Hardin's Defeat

Hardin's Defeat

Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Hardin's Defeat
partof=Northwest Indian War
date=October 19, 1790
place=Indiana, United States
result=Decisive Indian Victory
combatant1=Western Confederacy
combatant2=United States
commander1=Little Turtle
commander2=John Hardin
strength1=1,050 warriors
strength2=540 regulars and militia
casualties1=120-150 killed or wounded
casualties2=129 killed
94 wounded

Hardin's Defeat was a battle in the Ohio Country on October 19, 1790, between the United States Army and two tribes of Indians. It was part of General Josiah Harmar's campaign in the Northwest Indian War.

Prelude to battle

President George Washington and Secretary of War Henry Knox ordered General Harmar to launch a campaign into the Shawnee and Miami Indian country in retaliation for the killing of over 1,500 civilians in Kentucky, along the Ohio River, and at the few settlements north of the Ohio from the mid to late 1780s. The primary objective of the campaign was the destruction of the large, main Miami village of Kekionga (present-day Fort Wayne, Indiana), where the St. Joseph and St. Marys Rivers join to create the Maumee River.

The campaign was launched from Fort Washington (Cincinnati) in the southwestern Ohio Territory. At 10:00 a.m., on October 7, 1790, General Harmar began the march north, along the Great Miami River, with 320 regular U.S. Army troops and 1,133 volunteer militia, for a total of 1,453 men. Also deployed were three 6-pounder wheel-mounted, horse drawn cannon. By October 14, Harmar's force had marched to within convert|25|mi|km of Kekionga (Fort Wayne). At that point, Kentuckians serving as scouts for the army captured a Shawnee. After some intense interrogation (and possible torture), the Indian informed Harmar that the Miami and Shawnee were gathering at Kekionga, preparing for his army's advance. Before dawn on October 15, a detachment of 600 men under Col. John Hardin was dispatched north on a convert|25|mi|km|sing=on forced march to "surprise" the Indians at Kekionga. When Colonel Hardin's detachment arrived, they found the village abandoned and burned it, and camped south of the destroyed town.

Battle of Heller's Corner

On October 19, Colonel Hardin was given command of a scouting party consisting of 180 militia, a troop of cavalry under Major James Fontaine, and 30 regulars under Captain Armstrong. The party came within a few miles of Kekionga, where they encountered an Indian on horseback, who fled along a minor trail leading away from the village. Hardin ordered his company to pursue, but sent Major Fontaine's cavalry back to bring up a company that had been left behind. The Indian was a decoy, and led Hardin into a swampy lowland by the Eel River, where he could neither pursue nor easily retreat. Here, Little Turtle attacked from three sides. The militia fled, warning Major Fontaine's reinforcements to turn around.

The regulars stood their ground with about 9 militia, but only 8 of the 30 regulars survived. 40 Americans, total, had been killed, and another 12 wounded. [Allison, 73] Captain Armstrong hid in the marsh and escaped with his life. He blamed Hardin and the militia for the defeat, and claimed that only about 100 Indians had been involved. This was the approximate number of warriors available from Kekionga and Le Gris' Village. [Carter, 92-93]

Hardin's Defeat

On October 20, General Harmar arrived at the camp and immediately sent out a detachment of 300 men under Ensign Phillip Hartshorn northward to reconnoiter the Indian force's trail. Eight miles above Kekionga, Hartshorn was ambushed by a large war party, which killed him and 19 of his men. Instead of advancing immediately to attack the Indian force, Harmar pulled back, several miles south of the village, not even permitting a burial detail to bury their twenty dead. Morale by now had plummeted, and the men were enraged at the cowardice of their commander. Hardin then demanded that he be allowed to take 400 men and attack the Indian force, or at the very least, bury their fallen comrades.

At dawn on October 22, Colonel Hardin, with 300 militia and 60 regulars from the First American Regiment under Major John P. Wyllys, reached Kekionga to find a force of approximately 1,050 warriors encamped there. Hardin immediately sent a dispatch to Harmar requesting reinforcements. When the courier told Harmar (who was rumored to have been drunk) about the size of the enemy force, he became visibly shaken and ordered his 800-900 remaining men into a hollow defensive square and refused to come to Hardin's aid, leaving him alone to face an enemy more than twice his number. Colonel Hardin, expecting reinforcements at any time, divided his command into four groups under Major Wyllys, Major Hall, Major Fontaine, and Major McMullen. He planned to divide the forces and flank the Indians on all sides. [Allison, 74]

Little Turtle attacked first, however, sending small parties to fire on the militia and retreat. The militia gave chase in many instances, until the Regulars were left unguarded. Little Turtle then attacked Major Wyllys, with results as devastaing as Heller's Corner. [Allison, 75] Major Fontaine, meanwhile, lead a cavalry charge into a wooded area and into an ambush. Soon the Shawnee and Miami force was attacking Hardin from three sides. Still holding out for reinforcements from Harmar, Hardin's men put up a valiant defense, holding the Indians at bay for over three hours before finally falling back to join the rest of the army.

180 men were either killed wounded. [Barnhart, 284] The army forces reported 129 men killed in action (14 officers, including Major Wyllys and Major Fontaine, and 115 enlisted men) and 94 wounded (including 50 of the Regulars). Estimates of Indian casualties range from 120 to 150 total. The campaign came to be known as Harmar's Defeat. It was the worst defeat of the U.S. forces by Native Americans until that time, and would only be surpassed by St. Clair's Defeat and the Battle of the Little Bighorn. [Allison, 76]

References


*
* Barnhart, John D. and Riker, Dorothy L. "Indiana to 1816. The Colonial Period." ©1971, Indiana Historical Society. ISBN 0-87195-109-6
* Carter, Harvey Lewis. "The Life and Times of Little Turtle: First Sagamore of the Wabash." ©1987, Urbana: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-01318-2.

External links

* [http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=505 Ohio History Central]
* [http://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=1338 Historical Marker Database]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Hardin Richard Runnels — (August 30, 1820 ndash;December 25, 1873) was a U.S. political figure. He served as the 6th Governor of Texas between 1857 and 1859. His defeat of Sam Houston in the 1857 election for governor marked the only time that Houston ever lost an… …   Wikipedia

  • Harmar's Defeat — was a battle of the Northwest Indian War. It took place on October 21, 1790 near the Ohio and Indiana border. It is also known as The Battle of the Pumpkin Fields, because the steam from the scalped skulls reminded the Indians of squash steaming… …   Wikipedia

  • John Hardin — (1753 ndash;1792) was a Continental Army officer in the American Revolutionary War and a Kentucky militia commander in the Northwest Indian War. He was killed while serving as an emissary in the latter war.Early LifeBorn in Fauquier County,… …   Wikipedia

  • Harmar Campaign — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Harmar Campaign partof=Northwest Indian War date=October 19 22, 1790 place=Ohio Territory, United States result=Decisive Indian Victory combatant1=Western Confederacy combatant2=United States commander1=Little… …   Wikipedia

  • Battle of the Wabash — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Battle of the Wabash partof=the Northwest Indian War caption=Lithograph of Little Turtle, reputedly based upon a lost portrait by Gilbert Stuart, destroyed when the British burned Washington, D.C. in 1814.… …   Wikipedia

  • Pacanne — was a leading Miami chief during the late 18th and early 19th centuries. He was the brother of Tacumwah, who was the mother of Chief Jean Baptiste Richardville. Their family owned and controlled the Long Portage, an 8 mile strip of land between… …   Wikipedia

  • Le Gris — Le Gris, was a chief of the Pepikokia band of the Miami tribe in the 18th century. Also known as The Gray, he was one of three important Miami leaders during the Northwest Indian War, along with Pacanne and Little Turtle.In 1752, a smallpox… …   Wikipedia

  • 3d United States Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard) — Infobox Military Unit unit name=3rd Infantry Regiment caption=3rd Infantry Regiment coat of arms dates=June 3, 1784 Present country=USA allegiance= branch=Regular Army type=Infantry Regiment role=Ceremonial/Home Defense (one battalion) Mechanized …   Wikipedia

  • Forts of Fort Wayne, Indiana — Fort Wayne in modern Fort Wayne, Indiana was established by Captain Jean François Hamtramck under orders from General Mad Anthony Wayne as part of the campaign against the Indians of the area. It was named after General Wayne who had defeated the …   Wikipedia

  • Texas Ranger Division — Infobox Law enforcement agency agencyname = TDPS, Texas Ranger Division commonname = Texas Rangers abbreviation = |200px badge = motto = mottotranslated = formedyear = 1835 formedmonthday = October 17 preceding1 = employees = budget = country =… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”