July 1812 Stories

First Edition Published July 15, 2015

Second Edition Published June 30, 2016

Third Edition Published April 6, 2018

Fourth Edition Published April 26, 2021

Copyright by Fred Blair

Changes and Additions are in blue text.

July 1, 1812

At Lachine, Lower Canada

            A habitant had been arrested for deserting his militia unit.  On this day, about 400 sympathizers gathered in Lachine.  About half were carrying arms.  British troops and 2 field cannons were sent from Montreal.  One man was killed when the British fired into the crowd.[1]

 

July 2, 1812

On the Niagara Frontier

            A District General Order required 900 men from the flank companies of the Lincoln and York Militias to muster at Fort George where they were informed that they would join the regular troops in 4 Divisions along the frontier.[2]

            As the men mustered and marched to the fort, they were not aware that war had been declared and that they would be serving for an extended period of time.  To lessen the discontent, Brock declared that the flank company men would receive the same pay as his regulars.[3]

            Sergeant Angus McAfee wrote to his wife that when his company arrived in Niagara, they were billeted in a house belonging to Thomas Dickson with the men of Captain Samuel Hatt’s Company of the 5th Lincoln.  The men were certain that hostilities would not start without orders from Quebec, which would take some time to arrive, and that a truce would be signed before then as the Yankees could not defend themselves.  He requested 3 blankets from his wife as he and his brothers had none and they were destitute.[4]

At Gananoque

            Captain Ira Schofield of the 2nd Regiment of Leeds Militia marched his flank company of 40 men for 2 days, from Bastard to the Port of Gananoque, on the north shore of the St. Lawrence River, east of Kingston.  He paid for meals during the march and for the transportation of the men’s arms.  He also purchased supplies for the company while they were stationed at the port until the 24th.  His expenses included:

 

12 bushels of flour at 27 pounds

2 bushels of peas at 5 shillings per bushel

2 barrels of salt at 4.5 pounds

2 barrels of pork at 10 pounds

267 pounds of corned beef at under 4 pounds

3 cooking kettles at 8 shillings each

20 gallons of whisky at 5 pounds

12 blankets for men on guard duty at 9 pounds

1 axe for use in the barracks at 10 shillings

transportation of arms at 1.75 pound

 

Captain Schofield was not reimbursed for this expense until after the war.[5]

            Ira Schofield was born about 1776 in Connecticut and arrived in Leeds County in 1800 with his family.[6]

He submitted another claim for a personal loss on September 21, 1812.

            The value of some items could vary depending on size, quality, and scarcity, but a number of war loss claims were for food and live stock where values could be compared to give a general indication of what someone could purchase on a day’s wages.  Common labourers could earn ten to fifteen shillings per day.  There were twenty shillings in a pound.  A number of items are listed throughout these stories with their values to make comparisons more easily possible.

July 3, 1812

            A letter from the Quartermaster-General of the Militia sent from his headquarters in the Town of Niagara reported that none of the supplies requested for the militia were in store there except nails.  Camp kettles and haversacks were being made but no tents would be available.  Militia men were expected to find shelter in houses and barns.  However, the Medical Department in Chippawa had been fully supplied.[7]

 

On the Atlantic Coast

 

            Lieutenant Governor Sir John Coape Sherbrooke issued a proclamation that Nova Scotians were not to harass the Americans in the District of Maine or interfere with trading activities.  This would help keep the Atlantic Colonies more secure from American raids and help maintain British trade with the New England states.

            On July 10th, the lieutenant governor of New Brunswick declared the same proclamation.[8]

 

July 4, 1812

 

On the Niagara Frontier

 

            A General Order from Niagara reported that Major General Brock was aware that the militia were being exposed to great privations and that every effort would be made to supply those items most needed.  Each man was expected to supply his own blankets and necessities.[9]

 

            However, as the men did not know they would be serving on the frontier they had not brought supplies and they therefore requested money with which to purchase them.  They did not receive assistance in purchasing the items and growing discontent lead to desertions in growing numbers.  The fine for desertion at that time was 20 pounds.[10]

 

In Grenville County

 

            William Wells of Augusta Township, invoiced the British for goods he supplied to the Provincial Dragoons from this date to November of 1812.  His bill included:

 

210.5 bushels of “pease” at 5 shillings per bushel

336 bushels of oats at 2.5 shillings per bushel

500 pounds of bran at 3 shillings per 100 pounds

8975 pounds of bran at 4 shillings per 100 pounds

2.5 tons of hay at 6 pounds, 5 shillings

 

This portion of the bill included leather for “Holtsters, Scabbards, and Cartouch boxes” at 16 pounds, 16 shillings and thread, cloth, and a bear skin for the same project at under 2 pounds.

            William was also repairing gun boats and had purchased:

 

20 ox hides at over 24 pounds

60 bushels of hair at 1 shilling per bushel

23 pounds of chain at under 2 pounds

 

            Shipping forage to Prescott cost him under 5 pounds.  One of his bateaux was destroyed in shipping and was valued at 2 and a half pounds.[11]

 

On the St. Lawrence River

 

            Like the merchants, Simeon Washburn and James Cummings, who had lost rafted of timber on the St. Lawrence River in June, John Sparrow lost a raft about July 4th, but claimed to have rescued 605 barrels of flour destined for the British war effort.

            John’s timber raft, while traveling down the St. Lawrence, had been forced ashore at Ogdensburgh by enemy fire.  Like Washburn, he obtained a pass for his raft from Lieutenant Colonel Benedict to proceed past the American guard at the rapids and on to Montreal.  However, he noted that there were also large scow and a boat containing barrels of flour on the river.  When he learned that the scow and boat crew did not have a pass and would be seized by the American guards at the bottom of the rapids, John decided to abandon his raft at Ogdensburgh and to try to deceive the guards into thinking that his pass was for the flour.

            As the scow and boat were swiftly coming down the rapids, the Americans did not have time to read the details of John’s pass and only noted their officer’s signature.  The flour arrived safely at Cornwall.

            After the war, John made a war loss claim for his lost timber, which he had abandoned in order to save British provisions.[12]

 

July 6, 1812

 

At Buffalo, New York

 

            At a council, the New York Six Nations declared that they would remain neutral during the war.  The members of the Six Nations in Upper Canada responded by declaring that they would defend their lands from invaders.  Few of their warriors responded to Brock’s request that they gather at Fort George and those that did only remained there a few days.[13]

 

In Washington DC

 

            The United States Congress passed the act for “Safe Keeping and Accommodation of Prisoners of War.”  Although guidelines were set, some British prisoners would be deprived of the necessities of life because of local conditions and the availability of supplies and money to support them.

 

July 9, 1812

 

Near Detroit

 

            A number of the stories in this collection were compiled from diaries and journals.  One of these was Richardson’s War of 1812.  It was reported to be the only first-hand history of the entire war.

            On October 4, 1796, John Richardson was born in Queenston to Dr. Robert Richardson and Madeleine Askin.  Madeleine’s father was Colonel John Askin of a wealthy merchant of Detroit.  In 1801, Dr. Richardson joined a detachment of the Queen’s Rangers bound for Fort St. Joseph near the head of Lake Huron.  Madeleine took her children to her father’s house in Detroit.  When the Rangers were disbanded in 1802, Dr. Richardson took on the position as surgeon to the governor and garrison of Fort Amherstburg and later became a judge in the Western District.  Young John Richardson grew up in John Askin’s home and was acquainted with soldiers, Indigenous peoples, and fur traders in the region.

            On this date, at the age of 15, John Richardson was appointed as a volunteer in the 41st Regiment and remained with that regiment until he was captured by the Americans at Moraviantown on October 5th, 1813.[14]

 

July 10, 1812

 

On the Niagara Frontier

 

            A Militia General Order from Niagara reported that Major General Brock had been informed that a large portion of the American troops on the other side of the Niagara River had retired.  Half of each militia company were allowed to return to their homes.  Farmers with crops to harvest were to be given priority.  Some officers were to be given furlough as well so that they would be available to muster the men if they were needed back again to defend the Niagara River.  Arms were to be left with the men remaining behind.[15]

 

At Sandwich

 

            Militia men gathered to support the British regulars against General Hull’s forces which were expected to invade Upper Canada from Fort Detroit.[16]

 

In New Brunswick

 

            George Stracey Smith, President of His Majesty’s Council, Commander in Chief of the Province of New-Brunswick, and Major General in His Majesty’s Service, passed a proclamation stating that they would not molest their American neighbours or their fishing vessels if they in turn behaved in the same manner towards the inhabitants of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.[17]

 

July 12, 1812

 

Brigadier General William Hull Invaded at Sandwich

 

            After Hull occupied at Sandwich, he made a proclamation requesting the Upper Canadians to remain at home.  Hull promised prosperity and the protection of private property under American rule but he also threatened to kill any white man who was found fighting beside Indigenous warriors.  There was not a strong British force in the area to oppose Hull and the local militia was not prepared to oppose the invasion.[18]

 

When they received word of Hull’s proclamation most of the militia at Sandwich returned to their homes.  The remainder retreated to Fort Amherstburg with the British regulars.  The British commander felt that a retreat was necessary as he had lost the support of most of the militia.  Militia continued to desert in the following days.[19]

 

            Major General Henry Procter wrote that the American artillery had wantonly fired across the Detroit River at the home of Lieutenant Colonel Francis Baby, near Sandwich, prior to Brigadier General Hull’s invasion of Upper Canada, and had encamped upon that land after crossing the river.

            Francis’ wife and family were at home while he was serving as the Quarter Master General of the Militia at Amherstburg at the time.  During the occupation, the Americans occupied the buildings, destroyed the orchards and fences, and plundered the families possessions in retaliation of Francis’ loyalty to the British.[20]

            Among the items taken were 9 gilt framed prints, 3 looking glasses, 4 bedsteads, 2 buffalo robes, 6 three-point blankets, 4 coats, 10 yards of bed ticking, a set of bed curtains, a watch, 6 pair of new stockings, a muff and tippet, a large green rug, a fire shovel and tongs, 10 yards of flannel, 14 locks, 2 sets of knee buckles, a gold locket, 3 pair of earrings, 20 decanters, a large copper boiler, 4 tea kettles, a pepper mill, 5 tables, 6 cherrywood chairs, 20 ash chairs, 12 common chairs, 6 stone water jugs, a chest of earthenware, 4 iron pots, 12 buck handle knives, 2 pair of candle sticks, 2 glass dishes, 16 goblets, 12 tumblers and wine glasses, 6 large jars, a large china punch bowl, a large copper kettle, a twenty-four-hour clock and case, 3 pine tables, 12 china cups and saucers, 19 pewter basins, 2 large china dishes, 12 black bottles, a large green table cloth, 2 kitchen shovels and tongs, 4 ox chains, nails, 2 cross cut saws, 10 French plough chains, 8 iron shovels, 6 cow bells, 7 axes, 2 hand saws, 6 cross cut saws, a set of sawmill irons, 6 whip saws, 10 empty barrels with iron hoops, 3 plated bridles, 15 bags, 6 new collars and reins, 6 jockey whips, 10 sickles, 2 hay forks, 5 new saddle cloths, 2 double reeled fishing rods with silk line, a double-barreled gun, 3 well mounted rifles, one and a half acres of potatoes, 20 bee hives, horses, 10 cords of fire wood, a timber barn burned, and the following victuals:

 

1 barrel of pork at 6.25 pounds

16 hams at 12 pounds

154 pounds of sugar at over 9 pounds

12 pounds of tobacco at 24 shillings

 

The total claim was valued at just over 723 pounds.[21]

 

            Francis Baby was born in Detroit in 1768 and became politically active in the Upper Canada Assembly in 1792.  He held a commission as commander of the 1st Kent Militia, engaged the Americans during the war at Detroit, Frenchtown, and Moraviantown, and was once taken prisoner but quickly repatriated.[22]

            The Baby surname was not found in the American prisoner of war register.

 

An American guard was placed on the premises of Angus McIntosh in Sandwich.  Repeated searches were conducted in order to find and seize property of the North West Company, for which McIntosh was the local agent.  The Americans believed that the company had been aiding the British war effort.[23]

 

On the Niagara Frontier

 

            Brock wrote to Sir George Provost in Montreal that he feared the remainder of the militia men on the Niagara Frontier would depart, in defiance of the law, to tend to their harvests.  He reported that he had barely enough arms to supply the militia men on duty, that their clothing was in a poor state, and that many were without shoes.[24]

 

            British officers were to remind their men that it was forbidden to fire across the Niagara River without orders.[25]

 

            Major General Brock had received a letter from an American officer requesting permission for Senecas to cross the river at Queenston and meet with local chiefs in the Upper Canada.  Brock decided not to let these warriors look over his defences but allowed them to meet in Queenston on July 12th.  He requested John Norton to be present. They declared their intentions to remain neutral and asked the Upper Canadian tribes to follow their example.  The local warriors present declared their intention to support the British King.[26]

At York

            The Town of York magistrates ordered that it was illegal to bathe in Lake Ontario in front of the town between sunrise and sunset.[27]  While Lady Simcoe had stayed at York, she had hired a boat to take her out the islands where she could bath in privacy.

 


July 13, 1812

 

On the Niagara Frontier

 

            Captain Henry Buchner of the 3rd Lincoln Militia served on the Niagara Frontier from June 26 to July 13 but was unable to collect his pay as the Paymaster refused to pay for any militia service other than that of the militia flank companies.[28]

 

July 15, 1812

 

            David Gardiner, of Saltfleet Township in the Niagara District, had his boat impressed by order of Major General Brock.  The boat could carry a load of 20 barrels and was valued at 25 pounds.  The order was carried out by Lieutenant Robert Runchey.[29]

            David Gardiner served as a private in the 5th Lincoln Militia.  Robert Runchey later served as a captain of the Coloured Corps.

 

At Fort St. Joseph

 

            Captain Charles Roberts of the British 10th Royal Veteran Battalion stationed at St. Joseph’s in the northwest received letters from Major General Brock.  Captain Roberts, who was aware that British reinforcements were on the way but that his garrison could not be defended, that the Indigenous warriors were considering abandoning his garrison, and that the Americans had not yet received notice that war had been declared, decided to attack Fort Michilimackinac.[30]

 

At Fort William

 

            William McKay travelled from Fort Joseph to Fort William, where the North West Company had their inland headquarters, to alert them that war had been declared.  The company astronomer, David Thompson, noted this in his journal.  The whole season’s fur shipment was almost ready to ship to Montreal.  The voyageurs were anxious to get on their way before the Americans cut off their trade route east and captured them.  Many wanted to return home to their families in Lower Canada.[31]

 

July 16, 1812

 

At Fort Joseph

 

            Captain Roberts embarked for Fort Michilimackinac with about 100 regulars, 150 Upper Canadians, about 300 indigenous warriors, and 2 iron six-pounders.  Only about half the Upper Canadians had arms.[32] 

 

At Sandwich

 

            General Hull, in Sandwich, had not advanced on Amherstburgh.  The British had disabled the bridge over the Canard River that ran between the two communities.  Hull dispatched workers with military support to repair the bridge but they were daily confronted by the British, Upper Canadians, and Indigenous Peoples.

            The first British casualty was on this date.  On another occasion, 22 Menomoni warriors confronted an American detachment of 200 men under Major Denny and drove them back away from the bridge.[33]

 

July 17, 1812

The British Captured Fort Michilimackinac

 

            Captain Roberts force of 45 regulars, 180 North West Company Voyageurs, and about 400 First Nations’ warriors confronted 61 American regulars and their families.  The Americans surrendered the fort to the superior British force.  They had not been aware that war had been declared.[34]

            Note that different sources disagreed about the number of men in the British force.

 

            Mr. Askin Jr. of the Indian Department wrote Mr. Crawford commanded about 200 Canadians, Mr. Dixon 113 Seioux, Foolavoines, and Waynebegoes, and himself about 280 Ottawas and Chippawas.  He commended the warriors for not having drunk any liquor or destroyed any property after the surrender of the fort.[35]

 

            A history of the event described the warriors as 113 Sioux, Menominee, and Winnebago and 280 Ojibwe and Odaawaa.[36]

 

            Captain Rogers declared that private property would be protected and that the cargos of the merchant vessels in the harbour would remain the property of the respective owners.[37]

 

            The fort was situated on Mackinac Island in the straits between lakes Huron and Michigan.

            This action impressed the western Indigenous tribes that the British were determined to win the war.[38]

 

            David Mitchell was born in Scotland where he studied medicine at the University of Edinborough.  In 1771, he arrived as a sailor in New York with the British 8th Foot.  In 1774, he arrived at Michilimackinac as a surgeon with a detachment of the same regiment.  In 1776, David married Elizabeth Bertrand who was a Metis with strong connections within the First Nations.  About 1780, the family moved to Mackinac Island where David continued to serve the British but also cared for the voyageurs and began trading furs with his wife’s Native connections.  In 1796, the island was given to the Americans and the British moved to St. Joseph Island.  David and his sons remained and became prominent fur traders in the area.  In 1811, with the expectation of a war with the Americans, David joined the British on St. Joseph Island.  After the British captured Mackinac Island on this day, David Mitchell returned as the head of the British forces there.  The British strike force was led by Captain Charles Roberts.  David’s daughter had married another fur trader who helped recruit local Indigenous allies for the British.

            Later, after the sinking of the Nancy, David’s wife Elizabeth helped organized the Indigenous peoples to defend Mackinac Island.  She later received 100 pounds as a reward for her help.

            After the war the island was returned to the Americans and David left, but Elizabeth remained to run the family businesses there.  She eventually left under fear of arrest by the Americans but returned again and some of her children prospered there.[39]

 

July 18, 1812

 

            John Askin Jr. of the Store Keeper Department wrote to Lieutenant Colonel W. Claus at Fort George about the capture of Fort Michilimackinac.  Captain Roberts had command of most of the 10th Battalion, Mr. Crawford had command of about 200 Upper Canadians, Mr. Dickson had command of 113 Scioux, Menomoni, and Winnebagoes, and John had command of about 130 Ottawas and Chippawas.  John was assisted by his son, Charles Langlade, Augustin Nolin, and Michel Cadotte Jr.

            Who were John’s 4 assistants in command?

            John also reported that the Ottawas and Chippawas had not drank any liquour or killed any fowl belonging to the islanders after the capture.  He pointed out that generally they destroyed everything that they could.[40]

 

July 19, 1812

 

            Lieutenant Colonel James Baby was serving in Amherstburg with the Upper Canada Militia. The Americans seized and plundered his home in Sandwich.  Mrs. Baby received permission from Brigadier General William Hull to keep 4 cows and 6 sheep for her personal use at the house of William Hands Sr., where she and her children had taken refuge.[41]

 

July 22, 1812

 

On the Niagara Frontier

 

            Brock ordered all the militia on furlough on the Niagara Frontier to return to duty as a large number of Americans had invaded the province in the west.[42]

 

Major General and President Isaac Brock made a proclamation in response to General Hull’s in which he reminded the Upper Canadians living in the area invaded by General Hull that they would prosper more under British rule through government expenditures and access to British markets.  He warned that the Americans planned to give the British colonies back to France.  As most Upper Canadians had sworn an oath to defend the monarchy and the empire, it would be treasonous not to fight the Americans.  He also pointed out that the Indigenous Peoples had an equal right to defend their lands from invasion.  He declared that Britain would win the war and that those who had aided the Americans would be dealt with by the British at that time.[43]

 

In the West

 

            Brock ordered Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Talbot to assemble 200 men from the flank companies of the Oxford, Norfolk, and Middlesex Militias at Moraviantown to help repel Hull’s invasion.[44]

            John Beemer, a justice of the peace, Ensign Timothy Culver of the Norfolk Militia, and another man travelled from house to house over a 3-day period advising the inhabitants not to muster.  Beemer told Colonel Talbot that “withdrawing the militia from Long Point was highly improper.” [45]

 

            Talbot assembled his men from the Long Point area and marched towards Moraviantown but most mutinied on route and returned home.  General Hull had convinced the western Indigenous tribes to remain neutral.[46]

 

            Ebenezer Allan, Andrew Westbrook, and Simon Zelotes Watson approached General Hull and offered to help distribute his proclamation by forming a cavalry troop of sympathetic Upper Canadians.  They recruited about 50 local men to join their troop.[47]

            Allen and Westbrook were arrested by the local militia but Watson had returned to Sandwich before he could be apprehended.[48]

            Andrew Westbrook would later join the Americans and lead a number of raids into Upper Canada.

 

On the Niagara Frontier

 

            Lacking militia support in the west, General Brock decided to gather support from the Niagara and Home Districts and to march west to confront Hull himself.[49]

 

            A number of boats on the Niagara Frontier and further west were impressed to transport Brock’s expedition.  Some had to be hauled overland to Lake Erie.

            John Mucklehone of Stamford Township in the Niagara District had a team of oxen impressed to haul boats in that area.  John had fattened up his oxen to sell to the British commissariat as beef at $55.00 each.  The team was driven over the edge of a bridge and into a creek, killing one of the oxen.  John pointed out that the team had been driven by an impressed American sympathizer who later deserted to the enemy.

            Quarter Master Gilbert McMicking of the 2nd Lincoln Militia certified that he had been ordered to impress teams to transport boats.  The 1824 claim was rejected because it had not been presented to the earlier claims board in 1816.[50]

 

At the Grand River

 

            Major General Brock had asked John Norton to gather what support that he could from the Grand River warriors and to defend the Thames River area from American forces.  At the lower village on the Grand River, John heard that the Indigenous warriors in the Detroit area had decided to remain neutral.  Although John heard that many local warriors would support him in his expedition to the west, he did not know how many he could rely upon as they were busy harvesting crops.  He proceeded with the few that were ready to follow him and joined the British 41st Regiment in Oxford where he discovered that the militia had not arrived.[51]

           

July 25, 1812

 

At Sandwich

 

            Lieutenant Colonel Francois Baby’s home had been impressed as headquarters for General Hull.  Baby removed his chattels to the home of Jean-Baptiste Goyeau, but Hull sent a detachment to recover them for his use.[52]

 

On the Thames River

 

            General McArthur was sent foraging on the Thames for the Americans.  He penetrated 60 miles into Upper Canada.  McArthur’s party returned 5 days later with wagons loaded with hundreds of barrels of flour, hundreds of blankets, as well as salt, whiskey, cloth, household goods, tools, guns, ammunition, and boats.  During the raid they had ransacked and destroyed houses, other buildings, fences, orchards, and crops in the fields.  McArthur promised to pay for what he had taken after the British had relinquished the country to the Americans.

            Jean-Baptiste Beniteau, Jean-Baptiste Ginac, Jean-Baptiste Fourneaux, and Jean-Baptiste Boismier, a fur trader, all made war loss claims.

 

Although the Earl of Selkirk had left the settlement he created in Baldoon, Dover Township, in 1804, he still maintained a store, mills, and other property there which was raided by the Americans on this date.  A partial list of his losses included: 

 

73 sheep at 145 pounds

200 bushels of wheat at 5 shillings a bushel

500 pounds of flour at 15 shillings per 100 pounds

30 pounds of cooking hams

179 pounds of sugar at 7.5 pence per pound

108 bushels of oats at 2.5 shillings a bushel

50 bushels of corn at about 4.3 shillings a bushel

50 bushels of potatoes at 2.5 shillings a bushel

4 oxen at about 7 pounds each

3 2-year old steers at 3.75 pounds each

2 cows and a calf at 11.5 pounds

 

as well as a tartan cloak, 2 morning gowns, 2 pair of trousers, 3 barrels of salt, a barrel of pork, 8 chairs, 3 tin cups, 10 small plates, 18 pewter plates, a grid iron, a frying pan, 3 pair of wool shears, 5 pieces of canvas, 5 weaver’s reeds, rope, 126 pounds of ox chains, 2 pair of trace chains, 3 axes and a broad axe, 6 hoes, a spring bayonet gun, 30 pounds of nails, 80 pounds of spike nails, 10 sickles, 6 gallons of fish oil, a keg of white paint, 20 pounds of steel, 3 bushels of grass seed, a tent table, 11 augers, 10 horseshoes, 36 small files, 6 hand saws, a saw, and a cross saw, a large double lock, 28 chisels, 9 “plains”, 20 harrow teeth, 23 pounds of iron, a hammer, a flag stave, 4 pitch forks, and other items. From his farm, he lost 10 horses, standing crops of wheat and hay, and a set of blacksmith tools.  The total loss was valued at just over 612 pounds.

 

In 1814 he lost a scow, a canoe, 3 blankets, and 2000 rails.[53]

 

At Fort Michilimackinac, Michigan

 

            On September 8, 1812, Tanpoint Pothier wrote that he left Michilimackinac Island on the 25th of July.  He reported that the traders and most of the Indigenous people had left for their winter quarters.  Not many provisions remained, there was a “great scarcity of gun powder”, and the garrison lacked a “good interpreter.”[54]

 

July 26, 1812

 

At Kingston

 

            A General Order declared that allied Indigenous warriors would be compensated for injuries received in battle.  A chief who lost an eye or received a wound equal to the loss of a limb would receive 100 dollars annually in money or gifts, a warrior would receive 70 dollars.  The widow of a chief would receive a gift of 200 dollars and the widow of a warrior would receive 140 dollars.[55]

 

July 28, 1812

 

At York

 

            In Major General Brock’s speech at the opening of the Upper Canada Legislature he said, “A few traitors have already joined the enemy, have been suffered to come into the country with impunity and have been harbored and concealed in the interior, yet the general spirit of loyalty which appears to pervade the inhabitants of this Province is such as to authorize a just expectation that their efforts to mislead and deceive will be unavailing.  The disaffected, I am convinced, are few.  To protect and defend the loyal inhabitants from their machinations is an object worthy of your most zealous deliberations.”[56]

And “Our Militia have heard that voice and have obeyed it, they have evinced by the promptitude and Loyalty of their Conduct, that they are worthy of the King whom they serve, and of the Constitution which they enjoy”.[57]

 

            Brock ordered an emergency session of the Assembly of Upper Canada to pass new laws that would give him more control over of the militia, in order to deal with desertions, but the Assembly were opposed to martial law that would allow Brock to deal with those men harshly.

            Brock dismissed the Assembly on August 5th.   Regulations passed made it a crime to sell militia arms and supplies, to advise others not to report for militia duty, and to speak disrespectfully of the royal family.  Militia courts were granted the power to deliver death sentences for the crimes of desertion to the enemy or for promoting mutiny or desertion.[58]

 

July 29, 1812

 

            Major General Brock received word that the Norfolk Militia had refused his ordered to march to Oxford.[59]

 

            Isaac Brock noted that many had lost confidence in the British but that he spoke “loud” and looked big.[60]

 

            Major General Brock wrote to Lieutenant General Provost that he wished to amend the Militia Act.  Militia men who refused to march could only be fined 5 pounds or be confined for 3 months.  He wanted to impose harsher rules but thought that the “Americans” in the Lower House would oppose the change.[61]  Between 1804 and 1812 the British had enticed a number of Americans north with free land grants.  This had changed politics in some communities.

            He also had to mix militia with British regulars to form enough detachments to guard the frontier.[62]

 

            Sergeant Henry Pringle of the 1st York was ordered to proceed to Delaware Town with 8 privates from Captain John Button’s Cavalry.  He was to wait there for orders from Lieutenant William Merritt of the Niagara Light Horse.[63]

 

July 31, 1812

 

In Trafalgar Township

 

            Rachael McCraney had borrowed a horse with a saddle and bridle from Martin Middaugh Jr. of East Flamborough Township to ride to the Town of York.  The horse was pastured over night but was stolen with 3 other horses in the same field.  One of the other horses was the property of Major General Isaac Brock.  The thieves were believed to have been deserters from the Flankers.[64]

 

In York Township

 

            In July, Ely Playter ploughed, harrowed, and sowed, sheared a lamb, mowed and cut some grass, mended his rakes, hoed his corn, drilled his militia company, found his missing oxen, ground some buckwheat, cut timber and drew it to the creek, mowed, raked, and drew in his hay and stacked it, and bought flour.  He had help from others in his fields and sometimes worked in their fields as well.[65]

 

            Which creek would he have been hauling timber to?  Where was his farm located?

 

In Ancaster Township

 

            During the month, Benjamin Smith plowed in his orchard, planted buckwheat there, burnt logs and poles on his turnip ground, hoed corn, harrowed Jones’ corn, made a plow handle, plowed his corn field, heaped brush, picked it up, and mowed his north ground, and then sowed turnips there, began to harvest, and cradled (reaped) in John Vandecar’s, Jones’, David’s, John Wilken’s, and Tice Smith’s fields.

            He went to a Sunday meeting, spent a Saturday night at Sam Green’s house, and read a book at home on a Sunday.[66]

 

In Bertie Township

            Sometime during the month, a boat was impressed from Thomas Otway Page of Bertie Township.  The boat was used by the government to transport Elisha Clark to the American shore but was never returned to Thomas.[67]

            Why was Elisha Clark assisted to enter the United States?

 

Sources



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1 comment:

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