Inscription
Here during the night of July 16-17, 1812, a small force of British regulars and several hundred voyageurs and Indian allies from St. Joseph Island landed. They occupied a height that overlooks Fort Mackinac and demanded its surrender. Lieutenant Porter Hanks, commander of the American garrison of fifty-seven soldiers, had not known that war had been declared.
Realizing that resistance was hopeless and might provoke an Indian massacre, Hanks capitulated without a fight.
Location
Sources
More markers in Mackinac
Island House
Mackinac Island, MI
Constructed for Charles O’Malley about 1852, this building was one of the first summer hotels on Mackinac Island.
Home of the Ancestors
Mackinac Island, MI
Mackinac Island has long been a burial location for the Anishnaabek (Odawa, Ojibway and Potawatomi).
Lake View Hotel
Mackinac Island, MI
Originally known as the Lake View House, this is one of the oldest continuously operated hotels on Mackinac Island.
The Northernmost Point of Lake Michigan
Naubinway, MI
The northernmost point of Lake Michigan is about one mile west of here.
St. Ignace
St. Ignace, MI
Pere Marquette established in 1671 the Mission of St. Ignace.
