|
Date |
Name |
Description |
|
November 6, 1811
|
Battle of Tippecanoe
|
The Prophet, brother of Shawnee
Chief Tecumseh, attacked Governor William Henry Harrison's force at dawn near
the Wabash and Tippecanoe Rivers in Indiana Territory. After
hand-to-hand combat, the natives fled. |
|
August 15, 1812
|
Fort Dearborn Massacre |
American settlers and soldiers are killed in
ambush near Fort Dearborn, at the present-day site of
Chicago,
Illinois.
|
|
January 22, 1813
|
Battle of Frenchtown |
Also known as the River Raisin Massacre, it was a severe defeat for the
Americans during the War of 1812, when they attempted to retake Detroit.
|
|
August 18, 1813 |
Dilbone Massacre |
Three settlers killed in Miami County, Ohio.
|
|
August 30, 1813
|
Fort Mims Massacre
|
Following defeat at the Battle of Burnt
Corn, a band of Red Sticks sack Fort Mims, Alabama, killing 400
civilians and taking 250 scalps. This action precipitates the
Creek
War.
|
|
Sept 19 - Oct 21, 1813 |
Peoria War |
Armed conflict between the U. S. Army and the Potawatomi and the
Kickapoo that took place in the Peoria County,
Illinois area. |
|
1814
|
Creek
War
|
Militiamen under Andrew Jackson broke the
power of Creek raiders in Georgia and Alabama after the Creek had
attacked Fort Mims and massacred settlers. They relinquished a vast land
tract. |
|
1816-18
|
First Seminole War |
The
Seminole, defending runaway slaves and
their land in Florida, fought Andrew Jackson's force. Jackson failed to
subdue them, but forced Spain to relinquish the territory. |
|
Spring, 1817
|
Battle of Claremore Mound |
Cherokee
Indians
wipe out
| |