Sunday, August 23, 2015





It Happened Here -- The Short Violent Life of Walter Butler --part 2



 The following year, 1779, Indians and Tories operating out of Fort Niagara were thrown on the defensive by a large scale invasion by the Continental Army, itself, designed to break the back of  Iroquois, and force them into dependency on their British allies.  Rebel armies under General George Clinton and General John Sullivan met at Tioga and began marching north into the heart of the Iroquois homeland destroying everything in their path. John and Walter Butler's Rangers were out in front of them and snapping at their heels, taking an occasional straggler but there was little the Butler's 250 or so Rangers could do against a Continental army of 4000 to 5000.  And their Indian allies, so adept at the techniques of ambush and confident in small force maneuvers stood overawed at their enemy's numbers. Desperate to stop the American advance, the Indians and Tories constructed a line of breastworks along the Chemung River, camouflaging them with tree branches in the futile hope they could spring a trap on the American army. While ambushes might work against small forces (Oriskany, Battle of Lake George--"the Bloody Morning Scout") or larger incautious armies (Braddock at the Monongahela), they would not likely succeed against a larger army well screened by scouts and pickets.
Chemung Co. Rte 60, Lowman
And so it was that the Clinton-Sullivan Army knew of the Indian/Tory's intentions even before their breastworks were completed. While John and Walter waited with their Rangers behind the concealed breastworks, and groups of Indians attempted to lure a column of Continentals to within range of the hidden Tories and Indians, two other columns of Sullivan's army attempted to work their way around in back to envelop them.  It was then Sullivan's artillery opened up on the breastworks, to focus British and Indian attention in front of the barricade, to allow Sullivan's columns to complete their encirclement undetected.  But then the unexpected happened.  Some exploding shells landing in back of the Indians led them to believe they were already encircled by artillery. The panicked Indians scattered and quickly discovered the encircling columns before Sullivan's army could close the trap. In total disarray Indians, Tories and British regulars bolted through the opening, and escaped. Remarkably, less than three dozen Indian and Loyalist troops were killed, wounded or captured, but the Indians were badly rattled. They would never again stand to fight Sullivan's Army during the rest of the entire campaign. Only when Sullivan, after four weeks of destroying Indian fields and villages was preparing to return did a significant skirmish occur.  In the Genessee Valley a large party scouting ahead of the main army was ambushed.
Twenty two scouts were killed and its leaders, Lieutenant Boyd and and Sargent Parker were captured. The Indians poured out their anger from weeks of frustration and impotence into torturing them.  The Butlers, infamously, did nothing to stop them.

The year 1780 remains a large mystery in the life of Walter Butler.  In the dead of winter Butler was sent to Detroit to establish a small garrison among the Miami Indians. He was back in Montreal in February pushing for the exchange of his mother and siblings, and fuming when the courier going between the British and American capitals left without his knowledge, frustrating him from sending money and correspondence to his mother.  Among the rebels, the Butler legend had  grown such that he was rumored to be involved in every frontier attack from the smallest raid on an isolated cabin, to the campaign of Sir John Johnson and Joseph Brant that swept up the Schoharie  and both sides of the Mohawk valley, causing the destruction of  hundred of homes and farms. But the documentary evidence does not support his participation in any raids that year.  So where was he? Can one infer anything from a cryptic comment in a letter he wrote in the summer? Butler wrote he was ready to give up his prejudice against Ethan Allen and was ready to fight with him.  In 1780 Governor of Quebec, Sir Frederick Haldimand began secret diplomatic initiatives to get Vermont to join Canada as an independent province. For several years Vermont had tried to become the 14th State of the United States. Their efforts had been frustrated by powerful land speculators in New York and New Hampshire who hoped to still be able to carve off large chunks of Vermont territory for their states, and their personal gain. In response to this rejection Vermont had declared itself an independent republic. Haldimand hoped to bring Vermont back into the British fold by beginning a secret correspondence with Vermont's leaders, Ethan Allen, his brother Ira, and Thomas Chittenden, the Vermont Governor. Was Walter Butler involved in this secret initiative?  Was he being held back in reserve, so if the negotiations should succeed he might be ready with Ethan Allen to defend Canada's new province, or to go on the offensive, from Vermont?  We probably will never know.

In the fall, the following year Walter Butler was back in public view when  Major John Ross and Butler embarked on another raid of the Mohawk Valley, this year focusing on Johnstown, which had been spared in last year's major valley raid.  A strategy seems to have emerged in which many smaller raids of from a half dozen to a few dozen Indians and Tories would be launched from the early spring through the summer to keep Whig forces off balance and under pressure and to provide scouting information to the British in Montreal and Fort Niagara.  A larger raid, or raids, were planned for the fall, after the wheat was harvested and could be destroyed in the barns.

Whig strategy was evolving, too, as community militias were cooperating to counterattack and attempt to destroy the raiders.  In the 1780 valley raid militia garrisons from several forts and the Albany County Militia had sallied out to meet the invaders but poor coordination had contributed to their defeat at Stone Arabia.  Militia units, nevertheless, continued to pursue them, resulting in a running battle that became known as the battle of Klock's field. In the spring of 1781 Governor George Clinton asked Marinus Willett  to take over command of  militia along the New York frontier. Willett, formerly in charge of Fort Stanwix, was known and trusted by Mohawk Valley residents. Intelligent, and a fighter, he based his operations at Fort Plain, but developed a plan for a "flying camp"--he and a sizable militia strike force would shuttle between the twenty-four forts in the Mohawk, Schoharie and Cherry Valleys so his enemies would never know from where they might be counter-attacked.  Increased numbers of scouts and runners would provide intelligence to his forces as soon as raiders entered the region.

Johnson Ave., Johnstown
Coming down the Champlain, Lake George, Scandaga corridor, Ross and Butler hit the settlements of Warrensbush and Currytown  (Coreytown) but avoided setting fire to buildings in Currytown for fear of alerting Willett's forces, before they reached their main objective, Johnstown.  They had just reached Johnstown when Willett caught up with them near Johnson Hall with a force of about 415 militiamen. Though outnumbered by nearly 300, Willett divided his force sending half of his men to attack the British/Indian/Tory force from the rear. The right side of Willett's line gave way and began to fall back into Johnstown when Willett's flanking force hit the raiders from the rear. The battle then broke up into a number of small fights before the raiders began to withdraw.

Herkimer Co. 129/147 SE of Grey, bridge at Black Creek
Soon after the battle, Willett's men regrouped and provisioned themselves to give chase to the raiders. Five days later, along Black Creek the militiamen caught up with stragglers from the fleeing raiders. A sharp little skirmish occurred before the raiders were able to break clear.
Later in the day, with a wet snow falling, the militiamen caught up again with the Indians and Loyalist on the banks of the West Canada Creek
Several Oneida Indians, were at the head of Willett's pursuing force. In the rear guard of the raiders was Walter Butler. When Butler saw the Indians emerge from the dense forest and level their rifles at him he growled "Shoot and be damned!" and attempted to scramble up the opposite bank.  A rifle ball pierced his hat trimmed with gold braid and split the upper part of his skull. As he fell back, dying, the Oneidas moved in to remove his boots, his clothes and his scalp.

[ARROW]
1 MILE EAST
COL. MARINUS WILLETT ROUTED
BRITISH-TORY FORCE OCT. 30, 1783 (sic)
ALONG WEST CANADA CREEK;
WALTER BUTLER, TORY LEADER
WAS KILLED BY AN ONEIDA
Location: FAIRCHILD RD., 

NORTH OF HINCKLEY RESERVIOR

(1781 is the correct date. I was unable
 to locate this marker.)

With the weather steadily worsening Colonel Willett abandoned the pursuit.  The people of the Valleys greeted the news of Walter Butler's death with more joy and relief than they expressed for the surrender of Lord Cornwallis' Army in Virginia that same week.  Justified or not, Walter Butler had come to symbolize the cruelty and savagery of war on the frontier.

Over time, Walter Butler became a figure of legend, and myth. A story developed that Butler's body instead of being left to the animals of the forest had been secretly brought back to Schenectady to be interred underneath his family pew at St. George's Church. A rector of St. George's wrote this bit of
doggerel:
                                      "Beneath the pew in which you sit,
                                       They say that Walter Butler's buried.
                                       In such a fix, across the Styx,
                                       I wonder who his soul has ferried?
                                       And so the ages yet unborn
                                       Shall sing your fame in song and story,
                                       How ages gone you sat upon
                                       A Revolutionary Tory."*

N. Ferry St., Schenectady

The Broadalbin author, Robert W. Chambers in six historical novels created, as one of his fictious villians "Walter N. Butler," and Stephen Vincent Benet writing the short story, "The Devil and Daniel Webster" made Walter Butler the foreman of the jury-of-the-damned that included Benedict Arnold and Simon Girty.

*quoted from www.findagrave.com













Marker of the Week--Military Roads

Military Rd., corner of Herkimer Co. Rte. 60, Norway

Last year in a Marker of the Week, (9-7-14) "If you think its a Long Way to Tipperary..." I reported on a marker in Gloversville that told of General Izard's march from Plattsburgh to Sacketts Harbor.  Such a round-about route was necessitated by the British control of the Saint Lawrence and the lack of a direct route across the northern part of the state. This summer I came across a NYSHM marking that route crossing the hamlet of Norway, in Herkimer County.  


After the end of the War of 1812 the U.S. built an east/west road across northern New York, beginning in Peru, on the shore of Lake Champlain. through Plattsburgh, ending in Hopkinton.  The road which ended before it reached Sacketts Harbor, was one of the first forays of the U.S. government into road building, after the National (Cumberland) Road, which crossed the Alleganys and connecting Cumberland Maryland with Wheeling, WVA.

Military Tpke. Corner of Clinton Co. Rte. 3







1 comment:

  1. For the last year and a half I have had some health issues. But now I'm back and look forward to posting again. Watch for new posts beginning towards the end of May 2018. www.nyshmsithappenedhere.blogspot.com

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