Monday, 8 April 2019

Young Upper Canadians in the War of 1812


Compiled by Fred Blair

Last Revised Apr. 8, 2019


            In Ontario, Canada, the War of 1812 is part of the grade 7 history curriculum.  The following reports of young people’s experiences of the war may be of interest to those students.  Teachers can read more about each event in the Stories book in the right-hand column. 
            Also note that most school houses were impressed for the use of the military as barracks and warehouses.  Parents had to rely on their own initiatives to educate their children.  Sixteen-year old boys were required to muster for militia duty.

May 26, 1813
            Young Elizabeth Henry recalled the American bombardment of the Town of Niagara.

May 27, 1813
            Matthew Woodruff, age 15, fired upon the invading American force near the Town of Niagara.

June 3, 1813
            Jacob Cline, age 13, visited the American camp at the 40 Mile Creek.

June 4, 1813
            Daniel Barber, age 11, found himself with a herd of sheep in the middle of an engagement between Indigenous warriors and American dragoons.
            Jacob Cline, age 13, witnessed the return of the dragoons to the American camp.

June 5, 1813
            Daniel Barber, age 11, warned his father of the American advance towards their home.

June 6, 1813
            Elizabeth Gage, age 8, recalled the American’s arrival at Stoney Creek where they occupied her family’s farm.  When the British attacked during the night the children hid in the attic loft of their house where they heard musket balls strike the walls.  In the morning the children looked out upon the battle ground.
            John Cleaver, age 12, was employed as a teamster during the British retreat and helped clear the battlefield of bodies with his father’s wagon and team.

June 7, 1813
            Jacob Cline, age 13, witnessed the arrival of the retreating Americans at the 40 Mile Creek.

June 20, 1813
            Anna Gesso carried a report on the movements of American indigenous warriors from the Town of Niagara to British warriors at Beaver Dams.  She travelled there with her three children in an ox cart.  Laura Secord made a similar journey three days later.

June 21, 1813
            Dr. Kirby’s thirteen-year old son helped Lieutenant James Fitzgibbon capture two Americans in an inn on Lundy’s Lane.

July 7, 1813
            John Law, age 13, joined an engagement between the Americans and Captain John Norton’s Indigenous warriors and was rescued by his mother.

September 21, 1813
            Abigail Kyes, age 11, rode eight miles from her family’s farm to the nearest mill to have grain ground.

December 10, 1813
            Young Elizabeth Henry helped her mother gather water to extinguish the fire at their house, when the Americans burnt about 300 houses in the Town of Niagara.

July 25, 1814

            Teenager Charles Willson was working at the tavern at the falls, managed by his mother.  When he was 14, Americans used the tavern as a hospital after the Battle of Lundy’s Lane.

September 9, 1814
            One of Elizabeth Rapelje’s daughters fought to stop an Indigenous warrior from stealing one of the daughter’s dresses.

November 5, 1814
            George Nichols’ children were locked in his pigpen by American troopers who encamped beside his house.

End

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