Bit Marti) t&itwc IMFORfANT TO STATES jj, L. HOLMES, Editor and Proprietor. AS IT IS TO INWriDUALs; AND THE GLORT OF THE STATE IS THE COMMON PROPERTY OF ITS CITIZENS." at TERMS n ;D ner annum, n fm , rlu1 the end 01 si , ilmuu f the rear. Advertisements inserted at the rate f sixty 661113 " B4uare ro 1110 "r5t ana uurty eati tot eac'1 subsequent insertion. No oaper discontinued until arrearages are paid, JceoU oPtio f the Editor. No subscription received for less than twelve 'advertisements and Sheriff's sales, will . J? J tlaomanto aont fnr Till Kl iVo t rtr oIiaiiU ' the number of insertions intended marked upon them, otner ... jndctiargeuaiui.j. ...... trTLctters on business connected with this estab lislimeni, uiuai. - - lor of the North-Carolinian, and in all cases post-raid. lit mail, will remember that they can do so free of mr 1 l r 1 I 1 . nostaae, OS rosrnia6fra or auuiuiucu uy uw 10 franKetteM enclosing remittances, if written by themselves, or the contents known to them. PIANO FORTES. mjOW opening, and for SALE, at the Female seminary. One Extra, Grand Action Piano Forte, elegant Crotch Mahosony, Gothic Architecture, with every modern Improvement, manufactured by Wake and Gknn, ------ $470 One ditto, Rose Wood, 6 Octaves, by Wake and Glenn, One ditto, Mahogony, by Wake & Glenn, $340 One ditto, by Geib and Walker, - $350 One ditto, Common Action, by Dubois, Bacon & Chambers, 200 These Piano Fortes have been selected carefully, by the best masters in New York, and will be held at a libera discount from the regular prices, and a credtton ood paper, to suit the times. A L S O Sterol PIANO FORTES, which have been in use in the Seminary, are offered at great bargains. R. W. BAILEY. Fayettcville, June 13, 1810. 68-tf. F ayetteville FEMALE SEMINARY. nAVING declined further supervision of the FEMALE SEMINARY, it is but just that I should express to its former patrons and friends rav confidence, that in the hands of Mr. Spencer, it will be conducted with ability and faithfulness, on the general plan heretofore pursued. Air. Spencer 13 a teacher, is laborious, accurate and persevering. R. W. BAILEY. THE Subscriber will open the Seminary on the lot'i of October next, and hopes by giving "h-s ent re and exclusive attention to the business aidd in e:tch department by competent, efficient FEMALE TEACHERS to merit thepatronage heretofore bestowed. In regard to the plan he in teaJs tn pursue, he h-s only to say, at present, that he is DETERMINED to tive a course of instruc tion in each department as THOROUII as possible. The Academic year will he the same as before; com mencing on the loth October, and closing on the loth Jidy, and divided into two sessions. Pupils charged frntn time of entrance to close of session, and no deduction made lor absence, except in cases of sickness. TEIt.VIS In Advance. Elementary Department, or Se cond Llass, First Class, French Language, Drawing and Painting, Music on the Piano Forte ac companied by the Voice, Music on Guitar, Use of Piano, Incidentals, August I, 1S40. $3 00 per session 16 00 " 10 00 10 00 " 25 00 " 25 00 3 00 " 50 " G. SPENCER. 75- NOTICE, ' sTin LAND FOR SALE, THE Subscriber wishing to move to the West, wilt off.ir at public sale, on the 27th of this month, my plantation, with all the adjoining tract oT land, belonging thereto, on both sides of the 1 urnpike and Chicken Roads, Si EVEN MILES West of Fayctfeville, and runs acrosa Beaver Creek on the East side, with an excellent MILL SITE thereon. The above lands are as w !1 timbered as any lands within the same distance of Fayctteville, with pine and oak. ALSO AT the snrne time and place, I will offer my stock 0. t-aitl,, Hogs and Sheep, together with Household and .Kitchen Furniture, Farming Utensils, &c irie lands will be sold to suit purchasers, in sepa rate, tracts it requested the teims will be made easy, and known on the day of sale. p . DUNCAN BU1E. tayeiteville, Aug. 8, 1840. 76-3t FAYETTEVILLE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1840. Political. H. EBAMBERT R TAILOR, espectfully informs his frieno.3 and the public , . generally, that he has re-commenced the Tai H ? Business n the house next door to John "ske & Son, on Green Street 6 doors above the market House, where he will thankfully receive all waers m his line for cash only, finding the credit ern a bad one. All orders from the country for i- k'USt m a" cases have the cash enclosed, other ethey will not be attended to. Ho begs leave assure those who may favor him with their orders, n? pains shall be spared on his part to give fcenerl satisfaction. An HE HAS ON HAND Sue 1 c,nlr,8 isosoms, oouars, oiocks, Ponders, and Drawers, ot the best quality. WANTED. Throe r m - 1 nnl I Journeymen lailors, none neeu Jir SOod wortraent a"1 of steady habits. 6 50Two Rnv nrnntnH fn thf nhnve trade. ""Js from th rnnni.. ...; n. ..rrQ taycttev uuunirv wiu on preierreu. Extra cuttinjr done at the shortest notice, eville, April 25, 1840. 6I-3m. From the Globe. Jealousy, Ingratitude, and Treachery or General Harrison. The instance of cruel injustice committed by Harrison in throwing the pall of his report umu ui vjui. uumi iumer, who led, what Harrison and his friends now call the uiusi urimani sortie in our military annals, wuceu iu a recent number of our paper. Harrison, but a few davs hpfnr led with Col. Miller, and his yet unappeased resentment was supposed by Col. Miller and his friends to have induced the General to omit, m the hrst recital of the names of the gallant officers who performed the glorious achievement, that of the leader of the forlorn hope, to whose personal courage and skilful and judicious conduct of the action left entire ly to his discretion, its success is attributable. But the case of deliberate perhdity, to which we would now invite attention. bhVht in r thn laurels won by a striplina in his- armv. no temporary excitement can be even supposed to lend the slightest mitumtinn. C.nA tr ishness, enduring for twenty-six vears. char acterizes the yet unrepaired wronff. The in jured officer was one who volunteered before he reached manhood, to serve Harrison in in his Tippecanoe campaign. On the bloody night of the surprise, he acted as the aid of Boyd the Commander of the fourth regiment. and all know and admit, that to the admirable skill and firmness with which this body of men were made like a rampart to cover the camp, and the broken militia, Harrison and his army owe their deliverance from total de struction. The same vounir .hpm. uhn j 0 , u voice and bcanusr, amidst the darkness and dismay at Tippecanoe, inspired with invinci ble courage, veterans to whom he bore orders of their Colonel, was conspicuous again in that glorious sortie at Fort Meigs, which gave some light to the day which the butchery or captivity of the whole corps of Kentuckians unoer colonel JJudly had concluded with dis aster. Under Miller, he led a company of foity men to the assault of the batteries, which were carried. And there he left his whole command, but fourteen men, who alone sur vived to return with him to the fort. But his greatest service was that at Sandusky: and it i . rt . . . . . was ior tnis mat the Ueneral requited him with the artfully practised wrong, which from the noble nature of the injured party, and the insidious hypocrisy of his cunning adversary, has up to this hour, been shrouded iu mvste- ry. It is our purpose now to dissipate the obscurity by authentic and long suppressed documents. It is proper to jrive a brief view of the slcte cfthing3, out of which the secret history which we propose to open up, grew, that the partial ly known and conceded facts may shed their light on each other. The reader should look to the map, and take a comprehensive view (with a knowledge of the designs on both sides) of the scene of action of the whole compaign, which the vic tory obtained by Croghan at Sandusky so gloriously opened, and which the battle fought by Col. Johnson on the 1 names as brilliantly closed. Armstrong, the Secretary of War, had over-ruled Han i.-ori's idea of carrying the in vasion of Canada round the head of the lakes. His plan was to obtain the command of the lake by a naval victory and carry our army into Canada by transports built for the purpose. The fleet to contend for the mastery with the English, was prepared near Erie, under Fer ry. The transports were built by Jesup, at Cleaveland, and Harrison, whose duty it was to cover, with his force, these preparations, took post at Seneca. The lake heads like a bow into Ohio, from Erie, in Pennsylvania, to Sandusky bay. Sandusky is at the wes tern end of the arch Erie, at the eastern ex tremity Cleaveland is on the arch between the two. The British force was on the op posite side from the Sandusky bay. Harrison and his army, was at a considerable distance from the bay, up the Sandusky river Croghan at the post of Lower Sandusky, being about nine miles nearer the bay. The object of the British was to destroy the preparations for in vasion on the lake shores, and open the whole sweep of its arch in Ohio to the depre dations of the Indians supported by the Brit ish fleet and sustained by the land forces as a rallvinff point in their incursions. To re lieve himself from Harrison's force, which he did not doubt would be employed to cover Cleaveland, Proctor made a feint of besieging Fort Meigs a second time. This, he supposed, would withdraw Harrison from Seneca west ward, to succor Fort Meigs, and leave his de signs upon the boats and stores at Cleaveland and the fleet at Erie unobstructed. Harrison did not march to the relief of Fort Meigs. Proctor then came down the bay to Sandusky in the prosecution of his real object. Harrr son no sooner heard of his approach, than he ordered Croshan to burn his fort and retreat and he had all his own provisions and prepar ations for the Canadacampaign piled for a con flagration, and a retreat into me liueriur as snnn as Croehan joined him. Proctor would thus have obtained, trom the tears ot Harrison what his feint on Fort Meigs was intended to pfTfif.t. bv nrovokins his valor, had not Crog- han's courage disappointed Proctor and saved TTnt-riann A rmctrATI (T then Secretary, thus WV- s w7 . - sums up, in his notices of the war' the con rluct of Harrison at this Dointoftime: "Havinc on the 29th, sufficiently assured himself with regard to the number and equip ment of Proctor's force, and suspecting that this formidable array might be directed against his own entrenched camp -at Seneca, he at once determined to collect and destroy his surplus stores, abandon his present position and make good a retreat to Upper Sandusky reauug 10 lUe rate mat might await them, the settlements that were on the Southern shores of the lake; the boats built and stores collected at Cleaveland: and Perry's fleet, then fitting out and nearly ready for service, at Presque Isle. But though willing and prepared to make these sacrifices, he could not but perceive that a mere presumption of uaugci 10 ins own camp, would not jastifv the abandonment of Croghan's detachment, with out some effort on his part to extend to it the eventual security he sought for himself. On this point, however, the General's sense of duty was soon satisfied,- forgetting alike the admonition contained in his first order to Croghan, "not to hazard a retreat in the face of an Indian investment," and the fact now perfectly known to himself that such invest ment did exist, he despatched to that officer a second order, for "an immediate retreat" at all hazards; indicating the route by which he was to make it, but taking no step by which he was to cover, or otherwise sustain the movement. And, as if the task thus imposed was not in itself sufficiently perilous, he far ther prescribed, that the garrison, instead of employing all proper means to mask the oper ation, should bezin "bu setting fire to their stores and barracks," and thus virtually announce their intention to the surrounding enemy. "Fortunately, the great disposer of the events of this world, not unfreauentlv converts evil into good, and folly into wisdom. On the present occasion, we have seen, that bv the first order given to Crojjhan he was assigned to the defence of a post which, in the Gene- rai s opinion, 'could not be saved,1 and at the same time forbidden to retreat, in the face of an Iudian investment, and that by a second. he was ordered to abandon this untenable post, and make good a retreat of nine miles rough a continuous forest Jilltd with savages, tctthout aid or sunnort nf ami kind" 11 " "The circumstances connected with Crosr- han's refusal to obey the order to burn and retreat, are told for the first time truly in his letter, which we now publish. The result is forcibly told by the Secretary, Armstrong, in the following passage: "In making this selection, the young and gallant Croghan did not hesitate; and to the demand of a surrender, enforced bv the usual menace of indiscriminate slaughter in case of refusal, he answered substantially that the defence of his post was a point of honnr which could only be satisfied by an actual ex periment of the relative force and fortune of 3 antagonist and himself. "While this negotiation was in progress, Proctor was employed in landing his artillery and giving it a position in aid of his gun boats, from which on the delivery of Croghan's answer, a heavy fire was opened and contin ued on the fort, with little if any intermission during the night. At day-break a second battery of three six pounders was established within two hundred and fifty yards ot the pickets; and about four o'clock P. M. was found that the whole fire of the British cannon, was concentrated on the northwest corner of the fort a circumstance sufficiently indica ting the point and species of attack meditated upon it. Major Croghau, accordingly has tened to employ such means as he possessed to strengthen the menaced angle, and had barely executed his purpose, when the enemy (covering himself with smoke,) was seen rap idly advancing and but a few paces distant from the pickets. A general and well-directed fire of musketry from the garrison, which immediately followed this discovery, had the effect of checking his progress and consider ably disturbing his order; but the latter being speedily restored, the movement was resumed, and the ditch reached and occupied by the head of the column. It was at this critical moment that Croghan's single piece of artil lery, charged with grape-shot, and so placed as to enfilade the assailants, openea its nre, and with such effect, that in a few minutes the combat was virtually ended and the battle won. Most of the enemy who entered the ditch were killed or wounded, and such ot them as were less advanced and able to fly, sought safety in the neighbouring woods carrying with them no disposition to renew the attack, and strongly impressing their In- i .1 I T dian allies with their own pauic. jtiucioi now saw, that all attempts to rally the fugitives were hopeless, and that to avoid a greater ca lamity, his most prudent course would be, to re-embark what could be collected of his force, red and white, and return immediately to Maiden." We now come to the unpublished history connected with this event. It will explain why the results of this victory were carefully keot out of view at the tirae why Croghan consented to have his motives for disobeying his orders misrepresented, and Harrison's conduct in giving them vindication and why Harrison so perseveringly falsified the truth of history in the accounts given by him of this particular transaction, in the two works prepared under his own eye; the first puDiisu ed bv McAfecthe second bv Dawson. In bringing forward Colonel Croghan's letters uDon this subiect. it is Drooer to state L - r- that they were given to us by a gentleman ot high standing in Ohio, who, without any com- mumcatioji with Colonel Croghan upon ine VOJL. 2. JTO. 27. Whole Number 80 A Seneca state, fear that Harrison would quit his camp at and pounce upon him in his then crippled Tt was worthv of notice, that of these two commanders, (always the terror of each other,) one was now actually flying from his supposed pursuer, while the other waited only the arrival of Croghan -. . t, Hytrin a mmn rnnfla"ration ana JllHot 31 Odl'' li ' to 1 - e to Fort Meigs- subject, submitted them to us for the press. The facts that these letters were called for bv a committee of gentlemen at Wheeling, the friends of Harrison that Colonel Croghan expressed his willingness to give them to the public by referring the committee to General Harrison for the correspondence that this committee, after having had time to com municate with General Harrison, published a letter as Croghan's, which the late correspon dence between Harrison and Croghan shows was not his, but one which his self-sacrificing patriotism permitted Harrison to shape, to suit the exigencies of the time at which it was published that Harrison's aid Col. Todd, now conducting a press notoriously set up as the immediate organ of Harrison, declared, in reference to the call by the committee for the correspondence in regard to the contested question of the defence of Fort Stephenson, that there was no "such contested question" "that history and Col. Croghan's own let ter at the day, have placed the subject beyond the necessity of further elucidation" ail these facts, connected with the consideration that if what is said in behalf of Harrison in regard to the call of his own friends for the corres pondence, be true, the correspondence itself must be false, render it proper, in justice to the parties and to the public, that the issue made by Colonel Todd's declaration should be tested. We do not publish what purports to be the replies of Harrison, in the copies which we have in our hands, because the history referred to by Col. Todd, as true, is condemned, in the letters purporting to be Harrison's, as erroneous. Harrison must therefore deny the authenticity of these letters, or the authority of his friend, Col. Todd, to make the statement on his behalf. We shall await, then, some intimation on the part of General Harrison or his friends, touching this subject some recognition of the letters imputed to him, coupled with an expression of a willingness that they may meet "the public eye." In that contingency we shall with alacrity present (hem in the columns of (he Globe, in their proper connec tion. From the contents of Col. Croghan's let ters, it will be perceived that not a fact stated by htm is controverted. It was alone upon the admission of the truth of his statements that the mode of correcting the original misrepresentations was referred to the deci sion of mutual friends. COLONEL CROGHAN'S LETTERS TO GENERAL HARRISON. Red Hook, 1st July, 1818. Sir: Could I calculate on seeing you with in any reasonable time, this letter would not be written; but as there is no prospect of this, I deem it, therefore, most proper in this way to state to you with candor, that reports, or rather statements, have been made to me of such a nature, and from sources so direct and apparently so authentic, as to cause me to hesitate in the language I should bear towards you; and which will, unless positively denied by you, call from me such contradiction as would be extremely unpleasant to me, and, perhaps, mortifying to you. It is stated that you revised ana correcteo the work entitled "War in the Vest," (ot which McAfee is the ostensible author,) pre paratory to its going to press, thus giing your sanction and authority to the publication ot a statement in relation to me oeieucc ui Lower Sandusky, most positively incorrect, and which you at the time knew to be in di rect contradiction ot the language which you held in the Camp of Seneca during the bom bardment of Sandusky by tne enemy. "ten. Harrison," says the author, "discovering from the fire of the enemy that he had nothing but lioht artillery, which could make no impres sion on the works, felt no apprehension for the safety of the garrison, well knowing that a breach could not be effected, and that with out forming a breach, every attempt at esca lade could be successlully repelled oy tne gar rison," or words to this amount a statement as void of truth as possible, as you very well know, recollecting as you must your uneasi ness, during the whole continuance of the cannonade, for the safety of the garrison, and which more than once wrung trom you tins strong language of censure ot my conduct. "I wash my hands ot it tne uiooa do on nis own head" language which you had no right to use, and which would have damned my reputation as an officer had i fallen on mat occasion. I am informed that very lately, at a dinner in Philadelphia, when the subject ofthede fnre of Sandusky was brought up, you ex pressed yourself in substance thus: The officers and soldiers of that garrison are not so deserving of distinction for its defence as it is generally thought: to the blindness and f6lly of the enemy, more than to any extraor dinary exertions or skill of theirs, is to be ascribed his defeat and their safety; it is true they did very well, but not better than any other like number of troops trom my army would have done, &c, thus continuing on in such an exposition of the affair, as made me, cvs mv informant and others at the table, astonishment that the merits of the Hofence of the Sandusky had been so far over rated, and that the commanding officer had received for such service such applause. Did such conversation ever take place: or have vou ever expressed yourself in such manner of the defence of Sandusky, as to induce the belief in any one that its garrison received warmer plaudits than it was deserv jr nf? And in asking this, may I at the same time require of you an equally candid denial or admission of the statement of your having revised the work of which McAfee is the ostensible author? If it is made to ap pear from your answer that my informants have reported falsely, they shall know it to their confusion and cost: but if on the other hand there is an affirmation on your part of the truth of their statement, I will immediately take it upon myself to correct the false im pression you may have created. I will be in New York until the 1st of October next, to which place I beg that your answer mav be directed. I have the honor to be, Your obedient servant, G. CROGHAN. To Gen. W. H. Harrison, Cincinnati, Ohio. New York, Aug. 13, 1818. Dear Sir: The language of mv letter. although warm, was but the expression of my feelings at the time; for I had then scarce a doubt of your hostility towards me, by such an extraordinary chain of co-incident circum stances were the reports in proof thereof brought before me. With every desire to ad dress you as from the long friendship that has existed between us you had a right to expect, I was unable to express myself as I wished, for at each attempt at more dispassionate man ner, I became yet more warm at the idea of having so mistaken your character. Nor will you be surprised at this, when informed of the manner in which it was produced. In the first place, I was never satisfied with your report of the affair of Sandusky. You eulogi zed individual gallantry alone, without any at tempt at placing the facts before the Govern ment in the important light they merited thus doing an injury to myself and to others concerned. However, this neglect I found an excuse for at the time; the exasperated state of public feeling, unjustly directed against yourselfj rendering it more proper, for a time at least, such facts should be withheld as would tend the further to increase the reputa tion of the affair. Secondly. When I heard for more than two years, officers declare that you were inimical to me, (at the same time giving instances in proof,) a book appeared in Kentucky, highly corroborative of these declarations, for in wis book (on which it is said you had passed your approbation whilst yet in manuscript) a statement is given of the anair of Sandusky, calculated most complete ly to lessen its reputation in the opinion of the public. Lastly. When in a degree exas perated at the false coloring given to the af fair of Sandusky in the book above referred to, while revolving in my mind a conjecture of the real state of your feelings towards me, I accidentally met with a stranger who recited to me a conversation he had recently held with you, that places the fact of your hostility beyond a question. The conversation here alluded to was expressed at length in my last letter, and to it 1 might have added another fact which had its place in the chain of con nection that you presented to this stranger McAfee's History; and I may say vouched for its correctness, as it was given to him af ter he had avowed his intention of writing an ; account of the war. I might here relate many other facts of like importance in this chain of singular coincidents; but I deem it will readi ly appear from those I have already stated, that I was slow to believe you capable of im- proper teelmg, and that the warmtn ot wnicn you complain was the consequence of unwill ingness on my part to trouble you witn a recital of the various reports I had heard, un til at last they assumed so positive a charac- r.L l ter as to impress me wun amiusi au enure conviction of their truth. 1 may offer these particulars in excuse for the tone and language of my letter; but they do not cause me the less to regret having be trayed such warmth. You had a right to ex pect other tieatmeut; and I do not hesitate to say that I have wronged your friendship. xour letter Dears wun it an tne sausiacuon that you could give, or that I can ask. You have denied, in emphatic terms, the truth of the statements that have been made to me, and of course stand acquitted of every charge of improper feelings towards me. The sub ject, 1 hope, may stand at rest forever, at least so iar as relates to yourseit. onouiu a second edition, of McAfee's book be published, I will offer to the publisher an impartial detail of facts in relation to the affair of Sandusky, as a duty which I owe to those brave men who are miured in the statement now betore the world: but, in whatever I may say, no per sonal allusions shall be made to yourself, if they can be avoided. Although I no longer harbor a thought of your having ever wilfully injured us, of your having at any time stated any thing with a view to detract from the merits of the defence of Sandusky, I am very far, at the same time, from placing, as I used to do, the strongest reliance on the activity of your friendship for me. I once thought you anxious to seek an occasion to speak jn praise of my services. I since find my mis take, and that your neglect of me has gone so far as to cause you to pass from under your eyes a work containing an incorrect account of an affair on wnicn my reputation as a sol dier greatly depended, when it was fully in your power to have given it the necessary corrections. Feeling, as I do, that I have striven a great deal in your behalf, and aware that you were conscious of my having at one time rendered you a very signal service, 1 am surprised, perhaps mortified, that you should have neglected the very favorable opportunity that was offered to you of acknowledging the obligation by generously publishing to the woild a full account of every transaction in relation to the defence of Sandusky. Such a course would not have leA me among the number of those who have given proof of more personal courage, but would hare rank ed toe on the roll of those who have rendered their country signal services, while it would have exalted you as one superior to all Selfish considerations, more anxious to render jus tice to others than to claim it for yourself. J have been educated in the belief that candor was a virtue; I therefore address you in its utmost sincerity. I do not wish to hurt your feelings, but to show you what my own are. I harbor not against you the most remote re sentment I am as willing now as I have ever been to speak in your favor, nor will I ever neglect an opportunity of doing justicd to your military worth and services. 1 am, very respectfully, yours, G. CROGHAN. Gen. Harrison, Cincinnati. New Orleans, May 24, 1825 Sir : I unwillingly renew our correspon dence, which I had thought finally closed with my letter on the 13th August, 1818, and that I do so will be received by you as an evidence that my feelings towards yon are at least not hostile. You will call to mind the particulars of our recent conversation at Washington City, and cannot therefore be surprised at my entering, without circumlocution, upon the subject which then occupied us. Strict jus tice has never yet been done to the brave men who served with me at Lower Sandusky, and I require it for them at your hands. It would be needless for me to point out in what par- . ticulars they have suffered ; to you, at least, it should be enough to be referred to McAfee's History of the War in the West, and your own biography, recently published in Cincin nati. What is said in either of these books calculated to place the transactions at Lower Sandusky in a higher point of view before the world than is claimed for the most insignifi cant affairs of that day t Your answer must be that of every other reader nothing. I ask no more for myself, General Harrison, than I have a right to claim for every soldier who served under me. But might I not ask for more at your hand ! If you have one spark of grateful recollection, you will answer, yea more, much more. Did I not literally sacri fice myself to save you ? Did I not, ai a moment when the excitement against you throughout the whole State of Ohio, amount ing to general clamor, when there was almost mutiny in your very camp at Seneca, do every thing thai you and yuui fiicsuarcauir4 of me as necessary to reinstate you in the good opinion of the people and of the army t The success of our army required that you, the general-in-chief, should have the confi dence of all ; and to insure that, I signed ad dresses, without reading them, because I was told that it was necessary ; wrote letters ap proving throughout, your conduct, and subject to your corrections, without asking what they might be, because I was assured by members of your family that you yourself believed that on my expressions in relation to you much depended. But of what I did for you enough of what you have done for me there is nothing to be told. You have personally pledged yourself to correct any false impressions that may have been created by the publication of the two works above mentioned ; in a word, to speak of all things in relation to the trans actions in Sandusky as they deserve. We are told in McAfee's History, "Gener al Harrison, discovering from the fire of the enemy that he had nothing but light artillery, which could make no impression upon the work, felt not a moment alarmed for the safety of the garrison, well knowing that a breach could not be effected, and that without effect ing a breach, every, attempt at escalade could be successfully repelled." General Harrison, is this the fact? Did you not, during the whole of the bombardment of thirty-six hours, evince more emotion than could have been induced by a belief that the garrison was not endangered ? Did you not, in the extremity of your apprehensions, more than once cry out, "The blood be on his own head I wash my hands of it V And was there one man of all your camp at Seneca (the gallant Wood excepted) who believed that, without the most desperate resistance, the garrison could pre vail against the attacks of the enemy I An swer these queries, and fairly. I demand it of you as a right. If the statement in Mc Afee's book be correct, then where is the merit of the defence of Saudusky ! State candidly the facts without eulogium on any of us ; for each one who served there would be judged by his works. Tell to the world, that when you fell back on Seneca, leaving as a garrison for Sandusky, but 150 men, the works of the place were measurably defence less that the pickets which connected the block houses were so loosely planted, that the efforts of a single man could pull many of them Upthat there was no ditch about the work, nor any outward defence to oppose to an as sailing force that but few entrenching tools were left behind, and those unwillingly and to all this, that there was spared to us scarce .n i i u ruuuua ui uiuatiei ciuu luges -per ummj, without a single prepared cartridge or one ounce of powder for the only piece of artillery in the place. Then state the appearance of the defences, on your coming down immedi ately after the defeat and flight of the enemy. The brave men who toiled there during tea days and nights to put themselves in & posture of defence, are as much entitled to credit for it, as they are deserving of praise for their gallantry after the coming of the enemy. Having enlarged on these points as far as may be due to the truth, I would then have you speak of every other circumstance in re-