Footnote 63: At Fort George, at the head of Lake George.[(Back)]

Footnote 64: Volleys.[(Back)]

Footnote 65: It was the king's birthday. The firing of twenty-one heavy guns formed a royal salute.[(Back)]

Footnote 66: Bridge.[(Back)]

Footnote 67: Fort Musquito was a breastwork cast up at the mouth of Snooks' creek.[(Back)]

Footnote 68: This was a nickname for the regular troops, who were dressed in scarlet uniforms.[(Back)]

Footnote 69: Wrestled.[(Back)]

Footnote 70: Fort Anne was erected in 1757, a year before the occurrences here narrated took place. It was a strong blockhouse of logs, with portholes for cannon and loopholes for musketry, and surrounded by a picket of pine-saplings. When the writer visited the spot in 1848, he dug up the part of one of the pickets yet remaining in the earth, and, on splitting it, it emitted the pleasant odor of a fresh pine-log, though ninety years had elapsed since it was placed there. This fort was near the bank of Wood creek, about eleven miles from the head of Lake Champlain, at the village of Whitehall. It was in the line of Burgoyne's march toward the Hudson, in 1777; and near it quite a severe skirmish took place between Colonel Long, of Schuyler's army, and a British detachment under Colonel Hill, on the 8th of July, the day after Ticonderoga was abandoned to the enemy. Victory was almost within the grasp of Colonel Long, when his ammunition failed, and he was compelled to retreat.[(Back)]

Footnote 71: Canoe.[(Back)]

Footnote 72: Fort Misery.[(Back)]