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charge, during the continuance of the war with Buonaparte, was not so well founded as that relative to the navy; but as soon as the European war was terminated, it was expected that the American would be speedily brought to a close.

This expectation had very much the appearance of being gratified; for, as soon as possible after the peace of Paris, the British of Paris, the British ministry sent to America about 14,000 of those troops who had gained such fame under the duke of Wellington. The annihilation of the American army was now thought to be at hand: even the most sceptical could not hesitate to expect that troops which had ignominiously fled before a Canadian militia, would be dissipated like chaff before the victors of the peninsula; and the more sanguine already anticipated the conquest of at least a part of the United States, and that we should dictate peace at Philadelphia or Washington. Besides the troops which were sent to Canada, a strong naval force, with an adequate number of troops on board, was collected for the purpose of invading different parts of the United States. The object of this kind of expedition seems to have been two-fold in the first place, by actually landing in different places, and keeping the coast in constant alarm, to prevent the American government from sending as many troops as they would otherwise have done to the invasion of Canada; and in the second place, to retaliate on the Americans the destruction which they had committed at York Town and other places. It was also expected that, if either or both these objects were effected, the war would become more unpopular in America than it actually was; and that the clamours of the inhabitants of those towns and districts which were invaded and laid waste by our troops would either compel the president to make peace, or to withdraw the troops from Canada for their protection and defence. These invading expeditions were also defended on the ground that they were intended to retaliate the devastation and cruelty which the Americans had committed in their invasion of Canada. But it was asked in the house of commons, why did not we, on the same principle, imitate the cruelty of the Indians when we were at war with

them, and scalp our prisoners? In case of war with the pirates of the Barbary coast why should we not, on the same principle, make slaves of our prisoners? In short, if we were right in imitating the devastation of the Americans, we should be justified in imitating and retaliating all the inhuman practices of the most savage nations, with whom we might chance to be at war. The inexorable consequences resulting from such a system of retaliation would be a general feeling of alarm and revenge: the federalists, who hated Mr. Madison, and were averse to all his measures, would be drawn into the arms of the republican party, in order to avoid the greater evil of being passive while their country was laid waste, and our character for rectitude, humanity, and moderation, would be lost. But the determination of the British ministry, remained immoveable; the commercial and mercantile classes in England regarded the American war with comparative indifference, now that the trade of Europe was open to their goods; a great proportion of the community who had opposed the war while the orders in council remained in force, considered themselves bound to support the system of hostility as soon as they were repealed. The ministers, therefore, exulting in this change of public temper, confiding in the supposed unpopularity of Mr. Madison, and trusting to the prowess and experience of the veterans whom we had sent from Spain, publicly announced their sanguine anticipations of success.

The operations began in the early part of July. The American army effected a landing at the ferry of Lake Erie, having driven in the picquets of the garrison of Fort Erie. As soon as major-general Riall, who commanded the troops in the neighbourhood, heard of this event, he ordered the immediate advance of five companies of the royal Scots, towards Chippawa, to reinforce the garrison of that place. About the same time a detachment of the 100th regiment, with some militia, and a few Indians, moved forward for the for the purpose of reconnoitring the position and the numbers of the enemy. They amounted to about 6000 men, with a numerous train of artillery, and were strongly posted at and above Fort Erie. The force

of the British, in regular troops, amounted to about 1500, exclusive of 300 militia and Indians. In the afternoon of the 5th, major-general Riall having made the necessary dispositions, ordered the attack to commence. The enemy had taken up a position with his right resting on some villages and orchards close on the river Niagara, and strongly supported by artillery; his left was towards a wood, having a considerable body of riflemen and Indians in front of it. These were first attacked, and after a sharp but short contest were dislodged. After this success major-general Riall ordered the king's regiment to move to the right, while the royal Scots and 100th regiments were directed to charge the enemy in front. On this arduous enterprize they advanced with the greatest coolness and gallantry, notwithstanding they were exposed to a very heavy and galling fire. The enemy, aware of the advantages of their position, and finding that their fire was very destructive, stood firm, till at length major-general Riall finding that farther efforts would be unavailing, and that his troops had suffered severely, ordered them to relinquish the attack. In this affair lieutenant-colonel Gordon, and lieutenant-colonel the marquis of Tweedale, who charged in the most gallant manner at the head of their respective regiments, were wounded. A retreat now became necessary on Chippawa, which was conducted with good order and regularity, not a single prisoner falling into the hands of the enemy, except those who were disabled by wounds. The object of the enemy's advance was evidently to gain possession of Fort Erie, and major-general Riall was in hopes of being able to save it. After the battle, he understood that it had surrendered on the Sd. Major Back, who commanded that fort, appears to have been very ill informed of the movements of the enemy, since he was wholly unapprized of their having landed on both sides of him, and only at the distance of a mile. After this, instead of endeavouring to atone for his want of circumspection by determined courage, he surrendered the fort without firing a gun; himself and 150 men being made prisoners of war.

The enemy, emboldened by the success

which attended their first operations, looked forward to still greater advantages; but in this they were disappointed, for general Drummond advanced in considerable force to the support of general Riall, who was now posted near the falls of Niagara. Scarcely had the junction taken place when intelligence arrived that the American army was advancing in great force. General Ďrummond immediately proceeded to meet them: he found them already in possession of a rising ground, while their light troops were in the surrounding woods. The 84th regiment, the royal Scots detachment, and the 41st light companies, were immediately formed in the rear of the hill, their left resting on the road; while two twenty-four pounders were advanced in front of the centre, and the remainder of the British troops were posted on the left of the road. Scarcely were the troops thus arranged, when the whole front was warmly and closely engaged. The principal efforts of the enemy were directed against the left and centre of the British. They made repeated attacks, in the course of which the troops on the left were partially forced back, and the enemy obtained a momentary possession of the road. He derived, however, no material advantage from this circumstance, as the troops which were forced back formed again in the rear of the 89th regiment, fronting the road and securing the flank. About this time major-general Řiall, having been wounded, fell into the power of the enemy. In the centre, also, their attacks were repeated with considerable determination, but they were met and repulsed by our troops in that quarter with the most perfect steadiness and gallantry, and with very considerable loss to their opponents. The intrepidity of the Americans was equally remarkable; our artillerymen were bayonetted in the act of loading, and the muzzles of the enemy's guns were advanced within a few yards of ours. The darkness of the night during this extraordinary conflict occasioned several unusual incidents. Our troops having for a moment been pushed back, some of our guns remained for a few minutes in the enemy's hands. They were, however, not only quickly recovered, but the two pieces which the Americans had brought up were captured.

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One of the enemy's six-pounders was put by mistake on a limber or cradle of ours, and one of our six-pounders on a limber of theirs, by which means the pieces were exchanged. About nine o'clock, three hours after the commencement of the action, and during a short interruption of the firing, the Americans brought up the whole of their remaining force, and shortly afterwards renewed their attacks with fresh troops, but were every where repulsed with equal gallantry and success. They continued their efforts, however, against the hill till midnight, when they had suffered so severely that they gave the contest, and retreated with great precipitation to their camp beyond the ChippaOn the next day they abandoned their camp, throwing the greatest part of the baggage and ammunition into the rapids, and continued their retreat in great disorder towards Fort Erie. The loss of the Americans, in this severe contest, was estimated at 1500 men; and their two commanding generals were wounded. Our loss was also very se

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Soon after the decision of this battle general Drummond resolved to attempt the recapture of Fort Erie, For this purpose, on the 13th of August, he opened the fire of a battery against it, and having soon afterwards reason to believe that a sufficient impression had been made, he determined on assaulting the place. Two attacks were ordered to be made; one against the entrenchments on the side of Snake-hill, and the other against the fort and entrenchments on the opposite side. The troops appointed for the latter enterprise advanced to the attack as soon as the firing occasioned by the other attack was heard, and succeeded in getting possession of the demi-bastion, the guns of which they had actually turned against the enemy; when most unfortunately some ammunition caught fire, and a most tremendous explosion took place, by which almost all the troops which had succeeded in making a lodgment were dreadfully mangled. Panic was instantly spread among them; and the enemy taking advantage of it pressed forward, and commenced a heavy fire of musketry: under these circumstances it became absolutely necessary to abandon the fort, and the British

troops retreated towards the battery. Our loss was very severe in killed and wounded, and a very great number were made prisoners.

It was abundantly evident from these accounts, that we had beaten the Americans till we had taught them to fight. But it was fondly hoped that, as soon as sir George Prevost received the reinforcements which were dispatched to him immediately after the peace of Paris, he would obtain a splendid and decisive victory over the enemy. As soon as these reinforcements did arrive, he lost no time in advancing to the frontier; on which the American army abandoned its entrenched camp. Sir George immediately proceeded against Plattsburg, which place it was determined to attack both by land and water.The enemy were resolved to defend this place; and for that purpose their land forces occupied an elevated ridge, while their flotilla were at anchor out of gun-shot from the shore. As soon as this disposition of the enemy's forces was observed, sir George Prevost communicated the circumstance to captain Downie, who had been recently appointed to command the vessels on Lake Champlain. When sir George observed the flotilla steering for Plattsburg Bay, he ordered his troops to advance, and to escalade the enemy's works upon the heights.

In consequence of the light airs and the smoothness of the water, the fire between the flotillas was very destructive on both sides. From the commencement of the engagement, it was evidently the intention of the enemy to direct nearly all his efforts against captain Downie's vessel the Confiance. This vessel was fought with great gallantry, till on the death of her brave commander she was compelled to strike her colours. The whole of the enemy's force was then directed against the Linnet of 18 guns, which was also most bravely defended by her commander, till at length he was under the painful necessity of giving orders that her colours should be struck. Another of the British flotilla unfortunately stranded on a reef of rocks, and of course was prevented from rendering any assistance.

In the mean time the land forces had succeeded in effecting a passage across the Sara

nac. But at this time sir George Prevost was informed of the defeat of the flotilla; upon which he ordered the troops to give over the attack, and soon afterwards he commenced his retreat within the frontier. In the course of this retreat, a very considerable quantity of his baggage was obliged to be left behind; and the enemy stated, that upwards of 3000 men deserted from the British. It is scarcely possible to conceive the degree of mortification and disappointment which the intelligence of this defeat created in Great Britain. Troops which had been victorious in Spain and France; which had not only fought and conquered under Wellington, but which had received his particular commendation for their steadiness and bravery, had been defeated by the Americans, by men who could scarcely be called soldiers;-who but a few months before had run from the Canadian militia:—and not only had the heroes of the peninsula fled before such raw troops, but also before a very inferior force; since sir George Prevost had at least 14,000 men, while the American army was not half that number.

In Canada the complaints were loud and general against sir George Prevost; and sir James Yeo, who commanded his majesty's ships and vessels on the lakes, distinctly gave it as his opinion, in his official dispatch, that captain Downie was urged, and his ship hurried into action before she was in a fit state to meet the enemy: he also gave it as his opinion, that there was not the least necessity for the British squadron giving the enemy such decided advantages, by going into their bay to engage them; since, even if they had been successful, it would not in the least have assisted the troops in storming the batteries; whereas, he adds, had the troops taken the batteries first, it would have obliged the squadron of the enemy to quit the bay, and thus given the British a fair chance. In this opinion of sir James Yeo most military men agreed; and it is even said that, after the defeat of the flotilla, the officers were of opinion they could have taken Plattsburg; and that they obeyed sir G. Prevost's orders for a retreat with great reluctance and murmuring.

Nor was this the only misfortune which

attended our troops towards the close of the campaign on the frontiers of Canada; for the garrison of Fort Erie on the 17th of September made a sortie, in which we lost 800 men; and in consequence of this sortie general Drummond was under the necessity of commencing a retreat, in which he was followed and harassed by the American army. As soon as the winter set in, the enemy evacuated Fort Erie; and the campaign terminated, certainly without any ground being gained, or any decisive advantages being reaped, on either side, but with the character and confidence of the enemy greatly raised, and ours proportionally depressed.

Great expectations were at one time formed, of a very large ship which had been constructed upon the lakes, mounting 100 guns; but the season of the year was so far advanced before she was completed, that no other advantage was derived, but that of blockading the enemy's squadron in Sackett's harbour, and gaining the mastery of the lake on which it stands, at a period when that mastery could be of no service. We shall now turn our attention to the circumstances and results of our operations on different parts of the coasts of the United States; and we shall first notice the landing which was effected on the most northern part of them.

The Penobscot river is about 80 miles S. W. of the Passamaquoddy, which forms the barrier between the United States and the British province of New Brunswick. At the mouth of the latter river we took possession of some small islands; and after this, lieutenant-general sir J. Sherbrooke and rearadmiral Griffith, who commanded the land and sea forces on this station, determined to push their attack as far as the Penobscot.— To this they were most especially determined, from the intelligence which they received, that the John Adams frigate had taken refuge by running 27 miles up that river, to Hamden, where she had landed her guns, and lay under their protection. On the 26th of August, therefore, a combined sea and land force, under the command of these officers, set sail from Halifax on this determination. On the 1st of September they reached the town and fort of Castine, built on a peninsula on the eastern side of the Pe

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nobscot. The officer commanding this fort having blown up the magazine, and fled with the troops composing its garrison, it was immediately occupied by the British general, who sent forward a regiment to secure the town of Belfast, on the western bank, while a body of picked men, amounting to 700, supported by the boats of the expedition, ascended the river towards Hamden. Here they bivouacked during the night under an incessant rain; notwithstanding which, on the following day they pushed on to attack an enemy double their numbers, and strongly posted in front of the town, with rising grounds on both his flanks, strengthened with cannon. The British troops charged up the hill, and took possession of the guns, while some rockets from the boats completed the confusion of the enemy.

Before the boats got within good gun-shot of the battery thrown up to defend the frigate, the Americans abandoned its defence and set fire to her, and she was totally destroyed; while the troops that were stationed at the other battery ran away with great precipitation the moment our troops ascended the hill. The pursuit continued as far as the town of Bangor; where some of the inhabitants who had not fought, but pretended to fight, at Hamden, threw off the military character, and as magistrates, &c. made an unconditional surrender of the town. Shortly after this the American general Blake, with 191 troops, also surrendered, and were admitted to their parole. During these operations, another body of British troops, to the number of 700, were marched up the eastern bank of the river, about 18 miles, to Buxton; but the destruction of the frigate, and the dispersion of the enemy's troops in that quarter being fully effected, the British force was withdrawn from Bangor, Belfast, and Buxton, to Castine, where the head-quarters of sir J. Sherbrooke were fixed. The only fort between the Penobscot and the Passamaquoddy is that of Machias, which it was originally intended to have attacked first; but the attempt against Hamden was considered as preferable, from the necessity of taking or destroying the frigate. This object, however, having been accomplished, no time was lost in dispatching another body of troops against

Machias, where they landed without opposition on the 10th of September, and after a most fatiguing night march took possession of the fort without loss. This capture was followed by the capitulation of the American general Brewer, commanding the troops in that neighbourhood; who, considering the situation of the country between the Penobscot and the Passamaquoddy to be such as to preclude the hope of adequate protection by the United States, engaged, in the name of himself and his troops, not to serve against the British during the war.

The British general afterwards declared the country on the Penobscot, as far as he had conquered it, a part of the territory of his majesty in America. This step, in many points of view, was very impolitic; since to declare any territory as essentially and permanently attached to the conqueror, of which he has only gained a temporary possession, can only serve to expose his weakness when he is compelled to give it up, and to irritate the enemy. It was said that the territory of which we had gained possession was necessary for the purpose of an open and direct communication between Canada and New Brunswick:-but as it was to the Americans of little value, it might have been obtained, in the event of a peace, for an equivalent; whereas they were not likely to permit the disgrace of having it forced from them, of however little real value it might be to them.

The expedition against the southern, or rather the middle, states of America, it was determined, should be on a larger scale, and should, if successful, not only amply retaliate the devastations of the enemy in Canada, but strike such terror into them as would induce them totally to desert Mr. Madison, and compel him to make peace. The land forces employed on this expedition were under the command of major-general Ross, and the sea forces under the command of admiral Cochrane: these officers determined to disembark the army at the village of Benedict, on the right bank of the Patuxent, for the purpose of co-operating with real-admiral Cockburn in an attack on the enemy's flotilla under the command of commodore Barney. Admiral Cochrane landed the marines on the left bank of the river, at the place where he

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