William Henry Harrison (:
the battle of Tippecanoe
It was Tippecanoe and Tyler Too
Lieutenant General Thomas Jonathon Jackson's nickname was Stonewall.
His nickname is Black Jack
The Shawnee chief at the battle of Tippecanoe was Tecumseh.
He became known as "Old Tippecanoe" after the winning the Battle of Tippecanoe against the Shawnee Indians where the Tippecanoe River joins the Wabash in Indiana on November 7, 1811.
Harrison was known as Old Tippecanoe or Tippecanoe or, maybe for short, Old Tip, in honor of his victory at the Battle of Tippecanoe. Also called The Soldier of Tippecanoe.
Dwight David Eisenhower Dwight David Eisenhower
"Old Tippecanoe," or sometimes, just "Old Tip."
San Antonio, Texas acquired the nickname of Alamo City!
Tippecanoe is a nickname that ninth U.S. President William Henry Harrison got after he, as Governor of the Indiana Territory, and 1000 troops defeated an army of Shawnee Native Americans near the juncture of the Tippecanoe and Wabash Rivers in 1811.
The little-known U.S. Grant, who acquired his nickname here, after demanding 'Unconditional Surrender').
Tippecanoe was the nickname of William Henry Harrison. He received the nickname after a battle against native Americans near the Tippecanoe River when he was Governor of the Indiana Territory. His running mate in the 1840 presidential election was John Tyler.
It's a nickname he has acquired.
Gen. Thomas Jonathan 'Stonewall' Jackson
the battle of Tippecanoe
Harrison was the commanding general for the US army in this battle with the Shawnee, led by Tecumseh and his brother, the Prophet on November 7,1811. He caught them by surprise, had a hard fight until they ran out of ammunition and retreated. He burned their village and claimed a victory which was much heralded, although it did not end the threat of Indians there.