Lochry's Defeat, also known as the
Lochry massacre, was a battle fought on August 24, 1781, near present-day
Aurora, Indiana, in the United States. The battle was part of the
American Revolutionary War (1775–1783), which began as a conflict between
Great Britain and the
Thirteen Colonies before spreading to the
western frontier and bringing
American Indians into the war as British allies. The battle was short and decisive: about one hundred Indians under
Joseph Brant, a
Mohawk war leader who was temporarily in the west, ambushed about an equal number of
Pennsylvania militiamen led by
Archibald Lochry. Brant and his men killed or captured all of the Pennsylvanians without suffering any casualties.
Lochry's force was part of an army being raised by
George Rogers Clark for a campaign against
Detroit, the British regional headquarters. Clark, the preeminent American military leader on the northwestern frontier, worked with Governor
Thomas Jefferson of
Virginia in planning an expedition to capture Detroit, by which they hoped to bring an end to British support of the Indian war effort. In early August 1781, Clark and about 400 men left
Fort Pitt in Pennsylvania by boat, floating down the
Ohio River a few days ahead of Lochry and his men, who were trying to catch up.
Joseph Brant's force was part of a combined British and Indian army being raised to counter Clark's offensive. Brant had too few men to challenge Clark, but when he intercepted messengers traveling between Clark and...
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