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Battle of Queenston Heights

Battle of Queenston Heights
Part of the War of 1812

Death of General Brock at the Battle of Queenston Heights, John David Kelly
Date13 October 1812
Location43°09′43″N 79°03′02″W / 43.16192°N 79.05049°W / 43.16192; -79.05049
Result Anglo-Canadian victory[1]
Belligerents
[[File:|23x15px|border |alt=|link=]] United Kingdom
 Upper Canada
 United States
Commanders and leaders
[[File:|23x15px|border |alt=|link=]] Isaac Brock 
[[File:|23x15px|border |alt=|link=]] Roger Hale Sheaffe
[[File:|23x15px|border |alt=|link=]] John Macdonell 
Stephen Van Rensselaer
Winfield Scott 
Strength
1,300 3,550[2]
Casualties and losses
21 killed
85 wounded
22 captured[3]
80-100 killed
80 wounded
955 captured, of whom 90 were wounded[4][5][6][7][8]

The Battle of Queenston Heights was the first major battle in the War of 1812. Resulting in a British victory, it took place on 13 October 1812 near Queenston, Upper Canada (now Ontario).

The battle was fought between United States regulars with New York militiamen, led by Major General Stephen Van Rensselaer, and British regulars, York and Lincoln militiamen, and Mohawk warriors, led by Major General Isaac Brock and then Major General Roger Hale Sheaffe, who took command after Brock was killed.

The battle was fought as the result of an American attempt to establish a foothold on the Canadian side of the Niagara River before campaigning ended with the onset of winter. The decisive battle was the culmination of a poorly-managed American offensive and may be most historically significant for the loss of the British commander.

Despite their numerical advantage and the wide dispersal of British forces defending against their invasion attempt, the Americans, who were stationed in Lewiston, New York, were unable to get the bulk of their invasion force across the Niagara River because of the work of British artillery and the reluctance on the part of the undertrained and inexperienced American militia. As a result, British reinforcements arrived, defeated the unsupported American forces, and forced them to surrender.

Background edit

The United States invasion across the Niagara River was originally intended to be part of a four-pronged attack on Upper Canada's border strongpoints. From west to east, Brigadier General William Hull would attack Amherstburg through Detroit, Major General Van Rensselaer would attack across the Niagara River, another diversionary attack would cross the St. Lawrence River to take Kingston, and Major General Henry Dearborn, the commander in chief of the United States Army, would make the major attack via Lake Champlain to capture Montreal in Lower Canada.[9] These attacks were expected to bring the colony to its knees and ensure a quick peace.

However, the four attacks on Upper Canada failed or were not even launched. Hull was besieged in Detroit and, fearing a massacre by Britain's Native American allies, surrendered the town and his entire army following the siege of Detroit. Dearborn and his army remained relatively inactive at Albany, New York and seemed to be in no hurry to attempt an invasion.

Van Rensselaer was also unable to launch any immediate attack on the Niagara Peninsula, lacking troops and supplies. Although he held the rank of Major General in the New York state militia, Van Rensselaer had not commanded troops in battle and was not a warrior, being considered the leading Federalist candidate for the governorship of New York. Possibly hoping to get Van Rensselaer out of the way, New York Governor Daniel Tompkins had put Van Rensselaer's name forward to command the army on the Niagara, and he officially took command on 13 July. Van Rensselaer secured the appointment of his second cousin, Colonel Solomon Van Rensselaer, as his aide-de-camp. Solomon van Rensselaer was an experienced soldier who had been wounded at the Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794, and a valuable source of advice to the General.

Prelude edit

British moves edit

Major General Isaac Brock was both the civil Administrator of Upper Canada and Commander of the military forces there. He was an aggressive commander, and his successful capture of Detroit had won him praise, the reputation as the "saviour of Upper Canada" and a knighthood, the news of which would only reach Upper Canada after his death. However, his superior at Quebec, Lieutenant General Sir George Prevost, was of a more cautious bent, and the two clashed over strategy.

 
Major General Isaac Brock led a force made up of British regulars, Canadian militiamen, and Mohawk warriors during the Battle of Queenston Heights.

Brock had hastened back from Detroit, intending to cross the Niagara, defeat Van Rensselaer before he could be reinforced and occupy upper New York State. Prevost vetoed this plan, ordering Brock to behave more defensively.[10] Not only was Prevost concerned by Brock's apparently rash actions, but he was aware that the British Government had revoked several Orders in Council which affected American merchant ships, and thus removed some of the stated causes of the war. He believed that peace negotiations might result and did not wish to prejudice any talks by taking offensive action.[11] He opened negotiations with General Dearborn, and arranged local armistices. The United States government rejected Prevost's approach and ordered Dearborn "to proceed with the utmost vigor in your operations", after giving Prevost notice of the resumption of hostilities.[12] However, it took several weeks for this correspondence to travel between Washington and the frontier.

While Brock had been at Detroit, Major General Sheaffe had been in command of the troops on the Niagara. Acting under Prevost's orders, Sheaffe had concluded an armistice with Colonel Van Rensselaer on 20 August and had even gone further than Prevost's orders by voluntarily restricting the movement of British troops and supplies.[13] Brock returned to the Niagara on 22 August, to find the armistice in effect. The terms of the armistice permitted the use of the river by both powers as a common waterway and Brock could only watch as American reinforcements and supplies were moved to Van Rensselaer's army, without being able to take action to prevent it. The armistice ended on 8 September, by which time Van Rensselaer's army was considerably better supplied than it had been before.

American internal quarrels edit

Even with Hull's failure and Dearborn's inaction, Van Rensselaer's situation appeared strong. On 1 September, he had only 691 unpaid men fit for duty, but the arrival of reinforcements boosted his force considerably. In addition to his own force of around 6,000 regulars, volunteers, and militia, Van Rensselaer had Brigadier General Alexander Smyth's force of 1,700 regular soldiers under his command. However, Smyth, who was a regular officer although a lawyer by trade, steadfastly refused to obey Van Rensselaer's orders or respond to his summons.[14] As soon as his force reached the frontier, Smyth deployed his force near Buffalo, New York, at the head of the Niagara River.

 
Maj Gen Stephen Van Rensselaer planned for the main American force to cross the Niagara River from Lewiston, New York and take the heights near Queenston, Ontario.

Van Rensselaer planned for the main force to cross the Niagara from Lewiston and take the heights near Queenston, while Smyth crossed the river near Fort Niagara and attacked Fort George from the rear. However, Smyth made no reply to Van Rensselaer's plan. When summoned to a council of officers in early October to plan the attack, Smyth did not respond, nor did he reply to a letter sent soon after. A direct order to arrive "with all possible dispatch" was also met with silence. Van Rensselaer, an amiable politician in a hurry to launch his attack, chose to proceed with the attack from Lewiston only, rather than bring Smyth before a court-martial and possibly delay the start of the battle. His aim was to establish a fortified bridgehead around Queenston, where he could maintain his army in winter quarters while planning for a campaign in the spring.[14] Colonel Van Rensselaer had visited the British side under the escort of Brock's aide, Lieutenant Colonel John Macdonell, and had gained a fairly good idea of the lay of the land.

On 9 October, American sailors, artillerymen, and volunteers from the militia, commanded by Lieutenant Jesse Elliot, launched a successful boarding attack on the brigs Caledonia and Detroit, anchored near Fort Erie at the head of the Niagara River. Both brigs were captured, although Detroit subsequently ran aground and was set on fire to prevent it being recaptured. Brock feared this might presage an attack from Buffalo and galloped to Fort Erie. Although he soon realised that there was no immediate danger from Smyth in Buffalo, and returned to his headquarters in Niagara that night, it was mistakenly reported to Van Rensselaer that Brock had left in haste for Detroit, which Major General William Henry Harrison was attempting to retake.[15] Van Rensselaer decided to launch an attack at 3 a.m. on 11 October, even though Colonel Van Rensselaer was ill.

On 10 October, Van Rensselaer sent orders to Smyth to march his brigade to Lewiston in preparation for the attack "with every possible dispatch."[16] Smyth set out upon receipt of the letter. However, in foul weather, he chose a route to Lewiston that was so bad that abandoned wagons could be seen "sticking in the road."[17] The same tempestuous weather drenched Van Rensselaer's troops as they stood and waited to embark. One of the lead boatmen, a Lieutenant Sims, rowed his boat away and deserted the army, taking with him most of the oars. By the time the oars could be replaced, the attack had to be postponed. Colonel Van Rensselaer set the second attempt for 13 October.[18]

Smyth received word the attack had been postponed at 10 a.m. on 11 October. He then turned back to his camp at Black Rock, New York, near Buffalo, rather than press on to Lewiston. He wrote to Van Rensselaer on 12 October that his troops would be in condition to move out again on 14 October, a day after the postponed attack was to be launched.

Brock's preparations edit

 
Attempts to perform a prisoner exchange were made on 12 October by Major Thomas Evans. Intelligence gathered from the attempted exchange led Evans to deduce an American attack was imminent.

Brock was aware of the failed attempt to cross the river on 11 October but was not certain this was not a mere demonstration to distract him from a major attack elsewhere. On 12 October, Major Thomas Evans (the Brigade Major at Fort George)[19] crossed the Niagara River under a flag of truce to request an immediate exchange of prisoners taken in Elliot's raid on the British brigs three days before. He attempted to see Colonel Solomon Van Rensselaer but was told the Colonel was ill. Instead, he was met by a man who claimed to be General Stephen Van Rensselaer's secretary, Toock. Toock was probably Major John Lovett (Van Rensselaer's private military secretary) in disguise, and he repeatedly stated no exchange could be arranged until "the day after tomorrow."

Evans was struck by the repetition of this phrase and spotted several boats hidden under bushes along the shore. He deduced that a crossing was planned for 13 October, but when he returned to the British lines a council of officers responded to his statement with laughter and mockery. However, Brock took Evans aside and after a meeting was convinced of the possibility. That evening he dispatched several orders for the militia to assemble.

On 13 October, Brock was at his headquarters in Niagara. Major General Sheaffe was at Fort George nearby with the main British force. There were other British detachments at Queenston, Chippawa, and Fort Erie.

Battle edit

British dispositions edit

 
Depiction of Vrooman's Point. A mile north of Queenston, the British positioned a twenty-four-pounder artillery piece used to harass American troops attempting to embark across the Niagara River during the battle.

The village of Queenston consisted of a stone barracks and twenty houses each surrounded by gardens and peach orchards.[15] Several farmhouses were scattered through the neighbouring fields and pastures. The village lay at the mouth of the gorge of the River Niagara. Immediately south of the village, the ground rose 300 feet (100 m) to Queenston Heights. The slope from the heights to the river bank was very steep but overgrown with shrubs and trees, making it fairly easy to climb. Lewiston was on the American side of the river, with the ground to its south rising to Lewiston Heights. The river was fast-flowing and 200 yards wide but was described as being little trouble to even an indifferent oarsman.[15] In time of peace, there was a regular boat service between Queenston and Lewiston[20] with permanent landing stages in both villages.

The British detachment at Queenston consisted of the grenadier company of the 49th Regiment of Foot (which Brock had formerly commanded) under Captain James Dennis, a flank company of the 2nd Regiment of York Militia (the "York Volunteers") under Captain George Chisholm, and a detachment of the 41st Regiment of Foot with a 3-pounder grasshopper cannon. The light company of the 49th under Captain John Williams was posted in huts on top of the heights. An 18-pounder gun and a mortar[21][22] were mounted in a redan halfway up the Heights, and a 24-pounder gun and a carronade were sited in a barbette at Vrooman's Point, a mile north of the village, guarded by a company of the 5th Regiment of Lincoln Militia under Captain Samuel Hatt. Two more companies of York Militia under Captains Cameron and Heward were stationed at Brown's Point, three miles to the north.[23] The remaining local militia of the 5th Lincoln Regiment were not on duty but could assemble at very short notice.[24]

First American landing edit

"The grape and musket balls, poured upon them at close quarters as they approached the shore, made incredible havoc. A single discharge from a field-piece directed by Captain Dennis himself (the captain of the 49th Grenadiers) killed fifteen in one boat."

Lieutenant John Beverley Robinson of the 2nd York Volunteers[25]

The American forces involved were the 6th, 13th, and 23rd U.S. Regiments of Infantry, with detachments of U.S. Artillery serving as infantry. There were also the 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, and 20th Regiments of New York Militia and a volunteer battalion of riflemen,[23] totalling 900 regulars and 2,650 militia.[2] Because the United States Army was being rapidly expanded, most of the regulars at Lewiston were recent recruits, and Van Rensselaer considered the militiamen's drill and discipline superior to that of the regulars. The Americans had twelve boats, each of which could carry thirty men, and two large boats which could carry eighty men and which were fitted with platforms on which field guns or wagons could be carried. A last-minute squabble over seniority and precedence led to the command of the first landing party being split. Colonel Van Rensselaer led the militia contingent and Lieutenant Colonel John Chrystie of the 13th U.S. Infantry led the regulars.

 
The Battle of Queenston Heights by eyewitness James B. Dennis, depicts the American landing on 13 October 1812. The village of Queenston is in the right foreground, with Queenston Heights behind. Lewiston is in the left foreground

The Americans began crossing the river in thirteen boats at 4 a.m. on 13 October. Three boats, including Chrystie's, were swept downstream by the current. One landed lower down and the other two under Chrystie returned to the American side of the river. Ten minutes after they began the crossing, the remaining ten boats under Colonel van Rensselaer began landing at the village.[23] A sentry noticed them and, rather than fire his musket to raise the alarm and thus warn the American troops that they had been spotted, ran to Dennis' headquarters. After waiting and observing the enemy landing build up for several minutes, Dennis' troops began firing rolling, accurate volleys into the Americans in the midst of their coming ashore, firing low so as to inflict debilitating wounds.[26] Colonel Van Rensselaer was hit in the thigh by a musket ball as soon as he stepped out of his boat on the Canadian shore. As he tried to form up his troops, he was promptly hit five more times in the heel, thighs and calf, and though he survived, he spent most of the battle out of action, weak from loss of blood.[26] Captain John E. Wool of the 13th U.S. Infantry took over and fought to retain the American foothold in Queenston.

Meanwhile, the British guns opened fire in the direction of the American landing stage at Lewiston, and the American guns (two 18-pounder guns in an earthwork named "Fort Gray" on Lewiston Heights, two 6-pounder field guns and two 5.5-inch (140 mm) mortars near the landing stage) opened fire on Queenston village.[23] Dennis' troops were driven back into the village but kept firing from the shelter of the houses.

As the light grew, the British guns became more accurate. As a second wave of six American boats began to cross the river, the crews of three of them, including their two largest, one of which was carrying Lieutenant Colonel Chrystie, panicked as they came under fire. Chrystie's pilot turned the boat back for shore, despite Chrystie's efforts to restrain him. This later caused controversy when Captain Lawrence, commanding the next boat following, asserted Chrystie had ordered him to retreat, leading to accusations of cowardice.[27] One of the four remaining boats was sunk by fire from a 3-pound grasshopper cannon and a trio of others, carrying Lieutenant Colonel John Fenwick (formerly the commandant at Fort Niagara) and 80 men, drifted downstream and landed in Hamilton Cove, a hollow about 800 yards downriver, where a detachment of York and Lincoln Militia quickly surrounded Fenwick's men. A blistering fire was opened upon the U.S. infantry; Fenwick was grievously wounded in the face by a pistol shot, also receiving musket balls in his thigh and right side – his cloak was riddled with nine additional balls.[28] Their boats' hulls perforated with musket fire, and most of their comrades killed or wounded within minutes, all the other survivors of Fenwick's party quickly surrendered.[29][25] Three men managed to escape in one boat, which sank on reaching the American side of the river. The last boat drifted within easy range of the gun at Vrooman's Point and its occupants surrendered.

Death of Isaac Brock edit

At Fort George, Brock had been awakened by the noise of the artillery at Queenston. As he considered this might only be a diversion, he ordered only a few detachments to move to Queenston but galloped there himself, accompanied by a few aides. He passed through the village as dawn broke, being cheered by the men of the 49th, many of whom knew him well, and moved up to the redan to gain a better view.[30]

The 18-pounder cannon and the howitzer[21] in the redan were causing great carnage amongst the American boats. Since coming ashore an hour-and-a-half earlier,[31] the U.S. forces had been pinned down along the river. Prompted by Lieutenant Gansevoort of the U.S. Artillery, who knew the area well, the wounded Colonel Solomon Van Rensselaer ordered Captains Wool and Ogilvie to take a detachment upstream "and ascend the heights by the point of the rock, and storm the battery."[32] The redan had very few troops guarding it, the light company of the 49th having been ordered from the heights into the town by Brock to join the fighting in the village in support of the grenadier company.[33] Wool's troops attacked just after Brock arrived, forcing his small party and the artillerymen to flee into the village, after quickly spiking the guns. Brock sent a message to Major General Sheaffe at Fort George, ordering him to bring as many troops as possible to Queenston. He then resolved to recapture the redan immediately rather than wait for reinforcements.[34]

 
Major General Brock leading the charge. Brock was later killed in action, leading the right flank towards the top of Queenston Heights

Brock's charge was made by Dennis' and Williams' two companies of the 49th and two companies of militia.[29] The assault was halted by heavy fire and as he noticed unwounded men dropping to the rear, Brock shouted angrily that "This is the first time I have ever seen the 49th turn their backs![35][36] Surely the heroes of Egmont will not tarnish their record!"[36] At this rebuke, the ranks promptly closed up and were joined by two more companies of militia, those of Cameron and Heward. Brock saw that the militia supports were lagging behind at the foot of the hill and ordered one of his Provincial aides-de-camp, Lieutenant Colonel John Macdonell, to "Push on the York Volunteers" while he led his own party to the right, presumably intending to join his party with that of Williams' detachment who were beginning to make progress on that flank.[35]

Brock was struck in the wrist of his sword arm by a musket ball but pressed home the attack he was directing. His height and energetic gestures, together with his officer's uniform and a gaudy sash given to him eight weeks earlier by Tecumseh after the siege of Detroit,[34] made him a conspicuous target. He was shot down by an unknown American who stepped forward from a thicket and fired at a range of barely fifty yards. The ball struck Brock in the chest, killing him almost instantly.[37] His body was carried from the field and secreted in a nearby house at the corner of Queenston Street and Partition Street, diagonally opposite that of Laura Secord.[38]

Despite being a lawyer by trade with little military experience, Lieutenant Colonel Macdonell led a second attempt, together with Williams, to retake the redan.[39] With Williams' men of the 49th starting from brush to the right of the line near the escarpment and Macdonell's anchoring the left, the force of between 70 and 80 men (more than half of whom were militia) advanced toward the redan. Wool had been reinforced by more troops who had just made their way up the path to the top of the Heights, and Macdonell faced some four hundred troops.

Despite the disadvantage in numbers as well as attacking a fixed position, Williams' and Macdonell's small force was driving the opposing force to the edge of the gorge on which the redan was situated, and seemed on the verge of success before the Americans were able to regroup and stand firm. The battle's momentum turned when a musket ball hit Macdonell's mount, causing it to rear and twist around, and another shot hit him in the small of the back, causing him to fall from the horse.[40] He was removed from the battlefield but succumbed to his injuries early the next day. Captain Williams was laid low by a wound to the head, and Dennis by a severe wound to the thigh (although he continued to lead his detachment throughout the action).[41] Carrying Macdonnell and the body of Brock, the British fell back through Queenston to Durham's Farm a mile north near Vrooman's Point.[42]

According to legend, Brock's last words were "Push on, brave York Volunteers", but this is very unlikely, since Brock was not with them when he fell. Moreover, the wound's location (as seen on his coat, which is on display at the Canadian War Museum) suggests Brock died almost instantly, without time to speak. According to historian J. Mackay Hitsman, Brock's earlier command to push on the York Volunteers, who had just arrived from Queenston, was transformed into the later legend.[34]

Movements, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. edit

By 10 a.m., the Americans were opposed only by the 24-pounder at Vrooman's Point which was firing at the American boats at very long range. The Americans were able to push several hundred fresh troops and a 6-pounder field gun across the river. They unspiked the 18-pounder in the redan and used it to fire into Queenston village, but it had a limited field of fire away from the river. Some American soldiers entered Queenston village and looted some houses. They also rescued Lieutenant Colonel Fenwick and other survivors from his party, but did not attempt to drive Dennis from his position near Vrooman's Point.[43]

 
Lieutenant Colonel Winfield Scott was instructed to take command of the American forces that captured Queenston Heights earlier in the day. Scott was later captured at the end of the battle.

Lieutenant Colonel Chrystie briefly took charge of the troops on the Canadian side but returned to Lewiston to collect reinforcements and entrenching tools. At about noon, General van Rensselaer and Chrystie crossed to the Canadian side of the river. They ordered the position on Queenston Heights to be fortified. Lieutenant Joseph Gilbert Totten of the U.S. Engineers traced out the position of the proposed fortifications. Van Rensselaer appointed Lieutenant Colonel Winfield Scott of the 2nd U.S. Artillery to take command of the regulars on Queenston Heights. Brigadier General William Wadsworth, who was nominally present as a volunteer[43] and who waived his right to overall command, took charge of the militia. There were few complete formed units; there was only a collection of unorganised detachments, some without their officers. Likewise some officers had crossed but their men had not followed them. Little more than a thousand of General Van Rensselaer's men had crossed the Niagara River.

Meanwhile, British reinforcements had begun to arrive from Fort George. A detachment of the Royal Artillery (a "car brigade", with draught horses and drivers provided by Canadian farmers and militia)[44] under Captain William Holcroft with two 6-pounder guns moved into Queenston village, supported by a company of the 41st under Captain Derenzy. Militia Captain Alexander Hamilton guided them to a firing position in the courtyard of Hamilton's house. When they opened fire at 1 p.m., it once again became hazardous for the American boats to attempt to cross the river. Two American boats and a scow were sunk, and shrapnel fire several times silenced the American batteries in Lewiston.[45]

At the same time, 300 Mohawk[44] warriors under Captains John Norton and John Brant climbed up to the top of the heights and suddenly fell on Scott's outposts. None were killed, and the Mohawk force was driven back into some woods, but the Americans' spirits were badly affected by their fear of the natives. Warcries could be clearly heard in Lewiston, and militia waiting there to cross the river refused to do so.[46]

Sheaffe's attack edit

Sheaffe arrived at Queenston at 2 p.m. and took charge of the British troops. He ordered yet more reinforcements to join him, and when they had done so, he led his force on a 3 miles (4.8 km) detour to the Heights, shielding them from the American artillery. Here, he was joined by another column of reinforcements from Chippawa under Captain Richard Bullock of the 41st. In all, he commanded over 800 men. In addition to the remnants of the force which had been engaged under Brock in the morning, he had five companies of the 41st and seven of militia (including Captain Runchey's Company of Coloured Men), with two 3-pounder guns, belonging to Swayze's Provincial Artillery (a militia unit) but commanded by Lieutenant Crowther of the 41st.

 
Arriving at Queenston at 2 p.m., shortly after Brock's death, Major General Roger Hale Sheaffe took charge of the remaining British regulars, Canadian militiamen, and Mohawk warriors.

General Van Rensselaer determined at this point to re-cross to Lewiston to push forward reinforcements and munitions. Refugees and stragglers crowded into his boat and nearly capsized it.[47] In Lewiston, he found that the troops had dissolved into a disorderly crowd[48] and was unable to cajole any more of the militia into crossing the river. He then tried to induce the civilian boatmen to cross the river and retrieve his soldiers from Canada, but they refused even that. The General reported the next day that, "...to my utter astonishment, I found that at the very moment when complete victory was in our hands, the ardor of the unengaged troops had entirely subsided. I rode in all directions – urged men by every consideration to pass over – but in vain."[49] He sent a message to Brigadier General Wadsworth which left the decision whether to stand and fight or withdraw across the Niagara to him, promising to send boats if the decision was made to withdraw.[50]

As Sheaffe's force began to advance, Scott and Wadsworth received Van Rensselaer's message. At this point, according to Scott, the effective American force on the heights consisted of 125 regular infantry, 14 artillerymen and 296 militiamen.[50] The Americans decided to abandon their incomplete field works and withdraw. Scott fell back to the top of the heights where he attempted to throw up a barricade of fence rails and brushwood to cover the evacuation with his regulars. He placed the 6-pounder gun in front of the line, and posted some riflemen on the right among the huts formerly occupied by the light company of the 49th.

Sheaffe took his time forming his men up and preparing them for battle and attacked at 4 p.m., twelve hours after Van Rensselaer launched his assault. The first attack was made by the light company of the 41st with 35 militia and some Native Americans against the riflemen on Scott's right. After firing a volley, they charged with the bayonet, forcing the riflemen to give way in confusion.[51] Sheaffe immediately ordered a general advance, and the entire British line fired a volley, raised the Indian war-whoop and charged. The American militia, hearing the Mohawk war-cries and believing themselves doomed, retreated en masse and without orders. Cursing the men who would not cross the river, General Wadsworth surrendered at the edge of the precipice with 300 men. Scott, Totten and some others scrambled down the steep bank to the edge of the river. With no boats arriving to evacuate his men and with the Mohawk warriors furious over the deaths of two chiefs, Scott feared a massacre and surrendered to the British. The first two officers who tried to surrender were killed by Native Americans, and after Scott had personally waved a white flag (actually Totten's white cravat), excited Natives continued to fire from the heights into the crowd of Americans on the river bank below for several minutes.[50]

Once the surrender was made, Scott was shocked to see 500 militiamen, who had been hiding around the heights, emerging to surrender also.

Casualties edit

The British official casualty return gave 14 killed, 77 wounded, and 21 missing, with the loss of Norton's Native Americans not included.[52] Historian Robert Malcomson has demonstrated this computation to be in error and shows that the British and Canadian losses were 16 killed, 83 wounded, and 21 captured, with a further 5 killed, 2 wounded, and 1 captured among the Native American contingent.[3] This gives a total loss of 21 killed, 85 wounded, and 22 captured. Among the wounded Canadians was James Secord, husband of Laura Secord.

The number of Americans killed in the battle has been variously estimated at 60,[4] 90,[53] and 100.[5] 82 severely wounded Americans were evacuated across the Niagara before the surrender, of whom 2 soon died.[6] 955 Americans were initially captured by the British, including 120 severely wounded officers and men. This was more than the hospital at Niagara could accommodate, so some of them had to be cared for in the court house or in nearby churches. These were only the men who were badly injured enough to require hospitalization: the numbers of the walking wounded, who were seen by the British surgeons and then kept with the other prisoners, have not been recorded. Of the severely wounded prisoners, 30 soon died,[7] so by the time a full report on the prisoners was issued on 15 October, there were 19 officers and 417 enlisted men of the U.S. regulars and 54 officers and 435 other ranks of the New York Militia.[8] The 80 surviving wounded in the American hospital and the 90 surviving wounded prisoners were presumably the basis for General Van Rensselaer's statement, in a letter to Dearborn on 20 October, that "the aggregate" of his information would indicate that 170 Americans had been wounded in the battle.[4] This gives total American casualties of 60–100 killed, 80 wounded, 90 wounded prisoners and 835 other prisoners. 6 officers (4 regular and 2 militia) were among the killed; 11 officers (6 regular and 5 militia) were among the wounded who escaped capture and 8 officers (4 regular and 4 militia) were among the wounded prisoners. Those captured included Brigadier General William Wadsworth of the New York Militia, Lieutenant Colonel Scott and four other lieutenant colonels.[54] A 6-pounder gun and the colours of a New York Militia regiment were also captured.

Aftermath edit

Sheaffe immediately proposed a temporary truce and invited Van Rensselaer to send surgeons to assist in treating the wounded. Having assented, General Van Rensselaer resigned immediately after the battle and was succeeded as senior officer on the Niagara by Alexander Smyth, the officer whose insolence had badly injured the invasion attempt. Smyth still had his regulars at Buffalo but refused to launch an attack until he had 3,000 men under his command. He launched a successful raid to prepare the ground for a full-scale invasion at the Battle of Frenchman's Creek but then bungled two attempts to cross the river near Fort Erie and drew the loathing of his soldiers. Universally castigated for his refusal to attack and with rumours of mutiny in the air, Smyth slipped away to his home in Virginia rather than remain at his post.

 
Brigadier General Alexander Smyth, the officer who refused to support Van Rensselaer's attack, succeeded him as the senior American officer on the Niagara, after the latter's resignation.

At Albany, the defeat of Van Rensselaer only increased Henry Dearborn's reluctance to act. With two armies already defeated, Dearborn was not keen on leading the third. He led a half-hearted advance as far as Odelltown, where his militia refused to proceed further. After his regulars were easily repulsed by the garrison of an outpost at Lacolle Mills, Dearborn retired to American territory. He would be replaced the following year with only minor successes to his credit.

The question of who was to blame for the defeat was one that was never resolved. Stephen Van Rensselaer's popularity remained high enough that he was able to make an unsuccessful attempt to unseat Daniel Tompkins as Governor of New York, and he later served in the United States House of Representatives. General John Armstrong, Jr., the Secretary of War for much of the war, pinned the blame on General Van Rensselaer in his Notices of the War of 1812, published after the war. This provoked an indignant response from Solomon Van Rensselaer, who compared Armstrong to Benedict Arnold and laid the blame squarely on Lieutenant Colonel Chrystie (who had died of natural causes in July 1813), who he accused of cowardice and said "to his failure may mainly be attributed all our disasters."[27]

The loss of Major General Brock was nevertheless a major blow to the British. Brock had inspired his own troops and the militia and civilian authorities in Upper Canada by his blustering confidence and activity. Sheaffe, his successor, received a baronetcy for his part in the victory but could not command the same respect. He was already known to many of the troops in Upper Canada as a harsh disciplinarian. His success where Brock had rashly sacrificed himself could not help him escape censure for not having followed up the victory at Queenston Heights with an attack on Fort Niagara (which had been left virtually evacuated by its garrison after a bombardment from British batteries that afternoon).[55] The following April, he was defeated by a numerically superior American force at the Battle of York. Although his decision to retreat with his few regulars was accepted by his superiors (and his American opponents) to be correct in military terms, it left the local militia, the Assembly of Upper Canada and the population of York feeling abandoned and aggrieved. He was relieved of his appointments in Upper Canada.

Legacy edit

 
A 56 metres (184 ft) column, known as Brock's Monument was constructed atop Queenston Heights to commemorate the battle as well as Major General Isaac Brock.

A 56-metre (185 ft) column atop Queenston Heights in Queenston, Ontario, Canada, known as Brock's Monument, commemorates the battle as well as the memory of the British General who died there.

The song "MacDonell on the Heights", by Stan Rogers, commemorates the role of John MacDonell in the battle.

The Battle Honour "Queenstown" [sic] was awarded to two British regiments in the aftermath of the war: the 41st Regiment of Foot and 49th Regiment of Foot, whose successor units in the modern British Army are the Royal Welsh and the Rifles Regiments.

In the Canadian Army, the Lincoln and Welland Regiment, the 56th Field Artillery Regiment, RCA, the Queen's York Rangers, the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry, and the Lorne Scots perpetuate the history and heritage of Canadian militia units that took part in the battle. These regiments also carry the QUEENSTON Battle Honour.

The Ontario Highway 405 that connects the Lewiston–Queenston Bridge to the Queen Elizabeth Way is named the General Brock Parkway.

Many songs have been written about the battle. In 1959, as an answer to "The Battle of New Orleans", then a hit record by Johnny Horton, Toronto radio station CHUM recorded "The Battle of Queenston Heights", with DJ Mike Darow on lead vocals.[56] Credited to "Mike Darow and the CHUMS", the number became a regional hit in its own right, reaching #17 on CHUM's own chart.[57]

Multiple streets, avenues, roads, and a university in Ontario are named after Major General Brock, as is the city of Brockville in the province.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Brian Jenkins (14 March 1996). Henry Goulburn, 1784–1856: A Political Biography. McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP. p. 76. ISBN 978-0-7735-1371-6.
  2. ^ a b Hitsman, p. 92
  3. ^ a b Malcomson, A Very Brilliant Affair, p. 297
  4. ^ a b c Cruikshank, Documentary History, p. 143
  5. ^ a b Cruikshank, Documentary History, p. 92
  6. ^ a b Cruikshank, Documentary History, p. 121
  7. ^ a b Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 44
  8. ^ a b Cruikshank, Documentary History, p. 74
  9. ^ Elting, p. 19
  10. ^ Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 24
  11. ^ Hitsman, p. 83
  12. ^ Hitsman, p. 87
  13. ^ Hitsman, p. 86
  14. ^ a b Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 26
  15. ^ a b c Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 28
  16. ^ Malcomson, A Very Brilliant Affair, p. 118
  17. ^ Malcomson, A Very Brilliant Affair, p. 120
  18. ^ Van Rensselaer, pp. 21–22
  19. ^ Malcomson, Lords of the Lake, p. 66
  20. ^ Elting, p. 41
  21. ^ a b Malcomson, A Very Brilliant Affair, p. 136
  22. ^ Cruikshank, in Lundy's Lane Historical Society, p. 8
  23. ^ a b c d Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 30
  24. ^ Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 27
  25. ^ a b Robinson, C. W. (1904). "Life of Sir John Beverley Robinson, Bart., Chief-Justice of Upper Canada". p. 34. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
  26. ^ a b Berton (1980), pp. 233–234
  27. ^ a b Van Rensselaer, p. 28
  28. ^ Berton (1980), p. 235
  29. ^ a b Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 33
  30. ^ Elting, p. 45
  31. ^ Malcomson,A Very Brilliant Affair, p. 141
  32. ^ Malcomson, A Very Brilliant Affair, p. 142
  33. ^ Hitsman, p. 95. Cruikshank states Dennis had ordered the light company down by bugle call, before Brock's arrival
  34. ^ a b c Hitsman, p. 96
  35. ^ a b Cruikshank, in Lundy's Lane Historical Society, p. 9
  36. ^ a b Nursey, "The Story of Isaac Brock (General Sir Isaac Brock, K.B.): Hero, Defender and Saviour of Upper Canada 1812", p. 177
  37. ^ Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 36
  38. ^ . niagaraadvance.ca. 3 October 2012. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 6 November 2012.
  39. ^ Malcomson, A Very Brilliant Affair, p. 154
  40. ^ Malcomson, A Very Brilliant Affair, p. 155
  41. ^ Cruikshank, in Lundy's Lane Historical Society, p. 10
  42. ^ Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 38
  43. ^ a b Elting, p. 46
  44. ^ a b Hitsman, p. 98
  45. ^ Cruikshank, in Zaslow, pp. 39–40
  46. ^ Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 40
  47. ^ Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 42
  48. ^ Elting, p. 47
  49. ^ New York Herald, 4 Nov. 1812, front page
  50. ^ a b c Elting, p. 48
  51. ^ Cruikshank, in Zaslow, p. 43
  52. ^ Cruikshank, Documentary History, p. 73
  53. ^ Quimby, p. 73
  54. ^ Cruikshank, Documentary History, pp. 76, 166
  55. ^ Cruikshank, in Lundy's Lane Historical Society, p. 13
  56. ^ "The Battle of Queenston Heights" on YouTube
  57. ^ "CHUM Hit Parade - July 27, 1959".

References edit

  • Berton, Pierre (1980). The Invasion of Canada, 1812–1813. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 0-7710-1235-7.
  • Borneman, Walter R. Borneman (2004). 1812: The War That Forged a Nation. New York: Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0-06-053112-6.
  • Cruikshank, Ernest A. (1971). . New York: Arno Press Inc. ISBN 0-405-02838-5. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
  • Cruikshank, Ernest A. (1964). "The Battle of Queenston Heights". In Zaslow, Morris (ed.). The Defended Border. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada. ISBN 0-7705-1242-9.
  • Cruikshank, Ernest A. The Battle of Queenston Heights: An abridgement, by permission of the publishers, the Lundy's Lane Historical Society, of the monograph by E. A. Cruikshank.
  • Elting, John R. (1995). Amateurs to Arms: A Military History of the War of 1812. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80653-3.
  • Hitsman, J. Mackay; Donald E. Graves (1999). The Incredible War of 1812. Toronto: Robin Brass Studio. ISBN 1-896941-13-3.
  • Latimer, Jon (2007). 1812: War with America. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-02584-4.
  • Malcomson, Robert (2003). A Very Brilliant Affair: The Battle of Queenston Heights, 1812. Toronto: Robin Brass Studio. ISBN 1-896941-33-8.
  • Malcomson, Robert (1998). Lords of the Lake: The Naval War of Lake Ontario, 1812–14. Toronto: Robin Brass Studio. ISBN 978-1-896941-08-0.
  • Quimby, Robert S. (1997). The U.S. Army in the War of 1812: An Operational and Command Study. East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Press. ISBN 0-87013-441-8.
  • Nursey, Walter R. (1923). The Story of Isaac Brock (General Sir Isaac Brock, K.B.): Hero, Defender and Saviour of Upper Canada 1812. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.
  • Van Rensselaer, Solomon (1836). A Narrative of the Affair of Queenstown in the War of 1812. New York: Leavitt, Lord & Co. ISBN 0-665-21524-X.
  • Zaslow, Morris (1964). The Defended Border: Upper Canada and the War of 1812. Toronto: The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited. ISBN 0-7705-1242-9.

External links edit

  • An Historic Account of the Battle of Queenston Heights
  • Brock's Monument – Summary of the battle, information about the battlefield and tours.
  • PBS Documentary includes a chapter on this battle. 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine

battle, queenston, heights, part, 1812death, general, brock, john, david, kellydate13, october, 1812locationqueenston, upper, canada, modern, ontario, 16192, 05049, 16192, 05049resultanglo, canadian, victory, belligerents, file, 23x15px, border, link, united, . Battle of Queenston HeightsPart of the War of 1812Death of General Brock at the Battle of Queenston Heights John David KellyDate13 October 1812LocationQueenston Upper Canada modern day Ontario 43 09 43 N 79 03 02 W 43 16192 N 79 05049 W 43 16192 79 05049ResultAnglo Canadian victory 1 Belligerents File 23x15px border alt link United Kingdom Upper Canada United StatesCommanders and leaders File 23x15px border alt link Isaac Brock File 23x15px border alt link Roger Hale Sheaffe File 23x15px border alt link John Macdonell Stephen Van Rensselaer Winfield Scott Strength1 3003 550 2 Casualties and losses21 killed 85 wounded 22 captured 3 80 100 killed 80 wounded 955 captured of whom 90 were wounded 4 5 6 7 8 The Battle of Queenston Heights was the first major battle in the War of 1812 Resulting in a British victory it took place on 13 October 1812 near Queenston Upper Canada now Ontario The battle was fought between United States regulars with New York militiamen led by Major General Stephen Van Rensselaer and British regulars York and Lincoln militiamen and Mohawk warriors led by Major General Isaac Brock and then Major General Roger Hale Sheaffe who took command after Brock was killed The battle was fought as the result of an American attempt to establish a foothold on the Canadian side of the Niagara River before campaigning ended with the onset of winter The decisive battle was the culmination of a poorly managed American offensive and may be most historically significant for the loss of the British commander Despite their numerical advantage and the wide dispersal of British forces defending against their invasion attempt the Americans who were stationed in Lewiston New York were unable to get the bulk of their invasion force across the Niagara River because of the work of British artillery and the reluctance on the part of the undertrained and inexperienced American militia As a result British reinforcements arrived defeated the unsupported American forces and forced them to surrender Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 2 1 British moves 2 2 American internal quarrels 2 3 Brock s preparations 3 Battle 3 1 British dispositions 3 2 First American landing 3 3 Death of Isaac Brock 3 4 Movements 10 a m to 2 p m 3 5 Sheaffe s attack 3 6 Casualties 4 Aftermath 5 Legacy 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground editThe United States invasion across the Niagara River was originally intended to be part of a four pronged attack on Upper Canada s border strongpoints From west to east Brigadier General William Hull would attack Amherstburg through Detroit Major General Van Rensselaer would attack across the Niagara River another diversionary attack would cross the St Lawrence River to take Kingston and Major General Henry Dearborn the commander in chief of the United States Army would make the major attack via Lake Champlain to capture Montreal in Lower Canada 9 These attacks were expected to bring the colony to its knees and ensure a quick peace However the four attacks on Upper Canada failed or were not even launched Hull was besieged in Detroit and fearing a massacre by Britain s Native American allies surrendered the town and his entire army following the siege of Detroit Dearborn and his army remained relatively inactive at Albany New York and seemed to be in no hurry to attempt an invasion Van Rensselaer was also unable to launch any immediate attack on the Niagara Peninsula lacking troops and supplies Although he held the rank of Major General in the New York state militia Van Rensselaer had not commanded troops in battle and was not a warrior being considered the leading Federalist candidate for the governorship of New York Possibly hoping to get Van Rensselaer out of the way New York Governor Daniel Tompkins had put Van Rensselaer s name forward to command the army on the Niagara and he officially took command on 13 July Van Rensselaer secured the appointment of his second cousin Colonel Solomon Van Rensselaer as his aide de camp Solomon van Rensselaer was an experienced soldier who had been wounded at the Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794 and a valuable source of advice to the General Prelude editBritish moves edit Major General Isaac Brock was both the civil Administrator of Upper Canada and Commander of the military forces there He was an aggressive commander and his successful capture of Detroit had won him praise the reputation as the saviour of Upper Canada and a knighthood the news of which would only reach Upper Canada after his death However his superior at Quebec Lieutenant General Sir George Prevost was of a more cautious bent and the two clashed over strategy nbsp Major General Isaac Brock led a force made up of British regulars Canadian militiamen and Mohawk warriors during the Battle of Queenston Heights Brock had hastened back from Detroit intending to cross the Niagara defeat Van Rensselaer before he could be reinforced and occupy upper New York State Prevost vetoed this plan ordering Brock to behave more defensively 10 Not only was Prevost concerned by Brock s apparently rash actions but he was aware that the British Government had revoked several Orders in Council which affected American merchant ships and thus removed some of the stated causes of the war He believed that peace negotiations might result and did not wish to prejudice any talks by taking offensive action 11 He opened negotiations with General Dearborn and arranged local armistices The United States government rejected Prevost s approach and ordered Dearborn to proceed with the utmost vigor in your operations after giving Prevost notice of the resumption of hostilities 12 However it took several weeks for this correspondence to travel between Washington and the frontier While Brock had been at Detroit Major General Sheaffe had been in command of the troops on the Niagara Acting under Prevost s orders Sheaffe had concluded an armistice with Colonel Van Rensselaer on 20 August and had even gone further than Prevost s orders by voluntarily restricting the movement of British troops and supplies 13 Brock returned to the Niagara on 22 August to find the armistice in effect The terms of the armistice permitted the use of the river by both powers as a common waterway and Brock could only watch as American reinforcements and supplies were moved to Van Rensselaer s army without being able to take action to prevent it The armistice ended on 8 September by which time Van Rensselaer s army was considerably better supplied than it had been before American internal quarrels edit Even with Hull s failure and Dearborn s inaction Van Rensselaer s situation appeared strong On 1 September he had only 691 unpaid men fit for duty but the arrival of reinforcements boosted his force considerably In addition to his own force of around 6 000 regulars volunteers and militia Van Rensselaer had Brigadier General Alexander Smyth s force of 1 700 regular soldiers under his command However Smyth who was a regular officer although a lawyer by trade steadfastly refused to obey Van Rensselaer s orders or respond to his summons 14 As soon as his force reached the frontier Smyth deployed his force near Buffalo New York at the head of the Niagara River nbsp Maj Gen Stephen Van Rensselaer planned for the main American force to cross the Niagara River from Lewiston New York and take the heights near Queenston Ontario Van Rensselaer planned for the main force to cross the Niagara from Lewiston and take the heights near Queenston while Smyth crossed the river near Fort Niagara and attacked Fort George from the rear However Smyth made no reply to Van Rensselaer s plan When summoned to a council of officers in early October to plan the attack Smyth did not respond nor did he reply to a letter sent soon after A direct order to arrive with all possible dispatch was also met with silence Van Rensselaer an amiable politician in a hurry to launch his attack chose to proceed with the attack from Lewiston only rather than bring Smyth before a court martial and possibly delay the start of the battle His aim was to establish a fortified bridgehead around Queenston where he could maintain his army in winter quarters while planning for a campaign in the spring 14 Colonel Van Rensselaer had visited the British side under the escort of Brock s aide Lieutenant Colonel John Macdonell and had gained a fairly good idea of the lay of the land On 9 October American sailors artillerymen and volunteers from the militia commanded by Lieutenant Jesse Elliot launched a successful boarding attack on the brigs Caledonia and Detroit anchored near Fort Erie at the head of the Niagara River Both brigs were captured although Detroit subsequently ran aground and was set on fire to prevent it being recaptured Brock feared this might presage an attack from Buffalo and galloped to Fort Erie Although he soon realised that there was no immediate danger from Smyth in Buffalo and returned to his headquarters in Niagara that night it was mistakenly reported to Van Rensselaer that Brock had left in haste for Detroit which Major General William Henry Harrison was attempting to retake 15 Van Rensselaer decided to launch an attack at 3 a m on 11 October even though Colonel Van Rensselaer was ill On 10 October Van Rensselaer sent orders to Smyth to march his brigade to Lewiston in preparation for the attack with every possible dispatch 16 Smyth set out upon receipt of the letter However in foul weather he chose a route to Lewiston that was so bad that abandoned wagons could be seen sticking in the road 17 The same tempestuous weather drenched Van Rensselaer s troops as they stood and waited to embark One of the lead boatmen a Lieutenant Sims rowed his boat away and deserted the army taking with him most of the oars By the time the oars could be replaced the attack had to be postponed Colonel Van Rensselaer set the second attempt for 13 October 18 Smyth received word the attack had been postponed at 10 a m on 11 October He then turned back to his camp at Black Rock New York near Buffalo rather than press on to Lewiston He wrote to Van Rensselaer on 12 October that his troops would be in condition to move out again on 14 October a day after the postponed attack was to be launched Brock s preparations edit nbsp Attempts to perform a prisoner exchange were made on 12 October by Major Thomas Evans Intelligence gathered from the attempted exchange led Evans to deduce an American attack was imminent Brock was aware of the failed attempt to cross the river on 11 October but was not certain this was not a mere demonstration to distract him from a major attack elsewhere On 12 October Major Thomas Evans the Brigade Major at Fort George 19 crossed the Niagara River under a flag of truce to request an immediate exchange of prisoners taken in Elliot s raid on the British brigs three days before He attempted to see Colonel Solomon Van Rensselaer but was told the Colonel was ill Instead he was met by a man who claimed to be General Stephen Van Rensselaer s secretary Toock Toock was probably Major John Lovett Van Rensselaer s private military secretary in disguise and he repeatedly stated no exchange could be arranged until the day after tomorrow Evans was struck by the repetition of this phrase and spotted several boats hidden under bushes along the shore He deduced that a crossing was planned for 13 October but when he returned to the British lines a council of officers responded to his statement with laughter and mockery However Brock took Evans aside and after a meeting was convinced of the possibility That evening he dispatched several orders for the militia to assemble On 13 October Brock was at his headquarters in Niagara Major General Sheaffe was at Fort George nearby with the main British force There were other British detachments at Queenston Chippawa and Fort Erie Battle editBritish dispositions edit nbsp Depiction of Vrooman s Point A mile north of Queenston the British positioned a twenty four pounder artillery piece used to harass American troops attempting to embark across the Niagara River during the battle The village of Queenston consisted of a stone barracks and twenty houses each surrounded by gardens and peach orchards 15 Several farmhouses were scattered through the neighbouring fields and pastures The village lay at the mouth of the gorge of the River Niagara Immediately south of the village the ground rose 300 feet 100 m to Queenston Heights The slope from the heights to the river bank was very steep but overgrown with shrubs and trees making it fairly easy to climb Lewiston was on the American side of the river with the ground to its south rising to Lewiston Heights The river was fast flowing and 200 yards wide but was described as being little trouble to even an indifferent oarsman 15 In time of peace there was a regular boat service between Queenston and Lewiston 20 with permanent landing stages in both villages The British detachment at Queenston consisted of the grenadier company of the 49th Regiment of Foot which Brock had formerly commanded under Captain James Dennis a flank company of the 2nd Regiment of York Militia the York Volunteers under Captain George Chisholm and a detachment of the 41st Regiment of Foot with a 3 pounder grasshopper cannon The light company of the 49th under Captain John Williams was posted in huts on top of the heights An 18 pounder gun and a mortar 21 22 were mounted in a redan halfway up the Heights and a 24 pounder gun and a carronade were sited in a barbette at Vrooman s Point a mile north of the village guarded by a company of the 5th Regiment of Lincoln Militia under Captain Samuel Hatt Two more companies of York Militia under Captains Cameron and Heward were stationed at Brown s Point three miles to the north 23 The remaining local militia of the 5th Lincoln Regiment were not on duty but could assemble at very short notice 24 First American landing edit The grape and musket balls poured upon them at close quarters as they approached the shore made incredible havoc A single discharge from a field piece directed by Captain Dennis himself the captain of the 49th Grenadiers killed fifteen in one boat Lieutenant John Beverley Robinson of the 2nd York Volunteers 25 The American forces involved were the 6th 13th and 23rd U S Regiments of Infantry with detachments of U S Artillery serving as infantry There were also the 16th 17th 18th 19th and 20th Regiments of New York Militia and a volunteer battalion of riflemen 23 totalling 900 regulars and 2 650 militia 2 Because the United States Army was being rapidly expanded most of the regulars at Lewiston were recent recruits and Van Rensselaer considered the militiamen s drill and discipline superior to that of the regulars The Americans had twelve boats each of which could carry thirty men and two large boats which could carry eighty men and which were fitted with platforms on which field guns or wagons could be carried A last minute squabble over seniority and precedence led to the command of the first landing party being split Colonel Van Rensselaer led the militia contingent and Lieutenant Colonel John Chrystie of the 13th U S Infantry led the regulars nbsp The Battle of Queenston Heights by eyewitness James B Dennis depicts the American landing on 13 October 1812 The village of Queenston is in the right foreground with Queenston Heights behind Lewiston is in the left foregroundThe Americans began crossing the river in thirteen boats at 4 a m on 13 October Three boats including Chrystie s were swept downstream by the current One landed lower down and the other two under Chrystie returned to the American side of the river Ten minutes after they began the crossing the remaining ten boats under Colonel van Rensselaer began landing at the village 23 A sentry noticed them and rather than fire his musket to raise the alarm and thus warn the American troops that they had been spotted ran to Dennis headquarters After waiting and observing the enemy landing build up for several minutes Dennis troops began firing rolling accurate volleys into the Americans in the midst of their coming ashore firing low so as to inflict debilitating wounds 26 Colonel Van Rensselaer was hit in the thigh by a musket ball as soon as he stepped out of his boat on the Canadian shore As he tried to form up his troops he was promptly hit five more times in the heel thighs and calf and though he survived he spent most of the battle out of action weak from loss of blood 26 Captain John E Wool of the 13th U S Infantry took over and fought to retain the American foothold in Queenston Meanwhile the British guns opened fire in the direction of the American landing stage at Lewiston and the American guns two 18 pounder guns in an earthwork named Fort Gray on Lewiston Heights two 6 pounder field guns and two 5 5 inch 140 mm mortars near the landing stage opened fire on Queenston village 23 Dennis troops were driven back into the village but kept firing from the shelter of the houses As the light grew the British guns became more accurate As a second wave of six American boats began to cross the river the crews of three of them including their two largest one of which was carrying Lieutenant Colonel Chrystie panicked as they came under fire Chrystie s pilot turned the boat back for shore despite Chrystie s efforts to restrain him This later caused controversy when Captain Lawrence commanding the next boat following asserted Chrystie had ordered him to retreat leading to accusations of cowardice 27 One of the four remaining boats was sunk by fire from a 3 pound grasshopper cannon and a trio of others carrying Lieutenant Colonel John Fenwick formerly the commandant at Fort Niagara and 80 men drifted downstream and landed in Hamilton Cove a hollow about 800 yards downriver where a detachment of York and Lincoln Militia quickly surrounded Fenwick s men A blistering fire was opened upon the U S infantry Fenwick was grievously wounded in the face by a pistol shot also receiving musket balls in his thigh and right side his cloak was riddled with nine additional balls 28 Their boats hulls perforated with musket fire and most of their comrades killed or wounded within minutes all the other survivors of Fenwick s party quickly surrendered 29 25 Three men managed to escape in one boat which sank on reaching the American side of the river The last boat drifted within easy range of the gun at Vrooman s Point and its occupants surrendered Death of Isaac Brock edit At Fort George Brock had been awakened by the noise of the artillery at Queenston As he considered this might only be a diversion he ordered only a few detachments to move to Queenston but galloped there himself accompanied by a few aides He passed through the village as dawn broke being cheered by the men of the 49th many of whom knew him well and moved up to the redan to gain a better view 30 The 18 pounder cannon and the howitzer 21 in the redan were causing great carnage amongst the American boats Since coming ashore an hour and a half earlier 31 the U S forces had been pinned down along the river Prompted by Lieutenant Gansevoort of the U S Artillery who knew the area well the wounded Colonel Solomon Van Rensselaer ordered Captains Wool and Ogilvie to take a detachment upstream and ascend the heights by the point of the rock and storm the battery 32 The redan had very few troops guarding it the light company of the 49th having been ordered from the heights into the town by Brock to join the fighting in the village in support of the grenadier company 33 Wool s troops attacked just after Brock arrived forcing his small party and the artillerymen to flee into the village after quickly spiking the guns Brock sent a message to Major General Sheaffe at Fort George ordering him to bring as many troops as possible to Queenston He then resolved to recapture the redan immediately rather than wait for reinforcements 34 nbsp Major General Brock leading the charge Brock was later killed in action leading the right flank towards the top of Queenston HeightsBrock s charge was made by Dennis and Williams two companies of the 49th and two companies of militia 29 The assault was halted by heavy fire and as he noticed unwounded men dropping to the rear Brock shouted angrily that This is the first time I have ever seen the 49th turn their backs 35 36 Surely the heroes of Egmont will not tarnish their record 36 At this rebuke the ranks promptly closed up and were joined by two more companies of militia those of Cameron and Heward Brock saw that the militia supports were lagging behind at the foot of the hill and ordered one of his Provincial aides de camp Lieutenant Colonel John Macdonell to Push on the York Volunteers while he led his own party to the right presumably intending to join his party with that of Williams detachment who were beginning to make progress on that flank 35 Brock was struck in the wrist of his sword arm by a musket ball but pressed home the attack he was directing His height and energetic gestures together with his officer s uniform and a gaudy sash given to him eight weeks earlier by Tecumseh after the siege of Detroit 34 made him a conspicuous target He was shot down by an unknown American who stepped forward from a thicket and fired at a range of barely fifty yards The ball struck Brock in the chest killing him almost instantly 37 His body was carried from the field and secreted in a nearby house at the corner of Queenston Street and Partition Street diagonally opposite that of Laura Secord 38 Despite being a lawyer by trade with little military experience Lieutenant Colonel Macdonell led a second attempt together with Williams to retake the redan 39 With Williams men of the 49th starting from brush to the right of the line near the escarpment and Macdonell s anchoring the left the force of between 70 and 80 men more than half of whom were militia advanced toward the redan Wool had been reinforced by more troops who had just made their way up the path to the top of the Heights and Macdonell faced some four hundred troops Despite the disadvantage in numbers as well as attacking a fixed position Williams and Macdonell s small force was driving the opposing force to the edge of the gorge on which the redan was situated and seemed on the verge of success before the Americans were able to regroup and stand firm The battle s momentum turned when a musket ball hit Macdonell s mount causing it to rear and twist around and another shot hit him in the small of the back causing him to fall from the horse 40 He was removed from the battlefield but succumbed to his injuries early the next day Captain Williams was laid low by a wound to the head and Dennis by a severe wound to the thigh although he continued to lead his detachment throughout the action 41 Carrying Macdonnell and the body of Brock the British fell back through Queenston to Durham s Farm a mile north near Vrooman s Point 42 According to legend Brock s last words were Push on brave York Volunteers but this is very unlikely since Brock was not with them when he fell Moreover the wound s location as seen on his coat which is on display at the Canadian War Museum suggests Brock died almost instantly without time to speak According to historian J Mackay Hitsman Brock s earlier command to push on the York Volunteers who had just arrived from Queenston was transformed into the later legend 34 Movements 10 a m to 2 p m edit By 10 a m the Americans were opposed only by the 24 pounder at Vrooman s Point which was firing at the American boats at very long range The Americans were able to push several hundred fresh troops and a 6 pounder field gun across the river They unspiked the 18 pounder in the redan and used it to fire into Queenston village but it had a limited field of fire away from the river Some American soldiers entered Queenston village and looted some houses They also rescued Lieutenant Colonel Fenwick and other survivors from his party but did not attempt to drive Dennis from his position near Vrooman s Point 43 nbsp Lieutenant Colonel Winfield Scott was instructed to take command of the American forces that captured Queenston Heights earlier in the day Scott was later captured at the end of the battle Lieutenant Colonel Chrystie briefly took charge of the troops on the Canadian side but returned to Lewiston to collect reinforcements and entrenching tools At about noon General van Rensselaer and Chrystie crossed to the Canadian side of the river They ordered the position on Queenston Heights to be fortified Lieutenant Joseph Gilbert Totten of the U S Engineers traced out the position of the proposed fortifications Van Rensselaer appointed Lieutenant Colonel Winfield Scott of the 2nd U S Artillery to take command of the regulars on Queenston Heights Brigadier General William Wadsworth who was nominally present as a volunteer 43 and who waived his right to overall command took charge of the militia There were few complete formed units there was only a collection of unorganised detachments some without their officers Likewise some officers had crossed but their men had not followed them Little more than a thousand of General Van Rensselaer s men had crossed the Niagara River Meanwhile British reinforcements had begun to arrive from Fort George A detachment of the Royal Artillery a car brigade with draught horses and drivers provided by Canadian farmers and militia 44 under Captain William Holcroft with two 6 pounder guns moved into Queenston village supported by a company of the 41st under Captain Derenzy Militia Captain Alexander Hamilton guided them to a firing position in the courtyard of Hamilton s house When they opened fire at 1 p m it once again became hazardous for the American boats to attempt to cross the river Two American boats and a scow were sunk and shrapnel fire several times silenced the American batteries in Lewiston 45 At the same time 300 Mohawk 44 warriors under Captains John Norton and John Brant climbed up to the top of the heights and suddenly fell on Scott s outposts None were killed and the Mohawk force was driven back into some woods but the Americans spirits were badly affected by their fear of the natives Warcries could be clearly heard in Lewiston and militia waiting there to cross the river refused to do so 46 Sheaffe s attack edit Sheaffe arrived at Queenston at 2 p m and took charge of the British troops He ordered yet more reinforcements to join him and when they had done so he led his force on a 3 miles 4 8 km detour to the Heights shielding them from the American artillery Here he was joined by another column of reinforcements from Chippawa under Captain Richard Bullock of the 41st In all he commanded over 800 men In addition to the remnants of the force which had been engaged under Brock in the morning he had five companies of the 41st and seven of militia including Captain Runchey s Company of Coloured Men with two 3 pounder guns belonging to Swayze s Provincial Artillery a militia unit but commanded by Lieutenant Crowther of the 41st nbsp Arriving at Queenston at 2 p m shortly after Brock s death Major General Roger Hale Sheaffe took charge of the remaining British regulars Canadian militiamen and Mohawk warriors General Van Rensselaer determined at this point to re cross to Lewiston to push forward reinforcements and munitions Refugees and stragglers crowded into his boat and nearly capsized it 47 In Lewiston he found that the troops had dissolved into a disorderly crowd 48 and was unable to cajole any more of the militia into crossing the river He then tried to induce the civilian boatmen to cross the river and retrieve his soldiers from Canada but they refused even that The General reported the next day that to my utter astonishment I found that at the very moment when complete victory was in our hands the ardor of the unengaged troops had entirely subsided I rode in all directions urged men by every consideration to pass over but in vain 49 He sent a message to Brigadier General Wadsworth which left the decision whether to stand and fight or withdraw across the Niagara to him promising to send boats if the decision was made to withdraw 50 As Sheaffe s force began to advance Scott and Wadsworth received Van Rensselaer s message At this point according to Scott the effective American force on the heights consisted of 125 regular infantry 14 artillerymen and 296 militiamen 50 The Americans decided to abandon their incomplete field works and withdraw Scott fell back to the top of the heights where he attempted to throw up a barricade of fence rails and brushwood to cover the evacuation with his regulars He placed the 6 pounder gun in front of the line and posted some riflemen on the right among the huts formerly occupied by the light company of the 49th Sheaffe took his time forming his men up and preparing them for battle and attacked at 4 p m twelve hours after Van Rensselaer launched his assault The first attack was made by the light company of the 41st with 35 militia and some Native Americans against the riflemen on Scott s right After firing a volley they charged with the bayonet forcing the riflemen to give way in confusion 51 Sheaffe immediately ordered a general advance and the entire British line fired a volley raised the Indian war whoop and charged The American militia hearing the Mohawk war cries and believing themselves doomed retreated en masse and without orders Cursing the men who would not cross the river General Wadsworth surrendered at the edge of the precipice with 300 men Scott Totten and some others scrambled down the steep bank to the edge of the river With no boats arriving to evacuate his men and with the Mohawk warriors furious over the deaths of two chiefs Scott feared a massacre and surrendered to the British The first two officers who tried to surrender were killed by Native Americans and after Scott had personally waved a white flag actually Totten s white cravat excited Natives continued to fire from the heights into the crowd of Americans on the river bank below for several minutes 50 Once the surrender was made Scott was shocked to see 500 militiamen who had been hiding around the heights emerging to surrender also Casualties edit The British official casualty return gave 14 killed 77 wounded and 21 missing with the loss of Norton s Native Americans not included 52 Historian Robert Malcomson has demonstrated this computation to be in error and shows that the British and Canadian losses were 16 killed 83 wounded and 21 captured with a further 5 killed 2 wounded and 1 captured among the Native American contingent 3 This gives a total loss of 21 killed 85 wounded and 22 captured Among the wounded Canadians was James Secord husband of Laura Secord The number of Americans killed in the battle has been variously estimated at 60 4 90 53 and 100 5 82 severely wounded Americans were evacuated across the Niagara before the surrender of whom 2 soon died 6 955 Americans were initially captured by the British including 120 severely wounded officers and men This was more than the hospital at Niagara could accommodate so some of them had to be cared for in the court house or in nearby churches These were only the men who were badly injured enough to require hospitalization the numbers of the walking wounded who were seen by the British surgeons and then kept with the other prisoners have not been recorded Of the severely wounded prisoners 30 soon died 7 so by the time a full report on the prisoners was issued on 15 October there were 19 officers and 417 enlisted men of the U S regulars and 54 officers and 435 other ranks of the New York Militia 8 The 80 surviving wounded in the American hospital and the 90 surviving wounded prisoners were presumably the basis for General Van Rensselaer s statement in a letter to Dearborn on 20 October that the aggregate of his information would indicate that 170 Americans had been wounded in the battle 4 This gives total American casualties of 60 100 killed 80 wounded 90 wounded prisoners and 835 other prisoners 6 officers 4 regular and 2 militia were among the killed 11 officers 6 regular and 5 militia were among the wounded who escaped capture and 8 officers 4 regular and 4 militia were among the wounded prisoners Those captured included Brigadier General William Wadsworth of the New York Militia Lieutenant Colonel Scott and four other lieutenant colonels 54 A 6 pounder gun and the colours of a New York Militia regiment were also captured Aftermath editSheaffe immediately proposed a temporary truce and invited Van Rensselaer to send surgeons to assist in treating the wounded Having assented General Van Rensselaer resigned immediately after the battle and was succeeded as senior officer on the Niagara by Alexander Smyth the officer whose insolence had badly injured the invasion attempt Smyth still had his regulars at Buffalo but refused to launch an attack until he had 3 000 men under his command He launched a successful raid to prepare the ground for a full scale invasion at the Battle of Frenchman s Creek but then bungled two attempts to cross the river near Fort Erie and drew the loathing of his soldiers Universally castigated for his refusal to attack and with rumours of mutiny in the air Smyth slipped away to his home in Virginia rather than remain at his post nbsp Brigadier General Alexander Smyth the officer who refused to support Van Rensselaer s attack succeeded him as the senior American officer on the Niagara after the latter s resignation At Albany the defeat of Van Rensselaer only increased Henry Dearborn s reluctance to act With two armies already defeated Dearborn was not keen on leading the third He led a half hearted advance as far as Odelltown where his militia refused to proceed further After his regulars were easily repulsed by the garrison of an outpost at Lacolle Mills Dearborn retired to American territory He would be replaced the following year with only minor successes to his credit The question of who was to blame for the defeat was one that was never resolved Stephen Van Rensselaer s popularity remained high enough that he was able to make an unsuccessful attempt to unseat Daniel Tompkins as Governor of New York and he later served in the United States House of Representatives General John Armstrong Jr the Secretary of War for much of the war pinned the blame on General Van Rensselaer in his Notices of the War of 1812 published after the war This provoked an indignant response from Solomon Van Rensselaer who compared Armstrong to Benedict Arnold and laid the blame squarely on Lieutenant Colonel Chrystie who had died of natural causes in July 1813 who he accused of cowardice and said to his failure may mainly be attributed all our disasters 27 The loss of Major General Brock was nevertheless a major blow to the British Brock had inspired his own troops and the militia and civilian authorities in Upper Canada by his blustering confidence and activity Sheaffe his successor received a baronetcy for his part in the victory but could not command the same respect He was already known to many of the troops in Upper Canada as a harsh disciplinarian His success where Brock had rashly sacrificed himself could not help him escape censure for not having followed up the victory at Queenston Heights with an attack on Fort Niagara which had been left virtually evacuated by its garrison after a bombardment from British batteries that afternoon 55 The following April he was defeated by a numerically superior American force at the Battle of York Although his decision to retreat with his few regulars was accepted by his superiors and his American opponents to be correct in military terms it left the local militia the Assembly of Upper Canada and the population of York feeling abandoned and aggrieved He was relieved of his appointments in Upper Canada Legacy edit nbsp A 56 metres 184 ft column known as Brock s Monument was constructed atop Queenston Heights to commemorate the battle as well as Major General Isaac Brock A 56 metre 185 ft column atop Queenston Heights in Queenston Ontario Canada known as Brock s Monument commemorates the battle as well as the memory of the British General who died there The song MacDonell on the Heights by Stan Rogers commemorates the role of John MacDonell in the battle The Battle Honour Queenstown sic was awarded to two British regiments in the aftermath of the war the 41st Regiment of Foot and 49th Regiment of Foot whose successor units in the modern British Army are the Royal Welsh and the Rifles Regiments In the Canadian Army the Lincoln and Welland Regiment the 56th Field Artillery Regiment RCA the Queen s York Rangers the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry and the Lorne Scots perpetuate the history and heritage of Canadian militia units that took part in the battle These regiments also carry the QUEENSTON Battle Honour The Ontario Highway 405 that connects the Lewiston Queenston Bridge to the Queen Elizabeth Way is named the General Brock Parkway Many songs have been written about the battle In 1959 as an answer to The Battle of New Orleans then a hit record by Johnny Horton Toronto radio station CHUM recorded The Battle of Queenston Heights with DJ Mike Darow on lead vocals 56 Credited to Mike Darow and the CHUMS the number became a regional hit in its own right reaching 17 on CHUM s own chart 57 Multiple streets avenues roads and a university in Ontario are named after Major General Brock as is the city of Brockville in the province Notes edit Brian Jenkins 14 March 1996 Henry Goulburn 1784 1856 A Political Biography McGill Queen s Press MQUP p 76 ISBN 978 0 7735 1371 6 a b Hitsman p 92 a b Malcomson A Very Brilliant Affair p 297 a b c Cruikshank Documentary History p 143 a b Cruikshank Documentary History p 92 a b Cruikshank Documentary History p 121 a b Cruikshank in Zaslow p 44 a b Cruikshank Documentary History p 74 Elting p 19 Cruikshank in Zaslow p 24 Hitsman p 83 Hitsman p 87 Hitsman p 86 a b Cruikshank in Zaslow p 26 a b c Cruikshank in Zaslow p 28 Malcomson A Very Brilliant Affair p 118 Malcomson A Very Brilliant Affair p 120 Van Rensselaer pp 21 22 Malcomson Lords of the Lake p 66 Elting p 41 a b Malcomson A Very Brilliant Affair p 136 Cruikshank in Lundy s Lane Historical Society p 8 a b c d Cruikshank in Zaslow p 30 Cruikshank in Zaslow p 27 a b Robinson C W 1904 Life of Sir John Beverley Robinson Bart Chief Justice of Upper Canada p 34 Retrieved 19 March 2017 a b Berton 1980 pp 233 234 a b Van Rensselaer p 28 Berton 1980 p 235 a b Cruikshank in Zaslow p 33 Elting p 45 Malcomson A Very Brilliant Affair p 141 Malcomson A Very Brilliant Affair p 142 Hitsman p 95 Cruikshank states Dennis had ordered the light company down by bugle call before Brock s arrival a b c Hitsman p 96 a b Cruikshank in Lundy s Lane Historical Society p 9 a b Nursey The Story of Isaac Brock General Sir Isaac Brock K B Hero Defender and Saviour of Upper Canada 1812 p 177 Cruikshank in Zaslow p 36 Battle re enactment Brock funeral parade weekend highlights niagaraadvance ca 3 October 2012 Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 6 November 2012 Malcomson A Very Brilliant Affair p 154 Malcomson A Very Brilliant Affair p 155 Cruikshank in Lundy s Lane Historical Society p 10 Cruikshank in Zaslow p 38 a b Elting p 46 a b Hitsman p 98 Cruikshank in Zaslow pp 39 40 Cruikshank in Zaslow p 40 Cruikshank in Zaslow p 42 Elting p 47 New York Herald 4 Nov 1812 front page a b c Elting p 48 Cruikshank in Zaslow p 43 Cruikshank Documentary History p 73 Quimby p 73 Cruikshank Documentary History pp 76 166 Cruikshank in Lundy s Lane Historical Society p 13 The Battle of Queenston Heights on YouTube CHUM Hit Parade July 27 1959 References editBerton Pierre 1980 The Invasion of Canada 1812 1813 Toronto McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 0 7710 1235 7 Borneman Walter R Borneman 2004 1812 The War That Forged a Nation New York Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 06 053112 6 Cruikshank Ernest A 1971 The Documentary History of the Campaign upon the Niagara Frontier Part IV New York Arno Press Inc ISBN 0 405 02838 5 Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 6 February 2011 Cruikshank Ernest A 1964 The Battle of Queenston Heights In Zaslow Morris ed The Defended Border Toronto Macmillan of Canada ISBN 0 7705 1242 9 Cruikshank Ernest A The Battle of Queenston Heights An abridgement by permission of the publishers the Lundy s Lane Historical Society of the monograph by E A Cruikshank Elting John R 1995 Amateurs to Arms A Military History of the War of 1812 New York Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 80653 3 Hitsman J Mackay Donald E Graves 1999 The Incredible War of 1812 Toronto Robin Brass Studio ISBN 1 896941 13 3 Latimer Jon 2007 1812 War with America Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 02584 4 Malcomson Robert 2003 A Very Brilliant Affair The Battle of Queenston Heights 1812 Toronto Robin Brass Studio ISBN 1 896941 33 8 Malcomson Robert 1998 Lords of the Lake The Naval War of Lake Ontario 1812 14 Toronto Robin Brass Studio ISBN 978 1 896941 08 0 Quimby Robert S 1997 The U S Army in the War of 1812 An Operational and Command Study East Lansing MI Michigan State University Press ISBN 0 87013 441 8 Nursey Walter R 1923 The Story of Isaac Brock General Sir Isaac Brock K B Hero Defender and Saviour of Upper Canada 1812 Toronto McClelland and Stewart Van Rensselaer Solomon 1836 A Narrative of the Affair of Queenstown in the War of 1812 New York Leavitt Lord amp Co ISBN 0 665 21524 X Zaslow Morris 1964 The Defended Border Upper Canada and the War of 1812 Toronto The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited ISBN 0 7705 1242 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Queenston Heights Van Rensselaer s explanation to Gen Dearborn as to why the Americans lost the Battle of Queenston An Historic Account of the Battle of Queenston Heights Brock s Monument Summary of the battle information about the battlefield and tours Battle summary map photos of area Downloadable summary of Battle from Historic Lewiston NY Art works in the collection of the Niagara Falls Public Library Poems of the Battle of Queenston Heights from the Niagara Falls Poetry Project PBS Documentary includes a chapter on this battle Archived 2 October 2011 at the Wayback MachinePortals nbsp History nbsp Canada Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Queenston Heights amp oldid 1179931003, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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