Showing posts with label 1791. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1791. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Indian-Artifacts Magazine - 14-3 - pg 5 - Tecumseh story with Girty & Dunlap's Station

(Fair use. Draft)

"...freeze solid. However great their victory, the natives faced considerable hardship that winter.
The natives of Kegonga and Chillicothe had been obliged to feast the visiting warriors who had aided them in battle. Harmer had burned 20,000 bushels of their corn, and vegetables. He had also destroyed much of their winter clothing when he burned the Shawnee and Miami villages.
The village people were very grateful to have Tecumseh - their best hunter, back again. He spent most of that winter of 1790 hunting tirelessly. Not only was he providing food for them, but also furs needed for warm clothing. Tecumseh was a very generous but determined leader; he often chided his companions to give their kills to the elderly and to the women and children as he did. Those who refused could expect a sharp upbraiding.
Blue Jacket made many long, cold trips to Detroit, the British stronghold, in order to secure flour, corn, clothing, and ammunition. This ammunition enabled all of the warriors to fan out and hunt as they usually did in winter; however, people were still starving. In desperation, Blue Jacket decided to raid a new settlement called Dunlap's Station, located in the area of Colerain, Ohio, hoping to seize their food supplies, and also to keep the Shemanese from spreading farther into Ohio.

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Around an old Homestead...


https://archive.org/details/aroundanoldhome00hustgoog


Page 15
"There are few more picturesque spots than the gently rolling country of south-western Ohio. The old homestead of which I write nestles quietly among its hills. It is not far distant from the historic Fort Colerain, or Dunlap's Station, as it was sometime called, on the bluffs of the Great Miami, where, in the winter of 1790-1791, an attack was made on the garrison by Indians, led by the renegade Simon Girty, and a detachment of soldiers had to be sent out from Fort Washington, on the Ohio, to their aid. The old earthworks of the fort can yet be distinguished in outline from the highway along the river..."





Saturday, December 21, 2013

G. Turner, “Plan and Elevation of a Stockade Work, with Block-HouseBastions...


Draft... Fair Use only...

When in 1791 or 1792? was this drawn?:

Stockade "G. Turner, “Plan and Elevation of a Stockade Work, with Block-House Bastions; designed for the defence of the Settlement of Coleraine, on the Great Miami River, 1791.” Watercolor, pen and ink. Josiah Harmar Papers. Map Division, Small Maps 1791.

This proposal for a fort to protect the settlement of Coleraine on Ohio’s Miami River employs a ground plan that would become increasingly popular on the 19th-century frontier.  A square stockade with bastions or blockhouses only on two opposite corners was economical of the number of defenders needed and still provided adequate flanking fire in a small fortification.  The combination blockhouse-bastions are of uncommon design.  The buildings provided quarters for officers and men."
University of Michigan
Description
ACQ: Harmar Papers.
References:Brun 707.
Note:Signed at lower right: G. Turner.
Finished, colored plan and elevation at Coleraine or Dunlap's Station.
Profile view shows details of stockade and blockhouses.
Physical Description:1 ms. map : col. ; 38.5 x 33.2 cm. 
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http://mirlyn.lib.umich.edu/Record/005561763/Holdings#tabs 
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See also: 


  1. The Geometry of War:Fortification Plans from 18th-Century America

    www.clements.umich.edu/exhibits/online/geometry_of.../geometry5.php
    Jonathan Heart (1748-1791), “Plan of Fort Harmar protracted by a Scale of forty feet to an...