On 4 March 1791, Kirkwood was commissioned as a Captain in the
Second Infantry Regiment, raised in response to the losses during the 1790
Harmar Campaign. Kirkwood's home in
Wheeling was attacked that May. Although ill, Kirkwood accompanied his company when his regiment departed
Fort Washington in September 1791. On the morning of 4 November, a
coalition of Native American tribes attacked the combined forces under General
Arthur St. Clair, encamped on the banks of the
Wabash River near the present-day border of
Ohio and
Indiana. Kirkwood was seen rallying his troops, but was soon shot in the abdomen. According to the journal of
Ebenezer Denny, another wounded officer, Captain Jacob Slough, found Kirkwood leaning against a tree and offered to help him move. Kirkwood responded “No, I am dying, save yourself if you can, and leave me to my fate.” Captain Slough later recorded that Kirkwood feared capture by the Native American, and asked Slough to
kill him, stating “God knows how they will treat me.” Slough “shook him by the hand, and left him to his fate.” The United States retreated in disarray. Kirkwood's fate was uncertain, but he is listed among the 39 officers and 630 people killed at
St. Clair's defeat. Virginia governor
Henry Lee wrote, “It was the thirty-third time he had risked his life for his country; and he died as he had lived, the brave, meritorious, unrewarded, Kirkwood.”
Nathanel Greene wrote, “No Man deserves better of his Country than Capt Kirkwood.” == Legacy ==