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Sunday, May 31, 2015
Saturday, May 30, 2015
Zebulon Pike's Military Career
Source |
Friday, May 29, 2015
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Rising Up In Illinois
From: Rising Up from Indian Country:...:
John Leigh and John Kelso, an army private working the farm in his free time, fled ...and Private John Kelso came running away from the Winnebago attack.
Kelso, John U.S. Army private at Fort Dearborn, enlisted in December 1805; accepted discharge on Dec. 17, 1810, when his term expired; stayed to be a tutor to the Kinzie children and then a field hand on Leigh’s farm; on April 6, 1812, marauding Winnebago attacked and he escaped with John Leigh, and alarmed the garrison at the fort; rejoined the army May 3 as a private and was killed in action at the massacre of Aug. 15.
An 1812 service record for a John Kelso:
An 1812 service record for a John Kelso:
Source |
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Mr. Barnes With A Musket
Gun And Its Parts |
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Monday, May 25, 2015
Sunday, May 24, 2015
Battle Of The Sink Hole
Photo From An Adjacent County Of The Sink Hole Site |
From Wikipedia:
The Battle of the Sink Hole was fought on May 24, 1815, after the official end of the War of 1812, between Missouri Rangers and Sauk Indians led by Black Hawk. The Sauk were unaware, or did not care, that their British patrons had signed the Treaty of Ghent with the U.S.
The most famous of these expeditions was that made in 1814 by a company of mounted rangers raised by Peter Craig of Cape Girardeau county. Many of the members of the company had served under Captain Ramsay in 1813; they were now enlisted for a period of one year to serve on the frontiers of Missouri and Illinois, and they became a part of a regiment commanded by Colonel William Russell.
After the company was organized...it was sent to North Missouri and while there fought the battle of the Sink Hole (Lincoln County, near Cape au Gris). [Source]
Source |
Saturday, May 23, 2015
Friday, May 22, 2015
Thursday, May 21, 2015
Francais X. Goulet Served
From the Kent County, Ontario, Canada's Historical Society's Papers:
The family traditions generally fix the arrival of Francais Xavier Goulet there [Kent County, Ontario, Canada] and the beginning of his settlement duties on his allotment of lot 154 from Col. Talbot about a year or two earlier or about 1817 or 1818. As the surveyor of the district, Mahlon Burwell had only reached the last lot now in Tilbury on this road and encamped on this spot where the American Colonel Holmes bivouacked in the war of 1812 during the year 1817... .
Francais X. appears to have left his home at St. Jacques de l'Achigan, Montcalm Co. Que. early in the year 1812. His father writes him under date of May 21th. 1812 in a letter addresser "au detroit" beseeching him to return and that his mother was grieved and worried over his absence. President
Madison's proclamation of war soon followed his departure from his French Canadian home and we find the young man at le detroit enlisted with the British forces and serving at Fort Meigs, Riviere au Raisin and Fort Malden. For this service he received a medal from the British government.
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
John Brisby
War of 1812 Pension And Bounty Land Application - Fold3 |
Form Of Declaration For Surviving Officer Or Soldier
State of Tennessee
County of Maury
1 November 1850
John Brisby
Aged 67
Private in the Company Commanded By Captain [John] Dalton
2nd Regiment of the Tennessee Militia
Commanded by Col. [John] Cocke and by General [William] Carroll
In The War With Great Britain
Drafted At Williamson County, Tennessee ca 13 November 1814
Honorably Discharged in Franklin, Tennessee ca 20 May 1815
This document stated that Brisby participated in the Battle of New Orleans
Bounty Land - Soldier#: 5113 - 80 - 50
Bounty Land - Widow#: 48501 - 80 - 55
John Brisby married Rosey (or Rosa) Clendenin in June 1805 in Sumner County, Tennessee. The widow died in Culleoka, Maury, Tennessee, on April 6, 1873. According to the record, the soldier died on either January 8th or 24th in either 1851 or 1852.
Testimony from James Orr of Marshall County, Tennessee, who had known Rosey (Clendenin) Brisby since 1796 and John Brisby since 1816.
Census 1850
Maury county, part of, Maury, Tennessee
Birth Year (Estimated): 1783
Birthplace: Virginia
Household Role Gender Age Birthplace
John Brisby M 67 Virginia
Rosa Brisby F 64 North Carolina
Fanny Brisby F 25 Tennessee
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Monday, May 18, 2015
Sunday, May 17, 2015
William Trousdale's First Wars
The William Trousdale Papers held at the Tennessee State Library and Archives:
"This collection is centered around William Trousdale, resident of Gallatin, Sumner County, Tennessee; veteran of the Creek War, 1813; private during the War of 1812, 1814-1815...Governor of Tennessee and United States Ambassador."
1813 Volunteered as private in Captain William Edward’s Company of Mounted Riflemen; participated in Battles of Tallahatchie and Talladega during the Creek War
1814 Re-enlisted; served as private in War of 1812, after being defeated for first lieutenant and third lieutenant; participated in Battle of Pensacola
1815 Participated in Battle of New Orleans; returned to Tennessee in the Spring
Compiled Service Records of War of 1812 included:
Source |
Saturday, May 16, 2015
U.S. Marshall Duplessis
Chalmette Monument Commemorating The Battle Of New Orleans |
From the U.S. Marshal's Service, History - A Pirate, a Marshal, and the Battle of New Orleans:
"...Largely thanks to Jackson’s choice of position, good communication and resolve, the Americans won a decisive triumph."Duplessis' pre-war activity mentioned:
"A sizeable portion of that good communication was carried forth by Marshal Peter Duplessis, and the United States will forever be the better for it."
Friday, May 15, 2015
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Warping Or Kedging
Source |
Warping or kedging (was mentioned in Commodore Charles Morris's autobiography).
"...observing the benefit that the Constitution had derived from warping, Captain Byron did the same, bending all his hawsers to one another, and working two kedge anchors at the same time by paying the warp out through one hawse-hole as it was run in through the other opposite."
Source |
Monday, May 11, 2015
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Frontier Raids From Ogdensburg
Source |
Source |
The frontier raids, which had begun on the Upper St. Lawrence during the autumn of 1812, continued during the winter, facilitated by the frozen state of the river. The chief starting point for these expeditions on the American side was Ogdensburg in the state of New York.
Saturday, May 9, 2015
Fort Meigs And Its Environs
Source Fort Meigs |
NOTE: — The Toledo Blade of June 3, 1908, has the Larwill profile of the fort which differs somewhat in the fact that more traverse, earthworks, are shown next to the present public road.
Friday, May 8, 2015
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Admiral Cockburn On The Sassafras
Source |
"It was on the 6th of May, a warm and beautiful morning, that Cockburn, with hundred men, in eighteen barges, went up the Sassafras."
Source |
"So delighted was Cockburn with success in plundering and destroying unprotected towns that with characteristic swagger he declared he should not be satisfied until he had burned every building Baltimore."
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Dudley And Disaster At Fort Meigs
Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Kentucky... [Included is Colonel William Dudley who was killed May 5, 1813, at Fort Meigs:
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Incautious Valour At Fort Meigs
Col. Wm. Dudley's Defeat Opposite Fort Meigs...:
"When Col. Dudley attacked the batteries of the enemy, opposite Fort Meigs, on the 5th of May, 1813, he advanced in three columns. The right, led by himself, carried them without the loss of a man."
"For near fifteen minutes, with the loss of several killed and wounded, they maintained an unequal conflict. In this time, Col. Dudley, having effected his object, and fearing their fate, had advanced to their relief with the right column. The enemy retreated. Our troops, impelled more by incautious valour and a desire for military distinguishment than prudence, pursued."
Monday, May 4, 2015
The Third Expedition
Cecil County, Maryland, Map Source |
From The Sassafras River Water Trail [Cecil County, Maryland, area]:
"On May 6, 1813, British Rear Admiral Sir George Cockburn led his naval forces up the Sassafras River to raid the twin ports of Georgetown and Fredericktown."
"The third expedition undertaken....". H.M.S. Maidstone, off the Sassafras river, May 6th, 1813. (see below):
Source |
Sunday, May 3, 2015
The Great Disturber
Source |
Napoleon's land grab in Europe had consequences for North America. Troops devoted to stopping him were not available for duty in America until the War of 1812 was well underway.
Per Maple Leaves:....
The great disturber of Europe, Napoleon the 1st, having been sent a prisoner...enabled Great Britain to send a portion of her veteran army, under the illustrious Wellington, to prosecute the war with America--the brunt of which had, for two years, been nobly sustained by the militia of Canada, assisted by the mere handful of regulars which had been left in the country.
Note: Napoleon specifically "disturbed" the Palm family as well:
We are distantly related to Johann Philip Palm who is famous in Europe as the person who was executed upon orders by Napoleon for "publishing and distributing libelous pamphlets about France and Napoleon."
Saturday, May 2, 2015
William Howard Served
Source |
A list of Canadian War of 1812 Veterans from the Elgin County Branch Of The Ontario Genealogical Society, included:
HOWARD, William, Pte., served under Captain David Secord 1814, 1815
Friday, May 1, 2015
Meeting At Hutchinson's Tavern
Room In Ohio [Not Hutchinson's Tavern] |
From Personal memories, social, political, and literary, with sketches of many noted people, 1803-1843:
In the spring of 1812, the army, which was to be commanded by General Hull, began to assemble at
Cincinnati. Governor Meigs called out the First Division of Ohio militia, to meet at Hutchinson's Tavern, on the Colerain road. This was near our house, and I [E.D. Mansfield] went with my father to the place of meeting. The division was drawn out in line, and presented as motley an appearance as has ever been seen. Some of the men had rifles, but the greater part only sticks and cornstalks. As to uniform, there were all kinds of apparel, from hunting-shirts to butternut jackets.
"In 1811, Ezekiel [Hutchinson] purchased 400 acres of land in the Mill Creek Township. On this property, he opened a tavern and hotel called the Golden Lamb. This establishment was a resting point for travelers between Cincinnati and Hamilton, Ohio."[Source]