- Battle of Fort Fizzle
The "Battle of Fort Fizzle" (also called the Holmes County Draft Riots and the Holmes County Rebellion) was a skirmish that took place during the
American Civil War in the village of Glenmont (then known as Napoleon) inHolmes County, Ohio , between Union troops and localdraft resister s opposed to theConscription Act of 1863 .Adopted by Congress on March 13, 1863, the Conscription Act authorized President
Abraham Lincoln to draft men into military service in states that did not meet their volunteer quotas. When Federal officials tried to enforce the act in Holmes County in June, about 900 to 1000 locals built a makeshift fort, equipped with fourartillery pieces, to prevent the act's enforcement. After a brief encounter in which two resisters were wounded, Ohio GovernorDavid Tod ordered a force of nearly 420 Union troops, including the3rd Ohio Infantry , to disperse the resisters, giving the place the name "Fort Fizzle" because the rebellion had "fizzled out". The episode ended when the last four resisters who had assaulted a Federal draft official turned themselves in. [ [http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=474 Ohio History Central] ]Forty-three men from the Napoleon area were indicted for assaulting an officer and preventing the execution of law (US Military Conscription Act of 1863). The armed men involved in the prisoner rescue were indicted for treason. An additional 37 men were indicted for their involvement in activities in other parts of Holmes County, and in nearby Knox and Coshocton counties. [ [http://www.remarkableohio.org/index.cfm?action=search_markers.marker_details&marker_id=993 Ohio Historical Marker #3-38] ]
Of the 80 men involved in these activities the cases of just two men went to trial. Only one man, Laurant Blanchat (also known as Blanchard) was found guilty. Sentenced to six months at hard labor at the Ohio Penitentiary, Blanchat was pardoned by President Lincoln prior to the completion of the sentence. The prosecution of every other case was eventually dropped.
References
* [http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=474 Ohio History Central Online Encyclopedia: Battle of Fort Fizzle]
* [http://www.remarkableohio.org/index.cfm?action=search_markers.marker_details&marker_id=993 Ohio Historical Marker #3-38: Holmes County Draft Riots]
*Drouhard, Patrick J. , "It Don't Look Right For the Times: The Factual History of the Holmes County Rebellion", 2005.Notes
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