Battle of Kenapacomaqua
Battle of Kenapacomaqua | |||||||
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Part of Northwest Indian War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Wea Tribe | United States | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
unknown | James Wilkinson | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
60 warriors | 525 militia | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
9 killed 34 captured |
2 killed 1 wounded |
The Battle of Kenapacomaqua, also called the Battle of Old Town,[1] was a raid in 1791 by United States forces under the command of Lieutenant Colonel (later Brigadier General) James Wilkinson on the Miami (Wea) town of Kenapacomaqua on the Eel River, approximately six miles upstream from present-day Logansport, Indiana.[2][3]
Background and Battle
In 1791, Northwest Territory Governor Arthur St. Clair readied an Army to attack Kekionga in response to Harmar's Defeat in 1790. He intended to dispatch a separate force simultaneously to distract the defending Native American coalition.[4] Delays in preparations caused St. Clair to initiate Wilkinson's raid prior to the main body's advance, however.[5]
Lieutenant Colonel Wilkinson had served under Brigadier General Charles Scott during the Blackberry Campaign of 1791, in which mounted Kentucky militia raided Native American villages along the Wabash River and its tributaries. Wilkinson's force of more than 500 Kentucky militia departed Fort Washington on 1 August 1791.[6] They arrived at Kenapacomaqua on 7 August 1791, and immediately attacked.
Two Kentuckians and nine Miami died in the encounter. By Wilkinson's own account, the Miami dead included only six warriors.[7] Two of the dead were women. One was a child. Thirty-four Miami prisoners were taken prisoner, including a daughter of Miami war chief Little Turtle.[8] In addition, one U.S. captive was found at Kenapacomaqua and released. Wilkinson next burned grain stored at the deserted town of Ouiatenon before returning to Kentucky via the route established by Scott earlier that year.[9]
Aftermath
General St. Clair and President George Washington were both pleased with Wilkinson's raid. As a reward, Wilkinson was given command of the Second United States Regiment.[9] Wilkinson's success, however, is credited to circumstances unknown to him during his raid. At the time of his attack, Native American leaders in the Northwest Territory were at a grand council called by British Indian agent Alexander McKee.[9] Other coalition leaders were travelling to Quebec to request a new British fort at Miami Rapids for their mutual defense.[10] About 60 men from L'Anguille were gone on a reconnaissance mission, while others were at Vincennes, Indiana to acquire provisions.[10] Of the Wea left at L'Anguille, many suffered from an unknown disease outbreak in the region.[9]
At the Quebec council, meanwhile, Governor Guy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester urged peace, and the American Indian council departed with terms to present to the United States. When the council arrived at Fort Detroit, however, they received news of Wilkinson's raid and St. Clair's advance. The entire council immediately departed to defend Kekionga,[4] which ended on 4 November 1791 with St. Clair's Defeat.
Notes
- ↑ The action had no official name. Wilkinson's account of the operation refers to the town both by its Miami name (which means "Eel River Town") and its French name, "L'Anguille." "Old Town" or "Olde Towne" was a name given the town by later Anglo-American settlers.
- ↑ Powell, 125-126
- ↑ Barce, 188-194
- 1 2 Sword, 159
- ↑ Sword, 155
- ↑ Ward, 116
- ↑ Wilkinson's account of the expedition is found at Indiana University, Glenn Black Laboratory, American State Papers, Indian Affairs, March 3, 1789 to March 3, 1815, vol. 1, p. 134. Another account is found in James Handasyd Perkins and John Mason Peck, Annals of the West (1857) pp. 569-570.
- ↑ "Little Turtle (1752 - July 1812)". The Supreme Court of Ohio & The Ohio Judicial System. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 Sword, 156
- 1 2 Sword, 158
References
- Powell, Jehu Z. (1913). History of Cass County, Indiana. Chicago and New York: Lewis Publishing Co.
- Barce, Elmore (1922). The Land of the Miamis. Fowler, IN: The Benton Review Shop.
- Sword, Wiley (1985). President Washington's Indian War. The Struggle for the Old Northwest, 1790-1795. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0806124881.
- Ward, Harry M. (1988). Charles Scott and the "Spirit of '76". Charlottesville, Virginia: University Press of Virginia. ISBN 0-8139-1152-4.
See also
External links
- Cass County, Indiana, Genealogy Web: Olde Towne Battlefield Cemetery
- Cass County, Indiana, Genealogy Web: Map showing location of "Olde Towne Indian Burial Ground"
- TopoQuest: General Area of Battle of Kenapacomaqua
- Google Maps: General Area of Battle of Kenapacomaqua
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