Boar War
A marauding hog bites the dust in a border dispute between the United States and Britain that fails to turn ugly
- By Deborah Franklin
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2005, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 5)
On April 17, 1861, Virginia seceded from the Union. Two months later, Pickett resigned his commission and headed home to Virginia to join the Confederacy, where he would make history in what came to be called Pickett’s Charge up Cemetery Ridge in the last fight on the last day of the Battle of Gettysburg. (On that day, July 3, 1863, during 50 minutes of combat, some 2,800 of the men charged to Pickett’s care—more than half of his division—were among the 5,675 Confederates killed, captured or wounded. It was a turning point in the Civil War. Pickett survived, only to suffer other defeats at Five Forks, Virginia, and New Berne, North Carolina. Pickett died a failed insurance agent at the age of 50—just 12 years after Gettysburg and 16 years after landing with a few dozen U.S. soldiers to claim San Juan Island.)
Following Pickett’s departure, relations between the two occupying forces continued in relative harmony. It wasn’t until 1872, in a decision by a panel convened by Germany’s Kaiser Wilhelm, brought in as an arbiter, that the San Juan Islands were quietly assigned to the United States. The British took their flag, and their flagpole, and sailed home. With that, the upper left corner of the United States was pinned in place.
In his book on the war that did not quite happen, The Pig War: Standoff at Griffin Bay, Mike Vouri writes that the conflict was settled peacefully because experienced military men, who knew the horrors of war firsthand, were given decision-making authority. “Royal Navy Rear Admiral R. Lambert Baynes remembered the War of 1812 when his decks ‘ran with blood;’ Captain Geoffrey Phipps Hornby had seen the hospital ships of the Crimean War; and U.S. Army Lieutenant General Winfield Scott had led men in battle from Lundy’s Lane in the War of 1812 to the assault on Chapultepec Castle in Mexico. These are the men who refused to consider shedding blood over a tiny archipelago, then in the middle of nowhere; warriors with convictions, and most critically, imaginations.”
The overgrown site of Pickett’s makeshift camp on the southern tip of San Juan Island lies less than a mile from Mike Vouri’s office. Like the Coast Salish Indians before them, Pickett and his men had made their temporary home next to a freshwater spring that still bubbles through thick mats of prairie grass. For the 12 years of joint occupation, until 1872, American soldiers cleaned rifles, washed tinware (and clothes and themselves), smoked pipes, pined for sweethearts and drank away their boredom along the spring’s banks, leaving empty bottles, broken dishes and rusted blades where they lay. Every so often an artifact of Pickett’s days—chipped crockery, clay pipes, tarnished buttons or cloudy marbles—turns up, brought to the surface by animals or the water.
Recently, on a windswept bluff, Vouri picked his way through the marshy grass to show a visitor the water’s source. Ashard of blue glass glinted in the sunlight through the lowslung branches of a scraggly bush. Vouri stooped to pick up the shard—the square-bottomed lower third of a bottle, shimmering with blue-green swirls of tinted glass that had begun to deteriorate—sick glass, archaeologists call it. Near the bottom edge of the bottle was an embossed date: November 1858, eight months before Pickett and his men landed on the island.
Vouri’s latest find will join other broken bottles and artifacts discovered here. In a battlefield, of course, the settled dust also entombs spent shells and arrowheads, grapeshot and mine fragments, broken skulls and shattered bones. But in this old “peacefield” on San Juan Island, the relics are mostly buttons and glass.
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Comments (13)
well my comment is/it is is like a question that what was the problem with a british troops for burning the boar farm and even in their camp they are not feeding the boar women and choildren and what was thier consquen that the international law given to the british?
Posted by koang peter on August 6,2011 | 12:14 PM
I am wondering what the war was about. Was it all about slave labour and segregation? cheers.
Posted by Jimmy on May 31,2011 | 05:27 PM
i want to know if the was any mgedvule soko who was a traditiona healer durin the boar english war?
Posted by nokwanda on March 8,2010 | 04:34 AM
Re Harold Percy Bennett born 20 july 1881 in Mylor ,cornwall england.Elizabeth Tess He was my great uncle.He served and was a survivor HMS Amphion which inflicted the first german ship loss and was herself the first casualty of the british fleet in ww1.She struck a mine and sank 32hrs after war was declared with germany.
There is a three page report and pictures on the internet.
I was pleased to find your information on here.Uhru for now.Thanks Tess for the australian bit and here was me thinking I was the first bennett to migrate here...bummer!
Posted by cyril alexander bennett on May 26,2009 | 11:34 PM
The pig belonged to the Hudson's Bay Company, according to Charles Griffin's journal (entry dated June 15) and depositions taken in Whatcom County Superior Court (September 1859).
Posted by Mike Vouri on May 15,2009 | 06:36 PM
Elizabeth, I found Harold percy bennett in the national Archives of Australia. I knew one of them went there. he also had a son there as well. he joined the Australian Imperial Force September 29th 1915. I am sure there are still relatives alive there. Tess Cawley tesscawley@telkomsa.net
Posted by tess cawley on February 12,2009 | 04:00 PM
Re Harold Percy Bennett, born 20.7.1881, siblings were Cyril Victor b 1887, Arthur Sydney b 1878, Helen Benedicta 1873 - 1960, Ernest Peace b 1870, Reace b 1868, Walter W b 1866, Alonso A b 1864, Alfred b 1863, Alphonso b 1862. Parents Alice Julia (nee Jennings) and John Bennett b 1813. I was adopted into the above family. If this is the right "Harold Percy Bennett" I think this is the right family, as some of what you say rings a bell from my childhood. I am in Cape Town and maybe I can help. tesscawley@telkomsa.net
Posted by Tess Cawley on February 12,2009 | 03:16 PM
I am researching my Grandfather, Harold Percy Bennett, born 20.7.1881. He was a chief Petty Officer in the Royal Navy but obviously might have had promotion later in his career. He was in the Boar War and I would like to know which ship he wasw on/or names of the ships involved. I know H,M,S,Venables did go to S.Africa but how can I find the ship my grandfather was on please. Any advice would be appreciated. Thanks.
Posted by elizabeth Lean on October 21,2008 | 06:13 PM
My grand father was said to have spent the Boar War distiling water with the ships boiler of the coast of Afeica. He was an engineer James Cook 1870-1937 Any information please?
Posted by B COOK on October 21,2008 | 05:35 AM
I have a pipe from the boar war, it is a Sherlock Holmes style and has a small coin attached at the front.It is made of wood and bears the inscription From G B to J B 1900-1901. Could you give me any information on this as I am unable to find any references to this particular pipe. Thanks.
Posted by Audrey on October 4,2008 | 12:30 PM
This conflict is known locally as "The Pig War," not "The Boar War." While Vouri's book and some other versions report that the pig belonged to Cutlar, other sources (including a soldier's journal, which I have read), say that the pig was owned by a man named Sawyer, who left the island, and that, as Sawyer had disappeared, Cutlar was convinced to claim the pig was his in a later, official complaint.
Posted by Heidi on August 15,2008 | 06:23 AM
What was the date the Boar war started and when did it finish ?
Posted by Paul on August 7,2008 | 06:54 PM
I am trying to find out the name of the hat British Soldiers wore as part of their uniform during the Boar War
Posted by elisabeth gardner on June 21,2008 | 09:39 PM