Williams traveled with his unit to
Fort McHenry on September 10, 1814, two days before the British landed near Baltimore. During the bombardment on September 13th and 14th, Williams was posted with an infantry detachment of 600 men in the dry ditch surrounding the fort to repulse any British land assault. He and his fellow soldiers endured a 25-hour bombardment wherein over 1,500 explosive shells were fired at the fort and its gun crews. Williams was severely wounded, having his “leg blown off by a cannon ball” Williams served with the 38th U.S. Infantry until October 25, 1814 when he presented to the 10th District General Military Hospital in Baltimore due to
tuberculosis-related symptoms. Dr.
Tobias Watkins, Regimental Surgeon of the 38th U.S. Infantry, treated him, but Williams died at the hospital while still a soldier on March 19, 1815. His former enslaver Benjamin Oden petitioned Congress in 1832 for the right to be issued Williams' potential service-related land bounty, but was rejected by the House Committee on Private Land Claims in March 1836. to join the U.S. Army, from a runaway slave notice on May 16, 1814, in the
Baltimore, Maryland newspaper,
American Commercial and Daily Advertiser == See also ==