- Battle of Tallushatchee
Infobox Military Conflict
caption=
conflict=Battle of Tallushatchee
partof=theCreek War
date=November 3 ,1813
place=Mississippi Territory
result=U.S. victory
combatant1="Red Stick " Creeks
combatant2=United States
commander1=Unknown
commander2=John Coffee
strength1=Unknown
strength2=900 dragoons [Borneman p.147]
casualties1=186 killed [Borneman p.147]
casualties2=5 killed
41 woundedThe Battle of Tallushatchee was a battle fought during the
Creek War onNovember 3 ,1813 , inAlabama .Background
After the massacre at Fort Mims, General
Andrew Jackson assembled an army of 2,500Tennessee militia . Jackson began marching intoMississippi Territory to combat theRed Stick Creeks. Jackson's troops began to constructFort Strother along theCoosa River . 15 miles (24 km) away from the fort lay the Creek village of Tallushatchee where a sizeable force of Red Stick warriors were. Jackson ordered his friend and most trusted subordinate, GeneralJohn Coffee , to attack the village.Battle
Coffee took about 1,000
dragoon s and arrived at the village onNovember 3 , where he divided his brigade into two columns which encircled the town. Two companies ventured into the center of the circle to draw out the warriors. The trap worked, and the warriors attacked and were forced to retreat back into the buildings of the village. Coffee closed the circle in on the trapped warriors.Davy Crockett , serving in the Tennessee militia, commented "we shot them down like dogs". Coffee's forces killed about 180 warriors losing only five dead and 41 wounded.The battle was the first battle in General Andrew Jackson's military campaign. A week later General Jackson inflicted another serious defeat on the Red Sticks at the
Battle of Talladega .References
*cite book|last=Borneman|first=Walter R. Borneman|authorid=Walter R. Borneman|title=1812: The War That Forged a Nation|location=New York|publisher=Harper Perennial|year=2004|isbn=ISBN 9780060531126
External links
* [http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/national_parks/horseshoe_bend_war_1813-14.jpgA map of Creek War Battle Sites] from the PCL Map Collection at the Universtity of Texas at Austin.
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