The Hunters become the hunted,
Part 1: The 1838 U.S. invasion of Canada
STORY BY RUSSELL HILLIER
It’s not that I doubted whether visiting the battlefield at Windmill Point was a good idea, but more a case of if it was a good idea on this day. An iron-grey sky had produced a drizzling rain that the forecast assured would get worse. So, I packed hastily, hoping to outrun a darkening sky.
The Battle of the Windmill National Historic Site is located only an hour’s drive from Ottawa. It’s where, in 1838, some 250 armed American invaders rode the momentum force of manifest destiny northward, only to meet a violent end at the hands of British regulars and Canadian militia. The battle itself gets overshadowed figuratively by the War of 1812 and geographically by nearby Fort Wellington. Yet, I’ve always been intrigued by it and the question: Why would hundreds of people pick up their rifles, cross an international border and invade a country that they were not at war with?
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