Page:Henry Adams' History of the United States Vol. 3.djvu/323

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1806.
CLAIBORNE AND WILKINSON.
311

to Senator Smith of Ohio, the contractor for his supplies:[1]

"I have made the last effort at conciliation in a solemn appeal to Governor Cordero at Nacogdoches, who is chief in command on this frontier. Colonel Gushing bore my letter, and is now with the Don. I expect his return in four days; and then,—I believe, my friend, I shall be obliged to fight and flog them."

Governor Cordero, whose object was probably no more than to restrict American possession within the narrowest possible limits, withdrew his troops from Bayou Pierre, September 27, to the west bank of the Sabine, and left open to Wilkinson the road to the eastern bank. The Spanish forces recrossed the Sabine before September 30, but a week later, October 8, General Wilkinson had not begun his ostentatious march, of some fifty miles, to retake possession of the east bank of the river.

On the evening of October 8, General Wilkinson was sitting with Colonel Gushing, of the Second Infantry, alone in the Colonel's quarters at Natchitoches, discussing the military problem before them, when a young man was introduced who said that his name was Swartwout, and that he brought a letter of introduction from General Dayton. After some little ordinary talk. Colonel Gushing having for a moment been called out of the room, Swartwout slipped into General Wilkinson's hands a packet

  1. Wilkinson to Smith, Sept. 28, 1806; Senate Report, Dec. 31, 1807, p. 41.