Othiel Lutz (1810–1837)

By Elizabeth Klements

Early Life

Enlistment Register

Othiel Lutz was born in Württemberg, Germany, in 1810 and immigrated to the United States sometime before 1837.1 German immigration to the US had been steadily increasing in the nineteenth century. By 1832, more than 10,000 German immigrants arrived in the United States.2 Many were working-class men and women in search of a better life. Some went into the American West where land was cheap, while others settled in cities and engaged in the same urban craft trades that they had practiced in their homeland.3 The Register of Enlistments identified Lutz as a former soldier. He may have been a former member of the Prussian or US military. Lutz enlisted in the US Army out of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in August 1837, during a period of financial hardship for the country, as shown here.4 Former President Andrew Jackson’s financial policies led to a severe economic depression beginning in the Spring of 1837; banks collapsed, businesses went bankrupt, and thousands lost their savings.5 It is possible that by August of 1837 Lutz decided to return to a familiar profession that would guarantee a salary in this time of financial uncertainty.

Military Service

The Army that Private Lutz belonged to was very different than the twenty-first century US Army. It was much smaller with about 7,200 soldiers in its ranks organized into twelve regiments composed of four artillery, seven infantry, and one dragoon or cavalry regiments. Approximately 6,600 of these soldiers were enlisted men and about 600 were officers. This small army was scattered in fifty-three separate installations around the nation. Just before the Seminole War, 500 soldiers garrisoned ten bases across northern and central Florida. Many of these men were immigrants because soldiers, wherever they served, were poorly paid; they received five dollars a month. A civilian laborer made much more. As a result, recently arrived immigrants who needed work filled the ranks.6 As a result of the Second Seminole War, the regular Army almost doubled in size. Despite this expansion, 30,000 militia (part-time soldiers) and volunteer (newly-recruited) units reinforced the regular Army units in their campaigns in Florida against the Seminoles.7

Private Lutz was part of A Company in the 4th Infantry Regiment.8 Congress officially created the 4th Infantry Regiment in 1796, although it underwent a significant reorganization in 1808. The 4th Infantry participated in the attempted invasion of Canada during the War of 1812, and then moved along the western and southern US frontiers. There, they engaged in skirmishes with Native Americans, most notably in the First Seminole War in 1817 and the Black Hawk War in 1832. The US Government ordered the 4th Infantry to return to Florida in 1836, amidst rising tensions between the US and the Seminoles.9

Fought between 1835 and 1842, the Second Seminole War was part of a larger conflict between Native Americans in Florida and the United States military that lasted from 1816 to 1858. In alignment with the goals of the Indian Removal Act (1830), the United States government sought to move all of the Florida Native Americans, collectively—though inaccurately—referred to as Seminoles, from the peninsula to the Indian Territory (modern-day Oklahoma). Fighting in a harsh environment, against a mobile foe using guerrilla tactics, and without clear frontlines, the army struggled to defeat their outnumbered enemy. While estimates vary, approximately 10,000 soldiers and as many as 30,000 militia fought against fewer than 2,000 Seminole warriors. Eventually, after seven years, the death of 1,400-1,500 regular US Army soldiers, and the expenditure of $30,000,000-$40,000,000, the United States declared victory even while some Seminoles remained in Florida. Given these hardships, the Second Seminole War is generally considered “the longest and most costly of the Indian conflicts.”10

Surpassed only by Dade’s Battle in terms of casualties, the Battle of Okeechobee occurred on December 25, 1837, two years after the war began. On Christmas Day, commanding officer Colonel Zachary Taylor led approximately 800 infantry regiment troops into battle against 380-480 Seminoles who were camped on the shore of Lake Okeechobee. The 6th and the 4th Infantry regiments led the attack at the Battle of Okeechobee, but the 6th Infantry bore the brunt of the Seminole’s fire.11 The 4th Infantry lost three privates, including Private Lutz.12 Though Taylor claimed this battle as a great victory, the Seminoles – who had positioned themselves in a densely wooded area with a half mile of swamp in front of them – inflicted more extensive damage to the US troops than they themselves received. After three hours of battle, the Seminoles retreated in canoes across the lake, having lost less than seven percent of their men while Col. Taylor lost over seventeen percent of his forces. Further, the Seminoles successfully slowed Taylor’s march down the Kissimmee River long enough to evacuate their women and children farther into the Everglades. Public opinion regarding the battle’s outcome was initially mixed, but the nation eventually accepted Taylor’s claim of victory, propelling him into the national spotlight and initiating his road to the presidency.13

Legacy

Pyramid in background of reenactment

Along with some 1,500 US casualties of the Second Seminole War, Othiel Lutz is memorialized at St. Augustine National Cemetery in Florida. On June 13, 1842, as a prelude to the formal ending of the Second Seminole War, Col. William Worth announced that the remains of the officers who fell in the war would be gathered and reinterred in the burial ground next to the St. Francis Barracks in St. Augustine. The bodies of Maj. Francis Dade and his men were interred along with other regular soldiers in three massive vaults, each covered by an ornamental pyramid constructed of native coquina stone. Two years later, a granite obelisk was erected next to the pyramids. The US Government re-designated the St. Francis Barracks burial ground as St. Augustine National Cemetery in 1881. The so-called “Dade Pyramids” and memorial obelisk are believed to be among the oldest public monuments (excluding headstones) in the national cemetery system.14

Endnotes

1 In the Register of Enlistments, Othiel’s hometown is spelled as Wirtemberg. “U.S. Army, Register of Enlistments, 1798-1914,” database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com/: accessed January 16, 2020), entry for Othiel Lutz.

2 “A New Surge of Growth,” Library of Congress, accessed January 16, 2020, http://www.loc.gov/teachers/classroommaterials/presentationsandactivities/presentations/immigration/german4.html.

3 “Filling the Nation’s Breadbasket,” Library of Congress, accessed January 16, 2020, http://www.loc.gov/teachers/classroommaterials/presentationsandactivities/presentations/immigration/german4.html; “Urban Germans,” Library of Congress, accessed January 16, 2020, http://www.loc.gov/teachers/classroommaterials/presentationsandactivities/presentations/immigration/german6.html.

4 “U.S. Army, Register of Enlistments,” Ancestry.com, Othiel Lutz.

5 Samantha Gibson, “The Panic of 1837,” Digital Public Library of America, accessed January 16, 2020, https://dp.la/primary-source-sets/the-panic-of-1837.

6 Captain Michael G. Anderson, Staff Ride Handbook for Dade’s Battle, Florida, 28 December 1835: A Study of Leadership in Irregular Conflict (Leavenworth KS: Combat Studies Institute Press: US Army Combined Arms Center), accessed January 10, 2020, https://www.armyupress.army.mil/Portals/7/educational-services/staff-rides/StaffRideHB_DadesBattle.pdf.

7 U.S. Army, “Toward a Professional Army,” in The United States and the Forging of a Nation, 1775-1917, ed. Richard W. Stewart (Washington DC: Center for Military History, 2005), accessed January 10, 2020, https://history.army.mil/books/AMH-V1/ch07.htm.

8 “U.S. Army, Register of Enlistments,” Ancestry.com, Othiel Lutz.

9 James Leyden, “The Fourth Regiment of Infantry,” U.S. Army Center of Military History, accessed January 17, 2020, https://history.army.mil/books/R&H/R&H-4IN.htm.

10 C.S. Monaco, The Second Seminole War and the Limits of American Aggression (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018); John and Mary Lou Missall, The Seminole Wars: America's Longest Indian Conflict (Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2004); John K. Mahon, History of the Second Seminole War (Gainesville, FL: University of Florida Press, 1967); Quote from Jane F. Lancaster, Removal Aftershock: The Seminoles' Struggles to Survive in the West, 1836–1866 (Knoxville, TN: The University of Tennessee Press, 1994), 18.

11 Mahon, History of the Second Seminole War, 228.

12 Charles Byrne, “The Sixth Regiment of Infantry,” U.S. Army Center of Military History, accessed January 16, 2020, https://history.army.mil/books/R&H/R&H-6IN.htm.

13 Mahon, History of the Second Seminole War, 219; “Colonel Z. Taylor’s Account of the Battle with the Seminole Indians near the Kissimmee River, in Florida, on December 25, 1837,” 25th Cong., 2nd Sess., 1838, S. Rep. 789; John and Mary Lou Missal, eds., This Miserable Pride of a Soldier (Tampa: University of Tampa Press, 2005), 129.

14 John T. Sprague, The Origin, Progress, and Conclusion of the Florida War (New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1848, 521-522; “Saint Augustine National Cemetery,” U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, accessed January 17, 2020, https://www.cem.va.gov/cems/nchp/staugustine.asp.

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