- James Winchester
James Winchester (
February 26 ,1752 -July 26 ,1826 ) was aBrigadier General during theWar of 1812 and commanding officer of American forces during theRiver Raisin massacre . He was an important (if undistinguished) military figure in the War of 1812.Early life
Born in
Carroll County, Maryland , Winchester enlisted in the Maryland militia, serving with Gen.Hugh Mercer 'sFlying Camp battalion during the early months of theAmerican Revolution . He was captured by British forces during Gen.John Sullivan 's failed attempt to takeStaten Island onAugust 22 ,1777 . Winchester was later released in a prisoner exchange and was commissioned a lieutenant in the3rd Maryland Regiment in May 1778. Taken prisoner a second time at the surrender of Charlestown, South Carolina on May 12, 1780, Winchester was exchanged in December. Promoted to captain, he served the remainder of the war under Gen.Nathanael Greene .Life in Tennessee
In 1785, Winchester moved to what is now central Tennessee, then a frontier district of
North Carolina . He joined the local militia and eventually was promoted to brigadier general. He was elected to Tennessee's first State Legislature following the establishment of the state's government in 1796 and would remain one of the state's most politically and economically influential statesmen over the next decade. In 1802, construction was completed on his home,Cragfont .War of 1812
In March 1812, shortly before war began, Winchester was commissioned a brigadier general in the US Army. Within five months, he was in command of the Army of the Northwest, composed of several regiments camped near
Cincinnati . However, conflict over command resulted in Gen.William Henry Harrison taking charge of Winchester's forces, through a militia commission fromKentucky , in an expedition againstFort Wayne . Although Winchester's seniority was confirmed by military authorities in early September, he was forced to relinquish command to Harrison several days later when Harrison was commissioned a major general in the regular army.Later that month, Winchester commanded one wing of Harrison's advance to
Fort Defiance . After engaging in several skirmishes with British and Native American forces, he camped at the Maumee Rapids (present dayToledo, Ohio ) in December 1812.River Raisin Massacre
Early in the following year, Winchester rook part in an attempt to recapture
Frenchtown (present dayMonroe, Michigan ). His men were attacked on January 22, 1813 by a combined British-Indian force under Col.Henry Procter in theBattle of Frenchtown . After Winchester's own capture by Indians and the loss of a large number of his soldiers during the initial assault, he agreed order to a conditional surrender of all his troops in exchange for "a pledge of protection". Despite the pledge, Indians accompanying the British slaughtered hundreds of unarmed American soldiers who had obeyed Winchester's order to surrender.Winchester was imprisoned in Canada for over a year. He was released in a prisoner exchange and assigned to command the District of
Mobile . At the war's end, he resigned his regular army commission in March 1815 and returned home to Tennessee.Post war years
In 1819, Winchester served on the state commission to regulate the Tennessee-Missouri boundary. Along with
Andrew Jackson and John Overton, he founded the city ofMemphis, Tennessee on May 22, 1819.Winchester died in
Gallatin, Tennessee at the age of 74 on July 26, 1826.References
*McHenry, Robert. "Webster's American Military Biographies", Springfield, Mass.: G & C. Merriam Co., 1978.
External links
* [http://www.galafilm.com/1812/e/people/winchester.html War of 1812 - People & Stories: James Winchester]
* [http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/imagegallery.php?EntryID=W074 Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture: James Winchester]
* [http://oai.sunsite.utk.edu/sgm/mp005.html Tennessee Documentary History, 1796-1850: General Orders, 1812 Jul. 8, Nashville (to) Captain John Ballinger, New Orleans/General J. Winchester]
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