The War of 1812: Remember the Raisin!
The war's battle cry, along with almost everything else about it, has been forgotten for far too long
- By Tony Horwitz
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
“Muskrat’s an acquired taste,” acknowledges Ralph Naveaux, scraping dark meat from the rodent’s bony hindquarters, or what another diner calls “the ass-end.” Naveaux likens the taste to wild duck, or “a very aggressive turkey.” Many others at his table stick to the spaghetti.
Re-enacting at River Raisin also requires a hardy constitution, since the original battle occurred in January. Some of the Lacroix men hide hand warmers in their boots and wear long johns beneath period knee pants and linen shirts. Most are over 50, and there aren’t enough of them to stage a full-scale battle. Ken Roberts, a former autoworker who has re-enacted almost every conflict in American history, says the War of 1812 attracts fewer participants than any other. “It’s not a Hollywood kind of war,” he says.
This is especially true of the River Raisin fight. At first, Americans succeeded in dislodging a British encampment by the river. But a few days later, the British and their Indian allies launched a devastating counterattack. Of the thousand or so Americans involved, mostly Kentuckians, only a few dozen escaped killing or capture. This made River Raisin the war’s most lopsided U.S. defeat, accounting for 15 percent of all American combat deaths in the entire conflict.
But the most notorious incident at River Raisin occurred after the battle, when Indians attacked 65 wounded American prisoners, in apparent reprisal for atrocities the Kentuckians had committed against natives. Reports of the slaughter were quickly exaggerated in wartime propaganda, with political cartoons and recruitment broadsides depicting a drunken massacre and scalping by Indian “Savages,” abetted by their British allies.
In October 1813, shouting “Remember the Raisin!,” U.S. troops exacted revenge in a victory over the British and Indians that resulted in the killing and skinning of the great Shawnee warrior Tecumseh.
The vengeful Raisin battle cry was the precursor of “Remember the Alamo!” and “Remember the Maine!” Bitterness over River Raisin also contributed to the postwar expulsion of tribes living east of the Mississippi, a campaign championed by William Henry Harrison and Andrew Jackson, two leading Indian fighters from the War of 1812.
“This isn’t just local history, it’s critical to our nation’s long war against Native Americans,” says Daniel Downing.
Even so, the Raisin and its legacy are largely forgotten, and the War of 1812’s bicentennial has brought little federal or state support to the battlefield, which lies within the industrial city of Monroe. Until recently, a paper mill covered the heart of the battlefield. It’s been demolished, but a light industrial park, an ice rink and other buildings occupy other parts of the historic ground. Toxic chemicals linger beneath the field and in the River Raisin, originally named by French settlers for the abundant grapes along its banks.
Downing, a disabled Iraq War veteran, attributes some of this neglect to Americans’ penchant for redacting dark passages from their history. “This battle, and all that flows from it, isn’t flattering to our self-image,” he says.
The opposite applies at Fort McHenry, on the shore of Baltimore Harbor. It was here, during a British bombardment in 1814, that Francis Scott Key wrote the poem that became “The Star-Spangled Banner.” The flag that Key saw waving above the rampart now hangs in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History; Key’s words appear on the inside flap of U.S. passports; and Fort McHenry is a well-preserved national monument and historic shrine, attracting 650,000 visitors a year.
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Comments (21)
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Good summation of the War of 1812. This needs to be read by all high school students. We teach very little about this war aside the burning of Washington and the Star Spangle Banner.
Posted by Ron Lewis on November 11,2012 | 05:20 PM
I'm shocked that such propaganda and lies have been included in this article from a supposed American. Obviously, it was not done by a patriot, rather just another hater of America. I'll bet my 27 year career in the army the writer never served a day SERVING this country! Sergeant-Major Thomas Cole (retired)
Posted by thom cole on September 19,2012 | 10:23 AM
Editor, Smithsonian - Sorry for the delay, but this was sent on 5-29-12 in reply to the paper article. "Thank you for Tony Horwitz' fine article "Remember the Raisin !" To a Canadian and American who grew up in England it seems reasonably objective despite its brevity. I shall have to re-read Pierre Berton's much longer The Invasion of Canada, Penguin Canada, 1988 to compare points of view. Incidentally, I wish someone could explain to me what prompts this wish to re-enact past battles." Red Wetherill
Posted by Ewart A. Wetherill on September 1,2012 | 03:00 PM
This is a great story, but the area surrounding the park is in great disarray. A new subdivision was but just on the edge with no regard for any spillage of the battle into the current neighborhoods. Plus the knockdown of the paper plant appears to have been done with the same regard. I would have liked to seen more care done with the building that occurred and more archeology done before stuff got ‘covered’ with progress. I live a mere 4 blocks from that area, and it battlefield area looks pretty good now.
Posted by mike on August 3,2012 | 11:31 AM
I'd like an explanation of how the Washington portrait bears scorch marks. My understanding is that Dolley Madison left the White House before it was torched; ergo, the Washington portrait couldn't bear scorch marks from that particular incident.
Posted by Marguerite Horn on July 12,2012 | 12:01 PM
Contrary to Tony Horwitz's conclusion that the War of 1812 is the Forgotten War, a great many Americans and Canadians know its history, and honor the fallen with memorials. On Memorial Day, May 28, 2012, an impressive ceremony was held jointly by the American Navy, and Canadian Forces honoring U.S. POWs who died in prison in Halifax and were buried on Deadman's Island. Cannon firing, a rifle volley, large contingents from the U.S. Navy and Canadian Forces, Nova Scotia's Lt. Governor, representatives from the U.S. Embassy, and a crowd of interested Canadian and Americans were present as the National President of the Daughters of 1812 unveiled a plaque commemorating the U.S. servicemen who died here. U.S. Army and militiamen, captured on the Niagara Frontier and other battlefields were marched to Montreal, placed on transports and brought to Halifax, where thousands were held in Melville Prison. Of these, 195 died of diseases such as smallpox, dysentery and typhus. Deadman's Island now is a protected historical park, as a result of joint efforts by American and Canadian groups interested in preserving our joint history - and symbolizing the two nations' changed relationship from war to peace. [Attached photo of Flag Guards from U.S. Navy and Canadian Forces] Maida Follini (Apr 310, 154 Willowdale Drive, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia B2V 2W4 Canada - phone 902-435-3784) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by Maida Follini on July 11,2012 | 09:08 PM
"The beleaguered U.S. government also defaulted on the national debt." Though there have been other defaults, depending upon the definition of default, I was unaware that there was a default during or immediately after the War of 1812. Was the article checked for accuracy? Can the magazine share some details about this dfault?
Posted by St George Pinckney on July 6,2012 | 02:26 PM
“It was also extremely unpopular.” It has been said by some historians that democracies tend to be warlike. Whether true or not, it is amazing how often a skeptical majority of Americans get dragged into an ill-conceived war, and then, after-the-fact, are placed in a position where they understandably rally around the flag and their brave troops. All this is still taking place, but, at least in recent decades, with the bizarre twist that pro-war political elites show little interest in defending their own nation’s borders, while, ironically, that would be at least one show of greater force that would be, according to all polling data, wildly popular with the American majority.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on June 22,2012 | 10:59 PM
Regarding Horwitz’s “…U.S. troops exacted revenge in a victory over the British and Indians that resulted in the killing and skinning of the great Shawnee warrior Tecumseh,” Tecumseh was apparently killed during the battle, but there were many conflicting reports as to where and how he was killed and what happened to the body. Harrison, one of the few who had met Tecumseh, could not identify the body as that of the Indian leader and made no mention of any skinning. The late Pierre Berton, noted Canadian author, popular historian, and journalist, believed that Tecumseh’s body was retrieved by his followers and buried in an unmarked grave. Andrew Clarke, a dying British participant, claimed to have seen Tecumseh’s body carried away, according to “God Gave Us This Country: Tekamthi [Tecumseh] by Bill Gilbert.. There are as many variations in the tales of the death of Tecumseh and the disposition of the body as there are books that touch on the subject. There may be some truth to the tale of a few Kentuckians cutting some strips of skin from an Indian corpse, but Indians did that to live human beings. Given the uncertainty as to whether the corpse found and allegedly “skinned” was that of Tecumseh it takes either an agenda unrestrained by conflicting accounts or great credulity to unequivocally claim, “U.S. troops” skinned “the great Shawnee warrior Tecumseh.” That Tecumseh did not survive the battle is certain, the rest is conjecture. The need to overplay “moral equivalence,” by dragging in unnamed atrocities by Kentucky frontiersmen and a disputed claim of the “skinning of the great Shawnee warrior Tecumseh,” is as bad as suggesting that some Marines pulling gold teeth from Japanese corpses in the Pacific in WWII rises to the Japanese butchery of American POWs in the Bataan Death March and elsewhere. One side’s practice was occasional and limited to the few; the other side’s conduct was commonplace and widely practiced.
Posted by Glenn Merritt on June 13,2012 | 04:55 PM
Thank you all for your comments and your eagle eyes. According to National Park Service officials, River Raisin is the only national battlefield park related to 1812 because all the others are state sites, national monuments (Lafitte, Fort McHenry), national historic parks, and so on. While some of these are administered by the National Park Service, none were created by the NPS as battlefield parks, and generally inherited from other bodies. Best, Brian Wolly Digital Editor, Smithsonian.com
Posted by Brian Wolly on June 11,2012 | 07:38 PM
With the emergence of a post-1960s politically-correct overlay on American History it has increasingly become necessary for some to append to every massacre by “Native Americans” a vague claim of a causal atrocity by frontier whites. So it is with Horwitz’s “Remember the Raisin” that “the most notorious incident at River Raisin occurred after the battle, when Indians attacked 65 wounded American prisoners, in apparent reprisal for atrocities the Kentuckians had committed against natives.” In surrender negotiations, the American commander stated to the British commander, Henry Proctor, “it has been customary for the Indians to massacre the wounded and prisoners after a surrender” and appealed for protection or else the fight would continue. Proctor agreed to the condition and marched off the bulk of the captured Americans. Promised protection but subsequently abandoned by the British, the remaining wounded American prisoners in makeshift hospitals were not just “attacked” but were tomahawked and scalped by the Indians. Some of the more ambulatory wounded were taken for future ransom and forced to travel with the homeward-bound Indians though many, weakened by their wounds, faltered and were summarily killed and scalped. For their lethal marksmanship, the Kentuckians were hated by the Indians who never turned down an opportunity to butcher the vulnerable and the incapacitated. Later that year, another 40 unarmed American prisoners at Fort Meigs in central Ohio were murdered by Indians. The depiction of “a drunken massacre and scalping by Indian ‘Savages,’ abetted by their British allies” has more historical fact behind it than does the author’s claim of unspecified atrocities by Kentuckians. Historical perspective has been subverted by the liberal tenets of moral equivalency and the victim culture, aided and abetted by politically-correct writers perhaps seeking absolution for the real and imagined transgressions of our European ancestors.
Posted by Glenn Merritt on June 9,2012 | 12:19 PM
When an egregious omission is made, the venerable newspaper The New York TImes attaches a correction addendum to the article. From that time on, the addendum is attached permanently to the web link. The Smithsonian magazine should do the same. Here is the U. S. government link to the Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve (a national park opened in 1864): http://www.nps.gov/jela/index.htm
Posted by Joseph LoCicero on June 8,2012 | 09:05 AM
FYI, regarding comments below on River Raisin's status, the article is in fact correct. There are other 1812 sites in the state and national park system, but it is the only one designated a national battlefield park. Smithsonian, I believe, will be posting details on this soon.
Posted by Tony Horwitz on June 7,2012 | 12:43 PM
This article portrays Monroe,Michigan as a polluted industrial city. This may have been true 40 years ago, but today we are seeing the results of huge efforts to restore not only the Raisin River, but also vast amounts of wetlands along the Lake Erie coastline. For what it's worth, this past January as Mr. Naveaux spoke at the annual comemoration of the Battle of the River Raisin, a bald eagle slowly flew directly over our heads as we stood at the battlefield in the snow. I can't think of a better symbol for better times on the horizon.
Posted by james johnson on June 7,2012 | 12:30 PM
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