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Fort Mims massacre

Coordinates: 31°10′50″N 87°50′17″W / 31.18050°N 87.83797°W / 31.18050; -87.83797
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Fort Mims massacre
Part of Creek War

The Battle
DateAugust 30, 1813
Location
35 to 40 miles north of Mobile, Alabama near Bay Minette, Alabama
Result Red Stick victory
Belligerents
Red Stick Creek United States United States
Commanders and leaders
Peter McQueen
William Weatherford
Daniel Beasley
Dixon Bailey
Strength
750[1]-1,000[2]warriors 265 militia,
Fort Mims[2]
Casualties and losses
~50 killed,
unknown wounded
517 killed,
unknown wounded,
Fort Mims severely damaged[2]

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The Fort Mims massacre occurred on 30 August 1813, when a force of Creek people, belonging to the "Red Sticks" faction under the command of Peter McQueen and William Weatherford "Red Eagle", his cousin by marriage, killed hundreds of settlers, mixed-blood Creeks, and militia at Fort Mims, Alabama.

Background

At the start of the Creek Civil War, settlers north of Mobile, Alabama, particularly mixed-blood Creeks from the lower towns, began to take refuge with the American settlers in the stockades of Fort Mims. About 517 settlers[2], including 265 armed militia[2], were gathered at Fort Mims, which was located about 35 to 45 miles (50–70 km) north of Mobile on the eastern side of the Alabama River.[3]

Upon learning that Peter McQueen's party of Red Sticks were in Pensacola, Florida, obtaining arms from the Spanish, Major Daniel Beasley, Captain Dixon Bailey, and Colonel Caller, led a disorganized force to intercept the Red Sticks. The resulting ambush is known as the Battle of Burnt Corn[citation needed].

Weatherford agreed to take part in the retaliatory attack, with the hopes of preventing a slaughter of the women and children in the Fort. He wanted to seek vengeance upon his personal enemy, Captain Dixon Bailey. Captain Bailey, a native of the town of Auttose, was a mixed-race Creek, who had been educated at Philadelphia under the provisions of the treaty of New York of 1790.

Alabama Historical Association Fort Mims marker.


The Attack

Although Major Beasley, the commander, stated that he could "maintain the post against any number of Indians", the stockade was poorly defended. At the time of the attack, the East gate was partially blocked open by drifting sand. According to anecdotal evidence, the gate was open "...when the officers all got drunk and were playing cards and left the gate open, and it rained and washed the sand in the gate so it could not be shut and Father left with Mother and the children, and the Indians killed all that stayed."[citation needed]

The attack occurred the next day during the mid-day meal, when no American scouts were out. The "Red Sticks" rushed the fort and tomahawked Beasley, who was trying to close the blocked gate.

Inside Fort Mims looking at the West wall and gate.

The Indians seized the loopholes and the outer enclosure. The settlers, under Captain Bailey, held the inner enclosure, and fought on for a time. However, the Red Sticks set fire to a house in the center, which spread to the rest of the stockade.

The warriors forced their way into the inner enclosure and, despite the attempts of William Weatherford, massacred most of the mixed-blood Creeks and white settlers. Five hundred people died, and the "Red Sticks" took 250 scalps. They spared the lives of most of the enslaved African Americans, to take them as their own slaves. About 36 people escaped[2], including Bailey, who was mortally wounded.

Aftermath

The Red Sticks' victory at Fort Mims spread panic throughout the Southeastern United States frontier. The massacre marked the transition from a civil war within the Creek tribe (Moscoge) to a war between the United States and the Red Stick warriors of the Upper Creek Nation.

Since Federal troops were occupied with the northern front of the War of 1812, Tennessee, Georgia, and the Mississippi Territory mobilized their militias to move against the Upper Creek towns that had supported the Red Sticks' cause. After several battles, the Battle of Horseshoe Bend ended the Creek War.

Today the site is maintained by the Alabama Historical Commission.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Heidler, p. 133
  2. ^ a b c d e f Thrapp, p. 1524
  3. ^ "Fort Mims", Alabama Historical Commission.

References

  • Owsley, Jr., Frank L. "The Fort Mims Massacre," Alabama Review 1971 24(3): 192-204
  • Henry Adams History of the United States of America During the Administrations of James Madison (Library Classics of the United State, Inc. 1986), pp. 780-781 ISBN 0-940450-35-6
  • "Creek War" in Heidler, David Stephen and Heidler, Jeanne T. Encyclopedia of the War of 1812, Santa Barbara, Calif. : ABC-CLIO, 1997. ISBN 9780874369687
  • John K. Mahon The War of 1812 (University of Florida Press 1972) pp. 234-235 ISBN 0-8130-0318-0
  • John Ehle, Trail of Tears The Rise and Fall of the Cherokee Nation (Anchor Books Editions 1989), p. 105 ISBN 0-385-23954-8
  • Andrew Burstein The Passions of Andrew Jackson (Alfred A. Kopf 2003), p. 99 ISBN 0-375-41428-2
  • "Weatherford, William (Lamochattee, Red Eagle)" in Thrapp, Dan L. Encyclopedia of frontier biography : in three volumes Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, 1991. OCLC 23583099
  • Gregory A. Waselkov A Conquering Spirit: Fort Mims and the Redstick War of 1813-1814 (University of Alabama Press, 2006) ISBN 0-8173-1491-1

31°10′50″N 87°50′17″W / 31.18050°N 87.83797°W / 31.18050; -87.83797