Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 8).djvu/147

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ST. CLAIR'S CAMPAIGN
143

and one whole dark week was spent here waiting for provisions. The condition of army discipline was probably indescribable. The Kentuckians, who formed the large portion of the militia, were not afraid of the savages but the lack of food completely demoralized them. On the last day of October a large party numbering at least sixty deserted, and, hastening down the roadway which the army had cut, threatened to seize the provision train that was supposed to be slowly nearing the sorry army. The threat cast a gloom over the army and St. Clair was compelled to order out the First Regiment, not so much in pursuit of the deserters,[1] as for the protection of the needed provisions. The army, weakened by the absence of this regiment, marched on—following an Indian trail that ran north from Greenville on the general alignment of the present Fort Recovery Road. St. Clair states the direction of the path as "north 25° west."[2]

Added to St. Clair's many discourage-

  1. The St. Clair Papers, vol. ii, p. 257.
  2. American State Papers, vol. iv (Indian Affairs, vol. i), p. 137.