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Battle Of The Thames




  partof the War Of 1812
  caption A speculative depiction of Tecumseh's death at the hands of Richard M Johnson
  date October 5 , 1813
  place Near Chatham, Ontario
  result American victory
  combatant1 Britain <br/> Tecumseh's Confederacy
  combatant2 United States
  commander1 Henry Procter <br/> Tecumseh
  commander2 William Henry Harrison
  strength1 800 regulars<br/>500 natives<sup id="fn_1_back"> 1 </sup>
  strength2 2,380 militia<br/>1,000 cavalry<br/>120 regulars<br/>260 natives<sup id="fn_1_back"> 1 </sup>
  casualties1 155 British dead or wounded<br/>477 captured<br/>33 natives dead
  casualties2 15 dead<br/>30 wounded


The Battle of the Thames, also known as the '''Battle of Moraviantown''', was a decisive American victory in the War Of 1812 which took place on October 5 , 1813 , near Chatham, Ontario in present-day Canada .


BACKGROUND

In September, 1813, the American navy under Oliver Hazard Perry scored a decisive victory in the Battle Of Lake Erie . British General Henry Procter , feared losing his supply lines and, against the advice of his ally Tecumseh , was retreating from Fort Malden . American General William Henry Harrison trailed Procter through Upper Canada . Tecumseh had pleaded with Procter to stop and face Harrison several times. Finally Procter was convinced to face Harrison at Moraviantown on the Thames River .


FORCES

William Henry Harrison's force totaled at least 3,500 Infantry and Cavalry . Harrison had two regular infantry brigades under generals Duncan McArthur and Lewis Cass . Colonel Richard Mentor Johnson commanded the Kentucky cavalry; five Brigade s of Kentucky militia were led by Isaac Shelby , the sixty-three year-old governor of Kentucky and a hero of the American Revolutionary War . Many of the volunteers under Johnson were from the River Raisin area and enlisted with the slogan "Remember the Raisin". Harrison's army was eager for a fight.

Procter had about 800 soldiers along with about 500 American Indians led by Tecumseh. The British soldiers were becoming increasingly demoralized and Tecumseh's warriors grew even more impatient with Procter for his unwillingness to stop and fight, giving Procter reason to fear a Mutiny by the warriors.


THE BATTLE

On October 4 , Tecumseh skirmished the Americans near Chatham, Ontario to slow the American advance. The warriors were quickly overwhelmed and Procter's aide Lieutenant Colonel Augustus Warburton lost his supplies and ammunition to an American raiding party. On October 5 Procter formed the British regulars in line of battle at Moraviantown and planned to trap Harrison on the banks of the Thames, driving the Americans off the road with his cannons. Tecumseh's warriors took up positions in a swamp on the British right to catch the American's in the flank. General Harrison surveyed the battlefield and unconventionally ordered James Johnson (brother of Richard Johnson) to make a frontal attack against the British regulars. Despite the Indians' flanking fire James Johnson broke through; the British cannon having failed to fire. Immediately Procter and the British turned and fled the field, many of them surrendering. Tecumseh remained and kept up the fighting. Richard Johnson at the head of about 20 cavaliers charged into the Indian position to draw attention away from the main American force, but Tecumseh and his warriors answered with a volley of musketfire that stopped the cavalry charge in its tracks. Fifteen of the men were killed or wounded and Johnson himself was hit five times. Johnson's main force became bogged down in the mud of the swamp. Tecumseh was killed in this fighting; Colonel Johnson may have been the one who killed Tecumseh, though the evidence is far from certain. The main force finally made its way through the swamp and James Johnson's troops were freed from their attack on the British. With the American reinforcements converging and news of the death of Tecumseh spreading quickly the Indian resistance quickly dissolved. Mounted troops then moved on and burned Moraviantown, a peaceful settlement of Christian Munsee Indians, who had no involvement with the conflict.


RESULTS

The Battle of the Thames was a decisive victory for the Americans that led to the re-establishment of American control over the Northwest Frontier for the remainder of the war. However, Harrison failed to exploit this success and, after burning Moravian Town, promptly withdrew to Detroit. The front would remain quiet for the rest of the war.

Harrison's popularity grew and was eventually elected President Of The United States . Richard Mentor Johnson eventually became Vice President based partly on the belief that he had killed Tecumseh.

Procter was later Court-martial ed for cowardice and removed from command. Historians have been somewhat kinder to Procter, noting that with the Americans in control of Lake Erie, the Detroit frontier was no longer tenable with the limited men and supplies available to Procter. The death of Tecumseh was a crushing blow to the Indian alliance he had created and it effectively dissolved following the battle.


NOTES