(Redirected from William Winder)A promising Maryland lawyer, 'William Henry Winder' (1775-1824) was an
American soldier, born in
Somerset Co.,
Md. He was the nephew of
Levin Winder. He graduated at the
University of Pennsylvania, and from 1798 to 1812 practiced law in
Baltimore.
[1] He was commissioned as a colonel in the U.S. Army at the start of the War of 1812. Promoted to
brigadier general, he was one of two acting commanders of the American army at the
Battle of Stoney Creek in July 1813, where he was captured, along with fellow commander
John Chandler.
Exchanged the following year, Winder was appointed commander of the defenses of Washington and Baltimore by president
James Madison on July 4, 1814. In August
General Ross with several thousand troops advanced upon
Washington. Winder had only a few hundred regulars, and a mob of some thousands of militia to oppose them. The Americans met the British at the
Battle of Bladensburg on August 24, 1814. He failed to show effective command in the battle, retreated in the ensuing rout, and the Capital fell into the hands of the invaders. Winder was afterward court martialed, but was acquitted of all blame.
[2]
Winder also testified at the impeachment trial of Associate
Supreme Court Justice
Samuel Chase.
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