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Battle of Fort Stephenson
Part of the War of 1812
DateAugust 2, 1813
LocationSandusky County, Ohio
41°20′46″N 83°6′55″W / 41.34611°N 83.11528°W / 41.34611; -83.11528Coordinates: 41°20′46″N 83°6′55″W / 41.34611°N 83.11528°W / 41.34611; -83.11528
Result United States victory
Belligerents
Flag of the United Kingdom Great Britain
Tecumseh's confederacy
US flag 15 stars United States
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom Henry Procter,
Tecumseh
United States George Croghan
Strength
1,400 British regulars and Indians 160 U.S. regulars
Casualties and losses
26 killed
41 wounded
29 missing[1]
1 killed
7 wounded[1]


The Battle of Fort Stephenson was an American victory during the War of 1812.

Background[]

After failing to defeat American forces in the siege of Fort Meigs, the British under Henry Procter withdrew. Procter attempted to take Fort Meigs again in July by staging a mock battle to lure the defenders out of the fort. The ploy failed, and Procter abandoned the idea of taking the fort. The British and Indian force moved on to capture an American supply base on the Sandusky River guarded by Fort Stephenson. The fort was commanded by Major George Croghan with a garrison of 160 U.S. Regulars (17th U.S. Infantry-later consolidated into US 3rd Infantry Regiment) under his command. William Henry Harrison, the U.S. commander of the Northwest Frontier, believed Procter's force to be larger than it was and ordered Croghan to destroy the fort and withdraw. Croghan insisted that he could hold the fort and stayed. Harrison agreed to let Croghan stay, but still fearing the worst he moved all available forces 10 miles (16 km) away from Fort Stephenson.

Battle[]

Battle of Fort Stephenson from 1912 History Book

Battle depicted in 1912 history book

Expecting Harrison to be moving to Fort Stephenson's aid, Procter had no intentions of conducting a siege as he had at Fort Meigs. The British artillery and gunboats began shelling the fort but with little effect. On August 2, Procter ordered an infantry assault. Croghan ordered the defenders to hold fire until the attackers were within close range. Once within range, the garrison opened fired along with the fort's artillery. The attack fell back, and Procter tried and failed several more times. Lacking scaling ladders, Procter finally realized that the attackers could do very little against the fort. Procter called off the attack, and the Indians returned to the field late at night to carry away the wounded.

Five currently active units of the Regular Army (1-3 Inf, 2-3 Inf, 4-3 Inf, 2-7 Inf and 3-7 Inf) perpetuate the lineages of the old 17th and 24th Infantry Regiments, both of which had elements that were engaged at Fort Stephenson.

Results[]

The battle had been a victory for the Americans. George Croghan emerged from the battle as a hero and was promoted to lieutenant colonel. Both Procter and Harrison suffered criticism for their parts in the battle. The British as well as Tecumseh were growing increasingly aware of Procter's shortcomings. Harrison was criticised for not making a whole-hearted effort to come to the fort's aid. Yet the British had been defeated, and Procter withdrew to Canada. In the following months, the Americans won decisive victories at the battles of Lake Erie and the Thames.

Notes[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Gilpin, p. 207

References[]

  • Gilpin, Alec R. (1958 (1968 reprint edition)). The War of 1812 in the Old Northwest. East Lansing, MI: The Michigan State University Press. 

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Battle of Fort Stephenson and the edit history here.
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