FOOTNOTES:
[A] To prove that this surrender was not in consequence of the want of ammunition and provisions, it is sufficient to state, upon the authority of official information, that there were thirty-three pieces of cannon, twenty-five of which were brass and eight iron, which were well manned and supplied with ammunition.
For the muskets, seventy-five thousand cartridges were made up, besides twenty-four rounds in the cartouch-box of each man.
In the magazine were sixty barrels of powder, and one hundred and fifty tons of lead.
In the contractor’s store were at least twenty-five days’ provision; and in the adjacent country considerable supplies could have been had, besides three hundred head of cattle, under an escort commanded by Captain Brush, at the River Raisin.
An Ohio Volunteer.
[B] Colonel Allen stopped at St. Mary’s for the remaining part of the army.
[C] He died in a few days.
[D] Pronounced Rushdeboo.
[E] We learned since, the British officer was Col. Elliott’s son, and was probably a Captain.