Saving New Orleans
In a new book, "Patriot Fire," the author of "Forrest Gump" paints an uncommonly vivid picture of an overlooked chapter in American history -- and its unlikely hero.
- By Winston Groom
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2006, Subscribe
(Page 7 of 8)
In only 25 minutes, the British Army had lost all three of its active field generals, seven colonels and 75 other officers—that is, practically its whole officer corps. General Pakenham was dead, cut down by American rifle fire. By now the entire British Army was in irredeemable disarray. A soldier from Kentucky wrote, "When the smoke had cleared and we could obtain a fair view of the field, it looked at first glance like a sea of blood. It was not blood itself, but the red coats in which the British soldiers were dressed. The field was entirely covered in prostrate bodies."
Even Jackson was flabbergasted by the sight. "I never had so grand and awful an idea of the resurrection as on that day," he later wrote, as scores of redcoats rose up like dim purgatorial souls with their hands in the air and began walking toward the American lines. "After the smoke of the battle had cleared off somewhat, I saw in the distance more than five hundred Britons emerging from the heaps of their dead comrades, all over the plain, rising up, and...coming forward and surrendering as prisoners of war to our soldiers." These men, Jackson concluded, had fallen at the first fire and then hidden themselves behind the bodies of their slain brethren. By midmorning, most of the firing had ceased.
Laffite, who was returning from an inspection of his stores of powder and flints deep in the swamp, got to the grisly field just as the battle ended, but he did not know who had won. "I was almost out of breath, running through the bushes and mud. My hands were bruised, my clothing torn, my feet soaked. I could not believe the result of the battle," he said.
On the morning of January 21, the victorious troops marched in formation the six miles from the battlefield to New Orleans. Two days later, Jackson's army was drawn up on three sides of the city’s parade ground. The Tennesseans and Kentuckians were there, too, as were Laffite's red-shirted Baratarian buccaneers. Bands played, church bells pealed and a celebratory cannonade roared from the banks of the levee.
Laffite felt a particular gratitude "at seeing my two elder brothers and some of my officers lined up in the parade...whom the public admired and praised with elegies and honor for their valor as expert cannoneers."
On February 6, President Madison sent out a proclamation pardoning Laffite and all the other Baratarians who had fought with the Army. Laffite assumed this also freed him to recover the property that had been confiscated by Commodore Patterson and Colonel Ross following their September raid on Grand Terre. Patterson and Ross disagreed; they had the property now and were backed up by the Army and the Navy. Laffite's lawyers filed suit, but Ross and Patterson began to auction off the property anyway, including 15 armed privateering ships. Laffite persuaded his old partners—who remained among the wealthiest and most influential citizens of New Orleans—to surreptitiously repurchase them for him, which they did. Laffite resumed preying on Spanish shipping under letters of marque from Cartagena.
In 1816, with some 500 of his men, he relocated to Galveston, 300 miles to the west. The Galveston enterprise quickly became profitable, and by 1818, Laffite had made arrangements to sell his captured goods to various merchants in the interior, as far away as St. Louis, Missouri. It wasn't long before the authorities in Washington got wind of his doings; President James Monroe sent a message to the effect that Laffite and his crews must depart Galveston or face eviction by U.S. troops.
Then, in late September 1818, a hurricane roared through Galveston Island, drowning a number of Laffite's men and wiping out most of the settlement's houses and buildings. Laffite set about rebuilding, managing to keep the authorities at bay for another two years. Finally, in 1821, he abandoned the Galveston redoubt and for all intents disappeared.
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Comments (5)
Interesting information. Another account of Jean and Pierre Lafitte's origin and background.
Posted by Glenn Lafitte on September 10,2010 | 12:10 PM
THIS IS VERY INTERESTING TO ME AND I LOVE LEARN ALL ABOUT HISTORY AND US HISTORY TOO AND I WOULD LOVE TO LEARN A LOT MORE ABOUT PRESIDENTS LIKE JOHN F.KENNEDY AND MAYBE LEE HARVEY OSWALD TOO MAYBE BECAUSE LEE HARVEY OSWALD WAS BORN NEW ORLEANS I BET YOU DIDN'T KNOW THAT DID YOU?
FROM ANGELA BETH HARTH HARTMAN OF HOLIDAY,FLORIDA.
Posted by ANGELA BETH HARTMAN on April 19,2010 | 08:22 PM
Read Jean Laffite's Book - "The Memoirs of Jean Laffite" translated by Gene Marshall. It was found in circa 1990.
Posted by Bob Berentz on August 6,2009 | 08:07 PM
I have a letter that has been passed down through generations written by one of Pierre's sons stating that a Edward Livingston took slaves and a piece of iron and helped Pierre escape at 2 am on September 6th 1814. It also talks about one of Pierre's captains killing the man that arrested Pierre.
Posted by Susan Austin on January 14,2009 | 01:49 PM
An interesting account but I, as an Irish reader, would have welcomed some reference to the Irish contribution to this battle. Jackson of course was the son of Irish emmigrants from Carrickfergus, Co Antrim while Patteron, Carroll and Adair were also of Irish descent. And what of that gallant friend of Ireland, General Humbert of 1798 immortality. He too fought bravely at New Orleans. But I didn't see his name mentioned. Also the serious wounding, in the throat of General John Keane, alas a Waterford Irishman Sincerely, James Molloy.
Posted by James Molloy on November 30,2008 | 05:36 PM