Harmar campaign

Harmar campaign
Part of the Northwest Indian War

A map of Harmar's campaign[1]
Date7–22 October 1790
Location
Northwest Territory
(Now within present-day Fort Wayne, Indiana)
41°5′19″N 85°7′26″W / 41.08861°N 85.12389°W / 41.08861; -85.12389
Result Northwestern Confederacy victory
Belligerents
Northwestern Confederacy  United States
Commanders and leaders
Little Turtle
Blue Jacket
Le Gris
Josiah Harmar
John Hardin
Strength
1,050 1,420
Casualties and losses
~120–150 killed or wounded 262 killed
106 wounded

The Harmar campaign was an attempt by the United States Army to subdue confederated Native Americans nations in the Northwest Territory that were seen as hostile in Autumn 1790. The campaign was led by General Josiah Harmar and is considered a significant campaign of the Northwest Indian War. The campaign ended with a series of battles on 19–22 October 1790 near the Fort Miami and Miami village of Kekionga. These were all overwhelming victories for the Native Americans and are sometimes collectively referred to as Harmar's Defeat.

  1. ^ Lossing, Benson (1868). The Pictorial Field-Book of the War of 1812. Harper & Brothers, Publishers. p. 43.