in
The Death of General Montgomery in the Attack on Quebec, December 31, 1775 by
John Trumbull Although the Mohawk and three other of the
Iroquois nations sided with the British during the American Revolution, hoping to expel the colonists from their lands, Cook allied with the Thirteen Colonies, as did the Oneida and Tuscarora. As early as 1775, he offered his services to General
George Washington. Cook returned in January 1776 with a group to meet with
Philip Schuyler in
Albany and with Washington and
John Adams at
Cambridge, Massachusetts. Cook was with
Benedict Arnold on his
expedition into Quebec, when he was already known as "Colonel Louis." Washington met again with Cook in 1776. John Adams who saw the Natives at Cambridge said Colonel Louis ,” spoke English and French as well as Indian.”[1]Louis Cook was present at the siege at Fort Stanwix which resulted in a Patriot Victory. A story that illustrates Cook’s fierceness as a fighter was that“ Lous Atayutaghranghta noticed that an enemy Indian was a crack shot. When the warrior next rose to take aim, Louis fired. That fell will do no more harm.”[1] Declared Louis, who went to take the dead man’s scalp. Colonel Cook was a man of action who could be relied upon especially by the likes of our founding Fathers such as George Washington and John Adams.[2][2]General Washington even referred to Colonel Louis as ,” our friend.” General Washington was also relieved to hear that Colonel Louis had ,” returned safely from a mission.” In New York, Louis Cook was present at the
Battle of Oriskany, and participated in the
Saratoga Campaign. under General
Robert Van Rensselaer. Following the
Battle of Klock's Field, Cook forded a river in pursuit of
Sir John Johnson while General Rensselaer delayed. Infuriated, Colonel Louis shook his sword at Rensselaer and accused him of being a
Tory. Cook was with the Continental Army at
Valley Forge in the winter of 1777. In spring 1778,
Peter Stephen DuPonceau wrote of meeting Cook, dressed in American
regimentals, after hearing the officer singing a French aria. In March of that year, General
Philip Schuyler sent Cook to destroy British ships at Niagara in order to prevent another Canadian expedition. The nickname of "Colonel Louis" was made fact on June 15, 1779, when Cook received a commission from the
Continental Congress as a
lieutenant colonel in the
Continental Army. It is the only known Continental Army commission given to a man of known African descent. Colonel Louis led a Native American delegation to greet
General Rochambeau in 1780, where some officers noted he spoke French with no discernible accent. Louis was with Lieutenant-Colonel
Marinus Willett at the
Battle of Johnstown in 1781, one of the last North American battles of the Revolution. During the war, Cook became a personal enemy of Captain
Joseph Brant, a Mohawk who supported the British. When each returned to their homes after the war, their personal conflict divided the Mohawk nation. The
Seven Nations of Canada and the Iroquois at what would be the
Six Nations Reserve, who were mostly emigrants from the New York colony, were brought to the brink of war. ==Later life==