[032] Charles Schultz, Jr., was the author of Travels on an inland voyage through the states of New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee, and through the territories of Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, and New Orleans; performed in the years 1807 and 1808 (New York, 1810).—Ed.
[033] On Louisville and the Falls of the Ohio, see Croghan's Journals, in our volume i, note 106.—Ed.
[034] For sketch of Shippingsport, see Cuming's Tour, in our volume iv, note 171.—Ed.
[035] For the history of the canal at the Falls of the Ohio, see Nuttall's Journal, in our volume xiii, note 40.—Ed.
[036] On Clarksville see André Michaux's Travels, in our volume iii, note 123.—Ed.
[037] New Albany, founded in 1813, is just below Louisville, in Floyd County, Indiana.—Ed.
[038] Corn Island was the site of the first settlement at Louisville. George Rogers Clark built a fort on the island in the spring of 1778, to protect his supplies. The twenty families who had followed him to Kentucky established themselves at the lower end, where the land was most elevated, and during the summer raised the crop of corn from which it is said the island derived its name. It stood just above the present Louisville-Albany bridge, in the elbow of the stream; in Clark's time it had an area of at least seven acres, but it has now been almost entirely obliterated both by the erosion of the stream and the operations of a neighboring cement mill which has used the island as a quarry.—Ed.
[039] Jeffersonville, laid out in 1802, is opposite Louisville, in Clark County, Indiana.—Ed.
[040] The same name is applied locally to the hills which extend nearly fifty miles to the northward of the river.—Ed.
[041] Volney.—James.