Fouier-Major Augustin de La Balme of the Gendarmerie de France, a personal Gaurd Regiment of the King was decorated and respected cavalry officer despite his low birth. |
Col.
Augustin de La Balme was a French cavalry officer who came to the American shores as an early volunteer
with the Continental Army in 1777. The veteran
officer had dreams of glory and advancement that were not realized.
Three years later he died in a
desperate fight after being ambushed
and besieged in a makeshift mud fort on the banks of an obscure creek in what is
now Indiana. How he got there and just what the hell he thought he was going to
accomplish are matters of some considerable mystery and dispute.
He was born as Augustin Mottin on August 28, 1733 in the shadows of the French Alps in the Saint-Antoine-l’Abbaye, which was also known as La-Motte-Saint-Didier. His father was not a noble, but a tradesman a
tanner. His family was well enough off, however, to buy his admission as a trooper into the prestigious Scottish Company of the Gendarmerie de France, a personal regiment of the King and one of two Guards regiments. Mottin was evidently a brave and competent soldier and despite
his lowly birth rose to become an officer during the Seven Years War. He was one
of the few cavalry officers to survive
the disastrous Battle of Minden in
1759.
Mottin subsequently became the Riding Master at the Gendarmerie Riding School in Lunéville. He retired
on pension with the rank of Fourrier-Major in 1773 and wrote two
highly regarded manuals, one on horsemanship and the other on cavalry tactics under the nom
de plume Augustin de La Balme.
The books made him well known in European
military circles.
In 1777 La Balme, as he was now
known, became one of a small handful of
French officers who without
permission—or perhaps with a wink
and a nod—came to the rebellious colonies
the best known of whom was the younger, dashing, and noble-born Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette. Lafayette was rewarded with a commission as a Major General and quickly became an aide and favorite to Commanding General George Washington of the Continental
Army.
The far more experienced La Balme was made a Colonel and appointed the
Army’s Inspector of Cavalry, a post
much more impressive in title than
in reality. The American’s had never really developed a cavalry tradition. Outside of a few locally raised companies, widely scattered, and armed and trained to different drills
and uses, there was no major
Continental cavalry force. La Balme
hoped to create order out of chaos, consolidate training based on his own
methods and eventually be placed in
direct command of a regiment of mounted regulars.
Washington concluded that the
creation of a regularized cavalry was needed, especially for operations in the South where mounted Tory
units under Banastre Tarleton
were proving devastatingly effective. But the Polish
officer Casmir Pulaski caught
Washington’s ear and was commissioned to form the cavalry unit that came to be
known a Pulaski’s Legion. The Pole, not La Balme, became known as the Father of the American Cavalry and went
on to glory and death leading an ill-conceived charge on English guns trying to re-take Savannah.
Disgusted
at the snub, La Balme resigned his Continental Army commission in 1780. He next appeared
in the frontier town of Kaskaskia
on the Mississippi River in the Illinois country. What he was doing there and under whose,
if any, orders, is a bit of a mystery. He showed up in the uniform and identity of
a French officer, not a Continental
one. He brought with him a French Fleur
de Lis flag, not a Continental
banner.
Apparently, he had a plan inspired by George Roger’s Clark’s daring success in liberating the River
settlements from the English and then marching
overland to take Fort
Vincennes. La Balme planned to raise a force from among the French militia in the scattered settlements and make an even longer overland trek to seize the
English western stronghold at far
away Fort Detroit. He expected the large French population in the region, including those in the fort,
to join him.
Some say that he was operating under secret orders from Washington,
but no evidence of this has ever
been found. Others think Washington gave
tacit approval to the scheme. Still others believe that La Balme was acting purely on his own and wonder if
he planned to capture the fort for
the Americans, the French, or perhaps to establish
an independent French speaking country from what had been Lower Quebec. Claiming it for France seemed to make little sense because the English were
in firm control of Quebec and Upper and Lower Canada to the east and unlikely
to lose that grip. And he could not connect to the south with Louisiana which was then in Spanish hands.
The sudden appearance of a French officer among them cheered the settlers of the Illinois Bottom. They had chaffed at English rule and the disruption of their old fur trading patterns with the native tribes. But they were also distrustful of their new
masters, the Virginians. La Balme collected
the complaints and concerns of the
local citizens and sent them by messenger
to the French agent at Fort Pitt, presumably to be acted on by
the Governor of Virginia, then Thomas Jefferson.
La Balme gathered his forces and began to execute his plan by ordering a diversionary
attack on Fort St. Joseph at the
mouth of the St. Joseph River on the
shores of Lake Michigan. That small
force was consisted of settler from Cahokia led by militiaman Jean-Baptiste
Hamelin and Lt. Thomas Brady,
one of the few Virginia officers on the frontier. After raiding
and looting the supply depot for English allies the Miami and Potawatomi, the
party was hunted down and defeated
by a native force led by British Lt. Dagreaux Du Quindre at Petit Fort in the Dunes at the lower end of
the Lake. Instead of a diversion,
the action alerted the English and
their allies that military activity
was picking up on the frontier.
The French officer was unaware and unprepared for the realities
of campaigning on the frontier, including the grueling long marches over swampy
ground, through thick forests,
and across prairies where the tall grass waved high above men’s heads
making navigation difficult. There were only rudimentary Indian and deer trails, and sometimes none at
all. There were several streams and some good sized rivers to ford, luckily at low water, in the fall.
He had also picked a time of year when the enemy
tribes had hunting parties out preparing for the winter making an accidental encounter that would tip his hand more likely. Fortunately his militiamen included not just
bottom land farmers, but experienced
voyagers and fur traders who knew the country.
A French militiaman volunteer on La Balme's long raid. |
La Balme left the country around
Kaskaskia and Chahokia with about 60 men and expected to rally more at
Vincennes. After re-tracing Rogers’s march he arrived at Vincennes and indeed found eager recruits. From there he
followed the Wabash and collected
more men at the settlements of Ouiatenon
(present day West Lafayette,
Indiana) and Kekionga (now Fort Wayne).
At Keionga he expected to capture the British
agent Charles Beaubien, and a
number of Miami known to be there—and perhaps even hoped to turn them into allies.
But the agent and most of the tribesmen were gone for the long hunt. La Balme raised the French flag and paused
three days to recruit locals and
to loot the supplies of the trading post. He sent out scouts to raise more volunteers, but none arrived.
La Balme now had around one hundred
men under his command and was still far from Detroit. He decided to split his forces, leaving about twenty of his men to garrison Keionga while he marched on a quick side-raid on a
trading post on the Eel River. But the returning Miami hunting party had
spotted the French flag over Kekionga.
The large hunting party easily overwhelmed
the small garrison.
Unaware that he had lost his base and his rear was exposed, La Balme pressed on. Little
Turtle, a local Miami chief from
a village on the Eel River was alerted
by runners from Kekionga who had easily gotten ahead of La Balme’s slow
moving party. Little Turtle gathered
his warriors and laid an ambush at a
key ford of the river. La Balme marched
right into the trap.
There was a sharp fight and both sides were, at first, evenly matched. The
surprised militiamen rallied and
were able to dig mud fortifications
along the river bank. The battle settled into a siege with La Balme hoping for aid from Kekionga or from
other French settlements. Meanwhile more
Miami gathered and his forces were picked
off one by one.
Accounts differ as to how long the French held out. Some say days,
some say a week or more. It was unlikely at the longer range of the accounts. On or about November 4 or 5 La Balme was
killed. Finally his men were overwhelmed
and most of them killed. Only a handful would live to return to their homes.
The mission was a failure and La
Balme, far from winning glory, became all
but forgotten. This minor side show to the American
Revolution had no strategic importance. But it did accomplish one thing. The
English were so alarmed by the
activity on the frontier that they decided they had to garrison Fort Detroit
and a string of frontier forts with British Regulars and Major de Peyster subsequently deployed a detachment of British Rangers to protect
Kekionga. This diverted experienced troops from action on the frontier closer to
the Allegany Mountains and American
settlements.
A probably unreliable by widely circulated portrait of Little Turtle as a young Miami war chief. |
The biggest beneficiary was Little
Turtle whose prestige as a Miami
war leader was enhanced. By the end of the decade he would become the main war chief of the tribe and a key leader of the Western Indian Confederacy in its war with the United States. He smashed an American army lead by General
Josiah Harmar in 1790 and another led by General Arthur St. Clair a year later.
The Confederacy, then under the
command of Blue Jacket, was finally defeated by General
Mad Anthony Wayne at the Battle of
Fallen Timbers in 1794 after the wily Miami chief urged caution and making
peace with the “soldier who does not
sleep.”
The recently installed Indiana State Historical Marker near the site of La Balme's doomed stand against the Miami.Augustin |
La Balme may have fallen out of American history books,
but he is remembered, a bit, in
Indiana. In 1930 the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR)
erected a small monument—a plaque on a boulder at the site of La
Balme’s Defeat. The Indiana Society of the Sons of the American
Revolution commemorated the 225 anniversary of the battle in 2005 with decedents of both the French militia
men and the Miami warriors present, a re-enactment
and unveiling of a new, large state historical marker.
Nice, but not quite the glory the old cavalryman had in mind.
No comments:
Post a Comment