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Brock at Detroit and Queenston Heights, 1812
The prorogation which released Brock from his
parliamentary duties on August 5 had been followed by eight days of
the most strenuous military work, especially on the part of the
little reinforcement which he was taking west to Amherstburg. The
Upper Canada militiamen, drawn from the United Empire Loyalists and
from the British-born, had responded with hearty goodwill, all the
way from Glengarry to Niagara. But the population was so scattered
and equipment so scarce that no attempt had been made to have whole
battalions of 'Select Embodied Militia' ready for the beginning of
the war, as in the more thickly peopled province of Lower Canada.
The best that could be done was to embody the two flank
companies--the Light and Grenadier companies--of the most urgently
needed battalions. But as these companies contained all the picked
men who were readiest for immediate service, and as the Americans
were very slow in mobilizing their own still more unready army,
Brock found that, for the time being, York could be left and Detroit
attacked with nothing more than his handful of regulars, backed by
the flank-company militiamen and the Provincial Marine.
Leaving York the very day he closed the House there, Brock sailed
over to Burlington Bay, marched across the neck of the Niagara
peninsula, and embarked at Long Point with every man the boats could
carry--three hundred, all told, forty regulars of the 41st and two
hundred and sixty flank-company militiamen. Then, for the next five
days, he fought his way, inch by inch, along the north shore of Lake
Erie against a persistent westerly storm. The news by the way was
discouraging. Hull's invasion had unsettled the Indians as far east
as the Niagara peninsula, which the local militia were consequently
afraid to leave defenseless. But once Brock reached the scene of
action, his insight showed him what bold skill could do to turn the
tide of feeling all along the western frontier.
It was getting on for one o'clock in the morning of August 14 when
Lieutenant Rolette challenged Brock's leading boat from aboard the
Provincial Marine schooner General Hunter. As Brock stepped
ashore he ordered all commanding officers to meet him within an
hour. He then read Hull's dispatches, which had been taken by
Rolette with the captured schooner and by Tecumseh at Brownstown. By
two o'clock all the principal officers and Indian chiefs had
assembled, not as a council of war, but simply to tell Brock
everything they knew. Only Tecumseh and Colonel Nichol, the
quartermaster of the little army, thought that Detroit itself could
be attacked with any prospect of success. Brock listened
attentively; made up his mind; told his officers to get ready for
immediate attack; asked Tecumseh to assemble all the Indians at
noon; and dismissed the meeting at four. Brock and Tecumseh read
each other at a glance; and Tecumseh, turning to the tribal chiefs,
said simply, 'This is a man,' a commendation approved by them all
with laconic, deep 'Ho-ho's!'
Tecumseh was the last great leader of the Indian race and perhaps
the finest embodiment of all its better qualities. Like Pontiac,
fifty years before, but in a nobler way, he tried to unite the
Indians against the exterminating American advance. He was
apparently on the eve of forming his Indian alliance when he
returned home to find that his brother the Prophet had just been
defeated at Tippecanoe. The defeat itself was no great thing. But it
came precisely at a time when it could exert most influence on the
unstable Indian character and be most effective in breaking up the
alliance of the tribes. Tecumseh, divining this at once, lost no
time in vain regrets, but joined the British next year at
Amherstburg. He came with only thirty followers. But stray warriors
kept on arriving; and many of the bolder spirits joined him when war
became imminent. At the time of Brock's arrival there were a
thousand effective Indians under arms. Their arming was only
authorized at the last minute; for Brock's dispatch to Prevost shows
how strictly neutral the Canadian government had been throughout the
recent troubles between the Indians and Americans. He mentions that
the chiefs at Amherstburg had long been trying to obtain the muskets
and ammunition 'which for years had been withheld, agreeably to the
instructions received from Sir James Craig, and since repeated by
Your Excellency.'
Precisely at noon Brock took his stand beneath a giant oak at
Amherstburg surrounded by his officers. Before him sat Tecumseh.
Behind Tecumseh sat the chiefs; and behind the chiefs a thousand
Indians in their war-paint. Brock then stepped forward to address
them. Erect, alert, broad-shouldered, and magnificently tall;
blue-eyed, fair-haired, with frank and handsome countenance; he
looked every inch the champion of a great and righteous cause. He
said the Long Knives had come to take away the land from both the
Indians and the British whites, and that now he would not be content
merely to repulse them, but would follow and beat them on their own
side of the Detroit. After the pause that was usual on grave
occasions, Tecumseh rose and answered for all his followers. He
stood there the ideal of an Indian chief: tall, stately, and
commanding; yet tense, lithe, observant, and always ready for his
spring. He the tiger, Brock the lion; and both unflinchingly at bay.
Next morning, August 15, an early start was made for Sandwich, some
twelve miles north, where a five-gun battery was waiting to be
unmasked against Detroit across the river. Arrived at Sandwich,
Brock immediately sent across his aide-de-camp, Colonel Macdonell,
with a letter summoning Hull to surrender. Hull wrote back to say he
was prepared to stand his ground. Brock at once unmasked his battery
and made ready to attack next day. With the men on detachment Hull
still had a total of twenty-five hundred. Brock had only fifteen
hundred, including the Provincial Marine. But Hull's men were losing
what discipline they had and were becoming distrustful both of their
leaders and of themselves; while Brock's men were gaining
discipline, zeal, and inspiring confidence with every hour. Besides,
the British were all effectives; while Hull had over five hundred
absent from Detroit and as many more ineffective on the spot; which
left him only fifteen hundred actual combatants. He also had a
thousand non-combatants--men, women, and children--all cowering for
shelter from the dangers of battle, and half dead with the far more
terrifying apprehension of an Indian massacre.
Brock's five-gun battery made excellent practice during the
afternoon without suffering any material damage in return. One
chance shell produced a most dismaying effect in Detroit by killing
Hanks, the late commandant of Mackinaw, and three other officers
with him. At twilight the firing ceased on both sides.
Immediately after dark Tecumseh led six hundred eager followers down
to their canoes a little way below Sandwich. These Indians were told
off by tribes, as battalions are by companies. There, in silent,
dusky groups, moving soft-foot on their moccasins through the gloom,
were Shawnees and Miami from Tecumseh's own lost home beside the
Wabash, Foxes and Sacs from the Iowan valley, Ottawa and Wyandot,
Chippewa and Potawatomi, some braves from the middle prairies
between the Illinois and the Mississippi, and even Winnebago and
Dakotah from the far North-West. The flotilla of crowded canoes
moved stealthily across the river, with no louder noise than the
rippling current made. As secretly, the Indians crept ashore, stole
inland through the quiet night, and, circling north, cut off Hull's
army from the woods. Little did Hull's anxious sentries think that
some of the familiar cries of night-birds round the fort were
signals being passed along from scout to scout.
As the beautiful summer dawn began to break at four o'clock that
fateful Sunday morning, the British force fell in, only seven
hundred strong, and more than half militia. The thirty gunners who
had served the Sandwich battery so well the day before also fell in,
with five little field-pieces, in case Brock could force a battle in
the open. Their places in the battery were ably filled by every man
of the Provincial Marine whom Captain Hall could spare from the
Queen Charlotte, the flagship of the tiny Canadian flotilla.
Brock's men and his light artillery were soon afloat and making for
Spring Wells, more than three miles below Detroit. Then, as the
Queen Charlotte ran up her sunrise flag, she and the Sandwich
battery roared out a challenge to which the Americans replied with
random aim. Brock leaped ashore, formed front towards Hull, got into
touch with Tecumseh's Indians on his left, and saw that the British
land and water batteries were protecting his right, as prearranged
with Captain Hall.
He had intended to wait in this position, hoping that Hull would
march out to the attack. But, even before his men had finished
taking post, the whole problem was suddenly changed by the arrival
of an Indian to say that McArthur's four hundred picked men, whom
Hull had sent south to bring in the convoy, were returning to
Detroit at once. There was now only a moment to decide whether to
retreat across the river, form front against McArthur, or rush
Detroit immediately. But, within that fleeting moment, Brock divined
the true solution and decided to march straight on. With Tecumseh
riding a grey mustang by his side, he led the way in person. He wore
his full-dress gold-and-scarlet uniform and rode his charger Alfred,
the splendid grey which Governor Craig had given him the year
before, with the recommendation that 'the whole continent of America
could not furnish you with so safe and excellent a horse,' and for
the good reason that 'I wish to secure for my old favorite a kind
and careful master.'
The seven hundred redcoats made a gallant show, all the more
imposing because the militia were wearing some spare uniforms
borrowed from the regulars and because the confident appearance of
the whole body led the discouraged Americans to think that these few
could only be the vanguard of much greater numbers. So strong was
this belief that Hull, in sudden panic, sent over to Sandwich to
treat for terms, and was astounded to learn that Brock and Tecumseh
were the two men on the big grey horses straight in front of him.
While Hull's envoys were crossing the river and returning, the
Indians were beginning to raise their war-whoops in the woods and
Brock was reconnoitering within a mile of the fort. This looked
formidable enough, if properly defended, as the ditch was six feet
deep and twelve feet wide, the parapet rose twenty feet, the
palisades were of twenty-inch cedar, and thirty-three guns were
pointed through the embrasures. But Brock correctly estimated the
human element inside, and was just on the point of advancing to the
assault when Hull's white flag went up.
The terms were soon agreed upon. Hull's whole army, including all
detachments, surrendered as prisoners of war, while the territory of
Michigan passed into the military possession of King George.
Abundance of food and military stores fell into British hands,
together with the Adams, a fine new brig that had just been
completed. She was soon rechristened the Detroit. The
Americans sullenly trooped out. The British elatedly marched in. The
Stars and Stripes came down defeated. The Union Jack went up
victorious and was received with a royal salute from all the British
ordnance, afloat and ashore. The Indians came out of the woods,
yelling with delight and firing their muskets in the air. But,
grouped by tribes, they remained outside the fort and settlement,
and not a single outrage was committed. Tecumseh himself rode in
with Brock; and the two great leaders stood out in front of the
British line while the colors were being changed. Then Brock, in
view of all his soldiers, presented his sash and pistols to
Tecumseh. Tecumseh, in turn, gave his many-colored Indian sash to
Brock, who wore it till the day he died.
The effect of the British success at Detroit far exceeded that which
had followed the capture of Mackinaw and the evacuation of Fort
Dearborn. Those, however important to the West, were regarded as
mainly Indian affairs. This was a white man's victory and a white
man's defeat. Hull's proclamation thenceforth became a
laughing-stock. The American invasion had proved a fiasco. The first
American army to take the field had failed at every point. More
significant still, the Americans were shown to be feeble in
organization and egregiously mistaken in their expectations. Canada,
on the other hand, had already found her champion and men quite fit
to follow him.
Brock left Procter in charge of the West and hurried back to the
Niagara frontier. Arrived at Fort Erie on August 23 he was dismayed
to hear of a dangerously one-sided armistice that had been arranged
with the enemy. This had been first proposed, on even terms, by
Prevost, and then eagerly accepted by Dearborn, after being modified
in favor of the Americans. In proposing an armistice Prevost had
rightly interpreted the wishes of the Imperial government. It was
wise to see whether further hostilities could not be averted
altogether; for the obnoxious Orders-in-Council had been repealed.
But Prevost was criminally weak in assenting to the condition that
all movements of men and material should continue on the American
side, when he knew that corresponding movements were impossible on
the British side for lack of transport. Dearborn, the American
commander-in-chief, was only a second-rate general. But he was more
than a match for Prevost at making bargains.
Prevost was one of those men who succeed half-way up and fail at the
top. Pure Swiss by blood, he had, like his father, spent his life in
the British Army, and had risen to the rank of lieutenant-general.
He had served with some distinction in the West Indies, and had been
made a baronet for defending Dominica in 1805. In 1808 he became
governor of Nova Scotia, and in 1811, at the age of forty-four,
governor-general and commander-in-chief of Canada. He and his wife
were popular both in the West Indies and in Canada; and he
undoubtedly deserved well of the Empire for having conciliated the
French Canadians, who had been irritated by his predecessor, the
abrupt and masterful Craig. The very important Army Bill Act was
greatly due to his diplomatic handling of the French Canadians, who
found him so congenial that they stood by him to the end. His native
tongue was French. He understood French ways and manners to
perfection; and he consequently had far more than the usual sympathy
with a people whose nature and circumstances made them particularly
sensitive to real or fancied slights. All this is more to his credit
than his enemies were willing to admit, either then or afterwards.
But, in spite of all these good qualities, Prevost was not the man
to safeguard British honor during the supreme ordeal of a war; and
if he had lived in earlier times, when nicknames were more apt to
become historic, he might well have gone down to posterity as
Prevost the Pusillanimous.
Day after day Prevost's armistice kept the British helpless, while
supplies and reinforcements for the Americans poured in at every
advantageous point. Brock was held back from taking either Sackett's
Harbor, which was meanwhile being strongly reinforced from
Ogdensburg, or Fort Niagara, which was being reinforced from Oswego,
Procter was held back from taking Fort Wayne, at the point of the
salient angle south of Lake Michigan and west of Lake Erie--a quite
irretrievable loss. For the moment the British had the command of
all the Lakes. But their golden opportunity passed, never to return.
By land their chances were also quickly disappearing. On September
1, a week before the armistice ended, there were less than seven
hundred Americans directly opposed to Brock, who commanded in person
at Queenston and Fort George. On the day of the battle in October
there were nearly ten times as many along the Niagara frontier.
The very day Brock heard that the disastrous armistice was over he
proposed an immediate attack on Sackett's Harbor. But Prevost
refused to sanction it. Brock then turned his whole attention to the
Niagara frontier, where the Americans were assembling in such
numbers that to attack them was out of the question. The British
began to receive a few supplies and reinforcements. But the
Americans had now got such a long start that, on the fateful 13th of
October, they outnumbered Brock's men four to one--4,000 to 1,000
along the critical fifteen miles between the Falls and Lake Ontario;
and 6,800 to 1,700 along the whole Niagara river, from lake to lake,
a distance of thirty-three miles. The factors which helped to
redress the adverse balance of these odds were Brock himself, his
disciplined regulars, the intense loyalty of the militia, and the
'telegraph.' This 'telegraph' was a system of visual signaling by
semaphore, much the same as that which Wellington had used along the
lines of Torres Vedras.
The immediate moral effects, however, were even more favorable to
the Americans than the mere physical odds; for Prevost's armistice
both galled and chilled the British, who were eager to strike a
blow. American confidence had been much shaken in September by the
sight of the prisoners from Detroit, who had been marched along the
river road in full view of the other side. But it increased rapidly
in October as reinforcements poured in. On the 8th a council of war
decided to attack Fort George and Queenston Heights simultaneously
with every available man. But Smyth, the American general commanding
above the Falls, refused to co-operate. This compelled the adoption
of a new plan in which only a feint was to be made against Fort
George, while Queenston Heights were to be carried by storm. The
change entailed a good deal of extra preparation. But when
Lieutenant Elliott, of the American Navy, cut out two British
vessels at Fort Erie on the 9th, the news made the American troops
so clamorous for an immediate invasion that their general, Van
Rensselaer, was afraid either to resist them or to let their ardor
cool.
In the American camp opposite Queenston all was bustle on the 10th
of October; and at three the next morning the whole army was again
astir, waiting till the vanguard had seized the landing on the
British side. But a wrong leader had been chosen; mistakes were
plentiful; and confusion followed. Nearly all the oars had been put
into the first boat, which, having overshot the mark, was made fast
on the British side; whereupon its commander disappeared. The troops
on the American shore shivered in the drenching autumn rain till
after daylight. Then they went back to their sodden camp, wet,
angry, and disgusted.
While the rain came down in torrents the principal officers were
busy revising their plans. Smyth was evidently not to be depended
on; but it was thought that, with all the advantages of the
initiative, the four thousand other Americans could overpower the
one thousand British and secure a permanent hold on the Queenston
Heights just above the village. These heights ran back from the
Niagara river along Lake Ontario for sixty miles west, curving
north-eastwards round Burlington Bay to Dundas Street, which was the
one regular land line of communication running west from York.
Therefore, if the Americans could hold both the Niagara and the
Heights, they would cut Upper Canada in two. This was, of course,
quite evident to both sides. The only doubtful questions were, How
should the first American attack be made and how should it be met?
The American general, Stephen Van Rensselaer, was a civilian who had
been placed at the head of the New York State militia by Governor
Tompkins, both to emphasize the fact that expert regulars were only
wanted as subordinates and to win a cunning move in the game of
party politics. Van Rensselaer was not only one of the greatest of
the old 'patrons' who formed the landed aristocracy of Dutch New
York, but he was also a Federalist. Tompkins, who was a Democrat,
therefore hoped to gain his party ends whatever the result might be.
Victory would mean that Van Rensselaer had been compelled to advance
the cause of a war to which he objected; while defeat would
discredit both him and his party, besides providing Tompkins with
the excuse that it would all have happened very differently if a
Democrat had been in charge.
Van Rensselaer, a man of sense and honor, took the expert advice of
his cousin, Colonel Solomon Van Rensselaer, who was a regular and
the chief of the staff. It was Solomon Van Rensselaer who had made
both plans, the one of the 8th, for attacking Fort George and the
Heights together, and the one of the 10th, for feinting against Fort
George while attacking the Heights. Brock was puzzled about what was
going to happen next. He knew that the enemy were four to one and
that they could certainly attack both places if Smyth would
co-operate. He also knew that they had boats and men ready to circle
round Fort George from the American 'Four Mile Creek' on the lake
shore behind Fort Niagara. Moreover, he was naturally inclined to
think that when the boats prepared for the 11th were left opposite
Queenston all day long, and all the next day too, they were probably
intended to distract his attention from Fort George, where he had
fixed his own headquarters.
On the 12th the American plan was matured and concentration begun at
Lewiston, opposite Queenston. Large detachments came in, under
perfect cover, from Four Mile Creek behind Fort Niagara. A smaller
number marched down from the Falls and from Smyth's command still
higher up. The camps at Lewiston and the neighboring Tuscarora
Village were partly concealed from every point on the opposite bank,
so that the British could form no safe idea of what the Americans
were about. Solomon Van Rensselaer was determined that the
advance-guard should do its duty this time; so he took charge of it
himself and picked out 40 gunners, 300 regular infantry, and 300 of
the best militia to make the first attack. These were to be
supported by seven hundred regulars. The rest of the four thousand
men available were to cross over afterwards. The current was strong;
but the river was little more than two hundred yards wide at
Queenston and it could be crossed in less than ten minutes. The
Queenston Heights themselves were a more formidable obstacle, even
if defended by only a few men, as they rose 345 feet above the
landing-place.
There were only three hundred British in Queenston to meet the first
attack of over thirteen hundred Americans; but they consisted of the
two flank companies of Brock's old regiment, the 49th, supported by
some excellent militia. A single gun stood on the Heights. Another
was at Vrooman's Point a mile below. Two miles farther, at Brown's
Point, stood another gun with another detachment of militia. Four
miles farther still was Fort George, with Brock and his
second-in-command, Colonel Sheaffe of the 49th. About nine miles
above the Heights was the little camp at Chippewa, which, as we
shall see, managed to spare 150 men for the second phase of the
battle. The few hundred British above this had to stand by their own
posts, in case Smyth should try an attack on his own account,
somewhere between the Falls and Lake Erie.
At half-past three in the dark morning of the 13th of October,
Solomon Van Rensselaer with 225 regulars sprang ashore at the
Queenston ferry landing and began to climb the bank. But hardly had
they shown their heads above the edge before the grenadier company
of the 49th, under Captain Dennis, poured in a stinging volley which
sent them back to cover. Van Rensselaer was badly wounded and was
immediately ferried back. The American supports, under Colonel
Christie, had trouble in getting across; and the immediate command
of the invaders devolved upon another regular, Captain Wool.
As soon as the rest of the first detachment had landed, Wool took
some three hundred infantry and a few gunners, half of all who were
then present, and led them up-stream, in single file, by a
fisherman's path which curved round and came out on top of the
Heights behind the single British gun there. Progress was very slow
in this direction, though the distance was less than a mile, as it
was still pitch-dark and the path was narrow and dangerous. The
three hundred left at the landing were soon reinforced, and the
crossing went on successfully, though some of the American boats
were carried down-stream to the British post at Vrooman's, where all
the men in them were made prisoners and marched off to Fort George.
Meanwhile, down at Fort George, Brock had been roused by the
cannonade only three hours after he had finished his dispatches.
Twenty-four American guns were firing hard at Queenston from the
opposite shore and two British guns were replying. Fort Niagara,
across the river from Fort George, then began to speak; whereupon
Fort George answered back. Thus the sound of musketry, five to seven
miles away, was drowned; and Brock waited anxiously to learn whether
the real attack was being driven home at Queenston, or whether the
Americans were circling round from their Four Mile Creek against his
own position at Fort George. Four o'clock passed. The roar of battle
still came down from Queenston. But this might be a feint. Not even
Dennis at Queenston could tell as yet whether the main American army
was coming against him or not. But he knew they must be crossing in
considerable force, so he sent a dragoon galloping down to Brock,
who was already in the saddle giving orders to Sheaffe and to the
next senior officer, Evans, when this messenger arrived. Sheaffe was
to follow towards Queenston the very instant the Americans had shown
their hand decisively in that direction; while Evans was to stay at
Fort George and keep down the fire from Fort Niagara.
Then Brock set spurs to Alfred and raced for Queenston Heights. It
was a race for more than his life, for more, even, than his own and
his army's honor: it was a race for the honor, integrity, and very
life of Canada. Miles ahead he could see the spurting flashes of the
guns, the British two against the American twenty-four. Presently
his quick eye caught the fitful running flicker of the opposing
lines of musketry above the landing-place at Queenston. As he dashed
on he met a second messenger, Lieutenant Jarvis, who was riding down
full-speed to confirm the news first brought by the dragoon. Brock
did not dare draw rein; so he beckoned Jarvis to gallop back beside
him. A couple of minutes sufficed for Brock to understand the whole
situation and make his plan accordingly. Then Jarvis wheeled back
with orders for Sheaffe to bring up every available man, circle
round inland, and get into touch with the Indians. A few strides
more, and Brock was ordering the men on from Brown's Point. He
paused another moment at Vrooman's, to note the practice made by the
single gun there. Then, urging his gallant grey to one last turn of
speed, he burst into Queenston through the misty dawn just where the
grenadiers of his own old regiment stood at bay.
In his full-dress red and gold, with the arrow-patterned sash
Tecumseh had given him as a badge of honor at Detroit, he looked,
from plume to spur, a hero who could turn the tide of battle against
any odds. A ringing cheer broke out in greeting. But he paused no
longer than just enough to wave a greeting back and take a quick
look round before scaling the Heights to where eight gunners with
their single eighteen-pounder were making a desperate effort to
check the Americans at the landing-place. Here he dismounted to
survey the whole scene of action. The Americans attacking Queenston
seemed to be at least twice as strong as the British. The artillery
odds were twelve to one. And over two thousand Americans were drawn
up on the farther side of the narrow Niagara waiting their turn for
the boats. Nevertheless, the British seemed to be holding their own.
The crucial question was: could they hold it till Sheaffe came up
from Fort George, till Bullock came down from Chippawa, till both
had formed front on the Heights, with Indians on their flanks and
artillery support from below?
Suddenly a loud, exultant cheer sounded straight behind him, a
crackling fire broke out, and he saw Wool's Americans coming over
the crest and making straight for the gun. He was astounded; and
well he might be, since the fisherman's path had been reported
impassable by troops. But he instantly changed the order he happened
to be giving from 'Try a longer fuse!' to 'Spike the gun and follow
me!' With a sharp clang the spike went home, and the gunners
followed Brock downhill towards Queenston. There was no time to
mount, and Alfred trotted down beside his swiftly running master.
The elated Americans fired hard; but their bullets all flew high.
Wool's three hundred then got into position on the Heights; while
Brock in the village below was collecting the nearest hundred men
that could be spared for an assault on the invaders.
Brock rapidly formed his men and led them out of the village at a
fast run to a low stone wall, where he halted and said, 'Take
breath, boys; you'll need it presently!' on which they cheered. He
then dismounted and patted Alfred, whose flanks still heaved from
his exertions. The men felt the sockets of their bayonets; took
breath; and then followed Brock, who presently climbed the wall and
drew his sword. He first led them a short distance inland, with the
intention of gaining the Heights at the enemy's own level before
turning riverwards for the final charge. Wool immediately formed
front with his back to the river; and Brock led the one hundred
British straight at the American centre, which gave way before him.
Still he pressed on, waving his sword as an encouragement for the
rush that was to drive the enemy down the cliff. The spiked
eighteen-pounder was recaptured and success seemed certain. But,
just as his men were closing in, an American stepped out of the
trees, only thirty yards away, took deliberate aim, and shot him
dead. The nearest men at once clustered round to help him, and one
of the 49th fell dead across his body. The Americans made the most
of this target and hit several more. Then the remaining British
broke their ranks and retired, carrying Brock's body into a house at
Queenston, where it remained throughout the day, while the battle
raged all round.
Wool now re-formed his three hundred and ordered his gunners to
drill out the eighteen-pounder and turn it against Queenston, where
the British were themselves re-forming for a second attack. This was
made by two hundred men of the 49th and York militia, led by Colonel
John Macdonell, the attorney-general of Upper Canada, who was acting
as aide-de-camp to Brock. Again the Americans were driven back.
Again the gun was recaptured. Again the British leader was shot at
the critical moment. Again the attack failed. And again the British
retreated into Queenston.
Wool then hoisted the Stars and Stripes over the fiercely disputed
gun; and several more boatloads of soldiers at once crossed over to
the Canadian side, raising the American total there to sixteen
hundred men. With this force on the Heights, with a still larger
force waiting impatiently to cross, with twenty-four guns in action,
and with the heart of the whole defense known to be lying dead in
Queenston, an American victory seemed to be so well assured that a
courier was sent post-haste to announce the good news both at Albany
and at Dearborn's headquarters just across the Hudson. This done,
Stephen Van Rensselaer decided to confirm his success by going over
to the Canadian side of the river himself. Arrived there, he
consulted the senior regulars and ordered the troops to entrench the
Heights, fronting Queenston, while the rest of his army was
crossing.
But, just when the action had reached such an apparently victorious
stage, there was, first, a pause, and then a slightly adverse
change, which soon became decidedly ominous. It was as if the flood
tide of invasion had already passed the full and the ebb was setting
in. Far off, down-stream, at Fort Niagara, the American fire began
to falter and gradually grow dumb. But at the British Fort George
opposite the guns were served as well as ever, till they had
silenced the enemy completely. While this was happening, the main
garrison, now free to act elsewhere, were marching out with swinging
step and taking the road for Queenston Heights. Near by, at
Lewiston, the American twenty-four-gun battery was slackening its
noisy cannonade, which had been comparatively ineffective from the
first; while the single British gun at Vrooman's, vigorous and
effective as before, was reinforced by two most accurate
field-pieces under Holcroft in Queenston village, where the wounded
but undaunted Dennis was rallying his disciplined regulars and
Loyalist militiamen for another fight. On the Heights themselves the
American musketry had slackened while most of the men were
entrenching; but the Indian fire kept growing closer and more
dangerous. Up-stream, on the American side of the Falls, a
half-hearted American detachment had been reluctantly sent down by
the egregious Smyth; while, on the other side, a hundred and fifty
eager British were pressing forward to join Sheaffe's men from Fort
George.
As the converging British drew near them, the Americans on the
Heights began to feel the ebbing of their victory. The least
disciplined soon lost confidence and began to slink down to the
boats; and very few boats returned when once they had reached their
own side safely. These slinkers naturally made the most of the
dangers they had been expecting--a ruthless Indian massacre
included. The boatmen, nearly all civilians, began to desert.
Alarming doubts and rumors quickly spread confusion through the
massed militia, who now perceived that instead of crossing to
celebrate a triumph they would have to fight a battle. John Lovett,
who served with credit in the big American battery, gave a graphic
description of the scene: 'The name of Indian, or the sight of the
wounded, or the Devil, or something else, petrified them. Not a
regiment, not a company, scarcely a man, would go.' Van Rensselaer
went through the disintegrating ranks and did his utmost to revive
the ardor which had been so impetuous only an hour before. But he
ordered, swore, and begged in vain.
Meanwhile the tide of resolution, hope, and coming triumph was
rising fast among the British. They were the attackers now; they had
one distinct objective; and their leaders were men whose lives had
been devoted to the art of war. Sheaffe took his time. Arrived near
Queenston, he saw that his three guns and two hundred muskets there
could easily prevent the two thousand disorganized American militia
from crossing the river; so he wheeled to his right, marched to St
David's, and then, wheeling to his left, gained the Heights two
miles beyond the enemy. The men from Chippawa marched in and joined
him. The line of attack was formed, with the Indians spread out on
the flanks and curving forward. The British in Queenston, seeing the
utter impotence of the Americans who refused to cross over, turned
their fire against the Heights; and the invaders at once realized
that their position had now become desperate.
When Sheaffe struck inland an immediate change of the American front
was required to meet him. Hitherto the Americans on the Heights had
faced down-stream, towards Queenston, at right angles to the river.
Now they were obliged to face inland, with their backs to the river.
Wadsworth, the American militia brigadier, a very gallant member of
a very gallant family, immediately waived his rank in favor of
Colonel Winfield Scott, a well-trained regular. Scott and Wadsworth
then did all that men could do in such a dire predicament. But most
of the militia became unmanageable, some of the regulars were
comparatively raw; there was confusion in front, desertion in the
rear, and no coherent whole to meet the rapidly approaching shock.
On came the steady British line, with the exultant Indians thrown
well forward on the flanks; while the indomitable single gun at
Vrooman's Point backed up Holcroft's two guns in Queenston, and the
two hundred muskets under Dennis joined in this distracting fire
against the American right till the very last moment. The American
left was in almost as bad a case, because it had got entangled in
the woods beyond the summit and become enveloped by the Indians
there. The rear was even worse, as men slank off from it at every
opportunity. The front stood fast under Winfield Scott and
Wadsworth. But not for long. The British brought their bayonets down
and charged. The Indians raised the war-whoop and bounded forward.
The Americans fired a hurried, nervous, straggling fusillade; then
broke and fled in wild confusion. A very few climbed down the cliff
and swam across. Not a single boat came over from the 'petrified'
militia. Some more Americans, attempting flight, were killed by
falling headlong or by drowning. Most of them clustered among the
trees near the edge and surrendered at discretion when Winfield
Scott, seeing all was lost, waved his handkerchief on the point of
his sword.
The American loss was about a hundred killed, two hundred wounded,
and nearly a thousand prisoners. The British loss was trifling by
comparison, only a hundred and fifty altogether. But it included
Brock; and his irreparable death alone was thought, by friend and
foe alike, to have more than redressed the balance. This, indeed,
was true in a much more pregnant sense than those who measure by
mere numbers could ever have supposed. For genius is a thing apart
from mere addition and subtraction. It is the incarnate spirit of
great leaders, whose influence raises to its utmost height the worth
of every follower. So when Brock's few stood fast against the
invader's many, they had his soaring spirit to uphold them as well
as the soul and body of their own disciplined strength.
Brock's proper fame may seem to be no more than that which can be
won by any conspicuously gallant death at some far outpost of a
mighty empire. He ruled no rich and populous dominions. He commanded
no well-marshaled host. He fell, apparently defeated, just as his
first real battle had begun. And yet, despite of this, he was the
undoubted savior of a British Canada. Living, he was the heart of
her preparation during ten long years of peace. Dead, he became the
inspiration of her defense for two momentous years of war.
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Chronicles of Canada, The War
With The United States, A Chronicle of 1812, 1915
Chronicles of Canada |