The owl’s hull
reputation for wisdom is built up on lookin’
wise and keepin’
mum.-Sayings of St Sylvanne
The owl incident was one of the comedies
of their life, now they had business on hand.
The scraps of news brought by Quonab pieced out with
those secured by Rolf, spelt clearly this: that
Colonel Murray with about a thousand men was planning
a raid on Plattsburg.
Their duty was to notify General Hampton without delay.
Burlington, forty miles away, was
headquarters. Plattsburg, twenty miles away,
was marked for spoil.
One more item they must add:
Was the raid to baby land or water? If the latter,
then they must know what preparations were being made
at the British naval station, Isle au Noix.
They travelled all night through the dark woods, to
get there, though it was but seven miles away, and
in the first full light they saw the gallant array
of two warships, three gunboats, and about fifty long
boats, all ready, undoubtedly waiting only for a change
in the wind, which at this season blew on Champlain
almost steadily form the south.
A three-hour, ten-mile tramp through
ways now familiar brought Rolf and his partner to
the north of the Big Chazy where the canoe was hidden,
and without loss of time they pushed off for Burlington,
thirty miles away. The wind was head on, and
when four hours later they stopped for noon, they
had made not more than a dozen miles.
All that afternoon they had to fight
a heavy sea; this meant they must keep near shore
in case of an upset, and so lengthened the course;
but it also meant that the enemy would not move so
long as this wind kept up.
It was six at night before the scouts
ran into Burlington Harbour and made for Hampton’s
headquarters.
His aide received them and, after
learning that they had news, went in to the general.
From the inner room now they heard in unnecessarily
loud tones the great man’s orders to, “Bring
them in, sah.”
The bottles on the table, his purple
visage, and thick tongued speech told how well-founded
were the current whispers.
“Raid on Plattsburg? Ha!
I hope so. I only hope so. Gentlemen,”
and he turned to his staff, “all I ask is a
chance to get at them-Ha, Ha! Here,
help yourself, Macomb,” and the general pushed
the decanter to a grave young officer who was standing
by.
“No, thank you, sir,” was the only reply.
The general waved his hand, the scouts
went out, puzzled and ashamed. Was this the brains
of the army? No wonder our men are slaughtered.
Now Macomb ventured to suggest:
“Have you any orders, sir? These scouts
are considered quite reliable. I understand from
them that the British await only a change of wind.
They have between one thousand and two thousand men.”
“Plenty of time in the morning,
sah. Plattsburg will be the bait of my trap,
not one of them shall return alive,” and the
general dismissed his staff that he might fortify
himself against a threatened cold.
Another young man, Lieut. Thomas
MacDonough, the naval commandant, now endeavoured
to stir him by a sense of danger. First he announced
that his long boats, and gunboats were ready and in
six hours he could transfer three thousand troops
from Burlington to Plattsburg. Then he ventured
to urge the necessity for action.
Champlain is a lake of two winds.
It had brown from the south for two weeks; now a north
wind was likely to begin any day. MacDonough urged
this point, but all in vain, and, shocked and humiliated,
the young man obeyed the order “to wait till
his advice was asked.”
The next day Hampton ordered a review,
not an embarkation, and was not well enough to appear
in person.
The whole army knew now of the situation
of affairs, and the militia in particular were not
backward in expressing their minds.
Next day, July 30th, the wind changed.
Hampton did nothing. On the morning of July 31st
they heard the booming of guns in the north, and at
night their scouts came with the news that the raid
was on. Plattsburg was taken and pillaged by
a force less than one third of those held at Burlington.
There were bitter, burning words on
the lips of the rank and file, and perfunctory rebukes
on the lips of the young officers when they chanced
to overhear. The law was surely working out as
set forth by Si Sylvanne: “The fools in
command, the leaders in the ranks.”
And now came news of fresh disasters-the
battles of Beaverdam, Stony Creek, and Niagara River.
It was the same story in nearly every case-brave
fighting men, ill-drilled, but dead shots, led into
traps by incompetent commanders.
In September Lieutenant Macomb was
appointed to command at Plattsburg. This proved
as happy an omen as it was a wise move. Immediately
after, in all this gloom, came the news of Perry’s
famous victory on Lake Erie, marking a new era for
the American cause, followed by the destruction of
Moraviantown and the British army which held it.
Stirred at last to action General
Wilkinson sent despatches to Hampton to arrange an
attack on Montreal. There was no possibility of
failure, he said, for the sole defence of Montreal
was 600 marines. His army consisted of 8000 men.
Hampton’s consisted of 4000. By a union
of these at the mouth of Chateaugay River, they would
form an invincible array.
So it seemed. Rolf had not yet
seen any actual fighting and began to long for the
front. But his powers as a courier kept him ever
busy bearing despatches. The road to Sackett’s
Harbour and thence to Ogdensburg and Covington, and
back to Plattsburg he knew thoroughly, and in his
canoe he had visited every port on Lakes Champlain
and George.
He was absent at Albany in the latter
half of October and first of November, but the ill
news travelled fast. Hampton requested MacDonough
to “swoop down on Isle au Noix”-an
insane request, compliance with which would have meant
certain destruction to the American fleet. MacDonough’s
general instructions were: “Cooperate with
the army, but at any price retain supremacy of the
lake,” and he declined to receive Hampton’s
order.
Threatening court-martials and vengeance
on his return, Hampton now set out by land; but at
Chateaugay he was met by a much smaller force of Canadians
who resisted him so successfully that he ordered a
retreat and his army retired to Plattsburg.
Meanwhile General Wilkinson had done
even worse. His army numbered 8000. Of these
the rear guard were 2500. A body of 800 Canadians
harassed their line of march. Turning to brush
away this annoyance, the Americans were wholly defeated
at Chrystler’s farm and, giving up the attack
on Montreal, Wilkinson crossed the St. Lawrence and
settled for the winter at Chateaugay.
In December, America scored an important
advance by relieving Hampton of his command.
As the spring drew near, it was clearly
Wilkinson’s first play to capture La Colle Mill,
which had been turned into a fortress of considerable
strength and a base for attack on the American border,
some five miles away.
Of all the scouts Rolf best knew that
region, yet he was the one left out of consideration
and despatched with papers to Plattsburg. The
attack was bungled from first to last, and when Wilkinson
was finally repulsed, it was due to Macomb that the
retreat was not a rout.
But good came out of this evil, for
Wilkinson was recalled and the law was nearly fulfilled-the
incompetents were gone. General Macomb was in
command of the land force and MacDonough of the Lake.