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c only the neutrality, but also the cooperation of the Choctaws. Many Pearl giver settlers fled the frontier for the safety of Natchez or Mobile. By ^ ? f November only a few hardy souls remained in the Pearl River settlements behind ?? the stockades they had erected, including one at John Ford's.62 The Mississippi Territorial Militia took the field. Marion County's 13th Regiment, commanded by Colonel Nixon and part of Col. Jordan Morgan's 18th Regiment of Hancock County were among the troops. Their rosters show such familiar present-day T A Pearl River County surnames as Askew, Batson, Bond, Breland, Buckley, Burge, Favre, Ford, Graves, Landrum, Lenoir, Lott, Lumpkin, McGehee, Saucier and Wheat.63 Colonel Nixon's command guarded the eastern frontier and, after Maj. Gen. Andrew Jackson's crushing defeat of the Red Sticks at Horseshoe Bend on March 27, 1814, took the field to hunt down refugee Creeks along the Escambia and Perdido Rivers in what is now South Alabama and Northwest Florida.64 J. F. H. Claiborne, Mississippi's first historian, and a long-time Hancock County resident, in his 1860 biography of Creek War hero Sam Dale had Dale say that Nixon was one of the most active officers in the service. He protected the frontier very efficiently during the desultory war to which it was exposed and was afterwards stationed near the Bay of St. Louis to observe the enemy, then off Ship Island.65 Some 16 years later, however, on July 4, 1876, addressing his fellow Hancock Countians during the Centennial of their local history, Claiborne gave this interesting and enigmatic account of the fight between the British fleet, headed for New Orleans, which met Lt. Thomas ap Catesby Jones'5gallant little gunboat flotilla on December 23, 1814 on Lake Borgne just offshore from Bay St. Louis: A regiment of militia, under Colonel _____________________ from the interior, had been stationed here several days
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