Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 8).djvu/187

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FALLEN TIMBER
183

thousand five hundred Indians in the field against the Americans."[1] May, with equally exaggerated reports, affirmed that there were "3,600 warriors" at the Auglaize River.[2] Not long after this Wayne entertained at his camp at Legionville several of the chiefs of the Allegheny, Cornplanter, New Arrow, Big Tree, and Guasutha. Pointing to the Ohio from where he sat, one of them—according to Posey's journal—said: "My Heart & mind is fixed on that River & may that water Continue to run & remain the boundary of everlasting Peice, between the white & Red People on its opposite shores."

Few who had been watching the western situation believed but that spring would bring war. The Indians did not even keep the promised truce. Major Adair, encamped beside the "Bloody Way" within sight of Fort St. Clair, was murderously attacked by Indians early in the morning of November 6. Six whites were killed and five wounded and a large number of packhorses purloined. However few attacks

  1. Id.
  2. Id., p. 243.