TENNESSEE HISTORY Classroom
FULL HISTORY STORIES

The Forgotten Volunteer


He was an individual who is credited with, among other things, being an instrumental force in holding together a loose-knit group of soldiers in one of American history's most trying times.
While the glory and the glamor went to his superiors in the history books, he would become a legend in his own right – a man who would leave behind a legacy of service few could equal and a city, which still bears his name to this day.



William Lauderdale was born in Botetourt, VA around 1782 to Mr. and Mrs. James Lauderdale. The hearty Scots-Irish family were prominent in the Fincastle community of Virginia and had the self-sufficient skills that were common to the era. Their rise to prominence primarily came through their military service to the British and then to the newly-formed American government in the Revolutionary War where land grants were given to soldiers in exchange for their service. Land was the lifesblood of Scots-Irish families who could farm the cash crops that were vital to the early American economy. It propelled many of them to great wealth as foreign nations opened trade with the emerging nation.
As the great migration began over the Southern Appalachians to the new lands of Tennessee, the Lauderdales divested themselves of their Virginia holdings and moved to present-day Sumner County in 1796. William aided his father in building a log cabin near Greenfield Fort and the family began working the land raising cotton and tobacco. The young boy had been educated well by his mother and father. Although he did not possess much formal education, the ability to read and write allowed him to better himself in that regard.
It was a time in Tennessee where Indian raids and attacks on settlements were gradually diminishing and troublesome tribes were moving further South away from the well guarded settlement. The constant alert, however, fit the Scots-Irish mentality and the skills of combat and war were also taught to the young man and his brothers. The local militia often gathered and drilled on the Lauderdale property, which attracted people from throughout the County to watch. Four years later, tragedy struck when William Lauderdale’s father suddenly passed away leaving the teenager and his brothers to support the family.
Although described as somewhat small in stature, William Lauderdale continued the hard-working ways of his father and soon became a prominent man in his own right in the community. William Lauderdale managed to parlay his father’s property into a moderately sized plantation where he prospered in the ways common to the time. Among the many prominent people in or near Sumner County who would play pioneering roles in Tennessee’s early development and befriend the young man, was Lauderdale neighbor Andrew Jackson. His home lay across the Cumberland River from the County and the Lauderdale family became close friends with the future president.
In September 1812, in a special session of the Legislature, Gov. Willie Blount informed those assembled that an order had been issued calling up 100,000 militiamen to take up arms against the British and Spanish interests that were threatening American sovereignty. In addition, the two European nations were supplying rogue elements of the Creek Indian tribe with arms to attack so called "illegal settlements" in disputed territory. Blount also told them that the special order had been forwarded to Gen. Andrew Jackson, who was calling the state’s militia into action to fill Tennessee’s quota of 2,500 men. William Lauderdale had marched south twice as a Volunteer in 1803 to Louisiana territory to fight against the Spanish and the Indians, but no conflict emerged and Gen. Andrew Jackson had released them from service in Vicksburg.
On Sept. 22, 1812, Gov. Willie Blount signed William Lauderdale’s commission as a captain in the 15th Regiment. Following President Jefferson’s orders, Gen. Jackson converted the state militia into the Tennessee Volunteer Infantry, which was under the direction of the Congress. On Nov. 12, 1812, Gov. Willie Blount was forced to recommission William Lauderdale as a first lieutenant. Andrew Jackson himself was recommissioned as a Major General of the Tennessee Volunteer Infantry. With one of the most severe winters in years, the Tennessee troops made the difficult journey only to be once again disbanded and ordered home.
William Lauderdale returned to his plantation and took care of business until news suddenly reached the middle Tennessee region about the massacre of white settlers at Fort Mims in Alabama on August 13, 1813. The Red Stick Creeks, who were recovering from a fractious civil war in their tribe had organized and now back by European interests posed a dangerous threat on the frontier borders. Gen. Andrew Jackson immediately put out the call to his officers to assemble. Pres. James Madison sent out a call to raise three militias from Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee to deal with the Red Sticks and guard the Southern frontier. First Lieutenant –now Captain– Lauderdale was given command of his own company and ordered to meet up with Jackson. The General was recovering from a dueling wound and appeared unable to command, but managed to organize the troops and get them into the field. Through the years, he had developed a close trust with William Lauderdale and depended on him to help with the day-today business of managing the troops.
William Lauderdale excelled in the post and proved himself under fire time and again against the Creeks. Lauderdale had a respect for the Indian warriors that Jackson didn’t and the Tennessean learned much from his experiences with them, especially in terms of combat. At Tallushatchee, Lauderdale had to come to grips with the "no quarters" style of fighting that was common to the Indian Wars. He found himself revolted by the carnage of death that included women and children in the village. Following orders, however, he continued towards Talladega and engaged in his first combat with the talented Red Stick warriors.
The Tennesseans remained victorious in their battles, but Gen. Jackson spent the next few months trying to keep a rein on his troops as their enlistment periods ended. The ever faithful Capt. William Lauderdale took on numerous tasks to help support Jackson‘s command, even at the expense of angering his friends and family, which included the defection of two of his brothers from the Army. The Tennessean became so trusted by Jackson that he found himself named as aide-de-camp. Following the disastrous battle of Emuckfaw Creek, where American casualties were heavy and those killed included Jackson’s nephew, Lauderdale devised an ambulance method that evacuated the wounded smoothly from the field.
The climax of the campaign came at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in Alabama. On March 27, 1814, 3,100 Tennesseans battled 1,000 well defended Creek Warriors at Horseshoe Bend. Following the American victory, Jackson continued his march southward to Mobile and into Pensacola before turning his attention to New Orleans.
The American newspapers up north were touting Jackson’s victories and giving them the respect previously reserved for battles of the American Revolution. Capt. William Lauderdale had earned the respect of his superiors through his management abilities to keep the Army supplied and Jackson soon appointed him his Chief Quartermaster.
Capt. Lauderdale engineered the Army through the long field march from Florida to New Orleans and kept the men supplied well enough to endure the rugged terrain. In addition, Lauderdale helped Jackson secure men for the impending battle, which included calling upon free blacks to enlist in New Orleans. Jackson, who was a notorious micro manager, gave Lauderdale full authority to manage his position and often praised the Tennessean’s enterprising abilities.
At the Battle of New Orleans, tragedy struck in the heart of victory when Lt. Colonel James Lauderdale was killed in the skirmishing that preceded the battle. In spite of the grief, Capt. Lauderdale stayed at his post and kept every fort on the frontier in supplies throughout the battle and afterwards in case British forces regrouped for another strike.
On April 15, 1815 after 18 months in active military service, the Tennessean finally returned home to his Goose Creek Plantation in Sumner County to begin working on expanding his estate. After five years of moderate success, Capt. William Lauderdale, at age 40, married for the first time. He and his young wife settled on the family plantation and started raising a family.
Capt. William Lauderdale had two sons and one daughter by his wife Polly, but was shocked in 1826 when she suddenly passed away leaving him to raise the children on his own. He eventually remarried fellow widower Helen Goodall, who was also raising her two-year-old daughter on her own. She would go on the give birth to three children of which two survived.
Throughout the ups and downs of Lauderdale’s fortunes, he continued to assemble and drill the militia on his plantation property and keep them in shape. Like Jackson, the Creek Wars had taken their toll on the Tennessean and he suffered from a lung ailment that often came and went. The ghosts from the Creek Wars were ever present as well. Following the destruction of the Creek tribe, a 10-year-old boy had fled along with his mother to the jungles of Florida. The half-breed boy who was called Powell by Jackson and Lauderdale had become known by the name "Osceola" among the disenfranchised Creeks who were now termed Seminoles to indicate they were relocated Creeks.
As President, Andrew Jackson implemented his Indian Removal policies against all Indian tribes of the Southeast and the Seminoles, which included a good number of blacks among them, had organized a warrior force to fight relocation. While Indian agents had supposedly obtained signatures from Seminole Chiefs on treaties, the leadership of many tribes by men like Osceola had declared the treaties null and void and refused to abide by them.
On Dec. 28, 1835, a group of warriors under Osceola attacked and massacred 110 U.S. Army regulars and killed Indian Agent Wiley Thompson, which began an undeclared war between the Seminoles and the United States. The incident began America’s own version of the "Seven Years War" and turned into a major problem for then-Commanding General Winfield Scott. The Seminoles’ success encouraged other Creek tribes in Alabama and Georgia to openly attack white settlements and led to the Governors calling on President Jackson to deal with the problem. Jackson turned to his home state and once again would call upon his old friend Capt. William Lauderdale.
President Jackson’s dictatorial policies, however, had created a revolt in his home state and his supporters were feeling the wrath of the newly elected Whig Governor Newton Cannon. He withheld supplies from Capt. Lauderdale’s Mounted Brigade of Tennessee Volunteers. The Brigade overcame the snubs by the anti-Jackson partisans and served with Generals Thomas Jessup and Robert Armstrong removing rogue tribes from Alabama and Georgia and starting them towards Arkansas.
During his tenure in the operation, Capt. William Lauderdale was promoted to the rank of Major and worked as an aid to General Armstrong. The hardships endured by the troops, however, were monstrous. More than 30 men died of disease, ten were killed in combat, and 25 wounded. In addition, only 100 Tennessee horses out of 1,500 survived.
In 1837, General Jessup and the Secretary of War Joel Poinsett asked the Governor of Tennessee to raise Tennessee Volunteers to assist Gen. Jessup in the Florida campaign, but he refused because of the 1836 problems unless the government could give him assurances that the problems wouldn’t be repeated. Former President Andrew Jackson, now retired to the Hermitage, wrote to the Secretary that Major William Lauderdale would be the best man to raise the necessary troops to assist Jessup. Major Lauderdale, who had recently been convalescing in the Smoky Mountains of North Carolina, returned and raised five companies of 100 men each to make the trip to Florida and aide in the Seminole War. Major Lauderdale reached Florida in November 1837 and reported to Jessup.
Once again, the Tennesseans faced an impossible situation. The Seminoles had not planted corn crops, which were counted on to help feed the horses and the men constantly suffered from lack of supplies and bad generalship.
Gen. Zachary Taylor did engage the Seminoles and fought the biggest battle of the war at Lake Okeechobee against the main Seminole body where Americans suffered heavy casualties. The Seminoles then retreated deep into the swamps of the Everglades and forced American command to rethink their options. Major Lauderdale and his Tennesseans continued their move southward clearing a road from Fort Jupiter to a position on the New River. His company mainly operated as scouts in the country locating Seminole villages. They were ordered to reach the New River where a band of Seminoles numbering close to 500 were expected to be encamped.
Despite the heavy rains, the Tennesseans made excellent time clearing the road and reached a location on the New River on March 5, 1837 where they made camp after finding no Indians in the vicinity. The next day Lauderdale and his staff chose a location to erect a fort near a stand of oak trees that would offer some protection and support from Indians in the nearby Everglades. Under Lauderdale’s direction, 223 Tennesseans and elements of the U.S. Third Artillery Regiment under command of First Lieutenant Robert Anderson began work on the structure while scouting the area for Seminoles. By March 10, the troops had completed a two-tiered 30-foot long blockhouse that would serve as a fort and began working on a stockade fence to enclose the property.
On March 16, 1838 Gen. Jessup filed Special Order number 74 stating: "The new post established on the New River by the Tennessee Battalion of Volunteers and Company D, 3rd Artillery will be called Fort Lauderdale."
As work continued on the Fort, Major William Lauderdale and his men continued scouting the area and became the first military officer to explore the eastern section of the Everglades and the Atlantic seacoast in the Hillsboro, Middle, New, and Rio Rantones rivers. On March 22nd, Major Lauderdale and his Tennesseans assisted in the military engagement against the Seminoles at Pine Island. The U.S. Army emerged victorious from the battle and never again would Indians engage the military in South Florida.
On April 7, 1838, Major William Lauderdale and his Tennessee Volunteers were ordered to Tampa Bay to be mustered out of service and returned home to Tennessee. The campaign had taken its toll on the aging Lauderdale. He could no longer ride a horse and had to be transported in a carriage. He continually suffered from a high fever and was coughing up blood throughout the journey. Around April 24, the Tennesseans battered and beaten arrived at Fort Brooke where they turned over their arms and horses and boarded a ship for Baton Rouge to be mustered out of service. The men arrived around May 3 and Major Lauderdale was carried off the ship to the Army Barracks where he lingered with fever. On the night of May 10, 1838, the day before the Tennesseans were scheduled to be ceremoniously discharge, Major William Lauderdale passed away. The ceremonies were postponed until later in the evening while the men gathered to bury their commander. In the presence of a riderless horse, the band played, colors were presented, and a barrage of artillery and muskets fired a salute across the Mississippi River in honor of the Tennessee warrior. The next morning, the Tennesseans boarded the ship and returned home to their native state. While newspapers in Baton Rouge and New Orleans carried the news of Major Lauderdale’s death, the Nashville Republican, which was an anti-Jackson paper, completely ignored the story. A small ceremony was held at the Church in Hartsville, Tenn. where his friends paid their tributes to the fallen warrior. In addition to his widow, Lauderdale left six children – one son would later be killed in combat in the Mexican War.
His greatest contribution to American would be the small fort he and his men constructed. It would not only survive the Second Seminole War of 1838 to 1842, but would flourish and the city, which grew up around it, would become one of the nation’s most prominent and forever bear the name of its founder as Fort Lauderdale, Florida.



There has never been found a likeness or image of William Lauderdale. The family had a long-standing habit of naming many of their children James and William and this has often led to confusion among genealogists studying the family’s history. There is one excellent standing monument to the Tennessean near Fort Lauderdale, Florida at Forest Ridge, which was sculpted by Luis Montoya, but very little has been done to commemorate him in his home state. Lauderdale County was named after his brother James, who was killed at the Battle of New Orleans.
The body of William Lauderdale has never been found to this day. It is believed he was buried in the officer’s section of the graveyard in Baton Rouge, but the growth of the city and changes on the military post have forever lost the exact site. The graveyard was located on an ancient Indian Mound and, when bodies were exhumed in later years, numerous iron coffins were discovered, but no names were affixed to them. Many believe his remains could have been removed in 1880 and placed in the local National Cemetery in a section containing "unknown graves". The possibilities are too many and it can only be reasoned that they are forever lost to time.
William Lauderdale’s loyalty to Gen. Andrew Jackson hurt him in the end, but the Tennessean knew no other way. While numerous alumni of the Battle of Horseshoe Bend would go on to greatness in American history, numerous soldiers who revolted against Jackson because of his dictatorial policies would also rise to prominence and cause him a lot of political damage in later years. Unfortunately, those loyal to him would also suffer as did Lauderdale.
When he mustered his troops on the lawn of the Hermitage for the march to Florida, the Governor, who had attended every such muster since the War of 1812, refused to be present and the Nashville Republican newspaper never carried a single story about the Mounted Brigade in Florida. It was Lauderdale’s former troops and friends who honored him and no state ceremony was ever given. In later years, his widow would testify in a pension hearing about his failing health and it is from those hearings that a lot of information about Lauderdale would be first entered into the public record.
William Lauderdale is considered one of the most obscure figures of Tennessee history. Gathering information for this story involved a lot of work and special thanks has to go to descendant Eugenia Lauderdale Messick of Memphis. Throughout her life, she has worked diligently researching records to document and preserve the facts about his life. A book was written about him by Florida historian Cooper Kirk in 1982 entitled: "William Lauderdale: General Andrew Jackson’s Warrior". The book is out of print and extremely difficult to locate, but does offer a somewhat detailed account of his battlefield exploits.
"William Lauderdale represents the spirit of Tennessee’s military tradition," said historian Stephen Arlen. "Men such as him can be found throughout the state’s records, but disassembled in such a way that they easily escape notice of those studying Tennessee history. From the 1780s forward Tennesseans have been in the front lines of American conflicts. It is why the state’s Medal of Honor recipients are so notable. Other states may have more, but none can boast a recipient in every American conflict as does Tennessee."
William Lauderdale would also be credited with founding one of the first official "Tennessee Volunteer" companies that would go on to lend its name to the ensuing Mexican War and enshrine the state’s men in military history. Although reports from Army generals considered the Tennesseans’ service in Florida as inconsequential, historians will point out that the men were battle hardened enough to know the Seminoles were not going to be taken out of the Everglades without a devastating fight. By 1838, Native American tribes had more than three hundred years of European contact and knew how to combat the most advanced military tactics. Arlen and other historians say there should be some effort to erect a monument in Tennessee honoring Lauderdale near his home in Sumner County or Nashville.
"There aren’t many men who can be credited with founding a city like Fort Lauderdale," said Arlen, "and there should be some credit given to such an individual."