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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Diary of Captain John Cooke, 1794, by
-Anonymous
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Diary of Captain John Cooke, 1794
-
-Author: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: June 4, 2021 [eBook #65499]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DIARY OF CAPTAIN JOHN COOKE,
-1794 ***
-
-
-
-
- Diary of Captain John Cooke, 1794
-
-
- Prepared by the Staff of the Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen
- County
- 1953
-
-
-One of a historical series, this pamphlet is published under the
-direction of the governing Boards of the Public Library of Fort Wayne
-and Allen County.
-
- BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE SCHOOL CITY OF FORT WAYNE
-
- B. F. Geyer, President
- Joseph E. Kramer, Secretary
- W. Page Yarnelle, Treasurer
- Willard Shambaugh
- Mrs. Sadie Fulk Roehrs
-
- PUBLIC LIBRARY BOARD FOR ALLEN COUNTY
-
-The members of this Board include the members of the Board of Trustees
-of the School City of Fort Wayne (with the same officers), together with
-the following citizens chosen from Allen County outside the corporate
-city of Fort Wayne:
-
- James E. Graham
- Arthur Niemeier
- Mrs. Glenn Henderson
- Mrs. Charles Reynolds
-
-
-
-
- FOREWORD
-
-
-Primary source materials relating to General Wayne’s sojourn at Fort
-Wayne are scarce. Extracts from the diary of one of his captains were
-published in the FORT WAYNE GAZETTE eighty years ago.
-
-The Boards and the Staff of the Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen
-County reprint these extracts in the hope that they will be interesting
-and informative to students of local history. Grammar, spelling, and
-punctuation have been changed to conform to current usage.
-
- Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
- June, 1873
-
-To the Editors of the GAZETTE:
-
-The following extracts from the journal of Captain John Cooke of the
-Fourth Sublegion of General Wayne’s army will be of interest to your
-antiquary (if Fort Wayne is old enough to boast of antiquities), since
-it contains the earliest market quotations of your city, notices of the
-first sermons preached there, etc.
-
-Captain Cooke was a son of Colonel William Cooke, Twelfth Pennsylvania
-Regiment of the Continental Establishment; he entered the legal
-profession, which he later abandoned for that of arms. He afterward
-lived and died at Northumberland Town, Pennsylvania.
-
-His son, Jacob Cooke, Esq., is the possessor of this journal, which is
-written in a very scholarly hand and with great observance of details,
-most of which I have omitted as of no interest to the general reader. In
-the summer of 1792, Captain Cooke returned with General Wayne; with a
-party of officers on furlough to Philadelphia, he was personally
-introduced by General Wayne to General Washington. His fellow-officers
-accompanied him to a fashionable boarding school in Philadelphia. There,
-in his battle-stained clothes, he married his cousin, Jennie Cooke of
-Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
-
- John B. Linn
-
-
-September 17, 1794
-
-At 6:00 a.m. the army marched thirteen or fourteen miles to the Miami
-villages. We halted more than two hours near the ground where a part of
-Harmar’s army was defeated and directly opposite the point formed by the
-St. Joseph and the St. Mary’s rivers, until the ground was
-reconnoitered. It was late when the army crossed and encamped; our tents
-were not all pitched before dark.
-
-
-September 18, 1794
-
-Strong breastworks were ordered thrown up; since timber was very scarce,
-we were obliged to make them of earth. Four deserters came into camp
-from the British garrison.
-
-
-September 19, 1794
-
-Heavy rains and violent windstorms lasted throughout the night. The men
-still continued to work at the breastworks until 10:00 a.m.; then they
-were obliged to quit because of heavy rain. An express arrived from
-General Barbie informing us of his approach and stating that he would be
-here tomorrow. We began to build a fish dam across the Miami [Maumee].
-
-
-September 20, 1794
-
-The night was stormy with frequent, hard claps of thunder. General
-Barbie arrived with his command and brought provisions for the army;
-several private stores were brought to camp with this command. Current
-prices are as follows: mutton and beef, 25 cents; bacon, 75 cents;
-sugar, coffee, and chocolate, $1 per pound; butter, 75 cents; whisky, $8
-per gallon; cheese, $1 per pound.
-
- [Illustration: “The sermon was delivered by Rev. David Jones”]
-
-
-September 21, 1794 (Sunday)
-
-General Todd’s brigade of volunteers started for Greenville this
-morning. Under his command and direction were all the quartermaster’s
-and contractor’s horses, for the purpose of conducting our supplies. We
-attended divine service; the sermon was delivered by Rev. David Jones,
-chaplain. Mr. Jones chose for his text, Romans 8:31: “But what shall we
-then say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us?” This
-was the first time the army had been called together for the purpose of
-attending divine service since I joined it. [Rev. David Jones was
-Wayne’s chaplain during the Revolution. He served also as chaplain
-during the War of 1812. A copy of the sermon, preached from the same
-text at Ticonderoga, will be found in Lossing’s PICTORIAL FIELD-BOOK OF
-THE REVOLUTION, volume 2; a biographical sketch is also included.
-Horatio Gates Jones, Esq., the distinguished lawyer of Philadelphia, is
-a grandson of this chaplain.]
-
-
-September 22, 1794
-
-Two hundred men were ordered to cut timber and to prepare to raise a
-garrison. The ground laid out for the garrison is on the south side of
-the Maumee River, nearly opposite the confluence of the St. Mary’s and
-St. Joseph rivers. Three men deserted from the First Sublegion. Today
-the men began to draw full rations of flour, which had been stopped for
-some time.
-
-
-September 26, 1794
-
-No salt is available. I received a letter from Lieutenant Lee at Fort
-Defiance. He informs me that eleven men have actually deserted; and
-eight more are missing—either killed, deserted, or taken; the total
-rises to twenty-one, all since the thirteenth of this month. Miller, one
-of our spies, brought word that he had discovered an Indian and the
-trail of fourteen or fifteen more. A party of Kentucky volunteers was
-immediately dispatched after them and overtook them at sundown; but
-before they could complete their preparations for attack, the Indians
-had discovered them and had escaped unharmed. The fish basket is nearly
-completed.
-
-
-September 27, 1794
-
-Large hailstones fell during a heavy hailstorm, which lasted ten
-minutes.
-
-
-September 28, 1794 (Sunday)
-
-A man deserted from Captain Thompson’s company, now commanded by Captain
-Bines. This desertion seems somewhat extraordinary after McClellan’s
-[Robert McClellan, or McClelland, afterwards a famous trapper of the
-Rocky Mountains and immortalized in Washington Irving’s ASTORIA] report
-to the commander that he had, in accordance with orders, killed one of
-the deserters he was sent after and had seen two more who were killed
-and scalped. The contractors are out of beef and bread, and not a grain
-of salt is to be had. Major Price arrived bringing with him one hundred
-fifty bullocks. He informed me that four or five waiters, who had been
-sent for stores for officers, and who had preceded the escort, were
-killed about five miles from Greenville. Nelly Bundy was taken at the
-same time.
-
-
-September 29, 1794
-
-A heavy rain began at 4:00 p.m. The storm, accompanied with thunder and
-a whirlwind, blew down the top of a very large tree within a few steps
-of General Wayne’s marquee.
-
-
-October 2, 1794
-
-General Barbie, with his brigade of volunteers, was ordered to
-Greenville to escort our provisions. This raised great confusion among
-the volunteers, who had expected a discharge in accordance with the
-promise made to them some time before.
-
-
-October 6, 1794
-
-One hundred militiamen turned out voluntarily to work on the garrison.
-
-
-October 7, 1794
-
-A boat was built by the artificers and was launched. Mr. Tharp, the
-principal artificer, told me it would carry twenty-five barrels of
-flour.
-
-
-October 9, 1794
-
-A blockhouse on the bank of the river was begun today. The boat which
-was launched yesterday was loaded with salt and whisky for Fort Defiance
-but had not gone one mile before she was run upon a rock and sunk. The
-stores were all saved. McClellan, with six or seven spies, started up
-the St. Joseph River, intending to be gone for five days. The volunteers
-worked one half-day at the blockhouse.
-
- [Illustration: “... a French trader ... brought with him three
- prisoners....”]
-
-An express arrived this evening with the intelligence that Mr. Elliot,
-the contractor, was fired upon and was killed while traveling between
-Fort Washington [now Cincinnati] and Fort Hamilton.
-
-
-October 13, 1794
-
-A French trader, whose brother we took in the action of August 21,
-arrived in camp and brought with him three prisoners to exchange for his
-brother. One of them was a young girl of about thirteen years, who was
-taken near the Muskingum River about three years ago. Her
-brother-in-law, who is now among the Kentucky volunteers, called upon
-the commander and got her.
-
-The trader said that there had been fourteen hundred Indians in action
-on August 20; thirty-three were killed and seventy-six were wounded; the
-chiefs were then all in Detroit in council; Captains Brandt, Elliott,
-and G. Simcoe were with them; McKee’s son was killed in the action as
-well as five other white men; all the nations except the Shawnee are for
-peace.
-
-The other two prisoners were soldiers who were taken at the time Lowry
-was defeated. Four hundred Chippewa, awaiting the arrival of our army,
-accompanied the fourteen hundred mentioned above; but they got impatient
-and went home. The letter, written by White Eyes [sic] to General Wayne
-demanding ten days, was an endeavor to gain time to get the four hundred
-Chippewa back. Fifteen of the warriors—five chiefs and ten warriors—were
-Ottawa. The Indians, stationed between us and the British garrison [Fort
-Campbell], watch for our deserters, whom they carry into the garrison
-and sell to the British for twenty-five pounds. Those who will not
-enlist when they are purchased are put to hard labor with the
-wheelbarrow. One of our men who deserted from Defiance was pursued,
-brought back, immediately tried by court-martial, and executed.
-
- [Illustration: “... and executed....”]
-
-
-October 17, 1794
-
-A boat forty feet long by twelve feet wide, built upon the Kentucky
-plan, was launched today. It was built for the purpose of carrying
-provisions down the Miami from here to Fort Defiance. The garrison is
-still far from being finished. [The Maumee River is noted on maps of
-1794 and previous maps as the Upper Miami River.]
-
-
-October 19, 1794 (Sunday)
-
-At ten o’clock church call was beat. The troops fell in and marched by
-platoons out of the square to the front of the garrison, where a
-discourse on Romans 13:1 was delivered by Mr. Jones, chaplain.
-
-
-October 21, 1794
-
-Fatigue duty was discontinued by a general order which detailed the
-companies to remain in the garrison. Lieutenant Colonel Hamtramck was to
-command the companies of Captains Kingsbury, Spark, Preston, Greaton,
-and Reed; Captain Porter, of artillery; Subalterns Strong, Bradley,
-Brady, Campbell, Wright, and Massey. Lieutenant Wade was assigned duty
-as fort major.
-
-
-October 22, 1794
-
-Colonel Hamtramck marched the troops to the garrison at 7:00 a.m. After
-a discharge of fifteen guns, he named the fort by a garrison order,
-“Fort Wayne.” He then marched his command into it.
-
-Captain Kibby, with his company of spies, was directed to proceed up the
-St. Mary’s River to Fort Adams to ascertain the situation of the river
-with respect to navigation. He took with him the canoe and three days’
-provisions.
-
-
-October 25, 1794
-
-Captain Kibby sent back an express informing the general of the
-impossibility of navigating the St. Mary’s River. He begged permission
-to return but was peremptorily ordered to continue to Fort Adams.
-
-
-October 27, 1794
-
-At 11:00 a.m. the army proceeded on the line of march on General
-Harmar’s trace; after four and one-half miles we came to a large swamp.
-At about 3:00 p.m. we heard the discharge of several cannons in our
-rear; the firing was generally supposed to be at a dinner given by
-Colonel Hamtramck for the officers of the garrison. We encamped at 4:00
-p.m. after marching eight and one-half miles.
-
-
-October 28, 1794
-
-We marched sixteen miles very rapidly and halted by a small stream of
-water.
-
-
-October 29, 1794
-
-Marching twelve miles, we reached the St. Mary’s River at 3:00 p.m. We
-crossed the river and encamped at one of General Harmar’s camps.
-Formerly a Frenchman by the name of La Source [sic] lived here. The
-woods on the north side of the St. Mary’s River is very thick.
-
- [Illustration: “... and after three cheers ...”]
-
-
-October 30, 1794
-
-We marched at sunrise; after thick woods for a mile and a half, we
-entered an open, extensive prairie through which we marched four miles
-and struck General Wayne’s trace from Recovery, Ohio, to the St. Mary’s
-River. The prairie is, I judge, five miles long and four miles wide. We
-continued our march up the St. Mary’s River for Girty’s Town, ten miles
-away. Captain Kibby reported very unfavorably with regard to the
-navigation of the river; he said it may do for canoes or pirogues in
-high water.
-
-
-October 31, 1794
-
-The army fortified a camp and remained in it all day.
-
-
-November 1, 1794
-
-Starting before sunrise, we marched through some old Indian towns until
-we struck Hartshorne’s road; we then cut from Greenville to Girty’s
-Town. By rapid marching to the sixteen-mile tree, we made twenty-one
-miles today.
-
-
-November 2, 1794 (Sunday)
-
-After an early start and seven miles of rapid marching, we came to a
-bridge built by Major Hughes. The whole legion crossed and traveled
-three miles, halted, and were refreshed. In two hours we marched six
-miles to Greenville; after the discharge of several guns and after three
-cheers, the men were assigned to their respective huts, which we found
-very much out of repair.
-
-
-November 3, 1794
-
-Lieutenant Brady arrived at Greenville with a command from Fort Wayne.
-[This was General Hugh Brady, who died at Detroit some years ago.]
-
-
-November 5, 1794
-
-General Wilkinson, Colonel Strong, Doctor General Allison [sic], Captain
-Fort, and others, escorted by Lieutenant Brady and his command, started
-for Fort Washington. [These were all old Revolutionary War Hawks. Doctor
-Allison was surgeon of General Potter’s brigade during the Revolution;
-General Wilkinson and General Gates were adjutant generals at Saratoga.]
-
-
-FORT WAYNE GAZETTE, June 17, 1873
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Silently corrected a few typos.
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DIARY OF CAPTAIN JOHN COOKE,
-1794 ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Diary of Captain John Cooke, 1794, by Anonymous</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Diary of Captain John Cooke, 1794</div>
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-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DIARY OF CAPTAIN JOHN COOKE, 1794 ***</div>
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Diary of Captain John Cooke, 1794" width="600" height="932" />
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1><span class="cur">Diary of Captain John Cooke, 1794</span></h1>
-<p class="center smaller"><span class="ssn">Prepared by the Staff of the Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County
-<br />1953</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_i">i</div>
-<p class="tb">One of a historical series, this pamphlet is published under the direction
-of the governing Boards of the Public Library of Fort Wayne and
-Allen County.</p>
-<p class="center">BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE SCHOOL CITY OF FORT WAYNE</p>
-<dl class="undent"><dt>B. F. Geyer, President</dt>
-<dt>Joseph E. Kramer, Secretary</dt>
-<dt>W. Page Yarnelle, Treasurer</dt>
-<dt>Willard Shambaugh</dt>
-<dt>Mrs. Sadie Fulk Roehrs</dt></dl>
-<p class="center">PUBLIC LIBRARY BOARD FOR ALLEN COUNTY</p>
-<p>The members of this Board include the members of the Board of
-Trustees of the School City of Fort Wayne (with the same officers), together
-with the following citizens chosen from Allen County outside the corporate
-city of Fort Wayne:</p>
-<dl class="undent"><dt>James E. Graham</dt>
-<dt>Arthur Niemeier</dt>
-<dt>Mrs. Glenn Henderson</dt>
-<dt>Mrs. Charles Reynolds</dt></dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_ii">ii</div>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small">FOREWORD</span></h2>
-<p>Primary source materials relating to General Wayne&rsquo;s sojourn at Fort Wayne are
-scarce. Extracts from the diary of one of his captains were published in the FORT
-WAYNE GAZETTE eighty years ago.</p>
-<p>The Boards and the Staff of the Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County reprint
-these extracts in the hope that they will be interesting and informative to students
-of local history. Grammar, spelling, and punctuation have been changed to conform to
-current usage.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
-<p class="jr1">Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
-<br />June, 1873</p>
-<p>To the Editors of the GAZETTE:</p>
-<p>The following extracts from the journal of Captain John Cooke of the Fourth Sublegion
-of General Wayne&rsquo;s army will be of interest to your antiquary (if Fort Wayne is
-old enough to boast of antiquities), since it contains the earliest market quotations of
-your city, notices of the first sermons preached there, etc.</p>
-<p>Captain Cooke was a son of Colonel William Cooke, Twelfth Pennsylvania Regiment
-of the Continental Establishment; he entered the legal profession, which he later
-abandoned for that of arms. He afterward lived and died at Northumberland Town,
-Pennsylvania.</p>
-<p>His son, Jacob Cooke, Esq., is the possessor of this journal, which is written in
-a very scholarly hand and with great observance of details, most of which I have omitted
-as of no interest to the general reader. In the summer of 1792, Captain Cooke returned
-with General Wayne; with a party of officers on furlough to Philadelphia, he was personally
-introduced by General Wayne to General Washington. His fellow-officers
-accompanied him to a fashionable boarding school in Philadelphia. There, in his battle-stained clothes,
-he married his cousin, Jennie Cooke of Lancaster, Pennsylvania.</p>
-<p><span class="lr">John B. Linn</span></p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_2">2</div>
-<p class="tb">September 17, 1794</p>
-<p>At 6:00 a.m. the army marched thirteen or fourteen miles to the Miami villages.
-We halted more than two hours near the ground where a part of Harmar&rsquo;s army was defeated
-and directly opposite the point formed by the St. Joseph and the St. Mary&rsquo;s
-rivers, until the ground was reconnoitered. It was late when the army crossed and encamped;
-our tents were not all pitched before dark.</p>
-<p class="tb">September 18, 1794</p>
-<p>Strong breastworks were ordered thrown up; since timber was very scarce, we
-were obliged to make them of earth. Four deserters came into camp from the British
-garrison.</p>
-<p class="tb">September 19, 1794</p>
-<p>Heavy rains and violent windstorms lasted throughout the night. The men still
-continued to work at the breastworks until 10:00 a.m.; then they were obliged to quit
-because of heavy rain. An express arrived from General Barbie informing us of his
-approach and stating that he would be here tomorrow. We began to build a fish dam
-across the Miami [Maumee].</p>
-<p class="tb">September 20, 1794</p>
-<p>The night was stormy with frequent, hard claps of thunder. General Barbie arrived
-with his command and brought provisions for the army; several private stores were
-brought to camp with this command. Current prices are as follows: mutton and beef,
-25 cents; bacon, 75 cents; sugar, coffee, and chocolate, $1 per pound; butter, 75 cents;
-whisky, $8 per gallon; cheese, $1 per pound.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_3">3</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig1">
-<img src="images/p01.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="939" />
-<p class="pcap">&ldquo;The sermon was delivered by Rev. David Jones&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_4">4</div>
-<p class="tb">September 21, 1794 (Sunday)</p>
-<p>General Todd&rsquo;s brigade of volunteers started for Greenville this morning. Under
-his command and direction were all the quartermaster&rsquo;s and contractor&rsquo;s horses, for the
-purpose of conducting our supplies. We attended divine service; the sermon was delivered
-by Rev. David Jones, chaplain. Mr. Jones chose for his text, Romans 8:31: &ldquo;But what
-shall we then say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us?&rdquo; This was
-the first time the army had been called together for the purpose of attending divine service
-since I joined it. [Rev. David Jones was Wayne&rsquo;s chaplain during the Revolution.
-He served also as chaplain during the War of 1812. A copy of the sermon, preached
-from the same text at Ticonderoga, will be found in Lossing&rsquo;s PICTORIAL FIELD-BOOK
-OF THE REVOLUTION, volume 2; a biographical sketch is also included. Horatio Gates
-Jones, Esq., the distinguished lawyer of Philadelphia, is a grandson of this chaplain.]</p>
-<p class="tb">September 22, 1794</p>
-<p>Two hundred men were ordered to cut timber and to prepare to raise a garrison.
-The ground laid out for the garrison is on the south side of the Maumee River, nearly
-opposite the confluence of the St. Mary&rsquo;s and St. Joseph rivers. Three men deserted
-from the First Sublegion. Today the men began to draw full rations of flour, which had
-been stopped for some time.</p>
-<p class="tb">September 26, 1794</p>
-<p>No salt is available. I received a letter from Lieutenant Lee at Fort Defiance.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_5">5</span>
-He informs me that eleven men have actually deserted; and eight more are missing&mdash;either
-killed, deserted, or taken; the total rises to twenty-one, all since the thirteenth
-of this month. Miller, one of our spies, brought word that he had discovered an Indian
-and the trail of fourteen or fifteen more. A party of Kentucky volunteers was immediately
-dispatched after them and overtook them at sundown; but before they could
-complete their preparations for attack, the Indians had discovered them and had escaped
-unharmed. The fish basket is nearly completed.</p>
-<p class="tb">September 27, 1794</p>
-<p>Large hailstones fell during a heavy hailstorm, which lasted ten minutes.</p>
-<p class="tb">September 28, 1794 (Sunday)</p>
-<p>A man deserted from Captain Thompson&rsquo;s company, now commanded by Captain
-Bines. This desertion seems somewhat extraordinary after McClellan&rsquo;s [Robert McClellan,
-or McClelland, afterwards a famous trapper of the Rocky Mountains and immortalized in
-Washington Irving&rsquo;s ASTORIA] report to the commander that he had, in accordance
-with orders, killed one of the deserters he was sent after and had seen two more who
-were killed and scalped. The contractors are out of beef and bread, and not a grain of
-salt is to be had. Major Price arrived bringing with him one hundred fifty bullocks. He
-informed me that four or five waiters, who had been sent for stores for officers, and who
-had preceded the escort, were killed about five miles from Greenville. Nelly Bundy
-was taken at the same time.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_6">6</div>
-<p class="tb">September 29, 1794</p>
-<p>A heavy rain began at 4:00 p.m. The storm, accompanied with thunder and a
-whirlwind, blew down the top of a very large tree within a few steps of General Wayne&rsquo;s
-marquee.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 2, 1794</p>
-<p>General Barbie, with his brigade of volunteers, was ordered to Greenville to escort
-our provisions. This raised great confusion among the volunteers, who had expected
-a discharge in accordance with the promise made to them some time before.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 6, 1794</p>
-<p>One hundred militiamen turned out voluntarily to work on the garrison.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 7, 1794</p>
-<p>A boat was built by the artificers and was launched. Mr. Tharp, the principal
-artificer, told me it would carry twenty-five barrels of flour.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 9, 1794</p>
-<p>A blockhouse on the bank of the river was begun today. The boat which was
-launched yesterday was loaded with salt and whisky for Fort Defiance but had not gone
-one mile before she was run upon a rock and sunk. The stores were all saved. McClellan,
-with six or seven spies, started up the St. Joseph River, intending to be gone for five
-days. The volunteers worked one half-day at the blockhouse.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_7">7</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig2">
-<img src="images/p02.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="939" />
-<p class="pcap">&ldquo;... a French trader ... brought with him three prisoners....&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
-<p>An express arrived this evening with the intelligence that Mr. Elliot, the contractor,
-was fired upon and was killed while traveling between Fort Washington [now
-Cincinnati] and Fort Hamilton.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 13, 1794</p>
-<p>A French trader, whose brother we took in the action of August 21, arrived in
-camp and brought with him three prisoners to exchange for his brother. One of them
-was a young girl of about thirteen years, who was taken near the Muskingum River about
-three years ago. Her brother-in-law, who is now among the Kentucky volunteers, called
-upon the commander and got her.</p>
-<p>The trader said that there had been fourteen hundred Indians in action on August
-20; thirty-three were killed and seventy-six were wounded; the chiefs were then all in
-Detroit in council; Captains Brandt, Elliott, and G. Simcoe were with them; McKee&rsquo;s
-son was killed in the action as well as five other white men; all the nations except the
-Shawnee are for peace.</p>
-<p>The other two prisoners were soldiers who were taken at the time Lowry was defeated.
-Four hundred Chippewa, awaiting the arrival of our army, accompanied the
-fourteen hundred mentioned above; but they got impatient and went home. The letter,
-written by White Eyes [sic] to General Wayne demanding ten days, was an endeavor to
-gain time to get the four hundred Chippewa back. Fifteen of the warriors&mdash;five chiefs
-and ten warriors&mdash;were Ottawa. The Indians, stationed between us and the British garrison
-[Fort Campbell], watch for our deserters, whom they carry into the garrison and
-sell to the British for twenty-five pounds. Those who will not enlist when they are purchased
-are put to hard labor with the wheelbarrow. One of our men who deserted from
-Defiance was pursued, brought back, immediately tried by court-martial, and executed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig3">
-<img src="images/p03.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="928" />
-<p class="pcap">&ldquo;... and executed....&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
-<p class="tb">October 17, 1794</p>
-<p>A boat forty feet long by twelve feet wide, built upon the Kentucky plan, was
-launched today. It was built for the purpose of carrying provisions down the Miami from
-here to Fort Defiance. The garrison is still far from being finished. [The Maumee River
-is noted on maps of 1794 and previous maps as the Upper Miami River.]</p>
-<p class="tb">October 19, 1794 (Sunday)</p>
-<p>At ten o&rsquo;clock church call was beat. The troops fell in and marched by platoons
-out of the square to the front of the garrison, where a discourse on Romans 13:1 was
-delivered by Mr. Jones, chaplain.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 21, 1794</p>
-<p>Fatigue duty was discontinued by a general order which detailed the companies
-to remain in the garrison. Lieutenant Colonel Hamtramck was to command the companies
-of Captains Kingsbury, Spark, Preston, Greaton, and Reed; Captain Porter, of artillery;
-Subalterns Strong, Bradley, Brady, Campbell, Wright, and Massey. Lieutenant Wade
-was assigned duty as fort major.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 22, 1794</p>
-<p>Colonel Hamtramck marched the troops to the garrison at 7:00 a.m. After a discharge
-of fifteen guns, he named the fort by a garrison order, &ldquo;Fort Wayne.&rdquo; He then
-marched his command into it.</p>
-<p>Captain Kibby, with his company of spies, was directed to proceed up the St.
-Mary&rsquo;s River to Fort Adams to ascertain the situation of the river with respect to
-navigation. He took with him the canoe and three days&rsquo; provisions.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
-<p class="tb">October 25, 1794</p>
-<p>Captain Kibby sent back an express informing the general of the impossibility of
-navigating the St. Mary&rsquo;s River. He begged permission to return but was peremptorily
-ordered to continue to Fort Adams.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 27, 1794</p>
-<p>At 11:00 a.m. the army proceeded on the line of march on General Harmar&rsquo;s
-trace; after four and one-half miles we came to a large swamp. At about 3:00 p.m.
-we heard the discharge of several cannons in our rear; the firing was generally supposed
-to be at a dinner given by Colonel Hamtramck for the officers of the garrison. We encamped
-at 4:00 p.m. after marching eight and one-half miles.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 28, 1794</p>
-<p>We marched sixteen miles very rapidly and halted by a small stream of water.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 29, 1794</p>
-<p>Marching twelve miles, we reached the St. Mary&rsquo;s River at 3:00 p.m. We crossed
-the river and encamped at one of General Harmar&rsquo;s camps. Formerly a Frenchman by the
-name of La Source [sic] lived here. The woods on the north side of the St. Mary&rsquo;s
-River is very thick.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig4">
-<img src="images/p04.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="907" />
-<p class="pcap">&ldquo;... and after three cheers ...&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
-<p class="tb">October 30, 1794</p>
-<p>We marched at sunrise; after thick woods for a mile and a half, we entered an
-open, extensive prairie through which we marched four miles and struck General Wayne&rsquo;s
-trace from Recovery, Ohio, to the St. Mary&rsquo;s River. The prairie is, I judge, five miles
-long and four miles wide. We continued our march up the St. Mary&rsquo;s River for Girty&rsquo;s
-Town, ten miles away. Captain Kibby reported very unfavorably with regard to the
-navigation of the river; he said it may do for canoes or pirogues in high water.</p>
-<p class="tb">October 31, 1794</p>
-<p>The army fortified a camp and remained in it all day.</p>
-<p class="tb">November 1, 1794</p>
-<p>Starting before sunrise, we marched through some old Indian towns until we struck
-Hartshorne&rsquo;s road; we then cut from Greenville to Girty&rsquo;s Town. By rapid marching to
-the sixteen-mile tree, we made twenty-one miles today.</p>
-<p class="tb">November 2, 1794 (Sunday)</p>
-<p>After an early start and seven miles of rapid marching, we came to a bridge built
-by Major Hughes. The whole legion crossed and traveled three miles, halted, and were
-refreshed. In two hours we marched six miles to Greenville; after the discharge of several
-guns and after three cheers, the men were assigned to their respective huts, which
-we found very much out of repair.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_14">14</div>
-<p class="tb">November 3, 1794</p>
-<p>Lieutenant Brady arrived at Greenville with a command from Fort Wayne. [This
-was General Hugh Brady, who died at Detroit some years ago.]</p>
-<p class="tb">November 5, 1794</p>
-<p>General Wilkinson, Colonel Strong, Doctor General Allison [sic], Captain Fort,
-and others, escorted by Lieutenant Brady and his command, started for Fort Washington.
-[These were all old Revolutionary War Hawks. Doctor Allison was surgeon of General
-Potter&rsquo;s brigade during the Revolution; General Wilkinson and General Gates were adjutant
-generals at Saratoga.]</p>
-<p class="tb">FORT WAYNE GAZETTE, June 17, 1873</p>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Silently corrected a few typos.</li>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-</ul>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DIARY OF CAPTAIN JOHN COOKE, 1794 ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
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