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The American Revolution refers to the period during the last half of the 18th century in which the Thirteen Colonies that became the United States of America gained independence from the British Empire.
In this period, the Colonies united against the British Empire and entered a period of armed conflict known as the Revolutionary War or as the American War of Independence, between 1775 and 1783. This culminated in an American Declaration of Independence in 1776, and victory on the battlefield by 1783.
On 17 April 1783 British Colonel James Colbert conducted a raid against Spanish forces controlling Arkansas Post as part of a small campaign against the Spanish on the Mississippi River. Colbert's Raid was the only American Revolutionary War battle fought in Arkansas, or anywhere west of the Mississippi.
Sometime during the summer of 1776, Commandant Orieta died at the post. As his replacement, Governor Louis de Unzaga appointed Captain Balthazar de Villiers. A seasoned officer, De Villiers was a veteran of three campaigns in Flanders. He came to Louisiana in 1749 and served admirably under both the French and Spanish administrations. Unzaga thought DeVilliers ideally suited for the diffficult command at Arkansas Post.
The new commandant and his wife, Francoise Voisin Bonaventure, reached Arkansas Post in September 1776. De Villiers found a pitifully small French and Spanish community. Among their number were 50 whites and 11 slaves, all comiciled in 11 rotting dwellings in the vicinity of the fort. Only 16 soldiers formed the garrison. The fort itself was dilapidated by the annual floods that had plagued the settlement since its relocation in 1756. To Captain De Villiers, Arkansas Post was "the most disagreeable hole in the universe."
De Villiers confronted the problem of contraband trade. The small garrison on the Arkansas was ill-equipped to deal with large numbers of interlopers and relied on their Indian allies to pillage hunting camps and drive out the British. In October 1776, Spanish Indians raided a British camp and captured 300 deerskins and many beaver pelts. In the spring of 1777, the Kaskaskia tribe, recently located in Arkansas to escape Iroquois incursions in the Illinois Country, aided De Villiers by compelling British hunters to abandon the White River region. It was not until Spain entered the American War of Independence as allies of France and the Patriots, however, that the majority of British departed. De Villiers then turned his attention to improving Arkansas Post.
De Villiers had found the location of Arkansas Post unsuitable. In 1777, he wrote: "all the land [around the post] has been covered with water for three weeks and the entire harvest has been lost," indeed for the fourth year in a row. Heavy rains in the spring of 1779 forced the Mississippi to overflow. The muddy water backed up the Arkansas River, inundating the post. By February 17, there were two feet of water inside the fort. Weary of continual flooding, De Villiers advocated moving the post to higher ground.
Two former sites were favored by DeVilliers: the location where the Chickasaw attacked the post in 1749 or Ecores Rouges where De La Houssaye moved the post in 1751. De Villiers preferred Ecores Rouges. He believed that this location was more easily defended and, being above the cut-off where the White River entered the Arkansas, would be more effective in keeping British hunters out of the district. Furthermore, De Villiers reasoned that river traffic had slowed so much as a result of British patrols that a site near the Mississippi was no longer necessary. As far as the habitants were concerned, De Villiers believed they would welcome the move.
De Villiers' request to move the post cleared official channels, and on March 16, 1779, the commandant reported that the move to Ecores Rouges had been accomplished. The site selected for the new settlement was three hills on the north bank of the Arkansas River. On the first hill ascending the river, some Quapaw had already settled. On the second hill, De Villiers located a number of Anglo-American families, war refugees from east of the Mississippi. On the third hill, he placed the Franco-Spanish families and projected a fort. Before it was completed, however, Spain entered the American war for independence against Britain.
By the time news of the war reached Arkansas Post, Spanish Governor Jose Galvez had captured Natchez, Manchak, and Baton Rouge and was preparing to move against Mobile and Pensacola. Upon hearing that Spain had entered the war, Commandant De Villiers crossed the Mississippi with a detachment of soldiers and civilian witnesses. The band landed at the deserted British station of Concordia on November 22, 1780, and formally "...took possession of the left bank of the Mississippi River opposite to the Arkansas, White, and St. Francis Rivers, as far as the limits of the Natchez garrison, as dependencies and jurisdictions of this post." De Villiers' shrewd action helped reinforce the post-war claim of Spain the the east bank of the Mississippi and the region north of the mouth of the Yazoo River.
During the months following Galvez' action on the Mississippi, the major arena of conflict occurred on the lower Mississippi and in West Florida. In March 1780, Galvez captured Mobile and soon launched an attack on Pensacola. During the Pensacola seige, insurgents at Natchez under the leadership of John Blommart rose against the Spaniards. On June 22, 1781, Galvez directed his superior force against the rebels, crushing the rebellion. Blommart and several other leaders were imprisoned in New Orleans. A number of insurgents avoided capture, however, and fled to the Chickasaw, long-time allies of the British. This group united under the leadership of James Colbert. Colbert had been a former British Captain, but retired to the Chickasaw nation following the Spanish capture of Pensacola.
Colbert and the Natchez rebels vowed to disrupt Spanish commerce on the Mississippi and thereby gain the freedom of Blommar tand the other insurgents imprisoned in New Orleans. The proximity of this rebel band to Arkansas Post imperiled the Spanish fort.
Commandant De Villiers learned of this newest threat from four Americans who had been imprisoned by the rebels at Natchez. At least one of the rebels, a man named Stilman, formerly resided at Arkansas Post and knew the surroundings particularly well. Thus, De Villiers feared that the rebels posed a threat to the safety of his command. The post inhabitants were fearful for their lives and a day later offered to supply the garrison with pickets for a stockade. De Villiers was overjoyed.
Ironically, the first threat De Villiers encountered came from within the garrison. In 1782, two german soldiers -- Albert Faust and John Frederick Pendal -- and a number of Anglo-American refugees participated in a conspiracy to capture the post for Great Britain. The conspirators planned to open the gates of the fort to British sympathizers who would rush in and butcher the sleeping garrison. Warned by loyal French inhabitants, De Villiers promptly imprisoned the offenders. Both the Germans and two of the Anglo-Anmericans were tried, found guilty of treason, and executed in New Orleans.
Meanwhile, Colbert and his partisans were attacking Spanish boats on the Mississippi, disrupting the supply line, and placing Arkansas Post in a precarious position. Because of successive floods and drought, post residents had to rely almost exclusively on outside sources of food. On May 2, 1782, Colbert's band captured a boat at Chickasaw bluffs. On board the vessel was Nicanora Ramos, the wife of the Spanish lieutenant governor of St. Louis, and her four sons. Colbert tried unsuccessfully to exchange his hostages for Blommart. After a 20-day captivity, Colbert released his prisoners, vowing next to capture the Spanish post on the Arkansas. The former prisoners reported this information to Governor Esteban Miro, who responded by dispatching Antonio Soler, second lieutenant of artillery, with a supply of ammunition, two swivel guns, and orders to put the fort into a state of readiness.
Source: The Arkansas Post Story by Robert E. Coleman
Dubreuil wrote that all the men of the garrison had performed their duties with valor, and cited several soldiers for gallantry.
According to the report of the commandant, the attackers were led by Captain James Colbert, a part-Chickasaw and part-Scottish British officer who has his base in the Chickasaw territory of west Tennessee. Colbert’s men approached Arkansas Post in secrecy, their oars muffled with leather; then landed their boats and attacked the village at 2:30 a.m.
Taken by surprise, the town was quickly overrun and several prisoners taken, including a Spanish officer and his wife.
The British then assaulted the stockade, which was defended by Dubreuil and 40 Spanish soldiers. For six hours the small-arms fire of the British thudded harmlessly into the oak walls of the fort, while the Spanish cannon did no damage to the attackers who were hidden in a gully.
After ignoring a demand from Colbert that he surrender, the Spanish commandant opened the stockade gate and sent out an attacking party of soldiers and a handful of Quapaw Indians who happened to be at the fort. Hearing the Quapaw war whoops and fearing that reinforcements had arrived from the tribe, the Colbert force panicked and fled to their boats, taking with them a number of prisoners whom they had captured in the village.
The next day Chief Angaska of the Quapaw followed Colbert down the river with a force of 120 Quapaw warriors and Spanish soldiers. When overtaken on April 24 while camped on the bank of the Mississippi, Colbert surrendered most of his hostages without a fight.
The battle is considered a part of the War of the American Revolution. The American colonies are fighting for their independence form Britain. Helping the Americans are France and Spain. Spain owns the huge Louisiana territory on the lower Mississippi, including the settlement at Arkansas Post.
Source: Old State House Arkansas News
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