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Battle of Windsor
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==Fighting Island and Pelee Island== On February 24, 1838, a group of Patriots began assembling on [[Fighting Island]] on the Canadian side of the [[Detroit River]]. Supplies were ferried over from Detroit and some 400 Patriots from Cleveland joined the Detroit area men. The larger force of 600 Cleveland men occupied [[Pelee, Ontario|Pelee Island]] at the same time. It was reported that the Patriots had only 50 muskets and one dismounted cannon among them on the island. The U.S. general informed his British counterpart of the assembly, announcing that he would wait for the Patriots to break up and arrest them upon their return for violation of American neutrality laws. The British commandant replied that he would attack the Patriot camp and pursue them into the United States. This reply led General Brady to order a line of red flags to be placed in the ice on the river marking the border. He deployed his men with orders to shoot any British soldiers passing the line. The British regulars, artillery and Canadian militia attacked at daybreak of February 25. The British force proceeded across the ice to capture the island but did not cross the border. The U.S. forces briefly detained a few Patriots but soon released them. Casualties are uncertain, with the British commander claiming no deaths on either side but other reports claiming 5 British dead and 15 wounded and at least 5 Patriots wounded, some of whom required amputations of their arms.<ref>Both casualty totals quoted in ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=8d8BAAAAMAAJ&dq=%22patriot+war%22+michigan+militia&pg=PP5 The Patriot War]'', Robert B. Ross, 1890, The Detroit Evening News and the Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society</ref> On March 23, in a much bloodier engagement, a British and Canadian force drove the Patriots from [[Battle of Pelee Island|Pelee Island]].
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