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La Balme's Defeat

La Balme's Defeat
Part of the American Revolutionary War

Historical marker commemorating the battle
Date5 November 1780
Location
Result Miami victory
Belligerents
Miami  France
Commanders and leaders
Little Turtle La Balme 
Strength
Unknown 104 irregulars
Casualties and losses
5 killed[1] 30-40 killed

LaBalme's Defeat was a military engagement which occurred on November 6, 1780, between a force of Canadien settlers under the command of French officer Augustin de La Balme and British-allied Miami warriors led by chief Little Turtle during the American Revolutionary War. La Balme had led the hastily recruited force of irregulars to attack British-held Fort Detroit, but was ambushed by a group of Miami warriors after sacking their town of Kekionga on the way. The victory led Little Turtle to become well known on the American frontier, a reputation which would develop during the Northwest Indian War.

Background edit

Former cavalry officer Augustin de La Balme arrived in the United States with a group of French volunteers that included the Marquis de Lafayette,[2] and was appointed as the Colonial Army's Inspector General of Cavalry in 1777.[3] This position was later given to Kazimierz Pułaski. LaBalme resigned in October 1777.[4] However, in 1780, he traveled down the Ohio River to Kaskaskia.[5] The success of General Clark's capture of Fort Sackville at Vincennes inspired La Balme to attempt a similar feat against the British at Fort Detroit. La Balme arrived in Kaskaskia as a French officer and was "greeted as Masiah" by the local Canadien residents,[6] who had been living under British rule for over a decade. He represented himself as a representative of Louis XVI of France[6] and gathered a list of grievances from residents living under the rule of the Virginians, which was to be delivered to the French Ambassador at Fort Pitt.[7] La Balme openly disdained Clark, whom he considered an uneducated woodsman.[2]

He coordinated a diversionary attack against Fort St. Joseph,[8] then began his journey to Detroit, recruiting militia from among the Canadian citizens of Kaskaskia, Cahokia, and Vincennes. At Vincennes, he started up the Wabash River with the expectation of adding to his force from the Canadian villages of Ouiatenon (present day West Lafayette, Indiana) and Kekionga (present day Fort Wayne). La Balme apparently expected Canadian residents at Fort Detroit to join him once they arrived. La Balme kept the French ambassador, Anne-César de La Luzerne, updated on his movements,[9] and the expedition marched under a French flag.[10] La Balme's mounted force moved so quickly that it had little opposition until reaching Kekionga,[2] where La Balme had planned to arrest Charles Beaubien, the British agent. Beaubien and many of the Miami were not there, however, so the force raised the French flag[11] and raided British stores for two weeks[2] while awaiting reinforcements that never arrived. Upon learning of the return of a Miami hunting party to Kekionga, Le Balme departed to raid another trading post on the Eel River. La Balme left twenty French soldiers to guard the captured stores at Kekionga and marched his force out over the Eel River trail (the same trail Colonel John Hardin would follow ten years later).[12]

Battle edit

 
Historical enactors commemorating the 225th anniversary of the battle on 5 November 2005

The Miami Indians, learning of the invasion, destroyed the small group of 20 men left at Kekionga, who were all killed.[2] Little Turtle, who lived in a village along the Eel River, received permission from the Kekionga Miami to lead an attack.[2] He gathered available warriors and attacked La Balme's camp at dawn on 5 November, before he reached the Eel River trading post[13] and just 3 miles from Little Turtle's village.[2] The first casualty of the attack was a French soldier named Antoine Rembault who was serving as a "look out" for La Balme's forces. As Rembault alerted the rest of the French soldiers about the presence of the Miami, Little Turtle struck Rembault in the head with a tomahawk hard enough to have the tomahawk "buried in (Rembault's) brain."[14] La Balme and his men fortified themselves on the banks of the river but were only able to fire one volley before being overwhelmed.[2] The ensuing battle was entirely one sided, only a few survivors managed to escape. Multiple French soldiers were heard begging to surrender while they were scalped alive by Little Turtle's men.[15]

La Balme also died in the battle, which became known as "La Balme's Defeat". A group of French officers were deliberately taken alive by Little Turtle. Three of the captured officers were burnt alive at the stake, another one of them had his hands and feet cut off before being executed by having his face struck with a tomahawk. The remaining four were then set free as a warning to the rest of the French.[16] When French forces allied to the Americans attempted to scout out the location a few days later, they saw that the path was blocked by the heads of several French soldiers impaled on pikes. After seeing this, they turned back.[17] These events occurred near modern-day Columbia City in Whitley County, Indiana.[18] In another subsequent operation a small detachment under earlier orders from La Balme was defeated by Miami forces on December 5, 1780, at Petit Fort, Indiana.

Aftermath edit

 
Historical marker commemorating the battle

For his leadership in this battle, Little Turtle gained a reputation that initiated a successful career as a military commander in the Northwest Indian War.[2] 11 years later, almost to the day, he led an attack that remains one of the worst defeats in U.S. Army history. Although La Balme's expedition resulted in failure, it did cause the British considerable concern. Major de Peyster subsequently deployed a detachment of Butler's Rangers to protect Kekionga. The Miami, some of whom had favored the United States or wished to remain neutral, were enraged at the attack on Kekionga and united in an alliance with the British.[2] Fort Detroit would remain under British control until the Jay Treaty was ratified in 1796 (Detroit was again surrendered to the British in the War of 1812, but was returned at the conclusion of the war).

In a log entry dated 13 November, Major Arent DePeyster, in command of the British garrison at Detroit, recorded that "A detachment of Canadians from the Illinois and Post Vincennes arrived Kekionga about 10 days ago, and entered the village, took the horses, destroyed the horned cattle and plundered a store I allowed to be kept there for the convenience of the Indians, soon after assembled and attacked the Canadians, led by a French colonel... The Miami resisting the fire of the enemy, had five of their party killed, being, however, more resolute than savages are in general, they beat off the enemy, killed 30 and took La Balme prisoner with his papers … I expect the Colonel in every hour … [19] The Spanish Governor at St. Louis, Francisco Cruzat, wrote that "I am very sorry for what has happened to Monsieur La Balme ... [he] having, perhaps, attempted with imprudence an undertaking which needed more time, more strength and better circumstances..."

Memorials edit

  • In northeast Indiana, near the AllenWhitley County line, along the Eel River, A brass and stone marker placed by the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1930, reads: "In memory of Col. Augustin de La Balme and his soldiers who were killed in battle with the Miami Indians under Little Turtle at this place, November 5, 1780."
  • 5 November 2005, the Indiana Society Sons of the American Revolution erected a bronze marker and commemorated the event's 225th anniversary. The ceremony involved descendants of Revolutionary War soldiers and Miami Indians.
  • 6 November 2010, the Indiana Society Sons of the American Revolution erected a bronze historical marker commemorating the event.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Griswold, Bert Joseph; Taylor, Mrs. Samuel R. (1917). The pictorial history of Fort Wayne, Indiana: a review of two centuries of occupation of the region about the head of the Maumee River. Vol. 1. Robert O. Law Co. p. 78. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Hogeland (2017), p. 88-9.
  3. ^ Allison (1986), p. 45.
  4. ^ See letter of John Hancock to George Washington, 12 Oct 1777. Available online at the Library of Congress.
  5. ^ Keiper (2010), p. 48.
  6. ^ a b Birzer (2000), p. 139.
  7. ^ English (1896), p. 695.
  8. ^ Allison (1986), p. 49.
  9. ^ Birzer (2000), p. 137.
  10. ^ Seineke (1981), p. 36, fn.
  11. ^ Barnhill (2006).
  12. ^ Hogeland (2017).
  13. ^ Gaff (2004), p. 84-85.
  14. ^ Greene, G.E. (1911). History of Old Vincennes and Knox County, Indiana. S.J. Clarke Publishing Company. p. 217.
  15. ^ Notes on Old Cahokia: Part Two: Fort Bowman (1778-1780) Charles E. Peterson Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Vol. 42, No. 2 (Jun., 1949), pp. 194
  16. ^ Notes on Old Cahokia: Part Two: Fort Bowman (1778-1780) Charles E. Peterson Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Vol. 42, No. 2 (Jun., 1949), pp. 199
  17. ^ French Imperial remnants on the middle ground: The strange case of August de la Balme and Charles Beaubien - Birzer, Bradley J. Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society; Springfield Vol. 93, Iss. 2, (Summer 2000)
  18. ^ Gaff, Alan D. (2004). Bayonets in the Wilderness. Anthony Waynes Legion in the Old Northwest. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-3585-9.
  19. ^ Major DePeyster believed Colonel de La Balme had been captured alive.

Sources edit

  • Allison, Harold (1986). The Tragic Saga of the Indiana Indians. Turner Publishing Company, Paducah. ISBN 0-938021-07-9.
  • Barnhill, John (2006). "Mottin de La Balme, Augustin (1740–1780)". In Richard Alan Ryerson, Gregory Fremont-Barnes (ed.). The Encyclopedia of the American Revolutionary War: A Political, Social, and Military History. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO.
  • Birzer, Bradley J. (Summer 2000). (PDF). Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 April 2012. Retrieved 5 December 2011.
  • Carter, Harvey Lewis (1987). The Life and Times of Little Turtle: First Sagamore of the Wabash. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-01318-2.
  • Ferreiro, Larrie D (2016). Brothers At Arms. American Independence and the Men of France and Spain who saved it. New York: Knopf. ISBN 9781101875247. LCCN 2016007136.
  • Gaff, Alan D. (2004). Bayonets in the Wilderness. Anthony Waynes Legion in the Old Northwest. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-3585-9.
  • English, William Hayden (1896). Conquest of the Country Northwest of the River Ohio 1778-1783 and Life of Gen. George Rogers Clark, Vol II. The Bowen-Merrill Company. Indianapolis, Ind., and Kansas City, Mo.
  • Hogeland, William (2017). Autumn of the Black Snake. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 9780374107345. LCCN 2016052193.
  • Keiper, Karl A. (2010). "10". Land of the Indians - Indiana. ISBN 978-0982470312.
  • Magnin, Frédéric (2005). Mottin de la Balme, cavalier des deux mondes et de la liberté. L'Harmattan, Paris. ISBN 2-7475-9080-1.
  • Ryerson, Richard Alan; Fremont-Barnes, Gregory (2009). . The Encyclopedia of the American Revolutionary War: A Political, Social, and Military History. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2010.
  • Seineke, Kathrine Wagner (1981). George Rogers Clark: Adventure in the Illinois and Selected Documents of the American Revolution at the Frontier Posts. Polyanthos. ISBN 99920-1-653-1.

External links edit

  • A letter from Gen. Washington to LaBalme

balme, defeat, part, american, revolutionary, warhistorical, marker, commemorating, battledate5, november, 1780locationohio, countryresultmiami, victorybelligerentsmiami, francecommanders, leaderslittle, turtlela, balme, strengthunknown104, irregularscasualtie. La Balme s DefeatPart of the American Revolutionary WarHistorical marker commemorating the battleDate5 November 1780LocationOhio CountryResultMiami victoryBelligerentsMiami FranceCommanders and leadersLittle TurtleLa Balme StrengthUnknown104 irregularsCasualties and losses5 killed 1 30 40 killed LaBalme s Defeat was a military engagement which occurred on November 6 1780 between a force of Canadien settlers under the command of French officer Augustin de La Balme and British allied Miami warriors led by chief Little Turtle during the American Revolutionary War La Balme had led the hastily recruited force of irregulars to attack British held Fort Detroit but was ambushed by a group of Miami warriors after sacking their town of Kekionga on the way The victory led Little Turtle to become well known on the American frontier a reputation which would develop during the Northwest Indian War Contents 1 Background 2 Battle 3 Aftermath 4 Memorials 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Sources 6 External linksBackground editFormer cavalry officer Augustin de La Balme arrived in the United States with a group of French volunteers that included the Marquis de Lafayette 2 and was appointed as the Colonial Army s Inspector General of Cavalry in 1777 3 This position was later given to Kazimierz Pulaski LaBalme resigned in October 1777 4 However in 1780 he traveled down the Ohio River to Kaskaskia 5 The success of General Clark s capture of Fort Sackville at Vincennes inspired La Balme to attempt a similar feat against the British at Fort Detroit La Balme arrived in Kaskaskia as a French officer and was greeted as Masiah by the local Canadien residents 6 who had been living under British rule for over a decade He represented himself as a representative of Louis XVI of France 6 and gathered a list of grievances from residents living under the rule of the Virginians which was to be delivered to the French Ambassador at Fort Pitt 7 La Balme openly disdained Clark whom he considered an uneducated woodsman 2 He coordinated a diversionary attack against Fort St Joseph 8 then began his journey to Detroit recruiting militia from among the Canadian citizens of Kaskaskia Cahokia and Vincennes At Vincennes he started up the Wabash River with the expectation of adding to his force from the Canadian villages of Ouiatenon present day West Lafayette Indiana and Kekionga present day Fort Wayne La Balme apparently expected Canadian residents at Fort Detroit to join him once they arrived La Balme kept the French ambassador Anne Cesar de La Luzerne updated on his movements 9 and the expedition marched under a French flag 10 La Balme s mounted force moved so quickly that it had little opposition until reaching Kekionga 2 where La Balme had planned to arrest Charles Beaubien the British agent Beaubien and many of the Miami were not there however so the force raised the French flag 11 and raided British stores for two weeks 2 while awaiting reinforcements that never arrived Upon learning of the return of a Miami hunting party to Kekionga Le Balme departed to raid another trading post on the Eel River La Balme left twenty French soldiers to guard the captured stores at Kekionga and marched his force out over the Eel River trail the same trail Colonel John Hardin would follow ten years later 12 Battle edit nbsp Historical enactors commemorating the 225th anniversary of the battle on 5 November 2005The Miami Indians learning of the invasion destroyed the small group of 20 men left at Kekionga who were all killed 2 Little Turtle who lived in a village along the Eel River received permission from the Kekionga Miami to lead an attack 2 He gathered available warriors and attacked La Balme s camp at dawn on 5 November before he reached the Eel River trading post 13 and just 3 miles from Little Turtle s village 2 The first casualty of the attack was a French soldier named Antoine Rembault who was serving as a look out for La Balme s forces As Rembault alerted the rest of the French soldiers about the presence of the Miami Little Turtle struck Rembault in the head with a tomahawk hard enough to have the tomahawk buried in Rembault s brain 14 La Balme and his men fortified themselves on the banks of the river but were only able to fire one volley before being overwhelmed 2 The ensuing battle was entirely one sided only a few survivors managed to escape Multiple French soldiers were heard begging to surrender while they were scalped alive by Little Turtle s men 15 La Balme also died in the battle which became known as La Balme s Defeat A group of French officers were deliberately taken alive by Little Turtle Three of the captured officers were burnt alive at the stake another one of them had his hands and feet cut off before being executed by having his face struck with a tomahawk The remaining four were then set free as a warning to the rest of the French 16 When French forces allied to the Americans attempted to scout out the location a few days later they saw that the path was blocked by the heads of several French soldiers impaled on pikes After seeing this they turned back 17 These events occurred near modern day Columbia City in Whitley County Indiana 18 In another subsequent operation a small detachment under earlier orders from La Balme was defeated by Miami forces on December 5 1780 at Petit Fort Indiana Aftermath edit nbsp Historical marker commemorating the battleFor his leadership in this battle Little Turtle gained a reputation that initiated a successful career as a military commander in the Northwest Indian War 2 11 years later almost to the day he led an attack that remains one of the worst defeats in U S Army history Although La Balme s expedition resulted in failure it did cause the British considerable concern Major de Peyster subsequently deployed a detachment of Butler s Rangers to protect Kekionga The Miami some of whom had favored the United States or wished to remain neutral were enraged at the attack on Kekionga and united in an alliance with the British 2 Fort Detroit would remain under British control until the Jay Treaty was ratified in 1796 Detroit was again surrendered to the British in the War of 1812 but was returned at the conclusion of the war In a log entry dated 13 November Major Arent DePeyster in command of the British garrison at Detroit recorded that A detachment of Canadians from the Illinois and Post Vincennes arrived Kekionga about 10 days ago and entered the village took the horses destroyed the horned cattle and plundered a store I allowed to be kept there for the convenience of the Indians soon after assembled and attacked the Canadians led by a French colonel The Miami resisting the fire of the enemy had five of their party killed being however more resolute than savages are in general they beat off the enemy killed 30 and took La Balme prisoner with his papers I expect the Colonel in every hour 19 The Spanish Governor at St Louis Francisco Cruzat wrote that I am very sorry for what has happened to Monsieur La Balme he having perhaps attempted with imprudence an undertaking which needed more time more strength and better circumstances Memorials editIn northeast Indiana near the Allen Whitley County line along the Eel River A brass and stone marker placed by the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1930 reads In memory of Col Augustin de La Balme and his soldiers who were killed in battle with the Miami Indians under Little Turtle at this place November 5 1780 5 November 2005 the Indiana Society Sons of the American Revolution erected a bronze marker and commemorated the event s 225th anniversary The ceremony involved descendants of Revolutionary War soldiers and Miami Indians 6 November 2010 the Indiana Society Sons of the American Revolution erected a bronze historical marker commemorating the event References editCitations edit Griswold Bert Joseph Taylor Mrs Samuel R 1917 The pictorial history of Fort Wayne Indiana a review of two centuries of occupation of the region about the head of the Maumee River Vol 1 Robert O Law Co p 78 Retrieved 12 February 2011 a b c d e f g h i j Hogeland 2017 p 88 9 Allison 1986 p 45 See letter of John Hancock to George Washington 12 Oct 1777 Available online at the Library of Congress Keiper 2010 p 48 a b Birzer 2000 p 139 English 1896 p 695 Allison 1986 p 49 Birzer 2000 p 137 Seineke 1981 p 36 fn Barnhill 2006 Hogeland 2017 Gaff 2004 p 84 85 Greene G E 1911 History of Old Vincennes and Knox County Indiana S J Clarke Publishing Company p 217 Notes on Old Cahokia Part Two Fort Bowman 1778 1780 Charles E Peterson Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Vol 42 No 2 Jun 1949 pp 194 Notes on Old Cahokia Part Two Fort Bowman 1778 1780 Charles E Peterson Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Vol 42 No 2 Jun 1949 pp 199 French Imperial remnants on the middle ground The strange case of August de la Balme and Charles Beaubien Birzer Bradley J Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Springfield Vol 93 Iss 2 Summer 2000 Gaff Alan D 2004 Bayonets in the Wilderness Anthony Waynes Legion in the Old Northwest Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 8061 3585 9 Major DePeyster believed Colonel de La Balme had been captured alive Sources edit Allison Harold 1986 The Tragic Saga of the Indiana Indians Turner Publishing Company Paducah ISBN 0 938021 07 9 Barnhill John 2006 Mottin de La Balme Augustin 1740 1780 In Richard Alan Ryerson Gregory Fremont Barnes ed The Encyclopedia of the American Revolutionary War A Political Social and Military History Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO Birzer Bradley J Summer 2000 French Imperial remnants on the middle ground The strange case of August de la Balme and Charles Beaubien PDF Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Archived from the original PDF on 6 April 2012 Retrieved 5 December 2011 Carter Harvey Lewis 1987 The Life and Times of Little Turtle First Sagamore of the Wabash Urbana University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 01318 2 Ferreiro Larrie D 2016 Brothers At Arms American Independence and the Men of France and Spain who saved it New York Knopf ISBN 9781101875247 LCCN 2016007136 Gaff Alan D 2004 Bayonets in the Wilderness Anthony Waynes Legion in the Old Northwest Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 8061 3585 9 English William Hayden 1896 Conquest of the Country Northwest of the River Ohio 1778 1783 and Life of Gen George Rogers Clark Vol II The Bowen Merrill Company Indianapolis Ind and Kansas City Mo Hogeland William 2017 Autumn of the Black Snake New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 9780374107345 LCCN 2016052193 Keiper Karl A 2010 10 Land of the Indians Indiana ISBN 978 0982470312 Magnin Frederic 2005 Mottin de la Balme cavalier des deux mondes et de la liberte L Harmattan Paris ISBN 2 7475 9080 1 Ryerson Richard Alan Fremont Barnes Gregory 2009 Mottin de La Balme Augustin 1740 1780 The Encyclopedia of the American Revolutionary War A Political Social and Military History Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO Archived from the original on 25 September 2012 Retrieved 20 November 2010 Seineke Kathrine Wagner 1981 George Rogers Clark Adventure in the Illinois and Selected Documents of the American Revolution at the Frontier Posts Polyanthos ISBN 99920 1 653 1 External links editThe Whitley County Historical Society LaBalme LaBalme History Sons of the American Revolution A letter from Gen Washington to LaBalme Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title La Balme 27s Defeat amp oldid 1166881206, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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