- Adam Muir (British Army officer)
Major Adam Charles Muir (1770 –
May 11 1829 ) was an officer in theBritish Army , who played a significant but little-known role in the Anglo-AmericanWar of 1812 .Muir was born in Scotland. The date is not definitely known; it may have been 1766 or 1770. He enlisted as a private soldier in the
41st Regiment of Foot in 1778. He was evidently well-educated and very quickly rose through the ranks, becoming aSergeant in only five months and laterSergeant-Major , and being commissioned as anAdjutant in 1793. He became an Ensign shortly afterwards, and was promoted toLieutenant the next year. He served with the regiment in the West Indies.In 1799, the regiment was posted to Canada. In 1801, Muir married Mary Elizabeth Alexowina Bender in
Montreal . The couple would eventually have ten children. Muir was promoted toCaptain in 1804. In 1811, the regiment, noted by Major-GeneralIsaac Brock as being one of the steadiest units available in Canada, was sent toUpper Canada .In 1812, when war with America broke out, Muir was in charge of the detachment of the regiment at Amherstburg. In this part of the province, there were few British troops, but large numbers of Indians inspired by the
Shawnee leaderTecumseh aided the British. Muir was present at theBattle of Brownstown where Indians under Tecumseh routed an American detachment and captured vital despatches. Shortly afterwards, he commanded British troops and Indians at theBattle of Maguaga . Muirs troops were forced to retreat, but rallied, and the Americans withdrew without accomplishing their mission which was to clear a route for supplies to reach their army at Detroit.Muir was wounded at Maguaga, but recovered to lead the main body of the 41st at the
Siege of Detroit . Later in the year, Muir commanded another detachment sent to aid the Indians attackingFort Wayne, Indiana . The attack failed, but Muir retreated successfully to Detroit. During the following year, he took part in the Battles of Frenchtown, Fort Meigs and Fort Stephenson. He was one of several officers who became critical of the leadership of the commander of the division, Major GeneralHenry Procter . Finally, he was taken prisoner at theBattle of Moraviantown , when the by now starving and demoralised 41st Regiment gave way before a charge of Kentucky mounted riflemen.After some months in captivity, Muir was released by an exchange of prisoners. He was promoted Brevet
Major in 1814, and was appointed to command the militia in the Grand River district on the Niagara Peninsula, and played a small part in theBattle of Malcolm's Mills .After the war, the 41st returned to Britain. Muir was crippled by a fall from a horse in Ireland in 1816. He resigned from the Army two years later and returned to take up land in
Lower Canada . He was forced to sell his farm and retired to an invalid hospital at William Henry, where he died in 1829, leaving large debts.External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=37164 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
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