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Battle of Lundy's Lane

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Battle of Lundy's Lane
Part of War of 1812

American Infantry attacks at Lundy's Lane
Date July 25, 1814
Location Niagara Falls, Ontario
Result Indecisive
Combatants
United Kingdom
Canadian militia
United States
Commanders
Gordon Drummond +
Phineas Riall + #
Jacob Brown +
Winfield Scott +
Strength
At start:
2,200, 5 guns
Reinforcements:
1,800, 3 guns
At start:
2,000, 3 guns
Reinforcements:
1,000, 6 guns
Casualties
84 dead
559 wounded
193 missing
42 captured
171 dead
572 wounded
110 missing
7 captured
Niagara campaigns
Queenston HeightsFort GeorgeStoney CreekBeaver DamsFort Niagara – 1st Fort ErieChippawaLundy's LaneCook's Mills – 2nd Fort Erie

The Battle of Lundy's Lane was a battle of the War of 1812 on July 25, 1814, fought in present-day Niagara Falls, Ontario. It was one of the bloodiest battles ever fought in Canada.

Contents

[edit] Background

On July 3, 1814, an American army under Major General Jacob Brown launched an attack across the Niagara River, near its source on Lake Erie. His force quickly captured the British position at Fort Erie and then advanced north. Two days later, one of his two brigades of regular U.S. Infantry under Brigadier General Winfield Scott won a decisive victory against an equal British force at the Battle of Chippawa, putting them to flight.

A few days after the battle, Brown outflanked the British defences along the Chippawa River and the British fell back to Fort George. Brown lacked the necessary numbers and heavy artillery to attack this position. At the time, a British naval squadron controlled Lake Ontario. The American flotilla under Commodore Isaac Chauncey was waiting for new ships to be completed before they could challenge the British squadron. As a result, no reinforcements or siege guns could be sent to Brown. Meanwhile, the British were able to move several units of reinforcements across the lake to Fort George.

For most of July, Brown's army occupied Queenston, a few miles south of Fort George. In this forward position, his supply line was harassed by British light infantry and Canadian militia and Indians. On July 24, Brown fell back to the Chippawa River, intending to secure his supply lines before advancing west to Burlington. As soon as Brown retired, a British force under Major General Phineas Riall advanced to Lundy's Lane, four miles (6 km) north of the Chippawa.

[edit] Approach to Lundy's Lane

Early on July 25, the British Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada, Lieutenant General Gordon Drummond, arrived in Fort George to take personal command on the Niagara peninsula. He immediately ordered a force under Lieutenant Colonel John Tucker to advance south along the east side of the Niagara River, hoping this would force Brown to evacuate the west bank. Instead, Brown ordered an advance north, intending in turn to force the British to recall Tucker's column to protect Fort George. The Americans apparently did not know that the British held Lundy's Lane.

As soon as Riall knew the Americans were advancing, he ordered his troops to fall back to Fort George and ordered another column in the area under Colonel Hercules Scott to retreat to Burlington. These orders were countermanded by Drummond, who had force-marched a detachment of reinforcements to Lundy's Lane from Fort George. The British were still reoccupying their positions when the first American units came into view.

[edit] Battle

The Niagara Frontier in 1814
The Niagara Frontier in 1814

Lundy's Lane, a spur from the main portage road alongside the Niagara River, ran along the summit of some rising ground and therefore commanded good views of the area. The British artillery (two 24-pounder and two 6-pounder guns, one 5.5-inch howitzer) was massed in a cemetery at the highest point of the battlefield.

The American brigade of Winfield Scott, who had won the Battle of Chippawa, emerged in the late afternoon from a forest into an open field and were badly mauled by the British artillery. Scott sent the 25th U.S. Infantry to flank the British left. They caught the British and Canadian units there while they were redeploying and briefly drove them back in confusion, but the British rallied. General Riall was severely wounded and was captured by Ketchum's Company of the 25th U.S. Infantry while riding to the rear.

As night fell, Scott's brigade had suffered heavy casualties, but Brown arrived with the American main body (a brigade of regulars under Brigadier General Eleazer Wheelock Ripley and another of volunteers from the militia under Peter B. Porter). As Ripley and Porter relieved Scott's brigade, Brown ordered the 21st U.S. Infantry[1] under Lieutenant Colonel James Miller to capture the British guns.

James Miller's response to Brown's order, "I'll try, Sir", is now the motto of the 21st U.S. Infantry. While the British were distracted with another attack on their right, Miller's troops deployed within a few yards of the British artillery. They fired a volley of musketry which killed most of the gunners and followed up with a bayonet charge which captured the guns and drove the British centre from the hill.

Meanwhile, the British column under Colonel Hercules Scott began arriving on the field, already tired from their futile march and countermarch. Unaware of the situation, they blundered into Ripley's brigade and were also driven back in disorder. (They briefly lost their own three guns, but these were quickly recovered.)

1869 map of the battle
1869 map of the battle

Although wounded, Drummond now reorganised his troops and mounted three determined attempts to retake his own cannon and capture the American guns which were being deployed on Lundy's Lane. All three attempts were beaten off, as was another American attack by Winfield Scott. In the smoke and confusion, both sides several times fired on their own troops as the battle revolved around the cemetery.

By midnight, both sides were exhausted. Each sides had lost about the same number of men—878 British and 860 American. On the American side, only 700 men were still standing in the line. Winfield Scott and Jacob Brown were both severely wounded. With supplies and water short, Brown ordered a retreat. Ripley, Porter and Lieutenant Colonel Jacob Hindman (Brown's artillery commander) protested but complied. Although the British still had 1,400 men on the field, they were in no condition to interfere with the American withdrawal. The Americans could drag away only one of the captured British guns and had to abandon one of their own with a broken carriage.

There had been much fighting at close quarters. Veteran British soldiers, who had fought against Napoleon in Spain and Portugal during the Peninsular War, were horrified at the carnage they had witnessed at Lundy's Lane. Drummond reported, "Of so determined a Character were [the American] attacks directed against our guns that our Artillery Men were bayonetted by the enemy in the Act of loading, and the muzzles of the Enemy's Guns were advanced within a few Yards of ours".

[edit] Aftermath

In the early hours of the morning, Brown ordered Ripley to recover the abandoned British guns the next day. Reinforcing his exhausted men with detachments which had been left at Chippawa, Ripley moved out with 1,200 soldiers but found that Drummond had reoccupied the battlefield with 2,200 men. Ripley withdrew, unmolested.

The American army now fell back to Fort Erie, first deliberately destroying Riall's old fortifications along the Chippawa River and burning the bridges behind them. Because they were short of draught animals, they had to abandon some equipment and supplies to make room for the wounded on the available wagons. Drummond was later to claim from this that the Americans had retreated in disorder. In fact, after burying some of the dead on the battlefield, the British had themselves retreated to Queenston, until Drummond received reinforcements.

[edit] Outcome

The battle confirmed that the American regular forces had evolved from a poorly-trained militia into a professional army. Scott is widely credited for this change, having modelled and trained his troops using French Revolutionary drills and exercises.

Like the overall war, there is some dispute about the actual outcome of the battle. Some historians say the Americans retreated, based upon General Drummond's report that the British held the field. Others state that the British retreated during the night but took the position back in the morning when the Americans retreated because of lack of supplies.

Evidence compiled by Donald E. Graves, a Canadian historian employed at the Directorate of History, Department of National Defence Canada, provides what is likely the most complete and unbiased interpretation of the battle to date. Graves argues that General Drummond failed to utilize skirmish pickets to protect his guns, which were consequently captured by the Americans. The American force therefore appears to have won a pyrrhic victory, having captured the British artillery and forcing the British to withdraw from the heights after failing to recapture their guns.

In respect to the actual war, the British may also claim a strategic victory since they had driven the American army away from Fort George and inflicted so many casualties that the Americans could no longer mount a major attack. However, Drummond subsequently suffered a heavy defeat at the Siege of Fort Erie, which again reversed the odds, and might have been disastrous for the British, if Jacob Brown had not been superseded in command by the more cautious Major General George Izard.

The battle may therefore be declared as a narrow American tactical victory and a questionable British strategic victory.

[edit] Battlefield and memorials

The site of the battle is now a residential and commercial area of Niagara Falls, Ontario. Part of the battlefield site was preserved next to the Drummond Hill Cemetery on Lundy's Lane east of Drummond Road. Other memorials added to the site include:

  • Soldier’s Monument — created by the Canadian Parliament and unveiled by Lundy’s Lane Historical Society in 1895
  • Commemorative Wall — added 1994
  • Laura Secord Monument — Laura Secord is buried at the Drummon Hill Cemetery
  • Lundy's Lane is mentioned in the unofficial Canadian national anthem, The Maple Leaf Forever

[edit] Orders of battle

British order of battle American order of battle

Lieutenant General Sir Gordon Drummond

Left Division (Major General Jacob Brown)

  • 1st Brigade (Brigadier General Winfield Scott)
    • 9th U.S. Infantry
    • 11th U.S. Infantry
    • 22nd U.S. Infantry
    • 25th U.S. Infantry
    • Towson's Company U.S. Artillery (Two 6-pounder guns, One 5.5-inch howitzer)
  • 2nd Brigade (Brigadier General Eleazer Wheelock Ripley)
    • 21st U.S. Infantry
    • 23rd U.S.Infantry
    • 1st U.S. Infantry (part)
    • 17th U.S.Infantry (detachment)
    • 19th U.S. Infantry (detachment)
  • 3rd (Militia) Brigade (Brigadier General Peter B. Porter)
    • 5th Pennsylvania Militia
    • New York Militia Volunteers
    • Canadian Volunteers (approx. 1 company)
  • U.S. Artillery (Lieutenant Colonel Jacob Hindman)
    • Ritchie's Company (Two 6-pounder guns, One 5.5-inch howitzer)
    • Biddle's Company (Three 12-pounder guns)
  • Cavalry (Captain Samuel D. Harris)
    • Detachment U.S. Dragoons
    • Troop New York Volunteer Dragoons

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ John L. Burns of Gettysburg PA was a member of Miller's regiment.

[edit] References

  • Graves, Donald E. "Where Right and Glory Lead! The Battle of Lundy's Lane 1814" Toronto: Robin Brass Studio Inc. 1997.
  • Elting, John R. "Amateurs to Arms! A military history of the War of 1812", New York: Da Capo Press, 1995 ISBN 0-306-80653-3

[edit] External links

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