War of 1812, Part 13: British Retake the Niagara

By late July 1814, General Jacob Brown’s army had dwindled to 750 men in fighting condition and Brown, who was recovering from wounds sustained at Lundy’s Lane, withdrew the army to Fort Erie and brought in General Edmund Gaines to take command. Gaines was instructed to hold Fort Erie at all costs. In early August, British General Gordon Drummond commenced a siege of Fort Erie and, after several days of a largely ineffective bombardment, ordered an assault. For three vicious hours, British and Americans vied for control of the northeast bastion before the British withdrew. The following month, to force the British to lift the siege, General Brown ordered a sortie against the British lines. The fighting was desperate and three battalion commanders were killed before the Americans disengaged and returned to Fort Erie, where General George Izard, who assumed command from General Brown, made the painful decision to blow up the fort and return to American soil.

Tom Hand, creator and publisher of Americana Corner, discusses how the British retook the Niagara and why it still matters today. 

 

Images courtesy of the Library of Congress, Brown University Library, National Portrait Gallery - Smithsonian Institution, World History Encyclopedia, New York Public Library, Wikimedia. 


Next
Next

War of 1812, Part 12: The Battle of Lundy’s Lane