to nine thousand men, with three or four hundred cavalry;* his artillery, ten pieces of which fell into the hands of the victors, was com- manded by commodore Barney, who was wounded, and taken prisoner. The retreating army being ordered to move upon Washington, general Winder repaired to that city, where a council was hastily called, at which Mr. Monroe, the secretary of * General Ross's despatches. According to the American official accounts, their force did not exceed 6,053 infantry and cavalry. The British force, on the same autliority, is stated at 4,500, See *'Report of the Committee of Investigation on the Cap- ture of JVashin^rton" dated Novembw 23, 1814. M 2 142 THE UNITED STATES state, and general Armstrong, the secretary at war, assisted, and at which it was the prevailing opinion, tliat from the dispersion of a large proi)ortion of the American force, and the disorganized state of the remainder of the army, the defence of the city was impracticable. Under this desponding im- pression, the troops were ordered to retreat to George Town, and to take up a position upon the heights in, the vicinity of that place. General Ross, after having halted his army for a few hours, determined to march upon Wasliing- ton, and at eight o'clock in the evening tlie army under his command reached that city. Judging it of consequence to complete the destruction of tlie public buildings with the least possible delay, the capital, including the senate house, and house of representatives, was consigned to the flames; and the arsenal, the dock-yard, the treasury, the war- office, and the president's palace, with a rope walk, and the great bridge across the Potowmac, shar- ed the same fate. In the dock-yard, a frigate nearly ready to be launched, and a sloop of war, were consumed. The object of the expedition being thus accomplished, general Ross determined to withdraw the troops before any great force of the enemy could be aasembled. On the evening of the 25th, the army left Washington; and having reached Benedict on the ^9tii, the whole force, estimated at five thousand men, was embarked on the following day without molestation. The total loss of the British in the battle of Bladensburg amounted only to sixty-four killed, and one hun- AND GREAT BRITAIN. 145 dred and eighty-five wounded;* and the loss of the American army, as stated in their own ac- counts, in killed, wounded, and prisoners, amount- ing only to one hundred and eighty. Two hun- dred and sixty pieces of cannon, five hundred and forty barrels of gun-powder, and one hundred thousand ball-cartridges, swelled the trophies of the victorious army; and the repeated explosions which took place in the city of Washington and its neighbourhood during the night of the 24th, sufficiently proved, that the injury suffered by the enemy was still more considerable.! The capture of Washington made a deep impres- sion, not only in England and America, but also in France, and other parts of Europe. In Eng- land, tlic intelligence was at first received with great exultation, and it was confidently expected that Mr. Madison, who had witnessed the destruc- tion of his capital, and had been made personally sensible of the superiority of British troops, would now sue for peace; or at least, that lie w^ould be- come so decidedly unpopular, that the general voice of his country would hurl him from that elevation which he had so unworthily attained. Such were the fii*st impressions which the intelligence of this event created in England; but these expectations * Despatches from general Ross to Earl Bathurst, dated on board the Tonnant, Aujjust 30th, 18U. ■j- The destruction of public property at Washington, exclu- sive of the public library, is estimated at the sum of 969,171 dollars. — Report of ilie Committee of Investigation, on tJie Capiurc of Wmhington. 144 THE UNITED STATES soon gave way to more sober views. It was con- sidered that Washington, though nominally the cap- ital of the United States, could not boast a popu- lation exceeding some of our manufacturing villa- ges; that its number of houses scarcely amounted to nine hundred; and that the inhabitants in the city and its suburbs were stated in the last census of the United States at only eight thousand two hundred and eight souls. Such a capital was not then to be considered in the light of an Euro- pean metropolis; and the question naturally arose, whether the feelings to which its destruction would give rise would increase or diminish the populari- ty of the war party in America. Nor could it be concealed that the extent of devastation inflicted by the victors brought a heavy censure upon the British character, and low^ered her rank in the scale of nations. It was indeed acknowledged that strict discipline was observed while the troops were in possession of Washington, and that private property w^as scrupulously protected; but the de- struction, not only of etablishments connected with w^ar, but of edifices consecrated to the pur- pose of civil government, and affording speci- mens of the advance of the fine arts among a rising people, was thought an indulgence of ani- mosity, more suitable to the times of barbarism, than to an age and nation in which hostility is softened by sentiments of generosity, and civili- zed policy. History presents many instances of the hostile conflagration of palaces, but these ex- cesses have seldom failed to be reprobated as I: AiND GREAT BRITAIN. 145 acts of unmanly vengeance. Retaliation, it is true, has usiially been the pretext for hostilities exceeding the prescribed measure; and in the present case, the excesses committed by the Ame- ricans in their invasion of Canada, have been made the apology for the devastations at Wash- ington; but it has been seen that ample retribu- tion liad already been taken for these enormities, and the governor-general had, on the 10th of February, in the present year, explicitly decla- red, that the measure of retaliation for the mis- conduct of the American troops was full and compIete.=J^ These reflections fix themselves upon the mind with irresistible force; and will be duly appreciated by every one who has at heart the honour and moral reputation of his country, as well as her character for military prowess. At the time that admiral Cochrane advanced up the Patuxent, captain Gordon, of the Seahorse, proceeded with several vessels, up the Potowmac; but owing to the difficulty of the navigation, it was not till the 27th of August that he reached fort Washington. On the evening of the same day, tlic bombardment of the place was commen- ced, and the effect was so irresistible, that the garrison, after spiking their cannon, blew up the works, and abandoned the fortress. The small commercial town of Alexandria, being now left witliout defence, was obliged to capitulate, and the municipal authority stipulated for the preservation • Letter from sir George Frevost to general Wilkinson. 146 THE UNITED STATES of the place by the surrender of all the stores, merchandise, and shipping. This capitulation was signed on the 29th, and the whole of the captured vessels, being twenty-one in number, were brought off, richly freighted with tobacco, flour, and cotton, as well as with public stores A small expedition against the town of Beilair, on the banks of the Chesapeake, undertaken by captain sir Peter Parker, of his majesty's ship Menelaus, terminated less favourably. On the night of the 30th of August, about one hundred and twenty men were landed, and marched against the enemy, who were found drawn up in line be- fore their camp, in the midst of woods, and in much greater force than had been anticipated. The gallant captain, unintimidated by the superior numbers to which he was opposed, did not hesitate to commence the attack; but at the moment when he was animating his men to the assault, he receiv- ed a mortal wound, and liis troops, after forcing t!ie enemy to retreat, fell back to the beach, and abandoned the enterprise. The approach of the autumnal equinox render- ing it unsafe for the British fleet to quit the Ches- apeake, it was determined by admiral Cochrane, and general Ross, to employ the intermediate time in an attempt upon the important maritime city of Baltimore, which had been thrown into the utmost alarm by the fate of the neighbouring capital. The admiral accordingly sailed up the bay on the 11th of September, and anchored off the mouth of the Patapsco river, on the north side of which, round AXD GREAT BRITAIN. 147 a kind of basin, Baltimore is situated. On the following day, the troops, to the amount of from seven to eig-ht thousand,=^ were debarked at North Point, abjiit thirteen miles from the town, the ap- proach to which is through a peninsula, formed by the Patapsco and Back rivers. Across this neck of laud an intrenchnient extended, which the Americans were diligently employed in completing; but on the approach of the British forces these works were precipitately abandoned, and the Ame- rican general, Strieker, took up a position at the junction of two roads, leading from Baltimore to the bay. At this point, the advance of the two ar- mies became engaged, and general Ross, "in the dangers of the field ever active and foremost, and in his devotion to the honour of his country, and to the reputation of his troops, unfortunately too heedless of liis personal safety, exposed himself to the aim of tlie enemy's riflemen, and fell gloriously and lamented." Perceiving his wound to be mor- tal, he sent for colonel Brooke; to this officer, the dying general confided his instructions; and li- ving discharged his last duty to his country, he breathed out his gallant spirit, exclaiming, affec- tionately — <ii raged for nearly two hours.'* Captain Hull, in his very modest account of the affair, says by let- ter to the Secretary of the Xavy,* ^vifter informing that so fine a ship as the Guerricie, commanded by an able and experienced officer, had been totally dismasted and otherwise cut to pieces, so as to make her not worth towing into port, in the short space of thirty minutes, you can have no doubt of the gal- lantry and good conduct of the ofncers and ship's company I have the honour to command." (No. 10.) tiujyks op co.vgress. The historian is in error when he states that the congress of the United States, like city corpora- tions and the legislatures of New York and Massa- chusetts, voted **thanks^' to the captain, officers, and crew of the Constitution. Compliments of high character were voted by congress, as well as the sum of fifty thousand dollars in lieu of prize mo- ney. The thanks of congress were first during the war voted to commodore Perry, and afterwards to commodore M