[35] D. D. Wallace: The Life of Henry Laurens, Appendix iv.

[36] See also Hewit in Carroll's Collections, i, 435. Fort Prince George was located in the fork of the Six Mile Creek and Keowee River, in the southwestern part of Pickens County, and was completed probably by the end of 1753 (South Carolina Gazette, December 17, 1753).

[37] North Carolina Colonial Records, v, 140.

[38] Cited in Channing, History of the United States, ii, 5-73 n.

[39] North Carolina Colonial Records, v, 333, 357.

[40] Moravian Community Diary.

[41] North Carolina Colonial Records, v, 849.

[42] Virginia Historical Magazine, xiii, 225-264. North Carolina Colonial Records, v, 560, 617.

[43] North Carolina Colonial Records, v, 579.

[44] North Carolina Colonial Records, v, 641, 742, 849. Cf. also Hunter: Sketches of Western North Carolina, 325.