The military experience of James Ford was limited to commanding frontier Kentucky and
Illinois territorial militia units. Even without any combat experience, serving as a militia officer helped Ford acquire local prestige and created opportunities for him in the political and business affairs of the Ohio River valley of Kentucky and Illinois. Ford was
captain of the Livingston County
cavalry company in the 24th Kentucky Militia Regiment between July 1, 1799, and December 15, 1802. While living in Illinois Territory, on January 2, 1810, James Ford became captain of the Grand Pierre area militia company of the 4th Regiment of
Illinois Territory Militia, was one of three territorial militia companies in southeastern Illinois. (The other companies based around the frontier settlements of
Elizabethtown and Cave-In-Rock were simply local volunteer frontier military units.) The Grand Pierre Company comprised men from Grand Pierre, a frontier settlement in the area located near the
Grand Pierre Creek Watershed, now Rosiclare, Illinois. Grand Pierre was one of three frontier Illinois militia districts in what later became
Hardin County, Illinois. The fort used by the Grand Pierre militia company may have been the
blockhouse formerly located north of the present-day
water tower that was used later by the
Sturdivant Gang for counterfeiting in the late 1810s and early 1820s. During the occupation of the fort by the counterfeiters, James Ford held the
deed to the land, giving him legal ownership of the fort and making him guilty by association for allowing counterfeiting to take place. Ford was also the captain of a company of the Illinois Territorial Militia from July 15, 1811, to August 8, 1811. Ford was later promoted to
major, being one of two such military ranks available in the 4th Regiment of Militia in the Illinois Territory on November 28, 1811. James Steele Sr. also spelled Steel, who had been a private in Ford's Company, succeeded him as captain of the Grand Pierre militia. In the
War of 1812, Steele served as a private in Captain John Cochran's company of the 1st Regiment of
Illinois (Territorial) Militia, under the command of Captain Absolem Cox, at
Kaskaskia on September 3, 1812. The residency of James Steele was recorded in the first Illinois State Census in 1818 and the 1820 U.S. Census as living in Pope County, Illinois, now present-day Hardin County, Illinois. At the time the state and federal censuses were conducted, Steele was a criminal member of the Sturdivant Gang of counterfeiters which operated in the Rosiclare area of Hardin County from the 1810s to 1820s. ==Property holdings==