Battle of Nanticoke Creek

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DateNovember 13, 1813
Location
Result British victory
Battle of Nanticoke Creek
Part of War of 1812
DateNovember 13, 1813
Location
Result British victory
Belligerents
 United States
Commanders and leaders
Lt-Col. Henry Bostwick
Capt. Daniel McCall
Capt. John Bostwick
John Dunham
Dayton Lindsay
George Peacock jr.
Units involved
1st Oxford Militia
1st Norfolk Militia
2nd Norfolk Militia
American sympathizers
Strength
40+ 21
Casualties and losses
1 killed 3 killed
2 wounded
18 captured

The Battle of Nanticoke Creek was a small engagement fought on November 13, 1813, near Nanticoke, Ontario, Canada, during the War of 1812.[1]

With the American successes at the Battle of Lake Erie and the Battle of the Thames in the autumn of 1813, the majority of the Western and London Districts were under American occupation. British forces had retreated to consolidate their lines of defence around Burlington Heights. The local Canadian militias were left to defend themselves, and militiamen were often persecuted by the occupying Americans.[1]

The lack of proper military governance led to wide-scale raiding and skirmishing along the Niagara frontier in late 1813, and many American sympathizers living in Upper Canada gave aid to these raiders.[1] Loyalist militia despised the sympathizers as much as the American forces, and attempted to attack and hinder their raids when possible.

In early November 1813, emboldened by prospects of a conclusive American victory in the area, American raiders left Buffalo and, led by William Sutherland and Frederick Onstone, invaded the Norfolk/Haldimand region, stealing clothing, horses, and other goods, rounding up cattle and kidnapping militia officers.[2] Captain William Francis of Selkirk, an elderly loyalist who had fought in the American Revolutionary War, was among those captured[2] On November 11, a group of men met at the home of William Drake in Dover. A total of 36 men, including David Long and others from Haldimand, attended the meeting, and after some discussion, several resolutions were passed.[2] The main resolution was to oppose the American marauders and defend Norfolk and the surrounding counties from further raids. The men decided to attack the cabin of John Dunham, an American sympathizer who had lived in Dover but had relocated to Nanticoke Creek.[2]

Although almost all of the men who attended the meeting were members of the Norfolk and Oxford militias, the planned attack was not a sanctioned military action, and there were no official orders to march against the sympathizers.[2]

Order of battle

Canadian forces[3]

American forces

  • Militia and sympathizers – John Dunham, Dayton Lindsay, George Peacock jr. (21)

Battle

Aftermath

References

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