William Hull

views updated May 14 2018

William Hull

William Hull (1753-1825), American military commander, surrendered United States troops at Detroit to the British during the War of 1812, dealing a severe blow to the American war effort.

William Hull was born June 24, 1753, in Derby, Conn. After graduating from Yale College, he studied law in Litchfield and was admitted to the bar in 1775. That July he joined the American army besieging Boston and served actively throughout the Revolutionary War, rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel. After the war Hull set up law practice in Newton, Mass., the home of his wife, Sarah Fuller. He participated in the suppression of Shays' Rebellion and served as a state senator and as a judge of the court of common pleas.

In March 1805 President Thomas Jefferson appointed Hull governor of the newly organized Michigan Territory. Hull was instrumental in obtaining land cessions from the Indians, which added to their growing unrest. In the spring of 1812, after the declaration of war on Great Britain, he accepted a commission as brigadier general and command of the army which was to defend Michigan and to invade Upper Canada. Hull stressed the necessity of controlling Lake Erie, but he incorrectly argued that a large American army at Detroit might compel the British to abandon their naval forces on the lake.

Hull brought a 2,200-man army into Detroit, crossed the Detroit River into Canada on July 12, and occupied Sandwich. There he hesitated. When British commander Gen. Isaac Brock concentrated his forces on him, Hull retreated to Detroit and tried to reopen his lines of communication. This failed, and on August 12 Hull surrendered to Brock. This left Lake Erie and the Michigan country in British control. In defense of his actions Hull claimed that the army had had only a month's provisions and that continued resistance would have provoked the Michigan Indians, who were with the British, to massacre the civilian population.

A court-martial found Hull guilty of cowardice and neglect of duty, but he was pardoned because of past services. He lost his army position and retired to Newton, where he died on Nov. 29, 1825.

Further Reading

There is no good biography of Hull. His daughter, Maria Campbell, wrote Revolutionary Services and Civil Life of General William Hull (1848), which was published together with a work by Hull's grandson James Freeman Clarke, The History of the Campaign of 1812, and Surrender of the Post of Detroit. Since Clarke's essay was written to defend Hull, it should be read critically. An account condemning Hull is found in volume 6 of Henry Adams, History of the United States of America (9 vols., 1889-1891). A good brief account of Hull's western campaign is in Harry L. Coles, The War of 1812 (1965).

Additional Sources

Hull, William H. (William Henry), The good ol' boys, Edina, Minn.: W.H. Hull, 1994. □

Hull, William

views updated May 14 2018

Hull, William

HULL, WILLIAM. (1753–1825). Continental officer. Connecticut. William Hull was born in Derby, Connecticut, on 24 June 1753, graduated from Yale College when he was nineteen years old, studied law at Litchfield, and was admitted to the bar in 1775. He was appointed a captain-lieutenant in the Seventh Connecticut Regiment on 6 July 1775 and captain on 9 October, and served in the Boston lines. On 1 January 1776 he became captain of the Nineteenth Continental Regiment (Connecticut). He rose steadily in rank, becoming major of the Eighth Massachusetts Regiment on 1 January 1777 and lieutenant colonel of the Third Massachusetts Regiment on 12 August 1779. He served almost continuously, taking part in the battles of White Plains, Trenton, Princeton, Saratoga, Monmouth, and Stony Point, and for three winters in a row commanded the American advanced lines just above New York City. He led the bold raid on Morrisania, New York, on 22-23 January 1781. Brave and energetic, he won commendations from Washington and Congress. Retained in Colonel Henry Jackson's Continental Regiment on 3 November 1783, he served to 20 June 1784.

After leaving the army he returned to the law, became active as a Jeffersonian politician, and helped suppress Shays's Rebellion. President Jefferson appointed Hull governor of the newly organized Michigan Territory on 22 March 1805. President Madison named him a brigadier general on 8 April 1812, with the job of defending the territory with a motley army of militia and volunteers. He suffered a series of defeats at the hands of the British, including the surrender of Detroit on 16 August 1812, and was cashiered after a court-martial presided over by Henry Dearborn. (Three days after he surrendered Detroit, his nephew Captain Isaac Hull won his famous victory over the Guerrière.) William Hull spent his remaining years at Newton, Massachusetts, where he had established a home after the Revolution. He published a defense of his conduct at Detroit in 1824, a year before he died at home on 29 November 1825.

SEE ALSO Dearborn, Henry; Morrisania, New York; Shay's Rebellion.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Campbell, Maria H., and James F. Clarke. Revolutionary Services and Civil Life of General William Hull: Prepared from His Manuscripts by His Daughter, Together with the History of the Campaign of 1781 and Surrender of the Post of Detroit. New York: D. Appleton, 1848.

Hull, William. Memoirs of the Campaign of the North Western Army of the United States. Boston: True and Greene, 1824.

                              revised by Harold E. Selesky

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