Butler's Rangers
Butler's Rangers (1777–1784) was a Loyalist provincial corps raised by Major John Butler at Fort Niagara during the American Revolutionary War, functioning as irregular rangers specialized in frontier guerrilla warfare and raids against Patriot settlements in coordination with Iroquois allies.[1][2]
Authorized by Governor Guy Carleton in September 1777 from Loyalist refugees and frontiersmen, the unit expanded to multiple companies under Butler's command, with his son Walter Butler serving as a key captain in operations extending from the Mohawk Valley to posts at Oswegatchie and Detroit.[1]
The Rangers achieved notable success in expeditions such as the 1778 Wyoming Valley raid, where John Butler's combined force of rangers and Indians defeated Patriot militia, destroying settlements and prompting retaliatory campaigns like Sullivan's 1779 expedition, which devastated Iroquois villages but did not eradicate the unit's effectiveness in diverting Continental Army resources.[1][2]
Under Walter Butler, the corps participated in the November 1778 Cherry Valley attack, resulting in significant casualties and destruction amid the brutal irregular tactics characteristic of frontier conflict on both sides.[1][2]
Disbanded in June 1784 following the Treaty of Paris, Butler's Rangers' veterans received Crown land grants in the Niagara Peninsula, where they founded settlements including Butlersbury (later Newark), laying foundations for Loyalist communities in Upper Canada.[1]