The War Chief of the Ottawas : A chronicle of the Pontiac war eBook

Thomas Guthrie Marquis
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 99 pages of information about The War Chief of the Ottawas .

The War Chief of the Ottawas : A chronicle of the Pontiac war eBook

Thomas Guthrie Marquis
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 99 pages of information about The War Chief of the Ottawas .

Etherington, Leslie, and the soldiers were held close prisoners.  A day or two after the capture of the fort a Chippewa chief, Le Grand Sable, who had not been present at the massacre, returned from his wintering-ground.  He entered a hut where a number of British soldiers were bound hand and foot, and brutally murdered five of them.  The Ottawas, it will be noted, had taken no part in the capture of Michilimackinac.  In fact, owing to the good offices of their priest, they acted towards the British as friends in need.  A party of them from L’Arbre Croche presently arrived on the scene and prevented further massacre.  Etherington and Leslie were taken from the hands of the Chippewas and removed to L’Arbre Croche.  From this place Etherington sent a message to Green Bay, ordering the commandant to abandon the fort there.  He then wrote to Gladwyn at Detroit, giving an account of what had happened and asking aid.  This message was carried to Detroit by Father du Jaunay, who made the journey in company with seven Ottawas and eight Chippewas commanded by Kinonchanek, a son of Minavavna.  But, as we know, Gladwyn was himself in need of assistance, and could give none.  The prisoners at L’Arbre Croche, however, were well treated, and finally taken to Montreal by way of the Ottawa river, under an escort of friendly Indians.

On the southern shore of Lake Erie, where the city of Erie now stands, was the fortified post of Presqu’isle, a stockaded fort with several substantial houses.  It was considered a strong position, and its commandant, Ensign John Christie, had confidence that he could hold out against any number of Indians that might beset him.  The news brought by Cuyler when he visited Presqu’isle, after the disaster at Point Pelee, put Christie on his guard.  Presqu’isle had a blockhouse of unusual strength, but it was of wood, and inflammable.  To guard against fire, there was left at the top of the building an opening through which water could be poured in any direction.  The blockhouse stood on a tongue of land—­on the one side a creek, on the other the lake.  The most serious weakness of the position was that the banks of the creek and the lake rose in ridges to a considerable height, commanding the blockhouse and affording a convenient shelter for an attacking party within musket range.

Christie had twenty-four men, and believed that he had nothing to fear, when, on June 15, some two hundred Wyandots arrived in the vicinity.  These Indians were soon on the ridges, assailing the blockhouse.  Arrows tipped with burning tow and balls of blazing pitch rained upon the roof, and the utmost exertions of the garrison were needed to extinguish the fires.  Soon the supply of water began to fail.  There was a well near by on the parade-ground, but this open space was subject to such a hot fire that no man would venture to cross it.  A well was dug in the blockhouse, and the resistance continued.  All day the attack was kept up, and during the night

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The War Chief of the Ottawas : A chronicle of the Pontiac war from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.