Blackberry Campaign

The Blackberry Campaign is the name given to a May 1791 expedition led by Charles Scott against Native Americans of the lower Wabash Valley, primarily Wea, Kickapoo, Miami, and Potawatomi. The intent of the campaign was to demonstrate the vulnerability of Native American villages in the Northwest Territory, to take captives who could be used for peace negotiations, and to keep the forces of the Western Confederacy off balance in preparation for a larger campaign led by Arthur St. Clair. The name Blackberry Campaign was given because soldiers stopped to pick berries to supplement their food supplies.

Blackberry Campaign
Part of the Northwest Indian War

A portrait of Charles Scott
DateMay 1791
Location
Northwest Territory
40°24′3″N 86°57′36″W
Result American victory
Belligerents
 United States Wabash Confederacy
Commanders and leaders
Charles Scott
James Wilkinson
Unknown
Casualties and losses
5 wounded 32 killed
41 captured
Fort Washington
St. Clair's Defeat
Kekionga
Ouiatenon
Louisville
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