{{POV|date=May 2013}}
{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict=Battle of Woody Point
|image=[[File:Tonquin in 1811.jpg|300px]]
|caption=The Tonquin, passing the Columbia River bar in 1811.
|partof= The [[Maritime Fur Trade]]
|date=June 15–16, 1811
|place=off , [[Vancouver Island]], [[Clayoquot Sound]], [[Pacific Ocean]]
|result=Ship destroyed
|combatant1= American Fur Company
|combatant2= [[Nuu-chah-nulth]]
|commander1=[[...|23px]] [[Jonathan Thorn]] †
|commander2=unknown
|strength1=1 [[bark]]
|strength2=2 [[canoe|war-canoe]]s
|casualties1=22 killed<br/> 1 bark scuttled
|casualties2=~200 killed or wounded
}}
The Battle of Woody Point was an incident involving the [[Tla-o-qui-aht]] [[...|natives]] of the [[Pacific Northwest]] and a [[United States]]-registered [[merchant ship]]. After trading in the region for furs in June 1811, the American vessel was massacred by the natives and [[Scuttling|scuttle]]d by her crew off [[Vancouver Island]], in [[Clayoquot Sound]].
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Somehow Lieutenant Thorn realized the danger his ship was in and gave the orders to hoist the anchor and sails. At this moment the Nuu-chah-nulth revealed their weapons, killed Thorn, and began to attack the crewmen. The Nuu-chah-nulth were armed with knives and some pistols and immediately the Tonquin{{'}}s crew armed themselves and began to resist the boarders. Eventually the second canoe arrived and another wave of warriors came pouring onto the deck. The crew fell back into the cabins. Close quarters combat ensued until the Nuu-chah-nulth were defeated, though all but five of the crewmen died in the engagement. Four of the remaining men attempted to escape in their own canoe the following day but three of whom were killed by the Nuu-chah-nulth after a gale blew them onto the coastline.
Only one man, a half pilot named George Ramsay, or Lemazee, survived. One wounded man stayed aboard the Tonquin, James Lewis. After destroying the majority of Tonquin{{'}}s crew, the Nuu-chah-nulth returned to the Tonquin to plunder her. James Lewis was capable of reaching the powder magazine, once there he lit some of the powder and the resulting explosion sunk the ship, killed Lewis, and dozens of natives. The Nuu-chah-nulth acknowledged at least 100 dead and many more wounded, although other accounts say sixty-one to 200 natives were killed.