A marginal table gives the names of the farmers, and enumerates ten batteries, mounting one hundred and twenty-seven guns in all. The map is dedicated to Earl Percy.
A French reproduction of it. Plan de to Baie de Narragansett makes part of the Neptune Américo-septentrional, no. 6. It is given in fac-simile in the Mag. of Amer. Hist., July, 1879.
The Sparks Catalogue, p. 206, shows a "Map of the Nara Gansett Bay, by Lieut.-Col. Putnam, Jan. 7, 1776, presented to his Excellency, George Washington, Esq.;" but it is not among the maps at Cornell University.
There is in the British Museum a colored plan (1778) of Rhode Island and the adjacent islands and coast, made by Edward Page, second artillery (measuring 1 2-12 × 7 6-12 inches); and a colored view of Bristol Neck (1765).
Modern eclectic war maps of the bay are given in Lossing's Field-Book, ii. 80; Carrington's Battles, 456 (the last repeated in the R. I. Hist. Mag., 1884, p. 106).
The despatch of Pigot to his government is in the Gent. Mag., Nov., 1778, p. 537; in Dawson; in Rider's R. I. Hist. Tracts, vi.; in Newport Hist. Mag., ii. 253; in E. M. Stone's Our French Allies, p. 111. Cf. also paper of Aug. 31, to Clinton, in London Gazette, Oct. 15; Gent. Mag., Nov., 1778; Almon's Remembrancer; Stone's French Allies. See diaries at Newport in Hist. Mag., 1860, and Mrs. Almy's in Newport Hist. Mag., July, 1880. Stedman (ii. ch. 23, 24) tells the story.
The loyal wits had now their chance, and some of their effusions can be seen in Moore's Songs and Ballads of the Rev., p. 231. Wells (S. Adams, iii. 38) traces the effect of Sullivan's retreat on the country. Upon the general management of the campaign a committee of Congress reported, Aug. 7, on the early stages (Journals, iii. 9). An orderly-book of Glover's is in the Essex Inst. Hist. Coll. (vol. v.; cf. also i. p. 112), and another is noted in the Cooke Catal. no. 1,897. Maj. Gibbs' diary (Aug.) is in Penna. Archives, vol. vi. A diary of Manassah Cutler, who was a chaplain in Titcomb's regiment, is in E. M. Stone's Our French Allies, p. xv. Lafayette gave an account fifty years afterwards which is in the Hist. Mag., Aug., 1861. His letters to Washington are in Sparks's Corresp. of the Rev. (ii. 181, 196). Cf. also Sparks's Washington, v. 29, 40, 45; vi., etc.; Irving's Washington, iii. ch. 36; Marshall's Washington, iv.; Bancroft, ix. 209, 357; x. ch. 5; Greene's letter in Sparks's Corresp. of the Rev., ii. 188, and Greene's Greene, ii. 100, etc. A long letter of Dr. Cooper of Boston, Aug., 1778, to Franklin, defending D'Estaing's action, in Hale's Franklin in France, p. 183; Heath's Memoirs; John Trumbull's Autobiog. 51; Stuart's Gov. Trumbull, ch. 32; Williams' Gen. Barton, ch. 3; Arnold's Rhode Island, ii. 419; Barry's Mass., ii. 150; Hamilton's Republic of the U. S., i. ch. 17. There are rolls of the campaign in the Mass. Archives; and in N. H. Rev. Rolls, ii. 500, 508. Connecticut did not respond (Hist. Mag., ii. 7; cf. also iv. 145).