Battle of Fort Recovery
The Battle of Fort Recovery was a pivotal clash in the Northwest Indian War, fought from June 30 to July 1, 1794, at a frontier fort in what is now Mercer County, Ohio.[1][2] United States forces from Major General Anthony Wayne's Legion of the United States, numbering around 250 soldiers in the garrison, defended the position against an assault by over 2,000 warriors from a confederation of twelve Native American tribes, including Miami and Shawnee led by chiefs Little Turtle and Blue Jacket.[1][2] The fort, constructed in late 1793 at the site of Arthur St. Clair's disastrous defeat in 1791 to recover abandoned supplies and secure Wayne's advance, provided critical defensive advantages including blockhouses and stockades.[1] On June 30, Native forces launched a frontal attack that initially overwhelmed an advance party of about 100 U.S. sharpshooters, killing around 50 including Major Alexander McMahan, but the survivors retreated into the fort.[1] Over the next day, repeated assaults failed against the entrenched defenders, who inflicted substantial casualties—estimated at dozens killed and wounded—prompting the attackers to withdraw.[1][2] This U.S. victory, despite numerical inferiority, shattered the morale of the Native confederation, which had assembled its largest force yet with some British support, and marked a turning point that facilitated Wayne's subsequent campaign culminating in the Battle of Fallen Timbers and the Treaty of Greenville in 1795, opening the Northwest Territory to American settlement.[1][2]