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User:Wikitater25/Tecumseh's confederacy

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Overall, Tecumseh's confederacy played a crucial role in causing the War of 1812, and in early operations in the west. In 1812 Tecumseh's warriors, as shock troops, assisted a small force of 700 British regulars and Canadian militia to force the surrender of 2,500 American soldiers, by threatening to massacre any captives of the Siege of Detroit. General William Hull surrendered Fort Detroit in August 1812 to Sir Isaac Brock, whom was a confidant to Tecumseh, without a fight.[1] Tecumseh's frontier war forced the Americans into rearguard actions, which divided their forces and prevented them from concentrating large enough numbers to successfully invade and occupy the strategically important area of Lower Canada (Quebec).


Following the 1795 Treaty of Greenville, Native Americans in the Northwest Territory began to move out of the lands ceded to the United States. Many of the Natives, including the Lenape and Shawnee, moved westward at the invitation of the Miami tribe to settle in land considered part of Miami holdings. The tribes intermingled with one another, and most villages contained inhabitants of multiple tribes. Despite the individuals living amongst each other, they did not view themselves as a union of peoples.[2] The dominant Miami tribe inhabited much of modern central Indiana and the powerful Pottawatomie tribe lived in northern Indiana and Michigan. The Wea and Kickapoo (both related to the Miami tribe) and Piankeshaw inhabited a series of villages in western Indiana and eastern Illinois. The Piankeshaw later moved north, further integrating with the Wea and Kickapoo, following the 1803 Treaty of Vincennes. The Sauk, another powerful nation, lived in northern Illinois, to the west of the Miami.

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  1. ^ Twatio, Bill (September 2009). "Tecumseh Shawnee Shooting Star: The Most Revered of Indian Chiefs, Tecumseh Dreamed of a Vast Confederacy Strong Enough to Resist American Expansion. The Dream Died at Moraviantown on October 5, 1813". Esprit de Corps, Canadian Military Then & Now. pp. 24+.
  2. ^ Bottiger, Patrick (2013). "Prophetstown for Their Own Purposes: The French, Miamis, and Cultural Identities in the Wabash–Maumee Valley". Journal of the Early Republic. 33 (1): 29–60. doi:10.1353/jer.2013.0005. ISSN 1553-0620.