[159] Clark adds, in thoroughly hostile tone, that Wayne would have answered it but for the intervention of General Wilkinson.—Fol. 50.

[160] As mentioned in our narrative, p. 182, it was to a “fallen timber” on the Bloody Way between Forts Hamilton and St. Clair that Girty with a party of Indians went in the fall of 1792 on a raiding expedition. The name is preserved, at least in one instance, in West Virginia in Fallen Timber Run, Wetzel County. The modern spelling is “Fallen Timbers.”

[161] See ante, page 18, note 2. The original of Clark’s Memoir is found in the Draper MSS., xlvii J, fols. 1-128.

[162] See ante, page 53.

[163] Draper MSS., xxv J, fols. 14-60.

[164] Id., xxiv, fol. 9; xxv, fols. 14-20, 60.

[165] Id., fols. 14, 43.

[166] Id., xxiv, fol. 9.

[167] Id.

[168] Id., fols. 49, 50.