The Battle Of The Wabash || St. Clair's Defeat || US Army's Biggest Defeat

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  • Опубліковано 5 жов 2024
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    The Battle of the Wabash or St. Clair's defeat was a battle fought in 1791 on the Wabash river, near present day Fort Recovery, Ohio. The battle is also reffered as the Battle of a Thousand Slain. It's the US Army's Biggest or worst Defeat in history.
    After the end of the American Revolutionary War and the signing the treaty of Paris the British gave recognized United States sovereignty of all the land east of the Mississippi River and south of the Great Lakes.
    The Native tribes living in the area, however, were not participants to this treaty. Therefore in 1783 these tribes decided to make an alliance. Cherokee, Iroquois, Delaware, Miami, Odawa, Ojibwa, Potawatomi, Shawnee, Wabash and Wyandot nations formed The Northwestern Native Confederacy.
    Many of them, especially leaders such as Little Turtle - chief of the Miami nation and Blue Jacket - chief of the Shawnee nation, refused to recognize American claims to the area northwest of the Ohio River.
    In the coming years American settlers would try to occupy the land but would be in conflict with the Native Americans of the area. The US army tried
    to take the land but the Natives, backed by the British, fought on and woudn't give up their homeland.
    A series of conflict in the 1780s led up to the battle of the Wabash.
    Narration: Dean Moody
    www.deantmoody...
    Sources:
    thehistoriansm...
    www.whatitmean...
    www.britannica...
    ohiohistorycen...
    armyhistory.or...
    www.bsu.edu/-/...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 471

  • @nativeamericanhistory
    @nativeamericanhistory  Рік тому +12

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    • @andresyance8154
      @andresyance8154 Рік тому +5

      Hey If you could do a video on the Seminole wars that would be great, as they are the only indigenous nation in the US that successfully resisted relocation, that’s why the Florida Seminole are known as the Unconquered people.

    • @jcadams8232
      @jcadams8232 Рік тому +1

      There was never any sort of alliance (if there was, show me written documentary evidence) among the stated tribe in what used to be the Northwest as described here.
      The Declaration of Independence references the brutal and cruel practice of the British in this Northwest area to pay for scalps regardless of the children, pregnant women and little girls scalped. The British continued to foment unrest among renegade Indian tribes as evidenced by the words contained in the said Declaration of Independence.
      St. Clair, unfortunately, did not benefit from the 200 years of learning curves from fighting renegade Indians. There is a pdf by Van Cleve who narrates the misadventure. The conflict was precipitated by the British, not some sort of independent Indian alliance.

    • @berndwalther282
      @berndwalther282 8 місяців тому

    • @berndwalther282
      @berndwalther282 8 місяців тому

    • @berndwalther282
      @berndwalther282 8 місяців тому

  • @sandino27
    @sandino27 Рік тому +137

    For those who want to know more there is a book called The Victory With No Name that details the events leading, during, and after this event. This indigenous victory set a marker for several US military habits involving using native scouts and guerilla tactics; mainly ambush formations (L shape) and sign language. Also Little Turtle was considered a respectful ally after this event and was buried under military colors similar to a US Army General.

    • @washingtondale
      @washingtondale Рік тому +9

      🙏 appreciate the lesson

    • @jaimeosbourn3616
      @jaimeosbourn3616 Рік тому +8

      There is another book that came out this year called "War along the Wabash" by Steven P. Locke that covers the same battle

    • @chuckyxii10
      @chuckyxii10 Рік тому +10

      They also taught a complete lack of mercy, funnily enough the video doesn't mention the two hundred plus civilians massacred with the wounded. This victory was a disaster for the natives, it ended any chance of a negotiated settlement of the conflicts that began with Pontiac's war and endured through the revolution. Had they contented themselves with the victory and refrained from the massacre, it is likely they could have achieved an actual settlement with the US.

    • @jaimeosbourn3616
      @jaimeosbourn3616 Рік тому +20

      @@chuckyxii10It wouldn't have lasted. New settlers where always pressing westward

    • @steakeater4557
      @steakeater4557 Рік тому +2

      ah yes, persist the attack. a complete total failure.

  • @olentangy74
    @olentangy74 Рік тому +40

    I have visited the battlefield site in what is now Fort Recovery in western Ohio. There is an impressive monolith with a statue of a soldier. Under the monolith is the final resting place of hundreds of the dead, whose bones were gathered the following year and buried. The Wabash River was rerouted by the Army Corps of Engineers in the 1800’s to build the Ohio/ Erie Canal. Today the river is a shallow stream that is dry.

    • @avtomat6471
      @avtomat6471 Рік тому

      Typical Whiteman, destroying nature and the environment.

  • @thehappywerewolf
    @thehappywerewolf Рік тому +60

    Being Welsh with Irish decent I've always had much love and respect for the Native American. We Welsh have lived under a occupying force in one form or another since the Roman Empire turned up..🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇮🇪❤️⚒️⚒️⚒️

    • @spencer6735
      @spencer6735 Рік тому +6

      If you are welsh odds are you are Roman bud…

    • @stew4240
      @stew4240 Рік тому +9

      So has every other country. Not particularly exclusive to the Welsh.

    • @miked8545
      @miked8545 Рік тому +7

      I’m American of Sardinian and and scotch-Irish decent. My first ancestor was brought to the American colonies at 12 years old slave. After buying his freedom, land and raising a family, he and his entire family ,except for one grandson who was snuck out of the makeshift fort by his mother, were massacred by Indians after surrendering. Save your respect for individuals who earn it, don’t go giving it away to people just because their ancestors lost some fights.

    • @ibestrokin
      @ibestrokin Рік тому +10

      @@miked8545 you cant invade someone's home and then complain that they 86ed you.

    • @miked8545
      @miked8545 Рік тому

      @@ibestrokin it was a raiding party that also killed the local natives. My ancestors were brought here by force, and it wasn’t their home. Your ignorance is a perfect example of the intentional distortion of real history that is destroying our civilization.

  • @wellersonoliveira5334
    @wellersonoliveira5334 Рік тому +64

    I am from Brazil and have some indiginous blood, feel so proud for all native american nations, and i found their history fascinanting, something about learning about it, just speaks to my soul. Preach for my native american brothers and sisters ❤

    • @Kawaiijihad
      @Kawaiijihad Рік тому +14

      From a "north american" native to a "south american" native, we stand together on the lands we once did before.
      ☀️🙌

    • @wellersonoliveira5334
      @wellersonoliveira5334 Рік тому +6

      ​@@Kawaiijihad Yes brother 🤝

    • @andycockrum1212
      @andycockrum1212 Рік тому +7

      I’m happy Brazil’s natives have kept so much of their culture and language and traditions. Most native cultures in the US had massive loss of traditions and language

    • @KO-js6by
      @KO-js6by Рік тому +2

      LMFAO

    • @alexanderchenf1
      @alexanderchenf1 Рік тому +3

      Completely different civilizations

  • @andresyance8154
    @andresyance8154 Рік тому +62

    Could you please do a video on the Seminole wars ?, they are the only “Unconquered” indigenous nation, who successfully resisted relocation, it would make an awesome video !

  • @123Goldhunter11
    @123Goldhunter11 Рік тому +5

    No wonder this isn't talked about. Human history is bloody beyond belief. There were no good ole days.

  • @CtrlAltDlt68
    @CtrlAltDlt68 Рік тому +26

    There used to be an outdoor drama called "Blue Jacket" that was performed in SW Ohio. It sadly shut down several years ago, but depicted a lot of this campaign, including the Battle of the Wabash. At the time, they liked to claim that it was the only outdoor drama that featured flaming arrows.

    • @andrewbryant2656
      @andrewbryant2656 Рік тому +2

      In Chillicothe they still do it I go to it every year they do bluejacket and tecumseh

  • @jhall2224
    @jhall2224 Рік тому +6

    I'm in my 60's, born and still live in Fort Wayne. Went to school with and best friends with Little Turtles descendants. They're still here. The oldest treaty house east of the Mississippi is about a mile from my house. So much history here.

    • @marcservos3790
      @marcservos3790 Рік тому +2

      I'm also from Fort Wayne, which included growing up in New Haven from age 11 until moving out a few times, turning 60 next year. Overseas now. One thing I've picked up on is that there were several confrontations I'm aware of, which included the French Fort Miamis being attacked in I believe 1747 by native Americans, another in 1780 during the Revolution, and the last being the 1812 seige. That's interesting you mention Little Turtle's descendants. At IPFW, there was a descendant of Davy Crockett in a couple classes. He didn't brag about it, people asked him because of the same surname. To close, I'm in Singapore and hear many detailed stories of the Japanese Occupation during World War II.

  • @rdf4315
    @rdf4315 Рік тому +39

    I would love to hear more about this Miami tribe.

    • @scotthoff7661
      @scotthoff7661 Рік тому +6

      Check out William Hoagland's book, "Autumn Of The Black Snake", which chronicles the events leading up to and those after St Clair's Defeat-----which Hoagland argues were instrumental in the formation of a standing US Army, something opposed by many of the original Founding Fathers. A search for "Little Turtle" online can also give you lots of information. In short, the Miami were a tribal nation situated at an extremely important junction of several rivers (which were the equivalent of modern highways back then, as overland travel was difficult) which gave access to Lake Erie and ultimately all the way East to the Atlantic coast, and Westward via the Wabash River to the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. This gave them a huge advantage in both Native and British/French/American trade and made them quite prosperous. Additionally, they hybridized a type of maize which could be ground into a fine flour (as opposed to a coarse corn meal) which was very digestible as well as desired in trade. Their "capital", Kekionga, was a pretty large settlement (at the present site of modern day Ft Wayne, IN) which probably didn't look much different than NE Indiana today-----large fields of corn spreading out for miles, as the Miami were a settled agricultural people........but, as St Clair and Harmer also discovered, fierce warriors. Possibly one of the larger and more powerful tribes, both economically and militarily, that nobody has ever heard of for the most part.

    • @ruskibot7745
      @ruskibot7745 Рік тому +3

      Go to Miami Oklahoma. Plenty live there.

    • @rdf4315
      @rdf4315 Рік тому +1

      @@ruskibot7745 ok I didn't know there was a Miami Oklahoma but thanks I'll have to ask my dad if he's been through there since he's been to so many states as a truck driver.

    • @algernonrose
      @algernonrose Рік тому

      they were cannibals that lived in the woods. they never invented anything. they allowed humans to realize their godliness. they served their purpose.

    • @ruskibot7745
      @ruskibot7745 Рік тому +1

      @@rdf4315 Its on Route 66, nice little town.

  • @Daylon91
    @Daylon91 Рік тому +8

    Thanks for making this. Too few know about this battle

  • @ibestrokin
    @ibestrokin Рік тому +334

    In memory of those brave indigenous warriors! 💪

    • @acnj228
      @acnj228 Рік тому +18

      Amen love my native brothers and sisters and ancestors 😊

    • @angelmedina5387
      @angelmedina5387 Рік тому +12

      ​@@acnj228 LONG LIVE THE INDIGENOUS ONES MY NATIVE BROTHER!!!💙👌🏽🪶🪶🪶💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽💯💯💯

    • @angelmedina5387
      @angelmedina5387 Рік тому +5

      💙💙💙👌🏽🪶🪶🪶💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽💯💯💯AGREED BRO!!!

    • @Austin01Powers
      @Austin01Powers Рік тому +21

      Your people fought hard and I respect that ✊🏻

    • @ibestrokin
      @ibestrokin Рік тому +4

      @@Austin01Powers salute! 🍺🍺✌

  • @dmongosa
    @dmongosa 8 місяців тому +2

    I am a Miami Indian and remember being often told of this historical Native victory by my tribal elders. Chief Little Turtle is one of my distant ancestors and my 3rd great grandfather, Chief John Bull Mongosa was the last war chief of the Miami Indians in Indiana.

  • @wiseguysoutdoors2954
    @wiseguysoutdoors2954 Рік тому +14

    My 5th great uncle was Captain Richard " Shawtunte" Sparks, an adoptee of Tecumseh's father. Repatriated with the whites after Pukshinwah's death at the battle of point pleasant in Lord Dunsmores war, he scouted with Chief Piamingo of the Choctaw and William and George Colbert, half Scots, half Choctaw and warned St Clair of the impending doom, but he ignored them. So, gives the choice of dying with St Claire, or going back out to scout, they unanimously chose to go back out scouting. St Claire was a blundering fool. They made it safely to Fort Franklin, modern day Cincinnati area

    • @jakemocci3953
      @jakemocci3953 Рік тому +2

      Yeah, this seems like a failure of command. Brave man but foolish.
      The Romans learned millennia ago that you always make a fortified camp in “barbarian” territory, and stacking your weapons with the enemy afoot is rather ridiculous.

    • @ibestrokin
      @ibestrokin Рік тому

      That's a neat little piece of family history. Salute!

    • @jonathanborchardt891
      @jonathanborchardt891 3 місяці тому

      My 2 oldest are direct descendants of Tecumseh.

  • @J0einOK
    @J0einOK Рік тому +6

    Brings a whole new meaning to “The Wabash Cannonball”

    • @KroM234
      @KroM234 Рік тому +3

      Or the tune named "Hell on the Wabash"

  • @idaearl927
    @idaearl927 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for sharing this video. What America needs is knowledge of the history from many perspectives.

  • @davidtuttle508
    @davidtuttle508 11 місяців тому +2

    I teach US Army Military History for the Boston University Army ROTC Program. I first heard about this battle via The History Guy's video. I show that video in class, so we can discuss the History of that time. And BTW, at one time I lived in Peru, IN and saw the reenactment of the Battle of the Mississinewa (not sure of spelling). My neighbors in Peru gave me their time on the history of the Meshikinsoquah era.

  • @mattattack5205
    @mattattack5205 Рік тому +11

    So awesome hear this history being told basically taking place in my neck of the woods so long ago.

  • @reycesarcarino4653
    @reycesarcarino4653 Рік тому +4

    Tribes,Clans or Castes when Indigenous band together they are a Strong Native Nation

    • @Outlier999
      @Outlier999 Рік тому

      But they still lost eventually. They could not adapt to changing times.

    • @reycesarcarino4653
      @reycesarcarino4653 Рік тому

      @@Outlier999 they could not but they gave a hell of a fight after all the thing About progress it stops for no man

    • @m_4903
      @m_4903 4 місяці тому

      ​@@reycesarcarino4653 the biggest problem were the virus disease and some betrayer of a tribes. Virus disease & unfortunated backstabber betrayal were among the factor of their native defeat

  • @evilstorm5954
    @evilstorm5954 Рік тому +4

    Wow, I didn’t know this story before I watched your Video. Very good presentation, thank you for your work. PS- I’m an Aussie, and a History buff, this seems to be a “hidden” slice of history.

  • @rogerashmore6720
    @rogerashmore6720 Рік тому +8

    Great history lesson thank you.

  • @stevenmillikin558
    @stevenmillikin558 Рік тому +1

    Fascinating. Thank you for narrating and posting this.

  • @johnmcnulty4425
    @johnmcnulty4425 Рік тому +14

    A perfect example of how a nation buries its unflattering history. I teach history in the Ohio region and have only had two students who had ever heard of this defeat.

    • @ttpwwg1wga930
      @ttpwwg1wga930 Рік тому

      We were taught this in 4th grade Indiana history class.

    • @catfart879
      @catfart879 Рік тому

      How is it unflattering?? Tribes fought each other all the time. Do you think war paint was around before whites?
      White man no different than any warring tribe, except their pissed cause the white tribe won.
      Signed, brave white warrior.

    • @jaydunno8266
      @jaydunno8266 4 місяці тому

      I read about this years ago in a book called "the Battle of a Thousand Slain". It was a collection of stories about the Indian Wars. Aside from being weakened by desertion and food shortages, St Claire's army also had internal divisions between the regulars and volunteer troops. Some of the casualties were the result of friendly fire as the militia rushed into the regular camp.
      The reason it is not taught in history classes is that the victory was transitory. Another force was raised under Mad Anthony Wayne, who reorganized the force into The American Legion with four sub legions. Wayne had been surprised at Paoli during the Revolution, and was very vigilant about security measures. I believe the Indians called him the leader who sleeps with one eye open. The other advantage Wayne had is that he took the time and effort to train his force before marching off to engage the Indians. Wayne was effective in defeating the Indians because of this.

    • @johnmcnulty4425
      @johnmcnulty4425 3 місяці тому

      Thanks for the feedback. Indeed, General Wayne's approach to command and training is what made all the difference (He also presided over the court martial that introduced a young Meriwether Lewis to Lt. William Clark, but that's another story.)
      The fort where Wayne trained his troops was called Legionville and is located near Ambridge, Pennsylvania in Beaver County. I am fortunate to have a friend in that county who actually showed me the old wagon ruts next to a state road that ran through the camp.
      Wayne was so intent in controlling the field that he wanted to keep track of every civilian wagon heading to the frontier, so he had the only 'road' in the region run directly through the fort. The results of the battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794 speak for themselves.

  • @chiron14pl
    @chiron14pl Рік тому +2

    Wow! I was not aware of this event. In terms of number dead, percentage of casualties to total troupe strength, it really is astouding.

  • @sannemaras7801
    @sannemaras7801 Рік тому +2

    Thanks for making these videos

  • @cjthebeesknees
    @cjthebeesknees Рік тому +2

    You were right, in every way.. those solemn few with a open conscious -2023

  • @bigtex4058
    @bigtex4058 Рік тому +12

    Fun facts: 1. Most of the volunteers had never even fired a musket before the battle commenced. 2. The suppliers cheated St Clair, providing thin tents, thin uniforms, and shoes so shoddy they fell apart on the march. They were freezing and starving before the battle started.

  • @StarWarrior91
    @StarWarrior91 5 місяців тому

    Good overview of a fascinating yet totally forgotten campaign that’s key in early American frontier history

  • @kingstarscream3807
    @kingstarscream3807 Рік тому +5

    The Americans F'd around and found out.

  • @neilmunro7961
    @neilmunro7961 Рік тому +3

    It's nice when the good guys win.

    • @rki7068
      @rki7068 Рік тому +4

      True. The good guys won in the end

    • @neilmunro7961
      @neilmunro7961 Рік тому

      Not really unless you count genocide as acceptable.
      @@rki7068

    • @SlavesWereGood
      @SlavesWereGood Рік тому

      made this nation a super power that those little bickering tribes couldnt band together to do@@neilmunro7961

    • @gowvmohawk4215
      @gowvmohawk4215 Рік тому

      @@rki7068good guys don’t do genocide

  • @peterwilson5528
    @peterwilson5528 Рік тому +1

    It was very interesting. Thank you for your effort. Just goes to show what happens when different small nations form a united front against invaders..

  • @brianshall6100
    @brianshall6100 3 місяці тому

    There was a second battle at the same site. The second battle was led by Gen (Mad) Anthony Wayne. Ft Wayne is named after him. It set up the Treaty of (Ft) Greenville in Darke County, Ohio. Chief Little Turtle was to have said"I will fight no more forever " after their defeat at Ft Wayne.

  • @ferdinandcuevas8457
    @ferdinandcuevas8457 Рік тому +2

    Great content very informative and very tastefully presentation! 🇺🇸

  • @54032Zepol
    @54032Zepol Рік тому +1

    I love the illustrations they look so goodm

  • @gordanjunior
    @gordanjunior Рік тому +1

    Great video. Keep them comming!

  • @paulnienhaus5359
    @paulnienhaus5359 11 місяців тому

    Excellent presentation. Many Thanks

  • @patrickparker1403
    @patrickparker1403 Рік тому +2

    I live in Wabash County Indiana on the Eel river

    • @marcservos3790
      @marcservos3790 Рік тому

      I'm from Fort Wayne, born and raised there, its suburb New Haven age 11 until moving out three times. Now overseas. When Harmer's Defeat was mention, I knew where it was. Anyway, my dad and step-mom lived in the Lagro area in Wabash County for a while. They moved to Washington state several years ago.

  • @oddevents8395
    @oddevents8395 Рік тому +10

    speaking of the Great Lakes. they've found pyrimid structures in the waters. Kurimeo Ahau just did a 5 part series on them

  • @francisebbecke2727
    @francisebbecke2727 Рік тому +8

    Was Little Turtle that smart or was St. Clair that dumb?

    • @chrisharmon8858
      @chrisharmon8858 Рік тому +5

      What wasn't mentioned was that St. Clair was hampered by slow shipments which delayed his starting out on the campaign, blame congress. Then when they finally did start out he had a lot of desertions because the militia had only agreed to be gone for so long and had to get back home. When the attack came his best troops, a small contingent of regulars was out chasing down a large group of said deserters. I'm no fan of St. Clair, his autocratic actions didn't win him many friends among the militia and contributed to the desertions but his army wasn't firing on all cylinders when the battle began. This attack led to the creation of the standing U.S. Army which Washington still faced a lot of opposition too...including from Jefferson. I don't know if St. Clair was a good enough general at the time to have defeated Little Turtle/Blue Jacket even with his full army but he did meet some success during the Revolutionary War. Even though he received command because he was a friend of Washington's, Washington had him brought up on charges (I don't remember what) for the debacle but he was let off. A good book on this subject and the subsequent Battle of The Fallen Timbers which gained the U.S. almost half of Ohio is Autumn of The Black Snake by Hogeland.

  • @geraldmiller5260
    @geraldmiller5260 Рік тому +2

    Would make a great movie.

  • @davidw.5185
    @davidw.5185 Рік тому +1

    I live near Chief Little Turtles historic village. There is a nice plaque on the site, right next to the trailer court. 😱

  • @craigkdillon
    @craigkdillon Рік тому +11

    Factoid:
    Chief Blue Jacket was Dutch.
    He was out hunting with his younger brother as a teenager.
    A band of Shawnees intercepted them. They were going to be killed (as I remember the story).
    But the older boy was able to talk to them and negotiate a deal.
    He would go with them, if they let his young brother return home unharmed.
    They agreed.
    He became Shawnee (I don't remember his Dutch name, but it is known.)
    His reputation for bravery and good judgment enabled him to become
    a Shawnee War Chief.
    A War Chief is a position that is elected.
    It has nothing to do with governing or making tribal decisions.
    A War Chief was NOT a regular Chief.

    • @craigkdillon
      @craigkdillon Рік тому +1

      @@Dylan-kx6fc Yes. My source is the book The Frontiersmen by Allan Eckert.
      Great book, if you don't know it.

    • @craigkdillon
      @craigkdillon Рік тому

      @@Dylan-kx6fc Amazing books. Those footnotes are the same you find in a scholarly text. They cite the sources of his material.
      Those books are prose, but are real history.
      For me, it brought history to life.

    • @craigkdillon
      @craigkdillon Рік тому

      @@Dylan-kx6fc That, The Conquerors, and Frontiersmen. All excellent.
      This is great. Never met anyone that even read them, or heard of them before.
      The story of Simon Kenton/Butler was amazing.
      Why has no movie been made of his life?
      He is better than a Marvel super hero.

    • @craigkdillon
      @craigkdillon Рік тому +1

      @@Dylan-kx6fc Also, why has no movie been made of William Johnson?? That guy was incredible.

    • @Draco512x
      @Draco512x Рік тому

      As good as the historical fiction books are that this story comes from, the historical record doesn’t seem to back it up

  • @1bambiefawn
    @1bambiefawn Рік тому

    Learned something new today about this battle and about were some of these indigenous names come from such as Delaware, Pontiac, Tecumseh, Miami and others.

  • @keithgale1641
    @keithgale1641 6 місяців тому

    Very interesting. I am from a native American tribe also. I am mohawk and part blackfoot. Due to my lineage from my mother's great great grandmother's side of the family. ❤😮

  • @UncutSavage9858
    @UncutSavage9858 Рік тому

    Thank you for the video

  • @davidfinch7407
    @davidfinch7407 Рік тому +2

    In the thumbnail it says: "The battle is also referred as the Battle of a Thousand Slain. It's the US Army's Biggest or worst Defeat in history." Yeah, no. Just in World War II, for instance, there's Bataan/Corregidor and the Battle of Kasserine Pass, both of which were much larger defeats. The Civil War has a lot of examples of battle lost by the U.S. Army that were MUCH larger then this battle. This is just off the top of my head, there are certainly many more.

    • @chuckyxii10
      @chuckyxii10 Рік тому +5

      Always depends how you measure it, by percentage of losses it was biggest. Actual casualty rate was 97% both killed and wounded.

    • @mjcannons17
      @mjcannons17 Рік тому +1

      I think they mean percentage wise, as we only had a few thousand in the entire U.S. Army at the time.

    • @DanielKramer-jo8fm
      @DanielKramer-jo8fm Рік тому +1

      as a percentage of our standing military...much more than any you mentioned, 25% gone in 3 hour...nothing remotely compares to this.

  • @jonmeek3879
    @jonmeek3879 Рік тому

    Excellent! Never heard of this before

  • @Macdaddy.
    @Macdaddy. Рік тому +8

    The biggest defeat was actually the Seminole wars.

    • @Outlier999
      @Outlier999 Рік тому

      Not really. The Seminoles successfully resisted relocation but they have not ruled Florida for over 150 years. Call it a draw.

    • @jackrifleman562
      @jackrifleman562 Рік тому +4

      @@Outlier999 The Seminole inflicted heavy casualties and the U.S. spent a huge amount of money on the various campaigns against them. It was a cumulative heavy cost. But in terms of losing a single battle with high casualties even by the standards of modern warfare St. Claire's defeat tops all battles in terms of native vs. white conflicts in North America.

  • @porke1870
    @porke1870 Рік тому +1

    Great content

  • @br5877
    @br5877 Рік тому +5

    I feel so proud to be Native American...

    • @SlavesWereGood
      @SlavesWereGood Рік тому

      lolol

    • @torizo8763
      @torizo8763 Рік тому +1

      What is there to be proud of?

    • @gowvmohawk4215
      @gowvmohawk4215 Рік тому

      @@torizo8763the resilience our people have to have gone through all we have been put through and still be here.

    • @Langside_Sargent
      @Langside_Sargent Рік тому

      ​@@torizo8763"wHaT iS tHeRE tO bE pRoUD oF"

    • @torizo8763
      @torizo8763 Рік тому

      @@Langside_Sargent You sound offended, You must be a Native American lmao poor you.

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory Рік тому +1

    interesting, I had never even heard of this battle

  • @tompelham7035
    @tompelham7035 Рік тому +1

    I am curious as to why the great name of Tecumseh was not mentioned, was he a prominent figure at a later time in this resistance?

  • @garycole520
    @garycole520 Рік тому +2

    Yeah, historians have deliberately suppressed this crushing defeat.

  • @Outlier999
    @Outlier999 Рік тому +2

    What does it matter? The Americans won the war. By fair means or foul, despite losing some battles, the Americans won 🏆 that war and all others. The land is ours by right of conquest, something the Indians understood and practiced.

    • @Youngblood457
      @Youngblood457 Рік тому +1

      You know ours also includes Native American since they are American citizens, right?

    • @milin7120
      @milin7120 Рік тому

      Smallpox biological warfare did most of d conquest

  • @flintandball6093
    @flintandball6093 Рік тому +1

    What about battle of monongahela? 1000 US and English casualties against the French and their native allies.

  • @dennistallman1601
    @dennistallman1601 Рік тому +2

    natives are the only ones that defeated the U.S. military not once but so many times some aren't recorded are to embarrassing to admit lol. 😅

  • @unclenogbad1509
    @unclenogbad1509 Рік тому +4

    Not surprisingly, I've never heard of this event. I'm British, but suspect the same applies to most Americans. Military powers always try to brush their defeats under the carpet, hence our history books shy clear of mentioning major victories by peoples such as the Maori and Ashanti. I wish all descendants of these peoples well, and hope they can live in dignity for the future.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Рік тому

      British history is replete with mention of defeats. We've even made movies about them. The British don't shy away from defeat, unlike the Americans.

    • @unclenogbad1509
      @unclenogbad1509 Рік тому

      @@lyndoncmp5751 Mostly those would be against other European powers, and even those are usually spun in some way.
      As for movies, one of the best is Zulu, but it's not about Isandlwana, is it?

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Рік тому

      @@unclenogbad1509
      Zulu Dawn is about Isandlwana. Peter O'Toole, Bob Hoskins, Burt Lancaster, Denholm Elliot etc.

    • @unclenogbad1509
      @unclenogbad1509 Рік тому

      @@lyndoncmp5751 Yeah, I know that, but it's not the great film that Zulu is. Almost half-hearted, in fact. Typical lacklustre sequel/prequel, and gives no place to Cetewayo's ultimate assessment. I'd say it proves my point, but I know you'll disagree, so how about leaving it at that?

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Рік тому

      @@unclenogbad1509
      How you liked the end product doesn't negate that there was a major film with major actors portraying a major British defeat. This was 1979, just two years on from a Bridge Too Far. There was also The Charge of the Light Brigade in the 1960s.
      The British don't shy away from bringing attention to defeats.

  • @austinshannon4197
    @austinshannon4197 Рік тому +2

    I only have 88 days left in the U.S. Army IRR.

  • @tedpohlman7928
    @tedpohlman7928 Рік тому +1

    I live in the wabash I am proud of the land that I live in

  • @dmeinhertzhagen8764
    @dmeinhertzhagen8764 9 місяців тому

    Can someone please tell me which artist did the painting used for the thumbnail. The one depicting the battle on both sides of the river and with snow on the ground. Thanks in advance.

  • @AlanCooke-s4f
    @AlanCooke-s4f Рік тому

    A great (unknown) victory for the Natives Man !

  • @yossarianmnichols9641
    @yossarianmnichols9641 Рік тому +1

    I wonder why they didn't teach this in US history class when I was a kid.

    • @everettatwater2939
      @everettatwater2939 Рік тому

      No I have many books about this sometimes you need to learn beyond school, but is not censors you can read about online or go to a library and get a physical copy,

  • @jacksontaylor5708
    @jacksontaylor5708 Рік тому +1

    Some of these sentences are taken verbatim from the Wikipedia article on this battle. 😢

  • @nmelkhunter1
    @nmelkhunter1 Рік тому

    Interesting story. Where did you find the prints? I especially like those at 4:06 and 8:00.

  • @patrickharty9214
    @patrickharty9214 Рік тому +3

    You can not compare the two battles (Wabash vs. Little Big Horn). Little Big Horn was a culmination of two battles to include the Battle of Rosebud against General Crook (1,300 men) 8 days prior to the Little Big Horn (Greasy Grass). 7th CAV had a combined force of 700 men. Both US Army units had a combined force of 2,000 men. The combined force of Lakota, Cheyenne, & Arapaho was more like 20,000 according to the Lakota witnesses (I lived on the Pine Ridge in the late 1970s). Over 300 Men were killed from the 2 US Army Units. They could've easily wiped out both units, however the mission was accomplished by the extermination of the "Son of the morning star" due to his atrocities to their people.

  • @flashingarrows
    @flashingarrows Рік тому +6

    GREAT VICTORY!!!

  • @guichozuniga7385
    @guichozuniga7385 Рік тому

    Proud of being Native American!

  • @BerlinYankee
    @BerlinYankee 9 місяців тому

    I am direct descendent of Chief Blue Jacket. It was proven in the early 2000s thru dna that Bluejacket was not a Dutch child that was captured by the Shawnee. But was indeed a Full Blood Shawnee. Marmaduke Van Swearingen was not the true-Blue Jacket But was given the name as was custom in that time. he was not captured until in the 1770-time frame. BlueJacket or Weyapiersenwah was war chief "c. 1743-1810" and was the true BlueJacket.

  • @joevespa3157
    @joevespa3157 Рік тому +1

    Good 👍😊

  • @JustMe-im8ch
    @JustMe-im8ch 2 місяці тому

    This event deserves a block buster movie with action scenes like in the movies "the last of the mohicans" or "the revenant"

  • @MXB2001
    @MXB2001 Рік тому

    Glorious!

  • @williamswetnam4070
    @williamswetnam4070 25 днів тому

    3:39 "During the mid and late 1870s..."
    I think you meant "1780s".

  • @philipcoriolis6614
    @philipcoriolis6614 Рік тому +2

    They were defeated by smallpox, not by humans

  • @LouisHCampagna
    @LouisHCampagna Рік тому

    There is a confusing bit at 3:40. The narrator speaks of “mid- to late 1870ies”. That’s a one hundred years jump from the previous subtitle. Perhaps its a typo and we are actually talking of the mid- to late 1770ies. But to refer to a “cycle of violence” here kind of foes without saying: it’s in the middle of the US War of Independence.
    So, what period are we referring to here exactly?
    Ok, listening to the rest of the narration, I assume it was an inversion typo: should be “1780ies” rather than “1870ies”.

  • @sheepsfoot2
    @sheepsfoot2 Рік тому +1

    Braddock's humiliating defeat ?

  • @bustedford
    @bustedford Рік тому

    Even a broke clock is right twice a day👍🏻

  • @chesterstevens8870
    @chesterstevens8870 Рік тому +4

    I dont have the numbers on the top of my head, but I've always thought that the Dade Massacre was one of the most decisive and one-sided native american victories.

  • @johnmcnulty4425
    @johnmcnulty4425 Рік тому +2

    Great victory for the Natives but in three years General Wayne shall arrive and commence the battle of Fallen Timbers.

  • @xpqzl2551
    @xpqzl2551 Рік тому +1

    hate how lots of people try to paint natives as helpless uncivilised people in history when in reality they were actually really skilled and fierce fighters and even won some wars.

    • @عليياسر-ذ5ب
      @عليياسر-ذ5ب Рік тому

      Naturally, they were criminals 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @xpqzl2551
      @xpqzl2551 Рік тому

      how so@@عليياسر-ذ5ب

    • @noah2633
      @noah2633 10 місяців тому

      The Red Indians were often formidable opponents.

  • @kenskinner6948
    @kenskinner6948 Рік тому +3

    Extremely interesting, heroic in one way but absolute tragic that people couldn’t live in harmony. Also history has shown that the US military has to pick a fight to gain ‘something’.

  • @geraldmiller5260
    @geraldmiller5260 Рік тому +1

    Fort Washington was "in" and not "near" present day Cincinnati.

  • @maureencora1
    @maureencora1 Рік тому +1

    I Thought It was Custer Last Stand?

    • @Mistadobalina111
      @Mistadobalina111 21 день тому +1

      I was always led to believe that BS too. Custer had no 'last stand'. Him and his cavalry were annihilated.

    • @maureencora1
      @maureencora1 21 день тому

      @@Mistadobalina111 Touche' (smile)

  • @richardhanes7370
    @richardhanes7370 Рік тому

    Is this where Saint clairsville Ohio gets its name?

  • @wolfganggugelweith8760
    @wolfganggugelweith8760 Рік тому +1

    Brave red Indians! 💪😎👍

  • @joeydavalos6182
    @joeydavalos6182 8 місяців тому

    Excuting the wounded? Seems savage too me

  • @Qureshi00_
    @Qureshi00_ Рік тому +1

    First and foremost the European had no right to remain there. Second they call their war against UK independence one and what about the war of indegnous ppl ?

  • @michaelsnyder3871
    @michaelsnyder3871 Рік тому

    It wasn't just that the militia were untrained and poorly disciplined, many showed up unarmed, the states raising the men expecting the Federal Government to arm them. This was because the Militia Act of 1792 as amended and the various state militia laws had no enforcing capability. The law mandated that every militiaman own a musket or rifle yet there were no enforcement provisions so that even by 1814, 1000 Kentucky volunteers from the militia showed up in New Orleans in 1814 with no weapons. As far as native auxiliaries, the Continental Army had Mohicans and Delawares acting as scouts and in direct support during the Western campaigns against British, Loyalist and their allied natives, mostly Iroquois, Creek and Cherokee.

  • @rampantmutt9119
    @rampantmutt9119 Рік тому +5

    Americans are like "how dare these savages defend themselves from invasion!"

  • @Warmaker01
    @Warmaker01 Рік тому +1

    This event mauled the US Army. It has to be remembered that for so much of American history before WWI and its own Civil War, the United States was quite averse to keeping a large standing army. A distrust of a standing army, even. The Continental Army was gutted after the US won its independence from Britain. The US Army was something like 2500 strong in the 1780s. So the Army losing around 1400 men at the Battle of the Wabash is a big deal.
    On a semi-related note to US Army strength at the time and the army losing so much of its strength due to Wabash, the French Revolutionary Wars began in 1792, only a few months after Wabash. The new French government sent diplomats to the USA to garner support. Return the favor, France helped out in the American War of Independence, right? But President George Washington wisely denied the request and prevented any measure of volunteer formations to be raised. Washington kept the US neutral. The US Army was in no shape at all to play with European politics and wars.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Рік тому

      France didn't care about America
      France was only interested in fighting the British. Purely self interests. And the French Revolution, while noble in theory, was disgusting in practice.

    • @Outlier999
      @Outlier999 Рік тому

      It should be remembered that most of the white soldiers in that battle were poorly trained and cowardly militia, not regulars.

  • @JosephVespa-tk3wq
    @JosephVespa-tk3wq Рік тому

    Good

  • @tacticlol
    @tacticlol Рік тому +1

    This event lead to the formal creation of the US Army.

  • @johnishikawa2200
    @johnishikawa2200 Рік тому

    It stands to reason that the American army would suffer much bigger defeats at the hands of indigenous people in the late eighteenth century than they would some eighty years later in the 1870s , when by that later time , sadly , the indigenous people were all but vanquished .

  • @Matti94337
    @Matti94337 Рік тому

    Even the Vikings knew in the Year 1000 in Vinland to not trade their superior iron Weapons to the native Americans...

    • @royt9159
      @royt9159 2 дні тому

      maybe cos the native were smart people they will figure out a way to use a weapon given to them by toher settlers

  • @leonfairhurst7597
    @leonfairhurst7597 Рік тому +2

    It's a pity that the rest of the nation's didn't join together, but that's the same as what happened here over a thousand years ago when the Romans came

  • @BlavkTulip
    @BlavkTulip Рік тому

    Basically America's version of Zulu

  • @newbloomwon
    @newbloomwon Рік тому

    Is this the general that President Washington got so mad at that he was throwing things at him?

  • @wiseguysoutdoors2954
    @wiseguysoutdoors2954 Рік тому +7

    You give St Claire far too much positive credit!! He was a narcissistic fool!! Later, Gen Anthony Wayne listened to Captain Sparks and routed the natives at Fallen Timbers

    • @d.owczarzak6888
      @d.owczarzak6888 Рік тому +4

      Simon Kenton refused to serve under St. Clair because he knew that St. Clair knew absolutely nothing about the frontier.

    • @Outlier999
      @Outlier999 Рік тому +2

      Wayne was an idiot too. He lost two major battles during the Revolution because he thought anyone who told him anything he didn’t want to hear was drunk.

  • @andrewlancefield3730
    @andrewlancefield3730 Рік тому

    This is why the indigenous people sided with the English, the Genocide happened in the time after

  • @MondoBeno
    @MondoBeno Рік тому

    I wonder if the lesson here is that trained infantry don't do well against tribal fighters in the woods, mountains, swamps, or unfamiliar terrain.

  • @GEORGEHALL25
    @GEORGEHALL25 Рік тому

    I was wondering if someone could help me I was curious how native americans would be treated if they went into like towns or cities dressed like more traditional natives if that makes sense

    • @JDoe-gf5oz
      @JDoe-gf5oz Рік тому +3

      Gawked at because it's weird. The same if someone walked into town dressed like a stereotypical movie cowboy with a white outfit, gun rig, and jangly spurs.