First Edition Published May 21, 2016
Second Edition Published October 1, 2017
Third Edition Published October 2,
2020
Copyright by Fred Blair
Changes and Additions are in Blue Print.
October 1, 1814
At Presquile
John Farmer had a boat captured by
the Americans at Presquile Harbour on the north shore of Lake Ontario. Elias Jones of Hamilton Township had
purchased goods at Kingston and was shipping them west on that boat. Among his lost goods were cotton, flaxen sheeting,
flannel, shirting, muslin, cambric, satin, silk, diaper cloth, indigo, hose,
gloves, tape, ribbon, pocket books, combs, razors, whip lashes, bonnet wire,
buttons, scissors, knives, forks, spoons, latches, pewter tea pots, needles,
salt peter, brushes, pipes, bonnets, children’s hats, fancy borders, shawls,
and
A dozen pairs of men’s worsted
hose at 24 shillings a dozen
1 dozen pair of women’s black
cotton hose at 66 shillings
100 best quills at over 1 pound
2 dozen black lead pencils at 10
shillings a dozen
6 dozen iron tinned teaspoons at
4 shillings each
6 double bolted padlocks at 26
shillings each
6 claw hammers at 28 shillings
each
3 pewter tea pots (3 pints) at
10 shillings each
100 gun flints at 6 shillings
A pair of shoe brushes at 3
shillings
A dozen cakes of blacking at 6
shillings
A child’s coloured wool hat at
10 shillings
A man’s wool hat #12 at 14
shillings
A dozen half pint tumblers at
12.5 shillings
An iron tea kettle at 25
shillings
A dozen green and blue edged
table plates at 8.5 shillings
A keg sweet scented plug tobacco
(70 pounds) at 2.75 shilling per pound
Jamaica Spirits at 11.5
shillings a gallon [1]
In 1802, when he was about 33 years
old, Elias Jones had opened the first store in Cobourg, Northumberland County.[2] During the war he served as a major in the 1st
Northumberland Militia.
By 1812, Cobourg had two grain mills, a tannery, a saw mill, and a
distillery. The main roadway in the area
was the Danforth Road which the British used to transport prisoners to Kingston
with the help of the local militia.[3]
October 4, 1814
On Lake Erie
John Richardson and his
fellow exchange prisoners were picked up at Fort Stephenson in Michigan and
taken by boat to Cleveland about the beginning of October. They had been held there since August 29th
waiting for a vessel to carry them home.
On the lake, high winds upset the
boat close to land but the men were able turn the boat upright and to wade with
it to shore. Clothing and blankets were
soaked through and the men had to spend the night on the beach as no
settlements were near. One of the
officers perished from his illness before dawn.
An American officer was later able to purchase “a few potatoes and a
small quantity of rancid butter” but this did not appease their hunger. The boat finally brought them to the beach
below Cleveland where they consumed large quantities of peaches that were
growing close to shore.
The following morning, on this day,
they sailed across to Long Point in Upper Canada. The fever that John had acquired at Fort
Stephenson in Michigan would drag on for another 5 months. After it had passed, he joined the King’s
Regiment in Montreal and sailed with them to England. He would not return to Upper Canada until
1837.[4]
October 8, 1814
On the Niagara Frontier
Bugler and Drummer John
Bertrand of the Incorporated Militia was accidentally wounded by the discharge
of a companion’s musket during the retreat from Fort Erie to Chippawa. His right arm had to be amputated. He received support from the Loyal and Patriotic
Society and a pension after the war.[5]
[6]
[7]
October 10, 1814
After the war, Adam Beam of Bertie
Township made a war loss claim for the loss of his bridge across the Black
Creek. British General Dewaterfield had
ordered the Glengarry Light Infantry to destroy the bridge so that the
Americans could not use it to cross the creek.
They pulled part of it down and set fire to the remainder. On October 15th the Americans
arrived at his farm and took a large sheep, three skips of honey bees, a
breeding mare, and a load of hay.[8]
October 14, 1814
Stephen Skinner, of Crowland
Township, was on picket guard with the mounted militia on the road at
Cooksmills when the Americans were spotted advancing towards them. Lieutenant Ozias Buchner, of the 3rd
Lincoln Militia, ordered the militia men to dismount and engage the enemy on
foot in the swamp. Forced to retreat,
Stephen discovered that his horse was too far down the road to retrieve before
the enemy would be upon them and abandoned the horse as he fled.
Amos Morris, of the same township,
reported that a party of Americans came to his house after the Battle of Cook’s
Mills and found Stephen’s mare loose in the laneway. The Americans told him that the horse was
needed to help carry off the wounded from the battle.[9]
October 17, 1814
Richard Yokum, of Crowland Township,
saw two of Noah Cook’s sons hiding 2 barrels of flour in the woods. Noah and Calvin Cook had mills within a
quarter mile of Richards home. Richard
was aware that the American army was approaching and thought that the Cook’s hiding
place was a good one. He took some of
his own valuables and hid them there as well.
Two days later when he returned to the hiding place, he found that the
secret cache had been discovered by the Americans and all the goods hidden
there had been taken.[10]
In 1799 a grist mill had been built
on Lyon’s Creek by the Yokom family.
Just prior to the war, Calvin Cook had purchased that mill and also
built a tannery, sawmill, and distillery.
The community became known as Cook’s Mills.[11]
October 18, 1814
Having learned that an American
force was advancing from Black Creek to Cook’s Mills, Gordon Drummond sent a
detachment of British forces to intercept them at the mills before they could
cross the Chippawa River. He also issued
orders to destroy Brown’s Bridge across the Chippawa to prevent the American’s
crossing that river. Alexander Brown, an
ensign in the 2nd Lincoln Militia, had built the bridge and as well
as his home on the opposite side of the Chippawa. Although he would lose his bridge, his family
and home would probably be kept out of harm’s way. Fortunately, the American’s were stopped at
Cook’s Mills before reaching the river and his bridge was not destroyed.[12]
October 19, 1814
The Battle of Cook’s Mills
American pickets east of the mills were attacked by the
Glengarry Light Infantry and the 82nd, 100th, and 104th
Regiments. The British held the high
ground north of Lyons Creek with a field gun and rockets. The Americans left the wooded ravine to the
south and outflanked the British. The
British regiment was forced to retreat.
The American’s captured the mills and dumped the grain and flour there
into the mill pond. The British force
had 19 casualties.[13]
[14]
What were the Glengarry Light
Infantry losses?
Noah and Calvin Cook claimed for the
loss of 25 bushels of wheat and a barrel of flour, some of which was hidden in
the woods 2 days before. They also lost 7
hogs, a chopping axe, 2 pots, a big coat, part of a set of harness, and 24
panes of glass in a sash.[15]
October 21, 1814
Captain William Elliott reported
that Francis Crooks, a merchant in Grimsby Township, supplied 30 pair of shoes
for the Western tribesmen. The Reverend
Reynolds paid him 11 shillings, 3 pence per pair.[16]
October 22, 1814
At Detroit
The American Brigadier General
Duncan McArthur left Detroit with 650 mounted riflemen and 70 Indigenous allies
and led a stealthy attack on Upper Canada by going north of Lake St. Clair to
Baldoon and then to the Thames River.
In Norfolk County
Captain William Francis had been captured earlier in Woodhouse
Township by American raiders and was taken to Buffalo with 6 of his
cattle. Some of these men were captured
at the Battle of Nanticoke at John Dunham’s home and Francis captured Isaiah
Brinks at Fort Erie. Francis and his son
Thomas testified against these men at the Ancaster Assizes in 1813. On October 22nd, the Dickson gang,
composed of friends and relatives of the men tried, came to William’s home and
shot at him through his upstairs bedroom window. A shot hit him in the head. They then set the house and his buildings on
fire and carried off what property they could transport. William’s charred remains were buried near
the house. Thomas escaped the same fate
because he was not at home at the time.
William was a Loyalist who had
settled in the township and a captain in the Norfolk Militia. Francis was born about 1750 and the husband
of Catherine Bowlby.[17]
After the war, Thomas Francis made a
war loss claim for 187 pounds and 12 shillings for his father’s lost
property. He received 127 pounds and 10 shillings. The losses were itemized as:
3 oxen
1 cow
Household furniture
Provisions taken and destroyed
2 sheep
1 fuser
2 houses burnt
3000 feet of boards burnt[18]
In Dundas County
Private John McK… of the Dundas Militia lost an eye in an accident
and received a pension after the war because of the resulting disability.[19] Who was he?
October 24, 1814
At York
A Court of Oyer and Terminer and General Gaol Delivery was held at
York in the Home District by Justice Thomas Scott. Thomas Dowland was found guilty of larceny
and was sentenced to be imprisoned for 2 calendar months.
Stephen Cody and Andrew Patterson
were both found guilty of sedition and were sentenced to be imprisoned for one
month, to pay a fine of 20 pounds, and to remain in prison until their fines
were paid.
Lewis Lyons was found guilty of
stealing from the dwelling house of Harklan Lyons and was sentenced to be
hanged until dead.[20]
Lewis was the son of Harker/Harcar Lyons and Marcia Peer
who arrived in Upper Canada from the United States sometime before 1794. Both men served in the 2nd York
Militia during the war, Harcar as a sergeant and Lewis as a private.[21]
Lewis was held in prison in Burlington and made requests
for a pardon in 1814 and 1815. In
January, 1815, Judge Thomas Scott reported that the Attorney General would
initiate a pardon for Lewis.[22]
October 25, 1814
On the Niagara Frontier
Captain Robert Land of the 5th Lincoln Militia
was collecting supplies of flour and grain until December 24th.[23]
October 31, 1814
In Ancaster Township
Benjamin Smith’s diary entries
for this month were too faint to read.
Upper Canadian Service Deaths
Private Henry Bartholomew, 1st York, disease, October 14 or 20,
1814
Widow Catharine Bartholomew
Private William Clow, teamster, Leeds, illness, October 22, 1814
Widow Sophia Clow
Acting Sailing Master James Miller, Provincial Marine, illness
while a prisoner of war,
October 9, 1814, widow Theates Miller
Private Benjamin Smith, Prince Edward, disease, October 31,
1814,
Orphaned children to Christiana Cummings, his widow who
remarried [24]
[25] [26]
Sources:
[1] Collections Canada,
War of 1812, Board of Claims and Losses, Microfilm t-1129, pages 548-569.
[2] Trees by Dan, http://www.treesbydan.com/p2539.htm, accessed March 14,
2015.
[3] The Early History of
Cobourg, http://www.eagle.ca/westhistory/early_history_of_cobourg.htm, accessed March 14,
2015.
[4] Major John Richardson,
Richardson’s War of 1812, edited by Alexander Casselman, Coles Publishing
Company, Toronto, 1974, pages 291-293.
[5] Richard Feltoe,
Redcoated Ploughboys: The Volunteer
Battalion of Incorporated Militia of Upper Canada, 1813-1815, Dundurn Press,
2012, page 396.
[6] Pension Poster
– Casualties, January 1, 1817, Nelles Family Fonds, Ref. Code F 542,
box MU 2192, Ontario Archives, Toronto.
[7] The Report of the Loyal and Patriotic Society of Upper Canada, with an
appendix and a list of subscribers and benefactors, William Gray, Montreal,
1817, page 169, accessed on Dec. 14, 2018 at https://dr.library.brocku.ca/handle/10464/4754
[8] Collections Canada,
War of 1812, Board of Claims and Losses, Microfilm t-1126, pages 216-219.
[9] Collections Canada,
War of 1812, Board of Claims and Losses, Microfilm t-1133, page 647.
[10] Collections Canada,
War of 1812, Board of Claims and Losses, Microfilm t-1131, page 636.
[11] Cook’s Mills, Welland,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooks_Mills,_Welland, accessed April 22,
2015.
[12] Geraldine R. (Brown)
Wilson, More Than a Mere Matter of Marching, Ontario Genealogical Society,
Niagara Peninsula Branch, 2013, pages
14-15.
[13] Cook’s Mills, Welland,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooks_Mills,_Welland, accessed April 22,
2015.
[14] Canada’s Military
History, Facebook Group, July 12, 2019.
[15] Collections Canada,
War of 1812, Board of Claims and Losses, Microfilm t-1131, page 633.
[16] Collections Canada,
War of 1812, Board of Claims and Losses, Microfilm t-1134, page 808.
[17] Forces of Lord Selkirk
Facebook Group, Oct. 22, 2018 posting.
[18] Collections Canada,
War of 1812, Board of Claims and Losses, Microfilm t-1136, page 531.
[19] Pension Poster –
Casualties, January 1, 1817, Nelles Family Fonds, Ref. Code F 542,
box
MU 2192, Ontario Archives, Toronto.
[20] Linda Corupe, U.E.,
Upper Canada Justice, Early Assize Court Records of Ontario, Vol. 2, 1810-1818,
transcribed and indexed 2008, pages 142-145.
[21] Lorine Schulze’s Peer
family history, from correspondence in 2012-2013.
[22] Linda Corupe, U.E.,
Upper Canada Justice, Early Assize Court Records of Ontario, Vol. 2, 1810-1818,
transcribed and indexed 2008, page 393.
[23] Collections Canada,
War of 1812: Upper Canada Returns,
Norminal Rolls and Paylists, Microfilm t-10386, page 1087.
[24] List of Orphan Children
whose Fathers have been killed in Action, or have died from Wounds received or
Disease contracted on Service, poster at the Ontario Archives.
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