Born in 1768, with a name that translates as “Shooting Star,” Tecumseh was the youthful chief of the Ohio River Valley’s Shawnee tribe. Though no authenticated portraits of the leader exist, the fifty contemporary descriptions of his appearance and manner all mention his charisma – a trait that served him well as he organized an alliance between dozens of Native American tribes from Wisconsin to Florida.
Tecumseh’s goal was a unified front against the continued westward expansion of white settlers into Indian territories. Despite his political intrepidness, he was only able to lay the foundations of this Indian confederacy with the aid of his brother, Tenskawatwa — more popularly known as “the Prophet”. A self-styled shaman and religious zealot, the Prophet preached a return to Native American nature worship and a complete rejection of western civilization. It was message that allowed once competing tribes to set aside their differences and focus on a common enemy: the United States.
Having raised an army of volunteers out of his numerous allegiances, Tecumseh stationed the braves at junction of the Tippecanoe and Wabash Rivers – a key pass in the Indiana Territory. In response, then Governor (and future president) William Henry Harrison settled nearby with a regiment of 1000 men, but did not engage their opposition. Both sides merely observed movements of the other and policed Tecumseh’s “border,” as a stand-off slowly settled in.
That would change in November 1811, when Tecumseh departed the camp on a recruitment drive and his brother, the Prophet – believing that he had rendered himself and his forces invincible through the use of magic – ordered an surprise attack on Harrison and his men The few causalities suffered by Harrison’s troops were soon repaid in force as his men regrouped, and then summarily set about destroying the totality of the Indian settlement, including its food stores.
Though his brother’s poorly planned maneuver cost Tecumseh his dream of an Indian alliance to oppose the fledging US, it did help ensure his legend. Indian sympathizers in the States seized upon the story of the benevolent and sage-like chief, whose life exemplified the nobleness of the American Indian and their tragic role in the formation of the country. Tecumseh’s mythic stature was so pervasive that after he allied himself with the British during the War of 1812, an American general refused to capture him in one of the conflict’s opening salvos – thereby costing US forces an early opportunity to invade Canada and expel the British once and for all.
Tecumseh eventually did fall in battle some two years later at the Battle of the Thames in Ontario and his Indian forces surrendered shortly thereafter to William Henry Harrison himself at Detroit. Sympathy for Tecumseh’s cause continued to persist after his death, however; Civil War General William Sherman bore Tecumseh as his middle name and, to date, their have been no less than four USS Tecumsehs commissioned by the military for service at sea.
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Bonnie Prince Charlie, or Charles Edward Louis Philip Casimir Stuart, was the son of the executed English King, James Stuart. Charlie was brought up a Roman Catholic and was taught to believe that the Stuarts were the true ruling family of England and Scotland. From his birth the Prince was at the center of the Jacobite revolt and he was trained in the military arts so that he would be able to lead his own army to war and reclaim his rightful kingdom.
Unfortunately at The Battle of Culloden on the 16th April 1746 the Jacobite army was defeated by William Aufustus, the Duke of Cumberland. Thousands of Jacobites were killed but the Prince managed to escape with a bounty of £30,000 or $1 million on his head. After the battle Charlie fled to the Island of Benbecula, where Flora MacDonald lived.
Flora gave her own account of what happened: “After Miss MacDonald (with some difficulty) agreed to undertake the dangerous enterprise, she set out for Clanranald’s house, Saturday, June 21st and at one of the fords was taken prisoner by a party of militia, she not having a passport. She demanded to whom they belonged? And finding by the answer that her stepfather was then commander, she refused to give any answer till she should see their captain. So she and her servant, (Neil MacKechan), and another woman, Bettie Burk, a good spinster, and whom he recommended as such in a letter to his wife at Armadale in Sky, as she had much lint to spin. If her stepfather (Hugh MacDonald of Armadale) had not granted Miss a passport she could not have undertook her journey and voyage. Armadale set his stepdaughter at liberty, who immediately made the best of her way to Clanranald’s house and acquainted the Lady Clanranald with the scheme, who supplied the Prince with apparel sufficient for his disguise, viz. a flower’d gown, a white apron, ect., and sent some provisions along with him.”
It is said that the during the journey the Prince sung Flora many songs including ‘The King shall enjoy his own again’
Prior to the revolution that would change the system of governance in France, the people had suffered under the mismanagement of King Louis XVI and his queen, Marie Antoinette, who, along with the aristocracy, refused to acknowledge the economic plight of the lower classes.
Both political and socioeconomic factors contributed to the French Revolution as the ambitions of the rising bourgeoisie were allied with aggrieved peasants, wage-earners, and individuals of all classes. The influence of the ideas that rounded out the revolutionary movement, rooted in Enlightenment philosophies were also paramount to the desire for change in what was felt to be a stagnant system of government.
The King, his wife Marie Antoinette, and their children attempted to escape from Paris in 1791 after months of popular dissatisfaction and the increasing threat to the monarchy. The King and his family did not make it out of Paris and were instead captured and held in Paris and in 1792 the King was sent to the guillotine. For three years, between 1792 and 1795, a committee was established to rule the country headed by Georges-Jacques Denton, Jean-Paul Marat, and Maximilien Robespierre. They ruled in what became known as the Reign of Terror, sending thousands of Royalists to the guillotine including Marie Antoinette and other Royalists, dissidents of the Revolution, and even moderate thinkers who sought to mediate the excesses of the revolutionary movement. The Revolution succeeded in overturning generations of autocratic monarchic rule but became a symbol of excessive force and revolt without sufficient stabilizing elements to fundamentally change conditions for the French people. In 1799 a young General named Napoleon Bonaparte helped overthrow the government, called the Directory, and by 1804 had risen to such power that he etablished himself as “Napoleon I, Emperor of the French.”
The Americans at the outset of the Revolutionary War were outnumbered by the British in military capacity by 3 to 1, were poorly trained and had less arms power as well as financial resources at their disposition. The American advantage resided in that they were fighting on land they knew better than the British, familiar as they were with the wilderness of the terrain they themselves had populated and fought for against the Native Americans. The Americans also had excellent leadership for a young coalition of colonies: George Washington, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Samuel Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and Patrick Henry were among the great political, military, and ideological minds behind the American push for independence.
The revolution began in Lexington, Massachusetts on April 18, 1775, when British General Thomas Gage sent 700 soldiers to destroy guns and ammunition stored by the colonists in the town of Concord near Boston, provoking response from the colonists. The British also attempted to arrest two key leaders of the patriot movement, Samuel Adams and John Hancock. The colonists elected George Washington as Commander in Chief of the Continental Army and under his guidance entered the subsequent battle with the British on Breed’s Hill on June 17, 1775, today remembered as the Battle of Bunker Hill.
On December 25, 1776, after a stalemate on the battlefront of New York, George Washington and 2,500 of his soldiers crossed the Delaware River at night and attacked British and Hessian forces. Washington and his troops overpowered the opposition suffering only six wounded soldiers and cemented the path towards victory for the Revolutionary forces. By March 1777, Washington’s army had routed the British out of most of New York and New Jersey back towards New Brunswick.
A decisive battle was fought and won by the Americans in Saratoga on October 7, 1777 when the American forces under General Horatio Gates and General Benedict Arnold defeated General Burgoyne’s army. On October 17, 1777, about 5,700 of General Burgoyne’s men surrendered to the Americans and were sent back to England. This was the point at which the French government recognized the independence of the United States of America. By July 1778, the French would also declare war on Britain and ally themselves with the American effort. The British would be further threatened and put at a disadvantage in their counter efforts against the Americans when the Spanish also declared war on the British, though establishing no alliance with the United States, and other European countries such as Holland and Poland gave their support to American initiatives. The British, in turn, fought back allying themselves with various Native American tribes.
The Revolutionary War that was to decisively sever the relationship between the American colonies and their British rulers was provoked by increasing British infringement on the rights of the colonists in the 1760s.
The Revolutionary War that would mark a new era in global politics was not without internal struggle. Although an impetus for change was irreversible, about 20 to 30 percent of the colonists remained loyal to the British crown during the War, becoming known as Loyalists or ‘Tories’ or ‘King’s men.’ Furthermore, the colonies were still in conflict with some of their Native American neighbors and the later intercession of foreign European forces, such as the Hessians, French, and Spanish, made the lines of war and boundaries of conflict less clear.





