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Battle of Horseshoe Bend

32°58′56″N 85°44′07″W / 32.98222°N 85.73528°W / 32.98222; -85.73528

Battle of Horseshoe Bend
Part of Creek War

The Battle of Bend
DateMarch 27, 1814
Location
Near Dadeville, Alabama
Result Decisive U.S. & allied Native American victory
Belligerents
Red Stick Creeks  United States
Lower Creek
Cherokee
Choctaw
Commanders and leaders
Menawa Andrew Jackson
James Neill
Strength
~1,000 warriors American: ~2,000 infantry,
~700 cavalry,
unknown artillery
Native American: ~600 warriors
Casualties and losses
>800 killed
206 wounded[1]
American:
47 killed
159 wounded
Native American:
23 killed
47 wounded[1]

The Battle of Horseshoe Bend (also known as Tohopeka, Cholocco Litabixbee, or The Horseshoe), was fought during the War of 1812 in the Mississippi Territory, now central Alabama. On March 27, 1814, United States forces and Indian allies under Major General Andrew Jackson[2] defeated the Red Sticks, a part of the Creek Indian tribe who opposed American expansion, effectively ending the Creek War.

Background edit

The Creek Indians of Georgia and the eastern part of the Mississippi Territory had become divided into two factions: the Upper Creek (or Red Sticks), a majority who opposed American expansion and sided with the British and the colonial authorities of Spanish Florida during the War of 1812; and the Lower Creek, who were more assimilated into the Anglo culture, had a stronger relationship with the U.S. Indian Agent Benjamin Hawkins, and sought to remain on good terms with the Americans.

The Shawnee war leader Tecumseh visited Creek and other Southeast Indian towns in 1811–1812 to recruit warriors to join his war against American territorial encroachment. The Red Sticks, young men who wanted to revive traditional religious and cultural practices, were already forming, resisting assimilation. They began to raid American frontier settlements. When the Lower Creek helped U.S. forces to capture and punish leading raiders, the Lower Creek were punished in turn by the Red Sticks.

In 1813, militia troops intercepted a Red Stick party returning from obtaining arms in (Spanish colonial) Pensacola. While they were looting the material, the Red Sticks returned and defeated them, at what became known as the Battle of Burnt Corn. Red Sticks' raiding of enemy settlements continued; and in August 1813 they attacked an American outpost at Fort Mims.

After the Fort Mims massacre, frontier settlers appealed to the government for help. Since Federal military forces were committed to waging the War of 1812 against Great Britain, the governments of Tennessee, Georgia, and the Mississippi Territory organized militia forces, which together with Lower Creek and Cherokee allies, fought against the Red Sticks.

After leaving Fort Williams in the spring of 1814, Jackson's army cut its way through the forest to within six miles (10 km) of Chief Menawa's Red Stick camp Tehopeka, near a bend in the Tallapoosa River called "Horseshoe Bend"—located in what is now central Alabama, 12 miles (19 km) east of present-day Alexander City. Jackson sent General John Coffee with the mounted infantry and the Indian allies south across the river to surround the Red Sticks' camp, while Jackson stayed with the rest of the 2,000 infantry north of the camp.[3] Added to the militia units were the 39th United States Infantry and about 600 Cherokee, Choctaw, and Lower Creek, fighting against the Red Stick Creek warriors.

American Forces edit

West Tennessee Militia: Major General Andrew Jackson[4]

Brigade Regiments and Other
Headquarters

  

  • Mounted Spies: Captain Jean Bean
  • 39th U.S. Infantry: Colonel John Williams, Major L. P. Montgomery
  • Artillery: David Deadrick
Doherty's Brigade

   Brigadier General George Doherty

  • 1st East Tennessee Militia: Colonel Ewen Allison
  • 2nd East Tennessee Militia: Colonel Samuel Bunch
Johnson's Brigade

   Brigadier General Thomas Johnson

  • 1st West Tennessee Militia: Colonel Richard C. Napier
  • 3rd Tennessee Militia: Colonel Stephen Copeland
Coffee's Brigade

   Brigadier General John Coffee

  • East Tennessee Mounted Gunmen: Colonel John Brown
  • Tennessee Mounted Gunmen: Colonel Robert Dyer
  • Cherokee Regiment: Colonel Gideon Morgan

Battle edit

 
Battle positions
 
Horseshoe Bend Battlefield
 
Map of Alabama during the War of 1812[5]
 
Battle of Horseshoe Bend[5]: 780 

On March 27, 1814, General Andrew Jackson led troops consisting of 2,700 American soldiers, 500 Cherokee, and 100 Lower Creek allies up a steep hill near Tehopeka. From this vantage point, Jackson would begin his attack on the Red Stick fortification.[6] At 6:30am, he split his troops and sent roughly 1,300 men to cross the Tallapoosa River and surround the Creek village. Then, at 10:30 a.m., Jackson's remaining troops began an artillery barrage which consisted of two cannons firing for about two hours. Little damage was caused to the Red Sticks or their 400-yard-long, log-and-dirt fortifications.[6] In fact, Jackson was quite impressed with the measures the Red Sticks took to protect their position. As he later wrote:

It is impossible to conceive a situation more eligible for defence than the one they had chosen and the skill which they manifested in their breastwork was really astonishing. It extended across the point in such a direction as that a force approaching would be exposed to a double fire, while they lay entirely safe behind it. It would have been impossible to have raked it with cannon to any advantage even if we had had possession of one extremity.[7]

Soon, Jackson ordered a bayonet charge. The 39th U.S. Infantry, led by Colonel John Williams,[8] charged the breastworks and engaged the Red Sticks in hand-to-hand combat. Sam Houston (the future statesman and leader of Texas) served as a third lieutenant in Jackson's army. Houston was one of the first to make it over the log barricade alive and received a wound from a Creek arrow that troubled him for the rest of his life.[3]

Meanwhile, the troops under the command of General John Coffee had successfully crossed the river and surrounded the encampment. They joined the fight and gave Jackson a great advantage. The Creek warriors refused to surrender, though, and the battle lasted for more than five hours. At the end, roughly 800 of the 1,000 Red Stick warriors present at the battle were killed.[9] In contrast, Jackson lost fewer than 50 men during the fight and reported 154 wounded.

After the battle, Jackson's troops allegedly made bridle reins from skin taken from Indian corpses, conducted a body count by cutting off the tips of their noses, and sent their clothing as souvenirs to the "ladies of Tennessee."[10]

Chief Menawa was severely wounded but survived; he led about 200 of the original 1,000 warriors across the river and toward safety, to join the Seminole tribe in Spanish Florida.

Results edit

On August 9, 1814, Andrew Jackson forced the Creek to sign the Treaty of Fort Jackson. The Creek Nation was forced to cede 23 million acres (93,000 km2)—half of central Alabama and part of southern Georgia—to the United States government; this included territory of the Lower Creek, who had been allies of the United States. Jackson had determined the areas from his sense of security needs. Of the 23 million acres (93,000 km2) Jackson forced the Creek to cede 1.9 million acres (7,700 km2), which was claimed by the Cherokee Nation, which had also allied with the United States.[11] Jackson was promoted to major general in the U.S. Army after getting agreement to the treaty.[2]

Capture of Pensacola, Battle of New Orleans edit

After the battle, Jackson sent his friend and trusted scout, John Gordon, captain of the Spies, to secretly go to the Spanish fort at Pensacola to find out if the British were using it as a base to arm the Red Stick Creeks. Gordon travelled through hundreds of miles of hostile Creek territory to find the British flag flying at Pensacola and British officers arming and training Creeks. Jackson, with this knowledge, took Pensacola, a controversial move which led ultimately to further battle against the British in New Orleans.[12]

This victory, along with that at the Battle of New Orleans, greatly contributed to Jackson's favorable national reputation and his popularity. He was well known when he ran successfully for President in 1828.

Legacy edit

The battlefield is preserved in the Horseshoe Bend National Military Park.[13]

Two currently active battalions of the Regular Army (2nd and 3rd Battalions of the 7th Infantry Regiment) perpetuate the lineage of the old 39th Infantry Regiment, which fought at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend.

In fiction edit

Eric Flint has written a series of alternate history novels, Trail of Glory, that begin with the Battle of Horseshoe Bend. In Flint's version, Houston is only lightly wounded in the battle, allowing him freedom to develop his career, in turn facilitating the author's objectives.

The main character of Paulette Jiles' novel News of the World, 'Captain' Jefferson Kyle Kidd, has a backstory that includes fighting as a youth of 16 in this battle under Jackson.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Borneman p.151
  2. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2015-09-06. Retrieved 2012-09-25.
  3. ^ a b Robert Remini, Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire, 1767–1821, (1977) ch. 13
  4. ^ Tennessee Unites during War of 1812
  5. ^ a b Lossing, Benson (1868). The Pictorial Field-Book of the War of 1812. Harper & Brothers, Publishers. p. 778. ISBN 9780665291364.
  6. ^ a b Mackenzie, George. . National Park Service. Archived from the original on 2019-07-12. Retrieved 16 July 2012.
  7. ^ Jackson, Andrew. "The Jackson Papers". Library of Congress.
  8. ^ Samuel G. Heiskell, Andrew Jackson and Early Tennessee History (Nashville: Ambrose Printing Company, 1918), pp. 356–359.
  9. ^ Heidler, p. 135
  10. ^ Ronald Takaki, A Different Mirror, (Little, Brown 1993), p. 85
  11. ^ Ehle p. 123
  12. ^ "Captain John Gordon, of the spies". archive.org. Retrieved 2016-12-13.
  13. ^ "If you visited Horseshoe Bend battlefield today". 27 March 2014. Retrieved March 16, 2018.

References edit

  • Andrew Burstein, Borneman, Walter R. (2004). 1812: The War That Forged a Nation. New York: Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0-06-053112-6.
  • Steve Rajtar, Indian War Sites, (McFarland and Company, Inc., 1999)
  • Robert Remini, Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire, 1767–1821 (1977) ch. 13

Further reading edit

  • Holland, James W. "Andrew Jackson and the Creek War: Victory at the Horseshoe Bend," Alabama Review, Oct 1968, Vol. 21 Issue 4, pp 243–275
  • Kanon, Thomas. "A Slow, Laborious Slaughter": The Battle of Horseshoe Bend," Tennessee Historical Quarterly, March 1999, Vol. 58 Issue 1, pp 2–15
  • Remini, Robert V. Andrew Jackson and His Indian Wars (2001), ch 4

External links edit

  • "The Battle of Horseshoe Bend: Collision of Cultures", National Park Service's Teaching with Historic Places.
  • A map of Creek War Battle Sites, PCL Map Collection at the University of Texas at Austin.
  • "Battle of Horseshoe Bend" 2014-12-15 at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopedia of Alabama
  • Mrs. Dunham Rowland, "The Mississippi Territory in the War of 1812", Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society, Volume 4, 1921, pp. 7–156
  • "If you visited Horseshoe Bend Battlefield today"

battle, horseshoe, bend, later, battle, 1832, 98222, 73528, 98222, 73528, part, creek, warthe, battle, benddatemarch, 1814locationnear, dadeville, alabamaresultdecisive, allied, native, american, victorybelligerentsred, stick, creeks, united, stateslower, cree. For the later battle see Battle of Horseshoe Bend 1832 32 58 56 N 85 44 07 W 32 98222 N 85 73528 W 32 98222 85 73528 Battle of Horseshoe BendPart of Creek WarThe Battle of BendDateMarch 27 1814LocationNear Dadeville AlabamaResultDecisive U S amp allied Native American victoryBelligerentsRed Stick Creeks United StatesLower CreekCherokeeChoctawCommanders and leadersMenawaAndrew JacksonJames NeillStrength 1 000 warriorsAmerican 2 000 infantry 700 cavalry unknown artilleryNative American 600 warriorsCasualties and losses gt 800 killed 206 wounded 1 American 47 killed159 wounded Native American 23 killed 47 wounded 1 The Battle of Horseshoe Bend also known as Tohopeka Cholocco Litabixbee or The Horseshoe was fought during the War of 1812 in the Mississippi Territory now central Alabama On March 27 1814 United States forces and Indian allies under Major General Andrew Jackson 2 defeated the Red Sticks a part of the Creek Indian tribe who opposed American expansion effectively ending the Creek War Contents 1 Background 1 1 American Forces 2 Battle 3 Results 3 1 Capture of Pensacola Battle of New Orleans 4 Legacy 5 In fiction 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Creek Indians of Georgia and the eastern part of the Mississippi Territory had become divided into two factions the Upper Creek or Red Sticks a majority who opposed American expansion and sided with the British and the colonial authorities of Spanish Florida during the War of 1812 and the Lower Creek who were more assimilated into the Anglo culture had a stronger relationship with the U S Indian Agent Benjamin Hawkins and sought to remain on good terms with the Americans The Shawnee war leader Tecumseh visited Creek and other Southeast Indian towns in 1811 1812 to recruit warriors to join his war against American territorial encroachment The Red Sticks young men who wanted to revive traditional religious and cultural practices were already forming resisting assimilation They began to raid American frontier settlements When the Lower Creek helped U S forces to capture and punish leading raiders the Lower Creek were punished in turn by the Red Sticks In 1813 militia troops intercepted a Red Stick party returning from obtaining arms in Spanish colonial Pensacola While they were looting the material the Red Sticks returned and defeated them at what became known as the Battle of Burnt Corn Red Sticks raiding of enemy settlements continued and in August 1813 they attacked an American outpost at Fort Mims After the Fort Mims massacre frontier settlers appealed to the government for help Since Federal military forces were committed to waging the War of 1812 against Great Britain the governments of Tennessee Georgia and the Mississippi Territory organized militia forces which together with Lower Creek and Cherokee allies fought against the Red Sticks After leaving Fort Williams in the spring of 1814 Jackson s army cut its way through the forest to within six miles 10 km of Chief Menawa s Red Stick camp Tehopeka near a bend in the Tallapoosa River called Horseshoe Bend located in what is now central Alabama 12 miles 19 km east of present day Alexander City Jackson sent General John Coffee with the mounted infantry and the Indian allies south across the river to surround the Red Sticks camp while Jackson stayed with the rest of the 2 000 infantry north of the camp 3 Added to the militia units were the 39th United States Infantry and about 600 Cherokee Choctaw and Lower Creek fighting against the Red Stick Creek warriors American Forces edit West Tennessee Militia Major General Andrew Jackson 4 Brigade Regiments and OtherHeadquarters Mounted Spies Captain Jean Bean 39th U S Infantry Colonel John Williams Major L P Montgomery Artillery David DeadrickDoherty s Brigade Brigadier General George Doherty 1st East Tennessee Militia Colonel Ewen Allison 2nd East Tennessee Militia Colonel Samuel BunchJohnson s Brigade Brigadier General Thomas Johnson 1st West Tennessee Militia Colonel Richard C Napier 3rd Tennessee Militia Colonel Stephen CopelandCoffee s Brigade Brigadier General John Coffee East Tennessee Mounted Gunmen Colonel John Brown Tennessee Mounted Gunmen Colonel Robert Dyer Cherokee Regiment Colonel Gideon MorganBattle edit nbsp Battle positions nbsp Horseshoe Bend Battlefield nbsp Map of Alabama during the War of 1812 5 nbsp Battle of Horseshoe Bend 5 780 On March 27 1814 General Andrew Jackson led troops consisting of 2 700 American soldiers 500 Cherokee and 100 Lower Creek allies up a steep hill near Tehopeka From this vantage point Jackson would begin his attack on the Red Stick fortification 6 At 6 30am he split his troops and sent roughly 1 300 men to cross the Tallapoosa River and surround the Creek village Then at 10 30 a m Jackson s remaining troops began an artillery barrage which consisted of two cannons firing for about two hours Little damage was caused to the Red Sticks or their 400 yard long log and dirt fortifications 6 In fact Jackson was quite impressed with the measures the Red Sticks took to protect their position As he later wrote It is impossible to conceive a situation more eligible for defence than the one they had chosen and the skill which they manifested in their breastwork was really astonishing It extended across the point in such a direction as that a force approaching would be exposed to a double fire while they lay entirely safe behind it It would have been impossible to have raked it with cannon to any advantage even if we had had possession of one extremity 7 Soon Jackson ordered a bayonet charge The 39th U S Infantry led by Colonel John Williams 8 charged the breastworks and engaged the Red Sticks in hand to hand combat Sam Houston the future statesman and leader of Texas served as a third lieutenant in Jackson s army Houston was one of the first to make it over the log barricade alive and received a wound from a Creek arrow that troubled him for the rest of his life 3 Meanwhile the troops under the command of General John Coffee had successfully crossed the river and surrounded the encampment They joined the fight and gave Jackson a great advantage The Creek warriors refused to surrender though and the battle lasted for more than five hours At the end roughly 800 of the 1 000 Red Stick warriors present at the battle were killed 9 In contrast Jackson lost fewer than 50 men during the fight and reported 154 wounded After the battle Jackson s troops allegedly made bridle reins from skin taken from Indian corpses conducted a body count by cutting off the tips of their noses and sent their clothing as souvenirs to the ladies of Tennessee 10 Chief Menawa was severely wounded but survived he led about 200 of the original 1 000 warriors across the river and toward safety to join the Seminole tribe in Spanish Florida Results editOn August 9 1814 Andrew Jackson forced the Creek to sign the Treaty of Fort Jackson The Creek Nation was forced to cede 23 million acres 93 000 km2 half of central Alabama and part of southern Georgia to the United States government this included territory of the Lower Creek who had been allies of the United States Jackson had determined the areas from his sense of security needs Of the 23 million acres 93 000 km2 Jackson forced the Creek to cede 1 9 million acres 7 700 km2 which was claimed by the Cherokee Nation which had also allied with the United States 11 Jackson was promoted to major general in the U S Army after getting agreement to the treaty 2 Capture of Pensacola Battle of New Orleans edit After the battle Jackson sent his friend and trusted scout John Gordon captain of the Spies to secretly go to the Spanish fort at Pensacola to find out if the British were using it as a base to arm the Red Stick Creeks Gordon travelled through hundreds of miles of hostile Creek territory to find the British flag flying at Pensacola and British officers arming and training Creeks Jackson with this knowledge took Pensacola a controversial move which led ultimately to further battle against the British in New Orleans 12 This victory along with that at the Battle of New Orleans greatly contributed to Jackson s favorable national reputation and his popularity He was well known when he ran successfully for President in 1828 Legacy editThe battlefield is preserved in the Horseshoe Bend National Military Park 13 Two currently active battalions of the Regular Army 2nd and 3rd Battalions of the 7th Infantry Regiment perpetuate the lineage of the old 39th Infantry Regiment which fought at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend In fiction editEric Flint has written a series of alternate history novels Trail of Glory that begin with the Battle of Horseshoe Bend In Flint s version Houston is only lightly wounded in the battle allowing him freedom to develop his career in turn facilitating the author s objectives The main character of Paulette Jiles novel News of the World Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd has a backstory that includes fighting as a youth of 16 in this battle under Jackson Notes edit a b Borneman p 151 a b Creek War Horseshoe Bend Archived from the original on 2015 09 06 Retrieved 2012 09 25 a b Robert Remini Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire 1767 1821 1977 ch 13 Tennessee Unites during War of 1812 a b Lossing Benson 1868 The Pictorial Field Book of the War of 1812 Harper amp Brothers Publishers p 778 ISBN 9780665291364 a b Mackenzie George The Indian Breastwork in the Battle of Horseshoe Bend Its Size Location and Construction National Park Service Archived from the original on 2019 07 12 Retrieved 16 July 2012 Jackson Andrew The Jackson Papers Library of Congress Samuel G Heiskell Andrew Jackson and Early Tennessee History Nashville Ambrose Printing Company 1918 pp 356 359 Heidler p 135 Ronald Takaki A Different Mirror Little Brown 1993 p 85 Ehle p 123 Captain John Gordon of the spies archive org Retrieved 2016 12 13 If you visited Horseshoe Bend battlefield today 27 March 2014 Retrieved March 16 2018 References editAndrew Burstein Borneman Walter R 2004 1812 The War That Forged a Nation New York Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 06 053112 6 Steve Rajtar Indian War Sites McFarland and Company Inc 1999 Robert Remini Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire 1767 1821 1977 ch 13Further reading editHolland James W Andrew Jackson and the Creek War Victory at the Horseshoe Bend Alabama Review Oct 1968 Vol 21 Issue 4 pp 243 275 Kanon Thomas A Slow Laborious Slaughter The Battle of Horseshoe Bend Tennessee Historical Quarterly March 1999 Vol 58 Issue 1 pp 2 15 Remini Robert V Andrew Jackson and His Indian Wars 2001 ch 4External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Horseshoe Bend 1814 The Battle of Horseshoe Bend Collision of Cultures National Park Service s Teaching with Historic Places A map of Creek War Battle Sites PCL Map Collection at the University of Texas at Austin Battle of Horseshoe Bend Archived 2014 12 15 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia of Alabama Mrs Dunham Rowland The Mississippi Territory in the War of 1812 Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society Volume 4 1921 pp 7 156 If you visited Horseshoe Bend Battlefield today Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Horseshoe Bend amp oldid 1215858087, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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