Revolutionary War Poster Celebrating Indiana's Bicentennial! "Battle of the Indiana Dunes"


Item Number: 221

Time Left: CLOSED

Value: $25

Online Close: Nov 21, 2016 10:00 PM EST

Bid History: 0 bids

Description

2016 is Indiana's Bicentennial and Rick Smurdon has donated a Revolutionary War poster via the iconic South Shore Poster series. The poster was unveiled at the Porter County Histoical museum and has been approved as a Indiana Bicentennial legacy project.


The 24 x 36 poster honors the Battle of the Indiana Dunes and is an Indiana Bicentennial Legacy Project.


 


 Some History!


"Petit Fort was a structure located in northwestern Indiana, in or near the Indiana Dunes, near the mouth of Fort Creek, now known as Dunes Creek. It may have been a French military outpost, but was more likely a private residence, trading post, or at most a support station for larger forts in the area. The National Park Service refers to it as a "fur depot."[1]


 


The fort came under the dominion of the British following their ultimate victory in theFrench and Indian War. It is unclear whether the British ever really utilized Petit Fort; at best it was a station for British fur traders. It was abandoned in 1779 as American settlers rebelled and Great Britain consolidated power in more fortified strongholds.


 


There are few records of Petit Fort, it being mentioned in only a few letters and at least one map. "Petit Fort" is, in fact, a description rather than a proper name, translating literally to "small fort". It is remembered primarily due to a small military action that occurred there during the American Revolution."


 


 


"In late Autumn 1780, a small band of about fourteen creoles from Cahokia, Illinois, under orders from Augustin de La Balme,[2] set out for British-controlled Fort St. Joseph in southwest Michigan, led by Jean Baptiste Hamelin and Lt. Thomas Brady, a former British officer and Indian Agent who now supported the rebelling Americans. The party recruited from frontier settlements along the way, and doubled in size to about thirty men.[3] The company travelled up the Illinois River and Kankakee River, portaged near modern-day South Bend, Indiana, and continued down the St. Joseph River to Fort St. Joseph, which they plundered. The raid was timed while local Indians would be away hunting, but La Balme also hoped to create a distraction for his journey up the Wabash River to attack Fort Detroit.[3]


 


The raiders returned by way of the Sauk Trail with pack-horses loaded down with plunder, mostly trade furs. British Lt. Dagreaux Du Quindre, however, learned of the raid and quickly formed a band of loyalist traders and Potawatomi under Chief Anaquiba and his son, Topeneble.[3] They followed Brady's company and overtook it at the sandy dunes South of Lake Michigan. A race ensued for miles through the dunes, until the raiders took up defensive positions at Petit Fort. Major DePeyster reported the action 8 January 1781 in a letter to General Henry Watson Powell."


 


 


 


 


Donated by Rick Smurdon


 


Nemo vir est quid mundum non reddat meliorem ? 


What man is a man who does not make the world better?