U.S. Army Regulars top the Red Stick breastworks in the Battle of Horshoe Bend. Lt. Sam Houston takes an arrow to the leg. |
In
1814 Andrew Jackson took a little
trip. But despite the memorable ballad,
he never came “down the Mighty Mississip.” Well before he got to New Orleans he and an army of Tennessee
Volunteers, a company of Army Regulars,
and a few hundred Cherokee and Southern Creek allies plunged deep into
the Alabama wilderness in pursuit of
a “renegade” faction of the Creek
Nation known as the Red Sticks. He found them at a place called Horseshoe Bend and fought them in the
most important American battle you have probably never heard of. Even if he had never triumphed at New
Orleans, his victory there would have secured him veneration as one of the
young nation’s greatest military heroes.
Historians
are somewhat divided on how to categorize the conflict. Many, maybe most, put it in the broader
context of the on-going War of 1812
because the Red Sticks were informal allies of the British and were largely armed with weapons smuggled from Spanish Florida. Others insist on calling it a distinct Red Stick or Creek War and placing it more generally in the context of an
on-going, genocidal land grab from Native
Americans. It seems to me it was
both.
The
whole thing started as something of a civil
war within the Creek Nation. The
Creek were a large tribe whose traditional territories and hunting grounds
stretched from western Georgia
across much of the mid-South. Like their cousins, and sometimes rivals for
hunting grounds, the Cherokee they
were sometimes considered one of the Civilized
Tribes because they tended to live in permanent or semi-permanent
settlements and engaged in extensive agriculture in addition to hunting. In the eastern and southern portions of their
range in Georgia, many had adopted White farming methods, clothing, and
customs. Many intermarried with frontier
Whites and the more prosperous owned slaves.
When
war broke out with the British these Creeks, who had lived cheek to jowls with
Whites in a sometimes dicey, but essentially stable relationship for decades,
declared their allegiance to the United
States and expressed willingness to support the Army militarily if need be.
A
larger group of Creeks residing further inland, however, maintained their
traditional culture and were resentful of both the “civilized” branch of the
tribe and the continuing pressure of encroaching settlement in their territory
by Whites.
In
1811 the great Shawnee Chief Tecumseh,
a close ally of the British, toured the Five Civilized Tribes of the South in
an effort to bring them into his Indian
Confederacy to oppose American expansion.
The British, he told tribal leaders, would provide arms and guarantee a permanent
Native homeland off limits to settlement.
The Cherokee, Choctaw, Lower
Creeks, and other tribes who all had treaties with the U.S. refused to
join. But the Red Sticks, influenced by
younger warriors, were ready for war against the Americans.
They
did not formally join Tecumseh’s Confederacy but became allies and allies of
the British, who were active in near-by Florida. The Red Sticks were soon
raiding isolated farms and settlements in a relatively low key guerilla
war. In support of their treaty commitments,
Lower Creeks asserted their claim to tribal leadership and moved against the
Red Sticks, arresting those warriors they could find. The Red Sticks responded with attacks on the
Lower Creeks including the slaughtering of cattle, pigs and other domestic
animals that were symbolic of adoption of white ways.
In
July of 1813 a sizable party of Red Sticks was returning from Florida with a
pack train of horses loaded down with corn meal, powder, shot, and arms
purchased with £500 sent to them by the British from the Spanish in
Florida. Lower Creeks got wind of the
transaction and sent word to American troops at Fort Mims, Alabama. Troops
under Major Daniel Beasley of the Mississippi Volunteers led a mounted
force of 6 companies 150 white militia riflemen, 30 mixed blood Creek known as métis under Captain Dixon Bailey to intercept Red Stick Leader Peter McQueen
party.
The troops surprised McQueen’s party during a mid
day meal break and quickly scattered them, capturing the pack train. But the undisciplined Militia fell into a
frenzy of looting as they tore into the packs. McQueen rallied his warriors in the
surrounding swamp and re-took the camp and supplies in a bloody fight known as
the Battle of Burnt Corn.
After the battle McQueen and other Red Stick leaders
called for a massing of warriors. Raids
stepped up. Panicked settlers, their
slaves, métis and other Lower Creeks sought refuge at Fort Mims, which was palisaded with a block house. About 520
people including 230 ill trained Militia and Creek warriors, crowded into the
fort which was located about 40 north of Mobile
on the Alabama River.
On August 29 somewhere between 750 and 1000 Red
Sticks led by McQueen and the other head
warrior, William Weatherford
launched an attack on the Fort, symbolically also at a noon lunch break. Major Beasley had neglected to put out
pickets or sentries and had ignored the warnings of two slaves who had been
gathering firewood outside the post. One
gate of the fort could not even be completely closed because of drifting
sand.
The Red Sticks stormed and easily took the outer palisade
as the soldiers and civilians retreated behind a lower secondary defense. Captain Bailey rallied his forces and held
off the attackers for two hours all the while being peppered by fire by Creeks
using the outer perimeter’s gun loops. Both
sides suffered significant losses. The
Red Stick retreated outside the walls to regroup. A second attack at 3 pm sent the defenders
reeling back to their block house bastion,
which the attackers set on fire.
After resistance finally collapsed around 5 pm
warriors began to club and tomahawk the wounded and other survivors despite
Weatherford’s attempts to restrain them.
At least 250 were killed and scalped, their bodies left where they
lay. The Red Sticks spared about 100
surviving slaves, but took them captive along with 30 or so women and
children. 36 defenders, including the
mortally wounded Captain Bailey escaped to tell the tail. Two weeks later a relief column arrived to
find the Fort destroyed and the bodies of both the defenders and about 100 Red
Sticks rotting in the sun.
The news of the Fort Mims Massacre set off a panic across the frontier. Settlers streamed to the safety of older
settlements. The Federal Government was unable to provide much help. Most of the Army was on the Canadian Frontier or scattered in
costal defense forts. The best they
could do was to call up the Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and Mississippi militia
and volunteers and place them under the overall command of lawyer/planter/politician
General Andrew Jackson of Tennessee.
While other militia units mostly took up defensive positions on the edge
of Red Stick territory, Jackson assemble an army to extract vengeance and, “Make
Alabama safe for White settlement.
Jackson had commanded the Tennessee Militia since
1802. Under his over-all command units
had been engaged in the ongoing Indian Wars that consumed the frontier in the
years after the American
Revolution. Not only did his
Tennesseans include many veteran Indian
fighters and experienced officers, but Jackson had drilled and trained
them. These troops in no way resembled
the rag-tag militias most states sent into the field. They were well armed, well trained and
fiercely loyal to their demanding commander.
As soon as weather permitted in 1814 Jackson headed
into Alabama at the head of an army of
over 3000—2000 infantry including the Regular Army 39th
Infantry Regiment,
700 cavalry and mounted riflemen, and 600 Cherokee, Choctaw and Lower Creek auxiliaries. He also had at least two batteries of field howitzers.
Jackson
march his column through the wilderness with discipline and as much stealth as
an army on the move could muster.
By
March 27 his scouts informed him that he was within six miles of Chief Menawa’s Red Stick camp of Tohopeka,
nestled in a loop in the Tallapoosa River
called Horseshoe Bend in central Alabama. Jackson sent his close friend and longtime political
crony General John Coffee with the mounted
riflemen and the native auxiliaries south across the river to surround the Red
Sticks’s camp, while Jackson stayed with the rest of the 2,000 infantry north of
the neck created by the bend in the river.
He
found the camp surprisingly well fortified behind an impressive earth and log breastworks stretching across the
neck. The logs were laid in a 400 yard zigzag line that permitted a lethal enfilading fire from behind its
protections. These kinds of field
fortifications were seldom encountered in Indian warfare.
Around
ten o’clock in the morning, Jackson opened up with his artillery on the
line. He pounded away for nearly two
hours with no discernible damage to the fortifications. The fire also concentrated the attention of
the Red Stick camp, which failed to detect General Coffee’s maneuvers to their
rear.
Around
noon Jackson ordered a frontal bayonet
charge on the breastworks led by Colonel
John Williams’s Regular Infantry.
Despite taking heavy losses, the troops gained the wall and some got
over it. That included Third Lieutenant Sam Houston who made
it over the wall only to be gravely injured by an arrow, a wound that would
bother him the rest of his long and colorful life.
As
more of Jackson’s men poured over the works, the fight turned into a desperate
hand to hand struggle. Then the Red
Sticks were hit from the rear by Coffee’s men.
The fighting continued for hours over a large battlefield that provided
good cover for the defenders, who refused to surrender, at least as reported in
the official reports of the action.
Red
Stick losses, almost all killed, were around 80% of the estimated 1000 warriors
in the camp. A wounded Chief Menawa and
about 200 managed to escape and make their way to Florida where they were
welcomed and absorbed by the Seminoles
there.
The
battle broke Red Stick power. The old
General established Fort Jackson near
Wetumpka, Alabama as a base of operations for mopping up
actions. He dispatched messengers to
summon tribal leaders to sign what everyone knew would be a dictated peace
treaty. Among the messengers was Sgt. Davy Crocket, an experienced
hunter who was fluent in Creek and other Indian languages. He
grew to sympathize with the defeated enemy and their harsh treatment at Jackson’s
hand eventually made him a Whig and Old Hickory’s political enemy.
The
treaty signed by leaders of several bands including the Red Stick Upper Creeks,
and the Lower Creeks on August 9, 1814 ceded 23
million acres of their remaining land in Georgia and much of central Alabama to
the United States government. The loyal
Lower Creek were shocked to be told that they had to give up their lands, but
had no choice. And the Choctaw and Cherokee
who also fought alongside the Americans discovered that the Creeks had signed
away land that they had long considered theirs.
Removal
was not immediate although some bands began relocating across the Mississippi
within a couple of years. The rest
followed over time or were force marched out under Jackson’s unforgiving and
absolute Indian Removal program
during his presidency.
As
a reward Jackson was promoted to Major
General of Volunteers and kept in the field. Meanwhile the British, in a tardy response to
the appeal for aid by the Red Sticks, had enlisted survivors in Spanish Florida
and began arming others as they arrived.
They garrisoned 400 Royal Marines
at Pensacola. Without authority, Jackson marched his army
into supposedly neutral Spanish territory easily taking the city and dispelling
the threat. The move also prevented
Britain’s new Creek and other native allies from pressing their attempted siege
of Mobile.
Having
essentially secured the Gulf Coast, Jackson
then marched his battle hardened army overland to reinforce threatened New
Orleans. You probably know the rest of
the story.
American
school children used to learn about the famous Battle of
Tippecanoe in which General William Henry Harrison killed Tecumseh and destroyed forever the threat of his Confederacy. That, they know safely opened up the Old Northwest Territory for settlement.
Tippecanoe in which General William Henry Harrison killed Tecumseh and destroyed forever the threat of his Confederacy. That, they know safely opened up the Old Northwest Territory for settlement.
But
for some reason they are not taught about the Battle of Horseshoe Bend which
had equally disastrous effect on the Southern tribes and entailed an even
larger direct land grab.
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