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Battle of Blue Licks

Battle of Blue Licks
Part of the American Revolutionary War

Daniel Boone rallying his men during the battle
DateAugust 19, 1782
Location38°25′42.2682″N 83°59′40.73″W / 38.428407833°N 83.9946472°W / 38.428407833; -83.9946472 (Blue Licks Battlefield)
Result British-Indigenous victory
Belligerents
 Great Britain
Shawnee
Mingo
Wyandot
Miami
Odawa
Ojibwe
Potawatomi
 United States
Commanders and leaders
William Caldwell
Alexander McKee
Simon Girty
John Todd 
Stephen Trigg 
Daniel Boone
Hugh McGary
Strength
300 Indigenous
50 provincials
182 militia
Casualties and losses
11 killed
14 wounded
77 killed
6 captured
Blue Licks Battlefield is located in Kentucky
Blue Licks Battlefield
Blue Licks Battlefield
Location within Kentucky

The Battle of Blue Licks, fought on August 19, 1782, was one of the last battles of the American Revolutionary War. The battle occurred ten months after Lord Cornwallis's surrender at Yorktown, which had effectively ended the war in the east. On a hill next to the Licking River in what is now Robertson County, Kentucky (then Fayette County, Virginia), a force of 50 Butler's Rangers and 300 Indigenous warriors ambushed and routed 182 Kentucky militia, who were partially led by Daniel Boone, the famed frontiersman.

Background

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Caldwell's expedition

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Although the main British Army under Lord Cornwallis had surrendered at Yorktown in October 1781, virtually ending the war in the east, fighting on the western frontier continued. Aided by the British military at Fort Detroit, Indigenous tribes living north of the Ohio River redoubled their efforts to drive the American settlers out of Kentucky County, Virginia.

In July 1782, British Indian Department officials met with their Indigenous allies at the Shawnee village of Wakatomika near the headwaters of the Mad River. Members of the Shawnee, Mingo, Wyandot, Miami, Odawa, Ojibwe and Potawatomi tribes were in attendance. As a result, several hundred warriors and a company of Butler's Rangers led by Captain William Caldwell set out to attack Wheeling on the upper Ohio River. The expedition was called off two days later, when scouts reported that a force under George Rogers Clark, whom the Indigenous auxiliaries feared more than any other commander, was about to invade the Ohio Country. Caldwell's force returned to the Mad River to oppose the invasion, but the attack never came.[1][2]

Bryan Station

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A month later, Caldwell with his company of rangers crossed the Ohio River into Kentucky. With him were Alexander McKee and Simon Girty from the British Indian Department, and roughly 300 Indigenous warriors. Their intent was to surprise and destroy the settlement of Bryan Station near Lexington. The settlers, however, had been forewarned and took shelter within their stockade. Caldwell laid siege to Bryan Station beginning at dawn on August 15. Without artillery, he knew that taking the fort was unlikely, however, the crops around the stockade were destroyed, outlying buildings burned, and livestock slaughtered. Caldwell withdrew early on August 17, when he learned that reinforcements from the Kentucky militia were nearby.[1][3]

The militia arrived at Bryan Station in the afternoon of August 18. The force included about 47 men from Fayette County and another 135 from Lincoln County. The highest-ranking officer, Colonel John Todd of Fayette County, was in overall command, assisted by Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Boone. Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Trigg and Major Hugh McGary led the Lincoln County contingent. Benjamin Logan, the colonel of the Lincoln militia, was still gathering men and had yet to arrive. The militia debated whether they should pursue the raiders immediately or wait for Logan to arrive with reinforcements. Boone advised waiting for Logan, who was only a day away, but others including Todd urged immediate action. Boone felt compelled to go along. The following morning the Kentucky militia set out in pursuit.[4]

Battle

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This 1820 oil painting by Chester Harding is the only portrait of Daniel Boone made from life.

On the morning of August 19, the Kentuckians reached a ford on the Licking River, near a spring and salt lick known as the Lower Blue Licks (today located in Nicholas County). A few Indigenous scouts were seen watching them from across the river. Behind the scouts was a hill around which the river looped. Todd called a council and asked Boone, the most experienced woodsman, what he thought. Boone said he was suspicious because of the obvious trail that had been left and signs that the warriors were attempting to conceal their numbers. He felt that the enemy was trying to lure them into an ambush. Hugh McGary, known as both a fierce fighter and an unstable hothead, urged immediate attack. When no one listened, he mounted his horse and rode across the ford, calling out, "Them that ain't cowards, follow me." The men immediately followed McGary, as did the officers, who hoped to restore order. Boone remarked, "We are all slaughtered men," and crossed the river.[4]

The militia dismounted and formed a line of battle several rows deep. They advanced up the hill, Todd and McGary in the center, Trigg on the right, and Boone on the left. As Boone had suspected, the ememy was waiting on the other side, concealed in ravines. When the Kentuckians reached the summit, the warriors and rangers opened fire with devastating accuracy. Within five minutes, the center and right of the Kentuckians' line began to fall back. Only Boone's men on the left managed to push forward. Todd and Trigg, easy targets on horseback, were shot dead. The Kentuckians began to flee down the hill, fighting hand-to-hand with the warriors who had flanked them. McGary rode up to Boone's company and told him everyone was retreating and that Boone was in danger of being surrounded. Boone ordered his men to retreat. He grabbed a riderless horse and told his 23-year-old son, Israel Boone, to mount it. Israel suddenly fell to the ground, shot through the neck. Boone realized his son was dead, mounted the horse and joined in the retreat.[4]

British and Indigenous casualties were negligible. One ranger and 10 warriors were killed with another 14 wounded. The Kentucky militia suffered 77 killed and 6 captured.[1]

Aftermath

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Monument at the Blue Licks Battlefield State Park, photographed in 2006 during a memorial service marking the 224th anniversary of the battle.

Simon Girty has been widely but erroneously credited with leading the Indigenous warriors at the Battle of Blue Licks. Girty, however, was subordinate to McKee, while Caldwell was in overall command.[5][6]

Although he had not taken part in the battle, George Rogers Clark, as senior commander, was criticized for allowing the British-Indigenous force to penetrate so deeply into Kentucky. In response, Clark launched a retaliatory raid in November. His force consisted of more than 1,000 men, including Benjamin Logan and Daniel Boone. The Kentuckians destroyed five unoccupied Shawnee villages on the Great Miami River in the last major offensive of the American Revolution. Only minor skirmishing took place since the Shawnees refused to stand and fell back to their villages on the Mad River. In a letter dated November 27, 1782, Clark reported the Indigenous warriors had ten killed with seven captured and two whites retaken. His own loses were 1 killed and 1 wounded.[7][8]

Four years later, the Indigenous villages on the Mad River would be destroyed by Logan at the outset of the Northwest Indian War. McGary, who accompanied Logan, confronted the Shawnee chief Moluntha and asked if he had been at Blue Licks. Moluntha nodded his head in agreement, and McGary killed him with a tomahawk. Moluntha had voluntarily surrendered when the Americans appeared, had hoisted an American flag, and held a copy of the peace treaty he had signed earlier that year in the belief that these actions would protect him. Logan immediately relieved McGary of his command and ordered him court-martialled for killing a prisoner. McGary was stripped of his commission for a year but otherwise went unpunished.[2][9]

Legacy

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The Blue Licks battle site is commemorated at Blue Licks Battlefield State Resort Park, on U.S. Route 68 north of Carlisle, Kentucky. The site features a pioneer museum, the Worthington Lodge, the Hidden Waters Restaurant, and a 45-foot (13.7 metre) granite obelisk erected in 1928. Every year, on the third weekend of August, a reenactment and memorial service is held.[10][11]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Hoffman, Phillip W. (2009). Simon Girty: Turncoat Hero: The Most Hated Man on the Early American Frontier. Franklin, Tennessee: Flying Camp Press. ISBN 978-0984225637.
  2. ^ a b Sugden, John (2000). Blue Jacket: Warrior of the Shawnees. University of Nebraska Press. Retrieved August 20, 2025.
  3. ^ "Capt. Caldwell's Report". The Online Institute for Advanced Loyalist Studies. Retrieved 18 August 2025.
  4. ^ a b c Faragher, John Mack (1992). Daniel Boone: The Life and Legend of an American Pioneer. Henry Holt and Co. pp. 216–222. ISBN 978-0805016031.
  5. ^ Barr, Daniel P. (1998). "'A Monster So Brutal'—Simon Girty and the Degenerative Myth of the American Frontier, 1783-1900". Essays in History. 40. Corcoran Department of History at the University of Virginia. Retrieved 2 November 2024.
  6. ^ Colwell, David G. (1994). "The Causes and Accuracy of the Reputation of Simon Girty in American History". Pittsburg History. 77 (1): 30–43.
  7. ^ Harrison, Lowell Hayes (1976). George Rogers Clark and the War in the West. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. pp. 88–92.
  8. ^ Withers, Alexander Scott (1895). Chronicles of Border Warfare, or, a History of the Settlement by the Whites, of North-Western Virginia, and of the Indian Wars and Massacres in that Section of the State. Cincinnati, Ohio: The Robert Clarke Company. p. 355.
  9. ^ Talbert, Charles G. (1956). "Kentucky Invades Ohio - 1786". The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 54 (188): 203–213.
  10. ^ "Blue Licks Battlefield State Resort Park". Kentucky State Parks. Retrieved August 19, 2025.
  11. ^ Wilson, Samuel M. (1928). "The Blue Licks Monument". Register of Kentucky State Historical Society. 26 (78): 289–300. Retrieved August 19, 2025.