Quick Facts
Also called:
Battle of Tohopeka
Date:
March 27, 1814
Location:
Alabama
United States
Participants:
Muscogee
United States
Context:
Creek War
Key People:
Andrew Jackson

Battle of Horseshoe Bend, battle fought on March 27, 1814, between U.S. federal forces and Creek warriors in central Alabama. The battle, also called the Battle of Tohopeka, yielded a decisive U.S. victory over Native Americans opposed to white expansion into their territories, and it largely brought an end to the Creek War (1813–14). It also brought Andrew Jackson, the American commander, to national attention for the first time.

Chief Tecumseh’s death in 1813 did not end conflict between the United States and American Indian tribes. In the southeastern Mississippi Territory (central Alabama today), Creeks known as Red Sticks, fighting for their sovereignty, raided white settlements, which sparked an intratribal war and threatened an alliance with the pro-British Spanish in Florida.

Unable to divert troops from the Canadian campaigns, the United States mobilized territorial militia to attack the Red Sticks. In the fall of 1813, multiple columns of militia were sent into hostile territory with meager results. There were several fights and Indian towns burned, but the Red Sticks held out. In early 1814 Major General Andrew Jackson’s Tennessee militia were reinforced by the regular 39th Infantry Regiment and fresh militia, and these were trained into a disciplined force of 2,700.

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On March 27, 1814, Jackson’s force plus about 600 allied Cherokee and “White Stick” Creek warriors surrounded the Red Stick stronghold of Tohopeka, under the leadership of the war chief Menawa. The village was located inside a bend of the Tallapoosa River, with the river on three sides and a strong earth-and-timber breastwork on the fourth. Colonel John Coffee’s militia and Indian allies occupied the riverbank opposite the village. Jackson’s offer to evacuate the 350 women and children in the village was refused, and he began a bombardment by his two small field guns. They did little damage to the earthwork but created a diversion during which Coffee’s men took Red Stick canoes and crossed the river to attack the rear of the village.

Jackson then ordered the regulars, among them the future Texas leader Sam Houston, and militia to charge. They stormed over the breastworks using bayonets and clubbed muskets. The Red Sticks made a valiant stand but were crushed in a five-hour hand-to-hand battle through the burning village. Wounded seven times, Menawa managed to escape and continued to advocate for Creek interests. He died on the Trail of Tears in 1836, during the removal of the few Creeks left in Alabama.

Located near the present town of Daviston, Alabama, the site of the battle is now preserved as Horseshoe Bend National Military Park.

Losses: U.S., some 150 dead or wounded; American Indian allies, 23 dead, 46 wounded; Red Stick Creeks, nearly 1,000 dead or wounded.

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Raymond K. Bluhm
Quick Facts
Date:
1813 - 1814
Location:
United States
Participants:
Cherokee
Muscogee
United States
Major Events:
Battle of Horseshoe Bend

Creek War, (1813–14), war that resulted in U.S. victory over Creek Indians, who were British allies during the War of 1812, resulting in vast cession of their lands in Alabama and Georgia. The Shawnee leader Tecumseh, who expected British help in recovering hunting grounds lost to settlers, travelled to the south to warn of dangers to native cultures posed by whites. Factions arose among the Creeks, and a group known as the Red Sticks preyed upon white settlements and fought with those Creeks who opposed them. On August 30, 1813, when the Red Sticks swept down upon 553 surprised frontiersmen at a crude fortification at Lake Tensaw, north of Mobile, the resulting Ft. Mims Massacre stirred the Southern states into a vigorous response. The main army of 5,000 militiamen was led by Gen. Andrew Jackson, who succeeded in wiping out two Indian villages that fall: Tallasahatchee and Talladega.

The following spring hundreds of Creeks gathered at what seemed an impenetrable village fortress on a peninsula on the Tallapoosa River, awaiting the Americans’ attack. On March 27, 1814, at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend (Tohopeka, Ala.), Jackson’s superior numbers (3,000 to 1,000) and armaments (including cannon) demolished the Creek defenses, slaughtering more than 800 warriors and imprisoning 500 women and children. The power of the Indians of the Old Southwest was broken.

At the Treaty of Ft. Jackson (August 9) the Creeks were required to cede 23,000,000 acres of land, comprising more than half of Alabama and part of southern Georgia. Much of that territory belonged to Indians who had earlier been Jackson’s allies.

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