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Battle of the Thames

Battle of the Thames
Part of Tecumseh's War and the War of 1812

An artist's depiction of the battle and the death of Tecumseh
DateOctober 5, 1813
Location42°33′45″N 81°55′53″W / 42.56250°N 81.93139°W / 42.56250; -81.93139
Result

American victory[1][2]

  • Death of Tecumseh
  • Disintegration of Tecumseh's Confederacy
Belligerents
Tecumseh's confederacy
 Britain
 United States
Commanders and leaders
Tecumseh 
Henry Procter
William Henry Harrison
Strength

1,100[3]–1,800:[1]

  • Indigenous:
500[3]–1,000[1]
  • British:
600[1]–800[3] regulars

3,760+:

  • 2,381 militia
  • 1,000 volunteer mounted troops
  • 120 regulars
  • 260 Indigenous[3]
  • Unknown number of US Navy forces in Lake Erie[1]
Casualties and losses
Indigenous:
16–33 killed[4][5]
Unknown wounded and captured
British:
12–18 killed
22–35 wounded prisoners
566–579 captured[6][7]
10–27 killed
17–57 wounded[8][9]
class=notpageimage|
Location within Ontario
Battle of the Thames (Great Lakes)

The Battle of the Thames /ˈtɛmz/, also known as the Battle of Moraviantown, was an American victory in the War of 1812 against Tecumseh's Confederacy and their British allies. It took place on October 5, 1813, in Upper Canada, near Chatham. The British lost control of Southwestern Ontario as a result of the battle; Tecumseh was killed, and his confederacy largely fell apart.

British troops under Major General Henry Procter had occupied Detroit until the United States Navy gained control of Lake Erie, cutting them off from their supplies. Procter was forced to retreat north up the Thames River to Moraviantown, followed by the tribal confederacy under Shawnee leader Tecumseh who were his allies.

American infantry and cavalry under Major General William Henry Harrison drove off the British and then defeated the Indigenous peoples, who were demoralized by the death of Tecumseh in action. American control was re-established in the Detroit area, the tribal confederacy collapsed, and Procter was court-martialed for his poor leadership.

Background edit

 
Maj. Gen. William Henry Harrison led American soldiers in pursuit of the retreating British.

The American Army of the Northwest under Major General William Henry Harrison was attempting to recover Fort Detroit and capture Fort Malden at Amherstburg, Ontario during the last months of 1812 and for much of 1813 from the Right Division of the British Army in Upper Canada, which was commanded by Major General Henry Procter. The British position depended on maintaining command of Lake Erie, as the sparsely populated region produced insufficient crops and cattle to feed Procter's troops, the sailors of the British ships on the lake, and the large number of Indians and their families gathered at Amherstburg under Tecumseh.

Supplies could effectively be brought to them only by water,[10] usually from Long Point near the eastern end of Lake Erie. If naval command of Lake Erie passed to the Americans, they would be able to land an army on the north shore, cutting off Procter from reinforcement from the east.

British armed vessels had maintained control of the lake from the start of the war to the end of July 1813. The United States Navy was constructing its own squadron at Presque Isle Bay commanded by Master Commandant Oliver Hazard Perry. During July, the British under Commander Robert Heriot Barclay kept the Americans pinned down in Presque Isle, but they had to lift the blockade for two days in order to receive supplies.

Perry was able to move his ships across the sandbar at the entrance to the harbor and into the lake, and Barclay failed to attack them. Perry's superior squadron instituted a counter-blockade of Amherstburg as soon as his vessels were armed and manned, and supplies of food rapidly ran short.

With supplies almost exhausted, Barclay put out to seek battle with Perry on September 10, but Perry gained a complete victory in the Battle of Lake Erie. Perry hastily wrote a note to General Harrison stating: "We have met the enemy and they are ours". Harrison knew that Procter would be forced to retreat, so he ordered an advance. One thousand mounted troops began advancing along the lake shore to Detroit, and 2,500 foot soldiers were carried there and to Amherstburg by Perry's ships once they had repaired any damage received during the battle.

Procter's retreat edit

Procter had made preparations to fall back to the British position at Burlington Heights at the western end of Lake Ontario even before he received news of Barclay's defeat, and Tecumseh knew that this would remove all protection from the confederation tribes whose lands lay to the west of Detroit. He attempted to dissuade Procter:

Our fleet has gone out, we know they have fought; we have heard the great guns but know nothing of what has happened to our Father with one Arm [Barclay had lost an arm in 1809]. Our ships have gone one way, and we are much astonished to see our Father [Proctor] tying up everything and preparing to run the other, without letting his red children know what his intentions are.... We must compare our Father's conduct to a fat animal that carries its tail upon its back; but when affrighted, it drops it between its legs and runs off.[11]

Nevertheless, Procter could not defend Fort Amherstburg, as there was no food and the guns had been removed from the fort to be mounted on Barclay's ships. He began to retreat up the Thames River on September 27. Tecumseh had no option but to go with him. Procter apparently agreed to a compromise to retreat only as far as Moraviantown, a settlement of Lenape Indians who had migrated from the United States. This was the highest navigable point of the river, so it was safe from outflanking moves by water. Also, some supplies could be brought there overland from Burlington Heights, although the roads were very poor. However, Procter made no attempt to fortify this position.

The British retreat was badly managed, and the soldiers had been reduced to half rations. Procter allegedly left the main body of his army under command of Colonel Augustus Warburton of the 41st Regiment, without orders, while he led the retreat accompanied by his wife and family, the other women and dependents, and his personal baggage.[12] The British soldiers were becoming increasingly demoralized, and Tecumseh's warriors grew ever more impatient with Procter for his unwillingness to stop and fight.

The Americans left a brigade under Duncan McArthur to garrison Detroit and another under Lewis Cass to garrison Sandwich, Ontario. Harrison led the main body from Sandwich in pursuit of Procter on October 2. As they advanced, Harrison's men captured several abandoned boats and a steady stream of British stragglers. They caught up with the retreating British and Indians late on October 4. Tecumseh skirmished with the Americans near Chatham, Ontario to slow their advance, but the Indians were quickly overwhelmed. The boats carrying Warburton's reserve ammunition and the last of the food ran aground and were left behind to be captured by an American raiding party.

Forces edit

 
A diagram by Bennett H. Young of the forces arrayed in the battle

William Henry Harrison's force numbered at least 3,500 infantry and cavalry. He had a small detachment of regulars from the 27th U.S. Infantry and five brigades of Kentucky militia led by Isaac Shelby, the 63 year-old governor of Kentucky and a hero of the American Revolutionary War. He had 1,000 volunteer cavalry under Colonel Richard Mentor Johnson. Most of Johnson's men were from Kentucky, but some were from the River Raisin area of Michigan, all of them spurred on by the slogan "Remember the River Raisin."

Procter had about 800 soldiers, mainly from the 41st Regiment. The veterans of the regiment's 1st Battalion had been serving in Canada since 1803 and had suffered heavy casualties in several engagements in 1813, including the Battle of Lake Erie, where more than 150 of its men had served aboard Barclay's ships. They had been reinforced by the young soldiers of the 2nd Battalion. Most of the regiment's officers were dissatisfied with Procter's leadership, but Colonel Warburton, the next in seniority, refused to countenance any move to remove him from command. Tecumseh led about 500 Indians.

Battle edit

 
An engraving that depicts American mounted riflemen charging at British artillerists and native warriors.

Procter ordered his troops to abandon their half-cooked breakfast and retreat a further two miles shortly after daybreak on October 5, then formed them into line of battle with a single 6-pounder cannon. He planned to trap Harrison on the banks of the Thames, driving the Americans off the road with cannon fire, but he had made no attempt to fortify the position by creating abatis or throwing up earthworks, and the ground presented no obstacle to the American horsemen, while scattered trees masked the British fire. Tecumseh's men formed a line in a black ash swamp on the British right to flank the Americans. Tecumseh rode along the British line, shaking hands with each officer before rejoining his warriors.[13]

General Harrison surveyed the battlefield and ordered James Johnson (brother of Col. Johnson) to make a frontal attack on the British regulars with his mounted riflemen. Despite the Indians' flanking fire, Johnson's Kentuckians broke through, the British cannon not having fired. The exhausted, dispirited, and half-starved British regulars fired a single ragged fusillade before retreating in disorder.

Procter and about 250 of his men fled from the battlefield, while the rest of his soldiers threw down their weapons and surrendered. Most of the British soldiers, including Lieutenant Richard Bullock's[nb 1] grenadier company, who escaped the battlefield were on the right of the British line, where the ground was marshy and more thickly wooded.[14]

 
A depiction of Col Richard Mentor Johnson shooting Tecumseh during the battle

Tecumseh and his followers remained and carried on fighting. Col. Johnson charged into the Indian position at the head of about 20 horsemen to draw attention away from the main American force, but Tecumseh and his men answered with a volley of musket fire that stopped the cavalry charge. Fifteen of Johnson's men were killed or wounded, Johnson himself was hit five times, and his main force became bogged down in the swamp mud. Tecumseh is believed to have been killed during this fighting.[15]

The main force made its way through the swamp, and James Johnson's troops were freed from their attack on the British. The American reinforcements were converging as news spread of the death of Tecumseh, and Indian resistance dissolved. Richard Mentor Johnson was credited with shooting Tecumseh,[16] though the evidence is unclear. William Whitley, a Revolutionary War veteran, is also credited with killing him. Lawyer and one-armed marksman James A Drain Sr., in his autobiography Single Handed (1927), wrote of hearing from Whitley's granddaughter the family tradition that Whitley and Tecumseh killed each other simultaneously.

Casualties edit

 
"Remember the River Raisin". Artist Ken Riley's depiction of Kentucky Mounted Rifles charging the British line at the Battle of the Thames

Harrison reported that the British regulars had 72 killed and 22 wounded prisoners. Lieutenant Richard Bullock of the 41st Regiment, however, said that there were 12 killed and 36 wounded prisoners. More than a year after the battle, British Colonel Augustus Warburton and Lieutenant Colonel William Evans both reported that 18 were killed and 25 wounded.[6] Harrison reported 601 British troops captured, a figure that included the prisoners taken during the retreat leading up to the battle and stragglers captured after it.[7]

The Indians recorded their own casualties as 16 killed, including Tecumseh,[4] although Harrison claimed that 33 dead Indians were found in the woods after the battle.[5] General Procter wrote in a letter dated October 23, 1813, "The Indian cause and ours experienced a serious loss in the death of Round Head." American soldiers scalped and skinned some of the dead Indians in order to acquire souvenirs.[17]

There are conflicting versions of the American loss in the battle. Harrison stated that 7 were killed outright, 5 died of wounds, and 17 more were wounded. Major General Isaac Shelby said that 7 or 8 were killed outright, 4 died of their wounds, and about 20 more were wounded. Participant Robert McAfee gave 10 killed and 35 wounded, while Peter Trisler Jr. said that there were 14 killed and 20 wounded.[8]

Historian Samuel R. Brown states that there were 25 killed or fatally injured and 50 wounded in Johnson's regiment, and 2 killed and 6–7 wounded in the infantry, for a total of 27 killed and 56 or 57 wounded.[9] Harrison informed Secretary of War John Armstrong Jr. that the only casualties inflicted by the British were three men wounded; all of the rest were caused by the Indians.[6]

Aftermath edit

 
The death of Tecumseh during the battle was a crushing blow for the native Confederacy he created.

The enlistments were about to expire for the militia component of Harrison's army, so the Americans retired to Detroit.

The American victory led to re-established American control over the Northwest frontier, and the Detroit area remained comparatively quiet for the rest of the war, apart from skirmishes such as the Battle of Longwoods and an American mounted raid near the end of 1814 which resulted in the Battle of Malcolm's Mills. American victory at the Thames failed to translate into recapture of Illinois, Wisconsin, and other Midwestern territories, which the British and Indians held until the war's end; efforts also failed to regain control of the Old Northwest and of fur trade routes after the British victory at the subsequent Engagements on Lake Huron.

The death of Tecumseh was a crushing blow to the Indian alliance which he created, and it dissolved following the battle. Harrison signed an armistice at Detroit with the chiefs or representatives of several tribes,[18] although others fought on until the end of the war and beyond. He then transferred most of his regulars east to the Niagara River and went himself to Washington where he was acclaimed a hero. However, a comparatively petty dispute with President James Madison and John Armstrong resulted in him resigning his commission as major general.[19] Harrison's popularity grew, and he was eventually elected president. Richard Mentor Johnson eventually became vice president to President Martin Van Buren, based partly on the belief that he had personally killed Tecumseh.

A few days after the battle, Procter rallied 246 men of the 41st Regiment at the Grand River,[18] reinforced by some young soldiers of the 2nd battalion who had not been present at the battle. The two battalions were reorganized and merged, as the regiment was severely understrength at this point, and the survivors of the 1st Battalion were placed in the grenadier and light infantry companies.[20] The soldiers of the 41st who were taken prisoner at Moraviantown and the Battle of Lake Erie were exchanged or released towards the end of 1814. They had been held in encampments near Sandusky, Ohio, and had suffered severely from sickness during their captivity.

In May 1814, Procter was charged with negligence and improper conduct, though a court martial could not be held until December, when campaigning had ceased for the winter and a senior board of officers could be assembled. They judged that Procter had managed the retreat badly, failing to secure his stores, and also disposed the troops ineffectively at Moraviantown. He was sentenced to be suspended from rank and pay for six months.[21]

Legacy edit

Three modern battalions[which?] of the United States Army perpetuate the lineage of the old 27th Infantry Regiment, elements of which were at the Battle of the Thames.

Order of battle edit

The following units and commanders of the American, British, and Native American armed forces Battle of the Thames:

Abbreviations used

American Forces edit

Army of the Northwest: MG William Henry Harrison

General Staff

Unit Regiments and Other
U.S. Regular Army
Kentucky Mounted Riflemen


    Col Richard Mentor Johnson (w)

  • 1st Battalion: Ltc James Johnson
  • 2nd Battalion: Col Richard Mentor Johnson

Kentucky Militia edit

Governor Isaac Shelby[22]

General Staff

Division Brigade Regiments and Others

1st Division
     BG William Henry

First Brigade


   Col George Trotter[23]

  • 1st Infantry Regiment: Maj Richard Gang
  • 2nd Infantry Regiment: Col John Donaldson
Second Brigade


   BG David Chiles

  • 3rd Infantry Regiment: Col John Pogue
  • 4th Infantry Regiment: Col William Montjoy
Fourth Brigade


   BG John E. King

  • 5th Infantry Regiment: Col Henry Renick
  • 7th Infantry Regiment: Col Micah Taul

Second Division
     BG Joseph Desha

Fourth Brigade


   BG James Allen

  • 6th Infantry Regiment: Col Richard Davenport
  • 8th Infantry Regiment: Col John Calloway
Fifth Brigade


   BG Samuel Caldwell

  • 9th Infantry Regiment: Col John Simrall
  • 10th Infantry Regiment: Col Philip Barbour
Unattached


  • 11th Infantry Regiment: Col William Williams

British and Native forces edit

Major General Henry Procter

British edit

Tecumseh's confederacy edit

Tecumseh

Notes edit

  1. ^ At the time, there were two officers named Richard Bullock, possibly father and son, in the 41st Regiment. Lieutenant Richard Bullock commanded the grenadier company of the 1/41st at the Thames; Captain Richard Bullock was commandant of Mackinac Island at the time.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Battle of the Thames | War of 1812".
  2. ^ Battle of Moraviantown
  3. ^ a b c d Sugden (1997), pp. 368–72
  4. ^ a b Sugden, p. 133
  5. ^ a b Gilpin, p. 226
  6. ^ a b c Sugden, p. 127
  7. ^ a b Antal, p. 347
  8. ^ a b Sugden, p. 249
  9. ^ a b Sugden, p. 250, citing Samuel R. rown's, 'Views of the Campaigns of the North-western Army", W.G. Murphey, Philadelphia, 1815 (first published, 1814), p. 73
  10. ^ Forester, p. 142
  11. ^ Hitsman, p. 339
  12. ^ Katherine B. Coutts, Thamesville and the Battle of the Thames, in Zaslow, p. 116
  13. ^ Katherine B. Coutts, Thamesville and the Battle of the Thames, in Zaslow, p. 117
  14. ^ Victor Lauriston, Thamesville and the Battle of the Thames, in Zaslow, p. 128
  15. ^ Elting (1995), p. 113
  16. ^ Elting (1995), p. 113
  17. ^ John Sugden, Tecumseh's Last Stand (Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, 1985), 136–180
  18. ^ a b Hitsman, p. 176
  19. ^ Elting, p. 114
  20. ^ The 41st Regiment and the War of 1812, by Jim Yaworsky
  21. ^ Hitsman, p. 344 en
  22. ^ Organization of the Kentucky Militia forces (Young pp. 38–43)
  23. ^ The First brigade was assigned to BG Marquis Calmes who was absent at the time of the battle. Col Trotter commanded in his place.

Sources edit

  • Antal, Sandy (1997). A Wampum Denied: Proctor's War of 1812. Carleton University Press. ISBN 0-87013-443-4.
  • Carter-Edwards, Dennis. "The War of 1812 Along the Detroit Frontier: A Canadian Perspective", in The Michigan Historical Review, 13:2 (Fall 1987), pp. 25–50.
  • Cleaves, Freeman. Old Tippecanoe: William Henry Harrison and His Time. New York: Scribner, 1939. ISBN 0-945707-01-0 (1990 reissue).
  • Edmunds, R. David. "Forgotten Allies: The Loyal Shawnees and the War of 1812" in David Curtis Skaggs and Larry L. Nelson, eds., The Sixty Years' War for the Great Lakes, 1754–1814, pp. 337–351. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-87013-569-4.
  • Elting, John R. Amateurs, To Arms! A Military History of the War of 1812. Chapel Hill, NC: Algonquin, 1991. ISBN 0-945575-08-4 (hardcover); ISBN 0-306-80653-3 (1995 Da Capo Press paperback).
  • Forester, C.S. The Age of Fighting Sail, New English Library, ISBN 0-939218-06-2
  • Gilpin, Alec R. (1968) [1958]. The War of 1812 in the Old Northwest (reprint ed.). East Lansing, MI: The Michigan State University Press.
  • Hitsman, J. Mackay and Graves, Donald. The Incredible War of 1812, Robin Brass Studios, Toronto, 1999. ISBN 1-896941-13-3
  • Latimer, Jon. 1812: War with America. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 2007. ISBN 0-674-02584-9
  • Sugden, John. Tecumseh's Last Stand. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, 1985. ISBN 0-8061-1944-6.
  • Sugden, John. Tecumseh: A Life. New York: Holt, 1997. ISBN 0-8050-4138-9 (hardcover); ISBN 0-8050-6121-5 (1999 paperback).
  • Zaslow, Morris (ed) The Defended Border, Macmillan of Canada, 1964, ISBN 0-7705-1242-9 BOBBY

battle, thames, part, tecumseh, 1812an, artist, depiction, battle, death, tecumsehdateoctober, 1813locationnear, moravian, thames, first, nation, chatham, kent, ontario42, 56250, 93139, 56250, 93139resultamerican, victory, death, tecumseh, disintegration, tecu. Battle of the ThamesPart of Tecumseh s War and the War of 1812An artist s depiction of the battle and the death of TecumsehDateOctober 5 1813LocationNear Moravian of the Thames First Nation in Chatham Kent Ontario42 33 45 N 81 55 53 W 42 56250 N 81 93139 W 42 56250 81 93139ResultAmerican victory 1 2 Death of Tecumseh Disintegration of Tecumseh s ConfederacyBelligerentsTecumseh s confederacy Britain United StatesCommanders and leadersTecumseh Henry ProcterWilliam Henry HarrisonStrength1 100 3 1 800 1 Indigenous 500 3 1 000 1 British 600 1 800 3 regulars3 760 2 381 militia 1 000 volunteer mounted troops 120 regulars 260 Indigenous 3 Unknown number of US Navy forces in Lake Erie 1 Casualties and lossesIndigenous 16 33 killed 4 5 Unknown wounded and capturedBritish 12 18 killed22 35 wounded prisoners566 579 captured 6 7 10 27 killed17 57 wounded 8 9 class notpageimage Location within OntarioShow map of OntarioBattle of the Thames Great Lakes Show map of Great Lakes The Battle of the Thames ˈ t ɛ m z also known as the Battle of Moraviantown was an American victory in the War of 1812 against Tecumseh s Confederacy and their British allies It took place on October 5 1813 in Upper Canada near Chatham The British lost control of Southwestern Ontario as a result of the battle Tecumseh was killed and his confederacy largely fell apart British troops under Major General Henry Procter had occupied Detroit until the United States Navy gained control of Lake Erie cutting them off from their supplies Procter was forced to retreat north up the Thames River to Moraviantown followed by the tribal confederacy under Shawnee leader Tecumseh who were his allies American infantry and cavalry under Major General William Henry Harrison drove off the British and then defeated the Indigenous peoples who were demoralized by the death of Tecumseh in action American control was re established in the Detroit area the tribal confederacy collapsed and Procter was court martialed for his poor leadership Contents 1 Background 1 1 Procter s retreat 2 Forces 3 Battle 4 Casualties 5 Aftermath 6 Legacy 7 Order of battle 7 1 American Forces 7 1 1 Kentucky Militia 7 2 British and Native forces 7 2 1 British 7 2 2 Tecumseh s confederacy 8 Notes 9 References 10 SourcesBackground edit nbsp Maj Gen William Henry Harrison led American soldiers in pursuit of the retreating British The American Army of the Northwest under Major General William Henry Harrison was attempting to recover Fort Detroit and capture Fort Malden at Amherstburg Ontario during the last months of 1812 and for much of 1813 from the Right Division of the British Army in Upper Canada which was commanded by Major General Henry Procter The British position depended on maintaining command of Lake Erie as the sparsely populated region produced insufficient crops and cattle to feed Procter s troops the sailors of the British ships on the lake and the large number of Indians and their families gathered at Amherstburg under Tecumseh Supplies could effectively be brought to them only by water 10 usually from Long Point near the eastern end of Lake Erie If naval command of Lake Erie passed to the Americans they would be able to land an army on the north shore cutting off Procter from reinforcement from the east British armed vessels had maintained control of the lake from the start of the war to the end of July 1813 The United States Navy was constructing its own squadron at Presque Isle Bay commanded by Master Commandant Oliver Hazard Perry During July the British under Commander Robert Heriot Barclay kept the Americans pinned down in Presque Isle but they had to lift the blockade for two days in order to receive supplies Perry was able to move his ships across the sandbar at the entrance to the harbor and into the lake and Barclay failed to attack them Perry s superior squadron instituted a counter blockade of Amherstburg as soon as his vessels were armed and manned and supplies of food rapidly ran short With supplies almost exhausted Barclay put out to seek battle with Perry on September 10 but Perry gained a complete victory in the Battle of Lake Erie Perry hastily wrote a note to General Harrison stating We have met the enemy and they are ours Harrison knew that Procter would be forced to retreat so he ordered an advance One thousand mounted troops began advancing along the lake shore to Detroit and 2 500 foot soldiers were carried there and to Amherstburg by Perry s ships once they had repaired any damage received during the battle Procter s retreat edit Procter had made preparations to fall back to the British position at Burlington Heights at the western end of Lake Ontario even before he received news of Barclay s defeat and Tecumseh knew that this would remove all protection from the confederation tribes whose lands lay to the west of Detroit He attempted to dissuade Procter Our fleet has gone out we know they have fought we have heard the great guns but know nothing of what has happened to our Father with one Arm Barclay had lost an arm in 1809 Our ships have gone one way and we are much astonished to see our Father Proctor tying up everything and preparing to run the other without letting his red children know what his intentions are We must compare our Father s conduct to a fat animal that carries its tail upon its back but when affrighted it drops it between its legs and runs off 11 Nevertheless Procter could not defend Fort Amherstburg as there was no food and the guns had been removed from the fort to be mounted on Barclay s ships He began to retreat up the Thames River on September 27 Tecumseh had no option but to go with him Procter apparently agreed to a compromise to retreat only as far as Moraviantown a settlement of Lenape Indians who had migrated from the United States This was the highest navigable point of the river so it was safe from outflanking moves by water Also some supplies could be brought there overland from Burlington Heights although the roads were very poor However Procter made no attempt to fortify this position The British retreat was badly managed and the soldiers had been reduced to half rations Procter allegedly left the main body of his army under command of Colonel Augustus Warburton of the 41st Regiment without orders while he led the retreat accompanied by his wife and family the other women and dependents and his personal baggage 12 The British soldiers were becoming increasingly demoralized and Tecumseh s warriors grew ever more impatient with Procter for his unwillingness to stop and fight The Americans left a brigade under Duncan McArthur to garrison Detroit and another under Lewis Cass to garrison Sandwich Ontario Harrison led the main body from Sandwich in pursuit of Procter on October 2 As they advanced Harrison s men captured several abandoned boats and a steady stream of British stragglers They caught up with the retreating British and Indians late on October 4 Tecumseh skirmished with the Americans near Chatham Ontario to slow their advance but the Indians were quickly overwhelmed The boats carrying Warburton s reserve ammunition and the last of the food ran aground and were left behind to be captured by an American raiding party Forces edit nbsp A diagram by Bennett H Young of the forces arrayed in the battleWilliam Henry Harrison s force numbered at least 3 500 infantry and cavalry He had a small detachment of regulars from the 27th U S Infantry and five brigades of Kentucky militia led by Isaac Shelby the 63 year old governor of Kentucky and a hero of the American Revolutionary War He had 1 000 volunteer cavalry under Colonel Richard Mentor Johnson Most of Johnson s men were from Kentucky but some were from the River Raisin area of Michigan all of them spurred on by the slogan Remember the River Raisin Procter had about 800 soldiers mainly from the 41st Regiment The veterans of the regiment s 1st Battalion had been serving in Canada since 1803 and had suffered heavy casualties in several engagements in 1813 including the Battle of Lake Erie where more than 150 of its men had served aboard Barclay s ships They had been reinforced by the young soldiers of the 2nd Battalion Most of the regiment s officers were dissatisfied with Procter s leadership but Colonel Warburton the next in seniority refused to countenance any move to remove him from command Tecumseh led about 500 Indians Battle edit nbsp An engraving that depicts American mounted riflemen charging at British artillerists and native warriors Procter ordered his troops to abandon their half cooked breakfast and retreat a further two miles shortly after daybreak on October 5 then formed them into line of battle with a single 6 pounder cannon He planned to trap Harrison on the banks of the Thames driving the Americans off the road with cannon fire but he had made no attempt to fortify the position by creating abatis or throwing up earthworks and the ground presented no obstacle to the American horsemen while scattered trees masked the British fire Tecumseh s men formed a line in a black ash swamp on the British right to flank the Americans Tecumseh rode along the British line shaking hands with each officer before rejoining his warriors 13 General Harrison surveyed the battlefield and ordered James Johnson brother of Col Johnson to make a frontal attack on the British regulars with his mounted riflemen Despite the Indians flanking fire Johnson s Kentuckians broke through the British cannon not having fired The exhausted dispirited and half starved British regulars fired a single ragged fusillade before retreating in disorder Procter and about 250 of his men fled from the battlefield while the rest of his soldiers threw down their weapons and surrendered Most of the British soldiers including Lieutenant Richard Bullock s nb 1 grenadier company who escaped the battlefield were on the right of the British line where the ground was marshy and more thickly wooded 14 nbsp A depiction of Col Richard Mentor Johnson shooting Tecumseh during the battleTecumseh and his followers remained and carried on fighting Col Johnson charged into the Indian position at the head of about 20 horsemen to draw attention away from the main American force but Tecumseh and his men answered with a volley of musket fire that stopped the cavalry charge Fifteen of Johnson s men were killed or wounded Johnson himself was hit five times and his main force became bogged down in the swamp mud Tecumseh is believed to have been killed during this fighting 15 The main force made its way through the swamp and James Johnson s troops were freed from their attack on the British The American reinforcements were converging as news spread of the death of Tecumseh and Indian resistance dissolved Richard Mentor Johnson was credited with shooting Tecumseh 16 though the evidence is unclear William Whitley a Revolutionary War veteran is also credited with killing him Lawyer and one armed marksman James A Drain Sr in his autobiography Single Handed 1927 wrote of hearing from Whitley s granddaughter the family tradition that Whitley and Tecumseh killed each other simultaneously Casualties edit nbsp Remember the River Raisin Artist Ken Riley s depiction of Kentucky Mounted Rifles charging the British line at the Battle of the ThamesHarrison reported that the British regulars had 72 killed and 22 wounded prisoners Lieutenant Richard Bullock of the 41st Regiment however said that there were 12 killed and 36 wounded prisoners More than a year after the battle British Colonel Augustus Warburton and Lieutenant Colonel William Evans both reported that 18 were killed and 25 wounded 6 Harrison reported 601 British troops captured a figure that included the prisoners taken during the retreat leading up to the battle and stragglers captured after it 7 The Indians recorded their own casualties as 16 killed including Tecumseh 4 although Harrison claimed that 33 dead Indians were found in the woods after the battle 5 General Procter wrote in a letter dated October 23 1813 The Indian cause and ours experienced a serious loss in the death of Round Head American soldiers scalped and skinned some of the dead Indians in order to acquire souvenirs 17 There are conflicting versions of the American loss in the battle Harrison stated that 7 were killed outright 5 died of wounds and 17 more were wounded Major General Isaac Shelby said that 7 or 8 were killed outright 4 died of their wounds and about 20 more were wounded Participant Robert McAfee gave 10 killed and 35 wounded while Peter Trisler Jr said that there were 14 killed and 20 wounded 8 Historian Samuel R Brown states that there were 25 killed or fatally injured and 50 wounded in Johnson s regiment and 2 killed and 6 7 wounded in the infantry for a total of 27 killed and 56 or 57 wounded 9 Harrison informed Secretary of War John Armstrong Jr that the only casualties inflicted by the British were three men wounded all of the rest were caused by the Indians 6 Aftermath edit nbsp The death of Tecumseh during the battle was a crushing blow for the native Confederacy he created The enlistments were about to expire for the militia component of Harrison s army so the Americans retired to Detroit The American victory led to re established American control over the Northwest frontier and the Detroit area remained comparatively quiet for the rest of the war apart from skirmishes such as the Battle of Longwoods and an American mounted raid near the end of 1814 which resulted in the Battle of Malcolm s Mills American victory at the Thames failed to translate into recapture of Illinois Wisconsin and other Midwestern territories which the British and Indians held until the war s end efforts also failed to regain control of the Old Northwest and of fur trade routes after the British victory at the subsequent Engagements on Lake Huron The death of Tecumseh was a crushing blow to the Indian alliance which he created and it dissolved following the battle Harrison signed an armistice at Detroit with the chiefs or representatives of several tribes 18 although others fought on until the end of the war and beyond He then transferred most of his regulars east to the Niagara River and went himself to Washington where he was acclaimed a hero However a comparatively petty dispute with President James Madison and John Armstrong resulted in him resigning his commission as major general 19 Harrison s popularity grew and he was eventually elected president Richard Mentor Johnson eventually became vice president to President Martin Van Buren based partly on the belief that he had personally killed Tecumseh A few days after the battle Procter rallied 246 men of the 41st Regiment at the Grand River 18 reinforced by some young soldiers of the 2nd battalion who had not been present at the battle The two battalions were reorganized and merged as the regiment was severely understrength at this point and the survivors of the 1st Battalion were placed in the grenadier and light infantry companies 20 The soldiers of the 41st who were taken prisoner at Moraviantown and the Battle of Lake Erie were exchanged or released towards the end of 1814 They had been held in encampments near Sandusky Ohio and had suffered severely from sickness during their captivity In May 1814 Procter was charged with negligence and improper conduct though a court martial could not be held until December when campaigning had ceased for the winter and a senior board of officers could be assembled They judged that Procter had managed the retreat badly failing to secure his stores and also disposed the troops ineffectively at Moraviantown He was sentenced to be suspended from rank and pay for six months 21 Legacy editThree modern battalions which of the United States Army perpetuate the lineage of the old 27th Infantry Regiment elements of which were at the Battle of the Thames Order of battle editThe following units and commanders of the American British and Native American armed forces Battle of the Thames Abbreviations usedMG Major General BG Brigadier General Col Colonel Ltc Lieutenant Colonel Maj Major Cpt Captain Lt 1st Lieutenant w wounded k killed m missing American Forces edit Army of the Northwest MG William Henry HarrisonGeneral Staff Inspector General Col George Walker Military Secretary Maj William T Barry Judge Advocate General Maj Thomas Barr Adjutant General Joseph McDowell Aide de Camp Oliver Hazard Perry Aide de Camp BG Lewis CassUnit Regiments and OtherU S Regular Army 27th U S Infantry Col George Paull 24th U S Infantry detachment Ltc Edmund Pendleton Gaines citation needed 2nd U S Artillery detachment Maj Eleazar WoodKentucky Mounted Riflemen Col Richard Mentor Johnson w 1st Battalion Ltc James Johnson 2nd Battalion Col Richard Mentor JohnsonKentucky Militia edit Governor Isaac Shelby 22 General Staff 1st Aide de Camp BG John Adair 2nd Aide de Camp Maj John J Crittenden Quartermaster General BG John PayneDivision Brigade Regiments and Others1st Division BG William Henry First Brigade Col George Trotter 23 1st Infantry Regiment Maj Richard Gang 2nd Infantry Regiment Col John DonaldsonSecond Brigade BG David Chiles 3rd Infantry Regiment Col John Pogue 4th Infantry Regiment Col William MontjoyFourth Brigade BG John E King 5th Infantry Regiment Col Henry Renick 7th Infantry Regiment Col Micah TaulSecond Division BG Joseph Desha Fourth Brigade BG James Allen 6th Infantry Regiment Col Richard Davenport 8th Infantry Regiment Col John CallowayFifth Brigade BG Samuel Caldwell 9th Infantry Regiment Col John Simrall 10th Infantry Regiment Col Philip BarbourUnattached 11th Infantry Regiment Col William WilliamsBritish and Native forces edit Major General Henry Procter British edit 41st Welsh Regiment of Foot Col Augustus Warburton Local militia composition unknown Tecumseh s confederacy edit Tecumseh Shawnee Tecumseh Odawa Naiwash Ojibwe OshawahnahNotes edit At the time there were two officers named Richard Bullock possibly father and son in the 41st Regiment Lieutenant Richard Bullock commanded the grenadier company of the 1 41st at the Thames Captain Richard Bullock was commandant of Mackinac Island at the time References edit a b c d e Battle of the Thames War of 1812 Battle of Moraviantown a b c d Sugden 1997 pp 368 72 a b Sugden p 133 a b Gilpin p 226 a b c Sugden p 127 a b Antal p 347 a b Sugden p 249 a b Sugden p 250 citing Samuel R rown s Views of the Campaigns of the North western Army W G Murphey Philadelphia 1815 first published 1814 p 73 Forester p 142 Hitsman p 339 Katherine B Coutts Thamesville and the Battle of the Thames in Zaslow p 116 Katherine B Coutts Thamesville and the Battle of the Thames in Zaslow p 117 Victor Lauriston Thamesville and the Battle of the Thames in Zaslow p 128 Elting 1995 p 113 Elting 1995 p 113 John Sugden Tecumseh s Last Stand Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press 1985 136 180 a b Hitsman p 176 Elting p 114 The 41st Regiment and the War of 1812 by Jim Yaworsky Hitsman p 344 en Organization of the Kentucky Militia forces Young pp 38 43 The First brigade was assigned to BG Marquis Calmes who was absent at the time of the battle Col Trotter commanded in his place Sources edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of the Thames Antal Sandy 1997 A Wampum Denied Proctor s War of 1812 Carleton University Press ISBN 0 87013 443 4 Carter Edwards Dennis The War of 1812 Along the Detroit Frontier A Canadian Perspective in The Michigan Historical Review 13 2 Fall 1987 pp 25 50 Cleaves Freeman Old Tippecanoe William Henry Harrison and His Time New York Scribner 1939 ISBN 0 945707 01 0 1990 reissue Edmunds R David Forgotten Allies The Loyal Shawnees and the War of 1812 in David Curtis Skaggs and Larry L Nelson eds The Sixty Years War for the Great Lakes 1754 1814 pp 337 351 East Lansing Michigan State University Press 2001 ISBN 0 87013 569 4 Elting John R Amateurs To Arms A Military History of the War of 1812 Chapel Hill NC Algonquin 1991 ISBN 0 945575 08 4 hardcover ISBN 0 306 80653 3 1995 Da Capo Press paperback Forester C S The Age of Fighting Sail New English Library ISBN 0 939218 06 2 Gilpin Alec R 1968 1958 The War of 1812 in the Old Northwest reprint ed East Lansing MI The Michigan State University Press Hitsman J Mackay and Graves Donald The Incredible War of 1812 Robin Brass Studios Toronto 1999 ISBN 1 896941 13 3 Latimer Jon 1812 War with America Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2007 ISBN 0 674 02584 9 Sugden John Tecumseh s Last Stand Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press 1985 ISBN 0 8061 1944 6 Sugden John Tecumseh A Life New York Holt 1997 ISBN 0 8050 4138 9 hardcover ISBN 0 8050 6121 5 1999 paperback Zaslow Morris ed The Defended Border Macmillan of Canada 1964 ISBN 0 7705 1242 9 BOBBYPortals nbsp History nbsp Canada Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of the Thames amp oldid 1205801734, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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