Salmon River Raid (1814)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

DateFebruary 14–24, 1814
Location
Salmon River and French Mills, New York, United States
Result British victory
Salmon River Raid
Part of War of 1812
DateFebruary 14–24, 1814
Location
Salmon River and French Mills, New York, United States
Result British victory
Belligerents
Mohawk  United States
Commanders and leaders
Joseph Morrison
Hercules Scott
Francis Cockburn
Jacob Brown
Units involved
Canadian Fencibles
89th Regiment of Foot
103rd Regiment of Foot
1st Dundas Militia
1st Stormont Militia
Glengarry Militia
Mohawk Warriors
New York Militia
Brown's Brigade
Strength
1,200+ 200+
Casualties and losses
70 deserters No casualties
Supplies captured

The Salmon River Raid was a raid conducted by British forces in February 1814 against the recently abandoned American bases along the Salmon River near French Mills, New York.[1] A previous raid and battle at French Mills had been conducted in 1812.

The British forces, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Morrison, had been anxious along the St. Lawrence front since the defeat of the Americans on November 11, and their abandonment of Cornwall on November 13. The American force under Gen. Jacob Brown had gone into winter quarters around Malone and French Mills on the Salmon River, but in early February 1814 began to retreat to Plattsburgh to rendezvous with the rest of James Wilkinson's Army.[2]

The British force in the Cornwall area consisted of regulars from the Canadian Fencibles and the 89th and 103rd Regiments of Foot, as well as local militia and native warriors, and it waqs decided to launch a series of raids against the winter encampments in New York.[3]

Earlier in February, Capt. Reuben Sherwood had launched a Raid on Madrid and successfully captured a wealth of American supplies, convincing Morrison that it was the right time to conduct a larger scale raid.

Raid

Aftermath

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI