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Wabash 1791Wabash 1791

Wabash 1791

John F. Winkler

About this book

The battle of the Wabash, or St Clair's Defeat, was the greatest ever victory of American Indians over US Army forces. In 1791, Revolutionary War commander Arthur St Clair led a hastily recruited American army into Ohio in an attempt to wrest control of the area from its Indian inhabitants. Hindered by geographical ignorance, difficult terrain, bad weather, and a lack of supplies, the Americans advanced slowly through the wilderness. After a month, they reached the Wabash River, where an Indian army awaited them. On a cold November morning, the Indians attacked at dawn and three hours later the Americans fled, having suffered more than 60 percent casualties. In this book, author John F. Winkler re-examines the US Army's frontier disaster, analyzing what they did wrong and how the Indians achieved their crushing victory.

Details

OL Work ID
OL16604848W

Subjects

St. Clair's Campaign, 1791WarsIndians of North AmericaHistoryUnited states, history, militarySchlachtIndianerSt. Clair's Campaign (1791) fastUSA. Army

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