The Seminoles refrained from attacking in the other places, not because they thought they could achieve better surprise later but because they were waiting for
Osceola to join them. However, at the time he was busy trying to kill U.S. Indian Agent
Wiley Thompson. They finally gave up waiting and attacked without him. The troops marched for five quiet days until December 28, when they were just south of the present-day city of
Bushnell which is approximately south of Fort King. They were passing through a high
hammock with
oaks, pines,
cabbage palms, and
saw palmetto when a single shot rang out. The Seminoles had terrain and the element of surprise in their favor. Many sources state that the first shot and the following storm of bullets brought down Major Dade and half his men. Dade, who was on horseback, was killed in the Seminoles' very first shot fired personally by Chief
Micanopy, which by pre-arranged plan began the attack. Following Dade's death, command passed to Captain George W. Gardiner. Many of the soldiers, in two single file lines, were also quickly killed. Only a few managed to get their
flintlock muskets from underneath their heavy winter coats. Gardiner, a graduate of the
U.S. Military Academy, class of 1814, was also killed. An eyewitness account by Seminole leader
Halpatter Tustenuggee (also known as Chief Alligator) read as follows: "We had been preparing for this more than a year... Just as the day was breaking, we moved out of the swamp into the pine-barren. I counted, by direction of Jumper, one hundred and eighty warriors. Upon approaching the road, each man chose his position on the west side... About nine o'clock in the morning the command approached... So soon as all the soldiers were opposite... Jumper gave the whoop, Micanopy fired the first rifle, the
signal agreed upon, when every Indian arose and fired, which laid upon the ground, dead, more than half the white men. The cannon was discharged several times, but the men who loaded it were shot down as soon as the smoke cleared away... As we were returning to the swamp supposing all were dead, an Indian came up and said the white men were building a fort of logs. Jumper and myself, with ten warriors, returned. As we approached, we saw six men behind two logs placed one above another, with the cannon a short distance off... We soon came near, as the balls went over us. They had guns, but no powder, we looked in the boxes afterwards and found they were empty. The firing had ceased, and all was quiet when we returned to the swamp about noon. We left many
negroes upon the ground looking at the dead men. Three warriors were killed and five wounded." The battle began either at 10:00 a.m. (according to Alligator) or at 8 a.m. and ending around 4 p.m. (according to survivor Private Ransom Clark), with the Native and
Maroon allies leaving around sunset. "The Indians did not scalp or loot. They took food, and some clothes and ammunition, but nothing else. Only when they had withdrawn did a swarm of Negroes come to kill the wounded and loot the dead." Only three U.S. soldiers were reported to have survived the attack. Private Edward Decourcey had been covered by dead bodies, but for Ransom Clark, "the negroes, after catching me up by the heels, threw me down again with an oath: ''"He's dead enough."'' Then they stripped me of my clothes, shoes and hat and left me." The Indians hadn't
scalped or butchered the dead and wounded when they
over-ran Dade's men; they were in a hurry and were after
guns,
ammunition, and supplies. But when the Indians left the field, "negroes fifty or sixty in number, came up on horseback, entered the enclosure, and commenced hacking and cutting the wounded in a most savage manner...[with] frequent cries of
"what have you got to sell?" The next day, a Seminole pursued them on horseback and Decourcey was killed after they had split to avoid joint capture. Clark made it back to Fort Brooke, collapsing within a mile of the Fort and being helped all the way back by a friendly Indian woman. Clark provided the only narrative from the Army's side of what had occurred. A third soldier, Private Joseph Sprague, age 32, born in
Vergennes, Vermont, was on his 2nd enlistment and assigned to company B, 3rd Artillery. Pvt Sprague arrived at Fort Brooke on New Year's Day 1836, surviving his arm wound, and served in the army for 25 years, leaving the military in March 1843. He died in
White Springs, Florida "probably in 1848." He was illiterate, and did not leave a report of the battle. In 1837,
Louis Pacheco, the
mulatto slave who guided and interpreted for the Dade command, resurfaced and gave a third eyewitness account of the battle. Pacheco had been ahead of the column, by his account, and was taken prisoner by the Indians; some thought him to be a turncoat or informer. He was shipped west with the Indians about that time, but returned to Florida shortly before his death in early 1895. ==Aftermath==