"dom of Nanles. Exiled.as it Were, to Sicily, ftfrpnt that pflodaud eeludjfd frdhi the eeu-' f ' jient, that court has, nevertheless, remained f faithfally and : itedfastly devoted to England. srV ''. As. a remuneration for twenty years' at(a(rh-'BWt-'iBdiibmiswonVKolh 'fee King and 9ue0n . have b'eefl arrested. .Th Qaeenwas put dn 'hoard a jsliip aud sent offto Constantinople. . The King, plundered, degraded, and' almost .confined to an only castle, beheld his most iitli vfaiate friend also arrested, ami dragged to the dungeons. In fine, thecondnct of the English xn Sicily, has been exactly correspondent to that i practised by them upon the Nabobs of India 1 ; , ' Certain it hythat the people of France have not cause to mourn at any mjshap. that may befal the house of Sieily nevertheless, sueh 'ingratitude and perfidy on the part of England tpwards Priuces who have, sacrificed their all lor her sake, and who, during the last twenty i ': years, haveif en her sonauy proofs of their ' devotedoess and aUa.chmit, is enough to excite ' 'the indignation even .'"of the most obdurate ! It is said, th&tthe QuWta!;, after hi arrivalat p- tJonstaatino pie; obtaiatd permission from the i-w Grand 8iyiioFto"eonje on shOrcAand make the ' best of her way by laud to II angary- Sad-and painful travelling, in a country where the roads : ... are seldo m or ever trodden by any kind of ear- 'flagej and which offer, to the traveller nothing tut obstructions in every shape. ,. for savages? the inhabitantappearto kMiiiyflnnded. ' ; H L: nappy racr, enjojniBj; wo , iuwi m us . ii-i'ni v ' o ihn necessaries of Iife.-i-Thev do not allow the i Mr. Tilteu Newcomb, . i. . . 1 'fiftyi di encampment, on KeaJC the British droms K,.M,5 use or spirilnons liquors in tneir country, .i Drig x ornenug uer ior mc ,r ry ,j- . - ---v-v ------ , 7i-i :r . . " , 1 ; c-i.x' - . t.' 't.. .fn,.A. nr1 onvp- their trnnns.thev however fttterrniturl f 1 l he lands or Hie creeKs are so pieasani anu, mates, us nest suiw bhcuiuswm".; t. " , I 1 " it 1 . "is n 1 r , . UHUfc tile: that their neighbors who' are' i shade orfniepee : and as .she is a very fast sailing Tassel, (stand. Major Powell who eommanded thefiri. raRwf Prize Master aiarra cans area, ana tne untish drums, ., ,a .ijijki and 12 men in the? arms, the riflemen advanced precipitately UlMl herfor 11'. . ........... . . . . -v - v 1 1 L?-i -1 . . i cniimT4KaM. KTsnu. rnwpu wnn rnnrnin.!i n lertile that their neighbors wno are a snaae or f Dienee 5 ana as ..sue m cijr v v-7 - r. " ; . wjsri- k.. a a.Arb' fAi mnoh onnfl,lAncP thnt he will arrive aafe ; tish torces was immediately taken nrUm... ino less liiwur u pwiuui , m , w nv iu . yy.. ,,-7 . j ; mi , ', ' i R Ji . .x- ucr. she sails nearly, as vweti as tneparama, aim 3 cucmj oiiiuicucu a me uijou our tro I think will make an excellent privateer-she from behind hoses, fences, &c. a coluinn a(j .Creelt Indians. 1 1 i -';';. FROM THE B6STOK CEjJTINJSl.! - te, ' PretlTIndiavsKi- the war.: with, this powerful Confederacy of the- Aborigines of the ,Lmeri can soil will probabfy'produce important ?qyent3.. the-reader may desire to be acquainted tlth a oni partienlars respecting them. . The Indians bear the national name of Mai' .xkogeesj but inhabiting, a tract of country in the ijtat'i f ueorgiaand the Mississippi-territory, wfcJCh is intersected by numerous Ureeks, they hav6 obtained and are known by the mare popu lar name, of Creek Indians,: and the Confede racy is div ided into various tribes such as A palaahec, Alibamas, Abecas, Cawiltaws, KoaibacV!, Coosas, Cobsacters, Chacsihomas, Natchez,' Oakmulgees, Oconees, Pakanas, Ta- cusas, Talepooses, . Weektiimkas, &c. a 6f whom are now dencwriinatcd cCrftcks. : They are in treaty with the United Btates(or fb H8eTne1aujMagev0f the administration prints re our savage al!s.ir) In If OO 1 and 1790, President Washington concluded with the King's, Chiefs and Warriors of the C reck Na tions of Indians " two treaties of Peace and Friendship." c ,' ,"!"!-vvl . liie first was neerotiated by ueneral Knox - r . conoisiB oi 1 articles. -xy me jirsi," peiyem ; - peace andfriendshipiva&jfromise d, between , .thi - eoutraeting parties." By the 22d, the . Creeks acknowledge themselves to be nuder the protection of the IJ. States, and no other sover- iftign!, . The 3d stipulates for the mutnal resto- t ration of prisoners. By the 4th, the boonda- ries of jhe territories t the Creeks are pointed has been a Spanish sloop f war J a 4? rencn vancen in ironr, out mey were an soon compel sloop of war an English Packet j and is how a , cd to lay down their arms, Several made thejp Yankee prize j ;and-is; a fi ne vessel. .: escap 'and secreted themselves 111 cellar,, N,B.Tn the action with the fdrgi ana, we j chambers, .c. . . hml killed. Mit. Sehrinir 1st Lieut. Mr Jack- , The loss 4jn the side' of theenemvisnoteM., Mwnv in onimii. hut wno on tnp. fiBore' reel mucn eonuaence vnai nc nunyw" , ..... .....-...j iisoiin of civilization have little to boast, have been, she sails nearly as ; well as the Saratoga, Inilucea frequently to brenK tne lum uommanu mentj and they have, by one means or another irtale.il thejDkiiJeks oi.t of great part of their ancient -possessftms. The encroachments on even their limits as fixe by our treaties of 1790 and 1796, are well known and the manner, in which they, have (according to their right by treatvv, vuniahed those who have forcibly occu pied their lauds, has been Jondly coninjained ofj by those iniruucrs :-wvnu nuiwiumanuuig those who thus conducted were declared by so lemn treaties '"to be oktlaws, and ought to have expected, on Indian ground, Indian execution ; yet whenever they have been rejected, or pu nished, they have filled the newspapers with tlieir railings ol savage outcueries anfl scalp ing" representing the native owners of the soTlas"tir.pfi of ie," and called upwi the strong arm of the Unitfcd States any-4.hing.in the treaty to avenge their s CO not The Indian savases have no Uazettes to ; my trumpet their story to paint their wrongs, or to advocate just ice in their behalf-and they must be extirpated, and, without remorse, the lands of their fathers will be given to aliens. This appears to be their doom, for the strong anpi of the nation in treaty with them is nerved at the execution 1 But candid men acquainted with the subject, do not hesitate to say, -they are a people, under all their provocations " more mined against than sinning. Wnn. saaman--wonnded moriallv. Freeman Hei ly known i three were killed aud a eonsidw. witt others slightly, or not dangeronsly." ; ble number wounded j two were wounded of t, The following is a copy.ot 'a letter from the Rifle corps. Col. Clark has made ninety thn4 commander jf the Morgianav to Mf. G? H. prisoners taken one hundred and twenty stand Felloes, prue master of the said vessel. of arms, eight horses and seven oxen. Tte'n'ri Sir If is w ith infinite pleasure that 'this -sdners arrived at this post on the 43th insf, ' opportunity "is Pred me of doing that justice : . ." ' '. ' ' to vour homanjty and kindness which they doj , tfonjin. so justly deserve, and tlianking yrri for! your ' ' ' ' , " ' ' - : kind attention, not only to me, bt .thc rest of: i, Yxenwa, jULt M, tho wonnded of II. li. JIajesty's late packet' His Majesiv tW Emperor has been pl-srf Morsiana, Since yon have naa the enarge oi L "v . t,,"u'ullu! "ievu, i that ship as pri; master. , 1 mustal4o give the contrary notwithstanding to j yoii every credit for the anxiety you have shewn Bi!ffI.i inL-R. aid to ertermiaate the to nrcserve.vour prize which I assure yon I pper colored bipeds, as wretches who ought! think yon have done your best in both to your it to have lot or portion upon earth. country and to your owners. If it is ever in The Indian savases have no Gazettes to i my future Tower to return our kindness to my- The firsl bejrmninffs of the War which now exists between the whites and the Creeks,, are involved in uncertainty. The agents posted in their country, have stated various reports of Individual outrages and reprisals, but they have left it doubtful on which side the balance of criminality, remained Bat of late they have stated, that the Creek Confederacy has been violently agitated by party spirit': That one party were resolved no longer to submit to the encroachment made noon them, and were determined to resist the whites by force of arms: and to this party several " 1'rophets" (the word now used as a term of reproach) were attached : That there was another party, who, for the sake of quiet were willing to submit to the encroachments of the w hites and were de nominated the Peace Party j and that these were neouraged by the whites, and the mixed breeds, and were supplied by the government agents j That these pnrticsMiad been at blows, but the extent of the injury jriven or sustained, hd not been stated. That the war party are always represented as the aggressors j That recently this War l'arty made application to the !3pnmsliirovcrn self shall certainly not be forgetful of that es- sential duty. - ' I am, sir, your obedient servant, ' (Signed) . J. CUNNINGHAM. to.Mr. G. H. Fellows, prize Master of the Morgianav , '.5 '4 omer iauus -acknowledged, as compensation probablv the usual suppfy which the Indians " ve nave a Pan) n. lor W-hieh tbs U ni ted htates agreed to give the. ftre in tlie consf ant hlt 0f receiving from the. vcc. yaiuttoic juujoii gooust auu nay Iiites since time immemorial : That hearing been successiul, American f breeds inbatt'e array nn. tlio. atuns nrparihr1 hv tile pomteH Ihe fth provides that all whites treaty way laid and attacked the ammunition tSho settle on the Creefc lauds, shall forfeit, the . collVoy, killed many of the guard; but were de protectpnvf .tne U. States, and that the Creeks j fitted by the Indians, with loss and acknow mwVnish' thw at fAr wecsui-?. The rthjiC(!i?ej airace. This last affair appears to r , y'7. " luc U,-,D,B;"',U ,ui".ou luc luve been the hrst commencement ot serious hostilities ; and the attack on the fort on. the Tombigbee. as narrated at the head of this arti cle, appears also to have been the anticipated effect of that affair. CentineL , CreeV lands, or to 'pv8 thereon w ithout pass t toorts.' TheSth audttthnrovide forthe deliver ?y Bp to punishment of kll.persons committing Capital crimes, &.C That no retaliations or reprisal shall be committed on either.stdeuniil ' satisfaction shall have heert demanded of the dg cresting party. By the ItthjLhe Cheeks promise Ivgive- notice of any designs hotile to the peace 61 interest of the United States. W By thej2th, ijils provided, id order, that the Creek nation may bo led to a greater degree of civilization, wnu to uecomeoerasmen una cultivators, m- o stead - States fnl domestic Extract from a letter to the Editor,' dated Fort G?orgey.0ctoher tV. ' "' " On the 11th iMst. we marched out with a force . of eleven hundred, inclusive of Indians, to see what had become of the gallant Vincent. But we foUnd that he had absconded percipi tately, burning all the public property he could reach.. From the bct information there can be no doubt but that the appearance of the mi litia, who were supposed dv' the enemy to a mount to. 5000 men, and the employment of the Indians, struck terror to their souls and cansed their retreat. Ve marched to the Tw elve Mile Creek, and were pursuing the rear guard of the, enemy, w ho .were about two hundred strong at the IVty, with baggage and sick. But the movements of col. Scott, who gave us notice that he was about to ijuit this fort, compelled gen. M'Clnre very Veiuctantly to give up the pursuit. We took a circuit through jthe country to Chippewa, and thence to this place. 1 ; r"""- We have collected inimeii9e quantities of perhaps 1000 barrels of flour. 3 rnl Staff of his arjhies, viz. the Field larsiiaf uieutenanrs iaucnnan enti ttuyieyto Ie Grvt, rats nj 'Artillery V the field Marshal LJeiatea' ants the Baron Spipsirs. the Prinua of Hi-j Hoinburg, and Coani de jlenau, to hh Genertl of Cavalry Major Generals L'Es;jiiie, Rei, rardFernerj Mohr, Marschall, Loderer, and the Prince of Alloys Lichtenstein, lobe TieU MarshalrLieuteifrnts j and 18 Colonels (whosa vcral Omcers m retireinpt have been ordered XlllW OVX III. ' I ... ' ' . , - , ... ' TIUCE, (nUKCART,) Jl'LT 7. It is said theEngSih Minister at Constanti nople has made , propositions to the Divan for the formation of an aUiance betw een the Porti and England knt-i hat th; propositions were rejected, the Grand Seignior persisting to main tain a most strict neutrality during the war. The Field-Marshal Prince of Lichtensteiofr with the army. ' L.r". , BOSTON, OCT. 22 Latest from Halifax. Arrived intown yesterday, capt. Mellow, of the sloop Jelly Robin, w hich sailed fror lliii port 23th Agg, last for CharlcstoliTB. C. .ith an assorted cargo of fish, nails, and wraj iag paper -.hi the Vth Sept. lat. "38, long 74wa chased 2d hours by the Plantagenet 74, the wind dying away in a calm, was captured by her boats, and after taking out all hands and the cargo, the Jolly Robin was destroyed,.aiid the men put on board the St. Domingo, (.Ad Warren's ship) and 'sent to Halifax, Mlierii they arrived on the 12th Sept. Capt. Mfcft Ha lifax, where fhev arrived on the 12th Hept. Dublic stores- or 400 stands of arms; 5000 hides, tallow,; Capt. M. left Halifax the 5th inst. being witi bread, bats. &.c. The conduct of the Indians ! eyeraf others paroled and permitted to sailu onffht to silence the British pretext of not be-1 the schr. Minerva, of Wiscasset, capt. Scott, 1 1 . a j L 'f"1 1. .1 J P I nr Aro I Yi a v Q rr i-(. nn K i 11 fl 1 if av.nin. 1 1 j t HIST aoie 10 resirum iiiciu. i uc amiress ui Ktu. j v v... "vuiuj .mu comment on7 theironj; ! tapt. m. nrongut no, r'apersout veroaJlT iiix ow out. Col. Chap- 'forms ps that the Grek ship Jerusalem had m iswithtnem. v c iook ior news irom uiem uc-n cicorcu, nun ui cuiu lenorey, m w every moment.' (the opper,, which was declared contraband The 23d infantry and all the light artillery, ! she was soon to sail for Boston as beunde hayloft Fort (ij?nrtre and taken un their line i stood. of march for the eastward on Thursday last, col. W. Scott accompanied them: but wc do not learn that gen. M. Porter has Isft Fort Ni agara. Aniericaa Intelligence. ' "''-" IViiw port, October 10. CAPTURE OF THE MORG1ANA. This afternoon arrived at this harbonr, the We learn that col. Grieve, w ith the 7th regi ment of state artillery, is on his nurch for the frontier. .:.'."sl4 S.VVANNAH, (GEO.) OCTOllSR 13. Sad !ws. Wre have seen a gentleman just There had been no new capture of late, x A frigate and 2 sloops of war Were going iff the same day cant. M. sailed. Admiral Warren's fleet had sailed froHa lifax, without the St. Domingo,' for the Chr sapeake. . . ' '. Jx ' 2 L The brig Diamond capt. "M'Intosh, was t$ sail for Boston shortly. v k Nothing had been done to. the ChesapeaU sinee she was stripped. - '3 :' : :The Minerva on her passage to WlscasseH was boarded off Cape Sables by the British. sloop of war RiGeman, capt. Piece, of 18gan th ii rnn am. dry And will send fbatBersons to" reside a,.! taken on the' 2.8 th of S;.')iember. off Surrinam mong theai, to, teach them the arts of agrieul- (Bank, by the Saratoga, after an action of 1 VllFP. Ann fn haAitn (nfapnfAfAM I I. i JOlli . - . nml S .n..na KB. I . t..' . i. . -) uv.yaiu iuivijrii.ii.iDi ' m iir, J.OIII vv. IfUUI ailU If 4UI1IU113, Ul uuajlllll. fronr Jones connty, whonl we learn, that on the 5th inst. nn express from Fort Haw kins reach wt fii"Pfnx-il. who wnV with tlie trnnns. en. camned thSs'side of that place civinir the sad 'nd off Monhegan, by, tho British sloop of intelligence that a body of Indians hair attacked j war Recrnit', capt. Evans, of ,18 guns, in eom-i the escort and taken the whole of the provisions pany w ith the sloop of war brig Fantome, eeptjj Rri(ih nacket. M nrpiaii a. mnt. Ciinnniffliani. 1 nn fhp wnv in the. Creek nsreucv 'for the cXhedi- : Lawrence aiSo of IS srUns.' of 18 gnns and gofoie'V" prize to the privateer ?f ion destined against theni. On receipt of jthe Spoke, off ape s Sablesibe privateer " wif ork. lhe news. Gen. Fl the 2th ofj horse and three, ( and was suit of the lii lii RiydTmmediately dispatched 300 Commodore Broke, formerly the Julian, Smith jpe, companies of infantry in pur- . of Boston, last from St Johns, on a cruise i 14th provide for the cessation of all pastcriev amies, and far the ratification and fulnlraent of 'Tthe treaty with ail good faith and security. . -The treaty of 1785 w as negotiated by Messrs. Hawkins, Clemorand Pickens;and recognizes all the provisions of the precedins' treaty s w ith imv uauioii, vuaixne uniiea laws snail nnye ; liberty to establish trading or military posts 9"u ths Altimanee, Oconee, -and eisewhereT as Extract of'a letter from Thomas AdertOn, Esq. commander of the privatB armed schooner : Sa ratoga, t the owners in tlnVcity, ans. . Our informant further ! Boston Bay - . proper esch post to Jiave annexed to it a dis- , trictofla:d 5 miles square the jurisdiction of which to be. in the U. States, who promised -to give' them goods to the value of OoQO dollafs, and to send ihcai two blackshiith, w ith strikers, '&c;' ,',:" ;VA,.- -r'.;:-;'-!v:' ';.:''" -:y ' i , These trjcaties are the " surpreiue law of the land," haying bten ralitied by the ,Sc.nate. . The Creeks have been represented, by those ' .who buve resi led amohg ttiem, tote a reinai ka , ble well madi, active, hardy and sagax-iaus peo ple j extreosly jealous of their rights and ter . rt ritwyaflfd very averse to parting with their landa.om:etimice, the Confederacy eon taiiii'd 172S0 perions,''of whom 08RO were fight ij mcuiThey have been eontiniially at war the C!uuiaws,Si. abonnd la warriors exeri c.i.d i all Hie-tactics of the bush. Many of Wfi uiJi are sensuuo, well educated men.'and h ildren are'tanght Wading,-' uiany of lhi'rsd fl wTiMng and avithmetie. The arts of citiliza i . . i i . j ... yu tu. inijumiri-c, wtoHue, -ttiiu eiciierev as f-rranii oeiveen ana ou men, jamcs vuoc aer-ine new iiituau uat imu axuvcu uiuc, giuai, ctciu.i i . t. M tIdntfth-itItat TJie news of Commodore Perrv's Victory o Lake Erie had been received in Halifax. A large body of troops had been ordered foJf Quebec, aud were soon to leave Halifax f thatplac44 -' "r--j'" - . From the Boston Centinel, of Oct. Mr ; FROM SPAJN. v . We have rece'ived by Jhe arrival from Cadiz thft Gazettes of that city to the 13th Angust-. 1 - j -7 n- . -r i!. i an , . . . . . .. . x f I . rni j -li ihA ntftsiai o nnmirii a ni ud ish racket x 3loreiaiia, orisacunsifrevious to uapi. . ju s saiun,?, a scnooner, nil-: i iiey coniain u ic muai- .VVw..... . . -.'- .: . . .. . .... . . ll.. T7 V. Uaniol. 1-in- ami oO men, James Una. der-the new llavtian flag, hart arrived there,' great events on ,:;ue rrcuni -g states, that 6u his way down to this place, it was reported that the detachment had overta ken the Indians and retaken the provisions. We have been favoured 'with the following Wc hope that this report ia i true. We learn with regret, that v ilwam li. liui Looh, Eq. declines a re-election for Senator Ifrom this State to the United States, which " We have bcefi based by brigs, frigates and line ot battle ships : but at last, off. surrinam RiWr, in aliout 4 fathom water, we captured the Brit takes place in November next. Arrived on Saturday evening last, sloop Ce lia, A. Blount, from 8t. Marys, cargo coffee. out, for Suriiiiam. We discovered the brigjat stays shrouas, Sec. almost all cut away, and and proceeded to Caldwell's manor, in the pro more than one hundred shot holes in Ourmain saiLm.y in our, masts, spars and tiqlj.&e J The bulwarks ofthe Mo.rgiana bewS ; equal, if not 8MyeTior,tp UtMiof tlio .Mraies gnahjod including the Captain werp all people of coldr. ins, through other channels. iicui'iv ni vuivi f jipiuukii Vv t-2 past. 3. A. M. Sc'nt. 16th on our ieebow4A-new-coverument-has lately been formed in Marshal Suchet had retreated to Barefion v ma'ie sail in cuuse. jjfuig 10 iuc wiuuwmu of Surriua:, she ran down before the wind fbr the River, and gave us' a hard run. . At a little b6fiire3, P. M. got nearlyAyithin musket shot, when the ehace hoisfed, Jhi nglis h" rcolonr?r'an,d gave us her, stern chacers j which she repeated three times and cut away some of our rigging. At 3 P. M. we hoisted American colours and being witliU good musket, shot, we commenced the action, aud continued a considerable part of the timet close along side, till 29 minutes af ter 4 P. M. when we carried her by boarding, after a severe action, in , which the:8ai'atoa:a, Hayti, and is said to be similar to that of the and the allied army was in pursoii tiaim.. lTnioA Qtoa VoHhti warn Ii.i:oi1 TWeiilpnt ; ad Snnnioh rmv was in Re US. . w""' A gentleman just from 8t. Mary's, informs, I Gen, Rosello, of the ith Spanish annyt that upwards of400 troops had lately arrived writes that on the 30h gen. AJava captured at Amelia Island, from the Havanna and St. i Biscay 8000 Freneh prisoners, witpoui reo Augustine, about 300 of them 'whites) and that 230 of them had gone In pursuit of the revolutionists, in a king's armed schooner. . . BURLI1TO, OCT. lU.'.H J On the evening ofthe 11th inst. a detachment of the rifle corps consisting of abont 130 men, under the command' of Col. k lsaae Clark,' em barked on hoard of baUeauxat Chazy, N Y. vinoej of Lower Canada,, and landed at the house of a Mr. Cook, where there was deposited about 63000 worth of property,' recently s'mag gled raTj the stateji, epnsbtiBg of leathr shoes, :n 4t, .-nnrAaA nnft thnt thfl division 01100 ga was pursuing the French intji Franca. The journals ofthe Spanish cortes showetf, that they were making every , effort to amelio ate the sitnation of the kingdom, and establiet its independence "and prosperity; j and if we mat judge from the nnmerous addresses presentea with the congratulations on the establUhmpnt the constitntioa. and on the abolishment of w Inquisition, we should think the assemhiy ip highly popular. A new eongreis was soon t be chosen, and its sessions would probablv held in Madrid. All tho provinces frogf wlnff mo' Vandafs.as l Fjc acp onhLO

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view