Everything about The Battle Of York totally explained
The
Battle of York was a battle of the
War of 1812 fought on
April 27,
1813, at
York, Upper Canada, which was later to become
Toronto, Ontario. An American force supported by a naval flotilla landed on the lake shore to the west, defeated the defending British force and captured the town and
dockyard. The success of the operation was marred by acts of arson and looting carried out by the American force.
Background
At the start of the campaigning season of 1813, the
American naval squadron on
Lake Ontario was ready for action before their
British counterparts. The commanders at the American base at
Sackets Harbor, New York (Major General
Henry Dearborn and Commodore
Isaac Chauncey) had a chance to strike a decisive blow by attacking the main British base and
dockyard at
Kingston, at the eastern end of the lake, but they feared that Kingston's garrison numbered up to 8,000. (There were in fact only 600 regulars there). They decided to attack York instead. This was the Provincial capital of Upper Canada, but it was far less important as a military base. It had a population of 625, though as many were living in settlements and farmsteads nearby.
Forces
The Americans appeared off York late on
April 26. Chauncey's squadron consisted of a ship-rigged
corvette and a
brig, together with twelve
schooners. The embarked force under Dearborn and Brigadier
Zebulon Pike numbered between 1,600 and 1,800 (mainly from the 6th, 15th and 16th U.S. Infantry, and the 3rd U.S. Artillery fighting as infantry).
York's defences consisted of a fort a short distance west of the town, with the nearby "Government House Battery" mounting two 12-pounder guns. A mile west was the crude "Western Battery", with two obsolete 18-pounders. Further west were the ruins of
Fort Rouillé and another disused fortification, the "Half Moon Battery", neither of which was in use. This caused further loss and confusion among the British, and they fell back to a ravine north of the fort, where the militia were forming up. Meanwhile, Chauncey's schooners, most of which carried a long 24-pounder or 32-pounder cannon, were bombarding the fort and Government House battery. British return fire was ineffective.
Sheaffe decided that the battle was lost and ordered the regulars to retreat, leaving the militia and several prominent citizens
"standing in the street like a parcel of sheep". He instructed the militia to make the best terms they could with the Americans, but unknown to the senior militia officers or any official of the legislature, he also ordered a warship under construction in the dockyard (
HMS Isaac Brock) to be set on fire and the fort's magazine to be blown up.
When the magazine exploded, Pike and the leading American troops were only two hundred yards away, or even less. Pike was mortally injured by flying stones and debris. The explosion caused over 100 casualties on both sides.
Surrender
The militia tried to arrange a capitulation, but the process took time. The negotiators had to ply back and forth between the shore and the corvette
USS Madison, which Dearborn refused to leave. When he eventually did so, Reverend
John Strachan (who held no official position at the time) accused Dearborn to his face of delaying the capitulation to allow his troops licence to commit outrages.
For their part, the Americans were angry over their losses, and because the ship and fort had apparently been destroyed after negotiations for surrender had begun.
Eventually, the articles for surrender were signed early on
April 28. The Americans took over the dockyard, where they captured a brig in poor state of repair (the
Duke of Gloucester) and twenty 24-pounder
carronades and other stores intended for the British squadron on
Lake Erie. The
Brock was beyond salvage. By chance, another ship-rigged vessel, the
Prince Regent, which carried 16 guns, had sailed for Kingston two days before the Americans had been sighted. Forsyth's company of the 1st U.S. Rifle Regiment was left as guard in the town
During
April 29 and
April 30, American troops carried out many acts of plunder. Some of them set fire to the Parliament buildings. (It was alleged that they'd found a scalp there.)
Other Americans looted empty houses on the pretext that their absent owners were militia who hadn't given their parole as required by the articles of capitulation. Dearborn emphatically denied giving orders for any buildings to be destroyed and deplored the worst of the atrocities in his letters, but he was nonetheless unable or unwilling to rein in his soldiers. Chauncey later returned some looted property, including books from the public library.
Aftermath
The Americans sent the captured stores away on
May 2 but were then penned in York harbour by a gale. They left York on
May 8, in miserable weather, and required a period of rest at
Fort Niagara on the Niagara peninsula before they could be ready for another action. Sheaffe's troops endured an equally miserable fourteen-day retreat overland to Kingston.
Following complaints about his conduct by the Provincial Assembly, Sheaffe lost his military and public offices in Upper Canada as the result of his defeat.
The most significant effects of the capture of York were probably felt on Lake Erie, since the capture of the ordnance and supplies destined for the British squadron there contributed eventually to their defeat in the
Battle of Lake Erie.
The many acts of arson and looting committed by American troops at York became (in part) the pretext for the later
Burning of Washington by British troops.
Further Information
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