Fingerhut Direct Marketing, Inc

HomeTownValue.com, Your Home Town 'Past and Present'

Netflix, Inc.

Browse our Bookstore
Home
About Us
Advertising
Ancestors
Antique Stores
Attractions
Cemeteries
Churches
Communities
Contact Us
Farmer Markets
Genealogical Societies
Golf Courses
Hall of Fames
Horoscopes - Personal Astrology Profile
Museums
Schools
Ski Slopes
Shopping
Sports
State Parks and Camping

http://www.onegreatfamily.com

Pontiac's Rebellion

1763-66

 

Also known as Pontiac's Conspiracy

 

The French attitude toward the Native Americans had always been more conciliatory than that of the English. French Jesuit priests and French traders had maintained friendly and generous dealings with their Native American neighbors. After conquering New France (Old Canada), the English aroused the resentment of the Western tribes by treating them arrogantly, refusing to supply them with free ammunition (as the French had done), building forts, and permitting white settlement on Native American–owned lands.

 

In April, 1763, a council was held by the Native Americans on the banks of the Ecorse River near Detroit; there an attack on the fort at Detroit was planned. Pontiac’s scheme was to gain admission to the garrison for himself and some of his chiefs by asking for a council with the commandant, but the Native Americans, who would be carrying weapons, were then to open a surprise attack. Major Henry Gladwin, the commandant, was warned of the plot and foiled it. However, Pontiac and his Ottawas, reinforced by Wyandots, Potawatomis, and Ojibwas, stormed the fort on May 10. The garrison was relieved by reinforcements and supplies from Niagara in the summer, but Pontiac continued to besiege it until November, when, disappointed at finding he could expect no help from the French, he retired to the Maumee River.

 

Fort Pitt in Pennsylvania had been warned of the uprising by a messenger from Gladwin and withstood attack until relieved by Col. Henry Bouquet. Bouquet and his forces, on their way to Fort Pitt in Aug., 1763, had been victorious in a severe engagement at Bushy Run. Meanwhile, Pontiac’s allies, the Delaware, Seneca, and Shawnee tribes, captured and destroyed many British outposts, among them Sandusky, Michilimackinac, and Presque Isle. In an attempt by the British to surprise Pontiac’s camp, the battle of Bloody Run was fought on July 31, 1763, with great loss to the British. The borders of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia were kept in a state of terror.

 

In the spring of 1764 an offensive campaign was planned by the English, and two armies were sent out, one into Ohio under Colonel Bouquet and the other to the Great Lakes under Col. John Bradstreet. Bradstreet’s attempts at treaties were condemned by Gen. Thomas Gage, who had succeeded Sir Jeffery Amherst as commander in chief, and Colonel Bradstreet returned home with little achievement. Bouquet, by his campaign in Pennsylvania, brought the Delaware and the Shawnee to sue for peace, and a treaty was concluded with them by Sir William Johnson. After failing to persuade some of the tribes farther west and south to join him in rebellion, Pontiac finally completed in 1766 a treaty with Johnson and was pardoned by the English.

 

Reference:  H. H. Peckham, Pontiac and the Indian Uprising (1947)

Community

Meet Local Singles

Flyfisher's Guide To Michigan

Fun With the Family in Michigan

Sport Statistics

Nascar

NFL Football

Go Big Blue!: The Michigan Wolverines

Coupons & Savings
Rollback Savings

Groceries Delivered to Your Home

Advertise Here

Genealogy
Create and Share your Family Tree
Find your Ancestors

 

 

Send mail to HomeTownValue.com with questions or comments about this web site. 

 

Copyright 2001- 2008, HomeTownValue.com, J. Stover