Montreal: a strategic destination!
Battle of the Châteauguay National Historic Site
The outdoor area of the Battle of the Châteauguay National Historic Site can be visited on your own.
Learn more about this campsite on the battlefield, also presented as the first stop of the 13 historic markers along the battlefield marked trail (accessible by bike or car).
Download the 2025 battlefield marked trail map (PDF, 1.87 MB).
Usefulness during battle: temporary encampment at Spears Farm on the island and surveillance of the American’s arrival.
Location on the battlefield: west end of the battlefield
Nearby: route 138, near the confluence of the Outardes and Châteauguay rivers, in Ormstown
Geographic coordinates in decimal degrees [latitude, longitude]: 45.1243° N, -74.0031° W
An American army of about 4000 soldiers, under the command of Major General Wade Hampton, left Plattsburgh in September 1813. This column marched the length of the Richelieu River, while another under the command of General James Wilkinson followed the St. Lawrence River. They were ordered to converge on Montréal and seize it to prevent the provision of supplies to the colonies of Upper Canada.
Along the way, Wade Hampton’s troop encountered British forces at Odelltown, near Lacolle. Short of fresh water, they withdrew to the United States, to the town of Chazy, and then headed towards the Châteauguay River.
During this time, in Lower Canada, Lieutenant Colonel Charles-Michel de Salaberry, responsible for protecting the Châteauguay corridor, placed scouts in various positions to keep track of Hampton’s movements. In the afternoon of October 1, 1813, Salaberry, accompanied by Canadian and Indigenous Voltigeurs, attempted to attack Hampton’s encampment set up at Chateaugay Four Corners, in New York State. Detecting the threat of American flank companies, Salaberry retreated along the Châteauguay River.
“While retreating along the Châteauguay River, on the cart road he blocked as he went along, Salaberry noted the advantages afforded by the terrain near the present site of Allan’s Corner (Quebec) as a place to confront the American army in the event it moved northward.” (V. J. H. Suthren, The Battle of the Châteauguay, 1980)
A Canadian picket (a small unit of soldiers maintaining a watch) made up of about 40 Sedentary Militia soldiers and Indigenous set themselves up near Spear’s Farm. Upon the arrival of Brigadier General George Izard at dinner time, the Canadian troops, after exchanging a few gun shots, succeeded in warning Salaberry that the Americans were coming.
It is said that the American militia, who were accompanying Hampton’s regular troops, refused to cross the border into Lower Canada. As a result, on October 21, 1813, Hampton continued his march to Montréal with an army of about 3,700 men in two brigades: that of Colonel Robert Purdy and that of Izard. With his 1,000 men, Izard took the Aux Outardes River while Purdy followed the Châteauguay River with the rest of the troops on a road that was in very poor condition
Today, the Aux Outardes River drains directly into the Châteauguay River, at the town of Ormstown. Referring to the map of 1814 drawn by Sir Joshua Jebb and Jean-Baptiste Duberger, you will see that the mouth of the Aux Outardes Outardes divided in two, thereby forming a small island. the Aux Outardes River drains directly into the Châteauguay River, at the town of Ormstown. As indicated on Jebb’s map, in 1813, the mouth of the Aux Outardes River divided into two, thereby forming a small island.
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