Winfied Scott is well known as the hero of the Mexican War and as the over all commander of Federal forces during the beginning of the Civil War.
Few have heard much about his experiences in the War of 1812, however.
One of those experiences involved the Irishmen under his command.
Thirty-six years later Scott would send fifty San Patricios to the gallows for treason,
but in 1812 he helped save twenty-three, and perhaps more,
Irishmen from a similar fate at the hands of the English.
Shortly after the war started the Americans began an invasion of Canada.
One of the officers who served in that invasion was Colonel Winfield Scott.
Also serving in this invasion force were a large number of Irish born soldiers.
On October 13, 1812 the American forces, numbering about 5,000 under the command of General Stephen Van Rensselaer, a political general, invaded Canada from western New York. Only a portion of the Americans got over the river in the limited number of boats available to them in the first wave.
The British were commanded by General Isaac Brock and numbered about 4,000, but they were not all on the scene of the intial action. Those British troops on the scene were outnumbered, but had the advantage of a strong defensive position on Queenston Heights. The Americans did manage to make it up the Heights by using a path up the back side that was unknown to the British, taking the postion. Brock led an immediate counterattack on the Americans, but it was repulsed and Brock was killed. As time passed, however, the rest of the British forces in the area began to close in. Meanwhile the rest of American force, NY state militia units, refused to cross over onto Canadian soil to reinforce the American invasion force, citing their purpose as NY state militia to be the protection of their state, not the invasion of foreign territory.
Without reinforcements arriving the Americans position was perilous. The British rallied and threw them off the heights, inflicting severe casualties and taking about 1,000 prisoners. Among those prisoners was Winfield Scott and many of those Irish born soldiers as well.
The prisoners were transferred to Quebec and placed on a prison ship.
Soon after arriving on the ship, Scott, who was below in a cabin,
was alarmed when he heard a commotion on deck. Rushing up to investigate he
found that the British officers were in the process of separating all the Irish
born soldiers they could find from the native born Americans. The purpose for
this was so those men might be taken to England to be "tried and executed for
the crime of high treason." It did not matter to the English that many of these men had already taken out US citizenship.
English law held that any man born an Englishman (and they held that Ireland was part of England, of course)
was an Englishman for life. They did not believe in naturalization.
As soon as Scott became aware of the purpose of this weeding process he order
all his men to answer no more questions from the English officers. The English had been
using surnames and Irish accents to pick those guilty of "treason."
In spite of threats, all remained silent and the British had to be content with the twenty-three unfortunate souls who had already been selected for death.
Though he was threatened and repeatedly order to go below,
Scott refused. The emotions those Irishmen were feeling as they were separated to
one side and marked for death must have been very much the same ones many Jews would feel one hundred and thirty years later,
as some Nazi officer selected them to die for no other reason than their race.
Going to those whose lives had apparently been forfeited by the spelling of their names
and the sound of the voices, he told them that if even one of them should be executed the
government would avenge them. He also pledged that he personally would retaliate and if
necessary refuse to give quarter to English soldiers in battle.
Those twenty-three condemned men were later shipped to England and Scott was
shipped off to Boston and exchanged. Scott hurried to Washington to report the
heinous action taken by the English. His report was sent to both houses of Congress
and on March 3, 1813 they passed a law giving the President the power to retaliate
if any of the Irishmen should be killed.
Two months later, at the capture of Fort George, Colonel Scott's command took a large number
of prisoners and, taking personal retribution, as he said he would, he immediately selected
twenty-three Englishmen to be held hostage to the fate of the twenty-three being held by England.
In making the selections he was said to have been careful not to pick any Irishmen
(who were numerous in the British army) so that Irishmen not be sacrificed for other Irishmen.
When the English heard of this they were furious and there then began an ever escalating
placing of hostages in confinement by both sides awaiting the fate of those twenty-three
Irishmen in England. The English insisted that English law in regard to the "traitors"
would be carried out and that if the US retaliated they would not only execute two Americans
for every one Englishmen, but they would also instruct their Navy and Army to "prosecute the war with
unmitigated severity against all cities, towns, and villages belonging to the United States,
and against all inhabitants thereof." Of course, to most observers, it may have seemed that the
British were already doing their best to "prosecute etc, etc ..." but,
be that as it may, and in spite of all their raging, pompous bluster,
the twenty-three Irishmen were never executed.
Although it seems to good an ending to be true, reportedly, one day in July, 1815,
sometime after the peace treaty between England and the US had been concluded, Scott
(by then a Major General) was traveling by the docks in New York City when he heard a loud cheer
going up from one of the piers. Investigating the General was delighted to meet his old
Irish comrades from Canada. After more than two years in an English prison,
twenty-one of those twenty-three hostages made it back to America; two had died of
natural causes in captivity.
The US and England had stared eye ball to eye ball on the "right" of England to
execute former English citizens for treason, and the English had blinked.
There were many long hard years ahead before the Irish in America would be treated as equals;
many times ahead when America and Americans would turn their backs on the Irish, or worse.
But on this occasion, the US government, and Winfield Scott, had stood behind a race a
people who in their long history had seldom experienced the support of any established
government; they had stood behind the sons of Erin.
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