Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 8).djvu/195

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FALLEN TIMBER
191

present; on the twentieth, twenty-four hundred. Of these, eighteen hundred were warriors. It was unanimously agreed that the Ohio should be made the boundary line and that the Indians be paid for Kentucky. Simon Girty, Governor Simcoe's aide-de-camp, a Lieutenant Silvy of the Fifth (British) Regiment, and another British officer remained at Colonel McKee's house, which was fifty yards distant from the council fire.

In the evenings the head chiefs, especially those of the Shawanese and Delaware nations, met with Colonel McKee and his guests. "McKee always promised that the King, their Father, would protect them & afford them every thing they wanted in case they went to war. . . Advise that they ought not to make Peace upon any other terms than to make the Ohio the boundary line. After the final decision, McKee furnished the savages with arms, ammunition, scalping knives and Tomahawks even more than they could use this winter." On the twenty-eighth of July the Indians separated to reassemble "at au-Glaize twenty-four days from that time"