Battle of Talladega

November 9, 1814, Talladega, Alabama (Mississippi Territory)

American Forces Commanded by
Gen. Andrew Jackson
Strength Killed Wounded Missing/Captured
2,000 15 85 ??
British Forces Commanded by
William Weatherford
Strength Killed Wounded Missing/Captured
700 300 110 ??
Conclusion: American Victory
Creek War

The Battle of Talladega was a battle fought between Tennessee militia and the Red Stick Creek Indians during the Creek War.

When Gen. John Coffee returned to Fort Strother after defeating the Red Sticks at the Battle of Tallushatchee, Gen. Andrew Jackson received a call for help from friendly Creek who were being besieged by Red Sticks at Talladega.

On November 9, Jackson's army arrived outside the village and their Creek allies inside the town yelled "howdy-do brothers, howdy-do". Legendary frontiersman Davy Crockett described the Red Stick counterattack as a "rush of locusts led by a devil".

The Red Sticks, led by William Weatherford, inflicted 100 casualties upon Jackson. However it took only 15 minutes for Jackson to inflict 410 casualties on the Red Sticks and drive them from the field.

After the battle, there was a significant lull in the fighting between the Red Sticks and Jackson's army. By December, the American force was down to almost 500 strong due to desertion and enlistments running out. When Jackson received reinforcements (some of them regular U.S. troops), he once again went on the offensive and met the Red Stick at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend.

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