The Scott Battle of 1817
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Markerman62
N 30° 42.048 W 084° 51.401
16R E 705272 N 3398404
Located off North River Landing Rd. in River Landing Park, Chattahoochee
Waymark Code: WM18M0W
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 08/20/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member tiki-4
Views: 0

A bloody battle fought on this site more than 200 years ago helped assure that Florida would become part of the United States.
Angered over an attack by American soldiers on the Lower Creek village of Fowltown near today's Bainbridge, Georgia, hundreds of Seminole, Miccocukee, Red Stick Creek, and Maroon (escaped slave or Black Seminole) warriors ambushed a U.S. Army supply boat here on November 30, 1817.
The Scott Battle of 1817 was furious and brief. The warriors surprised Lt. Richard W. Scott of the 7th Regiment of U.S. Infantry and his 40-man company as they tried to move their keelboat against a swift current that pushed it near the riverbank. The lieutenant and many of his men went down in the first volley of musket and rifle fire. Others fought back using their muskets and a small swivel cannon. The warriors waded into the river and stormed the boat, ending the battle with brutal hand to hand combat.
The battle was the first U.S. defeat of the Seminole Wars. It assumed a critical role in negotiations with Spain and helped assure the transfer of Florida to the United States in 1821.

Homathlemico
Homathlemico, the leader of the Native American forces in the Scott Battle, was a refugee Red Stick Creek chief who fled Alabama at the end of the Creek War of 1813-1814. He was captured and executed by U.S. forces in 1818.

Abraham
Abraham was a Maroon (escaped slave or Black Seminole) fighter during the First Seminole War. He served in the British Colonial Marines on the Apalachicola River in 1814-1815, gaining valuable military experience. He was an important Black Seminole leader and advisor for many years.

The Fowltown Raids
The Scott Battle was a retaliatory attack. Acting under direct orders from the administration of President James Monroe, Maj. Gen. Edmund P. Gaines ordered U.S. troops to carry out two raids on the Creek Indian village of November 21-23, 1817. The soldiers were ordered to kidnap the Fowltown chief, Neamathla (Eneah Emathla), who was to be held hostage until his people agreed to evacuate lands taken from them by the Treaty of Fort Jackson.

Elizabeth Stewart Dill
Elizabeth Stewart was the sole female survivor of the attack. She was the wife of a U.S. soldier and reunited with him after nearly six months of captivity. He died in the years that followed, and she remarried John Dill of Fort Gaines, Georgia, where two of her homes still stand today.
Marker Number: None

Date: None

County: Gadsden

Marker Type: Roadside

Sponsored or placed by: Chattahoochee River Landing Park - An Apalachicola River Heritage Destination

Website: Not listed

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Markerman62 visited The Scott Battle of 1817 12/09/2022 Markerman62 visited it